The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 12, 1933, Image 2

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PAGE TWO
MT. JOY BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY, PA.
J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr.
Subscription Price $1.50 Per Year
Six ‘Months ...... 76 Cents
Three Months 40 Cents
Single Copies 3 Cents
Sample Copies ...... FREE
Joy as second-class mall matter.
The date of the expiration of your
subscription follows your name on the
label. We do not send receipts for subse
scription money received. Whenever
you remit, see that you are given pro-
per credit We credit all subscriptions
at the first of each month.
All correspondents must have their
communications reach this office not
Mater 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-
ville 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
THE GREAT PROTECTOR
Curiously enough, a great
Americans regard life insurance purely
as “death insurance,” protection for the
dependents when the income-producer
dies.
This, of course, is an
function of life insurance. But it does
a great deal more than that. It is
being increasingly used as a means of
guaranteeing the education of one’s
children, for assuring an adequate in-
come in one’s old age, to protect again-
st business reverses, to build an es-
tate or rebuild a depleted one. For
some time past, the life insurance in-
dustry has been paying more money to

many
outstanding
living policyholders than to bene-
ficiaries,
There is hardly a human exigency
that life insurance, in one or another
of its forms, won't cover. It has earned
the right to be called the great pro-
tector. And it has earned the right,
too, to be called as secure and as safe
an institution as the human mind has
been able to conceive. The fact that
thousands of Americans are turning to
it with a new realization of its possi-
bilities and achievements means much
to the future of the country.

SQUEEZE THE
OFFICIAL SPONGE
“Yt thete is “watered stock” in in-
dustry, there is certainly “watered |
stock” in government when measured
by the same vardstick.
If there are industrial organizations
where the investor gets only $1 worth
of value for $2 worth of stock, there
are certainly government operations
where he gets only $1 worth of value
for $2 worth of taxes.
The difference between stock in a
private corporation and stock in gov-
ernment, is that the investor does not
Entered at the post omfce at Mount |
|
BAINBRIDGE
| Mr, and Mrs. Wilbur Garber, of Pit-
tsburgh, were the guests of the for-
mer's mother, Mrs, Carrie Garber, for
| several days visiting her grand-mother,
Mrs. Viola Trimble
Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd Brandt and
| daughter, Shirley, of New Cumberland
| and Ray Brandt of Branchville, N. J.,
were the week-end guests of Mr, and
Mrs, Harry Brandt.
John, Bernard and Kenneth Sechrist
of Thomasville, spent the week-end
with relatives here
Mr, and Mrs. Ervin Miller and son,
Jimmie, were the guests of the for-
mer's mother, Mrs, Estella Miller, at
Perdix on Sunday
The following persons were guests of
Harry Birch during the week-end: Mr,
and Mrs, H, B. McCall, Miss Catherine
Sullivan, Mrs. Harry Hackenberger,
Miss Catherine McCarvell, Miss Bea-
trice Murphy, Miss Elizabeth McGire,
Edward McCarvell, Charles McCall, all
of Harrisburg; Mr. and Mrs. William
Flanagan, of Pottstown, Eugene
Flanagan and sons, Torrence and Eu-
gene, of Columbia.
Mr. and Mrs, J. Harvey Hall and
children Jeanne, Harry and Jimmie and
Mr. and Mrs, Harry Shellamen of Phil-
adelphia, were the guests of Mr, and
Mrs, William Breneman on Tuesday
Miss Ruth Groff has resumed her
duties as student nurse at St. Joseph's
hospital, Lancaster, after recuperating
from an operation for appendicitis at
the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
C. W, Groff,
and

Farm Society, 2
Met Saturday
(From page one)
taken by the members. No member
will be admitted to the park that day
without a ticket, which will be given
free by the president at Manheim
Square the morning of the event. All
members are urged to attend, notifying
the president if no means of transpor-
tation is available.
A dainty refreshment was served by
the hostess to: Mrs. Harvey Spangler,
Mrs. Francis S. Weidman, Miss Esther
Wolgemuth, Mrs. Wm. Moyer, Mrs.
Armin Shearer, Mrs. Harry Gibble,
Martha Gibble, Mrs. Frank Ruhl, Mrs.
Fianna Ober, Mrs. Maude Boyer, Mrs.
John Miller, Mrs. John H. Snavely,
Mrs. Harry Blecher, Mrs. Emma K.
Wolgemuth, Mrs. Oliver L. Moyer,
Mrs. Roy Shelly and son Buddy; Mrs.
Lloyd A. Kauffman, Mrs. Norman
Shreiner, Mrs. Wm. Baum, Esther
Shreiner, Mrs. H. H. Berntheisel, Mrs.
Wm. P. Bucher, Mrs. R. McCom-
mon, Mrs. Charles Young, Mrs. Harvey
Spangler and children James and Bell-
erma; Mrs. M. Edwards and children
Dorothy and Pauline; Miss Mary Weid-
man, Mrs. Geib, Mrs. John S. Shelley,
Martha Gibble, Miss Verna Shearer,
Mrs. Benj. Smith, Emma Mae Ginder,


have to buy the former but he certain-
ly has to subscribe to the latter and
any property that he has may be taken |
by government to pay his bill.
There is as much or more need for
“wringing the water” out of govern-
ment operations, as there is for wring-
ing it out of private operations, In
fact, there is more need, for the simple |
on that there is not the same in-
dividual incentive to keep government |
solvent as there is to keep private:
business solvent.
When government is running in the |
red, the powers that put it there simp- |
ly ask the taxpayers additional sums to |
make up the deficits of bad manage- |
ment. When a private industry runs
in the red, it eventually goes out of
existence and its managers lose their
jobs
There is so much water in the man- |
agement of government today that if
the official sponge were squeezed, the
savings to the taxpayers would revive
our economic structure as would a
pitcher of water poured on a parched |
plant,



FIRE PROTECTION EOR
THE FARMER
The farmer is the greatest propor-
tionate sufferer from fire. In other
words, the annual farm fire waste is
greater in comparison to property
values than the urban loss.
This may have been unavoidable a
few years ago. Farms were far apart,
roads poor, communication facilities |
slow and undependable. But today al
different situation obtains. Good |
roads make it possible to go from the |
nearest town to the average farm in a!
very short space of time. The tele-
phone affords instant contact with the |
outside world. The reason farm fire |
loss has not come down is that the
bulk of farmers have taken insufficient !
interest in building up fire fighting or-
ganizations.
A few states have shown how this
can be done at a reasonable cost. A
first-class standard engine is situated!
at a central point, where it can serve
a wide number of farms in the sur-
rounding area. The department is
headed by a qualified fire marshal who
builds up a volunteer organizatien.
The cost to the state or the com-
munity or the farmer is nothing in
comparison to the protection furnish- |
ed. Such organizations have saved
hundreds of thousands of dollars worth
of farm property which would other-


wise have been destroyed. $
lived in farming, goes on in his mind it takes place also
Anyone who has
sections knows the tragedy of fire that |
destroys buildings, livestock, crops and people under the age of twenty-one
and insurance | who each week spend two hours or
rates. The solution is the central fire more in the mavies,
department, well equipped and scien- | will probably see the next Joan Craw-
f ford or Norma Shearer release than
jrave seen Shakespeare's
HAS AMERICA LOST ITS the three hundred years since it was
written
With the growing multiplicity of more fraught with consequences to the
lives and raises taxes
tifically developed
SPIRITUAL VALUES?
plans and schemes to iron out the
Emma Hoffer, Mrs. O. R. Brooks, Mrs.
Walter Dohner, Albert Dohner, Miss
Grace May Ober, Mrs. J. N. Shearer,
Mrs. Amos Hoffer, Rev. O. R. Brooks,
THE MOUNT JOY

The Actress
Incognito
By H. IRVING KING


® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate
WNU Service
HERE was a touch of the theatri
cal her as she passed with
her swinging gait down the lobby of
the hotel, Just a touch, not a loud
pronouncement It was a hotel on a
Florida beach; a moderate-priced, re-
tiring, restful sort of place, just
suited to its patrons who came year
after year,
about
Of course, every year there were
a few new faces, This season the
new faces were those of Rosalie
Maltravers and Charles Burdick.
Rosalie was the girl with the the-
atrical touch about her and Charles
was the young man who sat watch-
ing her intently as she strode through
the hotel lobby.
It was whispered that she was a
celebrated actress down there Incog-
nito, just for rest,
As for Charles Burdick his manner
and clothes were so perfect that fit
had been decided that he was a
voung man of “wealth and fashion.”
On the third evening after the
arrival of the perfectly equipped and
perfectly mannered Mr. Burdick, he
and the celebrated actress incognito
sat on the veranda of the hotel look-
ing out over the moonlit waters.
“Somehow, do you know, Miss Mal-
travers,” said Charles, “your face
seems familiar to me. Now where
could I have seen you before?”
Rosalie gave a little gasp and re-
plied, “Oh dear. It's no use for -me
to try and hide away—and just rest.
People will recognize me. I may as
well admit that I am merely an
actress, seeking quiet retirement in
this delightful and obscure place to
recover from the nervous strain
caused by my exacting work.”
“Acting must be hard work,” re-
plied Charles. “No wonder so many
actors and actresses suffer from
nervous breakdowns. May I go so
far as to ask your stage name?”
“Ah,” laughed Rosalie, “that I may
not—or will not—tell you. It would
be all over the hotel in half an hour
and I should have no peace. And
may I add that you yourself, Mr.
Burdick, appear to be somewhat of
a mystery according to the gossip of
the hotel? Tell me your real name.”
“Really,” replied Charles, “I must
have my secrets as well as yourself.
I. too, seek peace and not publicity.”
After that Charles and Rosalie
were together so much that every-
body at the resort considered the
affair as settled. The millionaire
was going to marry the actress.
Wasn't it delightful?
Never, never had the guests at the
little hotel enjoyed their sojourn
there so much. They wrote off reams
of letters to their friends in the
North about it. The lovemaking of
Rosalie and Charles progressed rap-
idly, but after that first talk of theirs
they let the mystery of thelr real
identities stand as it was—as i? there
was no mystery. Or was it that all
other mysteries were swallowed up
in the mystery of love? Sometimes
Rosalie would have a moody spell;

Lloyd Kauffman, Norman Shreiner, C.
D. Boyer, C. E. Young.
The program was closed by singing |
“Brighten The Corner” by the mem-
bers.
The next meeting will be the second
Saturday of August, the 12th, at the |
home of Mrs, Maude Boyer at Man- |
heim. |
rr tl Qn
|
There is no better way to boost your |
business than by local newspaper ad- |
vertising.
wrinkles in our economic and social |
fabrics, there is growing conviction |
among many persons that mechanical
formulas of money, credit, etc., are su-
perficial; that society is after all hoe)
man and what we need more than any-
thing else is a restoration of ideals,
spiritual values.
The thought that the moving pic-
tures, by placing our youth false stand-
ards of life, may have been a power-
ful instrument in bringing about the |
lamentable condition America now |
finds itself in, is set forth by Fred |
Eastman in the May.24 issue of “The
Christian Century,” leading undenom-
inational religious journal. He says
that our movies “express a type of
mind that has lost all sense of spiritual
values, all sense of the burden of
man’s destiny. It sees life only as a
whirling, rushing, confused struggle
after money and things, and then more
money and more things. This may be
the kind of life the motion picture
magnates have known, it may repre-
sent America at its worst. But to pre-
sent such life as good or true, or de-
sirable is to give the lie not only to re-
ligion and education but to the experi-
ence of the human race. For the goal
of religion and education is to produce
character; the goal of the movie values |
is to acquire things, get ahead, be
smart, dazzling, a big shot
“Look at the thing through your,
child’s eyes. At home and in school
and church he sees one set of values
upheld as the secret of a desirable life,”
continues Dr. Eastman. “At the movies
he sees another set presented with all
the power and glamor of strong emo-
tional stimulus. Two results are pos-
sible; he will either be confused and
vacillate between one set of values and
the other, or he will choose one and
scrap the other. While this struggle
in the minds of 23,000,000 other young


For more people
‘Hamlet’ in
Where is there a situation
“ure than this?”

pected the middle to July. Recommend-
ations for control call for 3 pounds of
calcium arsenate in
bordeaux mixtures and thorough cov- | juvenated by use of the harrow and
ering of potato vines. c
out surplus plants and the
{ tor will narrow the rows and work
sit silent, evidently thinking deeply
and letting Charles do all the talking.
One evening as they sat in the
hotel garden, the moon shining on
the sea and a gentle wind waving the
Spanish mass upon the live oak
Rosalie after one of these fits
said, “Charles, I am
trees,
of meditation
almost tempted to tell you my real
name.”
“You need not, dearest,” replied
Charles, “unless you want to, It
makes no difference. It is you that
I care about. You are all the world
to me. You know it. Now, then,
will you marry me?”
Rosalie turned her head aside and
said softly, “What would your
wealthy family say to your marrying
an In some quarters there
is still prejudice against the stage,
vou know.”
“Nonsense,” answered Charles,
“that sort of thing vanished long
ago. Again 1 ask, will you marry me?”
“When I have told you who I am,
if vou still want me, 1 will,” said she.
“Don’t bother,” replied Charles.
“l know who you are. You are that
actress?
BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
Straight Eight
nlya STRAIGHT EIG
)

HT can give
PERFORMANCE!



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becau


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Controlled Vea-
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; first need because it
%. lasts, stands up and
YY delivers.”
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“Pontiac not only
performs like a truly
modern car—it looks
the part, and I'm
proud of it.”
. “I've been used to
costly cars, but I
must say my Pontiac
gives me everything
I could want—and
gives it economi-
Body by Fisher.” Special equipment

THE ECONOMY STRAIGHT EI
Straight Eight
performance—
not something
Just as good.”

The 4-door Sedan, $695, f. o. b. Pontiac.
a LEN



ke Pontiac
se I want
TN
§ I~
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cheapness, but I
want a real auto-
mobileandI want
practical econ-
omy. Pontiac
gives me just
that.”

PONTIAC—the Economy Straight Eight—is one of the out-
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Everybody wants big-car comfort and Straight Eight per-
formance—and everybody knows that only a Straight Eight
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Pontiac is the Economy Straight Eight. Ask any Pontiac
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but for mady thousands after you'd expect it to show signs of
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Poatiac, you see, is so balanced in design; stresses and
strains so well ‘equalized, that it gives its owners Balanced
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weaknesses, but stands up as a whole.
One of Pontiac’s outstanding features is Fisher Controlled
Ventilation. You'll néyer know how delightful summer motor-
ing can be till you try it. Many say no car can be considered
modern without it. %
Try a demonstration. Let Pontiac itself convince you that it
has no equal at or near its price—that it is the outstanding car
of the year in every detail that goes to make a car modern and
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Visit the General Motors Building, Century of Progress
Ask your dealer for a copy
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AND UP..F.0.B.PONTIAC
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eo
 
HASSINGER & RISSER, ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.


little stenographer who
and Blankford in
demure
works for Hayden
y
|
the Magathum building and are down 2 . . i
here taking a a the first in 2 Local Classes | When at Inceptive Age Cherries Ripe!
vears. T have often seen you in the | There is a delichtinl example of the °
eleva or, or passed vo in . / 9 | eommunal tire among insects to be S , 2
a Aon nbn at he dnd Held Meetings seen in the bush, writes Evelyn Cheese- >
I chanced to run across you here.” | man in the St. Louis Globe Democrat. =
“You horrid thing,” sobbed Rosalie. — mr 1 It is communal lije at an inceptive age. Cai X
“Why didn’t vou tell me vou knew (From page 1) I The other end oi the series is the ,
me at once and mot let me make a |day at Keener’s Park, near €laborate organization of the ants’ so
fool of myself posing as an actress. |town, All members of the class are| Ci€ties. with their dairy farming and
But you needn't think yourself so |expected to attend the picnic. fungus-growing and the self
smart. You are that young lawyer A very pleasant social time was en- oF at opie’
who has an office on the top ffoor (joyed, the hostesses serving delicious re- sang Sepang Ras the host
and I have known vou all along. But |freshments to Mrs. Aaron Musser, Mrs. a I any ave
ils tot yo Joey Be Abner Hershey, Mrs. Martin Gerber, | vary handsome, striped boldly in black
AD CCFO : Mrs. Eli Bentzel, Mrs. Hatie Hoffman, | white. When they are small they
“You are a perfect actress, darling,” Miss Maggie Haines, Mrs. B.F. Green- feed altogether in the nest. not leav-
replied Charles soothingly. “but, as awalt, Mrs. John Hendrix, Mrs Wil- ing the web. When the leaves en-
vou remarked when we first met liam Way, Mrs. Perry Bates, Mrs.| meshed disappear they forsake it, one |
down here. zood acting is a great | Charles Derr, Mrs. Roy Ament, Mrs. | caterpillar leading, and settle in an
strain on the nervous system. What
say. Miss Ruth Mathews-—shall we
go back to New York and get mar-
ried? Business Is pretty good with
me: you won't have te work any
more.”
Of course, Ruth, wmlias Rosalie,
eventually said ves. Bpt at the same
time she told Charles that she doabt-
ed if she ever could really forgive
him for the way he had deceived her
in Florida,
tl A A
Control Flea Beetles
A second brood of flea beetles is ex-
100 gallons of
Walter Greiner, Mrs. O. L, Mease, Mrs.
Eli Ebersole, Mrs. Wm. Strickler, Mrs.
Philip Greiner, Mrs. Fanny Runrk, Mrs,
Annie Hendrix, Mrs. M. Edwards, Mrs.
Wm. Weldon, Mrs. H. N. Nissly, Mrs.
Fred Schneider, Mrs. John G. Eberle,
Mrs. Weidman, Mrs. Roy Zink, Mrs.
Harry Ney, Mrs. Earl Myers, Mrs. John
Reigel, Miss Nora Strickler, Mr. Ray-
mond Nissly, Mr. Wm. Strickler. Mr.
Philip Greiner, Mr. Walter Greiner,
Dorothy and Pauline Edwards, Betty
McKinney, Junior Musser, Misses Edna
Charles, Ethel Felker,
Almeda Stauffer, Hazel Hoffman.


Ants and Caterpillars
and spin a new web. Wherever
own quarters when they want to
night.
great determination toward its
part of the nest, without any he
own particular niche as a cow find
stall.
Laura Mixell,
thread just where it has walked.
—— litters ine
Rejuvenate Berry Beds
Old Strawberry beds may be re-
Cee
Water Sweet Peas
will tear
ultivator. The harrow


Fond Mother—David, you
ave a place for everything.
David—What’s the nce, Ma? I
aver put ’em there.
should
cultiva- | at all times

up the spaces between them. ure.
: —— ~~ — Een:
Patronize Bulletin Advertisers J Advertise in The Bulletin
other part of the tree not far away
are, however, when they havé left the
web they spin a stout silk rope, which
will guide them back again to their
during the heat of the day and at
It looks miraculous to see a
caterpillar marching off.with an air of
tion over the direction, and finding its
Jut there is no miracle when
we look closer, for there is a shining
One of the secrets of growing sweet
peas is to give them plenty of water
A mulch of grass clip-
pings will help to conserve the moist-| .



they

rest
T won't be long now—what with
April showers, May flowers
and all the nice things that
herald June cherries. But why
wait? Canned cherries are always
ripe cherries, and you can choose
royally at all seasons between
black cherries, red cherries, white
cherries, maraschino cherries,
cherries with pits and without.
red cherries on very thin slices
of whole wheat bread.
Here is a recipe we can vouch
for: »
Black Cherry Cobbler: Mix one
tablespoon sugar with one table-
spoon flour, add the boiling syrup
from ene-half of a No. 25 can of
pitted black cherries, and cook
until creamy. Add one tablespoon
lemon juice, one tablegpoon butter
and the cherries fro alf of the
can, which have been halved or
quartered. Pour into a buttered
baking dish. Make a biscuit
dough of three-fourths cup flour,
salads, cherry soups, cherry cock- {one and one-half teaspoons bak-
tails, cherry desserts. Thus far | ing powder, ome-fourth teaspoon
we have not heard of a cherry | salt, one and one-half tablespoons
sandwich, but with the present | shortening and one-fourth cup
vogue for fruit sandwiches it oc- | milk. Drop by spoonfuls en top
curs te us, that one would be [of the fruit. Bake in a hot oven,
delicious made with creamed {425 degrees, for about fifteen mine
| cheese, chopped nuts and chopped utes. Serve warm with cream.®
own
sita-
Ss its
Cherries for All—All for Cherries
What to do with them? That's
easy, for there are recipes on
every hand for delectable cherry



{
WEDNESDAY, JuLy 12th, 1933

 

AT,