The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 22, 1922, Image 6

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Ves i
Lil TLE JULIUS SNEEZEK




- ee GRANDPA Lr 7
| Citi I S MY GRANDPA'S | CWELL HOW
i | WELL JULIdS, BIRTHDAY (S | NEL Sow
AE {WH TS LP TOMORROW { i, E TO BE
B= rT , NOW é i AND T WANT ig PRESSE 2 7
{| = |Sou0 TO DRESS j{ ANE9SE,
| i 7 | ME UP 50 tT) =
ART [| ’ wit REMIND Il ¢
IperT.|! £7 rr======y | MC OF HIM!
1 vv 5.4 : : a



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y
THE-MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY LANCASTER COUNTY,PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
BY BAKER


[WELL WE L WELL WHAT
FOUGHT IN THE
CWiIL WAR! DO
You GET THE
DRESSING You


THE MATTER WITH
INA UNION -SULT

1




Ss T SAID HE FOUGHT
IN THE CIVIL WAR,
up IOU BIG
RUMMY a=
pf est poemm—


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By JACK WILSON
Copyright 1922 by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate


FINE WIRE






RUN OVER TO THE ‘LO . JIMMY
1
GTORE SPUD AND SMITH WHY MY
GET ME SOME .NAME SAN'T



MMMY SMITA.
- 17's
FRANKIE



WELL MY NAME
ISN'T MISTER
 



 









WELL -THAT'S
FUNNY! 7 16a"
EITHER ONE

-— Tne Aipsen 2

|
AS 1 1 O ByE JOE 1 3
-~
: :
Peerless Combination :
Grinding Mill
1
Using 6” force
feed
This is the only mill with two separate hoppers.








patent force
feed slide
feed conveyor in roughage hopper, “Miracle”
plates, double crusher roll in grain hopper, betwzen
roughage and grain hopper, insuring a unifbym mixture of roughage
and grain at alt times. The only mill that does not have gears on
cutter to drive rolls. We also make a specialty of double crusher
roll feed mills with “Miracle” patent force feed machine-cut plates.
No 1500 and 1501 mills make an
shredder
Greater Capacity with less power.
ideal combination for farm tractors. “Peerless” fodder
will shred the heavy part of fodder without | pulverizing tops and
blades.
¢
‘Peerless’ dairy feed mixer can be used successfully with or with-
out molasses.
Call on us for prices.
6. MOYER
MOUNT JOY, PA,
West Donegal Street,
A111
Special 15 Day Sale
of New Home Sewing Machine
THE GIFT SUPREME


\7

The Light:
Running
Sewing
New Home Machine
Every Woman Wants One
Every woman knows the joy of making new, clothes is always doubled
by using the New Home—it stitches and sews so perfectly.
. Brings Joy to the Home---Lightens Her Tasks
The annoying troubles of mending are turned to trifle§ and made a real
pleasure I “using the New Home—it is the family fayorite—built for
the home. Making fancy things is child’s play with oul simplg . attach-
ments. > \
The New Home is a beautiful household ornament ‘as well as the most
efficient sewing machine. 4 4 i La
$1 Delivers-----The Weekly Installment of
H. E. HAUER, MI. JO
Pays
§ | sylvania in

HOME HEALTH CLUB
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX-
PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H.
REEDER

Cancer killed 7,586 people in Penn-
1921. This is a death
rate of 85.5 per 100,000 population,
a higher rate than that caused by tu-
berculosis of the lungs which was
78.9; higher than the diptheria rate,
22.5; or typhoid fever, 7.3.
Cancer brings death in an agoniz-
ing form, pet the disease is often cur-
able if taken in time.
The State Health Commissioner
says, “A death from cancer of the
skin or of the mucous membrane near
the skin, as the mouth, lips, tongue,
or cheek is an entirely avoidable
death. These cancers in their be-
ginnings can always be crued. Their
beginnings, as a rule, are not cancer,
= | but some persistent inflamation which
untimately turns into cancer; a wart
which grows and becomes inflamed,
=a mole which exhibits the same ten-
= | dency, a little skin patch which scales
and persists; these are the common
signs which require attention and
which can be cured before cancer
develops.
“A painless application of radium
will usually cure it,” he continued,
“sometimes the knife under local
anesthesia, which makes the proced-
ure so painless there is not even -a
wrinkling of the brow when a need-
ful cut is made and the one or two
stitches applied. A sore spof on the
lip which persists more than a few
days may be the forerunner of can-
cer—fever blisters last at most but a
few days. Persistent sores on the
tongue or cheek should be regarded
in the same light. Lumps in
breast or growing anywhere call for
immediate attention. By modern
methods the removal of growth is en-
tirely safe and painless.
“Internal cancer could
and always,

be cured,
nd ; except that in its be-
ginning it usually gives no sien and
not until it is largely developed can
it be detected by examination.”
During the World War the United
States lost 80,000 men, and in the
same period 180,000 people died of
cancer in this country.
——
FACULTY GIVES 17 PERCENT
OF TIME TO RESEARCH


Members of the faculty of Penn-
sylvania State College are giving
about 17 percent of their time to re-
search for the benefit of the indus-
trial and agricultural activities of the
man of the Senate Committee on Re-
search at the College.
instructors and professors are giving
Instruction to more than 5,000 stu-
dents a year, they are at the same
time finding it possible to give nearly
one fifth of their time this year to
pure or applied research problems
within their fields.
The apnouncement of Dr. Kern was
made on a basis of a questionaire
sent out by his committee to all mem-
bers of the faculty inquiring as to
the special needs of their schools or
departments. This was one of the
steps taken in preparation for the es-
tablishment of State College on a
university basis and for the expan-
sion of its facilities to provide for a
possible enrollment of 10,000
dents,
A few of the
are giving al
tions, while o
stu-
special research staff
I their time to investiga-
ther members of the fac-
ulty have teaching programs so full
as to make it
do any research work,
— a
Shipments from the barreled
ap-
ple areas have been double those of
last season, plainly showing the
heavier production in these sections
according to the United States De-
partment of Agriculture, To Oc-
tober 1 official reports indicate a to-
tal movement of approximately
15,000 cars. That is about half as
many as were shipped during the
entire 1921-22 season. .

the |
state, according to a recent announce- | ’,
ment by Dr. Frank D. Kern, chair- guy Desn
Dr. Kern stated that, though 315 medigine 0 had.”
impossible for them to |
FIFTEENTH ANNUAL SALE
OF CHRISTMAS SEALS
Nov. 15—Tubercu-
losis day will be observed in the
churches December 3 and in the
schools December 8 as features of
the Christmas Seal sale to fight the
White Plague. The plan is set for
by John S. Fisher Pennsylvania
Chairman for the Christmas Seal
sale, today in the following statement:
“In connection with the Fifteenth
Annual Sale of Christmas Seals it is
suggested that Tuberculosis Day be
observed in the churches on Sunday,
December 3, and in the schools on
Friday, December 8. All church and
educational workers are vitally inter-
ested in the physical, as well as in the
intellectual, moral and spiritual well
being of our people. It is, therefore,
appropriate that church and schools
put forth their best- efforts in con
serving the health of our citizens. In-
asmuch as the schools and Sunday
Schools deal with the well fare of the
young people, they furnish an invit-
ing field in the war against tubercu-,
losis.
“The Christmas Seal has bzcome a
vital factor in bringing better health
and longer life to the people of Penn-
sylvania. It is the means of prevent-
ing tuberculosis and of restoring to
health those who have fallen victim
to its ravages. The sale and use of
the Seal is, therefore, more than a
pretty Christmas custom.
“We confidently put the case before
the pastors, Sunday School superin-
tendents and workers and teachers in
our public schools. We earnestly
solicit your help and ask you to em-
phasize on the days above designated
the dangers and treatment of tuber-
culosis to the end that health may be
improved and life prolonged, and
particularly the part which the
Christmas Seal plays in this great
Harrisburg,



effort.”}
| nett 8 eee
B Sonn TESTIMONY
|
{ Time is the test of truth. And
|Doan’s |Kidney Pills have stood the
[test in {Mount Jo. No Mount Joy
{resident{ who suffers backache, or an-

inoying frinary ills can remain un-
|convine by this twice-told testi-
(mony. |
C. J. Gillums, 310 E. Main street,
Mount J4y, ave the following recom-
|mendatioh in January, 1916: “One
i I needed a kidney remedy

time whe
and needed it badly, Doan’s Kidney
Pills werd recommended to me. My
back had become so painful 1
couldn’t rest well, and I was all tired
out when|I got up in the morning.
Doan’s Kidney Pills took away the
disorder entirely after other remedies
had failed} in fact, Doan’s were the
only kidney remedy that ever did me
any good.”
On May 5, 1921, Mr. Gillums said:
“It’s no lohger necessary for me to
Kidney Pills. Doan’s
surely fixed up my back in A No. 1
shape and they also regulated my
| kidneys. ere is no better kidney
Price 60d, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask fpr a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mr. illumg had. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
STATE COLLEGE EDUCATIONAL
EXTENSION REACHES MANY

| More than{100 courses are listed in
the new general bulletin recently is-
{sued by the } Educational Extension
| Department of the Pennsylvania
State College. These are entirely ex-
| clusive of courses given by corres-
pondence by the extension force, and
| include education, psychology, Eng-
lish, languages, history, mathematics,
music, art, economics, and physical
| education. They lead to baccalaurate
or graduate degrees from State Col-
lege. In many places the instruction
is given in evening classes by the fac-
ulty of the local college or institution.
A gross enrollment of 3,067 is re-
corded for teachers who last year em-
ployed this means of furthering their
education and securing degrees.
etl Me

Teams representative of all the
member groups of the Intercollegiate
Fruit Judging League will participate
in the annual judging contest to be
held at the Pennsylvania State Col-
lege on December 9. Three men will
comprise each team.
—— eee.
If you want to succeed—Advertise
COMMUNITY PLAN OF
EXTENSION WORK GROWS
In the organization of co-operative
agricultural extension work in Penp-
sylvania counties, it is interesting to
note the increased favor with which
the community plan of organization
is met by those in charge of the pro-
gram of work. In 1921 there were a
total of 382 communities organized
in forty-five of the sixty counties in-
cluded in the survey made by the De-
partment of Agricultural Extension
at State College. With eleven coun-
ties completely organized on the com-
munity plan, and fifteen counties
having no community divisions for
carrying out the county program of
work, it was possible to make a com-
parison of both methods and to de-
termine the effect of each upon the
work.
A more constructive comparison
resulted when the work conducted in
a county under the unorganized plan
was weighed against the work ac-
complished in the same county under
the system of community organiza-
tion, It was found in almost every
case that dividing the responsibility
along community lines had made ithe
extension program more effective and
far-reaching. The tendency is to de-
velop more leaders, and consequently
more interest in the work,
In the 1922 survey, the number of
organized communities has risen to
587, leaving only 220 unorganized.
There are now only five counties that
have no community division of work,
while twenty-five have been complete-
ly organized. The more recent figur-
es prove the popularity and effective-
ness of the community plan and af-
fer a more-«reliable basis upon which
to make comparisons, especially with-
in the counties. In the matter of

leadership alone, the report for 1922
shows that there were a total of 2306
leaders of work in the
0 organized
communities, an averace of almost
tour to each community, In the 220
unorganized sections, there were only
334 leaders, :
caders, an average of one and
one-half each,
rn
PENN STATE CAMPAIGN
NEARS HALF-WAY MARK
—
The emergency building fund cam-
paign for $2,000,000 now being con-
ducted by the Pennsylvania State Col-
lege, is rapidly nearing the half-way
mark. Alumni throughout the state
and in every community in the count-
ry where they are assembled in any
number, are now sending in their
contributions at the rate of about
$50,000 a week, the total having
reached $750,000.
A number of large individual con-
tributions, ranging from $5,000 to
$15,000, have been added to the fund
during the past week and have aided
materially in boosting the building
fund. The Girls’ Glee Club, compos-
ed of students, a few days ago gave
a pledge of $200. The earnings from
a student vaudeville show, totaling
$385, were turned over to the fund
by the girl students, Three organi-
zations have each pledged $1,000 to
the fund, the Thespian Club, the
Lion’s Paw Senior Society and the
Penn State Glee Club. Philadelphia
and Allegheny counties are each out
to secure over $500,000 for the fund
and alumni oMranizations there
making progress in their work.
Se A—
STATE COLLEGE HOLDS LAST
PENNSLLVANIA DAY FETE
are


Thousands of people from
the state gathered
last Saturd
all over
at State College
ay for the annual observ-
ance of Pennsylvania Day at the
Pennsylvania State College. The
crowd was one of the largest that
ever attended a holiday function at
the college. Student exhibits, athlet-
ic and social events, mainly fraternity
house parties, were the big attrac-
tions. The college authorities have
ruled that in the future no particular
day will be set aside for visits of in-
spection and entertainment of the
general public, but have decided that
instead, “occasions be arranged for
visits of inspection and conference on
special group interests of the col-
lege.” This provides for a new type
of college entertainment after this
year.



IMPORT \
Dercnand for 31
Women of
Seema!



Ballots and bea
gether In the mind oy
an. At any rate, ten’
are worn today when ‘3%
before the war and bid
Beads by the billions kices in J
ported. This year’s rec
to run far ahead of last
last year’s record was worth
a any comment upon PRIC
vanced and emancipated wonfy %
terest In the ornament that is ux
set down as a South sea savage's
tion of an all-but-complete costum
quite unnecessary. The figures spehk
for themselves. ?
From central Europe, from France,
from the shores of the entire Mediter-
ranean, from all Judea, from the three



CR



great countries of the Far East, the |
making of beads for the United States
is a big business, declares a New York
Sun writer. Not satisfled with the
quantity that can be turned out with
everybody working at the job of dec-
orating the dresses and the hats and
the shoes of millions of American wom-
en, the demand for something differ-
ent has made the best dealers set the
very South sea savage to scraping up
the seashells from the shores of lonely
{sles that are all but lost on any
average map.
To the national bill for tire ma-
terials could be added the cost of all
imported cigarettes and then the total!
would be $35,000,000 short of meeting
the total outlay for feminine orna-
ments. In spite of the increase in
the amount of coffee imported, the cup
that cheers America at breakfast time
costs far than the beads that
women wear. About $66,000,000 less.
The comedy continues throughout the
whole list of life's lesser luxuries.
WOMEN IN VARIOUS TRADES
less

Fair Sex Has Traveled Far From
What Was Considered Proper in
the Victorian Era.
Ny
h,
There are today in New York state™
789 women in the building trades in-
cluding women carpenters, electricians,
house painters, glaziers, paper hang-
ers, plasterers, plumbers, and even
stone cutters. There are also women
working as common laborers for the
railroads.
We have had factory workers, to be
sure, for long years, but in the past
they have been chiefly employed as
semi-skilled operators in clothing, tex-
tile and similar industries. Today,
New York state boasts 2,610 jn lum-
ber and furniture work; 6,302 doing
semi-skilled tasks in steel and iron
and 8,217 working among the =
metals ; while 1,107 work in clay, sto:
or glass. The combined list of mill
workers and skilled operators runs
considerably more than 300,000 for the
state.
Such tasks are not so ‘anti-Victorian
as quarrying, mining, 's Joring, of
course, in which wome Ax en-
gaged, but they are still in
the kitchen stove, the". gRAust
nce Guy
‘public.







cloth and the nursery.-
Woolston in the Néw I

Chewing m Gave Him Away.
A gob of chewing gum his disrupted
a family. In a recent divorce case
the wife, who was suing, testified that
she was sure that her husband waSgun-
faithful, but did not know for certa
to which one of several charmers he
was paying attention.
One morning she found a
gum that he had been chewing
night before when he returned hon
late. In the lump of gum was the
fatal red hair. She caused
to be placed on the woman who had
locks to match the hair found
and discovered that her husband was
a frequent visitor at the red-head’s
apartment and got a divorce ga
Talk about your detectigg
ord tinfe.
what a plot!—Portland Ore-



a watel
she
stories,
gonian.
Locomotive From Scrap Iron.
Working for eleven years, with a file
as his only ‘tool, a man in Buenos
Ayres has made a miniature locomo-
tive of serap iron. The locomotive
can be operfited under its own power
by the use of npressed air. The
iran was not heate( the making, but
was worked cold. A sMgll coal tender
and passenger coach were
same time and the whole
little more than six feet in leng
weighs 170 pounds. More than 1
screws and 2,000 rivets were used {i
the work. The train is complete to
the last tiny detail and is built on the
model of the equipment used on the
British railroads of that country.


















Corncobs.
Corncobs are being turned into au-
tomobile fuel, also a hard rubber sub-
stitute for phonograph records, pipe
stems, varnish, buttons and electrical
oarts, , 9
This commercial alchemy happés
not in Germany, famous for its utili-
zation of by-products, but right here
in America. It is the result of six
vears of research by La Forge and
Mains, chemistry experts of the De-
partment of Agriculture,
Chemical engineering is one of the
biggest fields open to young men to-
day. It is the modern Aladdip’s lamp.



Norwegian Co-operative Bank.
A new bank, called “Bondernes”
(farmer's) bank, has been organized
In Christiania, Norway, by a combina-
tion of savings banks, co-operative as-
goclations and farmers. The author
ized capital stock is $4,200,000, and it
begins business with $2.680,000.
——-,
When and Where to Buy
The time to buy is now. The palce
to buy is from merchants who adver-
tise their wares for the benefit of the
public. Read the advertisements in
this and every other issue of the
“Bulletin” and you will save some
real money. The summer reduction
sales are now on. Mount Joy mer-
chants are offering real bargains.
There is no reason why you 3X

go elsewhere. §
ITH START












ES AS FJ.
=
UNTABLE ny
) wus between Pa
oy. RA
Returning leave )
7.15 P. M. NS
. -
Tickets on sale ¢omment
Friday, November 24.
Pennsylvania System
The Route of Broa














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ay Ltd
ov.
DOO0000CC0000000000C0000C
 

Famous
)
{Chincoteagne
\. Oysters
"N ——a———
ce Cream, Groceries and
Confections

BRANDT BROS.
Mount Joy Street. Mount Joy, Pa.




LL 0 TO
ONLY 'AN HOUR
ial line of spectacles
1 IL

within an hour
after examination,
wn
=
2
E
HORTON, The Optician
= 47 N. Prince St., Lancaster, Pa.
WOO
Why Not
\Use The Best

re
Martin's Sanitary Dairy
West Donegal St\,
No MOUNT JOY, PENNA:

\_ City Shoe
Ring Company

‘est End Bakery
ANS & WATSON, Proprs.
in Street MOUNT JOY



West

TRESH BREAB, AND BUNS DAILY
WEDDING & BIRWNIDAY CAKES
A SPECI Y A
#E SOLICIT A RARE OF YOUR
PATRONAGE N
STONE
placing your order
where see us.








We have “cut prices to pre
war ‘prices.
J, N. STAUFFER
MOUNT JU
Pinel Pi
We have a
angle and chan oy
cheap.
ISSAC Mi
Prince and
LANCASTER,
Ache?
When you're suffe
headache,
backacke,
tootha
ar pain from any other d
Dr. Miles Anti-Bg
~ One or two and the
Contain no hab;
Have you tried [J

It pays to advertise in the Bulletin
- 5
Ask
BP
8-3t














 


 
 






















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