By P. O. Asexander (© V7 Western Newspaper Union) SEEMS To ME Pp” OH OFFICER+ ALL THE \ i i WAY FROM BUFFALO WEST | TIVE LOOKED WR A SAVAGE)! f INDIAN | -T HOPE I SHALL [iff] NOT RETURN To STATEN fi TSLAND WITHOUT HAVING, SEEN ONE OF OUR QWN NATIVE AMERICANS THIS PART AV Ol SAW AN INJUN STRUITIN' AROUND TOWN, LES SEE IM WRITING A THEME ON THE VANISHING AMERICAN AND I MUST SEE THIS INDIAN IN HIS NATIVE HAUNTS san Whig I 1s oL CHIEF { HOOF AN MOUTH f THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. His Native Haunts WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 192 =7 LOUD, LIZZIE ¥~ WHAT DIDJA DO WID DE BUCK | 1 GIVE YUM DIS MORNIN Iv DONT PAY NO MOVIE A ACTORS KALE | ~ Y'KNOW 7» DIS OSHERIN AT DE PoNTiAC [77 7 Sow = 3; THE OLDEST HET STORE IN = 1543210 =. — THE AVERAGE \{ ° Z| | asa Wingert VOCABULARY OF 3 ONLY 500 WORDS| | —8uT Tink oF | | - THE TURMN-OVER Vy i { jrtment of 3 k PLAIN HATS (A SPECIALTY JNO. A. HAAS, Propr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. 1 ! het % — When in need of anything in our line, we serve you. a first-class Plui We Give us a call. We have secured the services of prepared to do only the best of work. will cheerfully furnish estimates, Brown Bros. West Main Street MOUNT JOY, PA of correct furniture and furnishing in the modern e cannot be over emphasized, if you wish to entertain your friends in a manner that will do yourself and your husband credit. The best way to insure proper furniture is to come here to make your selections. H. C. BRUNNER Wast Main Street, MOUNT JOY, PENNA, any other building, to cover it with Ambler Asbestos Shingie All Roofs:G PRICES VERY R F. H BAKER COAL MOUNT JOY, PENNA. uaranteed Let us estimate on your next roof, house, bara or| GOODRICH TIRES Prest-O-Lite Batteries Gas, Oil an TIRE AND BATTERY: JOHN W, DILLINGE 208 E. Main St. MOUNT JOY, PA. Accessories CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. 1 UMBER - RAZ AIRING Briefly Told In Juneau, there are | nine single men to every single | woman. | China had what seems to have | been a | in 1641. White House news indicates only | four official dishes have been brok- | en since 1918. The average expenditure of Yale undergraduates is estimated at $1,- 800 for each of the four years in college. Rheims Cathedral has been archi- tecturally restored and resumed re- ligious service on Ascension Day, May 26. More copper has been produced in the world in the past 20 years than in almost 7,000 years pre- viously. Chemicals may be manufactured serious influenza epidemic 4 from peach stones if the experi- ments of a Pennsylvania scientist prove successful. If a human being could jump with agility in proportion to a grasshopper he could clear the GO| Flatiron Building, in New York | City. A Chicago department store has established a silence room, fitted with steamer chairs and chaise | longues, for its exhausted women patrons. Because | stition regarding the all No. 13 berths on |of an English railway | 14-A, | Because of the inequality of | their strides lost persons invariably | impossible to. anyone without guid- walk in circles; a straight course is ing landmarks. The Shwe Dagon Pagoda, located at Rangoon and gold-plated from | top to bottom is the largest in Bur- of the prevailing super- number 13, sleeping cars will be No. | ma. It cost $5,000,000 and covers | ten to fifteen acres. The French midinettes, or work- ing girls, derive their name from midday from because at thousands (noon) emerge by artificial its color resemblance to stone ob- tained from the Isle of Portland on of Dorset, England. soldiers, mission, white chests open with butts. The chests hives of honey A cyclone the coast Chinese | American | teresting looting an some in- which they their found | smashed rifle | midi , because idday | they e oe vy thousands from | | the shops and factories. Portland cement, an rtificie | product, is so named because of | bees. recently destroyed Tamatave, a Madagascar port, and it may never be rebuilt, for more [than one hundred cyclones have | swept the city during the last cen- |tury and tidal waves are frequent proved to be | | can’t insult a ] fn Saki. Janan, the city of the | { little birds, two-thirds of all the | householders keep canaries, finches, | Java sparrows, sky-larks, and | singers . Some of the feathered | pets are valued as high as $2,500 {a pair. | largest Phantom Pool of Kenfig, the fresh-water lake in South | Wales, has moved nearly half a | mile toward Kenfig Hill in the {last ten years. At this rate it will take less than forty years for it to [re ach the nearest fillage. | The shark industry has been de- {veloped to a point where little of ithe fish is wasted. The liver, which is 96 per cent oil, is used in soap | mixing, the flesh and the dorsal {and tail fins are used as food, and | the hide fins made into leather. | A workman engaged in tearing | down the Southern Pacific Station lat Oakland, California, discovered. | when he attempted to kick an old [tin can, that it contained 400 five- |dollar gold pieces. The most re- icent date on any coin was 1886. i An experiment has been under- taken at the cemetery of San Jose [in Spain for the installation of tiny telephones in each casket. These are to be connected to an alarm bell in the porter’s lodge, thus pro- viding against the possibility of anyone being buried alive. So numerous have been the de- mands on Minneapolis firemen to come to the rescue of foolish cats that have climbed poles and high trees and refused to come down that the firemen have called a halt carious positions, A London school, ily to teach started primar- languages, now tourists who are anxious to quire an English accent short time. A close second in popularity is a course in ‘curing’ accents, A 22-story Chicago ing just completed is that the 21 upper westward 10 feet farther than the ground floor. The explanation is this: Originally a cow pasture, the | property when sold carried a deed ! providing for a 10 foot runway | along its west end for the conven- { ience of the former owner’s cow. | Failing to break the clause, lawyers | refer to the $2,000,000 building jas a monument to a cow. office build- unusual in stories extend and will rescue no more from pre- | | has never been an other | | finds | most of its pupils among American | ac- | within a | Crude Water Heaters Used by Old Romans Even so generally used and useful a thing as hot water in generous quan- tities is a development of very mod- ern times, For thousands of years primitive, laborious methods were the only means for having hot water. This condition was but little impr ved up to less than a generation ago. The first water heater known dates back some 2,000 years. This was the “ahenum” of the Romans, a crude bronze kettle with a handle for swing- ing over an open fire. The “focolus,” an apparently later device, was 8a metal container into which hot stones were put to heat the water surround: ing them. This seems to have been the best water heater the early Romans were able to devise. During the Elizabethan age in Eng land the people were notoriously un- washed. Perhaps it was because the teakettle was their only source of hot water supply. In 1809, when gas for fuel and light became a public utility, the desire and need for hot water be came easier to fill. With the develop- ment of the gas stove, hot water began to flow more freely. East Credited With Idea of Gunpowder Gunpowder was made in the Middle ages much as it is now, except that the processes were not so refined, and the product cruder and weaker. Gun- powder is a mixture consisting of potassium nitrate, sulphur and char- coal. The origin of it is involved in considerable uncertainty, but it is be lieved to have been discovered in the | ancient East. As far as "Europe Roger Bacon, alchemist and philosopher, is some- times spoken of as its inventor. At any rate he set down the formula in this fashion in 1270: “Mix together saltpetre with lura nop cum ubre and sulphur, and you will make thunder and lightning. if you know the mode of mixing.” The four is concerned, seemingly meaningless words in the middle are simply a transposition of the letters of carbonum pulvere or charcoal, Morocco a Safe Country The days of roughing it, exploration, freedom of action, are gone—as far as Morocco is concerned. Fifteen years | ago a man could take a pack outfit and a bunch of natives and go wher- ever funcy led. No more; and Spanish are in control, venture Magazine. Morocco is not. nor ever has been dangerous to a foreigner who attends to his own business and doesn’t act like a fool toward the natives mun in America with wut taking a chance of getting licked or Killed for it. The same Morocco and everywhere else. There “open season” on foreigners. All that wild news of the last 20 years has been European propadanda intended to warrant for- eign control of the country. says Ad Only a Dream Hubby listened intently. and her mother were talking. latter was saying: “You have indeed secured a splen did husband, and I think you ought to treat him with a little more tact and consideration. Don’t always want to know where he is going, and if he comes home a little late be agreeable and wait until he explains before you begin asking a lot of awkward ques- tions. He's just the sort to appreci- ate any generosity on your part. Be kind to him.” Hubby stirred uneasily. hear more, when—he awoke, His wife The Boc! She had been turning over every article the weary salesman had placed before her on the counter, but noth ing seemed to be exactly she wanted. “] am afraid there's nothing here to suit,” she decided at last, and then. in a burst of confidence, whispered: “You see, tomorrow is my husband’s birthday and I wanted to surprise him.” The weary man behind the counter zave her a scathing look. “Well,” he suggested in icy tones. “why not hide behind the armchair and yell ‘Boo’ at him?” Blissful Beginning Owing to the absence through {ll ness of the woman who taught the senior girls’ Bible class, the young as sistant minister was asked to under tale the duties for the day He consented. but hefore beginning he said smilingly: “Now, girls. T want to conduct yom class just as your teacher does so yo might tell me what she does first” A short panse then the answer from a pert miss of givteon “Well she always kisses us all round!” J Aen The hearing apparatus of an in- seet is often located in the legs. the Thirteenth-century | the French | One | applies in | trying to | the thing | Base Ball Notes During the Week LOCALS WON A CORKING GOOD GAME FROM LANCASTER IRON WORKS’ TEAM HERE SATURDAY Mt. Joy out-hit the Lancaster Iron Works nine 11 to 6 here on Saturday afternoon to win by a 3-2 score. The run pushed over by Mt. Joy in the first inning proved to be the deciding factor of the game, since each team scored two later in the game. Hendrix was on the mound for the locals and was at his best, allowing the visitors but six scattered hits. Ellis socked one in the middle for a round trip which was a feature. The score: Mt. Joy r ho a ¢ Bigler, vf ........ 0°31 8 0:0 Elis, 2b ......... >» 2.3 5 1 Showalter, ¢ ..... 0 2 4:30 Alwine, cf 1£ .... 2 2. 0 1 0 Weaver, 3b ...... 9 1 0 3 0 Derr, sz. ......... 0.2 0 2.0 Zimmerman, ¥ ... 0 0 2 0 | A. Myers, cf -...:. 0 12:0. 0 | Alexander, 1b 0 0.15 0 1 Hendrix, p ......5 0 0.0 2 0 Totals cots 811 27.16 2 Iron Works yr h.o ga ie Hagen, of ..... 9. 0 2 0 0 (Phillips, 1b 0 0-510 0 I Sterner, er... ue. 1 2 8% 30 40 | Yontz:: 3b ........ @ 2 2:-3.0 {Piester, 2b ....... 00. 02 Hess, Ip: ......% 0 1 4-0 1 J. Hagen: vf ,.... 0 0.6 0 0 Simers, p If ...... 0. 0.1.0 0 Vem i Totals. 2 624 4 7 Iron Wks. .000 00100 1--2 Mt. Joy 10000101 x—3 Two base hits—Alwine, Derr, Steamer. Home run—ZEllis. Base] on balls—Off Hendrix 2; Simmers 1 Struck cut, by Hendrix 4, by Sim- mers 7. Umpires—Geltmacher, Tap- pen. —— OE Old Timers Lost But for a bad inning, the fourth, a of our ol Timers ore at Friday evening. | al score was 7 to 4, the Regulars] | tallying six of these in the fourth | inning. Zimmerman and PRigler | poled three baggers. Garber allowed the Old Timers but six hits while the Regulars col- lected eleven off Ellis’ delivery. | The score: | Mt. Joy Regulars r h o a ej Bigler, vf: +... : 1-1 1 0 Bilis, 2b ........ 1 1:1.0 1 Alwine, ¢ i. ev 1.0 6 0 0 B.-Hendrix, 3b ... 0 2 0 1 2 Dory, Ssh. 1 1.0 1:0 Schneider, 1b... } 2:5 0 0 Zimmermon, If ... 1.1.0.0 0, J yf .... 1 2.2.0 0 Garher, P+: eo 1 0 1 0 ‘Total vue. 711 15 4 3 Old Timers yr ho a e ! Showalter, ¢ ..... 13:2 0 0 WW: Ellis, P.'...... 2 2.0.1 0 Schock, 1b ....... 1 1. 50 0 O'Neil, 2b ....... 1.01 0 G. Brown; 3h .... 0 3. 0 1.0 | Laskewitz, SS 0 0 2:1.0 H. Brown, rf 0.0 1:00 i Bramdt, of ....... ® 0.0.0.0 | Diffenderfer, 1f 0 20 0 Wotal 4 612 4-0 Two base hits, W. Ellis. Three | base hits, Zimmerman, Bigler; | Double plays, Bigler to Schneider; | Base on balls: off Garber 11g, V | Ellis 11; Struck out by Garbe | W. Ellis 2. 0ld Timers Mt. Joy Regulars eee ee FORCASTS SMALLER WHEAT AND RYE CROPS Smaller crops of both wheat and rye are forecasted for Pennsylvania by the May 1 report of the Federal State Co-operative Crop Reporting Service. The production forecast for wheat is 18,302.000 bushels as compared to a crop of 23,400,000 last year. The rye forecast is 1,201,000 bu- shels compared to a crop of 1,488,- 000 bushels in 1926. The condition of wheat on May 1 was four points higher and rye three points higher than on the same date of a year ago. Set Out Roses For late setting out of roses it is well to use pot-grown plants. These may be planted without much disturbance of the roots. rent Crocodile meat is liked by Afri- can natives, but most white travel- Jers find it inedible. Saving is Constructive : Saving now means satisfaction, comfort and happiness in the | future. | It will afford training fh. and education for your child- First National Bank™, | Capital $125,000 MOUNT JOY, PA. Surplus $229,000 Perfecto, ndres, Havana Ribbon Londres, Bolds Rocky Fo Henrietta Juniors, Summans, Wenesta, Shissler’s Merchant, Stock, Home Comforts, Wm. Penn, Square | Deal, Noble 1 i ht, Lew Morris, 6 for 25. Any of these, 50 | in box for $2.0( All 2 for 15¢" gs, 4 for 25¢; all 10c Cigars, 3 for 25. Special price on boxgiots. Camels, Piedmonts;. ®Chesterfields ‘and Lucky Strikes, two | 15¢ packs for 25c. A We have a fine Pipes. Ask to see them. 1125¢c. All 15¢ . Beechnut, ete., Tobaccos, such 2 packs 25c. All 10c Tobhaccos, 3 packs as Red Man, Red Horse, Bag Pt Prince Albert, 2 cans 25c. Al Fruits in Season. | &§ O Jave Been Reduced Buy Peruna Feeds fom Your Chicks. I handle all this firm’s complete line Also Certified Seed Pota 8, Fertilizer, Salt, Lime, Wood, Ete. wm. OUR SUMMER CLASS is High School Girls, College Girls and Teachers the greatest advantage of the va- cation months in ning how to make their own dresses—which is an S¥ildess source of economy and satisfaction. : over. WORK’S DRESSMAKING S€ Woolworth Bldg., LANCASTER, PA. Pa oh I am selling regular $5 Crepe Bo or $3.95. All styles and sizes. Large assortment to select from. Don’t the date. M. K. SHELLY J TA a