PAGE TWO yz Js THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11th, 1925 MT. JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. { Editor & Pro'r. | J. E. SCHROLL, Subscription Price $1.50 Year| Sample Copies .++FREE Single Copies 3 Cents Three Months 40 Cents Six Months 75 Cents = Entered at the post office as second-class mail matter The date of the expiraton at Meunt Joy of your sub. on stretches of straight road. It is unwise to assume that each car on the highway is in charge of an ex- perienced driver who knows the traf fic rules and will obey them. You may think that inasmuch as you are keeping on your side of the road there is no danger in running your car at a high rate of speed. | But you might meet a fool who will | not stick to his side of the road. { THE seription follows your name on the label TOBACCO SITUATION We do not send receipts for subscription money received. Whenever you remit, see | that you are given proper credit. We When a few crops of tobacco of eredit all subscriptions at the first of each | month, | only small acreage were sold at “rt 1 S f he n - it vy lists Pena ayy twenty cents about two months ago, Mount Joy Stan and News, were merged | many predicted that that would be with that of the Mount Joy Bulletin, | ¥ : od which makes this paper's ordinary weekly. | the prevailing price. Since then a EDITORIAL THE NEWCOMER’S IMPRESSION Many visitors to a town get their first impression from the appear- ance of the buildings. If. these structures are not attractive, the vi- sitor may get a conception which is difficult to remove. It is a fine thing when the ers of property realize that they are in a sense and that the conditions existing on their proper- ty are subjected to the close scrut- iny of a great many people. If they can brighten up and improve their property in cases where it needs at- tention, they will not merely make it more valuable, but they will ac- complish a stroke for the reputation of their home community. Their townspeople will appreciate what- ever they do to make the town’s front door look like the entrance to a homey and a wide awake advanc- wrong own- “on parade,” ing community. CONDITIONS UNCERTAIN with the market uncertainty of around here, unsettled condition of the stock market. Not only are things mighty uncertain on Wall Street but right here at home stocks are not selling as they should. As an example take the report of the stock and bond sale at Lancaster Monday. Stock of the First Nation- al Bank at Marietta, one of the best banks in the county, sold at $2 below par. Conestoga Traction Co. stock sold at $20.75 per share below par, while forty shares of Rohrers- town, Landisville and Mt. Joy street Along the tobacco comes the railway stock was withdrawn for lack of sufficient bidding. WHAT WE NEED HERE Lancaster School Board has de-| cided to build an the rear of the Junior High School there. It will comprise a base ball diamond, foot ball gridiron, tennis court and play ground, will accom- modate 4000 persons and will cost about $25,000. An athletic field is a asset to any public school. Devel- oping the young body at the same time that the young mind is matur- ing, is bound to make a better, stronger and healthier man and wo- man. We do hope that when our School Board is making plans for the erec- tion of that new High School build- ing, they also give the athletic field serious consideration for the benefit of our boys and girls. wonderful REASONS FOR NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING Newspaper reading is a universal habit, therefore newspaper adver- tising virtually reaches each week a great majority of those who buy. Newspaper advertising is the life- blood of local trade, because it touches all consumer sources in ev- ery community. It gives the na- tional advertiser the same opportun- ity for complete consumer appeal in any locality. Newspaper advertising enables quick, thoro and economical deal- er distribution and dealer good will, because retailers are willing to sell products advertised direct to their own customers. Newspaper adverticing enables manufacturers to tell where their products may be bought. Newspaper advertising can be started or stopped overnight, can be prepared between days to meet sud- den developments and to obtain im- mediate results. Newspaper advertising enables manufacturers to check advertising results and costs in every market which they enter. Newspaper ad- vertising costs less than any other kind. Try it. YOU MIGHT MEET A FOOL On a road at the foot of the Rock- ies is a sign that reads; “Danger Sharp Curve--You Might Meet A Fool.” Such a sign is calculated to make a driver sit up and take notice. The latter sees at almost every sharp turn a notice to proceed with caution, or to blow his horn, and comes to be little impressed by them. He has confidence in his abil- ity to avoid running into another car. But if there is a fool in the other car the efforts of the most skillful driver to escape may be fu- tile. There would be far fewer auto- mobile mishaps if every driver would bear constantly in mind the possibility that there may be a fool ahead, not only on sharp curves, but athletic field in| few more crops were sold at prices ranging from 15 to 20 cents. We | certainly do not wish to discourage the grower but here’s about how | the situation sizes up at present. | About eighty cent of the packers still have last year's crop in their warehouses. Their interest on their investment is increasing daily per | | and that tobacco is shrinking in weight. They have mighty poor chances of selling the tobacco at what it cost them, say nothing of the expense incurred in handling it to date. This being the case, and with some of the packers and even of our local having their crops of two years ago unsold, how on earth will there be a demand some growers for this year’s crop, which is far from a real good one. Unless conditions change, the best crops will be sold at only a fair price while the balance of the crop will go begging. In our estimation there is but one way to these We would advise the farmer to raise less and better tobacco, which, ere, should the demand and with it the price. ERISMAN’S CHURCH remedy conditions. long, increase Monroe Metzler unloaded sever- al carloads of feed the past week. Mrs. Hiram Witmer spent sever- al days the past week with her son, Earl. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Metzler were callers at Norman Rohrer on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller were callers at Elam Stauffer’s on Sun- day evening Bender Longenecker spent Fri- day visiting some of his friends in our vicinity. John Brubaker is the first man in our vicinity to have finished strip- ping his tobacco. The Rapho School Board met at Sporting Hill on Saturday and transacted their business. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Brubaker and family were guests of Grandma | Nissley’s at Mount Joy on Sunday. ! Mr. and Mrs, Martin Ebersole en- | tertained Mr. and Mrs. Noah Wit- | mer and family and Orville Shear- | ers. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Erb and daugh ter, Ruth, Rev. and Mrs. Martin Metzler were guests of Elias Met- zler’s on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Keener and family were entertained in the home of Abram Eshleman, at Landis- ville on Sunday. the milk received at Erisman’s creamery, to the concrete road due to the bad conditions of the roads. The Lincoln School was visited the past week by Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Erb and family and Mr. and Mrs. Christ Brubaker and Bender Longe- necker. Mr. and Mrs. John Brubaker and family and Mr. and Mrs. Elam Bru- baker, and Mr. and Mrs. Paris Bru- baker were callers at Amos Weid- man’s on Sundav evening. NEWTOWN Mr. and Mrs. Noah Gephard vis- ited the latter's parents here Sun- day. Mrs. Daniel Moore and son, Frank visited friends in Mount Joy Mon- day afternoon. : a Reading Circle here recently. The seventh and eighth grade pu- pils visited the Airy Vale school on Friday afternoon. Peter Greenawalt contemplates moving his family and household effects to Lancaster this week. (Too late for last week.) Miss Grace Engle, of Lancaster, spent the week-end here. Mr. Amos Sneat made a business trip to Mount Joy Tuesday. Miss Elizabeth Frank visited friends in Lancaster Saturday. Misses Grace and Irene Forrey were week-end visitors in Mt. Joy. John S. Gibble, of Silver Springs, transacted business here Friday. Mr. Fred Weaver, of Iron Bridge, was organized transacted business here Saturday afternoon. George Weiser, from Columbia, passed through here ning of the week. Owing to the excessive snowfall of the past week the automobiles in in the begin- this vicinity have entered into a state of hibernation. Miss Minnie Greenawalt, who is suffering with an acute attack of appendicitis, was taken to the Gen- eral hospital at Lancaster. MN One night last week several dogs raided the premises of Cyrus M. Nissley, south of town, and killed a twenty-five pound turkey. In the future, dogs prowling around there will be shot. H. B. Erb is at present delivering | Thru the effort of Miss Strickler | Women Who Give Rest Always Sought After half a dozen women friends a few duys ago, guests at a little dinner party were surprised to discover the popularity of a woman whom none had believed to have an original personality, Pleasant, kind, llvely, Interesting she undoubtedly is, but it was a man who explained the attraction which makes her companionship desired by all her friends. “She gives rest,” he sald. “And rest is the greatest gift a woman has to give, No one in Helen's presence can long be conscious of life's enor mous disarrays; she heals, Her very presence is harmonious, she gives a sense of serenity to the restless. That Is why everyone loves her." Very few women are able to bestow Discussing the gift of peace on those whom they | meet in daily life, says the London Mail. No woman whose mind Is restless, who has not accepted with gracious- ness the reconciliations between the ideal and the real, has power to give rest. For this power does not come from anything as superficial as the pose of languid ease, nor does It belong to the quiet woman who so often is also the dull woman. Only the woman whose mind has found rest through discipline, through courage, through strength, can heal the wounds of the disturbed soul. Women who have this power give to their friends the assurance of security. Very many women who delight today | displease tomorrow. One is unable fo depend on their stability. But the woman who gives rest does not change her attitude or her convictions or her moral standards; she is no romanti- cist, but because she is in tune with life and her own setting she creates harmony around her. Habits of Migration Forced on Bird Life Ages ago the United States and Canada swarmed with nonmigrating bird life, long before the arctic ice fields, advancing south during the glacial era, rendered uninhabitable the northern half of the continent. As the ice approached very gradual- and then enforced and absences—at first only iy, now receding, retreats a short distance and a brief time—in- | ereased both in distance and duration until migration became an integral part of the being of the bird. As the ice advanced southward the swing to the north in spring migra tion was continually shortened and the fall retreat to a suitable winter home lengthened in proportion until the glacial period birds were, for | most part, confined to middle South America. But the habit of migration had been formed, and when the ice receded to ward its present position the birds fol {owed it northward and in time estab- 'Ished their present diversified migra- tion Would Be a Hand’cap “1 eannot marry was the burden of the young girl's reply to the old millionaire, Many, many times he to reconsider her decision. but in the had asked her end he despairingly realized that she ould never be his. Almost angrily fie upbraided her: “Even Cupid,” he said, “could do nothing with you. You're like an ice berg. Why, a hundred Cupids might shoot you all day long, but not one ar row would make any impression on vour stone-cold heart.” Shie thought for a moment, then: “Not If they used an old beau,” she ! replied cuttingly. Wasps and Yellow Jackets “Wasp” is the general name of a large class of Insects. There are many species, both of social and solitary wasps. “Yellow jacket” is merely the name given to several species of American social wasps which belong to the genus “Vespa.” The color of the body of the yellow jacket is partly bright vellow and the insects are noted for their irritability and pain- ful stings. Yellow jackets are also called hornets. Some species live In the ground while others make paper nests suspended from a tree or bush. —Pathfinder Magazine. Singer’s Many Charms Charlotte Henrietta Haser was a celebrated singer born at Leipzig in 1780, the daughter of the director of music in the university there. In 1804 she was engaged by the Italian opera at Dresden. Her superior voice. her fine execution and her attempt to combine the advantages of the German and the Italian methods, gave her a brilliant success. Distinguished for the correctness of her morals and her great modesty, she was received with applause at all the most celebrated theaters in lialy and Germany.—Chi- cago Journal. Handed Himself Bouquet It was queer reasoning that induced Mr. Flower to change his name. He was a Portuguese—so Felix Weiss, im- migration Inspector, tells us—and ap pearing before the board of special inquiry, he gave his name willingly enough. “What, Flower, Mr. was yor name before came to America® in quired one of the hoard. “Oh, me change him to make eas) for American people. In San Miguel they calls me | You know Farina that's fl t's met'- Youth's Cemnanion A Ut Dromedary and Camel Dromedary is a name sometimes given to the Arabian er one-humped camel, but properly belonging to a variety of that species distinguished by slenderness of limbs and symmetry of form and by extraordinary fleet- ness, “bearing much the same . rela- tion to the ordinary camel as a race horse or hunter does to a cart horse.” Akron boro fixed its tax rate at 10 mills. ELIZABETHTOWN L. C. Hershey is spending a week at Washington, D. C., on business. John Sterner and wife, of Easton, visited relatives here for several days. Harry H. Martin, of Pittsburgh, visited his brothers, Walter B., and Wm. H, Martin. Rev. and Mrs. E. F. Yoder are spending several days visiting friends in Altoona. William Nauman, a veteran of the Civil War, of Middletown, visited friends in town this week. Roy Shaeffer, Christ Stern, R. A. Coble, R. S. Brandt and J. L. Haf- ley were at Lancaster, on Thursday night. { Miss Mary Mae Musser, a Junior of the High school, is seriously ill at | her home with symptoms of typhoid | fever. | Mrs. John Hose, manager of the | Lewis Bros. Pajama Factory, is con- | fined to her home with an attack | of grippe. M. K. Forney and A. G. Heisey | left on Wednesday for Florida, where they will spend a month at various seaside points. | The male chorus of the Church of | God, accompanied by the pastor, | Rev. Yoder, sang at Progress on | Sunday afternoon for an evangelis- tic. | Mrs. Levi Peifer, of Salunga, was the guest of her sisters, the Misses | Elizabeth, Mary, Emma and Esther | Sweigart, at their home on South | Poplar Street, on Wednesday. | Miss Stella Sheaffer, Elizabeth { Myers, Mrs. Willis Wade and Mrs. | John Heck, on Wednesday, visited | the Rev. B. M. Meyers, their former | pastor, who is convalescing at the St. Joseph’s Hospital, Lancaster. | A. G. Heisey, president of the Ex- {change Bank, and M. K. Forney, | director of the same institution left | on Tuesday on an extended trip to Florida. Wednesday was spent at | Washington. D. C. after which tncy proceeded to Sebring, Florida, | where they will remain for several months. George Fry, 434 Street, this boro, employed at the | Middletown Car Shops, was badly | crushed, on Thursday morning, by a stack of sheet iron plates shifting position and falling on him. He was taken to the hospital at Harrisburg where his condition was reported as not serious. | | | | South Market The “Home Builders” class of the church of the Brethren Sunday School held their regular meeting on Thursday evening at the hom: of Mrs. Ira Brandt of East High Street. The following program was ren- dered: Devotional, Mrs. Harry Lich- ty; business period; recittation, Mrs. A. C. Baugher; piano solo, Mrs. Wil- lis Heisey; general question box, by Mrs. Eva Dabeler. The officers of the class are: President, Mrs. Elsie Madiera; secretary and treasurer, | Mrs. Willis Enterline; teacher, Mrs. {Paul K. Hess. There were 25 mo- {thers in attendance. Refreshments were served after the program. Borough Council is co-operating with the State Highway Department relative to re-surfacing the streets traversed by State roads, these in- clude North Hanover, East Hum- melstown, West High, and part of Bainbridge streets for route No. 84. State route No. 13 which covers both North and South Market Street, the entire length of the bor- ough is also included in the work that will be undertaken as soon as the sewers have been installed. 8371 feet of the system which in- cludes 1260 feet of trunk sewer has already been laid. The cost of the work so far completed is $25,- 218.00. BLACK EYED SUSAN SALAD This is a simple and Inexpensive salad, both appetizing and decorative. It should be arranged on individual plates before serving. Allow at least half an orange for each portion, more if desired, on the number of petals you wish for each portion. Have crisp lettuce or water cress washed and chilled. Peel large, firm navel oranges, which, being seedless, ive perfect sections, and remove all Re white membrane with a shar knife. Separate Into sections an remove thin membrane. Arrange like flower petals on bed of green on indi- vidual plates. Have ready a bowl of dates and nut meats, chopped and mixed together. Make small ball of this mixture to form center of each Black Eyed Susan. Pass French dressing with this salad. California French Dressing teaspoon salt teaspoon paprika teaspoon powdered sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 tablespoons orange juice oil ew grains cayenne pepper Mix an Ingredients. Add fruit Juices and stir until smooth. Add the oil and beat until thick. This amount is enough to dress about four por- tions of salad. Ml twit Mice Save Human Lives Fire that destroyed a grocery store on the first floor of a building in Dun- bar, Scotland, drove upstairs hundreds of mice, which awoke the occupants of the top story flat just in time for them to escape with their lives. een. First Dictionary Chinese The first dictionary was Chinese Pa-out-she. [It contained about 40,000 characters. The first modern diction- ary was by a Venetian friar, Ambrose Calepini. a Latin work, before 1500. and was compiled about 1100 B. C,, by" We use the same methods e leading shoe To: II*s Catarrh Medicine | y the Thos: o are in a “run down” condl- ur results are fully as won will tice that Catarrh bothers s of wear to your on; e than when they are In fact proves that while igease, it is ently tional conditions, EDICINE is a A acts through surfaces of lammation 00d health, epaired here. Catarrh is a loca nfluenced by cons HALL'S CATARRH Ionic and Blood Purifier, the blood upon the muco he body, thus reducing the ind restoring normal conditio All druggists, Circulars free ¥, J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohfe, Repairing U BRANDT BROS. Mount Joy Street, Mount Joy, Pa. 50-62 S. Queen St. Lanca Why Not Start the New Year in one of these NEW HOMES? I have five new and very beautiful homes on West Donegal Street, Mount Joy, along trolley, that I am offering at attractive prices as they are to be disposed of before Spring. They are all new, one is a corner property, very well built by the Mount Joy Construc- tion Company, which is a local corporation formed to relieve the house shortage situation in Mount Joy and not to make a bunch of money. All the houses are built right from the ground up, thoroughly equip- ped, all modern conveniences and will be sold worth the money. Four of them are now vacant, having just recently been completed and the other is the prop- erty of the late Mrs. Mary Brunner. Any one interested in a home should at least in- vestigate. Call, let me take you thru these houses and then be your own judge. This is about the finest res- idential section in Mount Joy. Will finance half if Jno. E. Schroll Bell Phone 41R2 MOUNT JOY, PA. COOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOAOCOOOOOOO00 WANTED! More people to use the Bulletin’s Classified Columns when trying to dispose of any article for which they have no future use, for which some neighbor or someone further distant would be glad to purchase. As a selling agent along this line, the Bulletin has shown that it has no equal in the county. We have dozens of satisfied users who will testify to the worth of this statement. Try a CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT and reap the benefits. The cost is only 5 cents a line with a minimum of 25 cents. GSE eS