THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT 90s LANCASTER CUUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. §, A “Foul!” Cries Doc YHE WAND NooaN? \ SUPPOSE NOU GOT ENOUGH FOOTBALL FOR A AU J NHN FUNNY | \ NEVER COULD | NEY SERVICE Local and Long Distance Reasonable Prices Day and Night Service Smith OUNT JOY PENNA. HARRISBURG The State Capital AND RETURN March 23 Magnificent Capitol wiil be open om this Harrisburg. TRAIN LEAVES oY rips, A. M. Stopping at principal ons between Paol] and Mount Joy Returning leave Harrisburg 7.15 P. M. Thkets on sale Friday preced- ex: on. Sh on: ion Mar. 23 =U enna. RB. R. System he Standard R R of the World rall’s Meat Market ays have on hand anything is 8 the line of MEATS, HAM, DRIED | LARD, ETC. Veal, Pork, Mutton | 4. KRALL MOUNT JOY. ers Wanted L. WORKING CONDITIONS DY WORK. GOOD PAY THE LeBLANC COMPANY “The Herrmann Aukam & ny Factory sept. 26-tf j { OUR SHOES NEATLY PAIRED AT THE City Shoe giring Company QUEEN & VINE STS. LANCASTER, PA W. Gorrecht T MAIN STREET Jeweler Mount Joy Street, | | | GOOD 10° | GENUINE |, BULL” | DURHAM | BACCO | We Are Buying | | At The Highest Market Prices Witmer Eberle 102 E. Donegal St., Mount Joy, Pa. ¢ A man’s appearance depends upon the way he has his HAIR CUT. We cut hair to suit the customers, and not ourselves. Two Barbers for your service. tres C.K. WEAVER §| Two Doors East of Bennett's Meat Market STONE Before placing your order elsewhere see us. We have cut prices to pre- war prices. J. N. STAUFFER & BRO. MOUNT JOY, PA. S. HESS HERSHEY Investments Real Estate Insurance MOUNT JOY, PA. Bell Phone 75R2 OYSTERS Famous Chincoteague Salt Oysters Ice Cream, Groceries and Confections BRANDT BROS. Mount Joy, Pa. WANTED 20 MEN and 20 GIRLS STEADY EMPLOYMENT AND PLEASANT WORKING CONDI- TIONS. APPLY Nissly Swiss Chec. Co. Inc. FLORIN, PA. oct. 24-tf Such as Sofas, Chairs, Ete. I do all Kinds of Upholstering Lounges, Rockers, I also Repair Automobile Uphol- stering. H. S. MUSSELMAN FLORIN, PENNA. feb. 6-3 mos. SE [HOME HEALTH CLUB! | WEEKLY LETTER ‘WRITTEN EX. his fellow 1 tudents to whom he lectured (6) jrele and ‘will be added unto you.” in their blood. {known to nearly every other physi- cian in America and many European {says that syphilis is the father of ~~ S | all diseases. < | A well known physician who | stands high in the councils of one of our nations’ cieties states emphatically that with- out the foundation cause of syphilis | in the blood, there can be no such diseases as cancer, tuberculosis, ery- sipelas, colitis, dyptheria, paresis, | locomotor PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER | The justly famous Dr. Oslelr told | : and the medical | “Know yphilis in all its manifestations and JJations and all other things ciinicai teachings have overturned Another famous physician whose vork and teachings have overturned more medical dogmas than any other of recent years made the emphatic | tatement that 75 per cent of the hu- | statement that 75 p e | srovented by man family had the taint of syphilis A physician whose name is well scientific research so- | happened. The good deeds that you {and your neighbor do daily are so common that to tell about them is not news, If you or one of your neighbors commit a crime, it i { something very unusual and there {fore news. For a minister to com mit a erime is much more unusual and therefore startling news. When ever I see such accounts I do no blame the minister. I say at once that he has congenital lues. In other words, has either inherited from som one of 32 ancestors a taint of syphil is or he has been inoculated throug!’ vaccination or any one of the man; ways and the poison has attached hi: brain, All such disastrous results can br safe and sane methods and even the faintest trace of the poison eliminated from the blood by correct eliminative treatment and diet. Drugs will not do it. They mere ly suppress symptoms and nature’s heroic method of elimination thru horrible festering sores. The com- monly accepted method of the blood will not be found reliable and will not disclose the faint trace of the poison which may wreck many lives. A correct diagnosis of this condi- ataxia and most of the insanities. It is a well known fact that many { of our most brilliant men and wom- len are frequently stricken down in what appears to be the very apox of their career. The purest and best of people suff- er and are innocent victims of this vile and deadly scourage. It is one | of the fundamental laws of nature that like = attracts like unto itself. | Syphilis originates as a social dis- ease and when the brain is over- | worked even by a minister and the taint has been lying dormant for a tivity in a compelling manner the in- stincts which live in the person origi- nally infected. of the brain to control the actions of the individual and one of the out- standing features of that kind of brain degeneration is that the more pronounced the destruction of the brain the more positive becomes the manner of the victim. He becomes a law unto himself. He is the great “I Am” and can do no wrong. He loses a rational sense of probity, i honesty and honor. The most un- {heard of crimes will be committed in the coolest manner imaginable. Most of such crimes pertain to and involve sex. Not so long ago our country was shocked from coast to coast by the murder of an entire family and it was found that the 16 year old daughter was about to become a mother. A little later a priest, in whose house the girl was a servant, was also murdered. Those who are believed to know say that the priest was responsible for the girl’s condi- tion and also for the murders of her family, while the murder of the priest was the revenge sought by a young man who knew the facts. The big headlines of today’s news- papers tell of the disappearance of a prominent preacher and a teacher in the Sunday school. He leaves a beautiful wife and a fine family of children. Some people say this casts a slur on the church. Not so. It casts a deep and pro found reflection upon a so-called scientific profession that for a hun- dred and twenty-five years has been inoculating humanity with syphilistic virus in order to prevent smallpox, a disease from which less than one- tenth of one per cent of the people die. Will you kindly investigate the per- centage of deaths from cancer and tuberculosis? They are diseases which eannot develop without a taint of syphilis and 99 per cent of all vaccine virus carries that taint, Vaccination does not prevent small lifetime, it suddenly rouses into ac- | Already it has weakened the power tion accurately discloses the reason | why so many business men, who by | superior mental ability grow very { rich, quickly fall a prey to evil, | wreck their business, desert their | wives, and children and take up with questionable companions. I wish I could tell them from the i housetops of some of those pitiful | cases that have come under my ob- i servation, then I think there would | be a more intelligent work of preven- ! tion adopted by all humanity. } QI | Facts About the Telephone Chicago, with a population about the same as that of Paris, has three and a haif times as many telephones as the French capital, During 192% there were 180 tele- phene conversations for every man, woman and child in the Unit- ed States. Dr. Paul Kammerer, the emi- nent Austrian biologist who has been lecturing in this country, re. marked In a recent interview that the American telephone service “gives our Viennese service a black eye.” DIVIDEND DECLARED ON PREFERRED STOCK BY BELL TELEPHONE CO, W. S. Peirsol Retires; Directors Elect J. H. Crosman, Jr., as Secretary and C. L. Richie as Treasurer. The Board of Directors of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania at their annual meeting, held in Feb- ruary, In Philadelphia, declared the first quarterly dividend on the pre- ferred stock sold last November, pay- able April 15, to stockholders of rec- ord, March 20. The regular quarterly dividend of 2 per cent on common stock was also declared. The meeting was marked by the retirement of Winfield S. Peirsol, for many years Secretary and Treasurer of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania and the election of J. Heron Crosman, Jr. as Secretary, and C. Lothrop Richie as Treasurer. At the annual meeting of the Stoek- holders, which preceded the meeting of the board, the report of the Direct- ors for 1923 was approved. J. Howell Cummins was elected director to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Richard M. Elliott. The new director is president of the John B. Stetson Company, with which pox, but it does cause sickness, suff- ering, disease and death. It inoeu- lates pure, clean, innocent, human beings with the taint of a disease which destroys mind, soul and body, especially the mind. It is claimed that every brain that develops beyond the normal, in oth- er words—every brilliant and sue- cessful person—has the syphilistie taint, that it stimulates the brain to over-activity and eventually destroys it. In some cases it appears to at- tack only the spinal cord, but as that cord is practically a continuation of the brain, the gray matter of the body is evidently its favorite abiding is When you sce the big headlines ie the newspapers, it means that fe out of the ordinary has he has been associated since he was fifteen years old. He was born in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and received his education in the public schools and Central High Schoo! of Philadelphia. TELEPHONE COMPANY PAYS $300,000 IN BENEFITS IN 1923 During 1923, the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania paid out in pensions and other benefits $298,821, according to a recent repert of the Employees Benefit Fund Committee of that company. This plan for Employees Benefits has been in effect since 1913. The money to carry on this work is ap- propriated by the Bell Telephone Company each year and no assess ments are made ob the employees. == | TELEPHONE DEMAND TAXES BELL BELL GORPANY 14,000 New Heaton Every Month Being Added in Penna. The telephone industry Is growing At so rapid a rate, according to Bell felephone officials, that five years from now there will be almost 1,300, 000 Bell telephones In service In Penn- sylvania alone, At present this Com pany is operating about 860,000 tele phones in the State. The people of Pennsylvania are asking for 14,000 new telephones every | month. are being taxed to the utmost to keep up with the demand. In a recent statement, President Kinnard, of the Bell Telephone Com pany, stated that his Company would | connect some 168,000 telephones this | year in Pennsylvania, “We anticipate no falling off In the demand for telephones,” said Mr. Kin- pard. “During the next five years we will be called upon to connect | 125,000 telephones (gross) and our | net increase will he almost 425,000 ! new telephones. Our expansion pro gram this year alone calls for the ad- dition of $40.000.000 worth of new lic schools, is at St. Joseph’s Hospit- tack of kidney troubles. equipment to our present plant in Pennsylvania, and sp far as we can see now, the coming five years will require about $175,000,000 worth of new equipment, “The tremendous demand for new telephones necessitates this expan- | gion. It is our obligation to render | good telephone service, and to furn- | ish that service, so far as In our power lies, whenever and wherever it is neeced.” “We are doing our utmost to meet the demand for telephone service and are installing the telephones as quick- ly as we can place the necessary equipment.” FRENCH DISSATISFIED WITH GOVERNMENT TELEPHONES “France is casting envious glances at telephone efficiency in America,” declared General Otto H. Falk on his return from Europe recently. “After experiencing the superiority of the American brand of tele- phone service on the battlefields during the war, the French people have become acutely dissatisfied with the kind of telephone service provid- ed by the government. They point out that even if Amerie: has thirteen whereas France ha~ only one tele- | nhone for every 100 inhabitants, serv- fce in America is fa: superior.” General Falk emphasized the fact that “Americans, accustomed to prompt telephone service, find the service in European countries so poor and so annoying that they prefer to use the taxis instead.” The inferiority of the telephone systems abrord, General Falk indicat. ed, is due to the fret that “telephone communication in Furopean countries has been stagnatinz under political nanagement, which killed incentive | for invention and development aloug ! this ne,” ! BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY EMPLOYS 23,000 PEOPLE At the end of 1923 there were In the employ of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania 23,000 peo ple, according to the annual report recently issued by that company. These figures show an increase of 3000 employes during the year. There are nearly twice as many | women employees as there are men in the company. Most of the female employes are engaged in central office engaged in stenographic work and There are 7725 male employees in the company and all of them are skilled workers. The many Intricate phases of the telephone business re- quire workmen who are efficient and accurate. Not including the United States and Canada, the cstimated telephone in vestment in 1922 in all other coun he Western Hemisphere was Ti phone invest Johr Shank, this place, celebrated his seventy-third birthday anniver- sary and is enjoying the best of health. He is daily at work, employ- ed by the state department. He does as much work as many young men. ———— eee Former County Super Ili M. J. Brecht, aged 68 years, for- mer county superintendent of pub- al, Lancaster recovering from an at- In fact, telephone companies | { still taking it. ee Wilke Coul 4 eH Back Her | Strength Until She Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comp ound Rochester, Minnes Sota. — — “IT hada very serious operation and it seemed as if | uld not get my | health back after it. 1 suffered with | pain almost con- | stantly. My sister | came to help take care of me, and she | was taking Lydia E. | Pinkhain’s Vegeta- | ible Compound for nervousness and a | run-down ecndition,- | Ske had me try some | “dof it, and in a very | few days’ tie I began to feel better. { In two weeks I hardly knew myself and | ! after taking a couple of bottles more I { was up and helping around, and now I | am strong and healthy again and am Itis a pleasure for me to write this to you, and I hope that | | many other women who are suffering { like I was will find out about your med- j icine, I will give any information I possibly can.” — Mrs. JAMES WILKE, ! PSE. Der, Street, Rochester, Minn. | + TE MARTIN SANITARY DAJRYR PASTEURIZED M1 "HILDREN WISH THEY M A» E GLASSES BIG: GER The kiddies like our milk so well — they can’t et enough of it, Or a plentiful su ply. We deliver promptly every morn- ing. Get acquainted Wi h our dairy pro- ducts ‘ Wi v EMA DAIRY ur RMARTIN, PROB. Jour Mis, omar Wingert & Haas Hat Store Largest Line of Inter In the City ih lain Hats A Specialty JOHN A, HAAS, Propr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. Remember, the Vegetable Compound | has a record of fifty years of service | and thousands of women praise its | | merit, as does Mrs. Wilke. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text- | Book upon ‘‘ Ailments Peculiar to Wo- men ’’ will be sent you free upon re- quest. Write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass, The large circulation of the Bul 119 E. Main St. H. DIETZ Bell Phone 115R3 JNO. HOUSE WIRING DONE TO YOUR SATISFACTION etin makes it the best advertising | Attractive Fixtures of All New Fine -aedium in this section of Lancaster icounty. Give it a trial and be con | vinced. mn ev se Gr If you do not get your share of the business in this vicinity, its your own fault—no one else’s. Advertise and tell the people what you have to sell. if telephones for every 100 inhabitants, | | Sighs Ra op gen car. Either write to me or call ! Wolgemuth & Son, Florin, Pa. Get your orders in early. According to reports the northern grown seed will be scarce this spring due to an un- favorable growing season last year. LEROY 4 BATES Wiring, Bell Phone 18R4 operation. The remaining workers are || 5 i o = " tt clerical duti other clerica uties. $ = = = a CERTIFIED SEED POTATOES I will have a car of Northern Raymond B. Zook Westinghouse EAST MAIN ST, ishes at Reasonable Prices t! | Everything Electric to Make House: work a Pleasure Rotarex Washers, Ironers and Apex Cleaners Kook-Rite the New Electric Stove That can be attached to a light socket Automatie Ranges, Irons, Heaters, Waffle Irons, ete | . (roceries & Notions ——FOR— WORKING CLOTHES OVERALLS, PANTS, SHIRTS and HIGH GRADE GROCERIES at REASONABLE PRICES Go to ALBERT STRICKLER MT. JOY, PA. “DO IT WITH ELECTRICITY” ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Fixtures and Appliances] of All Kinds 66 West Main Street Mount Joy, Pa. mar. 5-3 mes. ; HERSHEY’S BARBER SHOP 3 BARBERS. GOOD SERVICE Children and Ladies’ HAIR BOBBING A SPECIALTY Try us and be convinced Agent for Manhattan Laundry Jos. B. Hershey, Propr. COAL IATE DELIVERY. CARDS ARE F.H B Both Telephones OOO PE 1c J 111 COAL ALL SIZES AND KINDS OF COAL ON HAND FOR IMMED. NOT USED ANY MORE. AKER TRY SUCRENE DAIRY FEED FOR MORE MILK USE SUCRENE DRY MASH FOR CHICKENS FOR MORE EGGS LUMBER and GOAL MOUNT JOY, PENNA. 7 EL Roz NGS SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, 32: : AL LUMBER | ha i. A ak wn aks a OM A Sa LE EE oS ho, an