The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 11, 1927, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR
A
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
MAY 11, 1927
WEDNESDAY,


RELIGIOUS MATTERS REPORT
IN OUR CHURCHES
VARIOUS CONGREGATIONS IN
MOUNT JOY
ED BY THE PASTORS OF THE
AND AROUND


Reformed Mennonite
Rev. Christ S. Nolt, pastor
There will be communion serv-
ices in the Reformed Mennonite
church in Landisville next Sunday
morning at 9.30.
Donegal Presbyterian Church
Rev. C. B. Segelken, D.D., Pastor
Church School at 9:30, Mr. D. C.
Witmer, Superintendent.
Evening worship and sermon at
7.30. Subject, ‘‘Achieving Great-
ness under Adverse Conditions.”
Trinity Lutheran Church
Rev. Geo. A. Kercher, Pastor
Sunday School 9:30 A. M.
Morning worship 10.45 A. M.
Evening worship 7 P. M.
Light Brigade, Wednesday 6.30.
Ladies’ Aid Society, Thursday
evening at the home of Mrs. George
Sillers.
Presbyterian Church
Rev. C. B. Segelken, D.D., Pastor
Church School 9:30 A. M.
H. S. Newcomer, Superintendent
Morning worship and sermon at
10.50. Subject, “The Sower.”
Wednesday evening at 7.30. Pray-
er and praise service,
T. U. Evangelical Church
Rev. A. S. Bernhart, Pastor
Mid-week prayer service will
held Wednesday, 7.30 P. M.
Bible School, Sunday, 9.30 A. M.
Preaching, Sunday, 10.30 A. M.
C. E. Sunday, 6.45 P. M.
Topic: “How to become a leader”
Leader, Hazel Kaylor.
Preaching Sunday 7.30 P. M.
Come and worship with us.
be
Church of Ged
Rev. I. A. MacDannald, D.D., Pastor
Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
J. S. Hamaker, Superintendent.
Sermon 10.30 A. M.
C. BE. 7.00 P. M.
Sermon 7.45 P. M.
Junior C. E. Wednesday,
. M.
Mid-week service Wednesday, 7.45
Choir Rehearsal Thursday, 7:30.
You are cordially invited to wor-
6.30
.ship with us.

Florin U. B. Church in Christ
Rev. J. C. Deitzler, pastor
Bible School 9:30 A. M.
Morning worship 10.30 A. M.
Junior Society at 5.15 P. M.
Intermediate Society at 5.45.
C. E. Society at 6.30 P. M.
Evening worship 7.15 A. M.
Teachers’ Training class on Tues-
day at 7.15 P. M.
Prayer Service Thursday at 7.30.
You are cordially invited to these
services,
Methodist Episcopal Church
Rev. C. E. Wonderley, Pastor
Wednesday, Junior League 4.00.
Wednesday evening, prayer serv-
ice.
Friday evening choir rehearsal.
9.15 A. M. Church School.
Dr. E. W. Garber. Superintendent.
10:30 A. M. Morning worship and
sermon.
Theme: “The Unknown God.”
6:30 P. M. Epworth League.
Topic: “Measuring up to our
Post.” Leader, Mrs. Diffenderfer.
7.30 Evening worship and sermon
Theme: “Many Keys.”
Mark’s United Brethren Church
Rev. H, S. Kiefer, Pastor
Sunday School at 9.00 A. M.
H. N. Nissly, Superintendent.
Anniversary sermon at 10.15 A.
M. by Dr. 8S. C. Enck.
Christian Endeavor at 6.30 P. M.
Sermon by Dr. Enck, Conference
Supt. at 7.30 P. M.
Quarterly Conference
St.
Saturday,

LANC. AUTO. CLUB
ADVISES PEDESTRIANS
In walking along a highway keep
to the left, thus facing traffic, offi-
cials of the Lancaster Automobile
Club advise. Contrary though it
may seem to the statutory law,
which says always keep to the
right, it is the safest method and
safeguards both the person afoot
and the motorist, the Auto Club
states.
“There is no specific law as to
which side the pedestrian should
take,” says S. Edward Gable, presi-
dent of the Automobile Club, “but
common sense tells us that it is
safest to face traffic when walking
along a highway where there are
no sidewalk provisions for pedes-
trians. In walking on the left side
of the road the pedestrian can see
the cars coming towards him, but
if he is walking on the ripht side
the automobiles are approaching
him from the rear and he can’t be
on the lookout for them.
“Then, too,” says Mr. Gable,” it
is easier for the driver at night to
see a person walking towards his
car as the white collar, the portion
of a dress or a skirt are usually
discernible if the person is walking
towards the car, while frequently
there are no such light objects to
catch the motorist’s eye if the pe-
destrian is walking in the same di-
rection as the car.”
Co-operation between the driver
and the pedestrian in these and
other matters are urged by the Au-
to Club president.” If both the
person afoot and the one behind
the wheel extend to each other the
common . courtesies,” says Mr. Ga-
ble,” I feel sure there would be
fewer instances in which people
walking along highways are struck
by automobiles and also fewer in-
stances in which vehicular accidents
are caused by drivers having to
swerve from their path because of
persons walking on the highway.
The pedestrian must be protected
by the auto driver and if the person
afoot does his share by facing traf-
fis and exercises care at crossings,
accidents will be. materially decreas-

ed.”
estan cami Mb wpb
BIRTHDAY DINNER FOR
MR. SAMUEL GEIB
A delightful surprise birthday
dinner was gvien by Mrs. Samuel
Geib on Sunday at their home on
David street in honor of her hus-
band, Samuel Geib, whose thirty-
ninth birthday anniversary Wos |
Sunday.
Mr. Geib was taken for an auto-
mobile ride after the Sunday school
services at the Church of God, Sun-
day, by his father-in-law, Mr. Wm. |
Wintermyer, to Bender’s Mill. Up-
on his arrival home, he was greatly
surprised to find relatives and
friends awaiting him. He remark-
ed: “I thought something was go-
ing on, as my wife was ‘“‘dolling ev-
erything up.” Still she told me she
wanted to get done house cleaning.
This was the first time a woman ev-
er surprised me. I didn’t think
they could keep a secret.” This
was also his first birthday surprise.
Many useful and handsome gifts
were received. Some packages re-
ceived must have been very fragile
as they gave Mr. Geib almost a
day’s work to unwrap them from a
huge pile of paper.
A sumptuous dinner was served
by Mrs. Geib to which “Sammy,”
did full and ample justice.
The following guests were pres-
ent: Mr. and Mrs, Jacob Geibe, of


May 14th, at 8.30 P. M.
This congregation will
their third anniversary of
cation of their church with
services.
Yo
the dedl


St. Luke’s Episcopal Church
Rev. C. E. Knickle, M. A.,, Rector
9:15 A. M. Sunday School.
Thos. J. Brown, superintendent,
10.30 A. M. Morning worship.
7.30 P. M. Evening service,
Monday, 7.30 P. M. Choir Prac-|
tice.
St. Mary’s Guild of St. Luke’s
Episcopal church will meet Thurs-
day evening at the residence of
Mrs. John Longenecker.
Convention at Sunbury beginning
May 9. Rev. and Mrs. C. E. Knick-
le and Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Brown
are delegates. Mr. Elmer Brown
is alternate delegate.
Ba trt:AF-R.N QHIN
Origin of Phrase Lost
The phrase used to describe Turkey
“the sick man of Europe,” probahly
had a journalistic origin, now lost
Montesquieu (1689-1755) in one of his
“Persian Letters,” speaks of the Otto
man empire, “whose sick body was not
supported by a mild and regular diet
but by powerful treatment, which con
tinually exhausted it.” The expression
is also sometimes credited to Czar
Nicholas I of Russia, in a conversation
concerning Turkey held with a British
diplomat in 1853: “We have on our
hands a sick man, a very sick man.”
————— Qs
Russian farmers shave only on
the rarest accasions. Among the
Old Believers, a large religious sect
in Russia, a man who has sheared
his beard is considered to have
lost all chances of entering heaven.
rt QP
As a preventive of colds, work-
ers in Japanese rice fields wear
stockings made of human hair.
observe |


cordially invited |
 








Land lle; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wagenbach, of Manheim, R. 'D. 3;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis R. Geibe and
‘hildren, George, Lillian, Warren,
Parthine and Gladys, of East Pe-
tersburg; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zer-
phey, Mr. ¢ Mrs. Harry Geibe,
{and d Mildred 1d

k, and ¢
Jacob,


Flore
Mr. and Mrs. Will 1
f town; Mi Fannie
Ruppert, all of
Mrs. Samuel
daugthers, Anna and
and bes I


Geibe
departed * their homes.
rr A Gre
Statesman a Stickler
for Legible Writing
Philip Guedalla tells us, in connec-
rion with a letter addressed by Pal-
merston to Lord Lansdowne, which is
reproduced in his biography, that the
viscount was a great stickler for good
| handwriting, an article in the Kansas
City Times recalls.
He early cautioned the young men
of the foreign office against the twin
iniquities of ill-formed letters and
pale ink. But letters still continued to
slope backward “like the raking
masts of an American schooner,” or
stood In horrid rows, “which can only
| be compared to iron railings leaning
| out of the perpendicular.”
His own flowed exquisitely in that
faultless hand, which lived on in Mr.
|

Gladstone's memory as one of the two
{ perfect things that he had known, en-
| titling Palmerston to be a trifle cap:
| tious on points of caligraphy, to re-
| turn a dispatch to a distant consul for
i transcription in blacker ink, and even
to acidly precise instructions
that some reluctant pupil ‘should
form his letters by connecting his
slanting down strokes by visible lines
at top or bottom according to the let-
ters which he intends his parallel
tm ies We
CE
issue


Soviet Russia, with a population
of 165,000,000, is now the third
most populous nation in the world.
FIVE TIMES AS MANY CAR-
LOADS OF FRUIT, AND
VEGETABLES INSPECTED
Federal-State inspections of fruit
and vegetables at Pennsylvania
shipping points increased nearly
400 per cent during the past season
over the previous season, states a
report of the Pennsylvania Bureau
of Markets. During the last 5
months of 1926 and the first three
months of 1927 there were 1668
carloads of apples, peaches and
potatoes certified in accordance
with the U. IS. grades by licensed
inspectors working at 63 loading
points in the state. During the
previous season 331 cars were cer-
tified by inspectors working at
at 12 loading stations.
This work which is under the su-
pervision of the Federal and State
Departments of Agriculture coop-
eratively, started in Pennsylvania
in 1923, when 274 cars were in-
spected. Since that time the growth
of the work has been steady, except
during the 1924 season, when the
apple and peach yields were great-
ly curtailed by frost damage.
The inspection of apples has
been heaviest in the state, with a
total of 1083 cars inspected during
the 1926 season. This is 28 per
cent of the 1926 peach shipments.
The work with potatoes has started
more slowly since only 5 per cent
of the 1926 crop potato shipments
were inspected, amounting to 150
cars.
“It is impossible to estimate the
actual monetary value of the serv-
ice to shippers in the state but
judging from reports received and
from the great increase in the
number availing themselves of the
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Ficture’s Valuation
The picture by Whistler called “Old
Battersea Bridge” is alluded to as the
“Nocturne in Blue and Gold.” It was
the source of one of the artist's most
famous witticisms. The opposing
counsel in the suit for libel which
Whistler brought against Ruskin in
1878 elicited the fact that the picture
had been painted in two days, and
then asked: “The labor of two days;
then {s that for which you ask 200
guineas?’ To which Wristler retort-
ed with dignity: “Ne; | ask it for
the knowledge of a lifetime.” This
picture sold two years later for 2,000
guineas.

Train Faster Than Birds

Tests of bird speed in calm alr,
made by a German Investigator, show
that the flyers have a wide range of
rapidity and few equal the rate of a
moderately fast train. Of those ob
served, the starling had the greatest
speed, slightly more. than 46 miles an
hour. Jackdaws made 38.22 miles an
hour, the parrot tinch 37 nfiles, rooks
82.58 miles, and hooded crows and
gray gulls 31.05 miles. The sparrow
hawk had the slowest speed of all
the birds whose flights were meas
ured, making only 25.70 miles an hour
—Popular Mechanics Magazine.
ee el Gr Rr
Advertise in The Bulletin.

service during the past two years,
the expense of the work seems to
be more than amply justified,” the
Bureau report states. “It is evident
that such shippers realize how im-
portant it is to ship into the mar-
kets a standardized product of high
quality in order to meet the keen
competition there of graded pro-

A WASHER UNEXCELLED
tion—practically indestructible.
World in Washer Value.
H. E. HAUER, Mount Joy, Pa.
ducts from other states.”
Oso 9, 9.
af i *
IT IS--

Veterans of the “Line”
7 3



CHARLES A. JANKE
Charles A. Janke, Traveling Audi-
tor for the Philadelphia revenue ac-
counting center of The Bell Telephone
Company of Pennsylvania recently
completed his golden anniversary in
the employ of the Telephone Com-
pany. Fifty years ago he started his
work with the Bell System as a mes-
senger in Camden, New Jersey. Later
he became Manager for the Telephone
Company in Camden.
Most of his service was spent in
he Commercial Department but on
“tfarch 1, 1910 he was appointed
""ravel ng Auditor in the accounting
'epartment, which office he still holds.
i —

At one time the, death penalty
was prescribed for more than 100
different offenses in the United
States.
* Ch A *

J
Grandeur and Decay
in Palaces of Indic
The abodes of indian polentutes als
an nero waxture of the magnifi
cent and tae cheap, the grandiose and
tae ludicrously Cows bask ob
he stops, the anteroom is filthy
with the droppings of pigeons; beg
gars doze under the gates or search
one another's heads for lice; in one ol
the inner courts fifty courtezans from
the city are singing interminable songs
iu honor of the birth of the maharaja's
ejeventh grandchild; In the throne
room, nobody quite knows why, there |
stands a brass bedstead with a sham !
mahogany wardrobe from the Totten-
ham Court road beside it; framed col
or prints from the Christinas number
of the Graphic of 1907 alternate along
the walls with the most exquisite Raj-
put and Persian miniatures; in the un-
swept jewel room £5,000,000 worth of
precious stones lie indiscriminately
heaped; the paintings are peeling off
the walls of the private apartments,
a leprosy has uttacked the stucco,
there is a hole in the carpet; the mar-
ble hall of audience is furnished with
bamboo chairs and the Rolls-Royces
are driven by ragged chauffeurs.—
Aldous Huxley, in the Bookman.

mm etl OE
Real Toy Town
The real toy town of Britain is Lon-
don. Wooden toys such as rocking-
horses and doll-houses come in thou-
sands from factories in south London.
fn the old days wooden toys were
mostly made by home workers, each
of whom devoted his or her time to
the production of one particular ar-
ticle. But the pay was poor, and the
increasing competition from Germany
practically killed this sort of work
0 9,
£20 20 2 A 20 A 2
The Marvel Of The Industry
Greatest Washer Value Ever Offered
Gome--See The New Model 20

IN ITS
LOW
PRICE, AND UNSUR.
THE CASH
HAS SPEED With SAFETY, SELF-DRAWING COPPER... TUB, STEEL and ALUMINUM WRINGER,
FULL 12 INCH BALLOON ROLLS, washes and wrings at the same time or separately. All Metal construc-
Has attractive and durable Gray Duco finish. Model 20 Automatic Leads the

J



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IIIT IIR TICE TRIPE TGR SOK IPE TK TPE TGR TGR IK RIKI TK TE TPR SPR IK 3 9, 90% 2% oF
20050 030430 650 430 650450950 430430 450430 430-430 430 050 430 450 050 050 05H 050 STO SSI ETI NI UI OI SSI VIII NI OIG SI 430 400 030 0304504 6930 050 030450630 430-42

E'TOWN DEFEATS
MT. JOY I. 0. O. F.
The Elizabethtown bowling team
defeated the Mount Joy I. O. O. F.
!by a margin of 42 pins at Eliza-
| bethtown, Monday evening. Stein-
er rolled high single score of 185
Derr rolled high triple score


pins.
of 525 pins. Scores:
Mt. Joy
1st 2nd « 3rd Tis.
Bers i 172 169 184 525
Conrad ..... 138 142 280
Here cei... 135 165 300
Bailey ....... 141 182 170 443
Snyder 176 147 322
Brown ..:.:- 170 183 164 517
Totals 756 801 830 2387
Elizabethtown
Ist 2nd 2rd Ts
Steiner ..... 173 185 138 496
Kun ....... 149 177 326
Baker ...... 161 160 329
Boozer 5 170 181 : 351
Bretz ....... 159 158 1565 472
Sheaffer 174 134 147 455
Totals 840 807 787,2429
a Gn
USED CAR BARGAINS
, 1—1923 Ford Coupe Truck
| 1—1922 Ford Truck with top
|
|
|

Ford Touring
1—1924 Overland Champion
1—1923 Overland touring
1—1925 Reo Speed Wagon cab
and body
1—1924 Reo Speed Wagon Cab
“rebuilt”
1—1922 Chevrolet Coupe Truck
1—Safe, suitable for office use.
STRICKLER’S GARAGE
Maytown, Pa.
———
| The Mt. Joy Bulletin costs only
$1.50 per year.
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