PAGE TWO THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO, I rs mins THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN Bo | Hoffman ESTABLISHED JUNE 1901 Published Every Wednesday at Mount Joy, Pa. JNO. E. SCHROLL, Editor and Publisher Subscription Price $1.50 Per Annum Six Months. .......«.... 75 Cents Single Copies........ 3 Cents Three Months........... 40 Cents Sample Copies..............FREE The subscription 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 |to arouse the interest of | girls in feeding high grade mals of the average weekly. EDITORIAL The old-fashioned man, who was presented with his first -first birthday, now has a son is old enough wateh and chain on his twenty who has worn out three automobiles before he lo vote. FE the advice on how to raise babies was written by old maids, stand that most of the economists who know how the gov- had money of They used to say that the most of ind now we under- ernment funds ought to be spent never any their own. AUTOISTS AND INDEPENDENCE DAY has been diminishing, that of While the powder menace This means that the automobile has been rapidly increasing. the headlines of July flIfth will report innumerable automo- bile accidents and hundreds of deaths for which the Fourth of July celebration will have to take the blame. There is no need to curb the holiday spirit and the natural enthusiasm associated with the country’s Natal Day. But every one will agree that to be careless in the operation of a motor car on that day is to invite possible injury and even death. On the Fourth all roads carry peak loads; and this fact, from the standpoint of safety, should be most em- phatic¢ally impressed upon the minds of all motorists. WATER COSTS MONEY Jorough water costs. money and should be conserved, The Pittsburgh Equitable Meter Co. has made an exact estimate of the amount of water escaping per quarter through holes of various sizes under 60 potinds pressure. According to their estimate, through a hole of one-fourth inch dimension there will escape 1,200,000 gallons per quart- er; through a threessixteenth inch hole, 675,000 gallons; through a one-eighth inch hole, 300,000 and through a onc- sixteenth inch hole 75,000 gallons. Citizens would do well to seriously consider the above as- tounding figures and have all leaks in the water line on the premises for which they are responsible promptly and thor- oughly mended. The water rates in Mount Joy are siders that water for family consumption, (mo matter how large the family) only costs $5 for one year. Because of this very low rate we should plug all the leaks possible. very low when one con- CURTAINS! ! Jim Jones lives out in the country, twenty miles from his office, and drives to work daily. The drive takes place large- ly on a modern highway, with the last few miles confined to busy streets. The drive can be made safely in about thirty-five minutes. But Jim would feel ashamed of his record if he ever took that long. So, by “stepping on her” hard, he manages if. in twenty-two minutes--a saving of thirteen minutes over the time taken by more conservative pilots. That saving of time is a great boon to Jim. It permits him to spend ten or fifteen minutes talking about golf to the boys at the cigar stand, or reading the funny papers. And the day he made his record he spent the saved time, plus quite a few minutes more, boasting about it. Of course, Jim has to weave in and out of traflic occasion- ally, cursing the slow-pokes who move along at a sedate forty-five. And sometimes he has to steel a right of way. Now and then he misses a crash by an inch, and after the first flush of nervousness passes, he chuckles to himself about what a good driver he is. Once he did have a minor accident, but the insurance company paid for that. There are a good many thousand Jim Joneses driving cars ine this country. They go on for vears with nothing happen- ing to them—and then the inevitable occurs. Curtains! ! BELLYACHES Turn your mind along the path of memory, and you may recall this childhood jingle: “A little fly flew past my door, Right into the grocery store. He ate so much jelly-cake, it. made his little belly ache.” The verse says nothing about the bellvaches that afflicted humans after eating flyblown jelly-cake and other foods, but there were plenty of them. The old-time grocery store, as a matter of fact, was an unsanitary marvel. The storekeeper customarily brushed the flies off the cheese before cutting you a slice, His cakes and breads were exposed to the rav- ages of any passing insect, as were his fruits and vegetables. What a chemical analysis of his eracker barrel would have disclosed in the way of foreign elements is unimaginable. Contrast teday’s up-to-date grocery stare with that of yes- terday. Foods are protected by glass. Refrigeration keeps perishables in the best of condition. Syphons freshen fruits and vegetables. Bread and pastries come wrapped. It’s pretty thin pickings for a present day #y. The modern grocery systems were largely responsible for this change. In. order to attract customers, they adopted the most ‘sanitary display equipment. They put in show cases and refrigerators and preserve foods. ‘Other groc- , CIs towed, suit to. incregse their business. 80 So the fly that flies past your door today will probably fly Bt the grocery store also, and this will save him, and mav- “be You, 8 stomach Bolle, LF | | | | | | I'd hate to have him ruin his phy- sique by working. DE REL When in need of Printing. (any- Exhibited) The ‘Cham p (From page one) sale. He praised the Baby Beef club and the efforts of cattle men boys and the steers Grand sold for 21 cents a pound. Champion sed hi teer Robert purcl ( November for 8 1-4 cents und when it weighed 430 pounds. In addition to the les returns, he was awarded the first cash prize of $20 . 1 showing the b and a pen and pencil set for beef in the club. Rohre champion, an James E. Landis, oi exhibited the Reserve Angus which tipped the scales at 865 pounds. The second ribbon carried a cash prize of $15.00. Norman Duke, Millersville 1, showed the third prize st Angus weighing 1020 pounds. ¢ He was awarded a cash prize of $10 Girl Places Fourth Fourth prize went to a Short Horn, exhibited 1 Schae- fer, ‘of York. It pcimds and was purct i the tHoir ttolr Shenandoah Ab: hundredweight. The animal wei- 560 pounds when it went on feed last fall pound “at that was awarded a ched cost 10 cents Phyll 54-piece 1 and time, is, aged ilver nine, cet for having the best beef shown by a girl, in addition to the $5.00 cash prize for making fourth place. She was in the club a year ago and’ her entry was the Grand Champion of the 1935 exhibit. Fach exhibitor of the fifth to the winning steers received 50 cash award. youngsters recei- enth prize a ribben and $2: Ten additional ved “honorable n tion { exhibits and were each check for $2.50 a Postmaster Harry Schnitman and During the sale one of bolted from the ring and spectators scrambling for the f ces The Grand Champion of the show, an 860-pound Hereford exhibited by Robert Hoffman, aged 13, of Mount Joy, was purchased | for 27 1-4 cents per pound by tl Lancaster Farms Prod 2 of Lancast Last 3 rs | fide: of “Where Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stern spent last week at Ocean Grove and Atlantic City. and Mrs. E. W. Kulp spent at Lancaster attending the | Dean—Singer wedding. 3 3 NT A | | —_— of — A. | WHAT'S IN A NAME? Probably the most Popular name | Christian a lof MARY. It has its forms in every | | language. The name comes from the | | Hebrew bitter, {f | lady, plump, beautiful or Star {| the Sea.” Its variations are Marie, Polly, Poll, Molly, ) | Mayme, Mamie, Marian, Marionette, meaning “rebel, of | MI 35 ers. Ago | | Among the appropriations Legislature, | by the 000 for an experimental made | quite close at present. tobacco | ¢ | l growing saloon at Mount Joy. E. L. Nissly and Co. have thus | far packed 2,000 cases of tobacco | this season. opened business. Harry the sc Gramm Harry 1 done a le of snow business in | last summer do fully as big a business this year: Heilig, David Gaffin, D, ercy Frank rode the leaving Sunday at 4 arriving at the 10:30. and a hearty Mount Joy 1iladelphia, A. M. and Brotherly 1 city of Love at rest dinner hey started for at 8:30 P. M. Jacob Shank, a resident of West Donegal Township, has a rose bush 559 red R which is bearing roses in which is ap- home is not ceeded by a dimness, going identity citizens their preciated by late at night- oven] na . SP revealed as heretofore. has I. Reider, saddler, just d a fine set of harness for Nissley, of Donegal Springs. A. S. Flowers of Mount Joy ad- vertise opening of a new sum- mer resort, Glen Orchard, adjoining Wild Cat Falls, » and American and European Paris s the with an plan with steamer service from the etta Station. A flying horse is doing a big busi- ness near the Exchange Hotel. Excursion trains on the R. & C. railroad and special trolley cars from Lancaster will carry the 4th of July crowds to Lititz Springs for its mammoth celebration. The Independence Day League of Ephrata will make an advertising the trolley lines of Lan- caster County and their destination Donegal Inn, Maytown, a grand baloon ascension will be held. tour over 711 1 will ne 20 Years Ago Dr. EW. veternarians, Newcomer, one of our has replaced his Krit j roadster, with a new 1916 Ford runabout. Mr. James Glatfelter will replace wife attended the Democratic Con- vention in Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Heisey at tended the Habig-Demmy wedding in Middletown, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weaver | Sunday with Mr. and Mr Heisey in Milt Don’t forget the being spent ith of July cele- sponsored by Post. bration local American Legion Kenneth B. Sh S S Kresg ton. N.Y, stores at Bingham- spent the week with his 1 § Tiict f ane F petore Justice of the Pe , Elizabethtown. Proud Father—I want our Wil-! lie to be a Pottiician, Friend—Wh BE Ss so strong big and thing) kindly remember, the Bulletin; 1 othe n Grove. | the | | Jloyees on an ffer, who is with} | The the gasoline engine which operates his ajr pump, with an electric mo- tor, which is | i another - | “Jimmy” | | } { step for toward progress. A number of {to Mt. went by way townspeople - went Gretna on Sunday. of “Pinch Hill” rs went by C. Owen Brandt 5] while “Koch's.” Brandt of and Stehman, the firm took the em- Har- auto trip to risburg. The following enjoyed the | trip. C. Owen Brandt, Harry E Greenawalt, C. S. Gingrich, Frank Greenawalt, J. Harvey Gingrich, E. parents Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Shaff- |w x HA IW. Bentzel and James Shoop. er, A drop i ) ice of Quite a number of town folk at- P in the price of gasoline tended the. Series ASSEmbiv of {is edicted soon because of the Tel: 1 Summer Assembly at} 3 4 Hi ecent discoveries of new oil fiel Mt. Gretna the past week, being I whic a ds . z = may cause an over produc- supervised by the United Breth- | tie : | tion. ren Churches of Eastern or : 7 : By | Some of the boys took a crack | vania. t the fl } | ee |: a e flyers and their shooting was | Rev. . KK. Ober, pastor of thei. i A er {sure one big joke. Sixty Groff | al cl of the Brethren, : i went one. batter. fs rs : { 1 vetter than usual by dressed members of the loc: nt ki : ox > Sig 3 ae: 3 | breaking 16 out of 25, while his | Rotary club at their dinner Friday, ive i Or 5 “The Ee | best pre vious score was 15. Harry aree N1110S0opnies A ta. Carpenter, a new man at the | traps is credited with 24 out of 25 an Miller, 36, of town, ‘ ir oa his 24 were misses, as he only ustained a broken nose, his w broke one £ I Mve 1 oe 25 -actured and Mrs. | : T Ria > 1 ri an mld The largest engine No. 5016, on Anna ney, 40, a fractured : . : re 143 {the Pennsylvania Railroad which m an auto accident a y [us the pewer of 3 engines passed T Sy . > J. St | Monday morning, enroute to Horac Means, of town, cl 1 ith 1 by hi oT Ea: it { and oh 1 res Burgess S. P. Engle of Elizabeth- w 1 on- | ; e . Ww 1 by C town g notice that the curfew vt mvc ve Bail {or : . forst and posted bail for a | ordinance will be suspended on the nights of 3 and 4 and July young America can enjoy the na- tional holiday to their utmost. E. R. Villee of Marietta, has 7 one session of his Sun- day + chool in 21 years. In the Milton Grove news we this article: The spirit of open or sports seems to pervade in the locality. They dresses, peek-a-boo and rarefied stock- ings reaching barely to their ank- heir dainty feet encased in white, oxford young men voung women of this short short les and t high heeled, shoes. occupy secluded nickes to take a solecistie These anxious glimpse as they pass by big | and he will doubtless | Schock and | bicycles to | After an | elegant | Some | | Saxon car. his snow | | | balls | | | | i | | | | | | | | arriving | | | i cient Greece. full bloom. {tv “sensible” o i vi we i : | to “sensible” clothing and says: | from the ground, to make stooping The richtness ho | “Wr AY ” sO 5 Dy : brig: : oe electric | “When women abondoned corsets lights in Mount 7 he Nn Suc- | ¢ avy \ v : s ount Joy has ben suc- and heavy underwear, when they | Ag many as sixty vines can be i naturally. | sculptors woman has the most beautiful fem- | bundles, | ures to devel re freely ATE {ures to develop more freely, more ! Hollywood beautiful.” your business | paper advertising young men. generally emerge from Mari-Anne, Marianna, Marilyn and Marion. Concerning the meaning of the Hebrew word from which Mary comes, there is disagreement their retreats with covered should- ers like the shell of a land turtle. Old potatoes are being hunted up The season original was that of $2.- | being so lat@ makes it rather diffi- among the lexicographers. The ult for the cooks to prepare their | “beautiful” is derived from regular meals. an earlier significance “fat or Morris Enterline, Mr. and Mrs. | plump.” To call a woman “fat” in P. N. Kraybill and daughter au-|he time and place of the early Mir- toed to Camp Brumbaugh in aliams was to imply beauty, for They found the high- ways blocked with teams and au- tos a distance of two miles, while approaching the camp. rr sees tll MODERN WOMAN'S FIGURE Of course every man praises and [in a onstrated by of California. A barrel in which holes of suffi- cient size for a strawberry plant have been bored, is filled with dirt. : In each of the holes a vine is set, American | 1 under each vine is built a screen platform to support it as it grows and bears fruit. The barrel is set on a platform some distance plumpness was considered essential to good looks. tA Beer Strawberry Patch in a Barrel Strawberries enough to supply a a season can he grown This has been dem- elavan D. Johnson, family for barrel. appraises modern women’s figures. But when such praise comes from an 84-year-old sculptor that is a different story. ‘According to Eph- Keyser, dean of Baltimore the modern raim inine figure since the days of an- He credits this beau- themselves up in permitted their tying they stopped barrel. By this of vines can be cultivated in a restricted area. The be better, too, raised in one fig- | method hundreds sensible They clothes--loose costumes that aid the wear berries are said to because they get more sun and air body in its natural development. are not so cramped as when do not call the modern figure the |they grow on the ground. er ers 2 TD (ERI LANDISVILLE The tenth annual community Va- cation Bible under the su- pervision of Miss Alice figure. It is natural— elt TD better way than by local news- There is no to boost school Strickler, AT 51] A HROUGH research and tests by the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads and other highway en- gineering organizations, a new kind of road has been developed within the last few years. A kind of road that costs just a trifle more than an ordinary gravel road, yet is hard and firm in all manner of weather— dustless in summer, rut-proof in wet seasons. Called ‘“‘stabilized’’ roads, they are easy to build, low in cost, and employ hand labor extensively. os When soils having characteristic properties, such as cohesion and friction, are combined in correct pro- portions and kept in a moist condition, they stick firmly together and resist separation. Calcium chloride provides the needed moisture-bond and, in| keeping the soil materials firmly bound, produces a' “stabilized” surface. Amazing as it may seem, sta- bilized roads pack down so tightly under traffic that it is difficult to dig into them even with a pick-axe.' 1 Here then is a low-cost, proven method of building permanent, all-weather roads from local materials, using local labor. Isn’t it false economy to merely grade and gravel a road in the old-style, loosely bound way, when a firm-surface “stabilized” high- way can be built for just a few dollars more? IT IS UP TO YOU TO ASK THAT WFA BUILDS THE KIND OF ROADS YOU WANT Recommendations for WPA projects must originate locally, so public demand decides the type of road improvement to be provided. If you want good stabilized roads, instead of ordinary, dusty, loose gravel surfaces, you and your neighbors must get together and take action. WRITE FOR A “ROAD IMPROVEMENT” PETITION FORM AND MORE INFORMA.- TION ON STABILIZED ROADS Drop a post card today to any of the Association companies, for complete data on the specifications, cost and methods of construction of stabilized roads. A convenient petition blank will also be furnished to make it easy for you and your friends to originate a local or WPA road project. SG Moll, Mell, May, JULY 1st, 1936 WEDNESDAY, on Monday, June 15 and | held at Enhaut last week. They oni, Sunday, June 28, with a are: Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Stover, Mis: fe Fannie Emsweiler, Mrs. Elias Rreid. [ de 'monstration of the work. The Church of God elected dele- | er and Miss Eleanore Snyder gates to the Missionary and Christ- | [ 3 : a {ian Endeavor convention which was | Patronize Bulletin Advertisers GAS SERVICE ANYWHERE WITH A CO mal Range INSTANT GAS FROM GASOLINE The nicest thing about Coleman Ranges is that they provide anybody, anywhere, all the convenience of city gas cooking without the in- convenience of costly piping and plumbing. Immediately the stove is set in the kitchen, it is ready to use. Coleman Ranges make their own gas from ordinary lead-free gas- oline. Band-A-Blu Burners igh instantly, same as city . give you Better Cooked Foods. H. s. NEWCOMER & SON, Inc. MOUNT JOY, PA, t Clarence Schock Mount Joy, Pa. aE We Ask Patronage We Cive Service A smooth, dustless ail weather road in DeKaib County, lllinois, Bi i accomplished by calciumechioride stabilization. PAAR ° x Calcium Chloride Surface Treatment Calcium Chloride being appiied uniformly on road for dust-proofing. If ade cannot be made available for stabilization, at t| least insist on treatment with calcium chloride to keep | the road surface always moist, so always dustless. Two or three light applications of this low-cost chemical are usually sufficient to maintain the road in perfectly dust- less condition. Even the smallest road budget can afford this method of eliminating the waste, danger, discomfort and contamination caused by dust. Calcium Chloride Association The Dow Chemical Company . . . Midland, Michigan Michigan Alkali Company . 60 E. 42nd St., New York City - 40 Rector St., New York City + . Barberton, Ohic Solvay Sales Corporation . The Columbia Alkali Coftoration ioe BE Ve room and hous Price Schr FO ed n Eliza CA Cabi bins ers. very letin, fence Mour Est of M Pa., « Let tate | dersig there medi: claim will se ettle FORE NU CO. POS VIL LIV CO Sect Borou Moun Penns daine( that provis ordineg any unloac any w in the volvin hour « the ho Sec lawful 3 of tl scha the he ter the any dc 1 loading as to c Sect or oth premis withou cient ¢ premis: ness di be obt: thereto cceupal danger result 1 case cf the sec satisfiec in fact such aj and un reasona ceeding ceeding who oh premise