A = Jake De Cake TO PEOPLE? THAT 13 MARVELOUS} SO MR.TOMATO HAS 109 DEGREES OF FEVER AND HE IS SITTING UP AND TALKING HIM AND HE 1S QUITE AT HIMSELF. ED fn VERY CALM NDEED. Lp ka (1 | TALKED TO HE REMEMBERED EVERY DETAIL OF HIS BUSINESS. HE IS HE ALSO REMEMBERED THAT YOU OWE HIM TEN DOLLARS AND HE ASKED ME TO REMIND YOU PLUMBDUF, WELL DONT PAY ANY ATTENTION TO HIM, LORD LET'IM RAVE. WEDNESDAY, Will Entertain Fresh Air Kiddies (From page one) children one year, the highest mark ever set by a single community in the 55 years the project has been con- ducted. Efforts to secure “summer homes” are now being made in Lancaster county by a committee headed by Charles S. Goodman, of Lancaster, so that as many children a possible will be entertained in the two weeks fol- lowing July 19, when they arrive by train. Local persons recall amusing and pathetic incidents of trips of former years, The boy who tried to pour eggs from one basket to another, the girl who wouldn't drink milk when she learned it came from cows instead of cans—these and a hundred other hap- penings have shown how little the children know of the country and how much they enjoy being in it. In New York workers are daily un- covering heart-rendering tales of mis- ery and want. To a family with an unemployed father and a mother who ekes out $4 a week washing, the prom- ise of two weeks elsewhere is God- send to the three girls and little boy. To the shrunken-checked little boys of a tenement cellar; the fresh air of a farm would be a tonic to put them back on the road to health. These children have read in school of the fertile farmlands of America and of the pleasant breezes that fan a countryside, but they have never seen them. Grass, aside from the dusty blades in a building-lined park, and animal life, except for an occasional milk or junk wagon horse, are un- known to them. The committee of the local Fresh Air fund in charge of securing homes for children on their two weeks stay includes: Chairman Samuel Heineman, Co- lumbia, (Townships of West Hempfield, East Hempfield, Manheim. Chairman of West Hempfield Town- ship, J. C. Shellenberger, R. D. No. 2, Columbia. 1. Silver Spring, Chairman, Mrs. H. S. Nolt, Columbia R, D. 1. Committee: Jacob Mellinger, Lancaster, R. D. No. 8. Jacob Charles, Silver Spring. © Mrs. Willard Swords, Silver Spring. Mrs. Lloyd Nolt, Mt. Joy, R. D., No. 4. 2. Cordelia, Chairman, Mrs Paul Metzger, Columbia R. D, 1. Committee: Mrs. John Keiser, Columbia R. D. No. 1. W. L. Ulrich, Columbia, R. D. No. 1. 3. Mountville, Mrs. D. L. Shellen- berger, Columbia R. D, 2, Committee: Miss Estella Stehman, Mountville. Mrs. J. W. Zehring, Mountville. 4. Columbia, Chairman, Rev. C. Z. Martin, Mountville. Vice-chairman, C. D. Landis, 1044 Lancaster Avenue, Columbia. 5. Salunga, S. H. Hiestand. Committee: H. N. Eaby, Mount Joy, Route No. 2. N. N. Baer, Salunga. Jacob H Musser, Salunga, R. D. Raffensberger, Salunga. Chairman of East Hempfield Town- ship, S. H. Hiestand, Salunga. 1. East Petersburg, Chairman, S. M. Bender, East Petersburg. Committee: Rev. Roy S. Forney, East Petersburg Harry N. Frank, East Petersburg. Wm. U. Myers. Rev. Walter C. Pugh, East Peters- burg. 2. Rohrerstown, Chairman, Rev. E. F. Asper, Rohrerstown. Committee: Scott Bushong, Rohrerstown. Miss Olivia Will, Rohrerstown. - Mrs, Mabel Davis, Rohrerstown. Miss Mildred Star, Rohrerstown. Mrs. David Ringwalt, Rohrerstown. Rev. Burt Behrens, Lancaster. Mrs. H. N. Snavely, Rohrerstown. nr To Identify Flowers Members of 4-H flower clubs in the state will enter a flower identi- fication contest at Club Week on August 17 to 20, at the Pennsylvan- ia State College. Twenty-five flow- ering plants are to be identified, 25 questions answered, and a state- ment containing the advantages of flower club work submitted by each participant. ER a Care for Asparagus To have a good crop of asparagus each spring care must be given the bed the previous summer. Feed the plants with manure or a complate commercial fertilizer, and keep the bed free from weeds. Cutting should ease mow so the plants can store d for the garly crop next spring. BULL RUNN BY CARL Poe fle ls Determined to Cut This Date So Just See What He Does In Order to Put It Over On &s-the Wi! Ho Bulls £0 \T OLD MAN" ADSE You Ravt AMERY LAST NIGHT = Yeu GotTA Go WITH ME GERNES HUSBAND, INTERNA CARTOON CO. NY § JUNE 20th, 1932. REAL LOG CABIN ADORNS FORT SITE . Pennsylvania who may wish to see how their early ancestors built their homes will find a good example in the log cabin within the restored Ford Ne- cessity, 10 miles east of here on the National Road, which is to be dedi- cated as a State and national historic shrine on July 3 and 4. The cabin, just completed, was built by pioneer methods and pioneer tools. There is not a nail in it, wooden pegs being used. The logs are saddled to- gether as neatly as any pioneer could have done it, and the chinks are filled with plaster, The floor is of hand- hewn white oak planks, The roof is of clapboards held together with poles. A big white oak stump cut from a tree 258 years old is the table, The original cabin was used as a hospital by Dr. Craik, then a young ensign, and George Washington's life- long friend, during the battle of Fort Necessity, July 3, 1754, when 400 Vir- ginia and South Carolina troops under the 22-year-old Washington, held off 1600 French and Indians, This battle was the spark which set off the French and Indian War. Memorial Plantings Foresters and rangers in the twenty-four state forest districts Pennsylvania during the past yea planted 1,692,000 trees which have been registered as George Wash- ington memorial tree plantings the American Tree Association of Washington. JE Ee a AE People who look in gasoline tanks with matches will criticize the fellow who lit a cigarette in a powder ma=- gazine. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin If any of you folks ever get rheumatism, stiff joints, or any- thing of that sort, “Sixty” Groff certainly has a good remedy. It’s a new kind of odorless liniment. We certainly had a lot of fun- ny things happen in town last week Here are just a few: Mrs. “Bud” Carpenter has four small green turtles in an aquarium and recently one was missing. Nearly a week later she found it under “Bridget,” the pet dog's cushion. Last week Harry Darrenkamp erected a fine new awning in front of his store. It was neatly lettered by one of our local sign painters, who put the lettering on the inside instead of the outside. That’s about as bad as Grandpap Schroll. Last Fall he erected a lot of trespass notices down at Crystal Springs and faced them all in in- stead of out. Talkin’ about turtles, last week Sam Miller, the P. P. & L. super, got a good sized turtle which he contemplated converting into soup. He put it in the cellar and it dis- appeared. Several days later when Sam’s good wife went to the cellar, lo and behold there was the turtle walking around with a wash tub on its back. While swinging over the water in Seachrist’s meadow, Joe Detwiler, a local barber. lost his hold and un- expectedly went bathing. His bath- ing suit was white knickers, white shirt and sport shoes. A boy about ten, on Marietta street, asked his father what ‘chaf- feur’ meant and he was told it was the driver of an automoblle. The boy said: -Daddy that was not what you called that fellow who nearly ran into our car on Sunday.” Bessie Lauer, a little miss from Harrisburg, is here on a visit. The other day she asked her mother why Harry Darrenkamp’s chickens are making such a noise and she was told that it was quite likely they wanted their food. Bessie replied: “If they are hung- ry why don’t they go and lay themselves some eggs?” Just then her brother “Buddy” said: “They would but they have no hammers to creck the shells.” From a crack like that you'd think Buddy was a smart lad but I'll let you in on a secret. The oth- er evening during a thunder storm the radio was full of static and I caught him putting a cough drop into it because it was so hoarse. A chap from town went on a trip recently and when shown his room at a hotel remarked: “This room is certainly small and poorly furnished—one chair and a folding bed.” The boy replied: “That, sir, is New Inspection For Autos Near (trom page 1) to allow inspection of bulbs and re- flectors. Bulbs will be checked for candlepower, discoloration or sagging filaments. Reflectors must be polished replated or replaced if brass shows through reflecting surface, if pin holes or small pots are bunched, or if re- flector is rusty or dented. Both headlamps are required to light in the driving and tilted position. Lenses must be clean, not cracked and of the same make in each headlamp. Headlmaps must be properly focused and aimed, with necessary loading al- lowance. Bear lamps and stop lights also will be checked. The condition of tires will be check- ed. This check is an - added safety precaution and is for the benefit of the vehicle owner. The condition of tires, unless continued operation with them is considered too dangerous, will not effect the issuing of approval stickers. Stickers will be issued only when the law has been compiled with. PATROL AIDS IN PREVENTING STATE GAS TAX EVASIONS e As part of the Department of Jevenue’s continuing drive on gas- oline bootlegging, State Highway patrolmen in May checked the source and destination of 24,479,182 gallons of gasoline. Patrolmen en- gaged in this duty are paid by the bureau of liquid fuels tax. On the total gallonage checked, the crew of the State Revenue cut- ter operating on the Delaware Riv- er reported on 20,918,847 gallons. At the Delaware River bridge heads, patrolmen checked 1,024,648 gallons entering Pennsylvania by truck and 1,421,765 gallons leaving the State by truck. The harbor and bridge head control is made by the Troop E. Details of Troop C operating in the western end of the State check- ed the contents of 848 gasoline trucks, and two tank cars. These operations are part of the system of gasoline control recently estab- lished on the Pennsylvania Ohio border in co-operation with Ohio revenue agents. The Pennsylvania patrolmen checked 25,830 gallons entering and 685,751 leaving the State. Gasoline checked inside the State totaled 402,341 gallons. The same troop investigated 1184 service stations. The service sta- tion check was to check records and is also part of the Department’s campaign to stop service stations from substituting and selling gaso- line other than the gasoline indica- ted by the trade name on their equipment. eee Qe An anatomist figures the average eye travels 7,000 miles in a lifetime. How many times from head to foot is that? the telephone booth.” I saw this ad in a Lancaster county paper: WANTED—Single man for small retail milk route and general farm work; must know how to milk and drive Ford car. Well I always knew you could do most anything with a Ford but darned if I ever knew you could milk ‘em. One of our local business men told me that the best after dinner speech he ever heard was last night he heard a fellow say: “Waiter, bring me the check.” A lady here went to Brubaker’s store and while thinking what else she might want the clerk suggest- ed: “Do you want some nice fresh eggs?” Lady replied: “No I have enough of them at home to last me a month or more.” A WISE OWL E don’t presume to tell you which motor oil gives you best results— Mid-continent or Penn- sylvania. But we can prove to you that in these two classes Sinclair Motor Oils are the finest that Nature and science together have produced. Sinclair Opaline Motor Oil is refined from crude oils, mellowed and filtered for at least 80 million years; it is a blend of the very oldest Mid-continent crudes, including the famous Cambro - Ordovician crude taken from a mile and a quarter below the surface in Oklahoma. Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oil is a product of the Devonian Age of a hundred million years ago. Sinclair Pennsylvania is refined 100% from Brad- ford-Allegany crude oil—a crude so rich in lubri- cating quality that every barrel commands an extra OPALINE REG US PAT OFF. MOTOR OIL En SINCLAIR MOTOR OILS... From Mid- continent's oldest crude or Pennsylvania's costliest crude . . . price. (See crude oil prices in any petroleum journal.) Both of these splendid motor oils undergo a special treatment in the Sinclaig, refineries. Sinclair Opaline and Sinclair Pennsylvania are not only de-waxed — they are also freed from heavy, sluggish, non-lubri- cating petroleum jelly at as low as 60° F. below zero. Containing no petroleum jelly, the lubricating body of Sinclair Motor Oils is absolutely genuine and will not thin out in engine heat. Experience will tell you quickly why Sinclair Opa- line and Sinclair Pennsylvania are the finest in their respective classes. Note how these oils stand up in hard, fast driving. Note especially at draining time how little oil has been used up—positive, visible proof of protection for the last mile as well as the first! MOTOR OIL otha Copyrighted 1932 by S. R. Ce. (Inc.) For this Locality’s Complete News Service Read — The er etl 4 iu Hay £ i n i 8 MN IRE SSH — SRA