The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 20, 1935, Image 3

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20th, 1935
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO, PA.
PAGE T

SECOND ANNUAL PUBLIC SALE
of LIVE STOCK, FARM MACHINERY and SUPPLIES
MARCH 21, 1935
ts at 12:00 O'clock Noon RHEEMS, PA.
Biv place of business in Rheems, Pa., the following:
TEN FARM HORSES
1 and 2—Pair Black Mules, 12 years old, broke for anyone
ork. One a single line leader. No. 3— Sorrel Horse, nine
d, weighing about 1,450 lbs. Single line leader and can-
bitched wrong. Broke for a boy to work. This is one
No. 4—This is a 4-year-old Colt. Was hitched a
AN os. 5 and 6—Pair of Sorrel Mules, about 13 years
g for children. No. 7—Gray Blind Horse, seven
ide worker. The balance of these horses are
ended. These horses were bought right






















not
few
old. Both single line leaders, and &
years old, weighing 1,400 lbs, good 0
good farm horses, and all must be as 0
off the farms and will give you satisfactio
25 Head T. B. Tested CATH
These are a lot of young cattle, Fresh and Close
Springers. Some Guernsey and Jerseys.
ALSO SOME HEIFERS and BULLS
50 Head %
Weighing from
NEW AND USED FARM MACHINERY AND SUPP
Used Fordson Tractor, McCormick Deering Corn Husker, Superior 1
in good shape; Farquhar Low Down Grain Drill, 8-hoe; Crown 8-
Spreaders, Corn Planters, Cultivators, Disc Harrows, Tractor and Hor:
Mowers, McCormick, Massey Harris, Osborne, John Deere; Spring Ha
and Scorer, 1 and 2-horse Riding Sulky Plows, Walking Plows, Syracuse}
Oliver; 2-horse Wagons, Rotary Hoe, Dump Rakes, Hay Tedders, Side Del
Tobacco Planters, New Idea; and many other articles not mentioned. 3
We will also offer a lot of new Implements—Wiard Plows, Harrows (Spring a
Tooth); Hay Tools, Case Non-wrap Spreaders, Wagons, Roller Harrows, Potato
Cultivators, Weeders, Tractor Plows, Corn Planters, Wheelbarrows, Brooder Std
and a number of Farm Supplies not mentioned.
Come early and prepare to buy as we have the above for sale, and will be sold wo
the money.

Don’t forget March 21st at 12 o'clock. No Hucksters
REIST R. MUMMAU
J. R. Mummau, Auct.
W. A. Herr, Clk.



ULLETIN ADS









 

ADVERTISEMENTS
Must Be Seen and Read
Every advertiser likes to believe that his advertising
will be seen—uwill be read.
But how many readers of a given medium actually
read the ads? How many, for that matter, even 80
much as see them?
Circulation figures, milline rate computations, how-
ever, impressive, do not provide the answers.
The clue is in time. Meaning—the more time the
reader gives to the reading of a publication the great-
er the certainty that he will see the ads—and read
them. : ar
Recently, O. B. Winters, vice-president, Erwin Was-
ey & Co., said: “I know from experience that a good
country weekly is read from cover to cover by literally
evvery one in the community it serves.”
Why? The answer is—time. Country newspaper
readers find the time to read their local papers. They
can be depended upon to see ads—and read them.
People never read a large daily paper as carefully or
as thoroughly as they do a good weekly.
Let us serve you in placing your advertising where
it is read.
PAY BIG DIVIDENDS
THE BULLETIN
&
:
3
3
Q
MOUNT JOY
OOOO AHHH ANA CH

OOO IEA

Cupid, Marksman
By JANNIS PARKER
®, McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
WNU Service.


INDA was in the tub thinking of
Jerry when the phone rang. She'd
been thinking of him ever since they'd
met a week before at the last club
dance of the season. And a bang-up
dance It had been, The orchestra, im-
ported from Harlem, had out-cavorted
the dancers, their instruments taking
a terrible beating, During what was
supposed to have been Intermissions
an Italian with a piano-accordion that
prohibited conversation, and a voice
that dimmed the piano-accordion, had
sauntered from table to table singing
old love songs of Italy and new ones
from Broadway.
Steve, good old Steve with the in-
delible frown, the rhythmic feet and
the fog-horn voice, had asked Linda
to the dance. He had also presented
Jerry.
“Want to meet the nicest little job
the stork ever turned out?” he'd
boomed.
Jerry had. And Steve hadn't exag-
gerated. In short Linda was O. K,
ace-high, top-notch, first-rate, And
certainly men like Jerry would always
have a market. He had everything
the advertisements promised. Easily
Jerry and Linda had been the best
looking couple on the floor and he had
stuck to her all during the evening
like ink to a blotter.
Linda, however, whose existence en-
abled the telephone company to pay
steady dividends, had not heard from
him since that night. She found
this disconcerting not because Jerry
was her answer to prayer but because
he'd started her praying.
Now, alone in the apartment, she
had to leave the suds hurriedly,
swathe herself in a towel and make
wet tracks for the shrill phone.
A man’s voice boomed hoarsely over
the wires and Linda's high hopes fell
to the ground. For seven days she'd
snatched up the phone—it might be
the call she’d prayed for. It never
had been.
“Linda he was repeating.
“You sound like King Kong,” Linda
replied, doing her best to sound light-
hearted and carefree. Why, oh why,
couldn't this have been Jerry?
slight cold,” he explained.
“I'll soon be back to the silvery
cadences. I'd have called you sooner
but until today 1 couldn’t speak at all.
‘Teed a cold, however, you know. So
how about having dinner with me?”
“Just a
“That would be awfully nice” Try
as she would Linda couldn’t sound en
thusiastic.
“Any chance for tonight?”
“Tomorrow night,” she said.
“Would it be too much to ask you
to meet me in town?” his voice rasped
Linda lived tucked off in the suburbs
far from jay-walkers and taxi races.
“Where and when?” she asked.
“Martini’'s. At seven. O. K.?”
“0. RK."
Linda’s mother came in as she hung
up the phone.
“For me?’ she asked.
“No. For me. Steve. I'm having
dinner with him in town tomorrow
night.”
Linda's mother repeated what she'd
been saying for some time. “You
could do worse.”
“Much worse,” Linda admitted. *I
could have two meals with him every
day and three on Sunday. No, thank
you. Steve's a lamb, but .
“You don’t appreciate him,” her
mother broke in. “He's a splendid
young man.”
“For somebody else.”
The next evening Linda dressed lacka-
daisically. She didn't wear the new
outfit. She was saving it just In case
the Jerry man had a sudden fit of
memory.
The train ride into the city was a
monotonous trip that was only taking
her to a monotonous evening. The
cross-town cab was an unrestful auto
that was taking her to a restless eve
ping. Linda bleakly visualized the
past seven days. Each day had
grown drearier, heavier. Each day
had taken her that much farther from
Jerry. The possibility of more such
days was ghastly—days when the
sound of the phone buoyed her up only
to cast her down.
“For two cents I'd scream,”
mused. “I'd do it even cheaper.”
At Martini’s she paid off the taxi
driver and walked in under the long.
striped awning. The sort of awning
she
used at weddings, she reflected mo-
rosely. Why had she accepted this
dinner invitation of Steve's? Why
had she forgone the comforts of home
where she could cry into a pillow in
peace instead of having to swallow
Ward lest tears splash into the hors
doeuvres? She was berating herself
when she walked right into his arms.
She blinked rapidly, shook her head
to clear it, but the apparition was not
an apparation. There he was, all six
feet three of him. There flashed the
smile that made her smile back.
There stood the man she'd never real-
ly left since the moment she'd met
him.
y Radiant at seeing her again, he
spoke, still hoarsely.
“How you recognized this battered
voice over the phone is more than I'll
ever know,” grinned. “Television
would be wasted on you, Linda.”
He indicated a charmingly secluded
little table marked, “Reserved.”
do you say?” he asked.
Linda spoke cautiously, as though
holding her breath. Her hand flut-
tered trembllngly at her throat.
“rm like you were before you
phoned me—speechless.”
Home of the Flamingos
Flamingos are natives of the ma-
hogany swamps of Cuba and the
islands in the Bahamas, Contrary to
popular belief they are not migratory
birds. They formerly were found in
overwhelming numbers in Cuba and
the Bahamas, but so many were killed
for their beautiful plumage and be
cause they are such tender food that
they are rapidly becoming extinet,
eee
Patronise Bulletin Advertisers
|

England Honored Wilson
President Wilson on his visit to Eng-
land, in 1918. on his way to the peace
conference in France, was lavishly en-
tertained at Buckingham palace, where
he was a resident guest, sleeping in
the state suite, At the state dinner
given in his honor the best gold serv-
ice in the English nation was used.
The Escurial
The Escurial is a royal
built by Philip IT of Spain. It is 22
miles distant from Madrid and con-
tains a palace, a church, a monastery,
schools, and a mausoleum. It Is the
largest structure in Spain and one of
the finest buildings in Europe.


residence

Whales Deep Divers
The ability of the whale to dive to
depths of a mile or more and come up
none the worse for its journey through
areas of varying water pressure is at-
tributed by scientists to a special
chemical reaction in the blood of these
sea monsters,
President Garfield's Father
Shortly after settling in 1830 in the
wilderness of the Western Reserve,
Abram Garfield died from a sudden at-
tack of fever, and left In poverty his
wife and four small children—one of
whom was James, our twentieth Pres-
ident.

Founded by Aristotle
The Peripatetic School was the
school or system of philosophy found-
ed by Aristotle, who used to walk
about as he taught his disciples in the
covered walk of the lyceum. This
colonnade was called the Peripatos.

Idols Built in Church Walls
Aztec idols are built into the walls of
many of Mexico's Christian churches.
Decapitated by zealots at the time of
the Spanish conquest, the pagan fig-
ures were frequently incorporated in
the masonry of new temples built on
the spot.

Anesthetic Used in Third Century
One of China’s famous physicians of
history was Tua To, Third century
A. D., who performed major operations
after making the patient insensible
with wine containing an anesthetic
powder.

Cake From Sidon
Sidon, great rival to Damascus, and
the city of the scholars who gave us
our alphabet, is known chiefly to mod-
ern Syrians for the manufacture of a
certain cake, made nowhere else.
Pony Express Equipment
The Pony Express line, which linked
Missouri with the Pacific coast during
pioneer days in the West, had 80 rid-
ers, 420 horses, 190 stations and 400
station workers.

Broadcast, Broadcasted
Broadcast is the regular past tense,
but in radio work broadcasted is used,
and is permitted, according to Web-
ster’'s Dictionary.
Nervous Ice Cap
The ice cap om the Chukchi sea is
in a state of perpetual vibration, ac-
cording to the report of a Soviet scien-
tist.

Oldest Dated Telescope
Said to be the oldest dated optical in-
strument in the world, a telescope sold
recently in London bore the date 1646.
Okapi, Giraffe-Like Animal
The okapi, a giraffe-like anmal, was
discovered in 1899 by H. H. Johnston
in the Semliki forest. Central Africa.


Take Measures
AKE measures to improve
your cooking with the follow-
ing table of cans by cupfuls.
A measuring cup is a magician
when you treat him right. He is
all of the difference between the
perfect dish, and the so-so—or
even the failure.
To make the best use of canned
foods—both from the standpoint
of taste, and of thrift—eclip this
useful little table:
CANS BY CUPFULS
AMOUNT CONTAINED
Soups
Meats
Spinach
(choice grade)
Peas
(choice grade)
Corn
(choice grade)
String Beans
(choice grade)
Size CAN
No.1 13; cups
vr Vegetables
1
No.2 2% cups Profits
No. 21% 312 cups Fruits
Some Fruits
Sweet
Potatoes
Pumpkin
Tomatoes
No.3 4cups |
Jams
No.5 Tcups { Preserves
Conserves
No.10 13cups { Fouls bist
A ——
When in need of Printing, (anything)
kindly remember the Bulletin.
Here’s The Real
Road Hog—
And He Isn’t Satisfied Yet





HE old-fashioned road hog who
insisted on crowding everybody
else off the highway has been
thoroughly unpopular with motorists
for a long time. However, decent
automobilists sometimes got a break,
for the road hog of that type had a
way of falling afoul of the law every
now and shen, and paying a sharp
penalty for his hoggishness.
But the new road hog has the law
on his side; the statutes especially
authorize him to crowd everybody
else off, and even make it a crime to
try to dodge him. He looks about as
big as the road could accommodate,
but nevertheless is ambitious to grow
a lot bigger.
The new style road hog is excessive
motor taxation. He is threatening an
invasion of Pennsylvania, and if the
legislature gives him authority to
break in he will quickly settle the

—-With apologies to the Pittsburgh Press.
problem of highway congestion by
forcing tens of thousands of motorists
to quit using the road. There will be
plenty of room for everybody that is
left when he takes possession; for it
has been estimated on the basis of
experience in other states that an
increase of 2 cents in Pennsylvania's
gasoline tax will force from 200,000
to 800,000 people to give up operating
their cars. These of course will be the
poorer people; those who most need
their cars, but who simply couldn’t
stand a tax of 60 cents every time
they bought ten gallons of gasoline.
The organized motorists of the
state are pressing their protests
against the increased tax, with all
possible vigor and announce that they
will not quit, and that they are con-
fident the legislature will finally
decide mot to “soak-the-poor” with
this tax.

Governor Earle
Is Told 5¢
Gasoline Tax Will Not Work

Harrisburg, March 12.—Gov. Geo. H. Earle received a letter
from A. P. Delahunt, for four years Pennsylvania’s Commissioner
of Liquid Fuel Tax, declaring
to 5c will not produce revenue as estimated, and more
The letter which has been laid before all mem-
reduce receipts.
bers of the legislature, follows:
My dear Governor Earle:
In view of my feurs years’ expe-
rience as Commissioner of Liquid
Fuel Taxation for Pennsylvania, I
have been much interested in the pro-
posal to increase the gasoline tax
from 3c to be.
Frankly, I have been distressed to
learn that Pennsylvania should seri-
ously consider such an increase. In
1929 the state increased this tax from
3c to 4c, with the result that boot-
legging and evasion increased so dis-
astrously that the 8c rate was
restored after a year. In 1934, at
the bottom of the depression, the
state collected more money at 8c than
it had done in the peak-of-prosperity
year 1929 at 4c.
An increase in gasoline tax is in-
evitably followed by a substantial
decrease in automobile registration
and in revenue from this source.
Hence, even though gasoline revenue
be slightly increased, the losses in
that to raise the State gasoline tax
likely will
diately fell from $11,665,482 in 1981
to $9,661,097 in 1932, a loss of 17.8
per cent, and the legislature went
back to the lower rate.
In Wisconsin the rate was raised
from 2c to 4c in 1931; the consump-
tion of gasoline promptly dropped 13.4
per cent.
The great majority of motor ve-
hicles in Pennsylvania being owned
within a few miles of the state border,
a large revenue would be lost because
of buying in other states. Because
of evasion and avoidance of this sort,
Philadelphia is even today losing
$100,000 a year from her portion of
state gasoline taxes.
The states with low gasoline taxes
invariably get business from nearby
states with high taxes. Thus Con-
necticut has the highest ratio of gaso-
line consumption to motor vehicle
registration of any state, and it has
the lowest tax rate—2c. The reason
is not that Connecticut people use
their cars more than do those of other


registration fees would offset so much
that the net gain from the two |
sources would be very slight. This
is borne out by the experience of |
many states.
states, but that the motorists of ad-
joining states avail themselves of the
low tax in Connecticut, and buy there.
Oregon increased its gasoline tax
lc at the bezinning of 1934. There

The Pennsylvania Gas Tax Ad- was immediate decrease of 5 per cent
ministration requires each distributor |
to post a bond covering three times |
the value of his gas tax returns]
for any one month. The records
of the Gasoline Tax Administrator
will quickly disclose that the great
majority of independent distributors
have the utmost difficulty in posting
this bond at the 8c rate. Under a 5c
rate this bond provision (which is
essential if bootlegging is to be held
eck) will force the independent
~hutor out of business. Instead
» being some 300 distributors
nt, the number will be cut
hin 30 days of the
it of such an increase.

50





is appat y based on the theory
} if a small dose of medicine
od. a double dose will be twice as
tive. But a small dose of strych-
n.ne stimulates the heart action, |
while a large dose spells sudden death.
Oklahoma in 1931 increased its tax
from 4c to Se. The revenues imme-


to increase this tax|
is|in warniz

in gasoline consumption; while every
state adjoining Oregon—California,
Washington, Idaho and Nevada—had
impressive increases.
The geographic and physical ecir-
cumstances of Pennsylvania make it
a particularly attractive field for
| bootlegging because of the great ex-
| tent of navigable waters at its bor-
| ders and the number of mountain and
| forest highways crossing the state
{line. These conditions in the past
| made Pennsylvania one of the worst
tates. To raise the tax
necessitate a heavy in-
of policing and

| bootlegging s
to be would
crease in t
| admini
The
| dur
cost

ate knowledge gained
my official service justifies me
therefore, that the pro-
would bring prafoundly
revenue results, and
se the tax admin-


| posed increas
|


istration.
| Yours very truly,
(Signed) A. P. DELAHUNT.





THE BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY, PA.
L. E. ROBERTS



You can get all the mews of this
locality for less than three cents a
week thru the Bulletin.
GAINS 25%: LBS.
IN TWO MONTHS
COD LIVER OIL—Once a
Punishment—Now a Treat
Stop tryin, to force your children to take nasty-
taeting, fab flavored cod liver oils. Give them
Coco —the cod liver oil with a delicious
chocolate taste—and watch their bodies ing
daily with_vigorous, athletic strength!
Merder of Milwaukee says:
“Before my child took
Coco Cod sheonlyweighed
80 lbs. Now, in two
months’ time, she weighs
105% Ibs. and she
not been sil since.”
rich in Vitamin B—the
appetite and growth
promoting vitamin,
children wi
Cones Tod ody. Af al
COD
he Cod Liver Oil That Tastes Like Chocolate