The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 24, 1931, Image 2

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PAGE TWO THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24th,
MT. JOY BULLETIN . .
JOY BULLETIN JRONVILLE | FALMOUTH LOBATA ow is the time for
J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr.
Sia .ption Price $1.50 Per Year
x Months ..... 75 Cente
iurce Months ...4V Cents



Single Copies .. 4 Cents
sample Copies ..... FREL
Ente:ed at the pc Mount joy
nd SC w-class mail
The date oi the exj your sub-
tion 10liOwSs your the label
we do 1 il eipts $ ription
€ you I . yee
credit We
s at the first ol ¢ach



must have their com
s office not later thao
news ot importance
[ 12 o'clock moon
for advertisements

es us Tuesday night.
application
lists of the Landisville
ws and the Mount Joy
New nerged with that of
Toy Bulletin, which makes this
paper’s circulation about double that ef the
paper s ordinary weekly.


 

EDITORIAL
Picnickers cannot expect to be given
permission to camp on private proper-
ty if they leave litter behind and, al-
ready, complaints have been received
of the debris left behind by people out
to have a good time, but careless of
——


their successors.
EACH PAY HIS OWN DEBTS
Some great writes that
our safety lies in “wiping out the war
debt.” We believe our safety lies in
having the other fellow wipe them
out—the fellows who owe them. In
all our life we have never found any-
one who would pay our debts. |
economist

KEEP ON ADVERTISING
Bruce Barton has a way of turning
to refreshingly picturesque language
the most basic facts of life. In these
20 short words, for instance, he utters
what every successful advertiser
knows to be an absolute fact: “You
can't advertise today and quit tomor-
row. You're not talking to a mass
meeting. You're talking to a parade.”
PRODUCTIVE BACK YARDS
Too often back yards and vacant lots
are allowed to not only become un-
productive but unsightly thru neglect,
when by all the tokens of economy
and thrif they should be made
either productive or sightly, and may
be both, for a well-kept garden is not
detrimental to the general appearance
of any property.
Present conditions demand that all
such plots be utilized to the fullest
extent, and thus aid many people in
the pursuit of a livelihood, who are
finding difficulty to meet such obliga-
tions.


+
Ii,
NEW TRAFFIC PROBLEMS
Motor buses properly and consider-
ately operated are an important public
convenience, and there is justification
for allowing to use the public high-
ways under necessary supervision.
When allowed such franchises, how-
ever, they should be bound by the
conditions of the road and the rules
that apply to other vehicles, and the
growing practice of endangering other
motorists and their own passengers in
the order to “make time” should be
stamped out.
Bus operators, faced with the neces-
sity of maintaining fast time sched-
ules, often have an incentive to abuse
the privileges of the road and endan-
ger life and property. Nothing will
be gained by penalizing them for reck-
lessness if their employers penalize
them for failure to maintain their
schedules.
In a number of states the highway
administrations, police and public
service commissions have warned bus
companies that their machines must
stay within the law or lose their li-
censes. The next thing to do is to
make these warnings really mean
something.
Arbitrary and unreasonable regula-
tions, howeves, will do more harm
than good. To reduce the bus speed to
a point less than the maximum which
buses can travel with comparative
safety is to encourage violation of the
rules. And to expect bus operators to
be infallible is asking the impossible.
TODAY'S SITUATION
Sixteen years have passed since the
war began. Sixteen years of financial
license. Sixteen years of freedom from
obstacles. Sixteen years of loose econ-
omy. Sixteen years of easy success.
What can a man of 35 today know of
the real art of making a living? And
how is he going to learn?
In the parlance of the times, we
have all been up in the air. We in
the United States have been living in
a sort of premature millennium.
Seems almost as though the Creator
has been trying us out.
At least three causes are evident, as
responsible for the tidal wave of high
prosperity on which we people of the
U. S. A. have been riding.
THE WAR—which made America
the custodian of the World's wealth.
THE AUTOMOBILE—which stimu-
lated the turnover of money and
spread it to the laps of the masses,
and quickly placed that industry be-
side steel as a leading financial in-
fluence.
PROHIBITION—which removed the
menace of poverty from the working
man’s brood and diverted his income
into the avenues of industry.
The War is over now, and its stimu-
lation spent, though its scars remain.
The automobile has reached its
“point of saturation,” about the ab-
sence of which we formerly were re-
galed by prosperity boosters.
The liquor question has again be-
come a matter of individual self-con-
trol.
So we are back, theoretically, to the
economic status in which 1914 found
us. Even a young man of 20 may re-
member the conditions which met the
aspiring individual then. Anyone
younger than that will hardly remem-
ber.
What are we going to do about it?
A. M. at Irpnville.
reviewed by John A. Fox.
his office not later |
New advertisements
| ceptacle, cauBing the wood
catch fire.
ter.
representing the
Sunday School§A
after striking the
rooms to be fille
son Arthur, who
the time,
jumped out thru

: Yau!
At the Some of Melvin Deishler, it
damaged the chimney and tore several
holes into slate roof. |
Sunday School on the circuit at 9:30
The lesson will be
Rev. J. 5 Smoker, will preach at
Ironville, on Sunday at 10:30 A. M. and
at Silver Spring at 7:30 P. M.
The Womaéh's Bible Class of the Iron-
ville United §Brethren Sunday School,
held their ass picnic at Lititz, on
Saturday aft@rnoon
Eva Jane Pe fractured her
right arm playing on the lawn
with a numifer of other children. It
was reset by Pr. A. G. Hess.
Mr. and Ms. Harry Albright enter-
tained at dinger, Mr. and Mrs. William


Miller, Mr. gnd Mrs. Henry Musser
and children§ Norman, Martin, Emma
and Ray 3
During thef electric storm on Tues-
day afternoog, the lightning struck in-
! to three houges, at the home of David
damaged an electric re-
work to
His daughter, Alice being
present at the time, quickly extin-
uished the fire with a bucket of wa-
2
Kauffman. if

WF
Alvin Bigley of Willow Street, Pa,
Lancaster County
ssociation, was pres-
lle United Brethren


ent at the Iron
Sunday Scho wd presented Eliza-
beth Fornoff and
medals that they§won when participat-
Ruth Kauffman with
ing in the field eet on Williamson's
field Saturday aftgrnoon, June 6th.
At the home off Raymond McCune
ouse, it caused the
with smoke. His
as in the houseat
he house on fire,
e window, badly
a window pane.
damage done to
large trees were



















fearing
cutting his arm b
There was no othe
the house. Several
damaged in the vill
lightning
The Silver Sprin
United Brethren chur
a cottage at Mount Gn
circuit of the
wes have rented
ian Endeavor Conve Rev. and
Mrs. J. L. Smoker, willjrepresent the
circuit Mrs Luther § Ulrich and
daughter Mirian, Mrs. Ggorge Fornoff
and Nellie Campbell, willjrepresent the
Ironville United Sunday
School. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kauff-
man, Ruth and Glen, the Sgnior Christ-
ian Endeavor and Ida Kduzman and
Janet Fornoff, the Junio} Christian
Endeavor, of the Ironville fhurch.
A daily vacation Bible will
be conducted in the Silvgr Spring
school house, starting on} Monday,

June 29th. The teachers wlll be Mr. |
and Mrs. J. L. Smoker, Miss Nellie
i Campbell and Miss Alma Deltzler. The
! school is open for all childr
| less of any denomination,
regard-
possible arrangements will bd made to
get children to the school by use of
automobiles.
wm: stata GR ten
SIXTEENERS HELD
THEIR 44th ANNUAL
REUNION SATURDAY

(From page 1)
A. H Kern, Altoona.
J. A. Kern, Altoona, Pa.
Mrs. Margaret Blair, York, Pa.
Jackson Stokes, Lancaster, Pa.
William Jones, Harrisburg, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. John Booth, Harris-
burg, Pa.
John Beale, Harrisburg, Pa.
C. E. Kener and wife, Philadelphia,
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Dr. A. Hull, Upper
Darby, Pa.
Sadie Wyant, Sunbury, Pa.
E. M. Snyder, Plainsfield, N. J.
Mrs. E. N. Snyder, Plainsfield, N. J.
Geo. Hambright, Millersville, Pa.
Mrs. Gertie Luft, Royalton, Pa.
Mrs. Alice Senft, Lancaster, Pa.
Mrs. Lizzie Bair, Lancaster, Pa.
H. H. Lindemuth, York, Pa.
Mrs. H. H. Lindemuth, York, Pa.
Mrs. Lizzie Runkle, Lancaster, Pa.
Mrs. B. F. Greenawalt, Mt. Joy.
J. W. Armstrong, W. Fairview, Pa.
Mrs. Sallie Sheaty, Harrisburg, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. William Myers, Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Weaver, York,
Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Gerhart, Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Miss Lou Appleton, Philadelphia, Pa.
W. H. Eichelberger, Royalton, Pa.
Mrs. Emma Zimmerman, Middle-
town, Pa.
Mrs. Warren Strouck, Gettysburg,
Pa.
Mr. Geo. Aberill, Pittsburg, Pa.
Mrs. Geo. Aberill, Pittsburg, Pa.
Calder Brunner, Harrisburg, Pa.
Mrs. Harriet Walton, Lancaster, Pa.
Harry Shire, Lancaster, Pa.
re Gere
AYRSHIRES AT THE HOMES
WONDERFUL PRODUCERS

The fifty nine Ayrshires owned by
the Masonic
bethtown,
produced an average of
31.35 pounds of butterfat, computed for
shire Herd Test plan. Every cow in
gardless of age or stage of lactation,
age, according to Advance
Superintendent, W. A. Kyle, of the
Nationa! Ayrshire Breeders’ Associa-
tion, at Brandon, Vermont.
Individual honors were awarded to:
Kathryn Keller, which produced 1912
terfat; Sir Roberts Maddalena, which
butterfat;
pounds of Dorothy Mills,
of milk, 57.07 pounds of butterfat.
—-———
When Thomas Jefferson brought the
tomato to America from France he

thought it
hogs.
at 7:30.
! ments are Mrs. H. M. Fink and B. R.
|man;
{den,”’ exercise;
{the Mountains,
ge being hit by |
tna, during the |
week of the Sunday School and Christ-!
and Mrs. Howar
ere ever |
| Ghering.
The annual Children's Day exer-
cises of the Falmouth United Breth-
ren Sunday School will be held at
the worship hour on Sunday evening
The committee of arrange-
Fink.
A special feature will be a drill of
mixed ages, comprised of members
of the school.
The program is “Flowers for the
King,” opening song, school; “Chil-
dren’s Day Welcome,” Ann Dupler;
“Forget Me Nots” Paul Reider;
“When Children Were Blessed,” Hel-
en Fink: “A Bright Idea,” Charles
Steininger; “Especially Children’s
Day Song,” John Reider; “Life's
Weavers,” Elenora Fink; “The Pri.
soners Who Sing in the Night,” Paul
Ebersole; “Sign of Our Father's
Miriam Hipple; exercise, five
song, school; solo,
Naomi Myers;
Care,”
small children;
“A Tiny Flower,”
“A Child in a Garden;” Evelyn Rei-
der; “How Beautiful,” Emma Hoff-
man: “The Bugle Call,” David Hoft-
Grandmother's Flower Gar-
“Children’s Day in
Mary Hipple; “For-
bid Them Not,” by Mary Hoffman;
song, school; drill, mixed ages of
the school; “The Garden of Your
Heart, Virginia Fink; “The First
Children’s Day,” Edna Rutherford;
«Herald of a Happy Day” Elsie
Leider: exercise, “With the Trees in
June:” “A Hopeful Thought,” Rich-
ard Myers; “Let Your Money Work”
Ruth Minnich; closing song, school.
rrr ee 4 meaner
MAYTOWN
Williabn Roath celebrated his 75th
birthday} on Sunday.
Mrs. x Henderson, of Red Lion,

visited fridends in town on Sunday.
Miss Asina Culp spent her vacation
with her mother, Mrs. Isaac Carpen-
ter. 8
Samuel Reiser, is spending his vaca-
tion with Ris parents, Mr. and Mrs
Clem Keise
Miss Laur§
spent the w
Miss Marian
Mr. Amos @
Reading, spentjthe week-end with Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Johnstin.
Miss Hazel SRireman, of
the week-end With her parents, Mr.
Shireman.
ack of Lancaster, is
ion with her par-
red Peck.
Drace, of Read-
d with the for-
Mrs. Samuel



Shireman of Lancaster,
ek-errd with her
hireman.
assel and son Frank, of
York, spent













Miss Georgie
spending her vac
ents, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Jac
ing, spent the week-
mer’s parents, Mr. a
Drace.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrenc
son, spent several days
the guests of Mr. and
Barnhart and
Harrisburg,
rs. Clyde
Mr. and Mrs. George DunNileberger,
of Harrisburg; Mrs. J. Shaef§er and
sons Lester, Paul and Morris of%Kist-
ler, Perry county; Miss Belle /Coney,
of Bethlehem, visited Mr. and Mrs. B.
F. Sheibly.
A ron
Experts See No Future
for Hemp Production
Hemp, once a profitable crop in this
country, has dwindled in importance,
and the vehicle through which it has
lost its market was the principal
market in former years. It is esti-
mated that in the early Colonial days
it took the product of 1,000 acres of

|

Mrs. Alice Leliland, Middletown, Pa. |
hemp to make the ropes necessary to
outfit a single sailing vessel of any
size.
Now ships bring jute from India and
|
this importation, due to its much low-
er price, has driven hemp from the
market to a large extent. In spite of
this loss of market, glowing pictures
of prosperity to be had from hemp.
growing are painted for farmers who
have had no experience with the crop.
Agents with something to sell have
induced many farmers to attempt
crops, but little hope of success is
held out by Department of Agricul-
ture officials, who point out that by
no means is the general run of land
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Weigart, York, | suitable for hemp production. Even if
it were, there still remains the fact
that the demand for hemp is more
than filled by present sources, with
the result that the prices are too low
to make a crop an attractive proposi-
tion financially for the grower.—Wash-
ington Star.
Iguassu Falls One of
Wonders of the World
The Iguassu falls of Brazil are said
to be the most wonderful in the world.
In the Wide World Magazine R. Hali-
burton writes: “Half a mile away a
vast mass of water seemed to flow
forth from the sky. It was a river,
which, after wandering quietly through




Homes Farm, at Eliza-|
eight hundred and one pounds of milk |
|
| wonders of the world. With one mighty
the month of April, under the Ayr- | charge along a front 10.000 feet in
| length it
the herd that had once freshened, re- | superb 200 foot cataracts of foam.
was included in computing this aver-| Victoria gr
pounds of milk, 78.39 pounds of but- | Penn State ornamental
| ists.
produced 1468 pounds of milk, 61.22 conspicuous as possible.
which produced 1341 pounds of milk, |
59.67 ponds of butterfat; Glen Foerd |
Rosette, which produced 1581 pounds [spray with 4 pounds of lead arsen-
the forests of Brazil, had come at
length to the edge of a g.eat plateau.

| There it girds itself for a grand cli-
1
| max to its career—a climax so spectac-
ular that no one who sees can ever
forget that this river surpasses all
others in the subli beauty of its
passing, leaving behind one of the
hurls over the brink, in
have

volume,
Niagara may 1t
, but for artistry
iter heizh

. |
Registry | and coloring Iguassu stands alone.”
———— A Cees.
Stake Tall Flowers
To prevent damage by wind the
taller flowers should be staked, say
horticultur-
These stakes should be as in-
eee
Spray Potato Bugs
To control Colorado potato beetle
ate or 3 pounds of calcium arsenate
in 100 gallons of bordeaux.
— eee
The invention of the radio has add-
would be good food for|eq about 5,000 new words to the Eng-
lish language.

r, Clevelun
ill at this writi
Rev. Ira Mil
McCurdy, on Sal
and Mrs.
children, Bobby
bridge, and Mrs.
myer, were guests
S. Goudie.
Mr. and Mrs. Cy?
tained the following
and Mrs.
daughter Margaret, of
Mr. and Mrs. Addiso
granddaughter of Lebakon, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Eaton and
net and Mrs. William Ea
visited in the hom
Hollinger and family on S
The following visited in th
Edward Gotshall, on Sunday;
Mrs. Donald Coli and Mid-
dletown; Mr. and Mrs. David
berry, of Hummelstown: Mr. a
Albert Gotshall, of near Elizabethtown.
THE FILTER PLANT
The second time bids were asked only
three were received.
The first time D. S. Warfel & Co.
bid $26,974.00. This time they bid $29,-
932.00, an increase of $2,958.00.
The first time H. V. Gulick of New
Cumberland bid $36,366.00. The second
time this firm bid $33,700.00 or $2,666.00
When Council awarded the contract
the first time to the
firm the price was $30,900.00.
The price to be paid to D. S. Warfel
& Co. is $968.00 less than the above
Mr. D. S. Warfel, at the Council
meeting Monday night, was asked why
his bid was
over his former bid, and particularly
so when his representative stated ata
previous meeting that the firm would
present exactly the same bid if new
bids were asked for.
Mr. Warfel stated that although his
representative had made that state-
ment and that he had told Mr. Clar-
ence Schock and Mr. Henry G. Car-
penter that he would present the same
he later
figures and that he simply corrected
s%id error. had been in use el
A rr rel rere heen sn
Drops of syrup form on top of mer-
ingue when too much sugar has been

Gotshall, is seriously
r called on Freeman
rday evening,
Clarence Bryn and
d Jimmy of Bain-
rry Smith, of Bill-
f Mr. and Mrs. J.
Onder Your
Hiectrice
s Keefer, enter-
on Sunday: Mr.
1, of Palmdale;
n Forney and |
ykens.
McCurdy and |
Jacob Ku
Mrs. Willi lefrigera
on these
aughter, Ja- |
r, of Mari-4
of George
day. |
home of |
Mr. and | |
AS LOW AS
$1 .00
down
24 MONTHS
TO PAY
ii


id Mrs.
CONTRACT AWARDED
(From page 1)
EASY TERMS

ELECIRIC REFRIGERATION











Then and Now
West Virginia

Pennsylvania
Power & Light Company





Why It Was Raised Blinds Not “Venetian”
Venotian blinds, now becoming pop-
ular in America, are not, and never
were, really Venetian, Home und Field
says.
“While the roller shade is purely an
American invention, the use of vene-
almost $3,000
increased
tian blinds, or tiliing slats, dates back
nearly 300 years to the West Indies,”
the article says. “The blinds now in
use are quite similar, but with added
improvements. Appareitly there is no
anthoritative information as to why
they are lied venetian, Careful re-
search shows that they were not seen
in Venice until many years after they
where, Tt has
however, that they
may have heen invented by a Vene-
tinn trader making his home in the
West Ind’es and named in his honor.”

found an error in his


g sted,

J
JELLY—an honored remedy in every family
P medicine chest—but what a trouble-maker in your motor oil!
For when you step on the starter in winter—it is petroleum
jelly that makes your oil stiff and unresponsive. And when your en-
gine wasms up it is petroleum jelly that makes your oil water-thin.
Petroleum jelly has virtually been stripped from Sinclair Opaline
Motor ©il—a new process requiring specially designed refriger-
ating equipment, operating at as low as 60° below zero—a
much lower temperature than is required for just removing wax.
All grades of Opaline are refined for year-around use— (See Sin-
by S. R. Co., 1931


Agent Sinclair Refining Co.
C. E. LUTZ, ELIZABETHTOWN,
SINCLAIR DEALERS IN THIS SECTION ARE
CLARENCE F. GRISSINGER, Mount Joy
CLARENCE SCHOCK
; MOUNT JOY, PA
LUMBER-COAL |

vs 4 . Ey 3 bs
TRV =
clair Law &f Lubrication booklet which we will gladly give you).
We sell Siglair Opaline according to the Sinclair Law of Lubri-
cation. This la
and cylinder wal} is widened by wear. The grade of oil which
filled this space at'%§,000 miles cannot safely bridge the gap and
is based on the fact that the space between piston
prevent gasoline at 15,000 miles.
Sinclair Opaline is ro§ ned from sclected paraffin base crudes in
_ various grades—one of thgm is designed to fit your engine accord-
ing to its present state of wear. Your speedometer will tell us the
grade you require. :


CEDAR TREE INN, West of Florin