THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1st, 1934 Thursday, July 26 . ) All Stars—Jewels {All Stary .......... d012000—4 SPOR S | Jewels as aes vie a 003003 6-12 1 All Stars rhoae All Stars .............. 4 721 1 1 nw rm | Jewels r hoae tdewels 121021 .7. 5 By ‘Mikey™ Weaver | Home run—Clinger. re A A Aree Team Batting Average Friday, Juiy 27 YA Stars ..... i civ ei en 319 Flunn—Legion IMs ann 294 22900 01 x—3 Legion .288 Ba 0 FOTO O00 i FIONN oo... cnr en O80 r h;:0. a ................... 0.00 279 ca 3 0219 0 Co. ines 2681 r 0 a e] —-——— han "218 6 4! Team Fielding Average ———— 7... id 932 Thursday, July 26 | Florin... 0, a ai 930 Fire Co.—Maust IMaust =... aia 917 as ives its 070003 x—10|Fire Co. 308 SsaiMaust ............. 3000000—3 Jewels 895 eC rh oa Stars nities 836 Carers ane 10 92111 4 ———- Ee rh oae Friday, July 27 anny 3 518 3 4 Richland Club—Lincoln 1 Walked by Funk 4, Childs 7. S. O. by funk 4, Childs 3. That Are Saltedin the Shell Are Healthful—Wholesome Sanita Delightfully licious 3 Contain r excess salt. Pa oR po bletided right in the kernel. i 9 Tap Rooms are givi away at a profitable ad them tage. Write or call for prices in lots of from 5 to 100 lbs. \ i eee | PERIS | Manufacturing Co, FLORIN, PA. % es PERFECT! WE invite you to imspect hundreds of samples of eur printed matter te give you an idea of the kind of work we turn out in our Job Printing Department. We know you'll like the quality. BULLETIN MOUNT JOY Phone 41J TIRED, ACHING, SWOLLEN FEET Moone’s Emerald Oil Guaranteed to Stop All Pain and Soreness and Banish Offensive Odors In just one minute after an appli- cation of Emerald Oil you'll get the surprise of your life. Your tired, tender, smarting, burning feet will literally jump for joy. No fuss, no trouble; you just ap- ply a few drops of the oil over the surface of the foot night and morn- ing, or when occasion requires. Just a little and rub it in. It’s simply wonderful the way it ends all foot misery, while for feet that sweat and give off an offensive odor, there’s nothing better in the world. Moone’s Emerald Oil is us guaranteed to end your foot amma troubles or money back. on, Electric and Acetylene w THE BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. OW ARE YOUR SHOES? Richland Club — 1 run Lincoln — 0 run Forfeited. BN Monday, July 30 Richland Club—Florin Richland Club .. 10000132—7 Florin ........... 0010121510 Richland Club rh oa Richland Club ........ T1724 1 % Florin r hoae Florin, on. ines 1016 2412 3 Home runs—Kunkle, J. Keener, Becker. a a lf Monday, July 30 All Stars—Maust All Stars ......... 2000000—2 Maoust ............. 756002 x—20 em meee GD Qe Tuesday, July 31 Richland Club—Jewels RB. Club........... 204135 x15 Jewels ............ 0015003-9 | Richland Club Yr hoae R. Cub ............. 1517.21 8 5 Tewels r hoae Jewels ©... arian 91818 6 8 Home run—Bigler. rr A A Tuesday, July 31 Fire Co.—Legion Fire Co. .......... p1 000.0025 ........... 000300003 Fire Co. rh oae Fire Co. 5 82414 4 Legion r hoae 3 524 4 3 Home run—Hendrix. eee Qe Team Standing W L Ave Morin ........ a. 9 2 BIS Fire Co. es 8 3 .127 Jewels 8.3 J Maust 7 4 636 Legion... .... a 00 6 5 54 Richland Club ........... 38 231 Sil Stars Loa 110 .090 etl) eee | The Marietta Ramblers defeated | Rheems 11 to 5 and Landisville 5 to i ns Men of the Shires Wiltshire moonrakers owe their ori- gin to an astute group of natives who dumped their smuggled cargoes in a lake and, when approached by rev- enue officers, pretended to be raking for the moon Hampshire hogs get their name from the county's erstwhile pre-eminence in producing a superla- tive brand of bacon. Cambridge cam- els were likewise nicknamed by rea- son of Fenland's preference for stilts to ply its labors, Thus mounted, the natives looked very much like camels | when loping about with their burdens, A yellow belly came to denote a Lin- colnshire man because of a plague of | yellow-bellied frogs that once devas- | tated the county. And Borrowdale | cuckoos originate from that little Lakeland village's once lamentable attempt to build a wall to keep the | cuckoo within its confines.—7Tit-Bits Magazine, Mummified Cats Archeological excavations in Egypt have brought to light thousands of | mummified cats—some elaborately in- closed in bronze boxes, many of which were found to be surmounted by a bronze statue of the cat's Ka, the dou- ble personality that was thought to survive after death with the soul. The mummies were wrapped in yards of plaited linen ribbons, The heads of some cat mummies had been incased in a rough kind of papier-mache, gilt and covered with linen. The ears were always carefully pricked up. The Emerald Isle Ireland is called the Emerald Isle because of the bright verdure of its grass and other vegetation, a condi- tion due largely to the frequent rains for which the island is noted. It is supposed that Dr, William Drennan (1754-1820) an Irish physician and poet, was the first to use the name. In a poem entitled “Erin,” published in 1795, he speaks of “the men of the | Emerald Later, in a letter pub- ished in ! Notes and Queries, original with Isle.” nao? Lhe he said nate was him. “Contact,” Verb and Noun The verb “contact,” in the sense in which fit has rehabilitated, is transitive and requires an objecta Therefore, one either contacts a nial or makes a contact with him. In the latter contact is a noun.— Literary Digest. been instance, Most Interesting Island The world’s most interesting island, from a sclentific standpoint, is in the Indian ocean, about 400 miles east of Madagascar. It is known as Reunion island, having an area of about 1,000 square miles. I has eels 15 to 20 feet long. Shells of huge tortoises, 3 feet long and 18 inches across, have been found, but these seem to be extinct. tl ARO A Boston scientist has reached the conclusion that the Garden of Eden was located in Ohio. We would give the nam of the scientist but we are afraid the California people would kill him. A Wyoming Claim By CLARA DOUGLAS ®, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate. WNU Service T WAS supper time at the Allen ranch in Wyoming, The ranch foreman usually supped with the family, and he entered the room through one door just as Mrs. Allen and her daughter, Judith, sat down at table. “My husband has had a telephone message from Red Spider,” said Mrs. Allen to the foreman, Rex Thomas, “and so he had an early supper and started off—perhaps you saw him?” “I did see him riding out of the gate,” admitted Thomas, “just as I came in from the upper pasture.” He waved his hand. “Has something come up at Red Spider?” “Something to do with business— that is the worst of being a sheriff— sometimes I wish Jim would give up his appointment.” “lI saw Bob Blake, Miss Judith,” said Thomas with a humorous twinkle in his eye. Judith flushed, and a warm look came into her lovely brown eyes. “I suppose he was riding Schuyler's herd,” she said with assumed indif- ference, “Riding something—I'll be hanged if 1 entirely understood the situation— he was going like lightning along the old Patch trail, but I was in a hurry and he didn’t seem to see me, so I didn't bail him. Looked as though he was trying to get somewhere in a big hurry.” Judith said nothing, but she looked rather worried, and Mrs, Allen carried on a desultory conversation until the meal ended. Then, while Mrs. Allen washed her silver and fine china, Chang, the Chinese cook, cleared off the table and Judith went out to the broad veranda and sat down with a book. But the girl's eyes were not on the printed page—they scanned the distant trail over which a racy black horse might come skimming—Bob Blake always came that way! To Judith Allen, just at this time, most of the world consisted of Bob Blake's tall, active figure. Though they were not engaged, Judith's parents rather expected the tall cowpuncher to ask the fatal question any day, and Sheriff Allen had his answer all ready. “I like you, Bob—there isn’t another boy I would rather give my girl to! But you're nothing except a line rider for Old Man Schuyler—and you've got to be more than that if you want our Judith!" That is what Sheriff Allen had planned to say when Bob Blake | came to see him about Judith, but he | had never told anybody excepting his | wife, and she, well-meaning soul if there ever was one, had confided in Judith. So Judith Allen knew that much, anyway, and perhaps she was think- ing that her father might have met Bob, and they had talked it men are apt to do She had not but she had not family. The casual remark of the foreman, Thomas, had ronsed her thoughts and made her uneasy. Later that evening came home, and with Blake, of all people. “1 arrested this fellow,” grinned the sheriff, “for loitering on the trail com- ing to the Blue Bottle!” Bob grinned sheepishly, winked at Judith. “He told me,” breaking the traffic laws by speeding “Bob’s made a voyage of discovery during the past week,” said the sher- iff, ‘and he is inviting the family (you, out, as seen Bob for a week, mentioned it to the Allen 30b Sheriff him came and openly said Bob, “that I was 1" | too, mother—I'll drive you in the buck board) to t with him at nine o'clock tomorrow morning. 1 guess we'll be back in time for supper!” 30b Blake remained that night at the Blue Bottle ranch and the next morning they started forth—Bob and Judith riding their horses, and the | sheriff driving two rangy colts in the | shafts of the buckboard in which his wife was snugly placed. The rode for many miles across the prairie, then up inte the broken hills where they never met a soul, and then at last they rounded a wooded hillock, crossed a brawling stream, and Bob told them to stop. It was noon and the sun shone down through one broken space in the thick tree tops, and fell into the bed of the stream where It was overhung by thick mosses and long, tangled roots. “Please come here a moment, all of you,” said Bob rather gravely. They stood and watched him ex- pectantly. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Allen, of course you know that I love Judith,” he said flushing beneath his bronze, “and now I am going to ask you for your daughter. Of course, I am just hoping that Judith likes me well enough to—" he paused and stared rapturously at the girl who had stepped forward and slipped her slim hand in his large brown one, clinging | to it firmly, ‘‘there, I guess that that proves she does like me a whole lot,” he went on choking a little, “and though you folks all think I am just a line rider, T am telling you I am a whole lot more than that! I am am bitious myself, and so, if you'll just glance down there where the sun is shining right through the water onto the prettiest bit of gold deposit-—well, I've been taking it out for weeks and believe me lama happy man! I've got a claim here, and my bank account at Cheyenne dollars turning is more than ten thousand and {f don’t heads mo yes, sir yon nind ment, then your Just a I want to kiss Judith here-—and we'll have come lunch tA eee Adjust Dairy Herd Adjustment of the dairy herd during the summer and fall to the prospective feed supply will aid greatly in reduc- ing milk production costs during the winter. ee Eee Policeman—Miss you were doing 60 anhour! She—Oh, isn’t that splendid! I only learned to drive yesterday—Hyde Re- porter, PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To Say This Week laid Es doot met gons fun hartza tsu meentiona desmohl os my gooter freind, der Johnny Honnaberger, or- ick in droovel is ollaweil. Si fraw is g'shtarva em ledshta Somshdawg, un de leicht wore em Moondawg, un shier oll de leit doh om Barrick hen gatend. Se wore gronk yusht a paw dawg. Der Porra Mohler hut de leicht breddich gadoo, un der Sam Schnitzler wore der foresinger un es fetsht leedly os se g'sunga hen wore, won ich net letz bin os Ollo menscho missa shtarva, Un olla uxa fressa hoy. Ich bin nee sure ep des de ex- acta wordta sin, awver es wore any how ebbes waega hoy, derwake we der porra es ous gevva hut. Awer wos ich sawga will is des— os se anes fun da beshta un shmart- shta wiveer wore om gonsa barricky far se wore olsfart bissy, un hut ga- nunk geed fardeened mit hardt shof fa os se de gons familia enaered hut. Se hut de wesh arawet g'shoffed far sivva odder ocht familia. Shier olla morga hut se ols wesh g'som- meled un hut se dahame gawesha, un sella walk hut se aw goot aucht gevva kenna uff de kinner un oll de house arawet shoffa derby. Der Johnny hut mer uftmohls g'sawt os se olla wuch ols fun dri bis fier daw ler fardeened hut. Awver era dote is now hardt uc der Johnny. Ich hob geshter owvet mit eme gschwetzed un are hut mere gsawt are wist now net woss tsu do wile are ne- mond het fer ene un si familia tsu enara, un wos eme bong is is os are now nuch gor selver shoffa muss un geld fardeena. Ich hobe eme gsawt are set broveera de kinner nows tsu do unner fremme leit far ees sin yusht dri—de Sally, shunt fartzae yohr oldt un shmart ganunk far era laeva tsu fardeena un der Billy is elf fohr oldt un con aw sich selver elfa, un de Kitty is aw shunt hine yohr oldt, u n wile se so ee fines maidly is hut’s leit ganunk os willis sin se tsu nemma un se uff tzeega, Yaw, hut der Johnny gsawt, awver we is es mit mere selver Om end muss ich now selver ons shoffa gae, anyhow ganunk far my kusht un glaider fardeena. Un are hut aw g'-' hint os won es mere aw so happena daid os de Polly shtarava daid don ware es aw ordlich hardt uff mich. Sell is aw so, won ich es aw selver sawga -muss. Es hut wiver blendy ivverall, un mere con dri wiver greega eb ae maud, awer selly os shmardt ganunk sin ame si laeva fardeena, der waeg we em Johnny si fraw gadoo hut un we de Polly doot far mich, sin ord- lich rore heitzadawgs. Ich -any how net huffa os es mere gait weem Johnny, anyhow net bis ich un deer Billy Bixler unser bully A No. 1 National Bank in gong hen. De Betz Grill hut awver ebbes g- sawt os mich net suit. So hut mer anyhow der Bill Bifiemoyer gsawt Se hut gsawt os de aurem dote fraw now feel besser ob is os se wore, wile se de gons tzeit seller fowl-len- ser, der Johnny Honnaberger, enara hut missa, usht exactly we de Polly seller farsuffa Gottlieb Bonnastiel enared. Un now geb ich aw notice os es arsht mohl os ich widder in de shtodt gae roof ich aw beim lawyeer un do en sasherashey rows nemma un do le Betz reshta lussa beim shreef un muss se es broofa os ich en farsuffner loadle bin. Ich cons broofa mit em Hullerheck os sell en leek is, wile ich tsu sawga nee nix shtarickers drink os kefferbree ous der schwartz buddle, mitout ich bin in coombany odrer by mer selver. IRONVILLE Elizabeth Fornoff and Ruth Kauff- man are attending the Penna. State Sabbath School Association camp at Spring Creek, Penna. This being their fifth year and they both will gradu- ate this year and each will receive a diploma from the State Association. Messrs. Charles Gingrich, Ephraim Fornoff, Misses Louella Peters and Jane Kauffman, were visiting at Ber- wyn, over the week end. Last week when the heavy storm passed over the village three boys from Columbia almost drowned when they went into a culvert under the Iron- ville pike to get away from the rain The culvert filled with water and Paul Peters heard their cry and rescued the boys. On Saturday the Lutheran Sunday School will hold their annual picnic at the Sylvan Retreat school yard. On Thursday evening the Ironville Woman's Missionary Society will en- tertain the Mountville Woman’s Mis- sionary society in the Ironville United Brethren church at 7.00 P. M. Stand- ard time. Rev. W. C. Blatt, pastor of the Sil- ver Spring circuit, consisting of the Ironville, Centerville, Silver Spring churches will leave on Wednesday for a two weeks’ vacation. A number of women from the vil- lage members of the Farm Women So- ciety were at the county picnic at Paradise Lancaster county on Satur- day. will 1st ert) Aree Thursday, August 23rd Sunnyside School reunion of teachers, pupils and patrons. the IN JAI HI-OCTANE’'S NEWCOMER SERVICE STATIONS Y Sauerkraut In Summer AUERKRAUT has a very def- e place in summer meals >tetically and decoratively. Perhaps yu think of kraut in the same breath with frankfurters, corned beef, and heavy foods. Then take another breath—a long one—for the lighter kraut dishes comprise a long | and they are delicious with summer-time meais. Besides sparkling, iced sauerkraut and iced- kraut used as a garnish for such cold cuts as tongue, chicken and roast, beef, serve, also, in summer some of the following delicious sauerkraut dishes which are color- ful and cooling. your cocktails, For Your Good Health Jellied Sauerkraut Relish: Soft- en two tablespoons of gelatin in four tablespoons cold water, then dissolve in two cups of boiling water. Add one-fourth cup of lemon juice and cool. Add the contents of one No. 2 can of sauerkraut, one-fourth cup of grated raw carrot and one-fourth cup of chopped green pepper. Season with salt and pepper, if necessary. Pour into individual molds and chill until set. Un- mold and serve as a garmish to cold meats, or on crisp lettuce with mayonnaise as a salad. This serves eight. These Are Easy to Make Sauerkraut and Carrot Salad: Mix one cup of canned sauerkraut with one cup of grated raw car- rot and one cup of creamy may- onnaise, Arrange on lettuce hearts and garnish with walnut halves. Corned Beef and Sauerkraut: Put alternate layers from two No. 2 cans of sauerkraut and one 12- ounce can of corned beef, broken into large pieces in a baking dish. Bake in a moderate--375 degree- oven for about fifteen minutes. This serves six persons.* Wild Celery Names Wild celery to the duck hunter, eel grass for the fisherman and Valis neria for the aquarist and scientist— it's all the same weed, but often one class of men does not know it by the other names, says the director of the Institute for Research, at Detroit. It is one of the best aerat- ers of water, it grows fast and multi- plies easily by means of runners. New plants sprout up just as new straw- berry plants. The flower of Valis peria is a three-cornered green one which makes its way to the surface by means of a slender stem that spir- als up like a corkscrew. The flower Is inconspicuous. [Fisheries “When Alex Morrison said physical condition means the difference between championship golf and Just golf, he hit the truth right square in the middle. GENE SARAZEN ~-gnd the condition of your motor depends upon its power diet. octane XR) BEST “, PROMPTLY BY Geo. Lamparter’s Sons LANCASTER, PA. One gallon of Harness Oil Givén for each dead horse and cattle. We pay all telephone e¢alls. Phone Lancaster 32014 Have You, The “Can’t Afford It” Habit? T= use of that phase does not suggest the inability to buy so much as the de- sire to practice rigid economy . . . to save . + . to deny yourself needed and necessary commodities. But Man, oh Man, and you, too Madam, how better and more effectively can you practice economy and thrift than to buy when prices are at their lowest ebb in years? How more certainly can you insure economy than to replace worn or out-of-date furniture than when new is selling for one-third of what it sold for 15 years ago? Or to stock up on food products when they are 40% less than at any time since the war? Or clothing when $53 today will buy you what you paid $100 for in 19127? What you really cannot afford to do is not buy because you cannot afford to miss to- day’s low levels . . . prices that are an ac- tual boon to reduced incomes . . . to the practice of sensible, far-sighted economy. Tue BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PENNA. Dead Animals Removed % ELIZABETHTOWN _— MARIETTA _\ To has ci Beer wish { not owner WOl by lad Good Zeager WALI mer EF Road, RE night | The T come. Darr out at ware, | and fu frames FOR Room ry Sto Schrol Benj Bureat pany i over T and Tt FOR John C FOR Golden and sp Keiser, FOR on Nor Will be give pc details FRA] Joy for garages first-cl: session Mount FOR Slate F Poultry highwa Schroll CAL! Prices town 1 Photc S.A (coin) Market FOR in Flori cated. painted sale. S¢ . DANI offering har, 2 sale. S enclose car ga houses, immedi: Realtor, AD) Estate Joy, La Letter having signed, are reqt ment ar mands & without undersig egal Str E iy A. T St Estate Hempfie ty, Pa. Letter: having signed a requeste and thos against out dela signed, 1 W. G. K jly 18-6t- BDO,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers