)Y BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. ."E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr. Subscription Price $1.50 Per Year « Sample Copies ..... FREE Single Copies ....3 Cents Three Months ...40 Cents Six M ..75 Cents Entered at the pos at Mount Joy as second-class mail matter. 2 The date of the expiration of your sub- scription follows your name on the label. We do not send receipts for subscription money received. Whenever you remit, see that you are given proper credit. We credit all subscriptions at the first of each month. Cos The subscription lists of the Landisville Vigil, the Florin News and the Mount Joy Star and News, were merged with that of the Mount Joy Bulletin, which makes this eaper’s ordinary weekly. EDITORIAL TRUE When the farmer harvests his crops and the merchant fails to gar- ner good business, it’s generally be- beats the house catalog advertising. the merchant cause A per too thick-headed g y ordinary traffic rules has no | W n » highways and iF 1 f > n pul sv act e bay 1 he use of tl them i p every vd 1 ignor- ce al alleys to 1at ¢ One of the problems which we | have with us always is the boy pro- blem. Boys are boys and there al- ways will be boys. appear to be rather annoying, usually if they are given a chance to |G help | 'n& but | Lancaster last week, RHEEMS Mr. and Mrs. George Flowers and son of Rheems spent the week-end at the home of her mother at Man- heim. Robert B. Kready mail messenger of Rheems, spent last Saturday and Sunday at Steelton as guests of the H. H. Heiser family. Clare Neiman of -Rheems the ex- pert mouth organ player, spent one day at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Eli Eshleman, of Florin. John Booth the hustling merchant of Mount Joy, spent several hours with his father Edward S. Booth at Rheems tower last Monday. The Misses Mary and Laura Es- penshade of, Rheems, who advocate early shopping to avoid the rush, spent last Saturday at Lancaster. Mr. Phares Grove the Rheems mechanic, spent several days at Philadelphia last week, purchasing supplies for his large machine shop in this place. Mr. and Mrs, Thomas daughter Kathryn and Rhineer from Columbia, at the home Mr. iam Neiman. . and Mrs. George Stoll Crow and Mr, spent and of returning from Ha g a few hours at the home of D. i € ast dat 1 venin i I rece ( 3 1 il incl ¢ the de 1 1 Rl 1: ( I LV ¢ ctive industries. | Kope S t Corn E extensive im- Rheems factory are mal to nts vem i | | | ing | a new 50 horse power boiler. | Mrs. Alida Greider and daughter | Martha from the Rheems Poultry Sometimes they | farm attended the cooking school at | claiming that it was quite interesting and instruc- they will prove that they are worth | tive. Large trucks removed cased to- bacco from the Isaac Hollinger Warehouse at Rheems last Monday 1 a ladv oe: 2 ar 1 1 . - When a lady can appear in public, he gelivered to the Eastern mar- it. COTTON STOCKINGS in cotton stockings and not be made to feel more like a criminal than a hero: when a gingham dress is con- sidered a badge of honor, and a few more little things or uses to which cotton is well and sensibly adopted- then, what? But that may be con- sidered a silly question, for there ain’t going to be no such a thing. ABOUT WHAT'LL HAPPEN When one law does not satisfy, or is not enforced, let's pass another. That is the best way in the world for this country in a few more years to have no laws at all. We are fast coming to the point where we overburdened with laws. that is the trouble with this country. They pass many that every fel- low has some law he is not in favor of and this disrespect for all laws. WHICH IS SO causes a WHAT WE NEED A number of our leading business men are agitating the employment of a constable to be on duty here at all times. This, in our estimation, is a move in the right direction. Thefts are quite numerous thru- out the county at this season of the year, many being traced to the un- employed and others to those who want extras over the holidays. We helieve we voice the senti- ment of many when we say that the employing of an officer would be money well spent. rp SIGNS AT CROSSINGS Automobile associations and oth- ers engaged in the work of averting grade crossing accidents. can do no better than campaign for the pre- vention of advertising signs at or near railroad crossings. There should be nothing at or near cross- ings likely to cause distraction. When the driver of a vehicle is ap- proaching a crossing he should have his mind on that very thing, and not be reading signs or thinking of something else. Signs are likely to attract his attention, and though only for a moment. it is at a time when he should be watching for trains and thinking of nothing else. It is for safety of the motor driving public that signs at crossings be re- moved, other than those required to indicate a railroad crossing, and au- to drivers and public authorities should co-operate to effect their elimination. SHOP NOW This is the year’s most cheerful season. The shop windows of Mt. Joy are tastefully decorated in har- mony with the spirit of the time. Youngsters are writing letters to Santa, and Christmas buying is on in earnest. With less than 4 weeks between now and Christmas, it is time for all of us to get busy. The merch- ants of Mt. Joy have secured excel- lent Christmas stocks, gifts to suit everyone gathered from the four corners of the earth. But these stocks will not last indefinitely. Last minute shoppers are bound to be disappointed. Local merchants have informed the editor that the buying is unusually heavy this year, and those who put off the shopping until December 24 will experience a hard time to get suitable gifts for the friends and relatives they have on their lists. So do your Christmas shopping tomorrow, or at the latest on the following day. Do not make it evi- dent to your friends that the gifts you sent were last minute thoughts. Most Christmas gifts are apprecia- ted not according to their intrinsic value but according to the thought- fulness they represent. TEACHING THRIFT. Many of our residents will have impressed upon them within the next few days the value of consis- tent saving. The banks here are now mailing out the grist of annual Christmas savings club checks to are | In a sense | { | kets where there is a slight demand (for cased goods. | Phares W, Heisey of the firm J. L. | Heisey & Sons, a member of the | Elizabethtown Gun and Rod Club, | spent the past week at their Camp near Pine Grove Furnace in quest of the frisky buck. The Donegal Farmers Hunting Club consisting of Simon Hertzler, Daniel Erb, David Eby, Henry Erb and J. Newcomer returned from | their Camp with two large bucks | | killed by Eby and Hertzler. AD rns vas . URGE T. B. FIGHT Strong expressions of support for as Seal and its mission of tuberculosis have been en by members of the State Seal Committee as follows: I will lend my support in every y to help bring success a n this _Philip H. Dewey, master of I will be glad to do anything to the great Pr. CG Howard Witmer, rery glad to help in any Irs. Mary Flinn Law- rence, P urgh. You have my very best wishes for complete success in your undertak- ing.—Cardinal Dougherty, Philadel- phia. I am always happy to bend every effort in the furtherance of this worthy work.—Dr. Harry S. Fish, Sayre. I will be very glad to do anything [I can to further the great fight | against the terrible disease of tuber- | culosis.——Judge Albert S. Heck, Cou- dersport. | TUBERCULOSIS DAYS | In connection with the Christmas | Seal Sale two special days are ob- i served as follows: | Tuberculosis Sunday, | 28th. Tuberculosis day in the schools, | Friday, December 10th. | Colonel Henry W. Shoemaker, | Christmas Seal chairman for Penn- sylvania, in announcing Tuberculosis | Day in the churches, appealed for | greater co-operation with the self- | sacrificing army of workers engaged in fighting the White Plague. Col- onel Shoemaker said: “Ministers and church workers are fully aware of the great inroads made | by the White Plague on family life. {It is one of the serious and tragic problems in every community.” On December 10th teachers will { call the attention of their scholars to | the dangers of the White Plague and how to avoid it. The children also will be given two stories, “The Three November Little Pixies” and “The Splendid Journey.” wnt) CR So low are army salaries in France that officers in crack caval- ry regiments and professors of the War College are working at menial labor to augment their income. Many are in dire want. tion will'amount to a considerable sum. Under the rules of the sav- ings clubs conducted by the banks, each member is required to deposit a definite amount each week, and the checks now being received can- not but serve an impressive evi- dence of the value in saving even a small sum each week. The Christmas savings club plan, inaugurated by the banks of the nation but a few years ago has been accepted by a host- of people as the means either for forming the nucleus of a permanent bank ac- count or for providing a definite sum of money for their annual Christmas buying. In either in- stance the clubs are demonstrating annually to thousands of people what can be accomplished through thrift, in either a small way or a The average club member himself that accumulate an practice of a definite big way. is having it proven to if it is possible to impressive sum by the thrift and adherence to plan for saving. those clubs and the total distribu- Melvin | one | Mrs. | emoving two boilers and install- | fight against tuber- | g £ Wits / mal children might be observed from SCIENCE ASKS WHAT MAKES BABY GURGLE : 1 in Ideal Home. New York.—In all the thousands of vears that fathers and mothers have watched their children they have masters the sounds that make up hu- man speech. They have never under- stood the mysterious process by which one baby blossoms out Into a social sort of person liking everybody, while another shy child, that clings only to a few trusted relatives. becomes a They have studied and loved and worried over their children, but even fn a flourishing family of 12 the par- ents could not tell you in what man- ner each child's development was be- ing shaped by factors of heredity or environment | Plan to Observe Closely. A systematic attempt to supply some of the missing information about human development in a normal home | is to be started by three specialists in | child research here, it announced. Dr, Mary Edith M. Burdick, a and Dr, Harold E sychology at Co arranging to has just been Cover Jones nurse, istant profe or of p bia univer are of a uperior children, under con ume the group tions ideal as possible, nearly 1e chile in this way be ob- en may as in wide and night, an household. A ment of scientific records of the physi- served hoth day assort- ordinary cal, mental and emotional develop- ment of the children will be made. number of babies to be ob- | The ( served will be small, in order that con- like those in a real home rather than an institution. The group Is expected of six, two of them the young children of Doctor and Mrs. Jones. The child personnel of the home has not been Doctor obtained ditions may be kept to consist finally completed, Jones said. Some are being from par- ents who are contributing toward the child’s maintenance, while others are obtained charitable tions. The three specific aims of the pro}- ect, according to Doctor Jones, are the study of human development in a controlled superior environment; the determination of the best methods of handling children of nursery age, and the educational ends to be achieved in the interest of the children them- selves. from organiza- Secure Special Housing. A home for the has been purchased in New York, and financial for the project been made, that the may be continued for at least the next babies arrangements have SO experiment three years. Plans are psychologists individual mothers and throughout the country can co-operate and in re- turn the mental findings. The importance | home in which a large group of nor- being developed by the whereby institutions receive on reports experi of establishing a infancy, in order that complete rec- ords of their hehavior could be made, was stressed several years ago by Dr. John Watson, well-known psycholo- gist of this city. The project just started is, in some respects, the first approach toward a realization of this proposal, Doctor Jones said. Chicken Blood “Flows” | in Fake German Duels Berlin.—Fake student duels, staged for the benefit of tourists who want to see the “real” German university life have sent the police on a cleanup campaign throughout the Rhineland An American, visiting his former home in the Rhineland, exposed the fraud to the police. Six roadhouse keepers near Heidelberg, Frankfort and Cologne have been arrested They are charged with collecting ad mission fees ranging from 25 cents tc $1, to witness the duels which tourists were told were regularly fought in the roadhouse courtyards by members of student fraternities. Police found professional duelists posing as students, fighting in jackets stained with blood represented as hav ing flowed from wounds received ir immediately previous encounters. The blood was that of chickens. The police also found there was no surgical rea- Son why the heads of duelists were swathed in bandages. Alaska to Ship Tons of Reindeer Meat to U. S. Washington.—Although the Agricul- tural department announced that rein- deer meat would be placed on sale soon, it was sald that the killing of the animals had not included Vixen, Trixen and the other Santa Claus team. So children need have no fear that the annual Christmas visits will be abandoned. One firm in Alaska has informed the department that it expected to export 5,000 carcasses. Much of the meat is shipped from Nome, Alaska, through Seattle. In Real Life London.—Comes from India an ac- count, apparently verified, of a Rom- ulus and Remus, in real modern life Two little girls were adopted by =a she wolf. When found at the age of two and eight years, they were run ning on all fours and barking. The vounger died. The elder, now In an orphanage and gradually learning speech, prefers the company of dog: to children. i A Plain Cow Wins. distinction of being the the United States has been awarded to a plain everyday cow. The lady is Larrobelle, re- cently crowned queen at a national dairy show. She is a Holstein, and four years ago was nameless and obscure. She cost $125. But last year she produced 13,032 pounds of milk. containing 481 pounds of but- ter fat. The champion of Picked Group to Be Studied | §§ never explained how a gurgling baby graduate | Jones, as- |: | xi A 5 i { EE a a LE WR > of nor- |} in pres THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JY, LANCASTER CO.. PA WEDNESDAY, DEC. 8th, 1926 Breneman’s Furnifure Store Is Ready kor Christmas 3 Christmas comes but once a year. Let itdo its best while itis here. Is your house ready for the home-coming Xmas friends? It is surprising how much a new piece of furniture here and there will improve the home atmosphere. 5 2 Living Room Sui ] utes if What about that Living Room Wf Suite you have been neglecting? Now is the time. Let Xmas do it. Priced especially for the Christ- mas Sale At §115.00 and up for a 3-pc. Suite. Lamps That Are Beautiful 4 Why not have a cozy Why not a lovely soft- sewing nook where ¥ shaded Lamp of deli- 3 mending becomes a de- Chiat cate tints to light her light with a lovely Bl living room? Floor Martha Washington or © a» . Lamps, Bridge Lamps | Priscilla Sewing Cabi- B Ei net. A large variety of and Table Lamps, in all styles and colors to sal J varieties to select from. lect from. SMOKERS—Select a Smoker, really new in design, com- WE ALSO CARRY A . 3 LARGE LINE OF pletely equipped, and with all the room needed. Men like : ; . TOYS things that are new and smart. Prices to suit any purse. TABLES WORTHWHILE Few Christm R d Mirrors Bookracks Rugs Reed Rockers Reed Chairs Bed Lamps Easy Chairs Da Beds Boudoir Chairs Tables have such a multitude of Kitchen Cabinets uses that we seldom have enough. Coxwell Chairs The line includes Library, Daven- Roll Top Desks port, Console, Occasional and End Gateleg Tables Tables, all at interesting prices for Windsor Chairs Xmas. Breakfast Suite Scliers Mastercraft A Spinnet Desk For H ep Delight her with a Desk. A really personal and intimate gilt that shows your understanding of her taste and desires. At prices that will surprise you. Many styles to choose from. ANY GIFT SELECTED CHEERFULLY HELD UNTIL WANTED. FREE DELIVERY. COME IN AND LOOK AROUND, NO OBLIGATION TO BUY. GEO. R. BRENEMAN & SON, Inc. 206 South Market Street ELIZABETHTOWN, PENNA. ELIZABETHTOWN, PENNA. NEW AUTO;|TOPS and CURTAINS GENERAL TOP REPAIR WORK Special Price for Making Curtains Also Anything in the Line of HARNESS M. FRANTZ 332 W. High St. to Open With Doors Oct. 13-8t 226 Have Your Floors Waxed the Right Have received an electric waxing polisher for treating floors and lin oleums, and work of this kind promptly and sat isfactorily. Phone 140-R2 7 Way am prepared to do JOS. J. COBLE N. Market St., Elizabethtown, Pa Oct. 27-3mo SH E. Yes® Sir, That’s My WILLIAMS & SCHOFIELD Agents for the Eureka Laundry Barber, ‘Cap’ Williams For a Good Clean AVE and HAIR GUT at a right price go to LEE ELLIS POOL ROOM and RESTAURANT Main St., MOUNT JOY, PA. Basement Mount Joy Hall pays. Consistent Pool Tournaments Each Tuesday Evening advertising always J. S. KUHN EXPERIENCED AUCTIONEER | Famous Chincotague Salt Oysters Ice Cream, Groceries and] I am available on Saturday after- Confections noons and evenings. Efficient service guaranteed. Item BRANDT BROS. Phone 76R2 Mount Joy Street Mount Joy, Pa. a ~