The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 14, 1924, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14th, 192«


A
HERE YA WORKIN |x
NOW, NR. RILEY 2



PRINTER'S DEVIL
EN =i ~~


MN, YOU MUST
DOWN 0)
T™E
QUARRY



WHERE ALL “TW
BLASTN 16 GOW ON?
A DANGEROUS JoB\



WAVE

 








DOLLARS
SL | HAD TH WY
' BORROW TW
FOREMAN =




OFF “THE

1
AN' NOW We
DERYECKS ME FROM
DANGER LIKE A
NOYHER DOES WER





LD










People Read
This Newspaper


















That's why it would be
profitable for you to
advertise in it
me.
FF you want a feb
If you want lo hire somebody
If you want fo sell something
If you wwant fo buy something
If you wwant to rent your house
If you want to sell your house
If yoa want to sell yoor farm
Kf you want to bay properly
If there {s anything that yoo E
want the quickest and best way
fo supply that want is By placing
an advertisement in paper
===
The results will surprise
and please you
ER CCR
=U RATA Re

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



 






§ always hlige on hand anything in
e line of









gis Waited
GOOD PAY




INDIAN
ROOT PILLS
|
{
|
is RIVE out the bady
Ts poisons. Keep wel, |
Keep the swstem active,
Relieve constipation.
36 \ IN: |
Favored For (PILLS) al
Years \252//
ted Al
MN





DURHAM
Uses’

10
Gardeners
Pulverized and
i
|
It will promot
Reliable Sheep § Head Brand
Try a ton or a few bags.
For Sale at
EH. Zeighers
MOUNT JOY, PA.





1—Chevrolet Coupe
1—Chevrolet Touring
1—Chevrolet Touring§1921.
1—Ford Sedan 1921.%
1—Ford Coupe 1918.

Fa | many little organs; the



1—Maxwell Touring, #100. Run-
ning condition.
1—Saxon Touring, $758 Running
condition.
1—Brand New Ford Colipe 1924,
run less than thirty-five miles; wil
| save you money.
E. B.
Che-rolet Sales and Seryice
-



NERDY [, BATES
“DO

 



WITH ELECTRICITY”
ELECTRIC CONTRACTOR
Wiring, Fixtyres nd Appliances
of All Ki
SRT ————








HAIR BOBBING A SPE
Try us and be convin
Agent for Manhattan Laun
Jos, B. Hershey, Propr.

66 West Main Street
Bell Phone 18R4 Mount Joy, Pa.
mar. 5-3 mos
. lrorrecht













Real Estate
Insurance
Landisville, Pa.
Phone 75R2

 



Save Pennies—

J. N. STAUFFER & B

MOUNT JOY, PA.

Ea




YOUR NAME
Is it on our subscrip

sterilized
sheep Manure an be applied
in many rr a fertilizer.
thrift to any
growing crop in field or gar-
den, lawn, or toiyour most del-
icate house plats. We have
just received a gar of the Old
[tive work. Hence there is chaos, |
@ @® | each sect or school claiming certain |
the cost of their maintainance are
er!
'| practicing medicine.


WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX.
PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H.
REEDER
MEDICAL PRACTICE: On gen-
eral principles the average layfan
does not give two whoops or a Ger-
man mark whether one faction or |
another of the quarreling medical |
! schools win or lose. They are not |
interested, at least not now. |
When a person gets sick they |
usually call the nearest doctor or |
the one for whom they have the |
greatest personal liking. i
What school he follows or how |
many diplomas he may have, wheth-
er he belongs to a medical society or |
not cuts no figure. The one ques-|
tion is, can he cure me?
At present, I say, that is the sit- |
uation, but if the plans of some of |
the so-called political doctors are]
carried out it will not be so in the
future. |
The only object in saying any-|
thing about the future is to give |
the average man just a faint idea of |

what the future would have in store |
if the politicians could have their |
way.
My attention was attracted to-day
by an article written by a very able
physician, one who loves the people |
and really tries to help the sick, re-
gardless of the effect upon his pocket- |
book.
I quote: anyone at all fa-
| miliar with present day medicine one
| thing stands out with disappointing |
clearness, like a sore thumb—its lack |
of remedial agencies and the next|
| thing, the confusing claims of var-|
| ious methods in use.
The general observer is impressed |
| with the destructive work that has|
| been going on but it requires a very |
| broad observer to see any construe- |

{laurels and possessing certain merits |
{ which it tries to extend to fields
| where it can show no harvest.
Medicine needs a complete evolu-
| tion, a restarting at first principles.
{ Allied sciences have made much pro-|
| gress, medicine has been left behind. |
Everyone recognizes the creative
| force of light and air as other fun-
| damentals. Electricity is a force |
| that should be studied from a ch
[ical standpoint
| include light 1s a form
Air also belongs to the)
Food belongs |
| electricity.
chemical department.
{to what is now called materia 0A Fires replied.
{ ca, which study needs the greatest
| readjustment and modernizing. |
We must learn to recognize that
the unities of each organ are so
unities of
[the tongue are so many little
| tongues; those of the stomach so
{ many little stomachs; those of the |
| heart little hearts; in short, visible
| forms exist from invisible forms.”
my many years of contact
| with the great body of physicians |
{has demonstrated that taken as a
| whole they are the most kindly and
| altruistic lot of men in any profes-
sion. Many are narrow but they all
want to help their patients. This is}
{
|
Now
| Scientists, Chiropractors, Dietetists, |
| Naturopths and Mental Healers as it |
is of the Eclectics, Homeopaths and
| Allopths, but politicians have dis-
covered a weak spot, a place where
| they can get fees from all of these
| various systems by baiting, just as
{ they used to bait the railroads.
| Very recently a bill was introduc-
{ at Washington which would pro-
| hibit any one, unless licensedby a
| ce in board, to minister in any
| way, shape or form to a sick person.
| This rabid bill goes so far that if
| you were to recommend to your
! neighbor a dose of slippery elm tea
you could be both jailed and fined
without a
for practicing medicine
license. It goes even farther and
although the wording of the bill
does not specifically say so, at the
same time any minister who offered
prayer for the sick and mentioned
any certain individual, . would be
In one of the more advanced med-
ical journals which I received yes-
terday it is admitted that to prop-
erly prescribe a diet for a sick per-

tion list? |
We will guarantee
you full value |
|
son is ultra scientific medical prac- |
tice and that a correct diet with sun-

| thing.
| religion.
A youne cectricai engineer from
Bygs* Tered an injury and was sent
to a hospital for treatment, where his
proved a problem to the at-
chiefly =n»d should |’
of |

one 1m
same
| “Can 1 have a baba?’ he appealed
to the Le
room,” she said.
don’t understand me;
! shaved.”—Indianapolis News.
| arrested
camps by the German authoritles were
schoolmasters,
has been provided for in a way which
suggests
entirely
[%s true of the Osteopaths, Christian | Answers reports.
and placed in a special group, which
| was then placed under the orders of a
number of boys belonging to aristo-
cratic families and chosen from among
the internes’ own pupils.
the younger generation in this country
are now beginning to believe that Ger-
many is not so bad a place, after all.
somewhat truculently, “lookit yere.”
hickory 1 sawed and split before I
went to the county seat?”
that last blizzard.”
c
am Lacolomb, the poet; possibly you
are acquainted with my verses.
was acquainted with them before you
were horn.—Le Rire (Paris).
TED
Axi
GLE G
OUCH
( Ti i
| BY GUM, EF THESE WERE |
! CHICKENS ALLLIS |
|
\



ERIN ROUND MY YARD |
ANT GOY NO WOME, LL.
DIG 'EM ONE, DODGAST
yy


I believe there is good in every-
No system of treating the
sick can long survive unless it ben-
efits the patient and to my mind it
would be just as logical to compel
preachers to pass an examination
and secure a license to save souls.
The soul is of much greater import-
ance and there are more sure paths
to Glory proclaimed than there are
sure roads to good health.
The preachers are just as positive
that the other fellow is wrong and
that his doctrine is the only true
system of saving souls as the doctors
are that their special pills and po-
tions or system is the only salvation
for the body.
The various
states and special
ilaws in different
boards with all
just as absurd as the ancient laws on
In time they will all be
abolished and those who continue to
treat the sick will survive because
they render real service.
ere AE Et
Speaking PRosionese

cent
lants,
“Could I have a baba?’ he asked


“ry
4
one in each room,” the
Later he made the same request to
attendant, and received the
answer,
another
ad nurse.
“There should be a Bible im each
“Say,” he called, desperately, “you
I want to get


Boys Rule Schoolmasters
Many of the communists recently
and placed in internment
and their “discipline”
that their
deficient in humor,
captors are not
London
The schoolmasters were collected
One consequence is that a few of
He Did it
“Hey, pap,” said Hank Hayfoot,
“Ail right, I'm a lookin.”
“What did you do with that cord of
“Fed the stove with it endurin’ of
“Dad burn it!”
“That's what I done”
heerfully.
sald dad
They Antedated Him
Young Writer (to critic)—Malitre, I
Critic—Indeed IT am, young man, I
Reason for Trouble
“You look troubled today?”

 
NATIONAL HIGHWAYS:
EASES
 



CUT-OFF ROADS
AROUND LARGE CENTERS
MODERN PRACTICE
Dividends


ties at the most convenient place,
down Main Street without slowing
up. The horse-drawn vehicle could
get through a city as fast as it
could travel the country road. With
and auto trucks, conditions changed.
Through traffic on roads is greatly
slowed up in the city, due to eross-
ings, congestion, narrow streets, one-
way streets, stopping for pedestrians
and street cars, ete.
through traffic brought through
city adds largely to the city’s traffic
problem.
The modern idea is to
The few additional miles thus tra-
veled are more than made up for in
the decrease of time. Thus, a by-
pass or a cut-off which lengthens the
through route ten miles, may add
thirty minutes to the running time
but where is the large city through
which, from one side to another, a
car or truck can pass in half an
hour? Not infrequently the cut-off
actually saves mileage instead of in-
creasing it.
To have all the through traffic go
through Main Street is all right as
long gas Main Street is short and not
crowded. To divert through traffic
from Main Street to a boundary
road is good economics, good engin-
eering, and good common sense
when Main Street is long and con-
gested. Municipalities on through
roads find it pays dividends to build
the cut-off and attracts more busi-
ness to the town than to force

Routing Traffic Around Cities Pays |
|
|
|
Bad of Woman's Illness Reme-
|
|
In the days of the horse, main ar- |
teries of travel naturally entered ci-:
!
and travel along the highway passed ,
the advent of the swift-moving car,
through traffic around large centers. |


through traffi= to another route to
avoid city congestion.
mre tl Aree
LONGEST WOODEN BRIDGE
MAY SOON BE REPLACED
|
The long wooden bridge at Clark’s|
Ferry, for sixty-four years the only |
means of crossing the
river by wagon or automobile
tween Harrisburg and Sunbury, a 65 |
of history. |
The old landmark is still in use,|
but it is quite probable that before |
so very long it will give way to al
modern concrete structure. |
It spans the river 14 miles north of
Harrisburg and is said to be the |
longest wooden bridge in the world. |
It is 2,088 fect long, divided into 10]
spans, nine of which are 212 feet
long and one of them 180 feet long.
Experts have estimated that more
than a billion board feet of choice
white pine lumber are in this unique
wooden bridge. Most of the logs
from which the lumber was cut
were rafted down from the great
white pine country along the West-
ern Branch of the Susquehanna.
Forestry officials say that 50 acres
of original white pine had to be cut
over to produce the wood required
for this bridge.








NQ REST—NO PEACE
There’s no peace and little rest
for the on& who suffers from a bad
istressing urinary disor-
ders. Mt. people recommend
Doan’s Pills Be guided by their
experience. sk your neighbor.
Mrs. Jacob €hilds, 125 Mt. Joy St.,
says: “For lofg time I suffered m0
terrible pains
my hips. Headfches and dizzy spells
came on and kidneys acted. ir-
regularly. My was broken and
mornings I felt tuckered out.
Doan’s Pills were ommended so
first and before
pletely removed
from my system that I
ferent woman.”
Mrs. Childs gave the
ment January 24, 1916.
firmed it on May 5th, 1
ows: “The cure Doan’s
for me has lasted. I am
of health now and give all

“Yes. [| was on the spree last night
i air and exer-
shine, fresh out door a ; {opa when I got home very late I
cise give freedom from disease more , 4 | had moved to another ad |
quickly and surely than drugs.
Under the bill referred to,
one, not even your own mother could
prescribe your diet and the sun
baths without the sanction of a doc-
no
system.
J
1 r
| dress "—Kasper, Stockholm.
Pennsylvania increased from 84.8 to
FOR YOUR MONEY licensed under the particular | 87.83 during the decade 1910 to
i 1920.
lr |
|
The average acreage per farm in,
{

| Doan’s Pills—the same t Mrs.
Childs had. Forest-Milbu Co.,
Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. %
I a —— a —
to Doan’s.”
Price 60c, at all deale

thi
Read the Bulletin.
It pays to advertise in the Bulletin
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin

my back, just
mile stretch, will soon be a matter |
pound, I
and cam work down any of my neigh- |
In addition,’ of Lydia
a pound.
divert | purchase
etable Co
| report the
For sale
 



Morrisom§ Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. |




—because it was ogiginally a com
bination of the dt and S$
(United States). Die to haste in
drawing, the curve &f the U grad-
ually dropped away. %c low price of
| N°
DISINFECTANT
plus tremendous strength, makes it
the ideal cleanser for every home.
No. 6 is ten times mpre powerful
than carbolic acid—and ten times
as safe. It goes like cleansing sun-
shine where sunshine cannot reach.
One of 200 Puretest preparations
or health and hygiene. Every item
not walk because of | he best that skill and care can pro-
the pains from in- duce.
flammation. My back E. W. GARRER
was all done up.
, MOUNT JOY,, PA.
ig by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
egetable Compound
Missouri.—‘‘I had such a |
af of female trouble that I could |





 
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
—d Vegetable Com-
d I am a strong woman now




hey wonder how I can do so
Work. I dare say that I have
your medicine to a thou-
en. A little book was thrown
§r, and thatis how I first learned |
Mrs. D. M. BEAUCHAMP, 1104









 






like this bring out the merit
. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
Chey tell of the relief from such
ains andi ailments after taking Lydia
i ’s Vegetable Compound.
ent country-wide canvass of |
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
pound, 98 out of every 100
were henefited by its use. |
druggists everywhere.
Lette




 


 
 








Rotarex Washers, Iro
Kook-Rite the New El
That can be attached to a
estos %
Westinghouse Automatic Ranges |





We the same methods employ
| ed by thW leading shoe factories; |:
| hence our ults are fully as good. !; Large
{ Add months
{ have them rep:
Susqueha 6 50-52 S. Queen St.
oo
ES
2 Ia










Martins Dail
the most ec
food your money
buy. And it’s the
milk is
mical
JNO. H. DIETZ
19 E. Main St. Bell Phone 118R2

 

 
 
est and the most
E WIRING DONE TO YOUR licious. Shall our 3
SATISFACTION £2, call and
 
 


Bq oh,
i CJ, AR.MARTIN, PROP.
Your Millman”
S56 W. DONEGAL ST.
BOTH PHONES 5:


 

 




Cleaners

2
ert & Haas
poy
Be 2 Ee on au
RL Gre
rons, Heaters, Waffle Irons, ste.

wear to your shoes;
City | NY
IIL
: n 2 City
Plain Hats A Specih
JOHN A. HAAS, ik
144 N. Queen Lancaster, |
OD 00
now located at the West






End, foRgerly Jacob Brown's
Store. Mgd to have your §
business, % | Hourly 7 to S P. M. and by Appoint-
0) | ment
¥ | Sell Phorie, 76R2 Resident Calls
0 | =
C.K. WEAVER §
8S J. S.. 3 D.C.
| High & Mt. Joy Sts.,
©
0
3
0
Mt. Joy, Ps.

BEC
-. »
H. DISHONG §
JAILOR
BAINBRIDGE, PA.
Repairing--Cleaning--Pressing




Will call for and deliver all orders
mar. 26-11
CHE


ARE YOU BUYINGSSATISFACTION WITH
TURE AND CARPETS
QUALITY AID SERVI KE FOR SATISFACTION.
WE ASSURE YOWOF ALL THREE
WE ARE DEPENDABLE
Westenberger, Maley &
128-131 E. King St,
6 O'Clock Closing Saturdays
YOUR FURNI- § -


 






=i id
1 TT A
—
 
 
i Sn