Ge 0 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO,, PA. TE rr rain me wo 3 v ore 3 Sa. aE FR a The pana a || Classified Column FOR SALE--Hog I. B. Breneman, Manheim Route 2. mar.15-2t-p "TOBACCO RIBS FOR SALE—See A. M. Hershey, Mount Joy. mar. 1-tf FOR SALE-—-Majestic Cooking Stove with water front, in good condition. Also a three-burner gas stove with even. Apply 258 West Main St, Mount Joy, Pa. mar.8-2t FOR RENT-A desirable property, No. 40 Donegal Springs Road, Mt. Joy. All conveniences, Also Garage. Apply to Mrs. Fanny Engle, Donegal Springs Road. mar.1-4t FOR RENT—A 7-room house with conveniences. Also poultry houses, garage, garden, etc. Apply at 333 Mari- etta street, Mt. Joy. mar.8-3t STERILIZING TOBACCO BEDS on short notice and at Reasonable Prices. Call Allen Shearer and Brother, R. 3, Manheim, Pa. mar.8-2tp USED AND DEMONSTRATING RADIO SETS—$10.00 up in good work- fng condition, Lancaster Electric Supply & Construction Co., 23 East Orange Street, Lancaster, Pa. mar.8-2t RADIO SERVICE—Day and night including Sunday. Apply T. F. Mc- Elroy, Florin. Phone Mt, Joy No. 8051J. nov.2-tf FOR SALE CHEAP—A 6-room house in Florin, all conveniences, nicely lo- cated. Property newly papered and painted. Will take $3,000 for a quick sale. See Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy, Pa. dec.28-tf TWO LOTS OF GROUND each fronting 40 ft. on Main street, Florin, with a 2%,-Story Frame House, shingle roof. An ideal location and priced to sell at depression price. List No. 439. Jno. E. Schroll, Mount Joy. mar.15-tf FOR SALE -A Brick House with Slate Roof, 8 rooms, all convenien- ces, Poultry House 12x12, along concrete highway, Florin. Apply to Jno. E. Schroll, Realtor, Mount Joy. No. 416. janl4-t! CHEAP HOUSE AT FLORIN- Have a Double House along Main St., 5 and 6 rooms, one side has heat, both have water amd electric *wo car garage. Rents show 10 r cent. investment. Price only ,200. Jno. E. Schroll, Mount Joy. ONLY $3,750 A SIDE—That’s all I ask for a Dandy Double House, with Double Garage. House has modern heat, baths, light, gas, etc., and is nicely located on Delis St., Mt. Joy. It's a good investment See Jno. E. Schrell, Mt. Joy, jan7-tf NEW HOUSE CHEAP--I have @ 6-room House along the trolley at | before | Florin that I want to sell April 1st. Has all conveniences an will sell for only $3,650 for a quick sale. This is No. 371 in my list Jvuo. E. Schroll. Realtor. Mt. Jov STOVE WOOD sawed in 12 inch lengths consists of oak and hickory. $6.00 per cord delivered. —JACOR G. BAKER, R. D. Manheim, Pa. Phone 1R2. jly-6-tf EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Estate of Elizabeth Sheaffer, late of Mount Joy Borough, Lancaster Coun- ty, Pa., deceased. Letters testamentary on said estate having been granted to the under- signed, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make immediate pay- ment, and those having claims or de- mands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, residing in Elizabeth~ town, R. D. 2, Pa. HARVEY D. SHEAFFER, Executor Wm. Rehm, Atty. mar.15-4t EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of John H. Engle, late of Mt. Joy Borough, deceased. Letters of testamentary on said es- tate having been granted to the under- signed, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make immediate payment and those having claims or demands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the un- dersigned, residing in Mount Joy Boro. HENRY J. ENGLE, Executor William C. Rehm, Atty. feb.22-6t TO THE MEMBERS OF THE PENN TOWNSHIP FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION OF LANCAS- TER COUNTY Notice is hereby given that a meet- ing of the members of the Penn Town- ship Fire Insurance Association of Lancaster County will be held at the general office of the Company, in the City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on Monday, April 17, 1933, at 2:00 o'clock P. M,, for the purpose of considering and acting upon a proposed amendment of the charter, as set forth in section 2, to include insurance against storm. ELMER E. BRUBAKER, Secretary mar.16-5t COURT PROCLAMATION WHEREAS, the Hon. B. C. Atlee, President Judge of the Court of Com- mon Pleas and for the County of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, and Gen- eral Jail Delivery and Quarter Ses- sions of the Peace in and for the Coun- ty of Lancaster, have issued his Pre- cept, to me directed, requiring me, among other things, to make Public Proclamation throughout my bailiwick, that a Court of Oyer and Teriminer and General Jail Delivery also a Court of General Quarter Sessions of the Peace and Jail Delivery, will com- mence in the Court House, in the City of Lancaster, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. One Week Commencing Monday, March 13, 1933 in pursuance of which precept Public Notice is hereby given to the Mayor and Alderman of the City of Lancas- ter, in said county ,and all the Justices of the Peace the Coroner and Con- stables of said City and County of Lancaster that they be then and there, in their own proper persons, with their rolls, records and examinations, and inquisitions, and their other re- membrances, to do those things which to their offices appertain in their be- half to be done; and also those who will prosecute against the prisoners who are or then shall be in the jail of the said County of Lancaster, are to be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be just. DANIEL F. SHUMAN, Sheriff Local Doings Around Florin (From page 1) son, Bobbie, of Lemoyne, visited the former’s home on Sunday. Miss Betty Hockenberry spent the week end with her aunt, Mrs. Dave Mumper in Mount Joy. Mr, Irvin Zink will move from the Dan Derr property in Mount Joy to Easton property here. Leanore and Arlene Woods, of Blain, are spending several days with their aunt, Mrs. A. D. Garber. Mr. Leroy Walters, of Grantham Bible College, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G Walters over the week end. Mr. Christ G. Stauffer will vacate from the Easton house and move to the Hostetter property vacated by Mr. Lehigh. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Robinson and children, of Middletown, spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rehrer, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Eppley of Marietta spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wagenbach on Chocolate Avenue. Mrs. Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs. Luther Trostle, of Maytown, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Easton on Sunday. Mr. Jacob Baker, of Maytown, and Miss Campbell, of Marietta, called on Mr. and Mrs. John D. Easton, on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Hershey and daughters, Sara, and Mrs. Melvin Weaver attended the funeral of Mrs. Mary Ebersole at Maytown. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Crowl and children and Mrs. Emma Raffens- perger visited Mr. and Mrs. John Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. N. S. Grimm, Flor- ence Grimm, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wittle and daughter, Clara, and Norman Will spent Sunday at Phil- adelphia with Mr. and Mrs. John Wittle. regular monthly meeting at the | home of Mrs. Harry Balmer. In-| cluded in the program was the elec- | tion of officers which resulted as | follows: President, Mrs. Henry Wit- | tle; vice president, Mrs. George Vogle; secretary, Mrs. Clarence | Nissly; treasurer, Bertha Kraybill; | assistant, Mrs. James Hockenberry; offering secretary, Mrs. Ar- | thur Braun; stewardship secretary, { Mrs. Gus Shetter and Mrs. Al Fike pianist, Mrs. Deitzler: 1ssistant, Phyllis Deitzler: collectors, Mrs. Al Fike and Mrs. Enos Wachstetter; secretary of literature, Miriam Guhl The Ushers’ League and the Male Quartette of the Mount Joy U. B. | church surprised Mr. and Mrs, Al- | { bert Haines at their home in Flor- in. The Male Quartette rendered several selections which were great- ly erjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. Haines | who wish to take this means in | thanking their many friends and reighbors for their kindnesa. These | tolks were present: Rev. 0. L.; Mease, John Shank, John Brubaker Daniel Brubaker, Robert Bentzel, | Earl Myers, Charles Z. Derr, Har- ry Beamenderfer, Christ Herr, | Lloyd Kime; members of the male | quartette were Eli Bentzel, Warren | Bentzel, Curtis Reisch, and Abram | Stauffer, all of Mount Joy; Howard Balmer, David Balmer, Jacch Stiz- ler, Simon Cover, Emma Boyer, Mary Bishop, Joe Baltoser and Billy Baltoser and Jane Zeller, all of Florin; Fannie Kline, of Lan- ® Private Sale a OF a HORSES On the Christian Nissley farm, a short distance east of Rheems. SOME GOOD SINGLE LINE LEADERS EXCELLENT WORKERS Irvin Kaylor mar-15-2t EXPERT WATCH and CLOCK REPAIRING JOHN H. MILLER 48 West Main Street Phone 211J MOUNT JOY, PA mar.,30-tf HOW ARE YOUR SHOES? Raffensperger at Elizabethtown on | Last Wednesday evening the Wo- | men’s Missionary Society held their | | Called Back | By COSMO HAMILTON ©, by McClure Newspaper Byndicate, WNU Service T WAS the doctor who spoke. He sald, “Pemberton, I have to tell you | that your wife won't live through the night,” | In order to hide his personal an- guish and professional distress the doctor put into his volce a certain roughness, But as he stood in that dimly lit room in which the figure of Pemberton was bending forward with his face between his hands, he said to himself, “Oh, my God, where have we got to in medical science when such a beautiful thing must slip through our fingers in all the glory of youth?” | The doctor had been, and was still, desperately in love with Enid, and had not recovered from the sudden and utter collapse of his hopes when, having asked her to be his wife three years before, she had sald these tri- umphant words: ‘But, my dear, haven't you heard the news? I'm go- | ing to be Mrs. Pemberton—the wife of Nicholas Pemberton, one of our coun: try’s greatest authors.” | «ince then he had resented Pem- berton. For a considerable time he had not been able to bear the sight of him. Rumor had it, and he believed It | to be trae, that Enid and her husband were among the very few happily married couples within a radius of | fifty miles of their old and charming { house. During his concentration upon what had been of necessity nothing but a case, he had, however, tumbled upon something which pointed to the fact that there had been a skeleton in the most private cupboard of that old place. And so, instead of leaving the room after making his statement, he shut | the door and went to the fireplace. ! “Pemberton,” he said, ‘there's | something behind all this which is defeating me. Your wife is entering upon the crisis of her illness. In or- dinary cases it would of course be touch and go although the odds would be with me. But in this case they are against me—heavily against me— because Enid hasn't the will to live, D—n it, she wants to die! This means | | | —something, and I want to Know what.” “It means that she wants to escape from me.” “Escape from you. Why? You've loved her, haven't you. Haven't you done every mortal thing to make her happy?” “Yes. I have loved her. I still love her and I've done every mortal thing, so far as I had the capacity, to make her happy with me.” “Well then—what do you mean?” t sum up my failure in two most terrible words—too old. To which I must add that she has been forced to divide me with my work. My work has erected a barrier be- tween us over which she has never been able to climb. Before this illness hit her I stood here late one night and prayed to God that she might obtain her freedom with some decent fellow nearer her own age.” The doctor stood aghast. Out of the mouth of this reticent man came words that he had dragged from his soul. No wonder he was being defeated. “I must go back,” he said. “She may want to die; you may want her to die, but, by Heaven, I shall put up a fight against death with all the strength I have.” He went to the door and came back. How he hated this man! “Here's a note addressed to you. I found it on the floor. It must have slipped from under her pillow.” The note was addressed to himself in the round, bland, schoolgirl writing that he knew so well. “Pembie, my darling, you've drama- tized all this. You've seen me with the eyes of a novelist from the very first. We haven't been living in life but in the pages of a manuscript. You have never been too old, as you have made yourself out to be, And if I resented your work because it took you away from me, each one of your books has been almost as much my child as it has yours, You know I loved you when I married you and I adore and admire you now, but you made up your mind that the story must end unhappily and it must. I can do nothing but die. But even when I am dead I shall sit outside your door and waft my love through the keyhole. I've done this every day since you married me though you never discovered it.” You should have heard those creak- Ing boards and seen the figure of that gaunt gray man as he plunged up that wide old staircase in a frantic effort to push aside that other gaunt gray figure which was standing by the bed! “What do you want?” It was the doctor who spoke, as the nurse rose to her feet, “It's my fight,” called out Pember- ton, flinging himself on his knees and placing one arm with utter tender- ness and sudden understanding over the flaccid body that lay on the bed. “Enid. Enid. I love you. Make the end of this story a happy one by liv- ing. Together we'll make a serial of this story which shall run on and on.” The little hand to which he had pressed his lips trembled and was withdrawn, presently to be placed like an inspiration on his head. And although there was net a single DON'T WAIT TOO LONG BRING THEM IN CITY SHOE REPAIRING CO. creak from those old oak boards, Death went away from that house, ——— Eee Advertise in The Bulletin disville; Charles Fogie and Harry Witmer, of Newtown; Howard Reh- rer, George Rehrer, Harry Brooks, William McGarvey, Peter MecGar- vey, Edwin Booth, Mildred Booth, Blanche McElroy, Harriet McElroy, Jane McElroy, Helen McElroy, H. Jacob Wm. C. Keener, Jacob Loraw, Emenheiser, Helen Loraw, Hamilton and daughter, Mary, Raa ACTIVITIES IN TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH HERE The Ladies’ Aid of the Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mrs. Wm. Hendrix on Thursday evesing. Missionary Society The women’s Missionary Society met at the home of Mrs. Howard Bortzfield on Tuesday evening. Mrs. Raymond Gilbert was the leader. The Clam Bake The clam bake held at the home of Mrs. Wm. Dillinger on Saturday for the benefit of the Ladies’ Aid was a de- cided success. Ladies’ Bible Class On Monday evening the Young Ladies’ Bible Class of the Sunday School met at the home of Mrs. R. Daman Smedley. The evening was spent sewing for the Lutheran Or- phans’ Homes. A fine program was followed by dainty refreshments. A A Executive Meeting The Executive meeting of the American Legion Auxiliary met on Monday evening at the home of Mrs. George Brown, on Marietta St. The ladies did sewing for the needy veterans’ children. The next meeting will be held the first Mon- day in April at the home of Mrs, | Clyde Eshleman on East Main St. BR. Plant Hardy Materials | perennials, This work can be done | most conveniently now before other spring work crowds it out of the | schedule, Flittings In Our from Samuel Hollinger’s property to the Lizzie Hossler’s Church, his homestead near Hossler’s church hold effects from North Barbara St to Florin. family from Florin to New Haven Street. to the J. Clarence Reist farm on Thursday. Apothecary, on East Main St. has moved into the Beamesderfer apart ment on East Main St. Engle estate. near Green Tree to Russell Shope’s tenant house, near Maytown on Thursday. Mr. Ira Heisey, of Elizabethtown moved into the property near Cherry Hill the past week. and Anna Mary Walter, East Peters- March is the time to plant hardy burg. trees, shrubs, vines, and herbaceous| William Carl Shiffer, Elizabethtown B= Grace G. Kauffman, Mount Joy, D2 Neighborhood (From page 1) Shearer property near Mr. Sam Hollinger moved into Mr. Alvin Sides moved his house- Mr. Elwood .Gerber moved his Mr. and Mrs. Kopp will move on- Mr. Maust, who conducts the from the Mr. Eugene Rice will move from Abram Eshleman school ——— ee: Marriage Licenses Jacob W. Ebersole, Rapho Township Patronize Bulletin Advertisers | | | 0 RNID J MAUST Quality The First National Bank and Trust Company of Mount Joy, Pa. Has resumed normal banking activities with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, through the Federal Reserve Bank. While the Banking Holiday was on we served our patrons as far as the rulings of the Secre- tary of the Treasury permitted. When Pay Rolls were released we cashed checks without re- striction. The officers of this bank wish to express their appreciation of the considerate manner in which our customers have met the trying con- ditions of the past ten days, which were im- posed by circumstances over which we had no control. Drugs Courteous Service Prompt Delivery Call 4W Vida MOUNT JOY. PENNSYLVANIA SPECIAL Hotpoint SPECIAL General Electric Ranges Three and four burner, oven attached $104.00 Installed in your home ready for use. No other expense incurred Cut out this ad, bring it to our store, procure 6 twenty cent Mazda Lamps for $1.08 and one Night Lamp will be given free. Lancaster Electric Supply & Construction Co. 23 East Orange Street, LANCASTER, PA. Liberal Offer For a Local Representative ego A RBs RT ur— CHEVROLET THE WORLD'S LOWEST-PRICED FULL-SIZE SIX-CYLINDER ENCLOSED CARS A NEW AND ADDITIONAL LINE OF CHEVROLET SIXES Another great new line of cars from the leader! Chevrolet introduces, as an addi- tion to its present Master Six, the new Standard Six line. Big, full-size, full-length Built to Chevrolet standards automobiles. of quality . . . performance . . . . and economy. at the lowest prices ever placed on six- cylinder enclosed motor cars. ability The styling is modern, aer-stream styling . . . ultra-smart and up-to-the-minute. bodies are Fisher wood-and-steel bodies— spacious, tastefully finished—and featuring Fisher No Draft Ventilation. shields have safety plate glass. The trans- . . depend- And selling The Special ered prices and easy ©. Chevrolet Motor Co.. equipment rir The wind- CCLUVE 445 COACH 455 COPE with rumiie seat ‘4795 A! prices f. o. b. Flint, Michigan yr Detroit, Mich. mission has an easy, clashless shift and a silent second gear. The engine is a smooth, fast, responsive six. And Chevrolet engineers have made economy an outstanding feature! tests show that the Standard Six goes more miles on a gallon of gas, more on a filling of oil, than will any other full-size car on the road. As for reliability—remem- ber, it’s a Chevrolet. Introduction of this new Standard Six opens the way for new thousands of people to enjoy the advantages of Chevrolet quality. It gives the public, for the first time, a full-size auto- mobile combining maximum quality and maximum all-round economy. Low deliv- 1.C. terms. CHEVROLET STANDARD SIX A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE H. S. NEWCOMER & SON MOUNT JOY, PA.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers