The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 26, 1925, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR
™ Eee.
MUE
Urri
LER
cetie




—~
a
Heater
designers a
ONLY Cabinet
furniture
» Furnacette isthe
creation of nfaster
The fF is a fit companion
lavenport or tabl heats with the efficiency of
on the fuel of a stove.
e, like radio and the automobile, is the answer
engineers.

e » something bett Why not have the com-
rt of nace, the economy $f a stove—and the beauty
fine living room furniture?
whole Shouse efficiently and eco-
by continuously
heats the
 
ymically ke the best furnace
warm, moist air.
cette embodies leadit eating features found in
Mueller Boilers and Furnaces---defendable heaters.
bes accurately the natural
The Louis XVI cabinet reprod
4 garish
alnut. No hin@es,
And no unsightly zig floor board!
nickel parts. And
No Other Home Heater $as These Extra
atures!
Value Extra
$42.50 WQRTH
- $30.00
$10.00
$ 2.00
$ .50
. $42.50
latches, stove legs or

Automatic Heat Regulato
61RD EWS REESE EEE 3X
Extra Liners
Built-in-Floor Protector
Glass Caster Cups

These extra features regularly furnished
every Mueller Furnacette, at no extra c
FOR SALE BY
: H. S. Newcomer & Son
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
SEE OUR WINDOW DI§PLAY
|}
OS
BEER REE EEE
RRR.
EEE
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
|
Native of Town
Commits Suicide
(From Page One)
Gochenauer produced a rifle, levelled
it at her, and commanded: “Write
this note to Boners, and get it done
by twenty minutes after ten, because
| then, either he or I will die!”
| Terrified, Miss Felker did as she
was ordered. She had three minutes
{to finish it, and hurriedly scribblec
|off a few lines to Boner, as follows:
“Martin:
{ “I don’t care for you any longer,
and will not have anything more to
do with you.
“Martha”
Gochenauer then became wild,
{and threatened to kill Miss Felker,
who turned and ran out of the front
door. As she was leaving, she saw
3oners enter the back way and
screamed: “Run, Martin, my God—
he’s got a gun!”
Boners immediately
ran from the house. A few seconds
later, Gochenauer, who was in the
dining room with the rifle in his
hand wait for Boners to enter,
shot himself. There was no report,
as would alarm neighbors. The
heart
|
|
|
turned and


such
vifle was pointed close to his

as he lay on the couch. A sudden
“thump”, Miss Felker says, was the
mly sound
Coroner's View
Trexler,
According to Dr. J. F.
G ch
but







auer did not die in-
th came perhaps a
fer the si







n or tw st
He bled very little from the g
hole in his breast.
just at the end of the
Coxe : It went through his
I attress, hit the
fell . to the floor in
as of the jack-
pieces of it

bullet w
* bullet
variety, an the




found under the couch resembled
thin strips of soft metal such as
icht form the iner for shot.
the bullet ft Gochenauer’s
blood seemed } been

r freely.
» remains Ww
and the funeral v
from the undertak
Roy B. Sheetz on
noon at two o'clock
made in the Eberle ce
I EE
Hatfield Home


:
Near Completion
EE







go all night —
an they stop?
joned.
cases, is a matter of
They can
How quickly
Their ability to GO is unqus
Their ability to STOP, in m
hoping.
The wise driver thinks 2s often
does of his motor.
Perhaps that is why so many of our
driving in.and ordering Johns-Manville
Lining put on their cars.
They know it is the best and we put it
lost motion!
Tryon's Garage,
his brakes as he
wnspeople are
bestos Brake
p with no
MARIET
Mount

 








— — —————
DON'T MISS
\'T JERUSHY
n the WARPATH’
3-A€T RURAL FARCE
MOOSE, THEATRE
ELIZABETHTOWN
SEPTEMBER 3 and 4
Greatest Home Talent Pla ver Shown
See ‘Mike’ Seibert Perform
ALLSTAR CAST
25¢ 8 50c AT OLWEILER'S.
AUGUST 27th ;









SE TEC
ata a =

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
age one)

field de so far as possible,
no char : should be made unless
necessary, and a large flour and






vn is about

feed mill, a milk station, a coal
vard and a number of residences
have been left as they were. But
the home about which the hamlet
centers has been thoroughly gone
over.
Standing on the west bank of the
31 very beautiful set-
ti a large lake
fe the river, the
1 ings are about
¢ could wish in
tl ol peauty and of peace
t




» the self-
| of trustees. The
Orphans Court ap-
ard headed by Horace
e Jr., of Parke rg, as pres-
th Herbert W. Hartman, of

 








as the vice-president.
. Hei of Lancaster,
| trustee and of the estate,
[and secretary board. The
other members are: Dr. Frank Alle-
Thomas
man, of La Dr.












 


Richmond, of Col. A.
iM. Hol y, of We ter, and
{ H. Graham Rambo, of Coatesville.
| Mrs. Hatfi specified in her will
{that two 1 rs of board of
trustees be ians of

  


| pro ence Vv.
DR men in the home
{feel that it will fil 1] need in
is neighborhood. persons
d rest and careful attention
 
|
| when they are not really ill enough
{to remain in a hospital, and when
| some time spent in such a place will
| do them much good.
i Oregon
treasurer,
Grange of
The
{ mourns the death of its
{ who had served more than 30 years
State
land was one of the recognized
farm leaders of the state.
Louis J. Taber, master of the
| National Grange, is on a 10,000-
mile trip through the Northwest and
{down the Pacific Coast, covering
| many Grange states and conferring
with organization leaders along the
way. Last year National Master
Taber covered nearly 15,000 miles
on Grange business and will ex-
ceed that distance this year.
| i tll Memmi
An excellent example of practical
community service work has
been furnished by Amesbury Grange
in Massachusetts, where a mam-
moth flagpole was erected and with
two beautiful flags was presented
to the town, accompanied by im-
pressive dedication exercises in
which the entire community hear-
tily joined.
In the Upper Peninsula in Mich-
igan the Grange is forging ahead
rapidly and the organization in
that part of the state has never
been so prosperous before. Among
the young men in these Granges
baseball teams and other athletics




| widespread
just |
COW. TESTING ASSOCIATIONS |
LIGHT UP THE MILKY WAY

Seven hundred and thirty-two |
stars now adorn a map of the Unit-'
led States in the office of the Bu-
reau of Dairying of the United’
States Department of Agriculture.
These stars represent the number of
cow-testing associations now throw-
ing light on the milk and butterfat
production of 307,078 cows. Thou-
sands of dairymen have watched
with interest the growth of the test-
ing idea from the time the first.star
was placed on the map in 1906 to
the present, with 732 stars mark-
ing the progressive dairy communi-
ties.
This map, says the bureau,, may
be likened to a chart of the starry
heavens in the early evening, As
the stars begin to appear one by
one, then more rapidly, and finally
in clusters in every pert of the
skies, so have the cow-testinp asso-
ciations appeared, first one by one,
then more rapidly, and now -in
groups in various parts of the Unit-
ed States.
To carry this analagy still fur-
ther: The Newaygo County (Mich.)
association, the first t6 be organized
in the United States, may represent
the evening star, whica is the first
to come out. The big associa ions
of our western coast may represent
the largest planets. Other smaller
but no less worthy associations may
be thought of as stars of various
magnitudes. Some of the more bril-
liant associations may be likened to
Mercury, Venus, and Mars, but it
requires no wild flight of the im-
agination to detect the m.lky way
in’ that great group of cow-testing
associations that extends in a long
and graceful eurve from the Dako-
tas through the upper stretches of
the Mis:issippi and St. Lawrence
Valleys, then across the Alleghenies
to the eastern shores of, New Eng-
land.
In these associations 1.2 per cent
of our dairy cows are now cn test.
As the years roll round it is hoped,
says the department, that more and
more cows may be placed on test,
and that finally every dairyman may
become a member of a wide-awake
cow-testing association, Then will
the analogy of the stars ard the as-
sociations be complete.
GE
HOW FAST IS WIND BLOWING?

Many people have extremely
vague ideas abeut the
the wind, just as others arefunable
sped with
velocity of
to gauge correctly the
which they may be traveling§in an
automobile. The two cases arg not
entirely comparable, because a
ir may be going very
ring its’ occupants @hat
small, light
whereas a
bounce and vibrate
lower rate of spee@
1s of wind velocity
affected by: vari-
temp rature,


+ impressi
however, may be
s factors,
moisture in the air,
even the condition of our skins. A
cold wet wind may blow no harder
but it will
topography, and
than a warm dry one,
scem tO,
actual speed of an
measured by its
may be
called
Just as the
automobile may be
speedometer, wind vi locity
instrument
an anemometer. According to the
pecifications of what is known as
the Beaufort scale, the Weather
Bureau of the United States De-
partment of Agriculture gives the
following rates for winds corres-
ponding successively to the numbers
on the Beaufort scale from 0 to 12.
When the wind blows less than 1
mile an hour, the air is said to be
“ealm.” “Light air” means a wind
rate from 1 to 3 miles per hour; a
“slight breeze”, from 4 to 7 miles;
breeze,” 8 to 12; “moderate
breeze.” 13 to 18; “fresh breeze,”
measured by an
19 to 24 miles per hour. At 25
miles an hour we have a “strong
breeze,” which is called a “high
wind” from 32 to 38 miles hourly;
39 to 46 miles an hour constitutes
a real “gale.” When seamen talk
about a “strong gale,” the weather
man interprets it as a wind blow-
ing between 47 and 54 miles an
hour: a “whole gale” is from 55 to
63 miles, and is as severe as most
of us care to encounter. A “storm”
wind ranges between 64 and 75
miles an hour, and above 75 miles
wind becomes a “hurricane.”
| eet A
| TRY TO SAVE WILD FLOWERS
|
| Granges in Oregon Engaged in Most
Commendable Work
any


Granges in Oregon are engaging
worthy project by creating
agitation in favor of
saving the wild flowers of the state
and to this end have called upon
chambers of commerce, civic clubs
and other organizations to cooper-
ate in the endeavor. The rapid in-
in a
crease in the use of automobiles
has resulted disastrously for all
roadside flowers and shrubs and the
Grange agitation appears to be es-
pecially timely. The Grange in
other states will take up the same
question and the movement is like-
ly to gain national proportions,
A Cees.
Use Milk in Mash
A novel and easy way to make
wet mash is to pour a little milk in
the mash hoprer at noon. Just
Save the Trees
Clean up the red spider. In many
sections of the state this is the |
worst pest on apples and this year
it is especially bad. Trees lose In
vitality when severely attacked by
the spiders.
Many Granges in Canada are
celebrating their 50th anniversar-
ies and these events evidence the
growing influence of the organiza-
tion in all the communities where
it exists. Most of the Canadian
Granges are in the province. of
Ontario,
We're at vour service when you
need job printing,



ECAUSE all Studebaker cars are manu- Instruments — inch
factured on thé one-profit basis, we have
een able to reduce the price of the Standard
Six Coach without sacrificing any of the
# equipment or quality which made it a big
seller at a higher price.
Scientific design, better materials, and finer
distinguish it. And the follow-
self-evident superiorities make it more
-date than the newest “yearly models”:
Excess Power — According to the rating of
%_ the National Automobile Chamber of Com-
merce this is the most powerful car of its size
and weight.
Abundant Room — Room to stretch your
legs—room to enter or leave without dis-
turbing occupant of folding seat.


and ammeter, in &




wheel, which serves

2 centralized organi
LY Sturdy Body Construction — Fine northern engines, all clutches,
ash and hard maple are used. We pay a pre-
mium to get the best quality steel.
= Full-size Balloon Tires — for which the
steering gear, fenders and even the body lines
are specially designed.
and drop forgings.
Automatic Spark Control — eliminating the
usual spark lever on steering wheel.
Safe Y 1. 3
\ ty Lighting Control — on the sti
wheel. See
protected from the
30 days.

line gauge, speedome
le grouping under glass,
on beautiful silver-faced dial.
Improved One-piece Windshield —automatic
windshield cleaner, weather-proof visor, rear-
view mirror, cowl lights and cowl ventilator.
Coincidental Lock — to ignition and steering


Studebaker has no
instead keeps its cars constantly up to data.
: x Therefore this Standard Six Coach is ahead
of the newest “yearly model,” yet owners are
ED. REAM, MOUNT JOY,
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1025
A recent meeting of York County
Pomona in Maine had a welcome
address given by a member more
than 90 years old: Rather strength-
ening the contention that ‘the
Grange is the place where the old
get young and the young keep
young.”


Same Fine Studebaker Coach
— but at a new low One-Profit price
iding 8-day clock, gaso-
ter, oil-pressure gauge
to reduce the theft ine
surance rate cn Studebaker cars.
New-type Cowl Ventilator —foot operated.
There are only two cars manufactured on
the one-profit basis—the Studebaker in the
fine-car field, and the Ford in the low-price
field. Only in these two cases does ons com-
pany in its own plants and with its own
ion make all bodies, all
ng gears, d’'feren-

tials, springs, gear sels, (ray iron castings,
“yearly models,” but
artificial depreciation
which has cut millions of collars from the
resale value of many makes during the past


In Ph

Re


xT
18 A STUDESBAKE
R YEAR

WT TICE TT RT
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
All-steel bodies )
 
 
 
 
proved
 
 
ing windshield on closé&d cars;
 
 

and Runabout. {Closed css in
 
 
monize; and nickeled radiator
 
 
 

 
er today for complete details.

 
 
Ze
#


activities are featuring large and
greatly increase interest.
enough liquid should be used to
moisten what the birds will clean up.


Tudor Sedan,
and open cars. Bodies and chassis both
lowered. Larger, moke attractive fenders,
affording greater New im-
and rear axle J
brakes on all types. One-piece ventilat-
I'd
DETROIT, MICH.
—_—r Ne
Announcing Important
Changes in Bodies
and Chassis
A¥ded Beauty and Utility
Cars in Color
| No Inckease in Prices
Coupe
double
ventilating type on open cars. Curtains
opening with all doors or\ Touring car
colors,
with upholstery of finer quality to har-
shells.
Many other refinements now add to
the beauty and quality of these cars.
See your nearest Authorized Ford Deal-

 




 

ee