The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 15, 1931, Image 3

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APRIL 15th, 1931
















 




 


needs. will bé, funds.




- .
or building your home, your first
If you have
none ready, YY the money by sav-
ing. How long it will take to ac-
quire a desirable piece of property
will depend on yout
rate of saving.
The first step is to provide yourself
with a way to save Cenveniently
and safely. The solution ‘is simple
OPEN and UPBUILD
a Bank Account
with us.
First National Bank & Trust Cod
OF MOUNT JOY
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




NEWCOMER’S

1929 FORD "WUDOR SEDAN
1930 FORD TOWN SEDAN
1930 FORD TUD
1929 FORD FORDOR'§EDAN
1929 FORD STD. COURE
31929 FORD ROADSTERS,
SEDAN
RUMBLE
1928 FORD COUPE RUMBLE'SEAT
1928 FORD TUDOR SEDAN
1929 CHEV.
CLARENCE S. NEWCOMER
JOY,
MOUNT

PA.
‘OR USED CARS
:
SIX TRUCK, Cab andiStake Body
1928 FORD TRUCK, Cab and Wide Express Body







need t new shades


70 ME in an
% 5 Shade Cloths
. ont on
Bh



Colors

SHADE
Sunproof, Waterproof
~ A j 8 4 ’
SHADE PRODU
Established. 1800
SPECIAL
Hartshorn’s Chouaguen Satin Finish Sh:
hp
and Cleanable \
Regular Size, each 95¢
D. ROY MOGSE
FLORIN, PENNA.
WHEN
Prices Reasonable
Phone 5R5
READ THE
IN NEED OF
COAL— COKE
CHICK FEEDS


HARRY LEEDOM
MOUNT JOY, PA.


et us show you Hartshorn
in a variety of pleasing
shorn Shade Rollers
ig since 1860.
ls
h,
MOUNT JOY BULLETIN




rompt Service
Patronage Greatly Apprecia



who was
& bed without his
nite. The
[OWL-LAFFS||
Tg

0. W. L
a (On With Laughtes 9 3
SL




see anything fun-
wearing a straw
a bucket of coal.
Did you eve~
nier than a man
hat and carry ng
Of course springtime nearly al-
ways comes ahead of Spring.
Two employes of a local industry
were discussing working, conditions.
One said he favored a five day
week while the other wanted a 5-
day week-end.


A little girl at Florin asked her
mother when the stork brought her
to mother and the reply was on the
15th" of May.
The little girl
funny, that was
said: “Ain’t that
on my birthday.
advert'sed in a
and got 113
“You can
in town
magazine for a wife
repiies. They all read:
have mine.”
A man

The other day the trolley stop-
ped at a certain street crossing up
town and when they were ready to
¢o the conductor yelled toward the
rear end, ‘All right back there?”
A certain colored lady said:
“Lawd sakes no. Wa't till I gits my
clothes on.”
Just about
in the car
the time everybody
craned ther necks ex-
pectantly, the colored lady got on
the rear platform with a basket
full of laundry.
A certain fellow in town was
ut play ng golf Sunday. When he
got home his wife said he was try-
ing to get the canary and the
cuckoo clock to sng a duet.
another
that he
Then golf nut
went to
supper Sunday
certainly has some
effects on
there was
so tred
game
peguliar
mosc
of the
some people.
office
the cars the other
the electric cur-
several hours and
heat, electric
came into
to beat
morning. He said
rent was off for
he had no hot
A fellew my
swearing
water,
l.ghts, ice or radio in all that time.
Aln’t it awful?
obin” Fenstemacher says you
can never tell how much a fellow
has traveled by the various labels
on his suit case.
Just before he went to work the
other morning a Marietta street
man’s wife said: “Is it true that
money talks,” and he replied,
“Yes.”
She said: “Well I wish you’d let
a little here for me today. I do get
so lonely.”


|
|
|
|
The other
street and
a fellow came up
id he was going to


Marie's Specialty Shoppe and buy
a cover for his typewriter.
I said: “Why she sells ladies’
wearing apparel.”
He said: “Well.”
Met a little chap coming up
street crying the other day. I in-
{ .
| quired what
| declares

guy
| Ve
! Engle’s hotel
it was all about and he
said: “He, with a lot of boys, were
playing North Pole and that be-
cause he the
made him drink a
cod liver oil.
was
pint bottle of
a chap living here who
that Adam was created
to give him a chance to
What that
x7 31
Ve have
first just
y something.
must
a wife
have.
i
LWO
fellows in a
One said:
local colored
ry heated argument.
“N does you know whut I
done wis I done wish dat Henry
yonder had a thousan’
and that yew wuz laid


iggah,


9
rooms in it,
out daid in e'vy room!”
|
|
|
|
y ened a mending shop and he'd
| day morning,
Elizabethtown
a good way to
regularly. He
the college op-
take
A fellow up at
tells me he now has
| get his sox darned
told her the girls at
them there. It worked.
Just Duck the Squirrels
Don’t worry if your job is small,
And your rewards are few;
Remember that the mighty oak
Was once a nut like you.
One of our local school pupils
was asked: “When water becomes
ice, what is the greatest change
that takes place?”
“The price,
”
came the reply.

Charles Eshleman,
the _Fire Co. and one of the most
active firemen we have, came run-
ning down the street early yester-
coat on his arm. He
the Market street bridge
secretary of
ran across
to the fire house and went along
back with the apparatus, only to
find that he ran
Ain’t that sumpin?
A WISE OWL
BM
over the fire.
Patronize Bulletin Advertisers
Eskimo they |
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO, PA.
HEALTH TALK

VRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE
B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF
HEALTH

“Less than two years ago, the
average American citizen was not
particularly interested in the price
of an article. His main ambition at
that time was to make as much
money as he could, as easily as pos-
sible. And with the gold spreading
‘bull market’ he made out very well
indeed—until the bull turned,” said
Doctor Theodore B. Appel, Secretary
of Health, today.
“Then when the squeeze came the
true value of the real dollar mani-
fested itself with a very painful
punch. So today, quite unlike his
counterpart of twenty-four months
ago, the American is looking with
strained eyes for his money's worth
So hard has he been engaged in this
optical pursuit, that the dollars he
was still fortunate enough to possess
at the time of the break took on too
much glue, and thus sticking illog-
ically in his pockets helped to cause
the great depression which now ap-
pears to be definitely receding.
“It therefore seems probable that
in the very near future, with both
attitudes toward money passing
away safely in Tistory, the normal
conception of a dollar's worth no
more no less for a dollar, will again
develop.
“This fundamental economic prin:
ciple can and should be applied to
the question of summer vacations.
No matter how much or how little
currency one is planning to spend
upon his annual sojourn, the real
concern should be that one gets his
money’s worth out of it.
“And this is quite impossible to do
if the individual is prodigal of his
vitality up to vacation time. The
average two weeks at the shore or
mountain can do much for one, pro-
vided he behaves sensibly on the vi-
sit. but it decidedly is not enough
time to permit nature's reconstruc-
tive processes to make a thorough
job of it.
“Therefore, in order to cash in on
the vacation it becomes necessary to
oive some thought and consistent ef-
fort to the subject weeks and even
months before the excursion. One
should start building up his constitu-
daily taking long walks
spring air, by giving
his body the nightly rest it needs, by
eliminating devitalizing habits and
excesses of all kinds; and in short,
getting as much out of nature as is
possible for him to obtain.
“Thus charged with vigor,
through the simple
strictly according to the
laws, the vacation will
finishing touches to a
under the
tion now by
in the balmy
vim and
vitality process
of living
fundamental
put on the
degree impossible
starting on the
wreck.
popular
method of pleasure
trip more or less ‘a
“The above
thing to commend it. It
economically and humanly
Why not try it? Get
worth on this year's vacation by in-
vesting in health now. And thus
perhaps discover for the first time in
really to
sugeestion has every-
is basically,
sound.
your dollar's
many years what it means
live.”
health officials can and do
much. But unfortunately
to be a
“Public
accomplish
there seems more or less
general attitude that health prob
lems are exclusively governmental in
their interest. ‘As a matter of fact,
the individual is and always will be
the key factor in the nation’s health
official activities in many instances
being quite secondary,” said Doctor
B. Appel, Secretary of Health, today
“To prove this statement one has
but to mention diabetes, heart affec-
tions and cancer-—all of them de-
manding individualistic interest in
bodily health if the consistent rise
in their death rates are to be curbed
“By the
ditions in
householder are
than
same token. sanitary con-
and about the
a matter for per-
public
premises of
sonal rather concern.
But this fact
importance of
in no wise lessens the
the matter.
“Public nuisances can be effective
ly controlled by law Garbage dis
posal, sewage, piggeries and stream
purvew of
things
pollution come within the
However
supervised, the
officials with these
work of the
that of the
properly
health boards ends and
individual begins.
“Housing expert;
working in us

and small cities have indicated that
the winter's collection of fly reed
ing material to be found in the back
vards and cellars is by no means lim-
ited to the crowded sections.
They
prosperous people who are
concerning their front yards, are
where the backs of their
concerned. Then too, be-
lack of regular
rural dis
residents of small
indifferent to
winter's
more
state that a large number of
particular
careless
domain are
cause of the
and trash collections in
tricts, many
towns are prone to be
the proper disposal of the
garbage
offal.
“It would seem that appearances
alone would prompt many of the
thousands now derelict in these mat-
ters to clean up, but apparently not
being sufficiently
permit matters to slide and thus ex-
tend an open and exceedingly wel-
invitation to the
of infant life and po-
typhoid fever.
harmless ap
to man. It
impressed they
come common fly,
that destroyer
tential spreader of
“The fly despite its
pearance is a réal enemy
breeds in filth, exists in filth, lives in
ilfh and then spreads its filth over
foodstuffs and in milk. The best de
fense against it is cleanliness. With
the fly-breeding spots eliminated, the
fly itself can not come into being.
«Therefore, swat the fly before it
exists, by removing the possible

Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin

MANS SHOT AND
DIED AT HOSPITAL
(From page 1)
known as the “Silver
situated in a secluded
distance off the Mariet-
ta pike, near Chickies, George See:
man, proprietor.
Dr. Gray had been called there
about an hour hefcre and found Bol-
lock on the floor, with blood stream-
ing from the abdominal wound. Still
conscious he told what had happened
He said he with Seeman. Frank [§

to a place
Slipper” Inn,
spot, a short
E. B. ROHR
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.


Rutter and George Keagle, were to-
gether in a room when Tracey walk-



A ——





ed in, whipped out a revolver and od
ordered them to “put up your hands”
and backed them against a wall. FREE INSURANCE CERTIFICATE
Then, 2 WwW p sai ‘ur-
: rem the wounded man said, Cur COVERINGWDAMAGE TO ROOF FROM
is, whom he described as being
crazed by drink, began firing promis- i i ey
oor Hail, Windstorni; Cyclone, Tornado
Bollock said he “took a chance,” ISSUED WITH EVERY ROOF APPLY
ralked yards > wi
walked tow rds the door with the INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU 03 A ROOF.
intention of fleeing, but as he moved
towards the door Tracey without
warning whirled around and fired at The COLDREN ROOFING COMPANY
him, He was ya few ot away
hi, Me was Tow 80h away 401 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER,
Fhe ball entered the lower left side
of the abdomen. fe) Tage
The other three men, who will be meses wuss can samme a
held as material witnesses, corro-
horated the story, the police said. ™
Realizing the gravity of Bollock’s
wound, Dr, Gray rushed him to the
hospital here and then called the of-
ficers.
When they arrived at the Inn,
which once was a grain mill and
which since the advent of prohibi-
tion has been the scene of numerous
rows and once yielded a giant whisk-
ey still, they were told that Tracey
was hiding.
An extensive search led them to a
dark dungeon-like cellar where, with
the aid of flashlights, they found
Tracey crouched in a corner. Des-
cribed as a desperado and one who
on previous ocasions ccaused police
trouble, the officers found Tracey
strongly resisting arrest. He fought
desperately, they said, and once
whipped out the gun, which was emp
ty. After being overpowered and
cuffed he was taken to an auto.
Again he resisted. In the scuffle
Officer Smith was bitten
once on a and Officer Joseph
hard blow with his
ribs. He later underwent an X-ray
to determine whether any ribs had
heen broken. “ny
Office.
George
finger
Smith stopped a
Tracey was charged by
Smith before Justice Bruner B. Stev
enson with felonious assault with
intent to kill and was later taken
0. ijail. The
of the gun.
officer took possession |
Bollock, a
World War
received his
veteran who
bonus
three
near the
recently money,
children
L.avino Fur
at Chickies. He is the son of
Bollock, a
and has
They reside
is married
nace
Jacob Rapho township
farmer.
The murder
World War
honorable
colerful
according to an
which stated he
served
1917 to April 19,
ipated in the most
conflicts of
battles of
teau Thierry. Soisson
victim had a
record
discharge
1915,
December 24,
1919, and
important
enlisted in overseas |
from
partic
that war in
Verdun, Cha
Paut a Maus
cluding: the
on, St. Mihiel, Blancmont and
Meuse Argonne
Besides his widow, Mrs. Emma
Frances Bullock, formerly Emma Ed
dy, the veteran is survived by three
mall children Martha Elizabeth, 9;
John Free, 7, and Minnie Viola, 2, all
at home,
One sister, Minnie, wife of John
Rooter, Marietta, and one brother,
John Free Bullock, of Valentine
with his father,
Marietta R. D., al-
Montana, together
Bullock, of
SO survive,
With the sudden
on Sunday in
Jacob
Bollock
hospital, a
was formally lodg
Tracey in the Lan
death of
Columbia
of murder
gainst Curtis
county jail,
really die?” Tracey
the officers in a


ed a
caster
asked
bewildered tone
‘Did he


| WE



when Constables George and Joseph
Smith served a warrant issued to
them by Justice B. B. Stevenson.
1 “Was it really that bad?’ he contin
after they brcke the news to |
him in his cell The wor truct
him like a blow, ithe poli said
They left him in a remorseful mood. |
GE mee |
GAME COMMISSION
ADDS 5517
ACRE
w
The Board of Game Commission-
completed the purchase
from the Central Pennsylvania Lum
her Company of acres of land
in Pleasant Valley and Clara town
ship, Potter county, and extending in
ers recently
HEA
to Annin township, McKean county.
In making the announcement, W.
Gard Conklin, chief of the bureau
of refuges and lands. stated that the
tract is in the heart of ideal deer,
hear and other game territory and is
a valuable addition to the Game
Commission’s holdings. The tract
has been designated State Game
Lands No. 59. For the present the
entire tract will remain open to law-
ful public hunting.
The Game Commission's
now aggregate 240,705 acres
in thirty counties of the
rr | Aree
Plant Seeds Right Depth
As a general rule, small seeds
like lettuce, carrot, radish,
and spinach are planted one-half to
three-quarters of an inch deep.
beans and corn
to three inches
holdings
distrib
uted State.
onion,
seeds like
one
Large
ave planted
deep.
Good taste


fly-breeding conditiins.
1 suggests that this be done. And
|
West Main St,
«30 W. Main St.

health absolutely demands it.
and stay clean.”
good
Clean up,


J
PES DI 2 Rr Fo olde ado ols odo eo lo ode els
on.
$ “PLUMBING and HEATING 4
4
Also All'Kigds Repair Work >
PROMPT SERVICE PRICES REASONABLF 3
JOSEPH L. HEISEY
*
0. NZ
OO %%%
-,

WV

4 Phone—179RS FLORIN, PENNA yA
og *
oe dn dodo edited TRIE PRON
eS dt, 3
“SIMON P. NISSLEY
SED
us
Funeral Director
aor 5
Jo






18 Poplar Street MOUNT JOY, PA.
Bell Telephone 210






NEW ROUTE
—OF—
RAW TUBERCULIN TESTED MILK
DELIVERED DAILY Ww MOUNT JOY AND FLORIN
—
ME ADOW VIEW-D AIRY

C. M. HERR & SON, Proprietors:
3 (Phone Marietta 44R21 ROUTE NO. 1, MT. JOY
apr.8-3mo.
2200SO0000000000000000000 i



SAVE-$ ON COAL
I from the mines direct to
handling s times.
person Ypuying
on coalNgow.
arranged whereby
I am going to
Three ons or
Weight Guaran-
Saving
e, thereby
n to you. Any

1siderable money

5 to all kinds of coal.
F. H. BAKER
MT. JOY


SAVE
SYSTEMATICALLY
KNVEST WISELY
HAVE
QUALITY
MEATS
|
|
|

ia sed in Building & Loan
| : savings and accumula-
| Krall’s Meat Marke! | tions of§those thrifty people who en-
Alc “i | thé money to our care, and
|
trust
JOY |]
MOUNTS
lend it t@ other equally thrifty people
| w ho needighelp to get Homes or who

5 = > ish loans} on other productive real
HOW%ARE YOUR SHOES? | ate. :
DON'T WAIT TOO LONG SAVE ANDLINVEST MONEY SE-
BRING “EHEM IN CURELY $AND PROFITABLY
CITY SHOE
REPAIRING CO.


Most Mén are Judged by Their
APPEARANCE
Up to the Minute Styles,
By Expert Barber
Ww. IF. CONRAD
MT. JOY, PA

BUILDING & YO0AN
ASSOCIATION
[ce Cream, Groceries and
’ Under Supervision of the sh


Confections Banking Department a
a -. D¢ You can get all the news of this
BR ANDT BROS locality for less than three cents a
Mount Se¥, Ps |week thru the Bulletin.
erent) QI eee
By subscribing ror tne Mount Joy
Bulletin you can get all the local
news for less than three cépts a
week. XR
Mount Joy Street

NEW LOCATION
23 East Main St.
(Formerly Barber Shop)
i
WALTER SNYDER
-3mo
hw,
bog

a
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