i Bla Te WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6TH, 1932 THATS BRINGING IT HOME er PRICES ARE LOWER. EVERYONE IS URGED. TO BUY NOW- "HELP YOURSELF HELP OTHERS” OH, HUM, ,| WAGE AND CON PRICES ARE BOUND TO RISE - "ACT NOW" WILL READ THAT 57 PRICES HAVE GONE 2 UP AND THAT HE ~ WILL HAVE TO PAY MORE FOR THINGS THAT HE Coup © HAVE BOUGHT FOR LESS “THAT LITTLE CAME” CL B. Link Pure OP A { WONT SIT (N AND GET (NYO THIS — THATTA 1 WEL BoTH Bo ! Just AS SOON AS | GET ENOUGH For GuM SHOES Nou CAN HAVE mY SEAT, — WHATTA YOU NEED ? AN OVERCOAT i . A NAW, A saY, WATSON: Br You AND | or DILL WHILE J 2, as Ble PLANING OR AB ace WE Buy ‘Em 7 oo Nou HEAR THAT? ~“OU'RE ADOPTED ¢ From Now ON CALL US POPPA - LET ME BE A POPPA - THAT wet AT LEAST KEEP THE MONEY IN THE FAMILY. DEAL SEM, WATSON 07, A, QOOCOOOOOOOOOO0 Phone No. 77 2 OREN IH AH WE ANNOUNCE Our Appointment by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Department of Revenue Bureau of Motor Vehicles As An Official Inspection Station Station No. 931 GARBER’S GARAGE SALES WE ALSO ANNOUNCE A DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION SERVICE ELIZABETHTOWN ON ALL LABOR CHAROES, EFFECTIVE JAN. 1, 1932 “BETTER SERVICE \T LOWER PRICES” oo 0 O00 0000 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Basket Ball News During the Week | BOOSTERS DEFEAT BELL TELE. | | FIVE WHILE THE MT. JOY GIRLS | EVEN COUNT WITH LEBANON { BY WINNING 19-17 | If you were not present last Wednes- day night you missed a pair of corking good games when the Boosters trimmed Joe Charles and his Bell Telephone Five of Harrisburg by three points. In the preliminary our Girls de- feated the only team to give them a setback this season, although the game was close and exciting from start to finish. Score: Boosters—Bell Five Bell Five G FT Charles, F 0 0 0 Roergteltor, FP 2 2 6 Markiwit, 'C ov... 7 1 1B Mathias, G 1 1 3 Humphrys, G .............. oOo 0 0 Gastrock, G ........... vu. 4 1 9 Polals avs 14 5 33 Mount Joy Boosters GC FF. TI Diffenderfer F ............. 2 3 7 Divit, Beers cvs 5 0 10 iC, Shiffer, C ceva 5 11 PU Shiffer, € i... 0, 1 0 2 Halbleib,' G ................ 0 0 0 POtals s,s ins 16 4 36 Referee, Lee Ellis. Scorekeeper, Frank. Timekeeper, Fellenbaum. Time of periods, 10 minutes. —————— eee Mount Joy Girls—Lebanon Girls Lebanon G F TI S Leese, hin. 3 9 1 Brighthill, 1 4 6 M.GollanC ............... 0 0 0 Heverling, SC ............. 0 0 0 W. Leese, G................ 0 0 0 RGollan, CG .............. 0 0 0 Bvans, G hy 0 0 0 Totals i... Fees divin 4 9.17 Mount Joy Girls G FF TI Way Fo... aati, 4 0 8 Bishop, FG i. caine 0 1 1 Heflig I" oi 2 6 10 F. Dillinger,:C vc. 0 0 0 Smeltzer, SC 0 0 0 H Dillinger, G ../......... 0 0 0 har. a 6 7 +19 Referee, LaSkewitz. Scorekeeper, Fel- lenbaum. Timekeeper, Frank. Time of periods, 8 minutes. tt Es Boosters—Collegians The Millersville Collegians displayed | a speedy offensive to defeat the Mount Joy Boosters Thursday night on the Miilersville court. The final score was 3 to 17. The winners opened up strong and went into the lead early. Maintain- ing a fast pace, they had little trouble staying out in front by a comfortable margin. Mount Joy Boosters G FF. Tl Murphy, BP... iia. 2 1 5 Charles, FF... cc ivi. 3 0 6 8.0 0 0 0 Bowman, G 5... 0.00000 1 0 2 Laskewitz, G .......0.. 00 2 0 4 Davis, FB i id lie dais 0 0 0 Cope, ac ns 0 0 0 Weaver, BP... oii 0 0 0 Totals: ssid, 8 1:37 Millersville Collegians G FF -T1 Hess, Fo. ceca 3 3 8 Shaub, FB... oh aa ha 7 3 17 i... ai ris % 2 16 Palmer, GQ 0 3 2 8 Bender, Gi... v.00 3 8 14 Wallick, FF 00a 0 0 0 Hostetter, Fo... 00 2 1 5| Totals’. is 25 18 68] Referee, Bishop; scorekeeper, Mit- chell; timekeeper, Mellinger; time of periods, 10 minutes. A Alumni—High School Mount Joy High School varsity drib- blers defeated the Alumni aggregation ' on Friday night by a 24 to 27 margin. The varsity ‘quintet opened up strong | and at half time were leading, 21 to 5. The Alumni returned in the second’ half displaying a complete reversal of | form and nearly overtook their op- | ponents. | f i | | | Referee, Smoker; scorekeeper, Smith; timekeeper, Secvears; time of periods, o 3 miutes. tl GG Alumni GF IT Diffenderfer, EF 3 0 6 Fackler, BF... lie vias 4 0 8 Charles, B 2... i ii 9 vz Krall, FP dae iiss 1 0 2 Hostetter, C 5 2 0 4 Hawthome, C 1 0 2i Laskewitz, 0: 0 0 0 Weaver, cc. 0 0 0| Eshleman, G J. ads 1 0 21 Stiller, Go. vot a ei 1 0 2! Totals i. i bhi. va 12 1.2% | Mount Joy H. S. GF TH Schroll, F ....c.. oii 0 4 4, Mumma, F ea 5 1 1H Heistand, FF... 00 00a 1 0 2! Darrenkamp, F............: 2 0 4 | Hostetter, C 00 0 2 0 4 Fellenbaum; G ......5:. i. 3 3 9 Myers, G ..... clic ada 0 0 0] Totals 5. oh oe. tia 2.8 2 I Reserves—Reserves The High School Reserves defeated ! the Alumni Reserves on Friday evening 14 to 5. Score: | to turn tail spins and do barrel rolls; | but, after all, they had deliberately AHI WIA HH Tenderfoot Showed Syndicate.) I WAS in New that Marvin first met Eulalia, had never seen a girl “like her befol. He couldn't Imagine, at first, what it was abont her that was so strangely different, She was not palely beautiful, as most of the girls he knew were—like hot house flowers. She was ruddily, healthily beautiful, Her lithe, slim Ag- ure had a brisk swing to it as she walked. Her hair seemed to have been dyed by the sheer gold of sun- light itself. Her teeth were perfectly matched pearls. She was 80 pretty she made him gasp. And then meet- ing her, dancing with her, taking her to a show or two, he began to under- stand, She was a girl from the “wide open spaces,” such as he had never seen before. That strength and power in her lovely, bright eyes came, doubtless, from looking along wide vistas; that glow in her cheeks was from early morning rides over her father's ranch, Marvin fell madly, desperately in love: so much so, in fact, that he followed Eulalia back to Arizona, to be near her. i Eulalia’s father welcomed him, but just a bit derisively, until he learned that Marvin could ride. Then he pro- vided him with a horse, and they all | got ready to start out together. Eulalia’s father’s foreman was to ride with them over the range. The | foreman was a husky, roughly hand- some man that Marvin could see was in love with Eulalia; Eulalia, Marvin | noticed, viewed the foreman with at | least admiration, perhaps for his | | rugged manliness. Marvin had to ad- nit that he didn’t cut much of a figure | in the ranch picture, | Trouble started as soon as Marvin i mounted his horse. He had never felt such horse muscles under him before; the horses he had ridden through Cen- tral park were, he realized now, al- most toy mounts as compared with this one, The horse reared. Marvin fell back- | ward sprawled in the dust. The fore- man and Eulalia and her father were | most solicitous; but he could see the glint of contemptuous amusement in their eves when they glanced at | Eulalia: the glances seemed to say: “Ts this supposed to he a man!” And so it went, day after day. In | New York, Marvin remembered, he ! had made some progress in Eulalia's affections; but here . . . her interest | in him seemed to be wavering. He | was hearthroken; for she was the one | girl for him, he knew. Not that she | actually was contemptuous of him | because he couldn’t ride horses, and couldn't get along in the ranch coun- try . . . but somehow because he did not show up bravely, in juxtaposition with her father and the foreman. At last, desperate, he spoke to New York over the long distance telephone. A day and a half passed, and a buzzing was heard"over the ranch, . “That’s funny,” Eulalia’s father said, “must be a mail plane off its route.” “Not at all,” Marvin corrected; “just my plane I had sent down. Thought you'd all like a trip in the air—that is,” he added pointedly, since thie foreman was present, ‘unless vou're afraid. .” The foreman turned visibly pale; Eulalia’s father looked startled; but he frowned. Eula- | lian was ecstatic. She said: “A ride in a plane! Marvelous. And | of course Don and Dad aren’t afraid; they've hoth often admitted to me that there isn't anything in the world they're afraid of.” After that, there { was no question about the.ride being a | foursome, It was mean, Marvin had to admit, provided him with an almost unride- | able horse. At the end of the ride ! Don and Dad were wrecks! “Never again!” Don swore, trying to make his legs behave so he could walk away from the plane as fast as possible, | “I'm too old to learn new tricks | like that,” Eulalia’s father declared without reservations; “though I envy vou youngsters growing up in this gen- eration.” It was as they walked after supper, with the chromatic tints of the sun- | set's afterglow painting the raw land in pagan colors, that Marvin said: “Honey, I'm wild about ranch life.” “And I'm crazy about city life,” she admitted “though I sometimes thought | maybe city men were puny as com- pared with western plains men. But as compared to running a plane, bust- | ing a broncho is child's play.” “How about our incorporating,” he suggested, “and spending our time fifty-fifty, ranch and city?” “A swell idea.” she echoed. The man in the moon saw their em- brace and approved, even if, in the distance, a jackal did howl disap- | provingly. | St. Paul’s Age Unknown The exact date of St. Paul's birth ! is not known, but it is supposed to have been between the years 5 and 10 of the Christian era. As it is believed that Christ was born some four years previous to the date from which we count our years, it is to be supposed that Paul was from nine to fourteen | vears younger. Paul was born at Tar | sus, in Asia Minor, but was sent to | Jerusalem te be educated. He was he headed at Pome in the year 67 or GS, during one of the persecutions of the Mount Joy Reserves GFT Ing. I Funk, Foo. 0 0 0 Christians under Emperor Nero, Hendricks, F i vey 0 0 0 ————————— Frank, F .................. 0 0 0} piacklick—Merchants and Mechanics Backenstoe, F' ............. 0 0 0 gunk merged with Citizen's National | Rohrer, C 3 0 6 Bank of Indiana. Brian, G 00 0s 2 0 4 Fr Weidman, G /...... ii. 0 0 0! | Hoffman, alsa iia. 0 0 Greiner, 7. ...... iii 2 4! i Zellers Gig chai hada 0 1 — — —:Fackler,G 00 0} Totals }...... ico 7 0 14 { — Alumni ° GF TH Totals a gees sense 2.1 8; Elis, B.A yO 0! Rfeeree, Weaver; scorekeeper, Smith; Schneider, ¥ ............f.. 0 0 timekeeper, Germer; time of periods, 8! Wenger, F\.......... 2 4 minutes. } : Se Ay Prayer Meetings THE WEST GREEN TREE CONGRE- GATION, ARRANGES DATES AND LEADERS FOR THE ENTIRE YEAR OF NINETEEN THIRTY-TWO Following are the dates and leaders of the weekly prayer meetings to be held every Wednesday evening thruout the coming year by the West Green Tree congregation: JANUARY 6 Earl Brubaker 13 S. S. Shearer 20 Dervin Shoemaker 27 M. B. Forney FEBRUARY 3 Elmer Snyder 10 Elmer Ebersole 17 Eli Brubaker 24 Harvey Hoffman MARCH 2 Grover Eichler 9 John Young 16 John B. Brubaker 23 Lavina Hostetter 30 Almos Earhart, Sr. APRIL 6 J. B. Hostetter 13 Martin Shearer 20 Henry Acker 27 Jacob Eshleman MAY 4 Amos Caslow 11 Abram Young 18 Henry E. Breneman 25 Abram Eshleman JUNE 1 Hiram Groff 8 Cyrus Geib 15 John Kraybill 22 Samuel Becker 29 H. S. Eshleman JULY 6 Paul Earhart 13 Geo. Bowers 20 Daniel Werner 27 Mrs. Frances Neideigh AUGUST 3 Norman Greiner 10 Roy Forney 17 Aaron Shenk 24 S. R. McDannel 31 Hiram Kaylor SEPTEMBER 7 Henry F. Breneman 14 Paris Ober 21 Roy Kaylor 28 Harry Eshleman OCTOBER 5 Elam Stauffer 12 Samuel Ober 19 Annie Enterline 26 James Garber NOVEMBER 2 Jacob Williams 9 Ira Brandt 16 John Shenk 24 Thanksgiving Evening Elmer Hoover 30 Wm. Longenecker DECEMBER 7 Allen Ober 14 Henry Hottenstein 21 Benjamin Hambright 28 Henry Werner ——— I en came 'USE OF FORESTS BY PUBLIC SHOWS STEADY INCREASE Recreational use of Pennsylvania State Forests is growing steadily. {More than 1500,000 people visited these 1,500,000 woodland acres dur- ling 1931, of which number 250,000 [were hunters and 100,000 fishermen, | John W. Keller, deputy secretary, Department of Forests and Waters, said today. Several reasons were cited by Kel- ler for the increased use by the pub-| lic of the State forests, parks and | ! public camps. The mounting mileage | ‘of hard surfaced highways and the larger numbers of motor vehicles | WE HAVE contributed greatly to the influx of visitors. But the principal cause, he said, is the ever growing tendency of the people of Pennsylvania to spend {more time in nature's out of doors. In view of this very definite urge on the part of people in all walks of life to get out into the woods, the forestry officials are keeping abreast |of the movement by providing greater i facilities for recreational use and | comfort. Maps, showing roads, trails (and streams, are now available for ‘most of the State Forests. Parks and public camps are designated for easy | location by visitors. These areas are equipped with "tables and benches, fireplaces, pure water, parking space, and other fa- | cilities for the convenience of the ! : : public. Well marked trails radiate from them into the surrounding for- | ests. These features make it possible for increasing thousands to enjoy the { . {outdoor life in a forest environment at moderate cost. POLICE MAKE 1197 ARRESTS IN MONTH The Pennsylvania State Police during November made a total of 1197 arrests ‘for all grades of crime. These in- cludes three arrests for murder, nine | for arson, eighteen for robbery, 316 for larceny, and 686 for lesser crimes. Stolen property valued at $24,598.55 | was recovered and returned to owners. One hundred and sixty-five arrests were made for violation of the prohibi- tion laws. Patrols of the State Police covered practically every county in the State, and special night patrols were made | where complaints indicated that holi- day poultry thieves were active. Greensburg — Rural road touching hree other improved highways com- pleted north of here. Philipsburg — Woodring Market, i Pine Street, installed electric refrig- ! erated counter. etl A ree You can get all the news of this | week thru the Bulletin. For Coming Year -— | Winter Woolens Now On Display Come In and Make Your Selection Before the Choice P2tiarns Are All Picked Out Weiss Tailoring Co. MERCHANT TAILORS 106 E. Vine, LANCASTER, PA. SANITARY CLEANERS and DYERS HARRY F. BROOKS Phone Mt. Joy 174R13 FLORIN, PA. Spouting, Roofing and Tinning Hot Air Heating 'BROWN’S TIN SHOP Phone 109R2 33 West Main St.,, MT. JOY, PA. HOW ARE ARE YOUR SHOES? DON'T WAIT TOO LONG BRING THEM IN CITY SHOE REPAIRING CO. QUALITY MEATS Krall’'s Meat Market MOUNT JOY West Main St. FEEL Your Hair Mark Off Every 10th Day On Your Calendar For a HA 1 R CUT Hershey's “Barber Shop Phone 56R3 Agent For Manhattan Laundry Famous Chincteague Salt Oysters Ice Cream, Groceries and Confections BRANDT BROS. Mount Joy Street Mount Joy, Pa. Tou oe ARE USUALLY AVANT FD sede Yi vn me Fick SE rir oli ag i