PAGE TWO Te —— THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17th, 1932 MT. JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr. Subscription Price $1.50 Per Year i Six Months ...... 76 Cents Three Months 40 Cents Single Copies 3 Cents Sample Copies ...... FREE Entered at the post office at Mount) Joy as second-class mail matter, The date of the expiration of your subscription follows your name on the label. We do not send receipts for sub- received, Whenever scription money you remit, see that you are given pro- per credit. We credit all subscriptions at the first of each month. All correspondents must have thelr communications reach this office not later than Monday. Telephone news of importance between that time and 12 o'clock noon Wednesday. Change for advertisements must positively reach this office not later than Monday night. New advertisments Inserted If copy reaches us Tuesday night. Advertising rates on application. The subscription lists of the Landis. wille 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 or- dinary weekly. EDITORIAL Of all the nuisance taxes, the three cents letter postage, is certanly the most unpopular, When the average citizen pays the extra cent to mail a letter he knows what officialdom in Washington has done to him, and his complaining is loud and bitter, and will become more so as he feels the pinch of other levies. WHY NOT? We have been asked on numerous occasions within the past ten days, “Will Mount Joy hold a Community Exhibit this Fall?” Our reply in every instance was, “Why Not? Of all years, this is the one time we should not miss for a number of reasons. We have spoken to some of the ac- tive workers on previous exhibits and all are willing to donate their services for the good of the cause. We feel certain their are others who will cheer- fully assist, Farm shows will be held in two of our sister boros and we sincerely hope we have one in Mount Joy again this Fall. ONE THING THAT NEEDS CORRECTION Stop if you will, for a few minutes, and watch traffic on any of our artery highways. You will be immediately impressed by the number of trucks, loaded to the top, traveling over these highways. Many are from other states. The roads are full of them. We cannot help thinking that here is a maladjustment of conditions that should be remedied. Here is a com- mon carrier outfit which uses and abuses, practically without expense, the roads for which the motorists of our state have been taxed for years. They are enabled by low expense to underbid for service our railroads up- on which the prosperity of this coun- try is considerably based. This problem will get worse from year to year unless it is curbed. Our roads are comparatively new now and the thundering impact of the heavy rigs does not seem to make much dif- ference but as time goes on the roads begin to crumble under the strain so that replacements are necessary it will be too bad. We favor being placed on a fair basis with the railroads. If they want to compete with the railroads, let them build their own highways and maintain them. Why should the taxpayers do it? SEVEN SIGNS OF AN UPTURN 1. Congress has adjourned there- fore cannot sanction further raids on the treasury. 2. Agricultural prices have been stabilized, surplus stocks have been reduced, and, in the case of pork pro- ducs, the market has stiffened. 3. The banks have secured. The recent florry in Chicago served only to prove how adequate the new ma- chinery is to prevent a new banking disaster. 4. All foreign gold having been withdrawn from the United States, there ‘is no ground for apprehension over the maintenance of the gold standard. 5. The general business index of The New York Times has been prac- tically stationary since the end of May. ended. 6. The country is close to the end of persons annually, who have learned of the period of the delayed replacement |. beautiful views they make pos- incomes | giple. cannot continue much longer to wear feet high of goods. Those who have our own union. the trucks and busses Knoxville! Each coutributed to our areas in the Commonwealth may be seen from the 122 forest fire observa- tion towers maintained by the Depart- The steady drop in production has|, of Forests and Waters, Interesting Trip (From page one) the “Bolder California. ous, very scenic and hot. where dates can be mercial purposes, 1S a continuous routine, be cut and bailed at night, this hay is shipped east. is the pretty city of San Bermardino. Here the orange growers gather an- nually to compete for the awarded by the orange growers as- sociation. The exhibition is a gala af- fair and takes place in February. Moving northward, however by northward I also mean rising to sea- level. At this point we were two hundred feet below sea-level. Reach- ing Barstow we prepared to spend a night, a sleepless one, and at three A. M. we began our first lap across the desert, At 3:15 A. M. we saw the sun- rise. This is a really most spectacular sight. By seven o'clock we reached Needles and were very glad to seek shelter under a frame shedding. Other tourists joined us and until four-thirty our chief duties consisted of drinking water and telling stories of Alaska and North Pole expeditions. The temperature had reached one hundred and twenty-two degrees. Beginning our second lap, we found as before vast waste-land, a few more coyotes and small white lizzards. There is also a rugged mountain climb to Williams Arizona. Needless to say was three A. M. and we were all suf- fering from the climatic conditions. Grand Canyon! What a contrast, and how we enjoyed it! I wish I could stop right here and tell you all the won- ders it possesses. The canyon itself is thirty-five miles across, one to two miles deep and two hundred miles long. This is the only National park in which Indians live within it's boundaries. The painted desert brought many exclamations and will always remain with our scenic wonders. Our time limited our Indians. We saw several cluding the Hopi and Navajo. Indian art is very fascinating. To learn of their customs we attended a lecture which proved very worthwhile, Their civilization is very questionable. We found grain stored in the houses built for them by the government while they exist in mud huts. Some tribes are dying out but in place of the seven thousand Navojos Custer found we learned they now number between fifty and sixty thousand. New Mexico was much of a surprise to us. We were hardly prepared to find so crude and backward a state in study of the tribes in- We found the Pan-handle section of Texas much different, This fertile ranch land is very beautiful as well as productive. Oklahoma was very inter- esting, finding both agriculture and oil. Tulso being a very beautiful city. Arkansas and poverty seem to go hand in hand. The Ozark regions are very beautiful and we feel that education would be the real means for progress. Tennessee, Memphis, Nashville and delightful trip. Lovely southern at- mosphere, beautiful buildings and warm hospitality. Cotton and tobacco fields gave us much to observe and appreciate. Upon entering Virginia came the urge to see our parents. From Har- risonburg we were on familiar soil. Following our planned route from Wincnester to Frederick to Gettysburg to York arriving at Mount Joy last Tuesday evening, Our entire trip covered eleven thousand three hundred and eighty-six miles. We visited twenty states and Mexico. The trip is an excellent one very his- toric and very beautiful. One we hope all our friends will make and enjoy. Cen. FIRE TOWERS OPEN NEW SCENIC VIEWS Some of the most beautiful scenic They are visited by thousands of The towers are from 60 to 90 and are safe and easy to old clothes and postpone other pur-| imp. chases. When the demand for foods increases, the national cease to decline. 7. German reparation, the greatest unsettling factor in world relationship, probably has been compromised at income will {forest fire danger, observers are sta- tioned at the towers. During the spring and fall periods of Visitors are welcome, Greer Advertise in The Bulletin last, with a perceptible decrease in the liklihood of a new conflict in Europe | from $1,964,000,000 to $3,195,100,000 a year. or a civil war in Germany. If these things do not indicate that America has “hit bottom” and is ready | a halt. for the upturn, what do they imply? t A WAVE OF PROTEST erty owners of every class penditures and mounting taxes, we believe, have issued a circular to their wholesale they point that while, last year, Feder- | d al, State and local taxes took almost |and individuals whose votes they de- 22 cents out of every dollar of private | sire. It is nothing short of robbery, in income, the proportion will be higher | our opinion, for a man in public of- this year because of the greatly re-|fice to impose taxes upon one class of the public in order to spend the money Expenses have not been reduced; |for the benefit of another class, whose they have been increased. According | votes, he hopes, will perpetuate nim to the Field tabulation, since 1927 our} in power, duced income. watchword of the coming No man should be supported for elec- Business men, manufacturers, prop- | tion to any office in which he will have and kind | anything to say about taxation or the are joining in the wave of protest |spending of tax money who will not against increasing governmental ex- | pledge himself to reduce expenses and taxes, even if by doing so he loses a Marshall Field & Company, the (few votes when he comes up for re- largest department store in the world, | election. customers in which | etnmental extravagance is due to the This is all wrong. It is time to call We see only one way to do hat, and that is to make economy the campaign. We think that nine-tenths of gov- esire of legislators to placate groups To Pacific Coast country” and realized t why the Bolder Dam is of such eat importance to the progress of The country is mountain- The Imperial valley of southeastern California flourishes with dates, This is the only place in the United States raised for com- The hay crop here which must Much of At the head of the Imperial valley prizes we welcomed the sight of the town, it duel between Commedore Barron, the pistols used by both parties were taken possession of by Capt. Jesse D. Elliott, U. S. N., who had acted as second for Barron. He retained them until his death, in 1845, when they came into the posses sion of the late Gen, W, L. Elliott of San Franelsco, by whom, it is recorded. they were owned in 1864, which is the last definite record the adviser on arms of the Milwaukee public museum has of them. locality for less than three cents a week thru the Bulletin. LANDISVILLE | Rev, and Mrs.A, E. Cooper, of Main | street, have returned home after spending ten days touring the New England States Coming home they | stopped at Mansfield and Chambers- | burg with their daughters, Rev, and Mrs. Cooper covered 1,790 miles on the ! trip. The tenth ennual Staley family re- union was held at White Rose Park, York on Thursday, Mr, and Mrs. J, J, Sheaffer, of De- troit, Michigan and L, L, Sheaffer, of Flint, Michigan, spent the week with their mother, Mrs, Sheaffer and sister Mrs. Dyer. Keith Dyer has returned with them, expecting to remain a few weeks. Mr, and Mrs, Paul Hess and Mr, and Mrs. Roy Fissell spent Saturday even- ing at the old fiddlers convention at Parkesburg. Miss Anna Habecker and friend Mr. Benjamin Brubaker, with a number of friends spent Sunday at Red Point Beach, Maryland, all enjoying the day. Miss Betty Minnich, who spent a few days at New York with her sis- ter, Hilda returned home Saturday. Prof, and Mrs, James Morgan of Mansfield, spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Mansfield’s parents, Rev. and Mrs. A. E, Cooper, Mr, and Mrs, Addison Miller and daughters Arline and Burnes with Mr. and Mrs, William Habecker attended the Habecker reunion at Downing- town. Miss Dorothy Fissell and some friends motored to Hanover, where they spent the evening at Senft's park. Mr, and Mrs, Howard Kline and family and Miss Joseph Staley, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Clay Miller, Mr, and Mrs. Victor Sny- der and family spent Sunday at Val- ley Forge. Miss Effie Dobler spent several days at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Miles Dobler, her brother on Broad street. Mr. and Mrs, W. B. Tobias and fam- ily of Williamsport, spent Sunday with Mrs. Tobias’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cooper. From here they went to Washington to spend some time, The Blue Ridge Mountaineers con- sisting of the Seifert family played at the home of Helen Dobler on Broad street Tuesday evening. Uncle Dudley and Uncle High was also present, Re- freshments were served by Mrs. Dob- WONDERS OF THE DEEP discovered. More and more [looks forward to the time when [ing and nutritious form. we are probing the secrets| we will cultivate the seas as we : of the air. But the ocean remains, |do the land areas, increasing Fishes in Summer Dishes in many ways, the great mystery. | their production, much as we do| Jellied Codfish: Make a white And since nearly three-fourths of | with oyster farming today. In|Sauce of two tablespoons butter, the earth’s surface is covered by |speaking of the importance of sea|tWwo tablespoons flour, one and oceans, it will probably be many [foods in the diet, Commissioner | one-half cups milk, salt and pep- years before scientists can ex-| O'Malley says: “They have proved | Per to taste and one slightly- plain all of the wonders of the|to be good sources of the min-|DPeaten egg. Dissolve one table- deep. erals and vitamins so essential to [Spoon of gelatin in four table One of the never-ceasing sources [a well-balanced diet, and of | Spoons of cold water. Add to the of wonder is the quantity of food | course, to good health. For a long | White sauce. Cool, fold in the which comes out of the sea, and |time sea foods have been contents of two 10-ounce cans of the nutritive value of this sea|nized as the richest known source | codfish flakes and eight sweet M Ge of the earth has been |in the United States, says that he | the deep” to your table in tempt- food. Science explains this, in|of iodine among foods.” pickles. Mold as desired. Chill. part, by telling us that as the| If you are a housewife, this all | L148 serves ten persons. land becomes poorer, the sea be-{gounds very interesting, perhaps Crab Meat Cocktail: Flake the comes richer. By the processes|__pyut perhaps, also, you hate to| contents of one 63%-ounce can of of erosion and other factors, the | clean fish. Scaling and cleaning | crab meat. Add two hard-cooked land is being continually impover-| even the most sleek and iodine-| e888 which have . been finely ished and the sea enriched. Wa- containing fish imaginable is not | chopped, and six sliced ter which seeps through the soil [an inviting task. But unless you | olives. Fork in lightly, one-half dissolves soluble salts and min-| ape a very old-fashioned house-| cup crisp shredded lettuce. Add erals and these eventually reach| wife, this element does not seri-| one-half cup cocktail sauce, and the sea. Man has even hastened | ously enter into your enjoyment | Serve in small green pepper cups. 3s Process by 2d of fish, because it is sold in such | This serves six persons. e Seas ave come a great|conveni c storehouse. I rR ad Sacked Sauces Miz together one-half cup catsup, one-fourth excellent variety, has been found to retain food value excellently. 00 Jem Speen ear Commissioner Henry O’Malley,| The following tested recipes will Worcestershire sauce and head of the Bureau of Fisheries bring some of these “wonders of drops of tabasco sauce.® Dietetic Importance SUMMER PRICES on now in effect at WOLGEMUTH BROS.) FLORIN, PA. Phone Mt, Joy 220 EXCLUSIVE AGENCY june-1-tf Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat In Just 4 Weeks Mrs. Mae West of St. Louls, Mo., writes: “I'm only 28 yrs. old and weighed 170 lbs. until taking one box of your Kruschen Salts just 4 weeks ago. I now weigh 150 lbs. I also have more energy and fur- thermore I've never had a hungry moment.” Fat folks should take one half teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water in the morning before breakfast—it’s the SAFE, harmless way to reduce as tens of thousands of men and women know. For your health’s sake ask for and get Kruschen at any drugstore —the cost for a bottle that lasts 4 weeks is but a trifle and if after the first bottle you are not joyfully satisfied with results—money back. 3424015 68 77 a sour blade LR 11/10 A Ly ler. entertained as her guests on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Shortlege and son, Miss Mildred Shortlege from Baltimore, Maryland, Mrs, Minnie Dombach, Al- len Dull and daughter of Columbia. Samuel Mumma is spending two weeks at the Choir camp at Goldsboro. Miss Lorea Falkenroth of York, is spending a week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Mumma. Ba Definite Price Put on Native Wife in Africa When an Inbhambani native of Portu- guese East Africa wants to get mar- ried he usually goes to Johannesburg to work in the gold mines for the price of a wife, Miss Ruth Thomas, a St. Louis missionary recently returned from there, says. The price of a na- tive wife is $75, which must be paid to her father, “The prospective bridegroom marches into the home of the father,” Miss Thomas reports, “and says in a bold tone, ‘Do the cattle eat here? (In- hambanian for ‘Are there any mar- riageable girls here?) “If the father replies affirmatively the boy produces the ‘bride price’ and asks for his daughter's hand. The father answers that the young man must obtain the consent of his daugh- ter. “If the daughter is obstinate it may require a good deal of arguing on the part of the parent to change her view. Seldom, however, does a prospective father-in-law allow $75 to slip away from him, - “When an agreement has been reached the two kneel before the fa- ther for his blessing. He fills his mouth with water and sprays the bride's face and then does the same thing to the bridegroom. That Is the wedding."—Exchange. Depression of 1873 Nearly 50,000 commercial houses failed between 1873 and 1878. By No- vember, 1873, pig iron could hardly be sold at any price and by December 1 half the furnaces and mills in the country had shut down. Six months later there were 175,000 men idle in that industry alone. Rhodes thus de- scribed the situation in those five vears, “a long, dismal tale of declin- ing markets, exhaustion of capital, low- ering in value of all kinds of property, including real estate; constant bank- ruptcies, close economy in business, and grinding frugality in living; idle mills, furnaces and factories, former profit-earning iron mills reduced to the value of a scrap heap; laborers out of employment, reductions of wages, | strikes and lockouts, the great railroad riots of 1877, suffering of the unem- ployed, depression and despair.” Re * covery was fairly rapid. <% Historic Daeling Pistols At the termination of the historic Stephen Decatur and ee You can get all the news of this CX a There is no better way to boost deral cost have increased 73 per cent ro” Ii is time to stop. your business than by local news paper advertising, o 2% ead 9 bo 020 050-4 9, ee 9. Sede! odo COR ee 9. Godel > 9, + 0.00, > 9 * 9 Ca 9 * 0%! 9 ® * 9, a 9 0, * 9, + 0 9 + 0, 9. * {a 9, * 0, 9 * 0, 7 * aXe’ 9 * a> OR) LA A A $0 a 0 0. 0 ho? 05% 040 0,9, {a> 9 $4.04, + 9, * 9. >, 9, 204 ¢ a 0 a? 0a? 4004 * 204 * 0 ho? %° >, So a? % 00 40 0. 0 P00 0000400, or edad aa a’ J * COR) ot 06% 06 9, * Kg) 9, 0.00, > J * 9, 0, 9, * Xa) > 9, + 0 Kaka) * 9, 0, 9, > 0, 9 + 0, 9, 0, * J Ka) 9. 9, * 9. * Xa) 9 Xa) * 9 + Ka) 0 * How to Heal Bad Legs Simply anoint the swollen veins and sores with Emerald Oil, and bandage your leg. Use a bandage three inches wide and long enough to give the necessary support, wind- ing it upward from the ankle to the knee, the way the blood flows in the veins. No more broken veins. No more ulcers nor open sores. No more crippling pain. Just follow directions and you are sure to be helped. Your druggist won't keep your money unless you are. Xa) 9 + 9 $0.00, * Xa) * 9 > 0, 0 * 9 > $0.00, + 9, 00% 4 * 9 0 >, J * >, * Ka) ® + 9, 0, * J) % 6204 ® RY) * 0 * 9. RE, 9 * 0, * 9. > 9, 0 > 9, 0, * 9, + J * 00 RaXa Xa Xe) 9 Ka) > Phone 211J * EXPERT WATCH and CLOCK REPAIRING JOHN H. MILLER 135 New Haven St. MOUNT JOY, PA. mar.30-tf Ka) 9, * CR) 0%, ooo > * 9 Xa 0. * 38) * SOR) 0, 9 9, 0% 9, * 0, 9, >, * 9, * 0, rode adel COW) * WE HAVE QUALITY MEATS Krall’s Meat Market West Main St. MOUNT Joy THE BULLETIN MOUNT JOY