The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 13, 1927, Image 8

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Jorn, per bu.
‘Wheat, per bu.
; Butter, per lb.

: sions

signed, residing at Mount Joy, Pa.
EXE(
In the Estate of Anna Walters,
late of Florin, Pa., deceased.
Letters on said estate having been
granted to the undersigned, all
persons indebted thereto are re-
quested to make immediate pay-
ment, and those having claims or
demands against the same, will
present thém without delay for
settlement ta
siding at Florin, Pa
Zimmerman, Myers, & Kready,
Attorneys
Cheap Country Home
Would any one be interested in
a dandy truck farm of two acres
near Hossler’s Church? Good brick
house, slate roof, frame stable,
poultry house, pig sty, excellent
producing soil, young orchard, good
water, Will sell for less than house
alone would cost today. Call or
phone J. E. Schroll, 41R2 Mt. Joy tf
nl A Un
MARKETS
Eggs, per doz, ...... 22¢-24c
dard, per 1b, ... viii, 15¢
(Classified Column


WANTED—Cook for plain cook-
ing. Apply Washington House
Pa.
Mount Joy,





short notice
H. S. Muss
July 6-

ING
reasonab
Florin, Pa.
FOR SALE—Che?
eon
RIC ES,

inder Overland Sedan.
ter Roberts, Phone
Joy, Pa.

A CHEVROLET


WANTED—Apply at once to P.
48 oy, Pa.
“Taly-¥3-tf
WANTED—Washings to do at
home. Done with Maytag electric
washer. Good work guaranteed.
Call evenings. F. G. Wagner,
W. Donegal St., Mt. Joy.
jly 13-2t-pd

FOR SALE—Self
Ford Hook celery plants 15
a hundred. F. S. Walter, Route 3.
Mt. Joy, Pa.

NOTICE — All patrons
shaving cups are at the late W. B
. shop will please
call for same. Mrs. W. B. Bender,
Mount Joy, July 13-1t

FOR SALE—A 10-room
House, Frame Stable, 2 acres
near Mt. Pleasant Church, north
Mt. Joy for only $2,000.00. See Jno.
E. Schroll. Mt. Joy, Pa. Phone 41R2
land

fe 40c¢
June 8-tf.
nd at
 

1925 4 cyl-
SALESMAN
345
blanching and
cents
July 13,-1t-pd
whose
Frame
of


| enterprise
| visited the place
Every reader should make use of |
the Classified advertisemen* section.
It is the way to dispose of what
you have to spare and to secure
what veu may need. t



 

NTED-— Sewing machine op-
ress work. Beginners
i Very sanitary
era
paid while
The work is
working conditi
easily learned.
Mount Joy, Pa.
Ap

ED—Young man over 21

 


yea pe fice for Automobile
Insurance. adr ndt, 1510
State St., Harrisburg, «Bel
7-2384R. feb, 9-tf
Yi
x TOR mar Tenement house
formerly known as Shirk’s Row.
Can show a #ig return on invest-
ment. Apply H. G."'Béngenccker,
one of the committee, Mount Joy,
Pa. Sept. 22-1tf

BEAUTIFUL HOME FOR SALE
between Mount Joy and Florin, 180
ft. front on concerte road, house is
very modern, has all improvements

tile bath, sun parlor, beautiful lawn
ete.; priced to sell. Don’t overlook
this. J. E. Schroll, phone 41-2, Mt
Joy, Penna, f


A BARGAIN— Who we
tract of land fronting 100 feet
the highway between here and
in and 540 feet deep? The pri
very reasonable if sold soon, J. E
Schroll, Mt. Joy.
' oe
HOUSE FOR SALE—A practic:
ally new 6-room house, along trol
ley at Florin, all modern conven-
jences and in A1 shape. I will sell
very reasonable to a snappy buyer
Come and see it.” Jno. E. Schroll
Rhone 41R2, Mt, Joy. mar 9-tf
a
EBECTRICAL REPAIRING
Repair®all kinds of electrical
equipment.
]] work






led

All work done pr
Work called for and
D. W. STRAYER
113 Fairview St. My Jos, Pa
July 13-3t
ered.

EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Estate of John C. Dyer, late of
Florin, Lancaster county, Pa, de-
ceased.


f | portion of the tourists who motored
| through
| er of the place.
mar 2-tf |

Adelaide’s Teashop
Became Famous |
By AD SCHUSTER
te 41
(Copyright,)
pusSisLy this story dates back to
Adelaide's great-grandfather who
sulled the seas when the waves tossed
high and a mariner took heavy chances
against a sate return. Had she been
& man she would have sought adven
ture. Adelaide told herself, and, being
a woman, she did the next best thing
aud read brave tales out of books
There came a time when she was left
alone with a small sum of money and |
the necessity of providing for the fu.
ture. She thought of all of the poss! |
bilities and then decided upon a tea |
room and restaurant, |
This was to be no ordinary tea
room Adelaide was determined to |
make It unlike any in the world. She |
would go to the coast, to some small
port on the Atlantic where fishing
fleets have come and gone for many
years and there set up in a slab |
sided shack a retreat and meeting |
place for adventurers,
Adelaide thought of hale men from |
the seven seas. men wearing ear-rings |
and stroking ferocious mustaches
She pictured booted men with red |
scarfs at thelr necks and wild yarns
on their lips and their delight when
they spied in her a kindred spirit. So |
she set up her shop and with a sign |
“Adventurers All” invited the roving
spirits of romance, the roaring, roils
tering lads of the sea, to have a cup
of tea. |
The old town ot Boulder Cove
rubbed its eyes in amazement at the
and assumption of this
young woman. Was it possible she
hought she could make tea better
than the good wives or that the hus
bands and sons were not getting
enough to eat at home? Those who
for curiosity Ieft
wondering at the idea anyone eccild
find adventure in tea and cake and
felt sorry for a girl who had -taked
her fortunes in go dubious a venture
Despairing ot winning over the home
trade or of seeing a real adventurer
come Into port, Adelaide discovered
that {f she were to keep the shop
open she must attract a goodly pro
the town Most of them
stopped, taiked to the old-timers, took
photographs and moved on.
These old-timers, particularly Tom
Crown, were of the kind she had plc
tured foregathering In her place. Ade
laide, in love with the town, totaled
her books and decided she had not
long to remain.
“Youn,” she said to Rodney Meek |
Boulder Cove’s merchant and post |
master, “are the only steady custom
If T don’t get more

I'l have to quit.”
“Perhaps.” the voung man answered
“perhaps things will pick up It
takes the folks here a long time to get
inything new. It would
accustomed to
be too bad te have von co
The, very next lay Tom Crown
rolled into ti nn took a place at a
table near a window and in his hi
of } a varn of the
se ed f is was as



Toh to Rodney, “that
sq SO Su deat it blew
ti ibhons afore we could
h vn We was as help
less an eggshell in Niagara ane
there came a big wave .
Adelaide could not catch the res
for she had to welcome Gy party of
tourists who sat at a tahle a&joining
the old sailor and gave him all their
attention le went on with his story |
| of the bark Nancy Imogene which was
 

lifted on a big wave and deposited ir
the very center of an island and as
he talked he pounded the tahle. The
tale was impressive and no one dared
Tere. at least, was one sue |
noon heur Maybe Rodney |
was right and business would pick up
After that Tom Crown came back
many times and with him a train of
tourists Always he had a tale of a
kind that sent the visitors away talk
ng of the picturesque old man whe
held forth in the inn of “Adventurers
AIL” Then some one wrote a story |
dispute
cessful
« about him for the city papers and Ade
Letters on said estate have been |
granted to the undersigned, all
persons indebted thereto are re-
quested to make immediate pay-
ment, and those having claims ox
demands against same, will present
them without delay for settlement

to the undersigned, residing at
Florin, Pa.
MRS. FRANCES DYER
Executrix
July 13-6t-pd
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE
In the Estate of Catharine
Shenk, late of West Donegal town-
ship, deceased.

 
Letters of administration on said |
estate having been granted to the
undersigned, all persons indebied
thereto are requested to make im-
mediate payment, and those having
ms or demands rainst the
> will present them without
delay for settlement to the under-
JOHN D. SHENK
Administrator
Rehm, Atty.
UTOR’S NOTICE
William C.


the undedsigned, re-
ALBERT G. WALTERS
Executor



ermanent Waving
nuine Edmond Process

RS
Milady Beauty Shoppe |
70 Main St., E. MT. JOY, PA.
York, recently received a postcard
mailed to her in 1915 from a
twenty-five miles from her home.
raised the official allowance
army cats, whose duty it is to
rats and
storehouses, from foursto ten
times a day.
laide’s teashop became famous.
“You told me, Rodney, that things
would change I wonder how you
knew.” |
“They just had to change,” he an
swered, “because, you know, it would
pot be right for you to go away. We
want you here, Adelaide. the town
does and, and 1 do, too.”
He read the answer in her eyes
and afterward when he met Tom
Crown op the street told him the
news
“Don't say?” the old sailor boomed
“well, I sorter expected it. I'll tell
you what I'll give you for a wedding
present You don’t have to pay me |
to visit that shop any more I'll go
nothing!”
for
Fallen Star
“Why is it that you have broken oft
Alice?” asked her
your engagement,
fair friend
“Oh, my dear! He told me he was
connected with the movies, and the
very next day, | saw him driving &
furniture van.”
The Fine Points
“Never borrow any money fron
that man. He is a shylock. In win
- : »
ter he tukes 30 per cent interest and
ifn the summer 60 per cent.”
“Why the 6072”
“Because the doyvs dre
suminer.”—-Pele Piiris
meet) eee.
longer in
war has
of the
The French minister of
run
mice out of the army
cen-
et I in

Mrs. Theodore Hoffman, of New
INTERESTING
{ the barn and roof at
| ofy Mrs.




Ny wt
~ >
A
Conerdl News for
Quick Reading
HAPPENINGS
FROM ALL OVER THE COUN.
TRY FOR THE BENEFIT
OF BUSY PEOPLE
10,770 dog licenses were granted
in this county to date.
Mr. Charles Wagenbach, of Back
Run, is improving his house with
paint.
Andrew K. Stoner aged 15 years,
of Falmouth, fell off a fence and
broke his arm.
The reunion of the Churches of
God will be held at Hershey Park,
Thursday, July 14th.
Mt. Zion A. M.
lumbia started a drive to raise $7,-
000 to clear its indebtedness.
The Women’s Missionary Society
of the United Brethren Church met
at the home of Mrs. Eli Ebersole
last evening.
Thirty-three auto
revoked and eleven
licenses
drivers
were
black-
listed by the State Highway Depart- |
ment last week.
The Sunday School Association
will meet after the mid-week serv-
ice on Wednesday at the United
Brethren church,
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
daughter, Margaret, of
spent Sunday with Mr.
Chas. Webb and family.
The Mt. Joy Travelers will play
the Pioneers of Lancaster, at Lan-
caster, on Saturday afternoon at
2.30 P. M., at Long's Park.
$i Because the price of milk
raised one cent a quart, many Lan-
Gibbons and
Reading,
and Mrs.
caster restaurants now charge 10
cents a glass instead of five.
Coatesville floated a bond issue
for $30,000 to purchase an aerial
ladder for the fire company and in-
stall a new fire alarm system,
Mr. H H. Zerphey and
painters, have just finished painting
the
Clara Brubaker, on
Main street.
Christ Sherk, Jr., has resigned his |
position as truck driver at the Grey
Iron Castings Company, at this
place, and has accepted a position
at Lancaster with John Young.
Mr. Foster Conner, who has been
employed with Ed. Ream, local
Studebaker dealer, has resigned his |the boro limits to the Mt. Joy ceme-
tery, community sale of everything
position to accept one with the As-
bestos Company, at Manheim. He
reported for work on Monday.
E. church at Co-
was |
sons, |
residence |
West |
BAUM FAMILY HOLDS

|
One hundred and thirty persons
attended the second annual reunion
Baum
clan, which was held on Saturday in
(a grove on the William Saylor farm
‘of the William and John
| two miles north of Manheim.
| Jacob K. Snavely, aged 77 years,
the oldest’
the reunion,
of Elizabethtown, was
person who attended
SECOND ANNUAL REUNION
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
|
and Robert Keath Durborow, aged
six weeks, of Elizabethtown, the
youngest. William Baum, of Au-|
burn, Ill., traveled the longest dis- |
tance, to be present at the gather-
ing. Lucille and Francis Tobias, !
of Collingswood, N. J., were also
present.
An address on “Family Reunion”
was delivered by Rev. Haessler, of
Following a program of
of
Columbia.
readings and music, a number
prizes were awarded for games and
refreshments were served.
R. S. Mason, Elizabethtown, was
elected president of the reunion.
Other officers are: Vice president,
Mrs. S. R. Mason; secretary and
treasurer, Mrs. Annie Saylor.
The next reunion of the
will be held in
Manheim, next year .
family

| First Silver Tckens

| 01d records show that silver (okens
for making change were first used in
this country in Annapolis With the
| consent of the government, IL Chal-
| mers, an Annanelis tnd
smith, in 1783 turned out by hand six-
pence, threepence and shilling coins,
| to combat sharpers who, after depre-
| ciation of paper money. hegan to cut
| five “quarters” out of silver Spanish
| dollars.
|
|
gold
of luck of change the cut-
ting of Spanish dollar into halves and
fourths was condoned. and even nec-
essary, until it was discovered that
| expert cutters were reaping a small
fortune. ‘Vhen expertly cut the fifths
could he discerned from quarters only
by keen eyesicht or by weighing.
Chalmers produced new standard coins
| and took the short pieces in exchange
| nntil the fraud was stopped
| ——-
|
OUR SALE REGISTER
| Wednesday, July 20th—On
| premises on the road leading from
{and anything at 7 P. M. C. S.
| Frank & Bro.
Kauffman Park, at
the
in America’s Co'nace |
SH pad
Odd legends About
Inhabitants of Moon
The weird marks seen on a full
moon, and today known to be moun
tains and valleys on the face of the
Queen of Night, have given rise
many guaint legends, peculiar to dif
ferent countries In certain races the
man in the moon is a being who, on
account of great wisdom, suys a writer
in the Popular Pictorial. was trans
ferred to the moon. from which he was
thle to see everything that occurred
Fo the Chinese he is Yue tuo. who ar
ranges all marriages. Among the old
Red Indian tribes the medicine meg
received their power by departing inte
the middle of a lake and holding con
sultation with the man in the moon.
The German version deals with a
peasant who was reprimanded by an
angel for gathering fagots on a Sun
lay. He replied. “Sunday on earth, or
Monday in heaven. it is all the same
to me.” For this he was sent to a1
sternal moonday in heaven
The earliest English version ap
pears in the writings of a St. Albans
monk. Here it was Moses who found
a man guthering sticks on the Sab
hath, and expelled him te the moon '
In France the man in the moon be
comes Judas Iscariot, and the wood
is a load which he must always carry
a8 a punishment.

Captive Wild Beasts
Have Strong Appeal
Long before Christ the desire of the
public to view wil animals, birds,
eptiles and fish at close range mani
fested itself. Royal preserves and me-
nageries are as old as the civilization
of Assyria and Egypt. In 1100 B. C
it Is recorded that the first emperor
of the Chou dynasty in China estab:
lished a zoological garden. the first of
its kind of which there is definite
knowledge. This garden was called
Intelligence park and appears to have
had scientific and educational objects
Che ancient Romans kept in captiv
ity large numbers of such animals as
leopards, lions, elephants, cam
els, rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses
as well as ostriches and crocodiles
Emperor Frederick I1 had at his Scil
ian court a notable collection from
which he sent to Henry III of England
| three leopards. in compliment to the
three animals of that species that ap.
peared in the monarch’s coat of arms
These animals, with an elephant sent
not long afterward by Louis IX of
France, formed the uucleus of the
famous Tower menagerie. — Detroit
News.
eel Qe
Our classified ads bring results.
 


oh
Cultivate Good Mind
Worry produces indigestion and dys-
pepsia; the gastric juices are not
formed Hate thoroughly, and you
will be a martyr to neuralgia. Be vio
tently jealous, and the upset to the
glands sows the secds of cancer. Be
malicious and cruel, and you'll get
ieuralgia Be a fault-finder, a nag
ger, a scold and asthma comes, It is
impossible to disconnect the mind and
the body
in the mind; it hits the hody some
where. [t has been noted that extreme
disgust will produce catarrh It Is
nal causes of disease, but we ought
to be able to control our minds. Poi:
son in the mind means poison In the
nhody—suffering, and a shortening ot
ife. Have a “good” mind, and you'll
ave good health.—London Tit-Bits.
American Ideas Abroad
Emigrants returning to their native
owns in Europe after having made
heir “fortunes” in the United States,
arry back with them American ideas
ind the American language, which has
supplanted French and German as the
international tongue among-the Euro
pean masses. In hundreds of villages
in southeastern Europe there are two
districts--one the “native,” built of
stone and rubble, with the chickens
roosting In the dining and bedroom;
the other the “American,” with houses
of white plaster and a special barn-
card for the live stock. says a corre-
spondent of the New York Sun.

Doubles—and Quits
were sitting out ‘a dance.
Great palm fronds hid them from
view. The saxophone wailed and
moaned and in the dim light the girl’s
head rested on her partner's shoulder.
Suddenly the girl spoke:
“How much do you love me?” she
asked.
“As much,” murmured the young
man, “as much, darling, as you love
me.”
The girl looked up and drew away
quickly.
“Humph !” she suid.
—— 0G.
They
Prepare for 1928 Shortcake
As soon as strawberries are well
the late summer and fall.
The function of
000 parts, is to

‘for any port in the world.
‘and community, gas sells
(to 20 cents plus 3 cents per gallon
An ill thought doesn’t stay |
not always possible to ward off exter |
picked, start the bed for next sea-
{son if it is worth keeping over.
| Cultivate, hoe, and fertilize be-
cause fruit buds are formed in
a recent calcu-
lation invention, consisting of 15,-
predict high tides
and low tides two years in advance

 
Should Try It Here
The Auto Club, at Troy, N. Y.,
sells gasoline to its members at 15
cents a gallon while dealers charge
19 cents. In Mount Joy, Lancaster
from 15
tax.

eel
Sense of smell is worth $800 ac-
cording to a -case in Paris where a
cook was awarded this amount for
the loss of the sense of smell when
knocked down by a taxi,
Summer
Woo




ler & Son
July 13-4t

Private Sale
CARLOAD OF
Erie and Crawford Co.
COoOMNMS
COMMENCING TUESDAY
JULY 19, 1927
At Our Stock Yards, Mt. Joy

gate SNS.
All Tested, shipped
and will be handled
disinfected yards.
Consist of Fresh Cows, Springers,
and Heifers.
J. B. KELLER & BRO.
in clean car,
in thoroughly




Friday
and
Nights
of Terrific
Selling
Close to
$50,000
Worth of Fine
Eurniture
Rugs, Ete.
Out to The
Public
 
July 15th i


fo be HandedZs















‘Biggest Event of Its Kind in
THE GARFIELD SHEARER Big Furniture Store
Throwing the Entire Stocks
From Top to Bottom
Y FOLLOW
THE
CROWDS
Bigger
Bargains



 








the History of Local Retailing
- From Wall fo Wall
On Sale
+ aM
xa
Ko OX A




9
i
Le
-
‘
s
SALE
ban’t Miss It
All Record Rock Bottom Low Prices Will Be.
Wide Open. Come to Elizabethtown and Sa
Garfield Shearer's
Big Furniture ‘Store
LOOK FOR THE TIME, THE PIACE
STARTS
To The
Public
1 Nothing Held Back. Things Will
Happen Here That Never
Happened Before


J
 

 
 

 
 
 





























 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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