SAGE YQ THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN | ESTABLISHED JUNE 1901 : Published Every Wednesday at Mount Joy, Pa. i JNO. E. SCHROLL, Editor and Publisher | ; Subscription Price $1.50 Per Annum Sis’ Months... ......... 75 Cents Single 3 Cents Theee Months...........40 Cents Sample Copies............. PEER The subseription lists of three other newspapers, the Mount Joy Star ! snd News, the Landisville Vigil and the Florin News were merged with the Bulletin. which makes this paper's circulation practically double that of the average weekly. : EDITORIAL ; YOU MAY BL NEXT BR is one of the human failings to regard with complacency * . cflorts to over-tax or over-regulate the fellow next door. Mast of us don’t stop lo think that if such efforts are success- fuk and the politicians get their hands on one business, some other business will be next in line for their attentions. Possibly you favor higher taxes on gasoline. If so, then ¥ . 3 . remember that it may not be long betore we have higher or the tobacco business, the whatever business you are in. taxes on the candy business, inwge ance business, or Or, vou may favor special punitive taxes against stores of ont kind or another. The inevilabie follow-up of that will be special taxés against other types of stores. That has al- reddy been suggested in at least one state, where some of the bagker 's of a special chain-store lax are casting longing eves! onsindependent groups of merchandisers. And so it goes. Once the trend starts, spaeial or class taxation. Your it today and get it in the neck tomorrow, there is no end to business may be free from GOOD WILL ON THE ROAD The Holiday season is a peculiarly fitting time to empha- size the obligations of every motorist. It is of more than pagsive interest that the Yuletide closes that quarter of the yedr when automobile accidents, deaths and injuries are al anannual peak. How horrible is the thought that as we ap- prééich the days when the sentiment, “Good Will to All” is aldrified throughout the land, the carnage of wrecks and bodies is strewn more than ever over the face of our codntry. 3 great deal has been said about the necessity of courtesy in driving as an accident Driving at spéeds reasonable for conditions, sharing the road. passing property. using correct hand signals, avoiding all those ac-| tions which make driving dangerous and uncomfortable for the other fellow, are the dictalgs of courtesy and manners. So, too, arc they dictates of the principle of the good neigh- bor. Good driving, with a real desire to safeguard the lives of those exposed lo the consequences of that driving, is prac- tical Christianity. 1t is a kind of practical Christianity that | followers of all creeds can subscribe in the common rejoicing this Christmas season. The first concern of the churches of America is the saving of souls. By entering with whole-hearted activity automobile safety movement, they can extend their activity | to the saving of lives, without violating their The blot upon a soul as a result of killing or maiming anoth- er through careless or heedless action, easily crased. The churches have the to] appeal to a great section of the drivers of the country on oe-] -asions when they are most receptive to the idea of good will as a driving maxim. on the road could | well serve as a theme for a sermon in every church at this me of the year. long as selfishness and stupid recklessness, se preventive measure. to as they join al into the first purpose. is one not advantage of being able The good neighbor y long as des i and destruction exist on our streets and Pad avs, the arth, good will toward mand little more than lip service, ideal of peace on men, will com- Armen eset ented CUT YOUR FIRE BILL It's fun to watch the fire engines flash by, with their crim- son bodies gleaming and their sirens shattering the air. It's also fun to wateh the firemen at work on a blaze, with their magnificent modern equipment, their amazing efliciency movement, and their knowledge of just what to to do it. Both of these “pleasures.” become less pleasur- able if you reflect that good, hard-carned dollars must come out ef your pocket to pay the bill, It should be everlastingly emphasized that we all pay for fives—whether fite hits our property or not. All of us help! to pay the upkeep of five departinents, alarm systems and water facilities. AH of us who carry insurance policies must help to pay the bill for those who sustain fires—over a period | of time, and town’s insurance rate is determined by the vol-! ume of its fire loss. All of us must chip in, through higher taxes, to make up the taxes lost when -a home or an industry lire. So it goes--we pay our share of the nation’s fire bill in a half-dozen. different Authorities estimate that hill could be cut at feast 80 per cent by the exercise of a little cau- tion, a lithe a little preparedness. Most fire hazards can be easily and cheaply those | which are easiest and cheapest to do away with are often produetive of the worst fires. Do your part to prevent fire —in the interest of your home, vour business, the lives of vour loved ones, and vour bank account. ; From what we can learn it is seldom that a fellow is pul in the jug from smelling the cork. Despite all the harsh things said aboul money. it is still as nopular as ever, Some orators take an andienes hy storm while others are nothing more than a frost. ol do and when however, is destroved by Ways, Pro and Connie By DAPHNE A. M'VICKER @ McClure Newspaper Syndicate. w NU Service. ONNIE liked her pleated flannel skirt with the soft wool of her canary pull-over sweater ruffled in a frill about her throat, She liked Ler little brown ghillies with their yellow silk ties, Nhe liked the yel- low beret with the big slouched crown, Clothes do help a broken heart. Besides, hearts must mend after a year, Jack's father had died, so she mustn't hold that old grudw any longer. But thinking of Jack's ; father brought back the. intoleralle picture. Nhe had gone shyly iuto the inner office supposing she was to he welcomed Into Jack's family. Mr. Craven, gaunt, gray, with in- | serutible eves, began: “You're a sensible girl, Miss Carter.” And | on like the father that Jack for himself. “1. him a absent treatment, Young men have a way falling in love with stenographers Zain, you know. Well drama to say was too fo choose Ss give year's of —and out id Of cours and haughtily. had agreed, instant- she ly She had written Jack to say that she thought they iad played around long enough, that tomorrow she was leaving to take a bhetier place in a distant city. Then she had given herself the pleasure of making confetti of the check Mr, Craven had offered her. Later, she was sorry, On the train to take the job as companion to a crochety old lady, she regretted treating Jack as if he had no right to decide for himself, They had always had a code phrase—“So to speak.” “I'm going over to the races Hoy row, Jack would say, adding: “So to speak.” And Con- nie would know he was coming by for her in the yellow roadster, “I'll be working late tonizht—so to speak.” They undersiood. And while the train rushed her farther away from him every minute, Con- nie scribbled the words on a blank sheet of paper and directed it to Jack. If he received it right afer her harsh note, he would under- stand, Aud now a year later, Connle still blushed at the memory, for Jack had never answered. jut that was over, Things were different. Connie was rich now, planning to play golf and tennis aud gray at gay vacation hotels, She had heard that the Cravens had lost money, Perhaps she was richer jut she must stop think- She must excited time she bhroad-shonldered man lock of hlond hair. ht now saw rig who was her than they. ing Cravens, stop be- Saw f with a of ing tall tumbled Why, golf lesson apnro: Li with Jack every the her looked at walked She as she give she that nro to Mine, and imagined Lie Craven's very he his colf step. the blond came to imagined that tossed lack out of meet her, A “Hello, Connie,” It was Jack. “H-hello” ingly. “Imag added. “I—I was expecting professional,” eye and pro! the man said. achieved waver- you,” the she she colf ine seeing granted “Yon are seldom he answered. promptly.” behold So him.” “But, Jack—" they had lost every- then. Jack, tournaments, who had Was now thing, many won So a pro- fessional. “T didn't sorry lo Jack.” “All in to congral She she said. T'm your troubles, know.” hear of came.” he said. “I'm you?’ Apparently Cravens revered money. the late frowned. all the “Yes,” she said. “I've been— lucky.” “That's an odd way of putting it. I should say it was the man whe was lucky. By the way, what do 1 call you now?” “I. don't know what you mean.” “Your married name?” “But I'm not married. Mrs, Ja- son, the old lady to whom I was companion, died and left me a lot of money, “You aren't Didn't you know 7” He dropped married?” the golf clubg and seized her shoul ders. “Oh, Connie darling, is it true? Then you're going to he, 1 can tell you, Oh, Connie, I've heen LI) lonely.” A strange, hard little thought Jabbed her. He was willing to marry her now that she had money, “Dad. told me,” he said slowly, “that yon had gone away to he mar- ried.” T got a note that said ‘So to Speak.” but just a month ago, from among dad's papers. He must have held it back. T.et's not be hard on him, Connie: he had his ideas even though they were wrong.” Against a brown wool golf sweaf- er Connie's ice was rapidly melt- ing. But she jumped at a harsh voice heéside them. “If thiz is the way yon fill vour Job, Mr. Craven.” a scowling Seeoi was telling Jack, “I'll not be need- ing vou longer.” “Semething came up. Mac,” Jack said. his eyes dancing “Well, take if and yourself away.” the golf pro scolded. “It was kind of you. to take my place so IT conld meet my daughter. But I'll not be needing van longer.” Then Jack =as not working pro- fegsionrallr? He wasn't poor? He wanted her for herself alone: The Inst of Connie's lce dis appeared, Patronize Bulletin Advertisers, in a melo- | Jeered First Umbrella in Seventeenth Century The mmbrella, a8 we now know it, was probably eastern in origin One can see it pictured in the sculptures of Nineveh and Assyria, and it was not unknown in early India, In ancient Rome, the umbrella was used by women and effeminate en as a screen froma the sun, The umbrella was introduced into England early in the Seventeenth century and became fashionable amonges the aristocracy and the wealthy. The first man who ventured to appear in the streets of London with an umbrella was Jonas Han- Vays, says a writer in Pearson's Weekly. He returned to London from Persia, in delicate health, and, | according seription, to a contemporary de- “a defended his face and w He vas subjected to considerable ahuse. AS late as 1784, Couper, in de- scribing the rising popularity of the umbrella, mentions that its adop- tion by the lower classes was suf- ficiently novel to call for comment, In many luge towns in Britain the name is known of the first izen courageous enough to appear sheltered by an umbrella in the streets of his native town, In L2d- inburgh he was a physician named Spens: in Glasgow, a surgeon named John Jameson who, when {raveling on the continent in 1871, noted the use of the umbrella in Paris and brought one home with him to Glas- gow. He used it, much to the won- derment and admiration of his fel- lows. Red Hot Cures Used by Chinese to End Disease In China, among the Nashi ple, who live around the mountains at the head of the Yangtze-Kiang river, there is an unusual way of curing sickness, When a man is ill, he sends for the Tombas, or priests, who stage a mock fight with the demon of disease, First a chicken is killed and put in a coffin, and offerings are made to the dead chicken. “Then a plow- share is brought to red heat, Dances are performed, and the chief priest takes the glowing plowshare from the fire, dances on it with his bare feet and Heks the red-hot steel with his tongue. He then heats a pot of oil dips his hands into the fire, burning pot and flaming fingers he rushes through the rooms of {tl sick man’s house, sword in mouth peo- e aud sprinkling every corner with | burping: eik This drives the dis- demon out and the sick man is | supposed to be free from the de- | mon, This ceremony lasts three | hours and is performed even for Weekly, Chasing the Raccoon Raccoon pelts are of value, yet the typical “coon hunter is more interested in the chase than in pelts. Usually, notes a writer in the Detroit Free Press, if he takes considerable enough pelis in a season to pay for the keep of his dogs, lhe is well satisfied. The thrill of the ‘coon chase lies in the dexterity and | good judgment of the raccoon, and the matching of wits of the dogs, | coupled with the eerie night and the music of the dogs® harking as it floats through the fields and val leys. Only inexperienced raccoons do foolish things. They are the ones which are easily taken. A raccoon with several seasons be- hind it will have learned most of the tricks, and this is the Kind of animal which robs the hunter of Once the doz old “foxy” gets on the raccoon, th his sleep. trail of an e i hunter is sure of an all-night chase, which is just as likely as not end up without any raccoon in the bag. First Movies Motion pictures came ing in 1889, when Ed after the invention of roll film, exhibited the Kivetoscope in the form of a peep show, The film was the size of the standard film, but maguified only six The camera weighed about a ton, the films very short, being only 50 into be- ison, shortly the flexible times. feet in length, and the apparatus had the disadvantage of not be- ing able to project the pictures, which could only be seen by one person at a time, Find No Elephant Graveyards "There is the tradition in all ele- phant countries that the aged sick animal senses the approach of death, and goes away in some secret sapetuary in the jungle Searches have been made again in Africa for ary places, but alvays without suc- cess, says a writer in the Montreal Herald. The object of the search is the discovery of the immense treasure of ivory that is supposed to have accumulated at the secret sanctuary. or to time and these mortu- die. History of Mirrors Mirrors in their primitive form were known to the aneients, The Hebrews used them as did also the ancient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans. Praxiteles taught the use of polished silver for nuirrors as early as 328 B. 0. Mirrors of glass were first made at Yenice in 1: 300, but were not intro lasd until 1673. eed .inlo Lng cit- | and | With | to | ‘ 18 0) nS 03 . LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18th, 19 ET A SS Sr | UT » i IT TAKES MY PATIENCE For the water that you drink | MEED NATURE'S WARNINGS | ment. He pointed out that the trea! VEDNESDAY [ — | You pay a tax. | Repeated sore throats and tonsil- ment of this disease no longer ne | When you light the evening lamp | When you smoke a cigarette, | ities followed by puffiness under the cessitates the giving up of meat gues—"—— You pay ins For the dinner that you get, l eyes, especially in children, is the | 2 food. A Wt i : post | For the beautiful coquette, forerunner of Bright's disease, ac- i CBSE 1en you buy a postage stamp You pay a tax, : i lec You pay a tax. ye cording to Dr. Paul, Dickens, Hs There is no better way to boo When you buy the baby clothes. When you buy an ice cream cone, When you read the morning news You pay a tax. When you buy a pair of shoes, When you buy a small soup bone, You pay a tax. You pay a tax When you buy a loaf of bread, When you watch the screen girl | When the doctor says you're dead, wink { And the final prayers are said, You pay a tax. You pay a tax. | AMAZE AMINUTE SCIENTIFACTS ~~ BY ARNOLD ErasTic IcE AT Low Ve TEMPERATURES 15 BRITTLE WHEREAS ICE NEAR 32°F 1S ELASTIC AND will BEND. Thu NDERBOLTS 2 ANCIENT PEOPLE THOUGHT | THEY HAD FOUND ACTUAL THUNDERBOLTS WHEN THEY DISCOVERED FULGURITES, — ROCK OR SAND FUSED d BY LIGHTNING'S HEAT, WHICH EXTEND AS DEEP AS FORTY FEET. PURE OCEAN BREEZE! ATLANTIC OCEAN AIR HAS BUT ONE BACTERIUM FOR EACH 80,000 FOUND IN A CITY HOSPITAL, | §'322 | warns parents that these symptoms | | should not go { should unheeded. The child treat- receive immediate your business than by local news paper advertising. 1c od fear no rivals.” DECEMBER IE m 17—Cclu who falls in love with himself 18—Hawaii's King visits the United States, 1874. . / imbus arrives in Spain a prisoner, 1500. Kalakau ( 2) 19--First autogiro flight in the ape United States, 1928, af 22 .20—First U.S. bathtub in 2 stalled, Cincinnati, 1842, ot 21—Start of the great influenza [@ 0 epidemic, 1889. 22~B. Franklin invents the lightning rod, 1749. - = _ 23—Joan Crawford, favorite of the screen, born 1908. Week: Rds SPE TRF Te Tore > ET PE TERETE ME NE PENCE NAS PEATE PERF PAVE FED Mee BRETHREN POINTMEN’ EACH WEI DURING C( Appended is appointments | meetings to bi | ren in Christ | ni ER RRA RRS REE RRR year. I O0D CANDY ! 2 Jan. (1)—F I 8 R “ ofl} 28 “ 15-F Bn ® « 20.P i RB Rv 20g i A Fl P , Feb. (5)—K Ni np “ 12H eo ; 3 ww ® “© 18-A 8 2 “ 28H i 8 Mar. (49)—A ¥ 8 MAKE SURE OF NOUGH READY MONEY NEXT * 11-D | In VET IE CHRISTMAS BY ING ONE : % 195.20 —THE IDEAL GIFT FOR CHRISSRM AS! A i 1RISTMAS RY JOINING ONE OR MORE i Cr a Packed in boxes from forty-five cents to 2 OF THE FOLLOWING CLASSES ¢ five pound box at Two dollars Bon “15-2 4 OR SAYS A eR ST On An i 22 ¥ FOR SALE AT LOCAL STORES OR A1 # # ’ 219 North Queen Street Lancaster, Pa. CLASS 10F Member pang 10 cents a week $ 5 00 0—E mR A RR ER ME psa fn 107 filly weeks will receiv ! Mey od - |X Ye CLASS 25 Member payiflg 25 cents a week 20—W & for fifty weeks will receiv. ..... coves $ 12. 50 ¥ RJ June CLASS 50 Members paying&50 cents a week $ 25 00 10-25 Wo for fifty weeks veceive...... . 17K g CLASS 100 Members payin 00 a k f 2-2 © CLAS Members paying week for fifty weeks will recejve....... 588 ............. $ 50.00 July (1)—Pau gt 8—San oN = CLASS 200 Members paying $2.088a week fo 15—M. a paying eck for 5 BOfty weeks will receive............ %..-..... $ 1 00.00 22—Am x “ 29—Her i ¢ CLASS 500 Members paying $5.00 a eck for Aug. (5)—Jac 4 fifty weeks will yeceive................ 8%. .... $250.00 12—Ab: es fre 4 id Sept. (2)—Joh i “ 9—Ab: A ‘ iY) « Sure I use it - i 16M I I i . . * 23—Ear ny i Th U N al M J k 30—Har ¢ 1ne Union National Mt. = “= Sh of 0 * 14—San LGEMU TH A S ° i “ 21—Joh | 0 : Mount Joy, Penna. as In [1 N (4)—Alb { 4 : ov FLORIN, PENNA. Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation “ 11—Ear Phone Mt. Joy 220 LN “« 18 Art REET 25— Mel Dec. (2)—Ja 9—AlL 16—Ph: * 23—Her * 30—Da COUNTY-WIDI WII Snyder, Clay; t %¥, Ephrata, R ecretary, The county-1 seing arranged xaster Co, it 20th, 1936, Lan Srowers’ cons Silver Spring; zabethtown, 2lay to arrange will feature ap; at t Harrisburg Assoc a Elmer R. Sn; slected preside Association. O Vice Presiden se Bark raster, Sn Patronize Bul