The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 13, 1927, Image 5

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NESDAY, JULY 13TH, 1927

TH JOY fos MOUNT joy, LANCASTER Co., PA.
 






ey


to all these services.
Donegal Presbyterian Church
Rev.. C. B. Segelken, D.D., Pastor
eligious News
mn Our Churches



3 Chureh School at 9:30, Mr. D. C.
\ Witmer, Superintendent. -
\ Evening worship and sermon at
\ VEWS PERTAINING TO ALL THE |7.30. “Young Womanhood in a
A CHURCHES IN MOUNT JOY Critical Position.”
BORO AND THE ENTIRE
SURROUNDING COM-

Presbyterian Church


ih MUNITY Rev. C. B. Segelken, D.D., Pastor
\ ¢ Church School 9:30 A. M.
Trinity Lutheran Church H. S. Newcomer, Superintendent
Rev. Geo. A. Kercher, Pastor Morning worship and sermon at
Pigg Sunday School 9:30 A. M. 10.30. Theme: “In Remembrance of,
| Morning worship 10:45 A. M. Me.” Communion.
NN, Evening worship 7 P. M. Wednesday evening at J.30 pray-
: : er and praise service.
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 service.
7.30 Evening service.
Church of God
Rev. I. A. MacDannald, D.D., Pastor
Sunday School, 9:30 A. M.
S. Hamaker, Superintendent.
Sermon 10.30 A. M.
Sermon 7.45 P.
C. B 7PM.
Leader, Mr. Billow.
Junior C. E. Wednesday 6.30.
Mid-week service Wednesday, 7.45
Choir rehearsal will follow the
mid week service.
You are cordially invited to wor-
ship with us.
J.
Reformed Mennonite
Rev. Christ S. Nolt, pastor
There will be services in the Re-
formed Mennonite church on West
Main street, next Sunday morning
at 10.00 o’clock.


St. Mark’s United Brethren Church
Rev. H. S. Kiefer, Pastor
Sunday School at 9.00 A. M.
H. N. Nissly, Superintendent
Worship and sermon at 10:15.
Evening worship at 73.0 P. M.
You are most cordially invited
T. U. Evangelical Church
Rev. A. L. Bernhart, Pastor
Mid-week prayer service will
held Wednesday, 7.30 P. M.
Choir rehearsal, Friday 7.30.
be









With Electricity
lghouse Ranges

a Westinghouse Electric
Et Range
at control gives you absolutely
n always duplicate vour best
 
Because accurate h
uniform results. You
culinary efforts. 53
Cooking with electricity
necessity for constant atte
An electric range is clean
It is healthy; there are no
safe; there is no need for loos
Kitchen,
Your kitchen is cooler with &
cause the heat does not penetrate
There is less shrinkage of meats
an electric range; vou will save in t
used for your family.
The meals you prepare on an electri
more appetizing and more nutritive be®
savory juices are retained by the heat sto
ple. See them on display at
 
 














«is easier; there is not the
ion and regulation.
here is no dirt or smoke.
bnoxious fumes. It is
atches in the kitchen
electric range be-
e oven walls.
d other food in
amount of food
ange will be
use all the
ge princi-
H. S. Newcomer & S
Mount Joy, Penna.




A Wonderful Bargain

I have just been given the sale of one of the
bargains I have ever
most value
offered. Read
”
the money” realty
over carefully.


18 ACRES BEST LIMESTONE LAND
With buildings second to none.
half a mile north of Maytown, along the macadam highway
This ideal farm is located
|
| basket

leading to Elizabethtown. Large frontage on highway. Farm
divided inte four fields, all level land, good cropper.
The buildings, which are
9-Room Frame House
in most excellent condition, are
and Summer House, all under slate
roof, good heating plant, large front porch, open lawn, Bank |
Barn for 8 head, concrete forebay, Pig Sty, dandy Poultry
Houses, New Garage, excellent water, Two Fruit Orchards,
an abundance of Berries, ete.
All Buildings newly painted. This farm is located in
the heart of East Donegal township and is one of the best {
and most beautiful that I have ever offered. The buildings
could not be duplicated for $10,000.

This is an excellent tobacco producer and can hang one
field of a crop.
The
Price is Only $8,500.00
and half the money can remain
closest investigation.
Jno. E. Schroll
Phone 41R2 MOUNT JOY, PA
Here comes the shock.
at 5 percent. Will bear


{ the



Local Doings
Around Florin
(From Page One)
Stark

Mr. and Mrs. . Daniel
Sunday at Mt. Gretna.
Messrs. D. M. and E. M. Wolge-
muth enjoyed an automobile
Atlantic City last week.
Rev.
ter spent last
City,
Mr. Fred Keener
Boston, Mass.,
spending a month’s
with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
of Middletown, called on
Mrs. G. A. Geyer.
William and Harry
Thursday
ret
vacat
Monday with
Mr. and Mrs. G.
Mr. Myers, son-in-law
G. Walters, is erecting a n
ing in town,
house on the
ship side.
Realtor Jno.
the fine double
ner Hallgren,
very reasonable. Also
Peris property along the t
Messrs. Wm. Shires,
Carpenter, Dick Peris, R¢
Adolphus Peris, Harry Gel
3reneman and several
their grar
A. Geyer.
dwelling of
joyed a fishing trip to Oxf
on Sunday. They
ers and spots.
Myr. Daniel M,
extensive coal and feed
has taken a partner in
Mr. Eli M. Wolgemuth.
do business in the future
caught 1
ae
his
firm name of Wolgemuth Bros. The
new member of the firm was em-
ployed there for some time and is
very familiar with the business.
Mr. Abram Hess, wife and three
children, Mr. John Earhart and fam
ily, Mr. Almos. Earhart, Jr., and
family, Mr. Paul Earhart and fam-
ily, Mr, Grayhill Brookhart and
family, Miss Bessie Hackman, Mr.
Calvin Shank and Miss Viola Keny,
were pleasantly entertained in the
family of Mr. and Mrs. Almos Ear-
hart, in town on Sunday.
Mr. John Griffin, first trick cross-
ing watchman at the street crossing
here, was struck at 7:51 A. M. yves-
terday morning. He is sixty years
old. Train 32 was stopped at the
station and just as this train start-
ed, Train BF11, engine No. 3667,
westbound, came along and struck
Mr. Griffin on the left arm, whirled
him around and threw him away
from the tracks, cutting his left
eye and bruising his left *
Also bruising his head and
{is spectacles were broken,
cut his eye. Dr. W. M.
was summoned and took
fin to his office for treatm
left eye required stitching.
fin has only one good
left arm was amputated
clbow some years ago.
A ——

Watch for Chick Disease
Coccidiosis is caused by
scopic parasite which
cells of
fection
flocks
fo run on
were
Cleaning
three days,
day, is advisable
of the droppings,
is most common ar
of chicks which are
ground wher
raised the
the brooder
or as often as
in order t
| infection.

Thin the Apple Cro
is not too late to thin
loaded trees of winter
3-inch apples will fill
as will a hundred 2
apples and they. are worth
It
ty



sunimer,

vice.
No Epworth League
and August.
and Mrs. Ditzler and
at
where they visited friends.
Saturday
S. R. Geyer
Bennett,
Altoona, spent Sunday and part of
of
adjoining the
East Donegal
E. Schroll is offering
in this place,
the
vhart,
Wolgen
Mr.
arm,
below

dev
the intestinal tract and injures the |
the intestinal walls.
previous
house
which carry
Dm
appl
four times as much, Winter apples
picked from overloaded trees in
v will net more profit than if left |
1til October.
———— ————
Pick Show Animals
i i time to select thej
ded for xhibit
a s. They ] > |
fed well otha the rema 1
gr yomed daily,

spent
trip to
daugh-
Tower
urned to
after
ion here
and
Hoffman,
Mr. and
of
1dparents,
Mr. A.
ew dwell-
school
town-
Mr.
for
Rag
sale
Dick
rolley
Ephraim
Peris,
Mr.
thers en-
ord, Md.,
60 croak-
y
mth,
aler

eye ball.
left arm.
which
Workman
Grif-
His
Grif
his
the
ent.
Mr.
as
a micro-

elops in
The in-!
nong the
allowed
chicks
year.
e

every
|
once
o get
a|
rid
the |
Pp
the
eS.
over
For-
as big a
1-4
three
inch
or




taugl wd
Bible School, Sunday, 9.30 A. M.
Preaching, Sunday, 10.30 A. M.
Christian Endeavor, Sunday 6.45.
Topic: “Applying Christian Stan-
i dards in Amusements.”
Leader, Mrs. Harry -Kaylor.
Preaching, Sunday 7.30.
There will be no services on
| Sunday, July 24th,
Come. You are weleome.
Methodist Episcopal Church
Rev. C. E. Wonderley, Pastor
9.15 A. M. Church School.
Dr. E. W. Garber, Superintendent.
10.30 Preaching service. Theme:
The World’s Question About Our
Value of Religion, and Christ's
Questions About the Value of the
Worlde
7.30 Evening worship.
Theme: “The Uses of Suffering.”
Wednesday evening, prayer ser-
during. July
(All Are Welcome)
Florin U. B. Church ia
Christ
Rev. J. C. Deitzler, pastor
Bible School 9:30 A. M.
Holy Communion service 10.30.
Intermediate Society at
Christian Endeavor at 6.30 P.
-M.
Evening worship at
The Teacher Training c
sing at both
services.
Teachers’ Training class
day at 7.15 P. M.
morning and
5.45.
M.
horus will
evening
on Tues-
Prayer Service Thursday at 7.30.
You are cordially invited to these
services,



.
Of the Big-Hpuse
Family
UJ EL Se
By CLARISSA MACKIE |


(Copyright,)
HEN the Allenbys lost all their
money and were obliged to leave
the Big House, as it was locally
called, they were able to occupy a
small cottage not far away. When
they were comfortably settled there,
Ann and her mother—for the father
had died betore his ill-judged invest-
ments had proved to be utterly worth-
less—were cozy and comfortable
enough, though they missed the large-
ness and space that they had always
been accustomed to. The cottage gar-
den was a thing of wonder, for dozens
of roots were brought from Big House,
and their old gardener, Jacob, had
mude them a wonderful vegetable gar-
den that was surrounded with more
flewers |
“Mother, darling, 1 know we lack
the luxury and the motors of Big
House,” said Ann, one lovely June
day, “but aren't you a little bit
happy?”
Mrs. Allenby smiled contentedly at
her charming daughter. “1 am hap
pier, dear, than 1 have been since I
was first married,” she admitted.
“Your father and I began our married
life in this wee house.”
“Mother! And you never told me!
exclaimed Ann,
“1 wanted you to teach yourself to
tike the change, without favorable
prejudice. You kuow, of course,” said
Mrs. Allenby, “that Big House has
been sold—a small family, I hear
mother and son, they say. He's an
electrical engineer. When they are
thoroughly settled, I shall, of course
call.”
Half an haur later, the gate opened
and a young man appeared carrying
a shining milk pail. Ann liked him at
once, because he was big and so clean
and thoroughly good looking
“I came to beg a pail of your spring
water, Mrs. Allenby,” he said. “We
have just arrived at Big House and
sométhing has happened to the spring
water pump there-—at least it is out
of comission.”
“Why, of course,” said hospitable
Mrs, Allenby. “My daughter will di
rect you,” and she resumed her novel
while Ann with a little nod of assent
put aside her sewing and joined him
on the red brick path.
“Big House is a fine old muusion,’
observed the young man as the)
walked along, “but 1 do miss a few
things—such as this old brick path
tor instance.”
“1 love them, too,” said Ann. “I
pelieve mother forgot to introduce us.
[ am Ann Allenby.”


”
“And 1 am Ronald Smith,” he
laughed. "One of the great Smith
clan!” They laughed together as they
reached the spring house.
“Then, you are a member of
House family,” offered Ann
He nodded carelessly. “There is
only mother and I—the rest of the
family have all married and gone off
—even father has taken a (trip to
South Americal”
Ann made some happy response, and
vent back to the veranda. She went
off*sewing daintily. Then Mrs Allen
by said abruptly:
“A rather pice looking mun—Y sup
pose he is the butler or chauffeur.”
Ann gasped, and then a dimple came
into her cheek; what a funny joke on
mother! she thought.
“Have you ever seen ‘any of the
Suiiths, mother—of course, I mean the
anew family next door?”
Big
“No,” said Mrs Allenby, resuming
rer book.
Every day Ronald Smith appeared
with his pail for water.
he brought a great
One morning
armful of yellow
roses, that had been Mrs. Allenby's
pride and joy at Big House. “Mother
sent these to Mrs Allenby,” he said
simply, and went on around by the
brick walk.
* ‘Mother I’ ™ exclaimed Mrs. Allen
oy. “Never let him know that 1
hought him the butler!
“Or the chauffeur!” Ann
wid then she told bier mother what she
wd learned that first day.
“Then, he must be the electrical gen



ineer,” decided Mrs. Allenby “I won
! she mused, “why he did not re
air their pump after that first day.’
“1 wonder!” echoed Ann, but ther
vas a pink flush in her cheeks, and :
eqader look in her eyes. for her meet
ngs with young Smith, though brie
wid been full of interest. Mrs. Allen
y put aside her plan of summer idle
iess, and sending for the village tax
ab she paid a state call upon Mrs
smith, who turned out to be so de
ightful a .woman of her own socia
unk, with so many congenial acquaint
innces whe were also f Mrs
\llenby's, that a very friend
ship grew rapidly between them
“Ronnie is just spending the sumine
ids of

wari
vith me,” explained Mrs Smith om
1y.
The two ladies exchanged a smile
or Ronald Smith and Ann had falle
iesperately in love with other
nd it was not long they be
ame engaged
Then Ronald announced
live with Mrs. Allenby at Whit.
‘ottage. “Of course, you cian have
ousemaid—and more, if you wish.’
e told Ann and her mother one day
but for my part, 1 can be both butle:
nd chauffeur, if necessary!”
each
i" before
his desir
0
Roman Household Gods
The household gods of the Romans
zy the time of Augustus were gen
oenlly known s# the Lares and Pen
ates.
Control Grain Moth
With harvest time near at hand
farmers are again reminded by the
entomologists of the Pennsylvania
State College that early threshing
must be practiced to protect the
wheat crop from the Angoumois
grain moth. Fumigation with ‘car-
Hon bisulphide in the bins should
follow the threshing operation.
A enw
Hauteville house, Victor Hugo's
home in exile, has been given by
his descendants to the city of Paris.
Thunting * licenses
Nickel Pinchers Not
Exponents of Thrift
I have never known a stingy person
who was nice, who was one of those
persons the thought of whom makes
your heart expand with warmth and
affection. I am not inveighing against
those who are sensibly economical and
thrifty, When a man or woman says:
“No, I can't afford that. It's only a
dollar, but a dollar is important to
me,” that is all right. The quality of
being unashamed transfigures almost
anything into something all right, even
charming.
But a stingy person tries to pretend
that the expense is nothing; that isn't
what interests him. Oh, no! Yet his
worry over the slipping away of nick-
els is so intense in him that it makes
your flesh creep. When there is a res-
taurant check to be paid, when you
invite a tightwad to have a soda with
you, click, click, you intuitively feel
the cerebrations going on in his anx-
ious brain as to which of you will
have to give up the mazuma for the
indulgence.
“I don’t want to embarrass them by
taking them to the Ritz,” the very rich
girl rationalizes her economy, “so 1
will just take them down to that inter-
esting little place under the elevated,
with the sawdust on the floor.”
“I don’t want persons to get to care
for me only for my money,” says the
very rich snob, who as often as not is
the richest debutante of the season.
So she always makes it a point to “go
Duteh.,”—Elizabeth Barbour in the
Saturday E Evening Post,
Normal Span of Life
May Yet Be Century
One of the greatest advantages of
the modern civilization is the way ii
which the span of human life has been
inereased, points out Brenda Ueland
in an article in Liberty.
“The span of useful life used to be
only forty-five years,” the writer ex-
plains. “Now people are living until
seventy in full usefulness and vigor.
{n the future they will be living until
eighty or ninety or a hundred. And
the result is that the center point of
humanity has shifted from the twen
ties to near the fifties,
“At the court of Louis XV,” the
writer continues, “a man’s prime was
twenty-five. After that—the down
ward slope. Today a man of twenty
five 1s one whose father is wondering
whether to send him to a law or a
medical school, or set him at work.
Formerly a woman of twenty-two was
an old maid; a woman of thirty-five
often was a grandmother,”

The Exact Witness
A barrister was cross-examining a
rather innocent-looking countryman.
“So you had a pistol?” the barrister
asked.
“] had, sir.”
“Whom did you intend to shoot with
it?”
“l wasn't intending to shoot any
one?”
“Then was it for nothing that you
got it?”
“No, it wasn't.”
“Come, come,
your solemn oath,
the pistol for?”
“By virtue of my solemn oath,” sald
the countryman, “I got it for ten-and-
sixpence.”—Weekly Scotsman,
sir! By virtue of
what did you get
Too Observant
Frequently in restaurants and othe:
places where a certain rule is continu
ally being ignored, we are reminded of
an incident related by a friend of ours
While wintering in Spain he lunched
at the monastery of the Benedictines
After lunch he took out his cigar case
“I don’t suppose you object to smok
ing here?” he sald to the white-robe«
monk attendant, “Yes. sir, we do,” was
the prompt reply. “There's a law
against smoking in the
“Then where,” said our friend, “do al
the cigar and cigarette tthe COM
from that I see about me?” “From men
who didn’t ask about the law,” the
monk replied, mildly.—Boston Tran
script.
Worked by the Tides
A water-mill that is nine wiles in
land, yet obtains all its power frou
the tides, is claimed to be the only on¢
f its kind by the inhabitants of Wood
ridge, Suffolk, formerly one of Eng
tand’s great shipbuilding centers. Jus!
how long this wheel has been answer
ng to the rhythm of the tides no one
is certain, but about 740 years ago a
mill, standing on the same spot, was
leased for a yearly rental of a pound
of cummin, valued in those days at
about twopence. When the tides of
the River Deben are at their highest
nd lowest the little mill rests, bu
it any other time the great wheel i:
arning.

Heroic Swiss Guards
a iy
entury
enroll
for th
pecial protection of the person of the
rench king. Left without directions
Louis XVI placed himself in the
he national the)
Tuileries ag the
revolutionists for ti but fr
the end were butchered as they re
ired in obedience to the king’s order
vised on a treacherous pron by ti
Swiss Guards were bot
1 the
Seventeenth
hen
assembly,
inst
wands of
defended



the
sume e,
ise
waders of the mob
Too Bad
flora-—1 don't bel
hont Mrs. Gavleigl
Fanny---Then
bout it?
i'lora-—1 was in ht
«onfirm it
ve that seand
why did you tell me
pe that you could
of the 650 inhabitants of
Lucas, Kansas, fifteen are octogen-
arians, ten men and five women.
Five of the men are veterans of the
Civil War. The combined ages of
the fifteen aggregate 1,250 years.
Out
There were more than 5,150,000
taken out by
sportsmen throughout the United
States and the Territory of Alaska
during the season of 1925-26.




































 

 






/ ’
REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK OF MOUNT JOY AT
MOUNT JOY IN THE STATE OF PENN-
SYLVANIA, AT THE _CLOSE OF BUSI-
NESS ON JUNE 30, 1927
Ri SOURCES
Loans and disca s, in-
cluding rediscotigis 951,089.50
Total loans iad $ 951,089.50
Overdrafts, sec none; “unse-
secured So 208.91
Deposited to ircu
lation (U bnds. par
value) 22 125,000.00
All othe rr 2
Government 163,726.21
Total .. 5 3 288,726.21
Other bonds, cks, securit| es, “ete 470,708.28 !
Banking - $29,073.95
Furniture and@¥ixtures 14,218.15
Total ee wees
Real Estate hed other
than banki house 18,564.15
Lawful rese with Federal Re-
serve Ban ia 56,394.58
Cash in vg and amount due
from natiofl banks 90,536.96
Amount d from State banks,
bankers, 4 trust companies in
the States Sd 7,321.88
Checks on er banks in
the same ly or town as
reporting n 2,251.34
Total of i ns 10. 11,
13.0 100,110.18
Miscellaneo cash items 473.45 |
Redemption nd witig U. S. Treas-
_urer and e from U., S. Treas. 6,250.00
S. Govefinent secur-
ities . 26,000.00
Other asset$ if an 1,661.94
Total $1,963,479.90
LIABILITIES
Capital stoc in...
id fund
Undivided pr

Reserved for

Reserved for
est, ete 20,405.16
Circulati 1 125,000.0¢
Certified "16.91
Cashier’s che 525.91
Total of
and
Indiv idual de




named
above
knowledge

and





| FELLENBAUM, Cashier. |
Subscribed a o beiore me this
th day of ] |
Wm. vota lic
My commis sich a Tit ; =
Correct—Attests !
JE S. CARMANY,
fx. ¥. SNYDER, M. D.
HENRY H. EBY
Directors
REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE UNION
NATION§l. MT. JOY BANK, LOCATEI
AT MOUNT JOY, IN THE STATE, OF
PENNSYLVANIA, AT THE CLOSE OF
BUSINESS ON JUNE 30, 1927
RESOURCES
discounts, #n-























 

 
Those


mean tle head-
aches disappes at once
and you are fee to take
up the day’s ##%s with vi-
gor if you fe two tea-
spoonfuls of Epsom Salt
dissolved in
water each
glass of cold
10rning.
Oc
fhce Container



E. GARBER
/
Rexall sire
® MOUNT JOY, PA.




 


 













THE HEAT FOLKS ARE Bull
BLOODS, ne i NO MIX TH
WITH THE SLATE OR STONE
FAMILIES IN QUR FAMILY 3
YES SIR, WERE FFF’
FIRST FAMILIES OF
THE FOREST

_ Have you evefnoticed the
imprint of a leg@on a piece
of coal? J
You'll find o sometimes,
a silent remin of the pre-
historic forest from which
coal came.
Think of tig centuries of
sunshine and @@resh air that
must have be@l absorbed by
these foresff before they
were finally giried!
That is coal we offer
you: wood nixed with con-
centrated fnshine and oxy-
gen, and g#@ressed for thous-
ands of !
No it burns so well
Call tiie HEAT FOLKS
for good, clean coal
T T ) )
& Brother
D3
174R6
# FLORIN. PA.












LIABILI Tl
|
{


Sav 401.65
Io sits S
Total $ 01.45
State of Pennsylvania, Count Lancas
ter, ss:
I, J. N. Summy, the above-
amed bank, dc that the
bove statement is true clbest of my
inowledge and belief. =
N. SUM , Cashier
Subscribed and affirmed to be me this
7th day of July, 1927.
Phares B. Stefiman, J. P.
My commission expires Janua 4, 1932
Correct—Attest: a
H. W. MINNICHg
W. SCOTT BUSHENG
M. L. SWARR :
# Directors






Redemption fund wi
urer and due from U. 5,000.
Other assets, if any 5
Tota] $2,246.6 5
pital stock paid ).
Surplus fund XX
Undivided profits 1
1 1 Ss uts
C
en
Ir ep
6.6
State, cou . 0
deposits ured
0
de
I ie
er, s
I. bal
M 8
RES
S.
Ri
( ( )
HS) I i
y AN i |
NT |
RESOURCE i.
lis Is. 5 | i
S 7.6 |
i
S. s pa |
{ S G |
adopted
 
0 a policy
of e« ping v DARTON tires,
I stad be estab-
Young's Tire Stoges
130 East Main Street
Y, PA.
MOUNT JOY,
ce Street
North P
TER. PA
in


11
LANCAS




% H. H. RALL
W
| always have on h# anything ia
the line
SMOKED MEATS, HAMS DRIED
BEEF, BOLOGNA, LARD,
Also Fresh Beef, Veal Pork,

Krall’s Meat Market
Main St. MOUNT JOY
SPECIALIZE
styles of




LADIES’ an



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