WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25th, 1933 i non -.s Dwr AH 1h SF Sr A ms a. he ns rt rm ON A 6: Bm i oh ann . THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. PAGE FIVE Harold’s EBRUARY NER- PRING wen 78, Ventilators and Damask Covers Featuring\the NEI” “SMOOTH¥ ENT” The Greatest Furniture Story Ever Told! Introducing Something Entirely NEW! IATTRESS PY] ila 0 MOUNT JOY CAGERS JOIN COUNTY LEAGUE At a meeting held on Sunday afternoon in the Lancaster News- papers building, Mount Joy and the Manheim A. C. were the new members admitted to the Lancaster County Amateur Basketball League for the secondh alf, This is the first many years that an basketball team from has been entered in petition, The local team will be composed of former high players and will be coached by Lee Ellis, well known athlete, The following players, who will represent the locals are: Divet, Kreider, Mummau, Beamenderfer, Halbleib, Charles, Derr, Philips, Diffenderfer, Fackler, Weaver and Coach Ellis, This same group of players forc« ed West Lampeter to the limit to win by a two point margin on their own court. time in a good independent Mount Joy league com- tl rors Peru? Peru is to have been the native howe of the tomato, and the natives of Mexico are known to have grown it since very early times. They called them xiotmates or zitotmiates from which the present word, tomato, has probably been derived. It was not until nearly 100 years after the dis- covery of America that Furopeans be- came acquainted with the tomato and even after they had known the plant for many years It was used mainly for ornamental purposes, the food value of the fruit being little suspect- ed. Sheepshead Valuable The sheepshead, a fish with an un- attractive name, is nevertheless one <> Tue CARD BASKET a By Maude Edwards wv Mrs. Frank Stark and Mr. Lester Kover were Monday visitors to Harrisburg. Messrs. Lester Kover, Richard Myers, and Elam Hostetter were visitors at Lititz on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Ober, of Man- heim, were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. Aaron Garber and family, Mrs. Adda Wolgemuth returned home after spending some with friends and relatives at Cen- tre county. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Hornafius and son, of Harrisburg, were week end guests of the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Christ Hornafius. Mr. and Mrs. John children, of Florin, were visitors at | the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Webb on Sun- day. Mrs. Frank Stark, Mrs. John Barnhart, Mrs. Mrs. William Beamenderfer and son were at Newville on Friday afternoon attending the funeral of Mrs. John Heilman. sr eB Chinese Junks Launched With Great Ceremony Unless history be at fault, the Chi- nese were pioneers in breasting tem- pestuous seas to carry their commer- Local Doings (Frem page one) spent Saturday and Sunday at Philadelphia, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Have a Double House alo: St., 56 and 6 rooms, one has heat, both have water and electrie, Around Florin [re = $3,200. Jno. E., Schroll, Mount Joy. CHEAP HOUSE AT FLORIN— Main garage, Rents show 10 investment. Price only Skeen at- |Your business tended the funeral of Mrs. George |Vaper advertising of There is no better than by way to boost local news. Reese, at Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mrs. Tillie Eshleman friends at Lancaster. Mr. and Mrs. John Roth called on Mr, and Mrs, Chas, Webb, at Mount Joy on Sunday. + Miss Sara B. Hershey is spend- ing some time in York, visiting Mr and Mrs, Penrose Gilbert, Mr. Wm. White moved his fam- | Easton property on Church St. time | man Ebersole on Tuesday evening. { hibited at H. K. Bortzfield’s Roth and | last week, Benjamin Clinger, | tertained a number of guests on ily from Mount Joy to the John A Bible Study meeting was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nor- Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Hershey and son, Bobby, of Lemoyne, visit- ed the former's parents, on Sunday Mrs. Harvey Hareleroth was awarded the Kitchen Console ex- store, Mr. Jack Rose and Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hershey, of New York, spent the week end with Mr. Her- shey’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Lehman en- Sunday in honor of her husband who were ried. sister and recently mar- er ni | visited with DOO : ursday, Jan. 26th Clara Bow —f ALL HER SAVAGE” No. 5 Hurricane Express ein Stars—Krazy Kat Saturday, Jan. 28th Pa ABOUT THE SICK AND AFFLICTED Mrs. Kate Dillinger is ill at her State Theatre The ow Place of Lancaster County home. Mrs. Elizabeth Good, on Barbara St., is ill at her cial enterprises to far lands. The f'hinese have held with astonishing to many of their ancient religious practices. In a Portuguese with la grippe. work, translated into English in 1579, Mrs. Wilbur I. Beahm, who has is found this fairly full account of | Peen quite ill at the home of her | what the Chinese then did when they | Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Baker, | their ocean-going junks: |on East Main St, was removed to ‘When they launched their ships into | the St. Joseph’s hospital at Lan- the sea at the first making, the priests | ¢aster on Thursday. zo appareled with long garments, be- TT ao yyy ing of very rich silk, to make their | PENNA. FARM HANDS sacrifices in the poops of them, where AVERAGE $19 MONTHLY EE ——— 0 the place of prayer is, and they offered Attention Radio Listeners painted figures, and they cut and Don’t forget to tune in on WGAL burned them before their idols with tonight at 9:30 P. M., and hear the! certain ceremonies that they mnke, | ing paid an average of $19 a month Legion program of the Walter 8, ind sing songs with an unorderly tone, | with board or $32 a month without. Ebersole Post No. 185, consisting sounding certain little bells. They A department of agricultural | of all local talent. worship the ‘devil, where they have | survey of farm wages throughout | = | im painted in the fore-part of the | the country showed that Pennsyl- | i | bethtown, died Tuesday afternoon! ship, because, as they say, he should | vania hands were of the most valuable food fish along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. It va- ries in size from two pounds to 15 pounds. The drum is sometimes called the sheephead, although this designa- tion is not correct. The name of the fish cores not from the shape of its head, bu! railior because of the nulure of Its teeth, | 4 with incisors in front and moclars be hind. It feeds upon shell fish. for which its grinding teeth are well adapted. LUMBIA, PA. Wedngsday & Thursday 25th and 26th yes, Gary Cooper South. home Aetoal Plotograph | Feature No. 1 of our GREATER FEBRUARY SALE brings this ! ULTRA-COMFORTABLE Maitress that YOY BCDY ON A Farm hands in. Pennsylvania at the beginning of the year were be- CUSHION OF AIR. Your favorit: color in DAMASK Wus Hil ALT - FUL SLEEP and EXTRA COMIORT. The NEW “SMOOTH- _ aft ! getting better- { VENT” TUFT cannot col- at her home of a complication of do no hurt to the ships. In all this | than-average-pay. = diseases. Beside her husband she! discourse they are eating and drink- A superabundance of labor was | lect dust, and leaves the STE I TRI AR SR STEN BRT EL A hr Ne DT LS A TN PR RT a = TAROLDE 25 EAST KING STR” <v ; is survived by these children: Mrs. ing at discretion."—From the Grace | available, supply being 200 per, surjace SMGCOTH FOR Alvin D. Hess, Manheim; Mus. Ww. Log. cent of demand. Demand was only COMFORT. EXCLUSIVE E. Buch, Akron; Mrs. Charles E. 66 per cent of normal demand. rents or Some people spoil the effect of a good deed by being so self-right- eous about it. AT HAROLD'S. LANCASTER, PA. Zell, Philadelphia, and Mrs. R. W.| | Schlosser, Elizabethtown; also two, Masterpieces Not Free | brothers, Israel Doster, Lititz, and' From Humorous Errors { Daniel Doster, San Fernando, Calif Among famous errors of noted men, [She was a member of the J Church the Golden Book Magazine notes that of the Brethren for thirty-nine in Vandyke's celebrated picture of Advertise in The Bulletin years. Charles I in armor, both gauntlets are . Services will be held at the home! (ho right hand. ARIETTA THEATRE Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock and, pe there Is that passage f: Mrs. Lucie Diffenbaugh at Middle Creek church at 2:30 o- oro Ee xan (Formerly Acri’s Theatre) MARIETTA, PA. NEW LOW ADMISSION PRICES! Frank C. Musser Mrs. Lucie F. Diffenbaugh, 85, clock. Interment will be in the ad-| possible, to get to the ship, so I pulled Frank C. Musser, extensive catq|died at her home, Elizabethtown, | joining cemetery. off my clothes and took to the wa- 25¢, Children 15¢ Satur Nights and Holidays Adults 35c, Children 15¢ RA HARA Joan Blondel Wallace Ford ( Services were held Saturday. In-|death. J TE terment in Marietta cemetery. Passed to The Great Beyond (From page 1) his garage by his wife Monday. |ren, John and William Diffenbaugh Daniel L. Sipling, Sr. seventy- I found that all the ship’s provisions was a life-long resident of the boro | Death was caused by monoxide gas of Elizabethtown, seven grandchild- seven, died early Tuesday morning | were dry; and being well disposed to Three sisters survive: Georgie | He was sitting in his car and the hic and three great grandchildren. from the effects of poison he swal- eat, I went to the bread room and and Emilie, at home; and Bella, the | motor of the car was running. De- uneral services were held Sat- lowed late Monday afternoon at the! filled my pockets with biscuit.” The tle dealer and former mayor of | Wednesday afternoon of complica- ier . . . and by the help of a rope Lancaster city, was found dead in| tions. She is survived by two child- Daniel Sipling got into the forecastle of the ship . . . Matin Every Saturday and Holidays at 2:15 P. MM. Adults 15¢, Children 10c wife of Rev. John McElmoyle, of | ceased was 60 years old. Business urday afternoon from : Christ Re- home of his daughter, Mrs. Harvey, various nudist colonics would no doubt WEDNESDA nd THURSDAY, JAN. 25th & 26th Wayne, survive. worries were responsible for his| formed church, of Elizabethtown. Sauders, of Marietta, R. D. 1. | be grateful for Defoe’s explanation of RICHARD CROMWELL DOROTHY JORDAN J Burial in the Mount Tunnel ceme- Dr. G. A. Harter, of Maytown,| how this feat was accomplished. “rp 9 99 tery. ) | Count Hermann Keyserling, who was T S mY BOY was called after the aged man’s y act was discovered but the physi- Dot the author of “How to Tell the Jacob Boyd cian was unable to save him. The Birds From the Wild Flowers” is re- Jacob Boyd, sixty-two, of Man- victim, who was subject to fits of sponsible for the following : “The jun- heim, died at his home on Wednes- | despondency, said he “wanted to 8l€ is a thicket; hd ys fauna, n gen day of the effects of an apoplectic | die”. Deputy Coroner Walter Fry- eral, is rich and fushriant, rather than stroke suffered several lays ago. | berger, of Marietta, rendered a ver important as regards its Individual He is survived by his wife and a | dict of suicide following an investi- Plants. son Lawrence, of Manheim; one! gation in which he was assisted by granddaughter; also three brothers, Dr. H. D. Lawrence of Marietta. | Clement, Pequea township; Rev. A.| These children survive: Mrs. Clay-| L. Boyd, Bowmont, Idaho; and B.|ton Portner, of Elizabethtown; Mrs. | F. Boyd, Durango, Col; and two | Sanders, vith whom he resided; the largest and only inhabited of a sisters, Mrs. Kate May, of Delta, | MS. Andrew Greider, Mount Joy, group of three islands in the middle York county; and Mrs, Harry Mil- R. D.; Irvin, of Rheems; Raymond, | of the South Atlantic ocean, is re- ler, Penn township. He was em- Daniel, Jr., of Bainbridge, BR. D.; garded as the loneliest place in the ployed as a pattern maker in the | Mrs. Mable Swope, Elizabethtown, | pop empire. It was named for a Hershey machine and foundry com- R. D.; Mrs. Mary Weidman, Mount Portuzucse. admiral who discovered pany for thirty-two years and a|J0% R. D; and Howard, Rheems; "0.0%" 500 member of the town council for 2150 two brothers, George and Gid- Months, and sometimes a year, pass several years, eon, of Dallas Center, Towa. without a ship calling there. People Services were held Friday at the| Services will be held Thursday, —the island has only a population of home. Interment in Fairview cem- afternoon, privately at the home at 160—go without mail and newspapers etery. 1:30 o'clock followed by public ser-| for a long time as a. result. Their or gloss 3 the food supply grows woefully short and i st ¢ tow . : Ane Soi David H. Engle ment Ry a a fare) they live on the barest means the soil David H. Engle, aged 80 years, died’ etery. on Thursday night at the home of his | | daughter, Mrs. Harry C. Zeamer, 302 | © | Chestnut street, Columbia. He had | been in ill health for sometime. i Mr. Engle for thirty years prior tol his retirement about fourteen years | ago was a funeral director and furni- | ture dealer in this boro. For seven years he was the superintendent and his wife was the matron at the Messiah Home for the aged in Harrisburg. Since the death of his wife six years ago he retired from active life and re- sided alternately at the Messiah Home and at the home of Mrs. Zeamer. Mrs. | Engle also died while on a visit to her daughter in Columbia. Mr. Engle was a member of the Brethren in Christ church, which maintains the Messiah Home, for the past half century. The survivors are his daughter, Mrs. Minnie M. Zeamer and one son John Engle, of Detroit, Michigan; two grand- children, Harold Zeamer, a student at Yale University and Miss Charlotte Zeamer, Columbia, The body was removed this place and was viewed at the Roy B. Sheetz Funeral Home on Saturday evening. The funeral was held on Sunday at the Cross Roads Brethren in Christ church. Burial was made in the ad- joining cemetery. WITH THE UNIVERSITY, OF CALIFORNIA FOOT BALL TEAM JACK HALEY IN\“THEN CAME THE YAWN” The Mad King (Terry-Tige)—Silver Spring (Magic Carpet) FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JAN. 27th and 28th SPECIAL SATURDAY MATINEE AT 2:15 P, M. VALUABLE PRIZES GIVEN AWAY EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT BORIS KARLOFF “THE MASK OF MANCHU” (THE FRANKSTEIN OF E ORIENT) LAUREL & HARDY in “The COMNTY HOSPITAL” THE JUNGLE MYSTERY—SERIAL—&HAPTER NO. § I'll be Glad When Your Dead (Screen Song) ollywood on Parade BIG SPECIAL SUNDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW BOX OFFICE OPENS SUNDAY, JAN. 29th 3% 12:01 A. M. MONDAY and TUESDAY, JAN. 31st Family night on every Tuesday night when all shildren accompanied by their parents are admitted free! JANET GAYNOR CHARLES FARRELL “TESS OF THE STORM COUNTRY”. Bring ’em Back Sober (Sennett Comedy) Movietonews, Organlogue Passing of Veteran Straphanger Forecast By De-Luxing Passengers Commuter com- i fort is now gain- J ing ground in many cities. Here is a deluxe car recently put into Detroit service. Solitary Islanders Unfortunately located for any ship lanes, the island of Tristan da Cunha, Below—A strap- hanger’s dream come true. Taste- fully upholstered in Chase Velmo, this street car provides a seat for every pas- senger. and sea can furnish, a erm EE Ii E11 E = MOOSE THEATRE ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. TWO EVENING SHOWS 7:00 AND 9:00 MATINEES ON SATURDAYS AND HOLIDAYS AT 2:00 P. M. ADMISSION: MATIN ES, 10 & 25¢c; EVENINGS 15 & 30¢ Agate Easily Polished The agate, once highly prized by the ancients because of the beauty of the coloring, can be brought to brilliant | color and polish by boiling in a sirup | and then in an acid. The resultant colors are beautiful. The agate is fairly widely distributed in the world, being found in Egypt, Scotland, Ger- many, South America, the United States and in other parts of the world. | The moss type is found in Wyoming and Nevada, while the banded type is found in quantity along Lake Superior. Large specimens of the banded type are also plentifully distributed in Texas, Wednesday, Jan. 25th \ “Handle With Care” | With James Dunn, Boots Mallory, El Brendel, Buster Phelps Thursday, Jan. 26th Buck Jones in “White Eagle” ith Barbara Weeks PERFECT! WE invite you to inspect Bn £2 | a = THE straphanger is on the way inexpensively and quickly as well. out! No longer will the ticcd In Detroit, the City of Detroit, and of Street Railways has urky placed into service, a de luxe street enough to corral a seat. No loner ear wherein, for an additional will tired and reproachful niciile, a passenger is sure of a send withering glances at uncom- se:t not an ordinary, every day fortable male seat occupants, garden variety of a trolley seat through the scanty protection af- either, but a luxurious chair up- forded by hastily raised new.pa- holstered in Velmo, of a quality yy pers The passenger is becoming de- ‘that ‘makes the blissful commuter luxed! imagine he is reclining in an easy In Philadelphia, Ralph T. Senter, chair in his own home. This mo- president of the Philadelphia Rapid hair velvet famous for its long Transit Co.- has instructed em-|wear and appearance has furnished ployees to begin being “friendly” |a parlor atmosphere to the car, and, with subway, bus and trolley pas-|through suggestion, parlor manners sengers. to the commuter. Man’s Need of Women By women, poets are ruled. Women give an age its color; not because they themselves are omnipotent, but be- cause men, being children first and last, see their gods through women and have no peace but at the breast and no imagination of rebirth but in the similitude of a womb. Solitary men are like cut flowers in a pot; they are beautiful but they wither; be- ing without nourishment; yet if man consent to be nourished of woman, he, like a flower, is rooted and held; there | is no escape until his earth receives 0 i business man sway gently to hundreds of samples of our “ fro in front of the chip fu FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JAN.\27th and 28th printed matter to give you an idea of the kind of work we JANET GAYNOR and CHARLES Tess of the Storm Country turn out in our Job Printing Department. We know you'll like the quality. Monday, Jan. 30th Tuesday, Jan. 31st BULLETIN “The Match King” “Lawyer With such indications from pro- »w York City, the New York, him again.—From “The Fountain,” by New i Hartford Railroad | minent commuting centers, it looks MOUNT JOY Charles Morgan. : es . ore has added a counter car, which |as if a specimen of the veteran Mrs. Hemry R. Souder Phone 41J with Warren Williams with William Powell looks like a lunchwagon gone high |straphanger should be captured and hat and wherein the busy commu- | stuffed for the museum before the ter can get a hastily cooked meal | species become entirely extinct. When in need of Printing, (anything) Mrs. Annie H. Doster Souder, 78, Kind Te the Bot y remem e etin. wife of Henry R. Souder, of Eliza- 4 BRR NT TEE CE I rT I TREO i} Pte | 4 ’ 4 Tom
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers