The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 01, 1931, Image 2

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PAGE TWO


THE MOUNT JOY SULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1st, 1931

MT. JOY BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY, PA.
J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr.
Savscription Price $1.50 Per Year
Six Months ..... 75 Cente
Three Months ...40 Cents
Su:gie Copies .3 Cents
Sutaple Copies ..... FREE


Entered at the post office at Mount Joy
ns second-class mail matter.
The date of the expiration of your
scription follows your name on the label
We do not send receipts for subscription
money received. Whenever you remit, see
that yo. are given proper credit. We
eredit all subscriptions at the first of each
month,
All corrsspondents must have their com-
munications reach this office not later than
Monday Telephone news of importance
between that time and 12 o'clock noon
Wednesday Changes for advertisements
must positively reach this office not later
than Monday night. New advertisements
fmserted if copy reaches us Tuesday night.
Advertising rates on application.
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
paper's circulation about double that of the
paper s ordinary weekly.
EDITORIAL
no such a thing as
the doctors tell us,
but they ought to come on out and
explain to us why it is that a man
has such an irresistable urge to go
fishing as soon as the weather
warms up a little bit.
—
There is
spring fever,

Cheating is cheating regardless
of its drama or lack of drama, re-
gardless of its seeming importance
or its seeming unimportance. There
should be honor in the class room
as well as on the athietic field. But
evidently there isn’t.
It takes
long time
some business men a
to wake up to the fact
that they must keep their names
before the buying public to con-
tinue in business, There is no bet-
ter way to do this than thru your
local paper.
a curfew that
home at 9 o’clock. In
most towns it isn’t the boys who
need to be sent home at 9 o’clock,
its the grown-ups. Most of the
devilment done after 9 o’clock is
done by the grown-ups.
Some towns have
sends boys
SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENTS
The slaughter of the innocents still
goes on. They are being crushed
beneath the wheels of the modern
Juggernaut—the god of speed. More
than 7,000 were killed on the roads
last year thru motor vehicles, and
of these victims 1500 were children.
Can't we Americans drive slower
and safer? Most of us go rushing
about going nowhere with nothing
to do when we gef there.
GLORIOUS SPRING
The winter is past; the flowers
appear on the earth; the time of
the singing of the birds is come,
and the sound of the carpet beater
is heard in our land.
Spring is clean up time. Let each
of us do our part this spring to
make this the cleanest town in the
state. It can be done if we take a
pride in. our home and our com-
munity. Let’s clean up and burn all
unsightly rubbish, plant more
flowers, keep our yards better,
cleaner and prettier. We will be
amply repaid by the feeling of hav-
ing had a great part in the beauti-
fication of Mount Joy.
BUY FARM LANDS NOW
One of the safest rules in buying
stocks, bonds or anything else is to
buy when everyone else wants to
sell and” to sell when everyone is
anxious to buy. It is not safe to
wait for the peak or the low spot
in the market.
“The time to have sold farm
land was back in 1920 when prices
were soaring sky high. Speculators
were jacking up the prices and the
boom craze went to the people's
head. Following the same reason
this is the best time to buy farm
land if you intend to farm. The de-
pression has lowered the price of
produce and with - it has brought
down farm land values. This is
bound to be a temporary condition.
When prices start their upward
march the cost of the acres will
bound with them.
Five years from now people are
going to look back and chide them-
selves for not investing in the farm
lands when they were in the price
valleys.
“. BAINBRIDGE
|

18 0. F. Lodge No. 627 held the
electiofgof officers this Monday nite
in their %pdge rooms.

Mr. L. M, Fahs is spending two
weeks at iladelphia as the guest
of his sister, Mrs, L. Brown.
Mrs. Calvin Cone,’ of Breoklyn,
N. Y,, is the gust of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Adams for several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Gallo are re-
ceiving eh apon the
birth of a daughter, } arch 23rd.
Mr. and Mrs. John ‘Goudie are
spending fime at L#&banon as
the guests ft their son, Rev.“ Aubrey
Goudie 27fl family.
> CP Eee
Diem—Wzerner
el R. Diem, of Ephrata, and
ary W. Werner, of Elizabeth-
, were married Saturday even-
at the residence of Rev. I. W.
lyor, pastor of the Church of the
etaren.
rr A
Eight Licenses Revoked
motorists from this vicinity |






ir cards suspended by the
of Motor Vehicles, State
Department, it was an-'
y at Harrisburg. Three
vicinity had their
N18
ed
.
Advertisers
sub-
| being
| Prizes
ELIZABETHTOWN
NEW STREET TO BE OPENED—
HERSHEY DEBATERS WIN—
FRENCH CLUB PRESENTS
PROGRAM
Borough council is considering in-
stalling floodlights about the square
here to correct the present inade-
quate illumination.
The French Club of the Eliza-
bethiown College presented an ‘All
French” program before the siu-
dents and friends of the school on
Wednesday,
Hershey High school debaters
won both ends of a dual contest
Thursday night with Elizabethtown
High school, completing the sched-
ule in the Ursinus Debating league.
Twenty-six persons were admitted
to the membershlp of the Christ Res
formed church by confirmation &nd
transfer by letter, and ten persons
received the baptismal rites during
the Sunday morning services at the
church.
Gabriel H. Moyer, prominent Leba-
non attorney, will be the principal
speaker at the annual election and
reorganization dinner of the Eliza-
bethtown Chamber of Commerce, on
Friday night, April 10, in the Odd
Fellows hall here, according to the
word received by the committee.
Preparations are being complet-
éd for the opening of the newly
accepted street between North
Hanover and North Market streets,
known as Linden avenue, with the
installation of gas and sewage.
This street was donated to the
borough by Jacob and Abram Hof-
fer, of this place, and will porvide
another avenue for traffic going
from the Lancaster and Harrisburg
pike to the Elizabethtown, Hershey
and Mt. Gretna highway.
A district conference of the State
Young Men's Christian Association
will be held here on Monday, April
6, at 6:15 o'clock during a compli-
mentary dinner in Hotel Kennewood,
it was announced Friday by the local
committee on arrangements. The
purpose of this dinner conference is
to discuss work accomplished by stu-
dents. Dr. Robert C. Shaw, of the
State department of Public Instruc-
tion at Harrisburg, will be the
speaker on this occasion.
A protest against the manner in
which monthly bills are rendered
by the Marietta and Elizabethtown
Gas Company, a subsidiary of the
Associated Gas and Electric com-
pany, was forwarded Wednesday
to Governor Pinchot by borough
council. In the complaint it is stat-
ed that bills to local consumers do
not isclude the meter readings but
merely state the number of cubic
feet of gas consumed and the a-
mount due. Meter readings have
been omitted from the bills for
several months, it is said.
LOBATA
moved on


a
Mr. m Frysinger
farm at Wildcat.
Myr. Edward Charles was
sick list this week.
Mri Levvin Shumaker
the Ji BE. Baker farm.
Mr. Cyrus Keefer did some cement
work ok the Epler farm.
Mary ‘and Mabel Gutshall spent
Sunday with Minnie Runkle.
Ben Blogher moved on Tuesday
to the Millér farm at Marietta.
Mr. Christan Demmy is out
ing tobacco for N. R. Hoffman.
Ira Miller apd wife called on Mar-
vin Landis andy family on Sunday af-
ternoon. \
Mr. Cizyton called
father, at Wrightyville, on
afternoon
Messrs. Christian \Forrey and Wil-
bur Landis attended Hess's big sale
on Thursday at Hersh@y.
Alice, the small daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Kame,\\is In the
Columbia hospital with prieumonia.
Miss Emma Baker, of Elizabeth-
town, spent Monday helping her
mother, Mrs. Ben Blocher, to get
ready to move.
MARIETTA
ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION WILL
HOLD MINSTREL SHOW APR.
17—-OTHER NEWS.
on" the
moved on
buy-
on his
Sunday

On Sunday, April 5th, Easter
Sunday, “he Lord’s Supper will be
observed #at the morning service at
11 o’clockl in the Presbyterian
church. 1
Seventy new books have been
received and% catalogued in the
Marietta Comunity Library at
the Community $House. More books
will be catalogued later.
A minstrel show, will be held in
Acri’s Theatre, April 17, under
the auspices of the Marietta Ath-
letic Association. The minstrels are
directed by Ralph C. Shire-
man.
Miss
street,
West Front
aty ?
Minnie Zuch,
entertained
were won by
and Mrs. Earl{Ney. Re-
were served %to Mrs.
Mrs. Fred Zugh, Mrs.
Abram Hawthorne, Miss Mary E.
Evans, Mrs. Earl Ney, Mrs. Henry
Fletcher, Mrs. Elsie H. Evans, Ed-
“Bridge.”
Mrs. Henry
Fletcher
freshments
Wm. Baum,

. as
ward Hegener and Charles Wagner.
A Mn
Deeds to be Recorded
C. Nissley Greider and wife to H.
Edgar Sherts, property in Rapho
township.
Samuel F. Lehman, et. al. to Hetty
Lehman, tract in Rapho township,
(Deed made July 3, 1889).
sme A Qe
Prevent Horse Sickness
Heavy feeding and no exercise on
Sunday or rainy days are bad for
horses. Be sure to reduce the feed
when the work stock is idle.
— —— nin a
leg bones of cattle are used
substitute for ivory,
| series of evening meeting
\ SALUNGA
(Tog late for last week)
Mr. Joseph Hays of Lancaster
spent Saturday afternoon with his
brother John,

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ibach Jr. an-
nounce the birth of a son, whom
they named J. Kenneth.
Salunga Methodists are well
pleased for the return of their
Pastor, Rev. K. H. Boohar.
Mrs, Lillian Shertzer of Lancas-
ter spent a few days last week with
her son Samuél and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Bryson, Mr. and
Mrs. Nelson visited friends in Al-
toona from Friday to Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Berg of
near Philadelphia visited their
daughter Mrs. Waller on Sunday.
Mrs. Amos Bortzfield and grand-
daughter Marion of Mt. Joy visited
Mrs, Alice Kline on Thursday af-
ternoon,
The decorations were carried out
in green and white, This was very
appropriate as they were also their
class colors.
John H. Peifer, Jr. entertained
the class of 1930 of East Hemp-
field Township High School on St.
Patrick’s evening.
The revival services in the
Church of the Brethren are very
well attended and are very interest-
ing. They will continue all week.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Eby enter-
tained on Sunday: Mr. M. S.
Schaeffer and family and Mr.
Morris Schaeffer and: family from
Brunerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Haverstick
and children Esther, Richard and
Donald and Mr. Elias Eby of
Petersburg called on Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel Eby on Friday evening.
The funeral of Mrs. Martha
Strickler was largely attended in
the Salunga Mennonite church.
Bishop Brubaker preached the
text, For me to live isi Christ and
to die is gain.
A large truck
house furnishings bound for Punx-
sutawney, Jefferson Co., became
stranded because of a broken axle
loaded with
at the west end of BSalunga on
Monday evening. They spent the
night by the road side hoping to
get fixed up in the morning.
M:. and Mrs. Fred and
children. Lloyd and Blanche; Mr.
and Mrs. William Miller : of Iron-
ville, Mr. and Mrs. George Wagen-
bach and daughter Miss Mary;
Martha Dyer and Miss Irene Ibach
of Mt. Joy, were Sunday guests at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Ebersole at Mt. Joy.
A class meeting was held follow-
ed by a musical program, after
which a chicken and waffle dinner
was served. Mr. Wallace Gre‘der,
the class advisor, his wife and
daughter Mary Caroline were a-
mong the guests. The other guests
included the class: Blanche Starr,
Anna Mae Charles, Rosa Longen-
ecker, Esther Musser, Mildred
Starr, Virgie Hottenstein, Myrtle
Landis, Kathryn Eby, Mrs. Lester
Hollinger, Cletus Raffensperger,
Joe Brubaker, Walter Landis, Jno.
Bowers, Marvin Eshleman, Earl
Heisey, Lester Hollinger, Jno. H.
Peifer, Jr.
RHEEMS
Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Neiman flitted
from the Mrs. John Enterline house
to 310 West James St., Lancaster
last Tuesday.
Mrs.! Ida Kanode and Anna
Mummau from Quarryville spent
last Mohday noon as guests of Mrs.
Susan Wolgemuth.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Brubaker
and children from Baltimore spent
the week end at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Ober.
Mrs. John Wagner who has suc-
cessfully ‘continued the operation
of a Garment factory at Lebanon
spent the week end at her home.
Rheems Aid Society held their
monthly meeting at their sewing
room in the: Church of the Breth-
ren last Wednesday with a good
attendance mniaking garments and
bed covers forimission purposes.
Church of the Brethren will hold


their mid-week prayer meeting at
the home of Me. and Mrs. Nathan
Eshleman, The following week at
the home of M# and Mrs. Joseph
Hostetter on Wednesday evening
April 8.
Charles Ricedorf, and the Farm
Superintendent of the Mason Home
site near Elizabetht§wn each pur-
chased a new twp row potato
planter from Mumnfau Bros., with
fertilizer attachment ito plant their
large acreage of pothtoes for the
1931 crop. i
Church of the Brethren held the
regular morning serviges at their
Rheems church last Shnday with
the Revs. Kaylor, Shearer, Nathan
and Hiram Eshleman f%and Henry
King from Reistville fupon the
bench. Rev. King held a two weeks
at this
place, the first two weekskin March
at which time 11 persohs came
forward to accept church fellow-
ship. Rev. King delivered a Baptis-
mal sermon after the sermdn Elder
Kaylor ordained the 11 applicants
into church fellowship. At two o’-
clock in the afternoon Elder Kay-
lor and Shearer
plicants in the
meadow of
théy have
Baptizing.
et Pe
FLITTINGS
The Howell people have moved to
Florin, Pa.
Mr. Fred Dietrich has
Salunga, Pa.
Mr. Charles Eshleman has moved
to the Martin property, 34 W. Done-
gal Street.
Mr. Charles Creider has moved to
the corner of South Market and W.
Donegal street.
Martin, the fruit man, has mov
to the corner of Weeping alley,
immersed t
small creek ih the
Samuel Ober where
a dam constructed for
ap-
moved to


W. Donegal street.

\

Paid April 1st
3 Regular Quarterly
Dividend to Preferred |
Stockholders
of oh
Pennsylvania
Power & Light Company

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rd
|
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|
-
. Pennsylvania Power & Light Company has paid
. |
dividends on its Preferred Stock every three
months, without a break, ever since the first
. |
shares were issued OVER TEN YEARS AGO. |
Lut out and mail order stock or for complete information
PENNSYLVANIA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
Preferrsd Stock Dept., Allentown, Pennsylvania 5
| (Mark X in [] meeting your requirements) | )
Please ha’ = i further ormation.
| Spm oii Hop, |
; Brock Lie o $97.00 and dividend per share. |
en 0 me own, exact a
Buy your shares | [J I wish to subscribe DE your $5 Preferred | We maintain &
Stock or. Easy Payment Plan of $10 per share down and Resale Dept. to
. from any em- | $10 per share per month until $97.00 and accrued dividend | oad \
love of the \ per share has been paid. assist and - \
P y : [J Please shin... shares your $5 Preferred Stock at $97.00 vise our stock- \
Company—they 1 and accrued dividend per share with draft attached through | boldets whe
: sre our sales- ' Name of Your Bank | maywish to sell !
wen: oS I
| ame 1
{ Street }
City > D-6-B
ASKS SPORTSMEN | Kidney Acids
(0 DEFEAT BILL B k Si F
g Nights, Backache, by AR
dag Balle Ee Nerve
(Fr 1) ousness, or due to function-
om page al Bladder Irri on, in acid condi-
foxes, the sportsmens greatest | tions, makes you feel tired, depressed the GREATE ST
7 i 1 hich and discouraged, try. the Cystex Test.
vermin enemy which ravages more | EF 0 ulating thru A
rabbits, pheasants and quail, by| the AY 15 minut Praised by ACHI EVEMENT
day and by night than any other Jlicusands for rapid snd we bye a %
vermin specie of its size. This bill| nounced Siss-tex) today, under the 5 n
is a camaflouge one against this ACR. pray yest
game in the young stock of nests ful sleep and energy, or money >
200 Squats, 3 mms 50 wD. Chandler, W. Main St, Mt. doy CHICK, STARTER
killlng of foxes on sight at any ANY
time. It also would threaten to| “ N DEVELOPMENT
displace our best game hunting by 1 Ny ! 0 N E i
minority sports of fox hunting
throughout Chester and Delaware " ’]
counties where fox protection is N Soci de;
tolerated. The Norton Bill embrac- | Betore ‘placing your orde:
es Montgomery, Berks and Lancas- eléewhere, see us.
ter counties as a rider to Chester | Crushed Stone. Also manufac
and Delaware county’s law and |turers of Concrete Blocks,
should be killed without reserva- | Sills and PREVENT those
tions as it does not interfere with N
present bounty premuim on foxes “oy TERRIBLE
killed at any time. J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
Senate Bill No. 264, House Bill i
No. 460, House Bill No. 795, as MOUNT JOY. PA: HEAD COLDS Ask Us
one bill would handicap hunters %
carrying either shot guns, rifles, or . Wolgemuth Bros.
pistols from bagging game at an| WE AVE , "you can do 1t § Phone Mt. Joy
opportune time by conveyance of ine FLORIN, BA,
automobiles and commercialize for Zonite disinfects ?
license and permit purposes, the $he 1iges, mouth
sportsmens delight of being ready activegermicide. :
to shoot small or large game as it M E | S Use regularl pe marll-tt
appears, in seasons and territory 0d yo Nous
of hunting. This bill aims to force ag
sportsmen to purchase licenses or ph ;
permits from the Game Commis- ’ PROBAK
sion for carrying fully equipped Krall S Meat Market 30¢, 60¢ ; 2
firearms in conveyance over the | West Main St M and $1.00
fields, or else carry same empty 4 a'n oy SUNT Soy | be allel ; e211
detached of in. The but
should be entirely voted down as we oo
too drastic within personal proper-
ty and rights of nimrods who are LADIES AND GENTS
so distinguished by their regular | >
license "plates and certificate num- | Why \Not Look Your Best J #
bors a Fora Small Sum? aon joyrment
House Bill No. 1105, To Repeal
Sec. 1103 and Amend Sections, Sanitary Cidérs forSmokers
1101, 1102, 1103 and 1106, Of The :
Game Code, would impose ex- ‘and Dyers of Pipe and. i
travagant fines on ignorant and in- Ci arett S
nocent, or wilfull fish-game law e
violators alike, subject the hunter, HARRY F. BROQKS g
game protector and State to a- FLORIN, PA. en
voidable expense saved under pres-
ent law of speed up system to |™ “
apprehend and penalize known
guilty violators at once when
caught upon the fields or streams.
This bill would also place less of
such fines in the sportsmens trea- F EE L
sury and more of them in the 9 -
politicians treasury in districts HENRY 6. CARPENTEE Your a i r |
where convictions are made, also | | % IN
create unnecessary charges for Al- NSURANCE “MOUNT JOY PA. How long is it? J
Jervien, constghies and other depu- &uery Rand of Insurance exce, ife anywhere in Pennsylvania. Sy How man days EC)
Z officers, whose services are > i i a1)
not required under present econ- Spou 3 Roofing and Since It
omic game laws. This bill would ing 10 IS RIGHT.
rip the Game Protectors from — eve 10 days
penalizing powers upon the fields Ea Hot Air ‘Healin y y> io
and should die in the Committee. Ham! Sangamo g Go Now, to
House Bill No. 1052, would take 0, a ba i, y
bounty off the most destructive i _locks ’ p i h J B b Sh P
feathered vermin Goshawk, upon $ 3 t BROWN’S TIN oP ers 8 S dr or 0
on turkeys, rabbits and squir- 1U Oo 5 Phone 109R2 . Agent for Manhattan Laundry a
the forests and should be! NON WW GOR i
as a safe guard to in- ® 33 West Main St.,, MT. JOY, PA.
his game stock. JEWELER Advertise in