The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 16, 1926, Image 4

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PAGE SIX

THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JCY, LANCASTER CO. PA.

By Charles Sughroe
© Western Newspaper Union



 
 
 
 
 

THIS MORMIMG, LEAVING A TRAIL OF
BLACK ENES = JIM HAD A STIFF NECK
FOR SEVERAL PAYS AND HE WLZ :
JQEST-GETTIN' EVEN WITH TH' FELLERS
WHO LAFFED AT WIM
3 IM GEEVER CARCULATED AROUND TOWR

Ne
 











M RS. HAROLD “THROGK MORTON
- 7
EORGE HIHAT, WHO WENT TO FLOR\DA
{ > LAST MONTH WITH A FAT WALLET TO
BUY REAL ESTATE \S BACK WITH A
\\ ,\ FLAT WALLEY, NO REAL ESTATE AND
\' A FLOCK OF RECE\PTED HOTEL BILLS


 
X
\
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16th, ‘1926
THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN
LANCASTER
Wingert & Haas
Hat Store
WON TH' WOMANS CLUB PRIZE
FER HAVIN' TH’ BEST HUSBAND
WHEN SHE RELATED WOW HER
HAROLD WOULD TUNE IN A
STATION ON TH' RADIO AND
LEAVE IT ON UNTIL TW STATION
SIGHED OFF, INSTEAD OF PUSSIN'
AROUND BRINGIN' IN NEW
SYATIONE EVERY TWO MINNITS




Hats, Caps & Gloves
So many kinds and styles that
RT WAMOK'S A\REDALE PUP |S CURED
OF BURMIN' THINGS, ESPECIALLY BONES,
IN STH’ COAL BIN = WEDNESDAY NIGHT








WHILE HE WAS DIGGIN' AWAY BUSILY
INTERRING A PIGS KNUEKLE, “THE
COAL SLID DOWN AND BURIED HIM
ALL BUT WIS TAIL, AND ART HAD
TO Gr UP'N DIG HIM OUT
you will not have any trouble ;
in being suited.


JNO. A. HAAS, Propr.
144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa.





















 
 
 

 
 



 

The importance of correct furniture and furnishing
in the modern home cannot be over emphasized,
if you wish to entertain your friends in a manner
will do husband credit.
The best way to insure proper furniture is to come
that yourself and your
here to make your selections.
H. C. BRUNNER
West Main Street, MOUNT JOY, PENNA.







DS —
Rd
Si SM pl I | | (
= Slit) \ \
RI a. 2
Mr Automobile Owner @
HaveYou ever Stopped toConsider
That a Locomotive Engineer would not think
of starting on a run without first giving his
brakes a thorough testing? Your automobile
should have the same a testing of its brakes
because it is more dangerous to the public, due
to the fact that all streets are tracks for your
automobile,







Let us inspect your brakes and re-line
them with Johns-Manville Asbestos
Brake Lining
Tryon’s Garage, Mi. Joy



The
Best
Heating
isa COAL
Pound for pound, Baker’s Coal will give you more heat, whether
burned in furnace, stove or grate, than any other coal you can buy. A
trial will prove the truth of our statement.





 


~
—F-H- BAKER, Mount Joy, Pa.
Furniture
ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FURNI-
TURE AND CARPETS?
QUALITY AND SERVICE MAKE FOR SATISFACTION.
B« WE ASSURE YOU OF ALL THREE
> WE ARE DEPENDABLE



A

WESTENBERGER, MALEY MYERS
125.131 E. Ki~g St,
6 O'Clock Closing Saturdays
Lancaster, Fa.
 
 
 
 
WILLIE I IER IANO III
pe


erected
between this city and Duquesne.
Company making
power line
Bethlehem
to be extended
Matters of Today
and Yesterday
to be
River,
McKeesport—New bridge
over Monongahela
Middletown—DMetropolitan Power
survey, for new
from Middletown to
Steel Works,, Steelton.
Columbia—Plans completed, for
construction of $280,000 new Holy
Trinity Catholic Church.
Waynesburg—North Morgan St.
across Red Bird
E. Frank-
Hollow, connecting with
lin street.
ho-
Hotel

community
site of
Pottsville—New
tel being built, on
Allen.
Forty water companies in Pa.
planted 1,200,000 trees on their
watersheds, during spring planting
| season.
Philadelphia-—New York concern
has force of 100 men laying out
and developing Mellon 500-acre
tract, east of Brooklawn.
Dubois—1,000 new oil wells will
be drilled in Luke Center district,
this season.
Allentown—3%$2.000,000 edifice to
be built by Pennsylvania Power
and Light Company at 9th and
Hamilton streets. :
Bethlehem—$11,700 contract 1s
let; for erection of new Victory
fire station.
Monessen—24 new fire plugs or-
dered.
Sykesville—First National Bank
of Sykesville installs new vault.
New Castle—$32,000 will be
spent, in constructing new 15-in.
water main from public squarre to
Division street.
New Castle—-Shenango
ship School Board purchases 8-
acre site on which to build central
ized school.
Hummelstown—The Hummels-
town National Bank increases capi-
tal stock from $50,000 to $125,-
000.
Rossiter— Work resumed at mine
of Clearfield Bituminous Coal Cor:
poration.
Scranton—St. Mark’s Lutheran
Sunday School will be enlarged.
New Castle—Structures on Mer-
cer and Falls Streets site being
razed, preparatory to erection of
$750,000 new community hotel.
Dykens—W. Bingaman erecting
business building on West Main
street.
Hazelton—Extensive develop-
ment of electrical power exten-
sions into surrounding districts un
der way, by Pennsylvania Power
and Light Company.
Bryn Mawr—$1,00,000 fund
raising to enlarge Bryn Mawr
hospital.
Huntsdale—New knitting mill is
established here, ready for opera-
tion, June 1.
Homeville—Ground broken, for
erecting addition to First Christian
church.
Carlisle—Gibbs Preserving Co.,
of Baltimore, will establish to-
mato receiving station here.
Westmoreland—The Westmore-
land Coal Company makes exten-
sive improvements to local proper-
ties.
Lansdale—New
opened in vicinity of Werner
foundry, to provide entrance to
new sewage -disposal plant.
Big Run—Penn Public Service
Corporation setting poles in down-
town section, preparatory to plac-
ing new lamps.
Bockway—Work progressing,
new Brockway Clay Co. plant.
Lansford—Penna. Power
Light Company negotiating
purchase of Panther Valley
tric Company.
Chambersburg—J. Sierer Sons’
store on South Main street, will be
converted into 5-story structue.
street will be
on
and
for
Elec-
|
|
Brownsville—Mfgrs. Light and
Heat Company, of Pittsburgh,
purchases Greensboro Gas Co., of
Brownsville.
Middletown—Middletown Knit
ting Mill will enlarge plant.
Lebanon—$33,325 contract let,
for constructing fourth unit of
sewage-treatment plant,
Mercersburg—New mail service
established, between this place and
Williamson.
Hometowh—Modern filling sta-
tion under construction, for anth-
racite Gas and Oil Co.
Greenville—Post office being en-
larged.
Srafiton—Madison and Clay Ave:
to be” hard-surfaced,
Pittsburgh—District corpora-
tions’ exhibits at Sesqui-centennial
will pass million-dollar mark in
value,
Souderton—New fire station de.
dicated.
Brownsville—Allison
remodeling store.
York—Work resumed at Eyster-
& Acklin.
Weiser foundry, damaged by re-
cent fire. .
Harrisburg—Undergreund cable

Town- |.

Home Health Club
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX-
PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER
LYMPHATICS: That word does
not mean much to the average
layman. He has heard of the
lympth and of lympathics and his
family physician may have said
something about poor drainage of
disturbances and organic involve-
ment from colds to fevers but in
the majority of cases, unless he
is an Osteopathic physician he
does not know an awful lot about
it himself and this, for the simple


reason that outside of surgical
references, very little has been
written or taught upon the sub-
ject,
The well trained Osteopathic
physician realized quite fully that
changes or disturbances of an or-
ganic nature must of necessity
involve the lympathics play a most
‘mportant part in the maintenance
of the normal in nourishment, elim
ination, secretion, assimilation, ete.
When your baby takes cold, just
feel the little lumps down each
side of its neck or in the groin.
The best text book upon the
subject of lymphatics so far suppli
ed to the profession is by former
townsman of mine, Dr. Millard, of
Toronto, Ontario. I will quote
just a few of his statements about
the Lympathics.
“The function,
system is to p
contents of its modules,
and ducts.”
“The enlarged nodes are often
at a distance from the point of
infected abrasion or tissue poisons
ing.”
“The
in part, of this
ify or clarify the
channels
vasomotors thru
thickened
lumpha-
unstable
lesions, congestion or
tissues, throw upon the
(EAT FOLKS
WANT TO CUT our YOUR,



Get the Heat Folks on the
job in July, and theyll fix it
up with the weather-man to
give you spring and
in your house all the
around.
year
To be sure of getting the
kind of coal you want, at
the price you want to pay,
call us now.
And we will give you pric-


ties great responsibilities.”

“Organic irregularities cause this
system to become more or less
blocked and taxed from the pointy
of infection to the termination of
the ducts.” |
In another paragraph he calls
attention to the effect upon the
little lymph glands shown very
quickly by a cut and infected;
finger, a blistered heel or an abra-
sion of any kind, even a blister |
between the toes, a corn or an in- |
flamed hang nail. |
The importance of such studies |
was shown during the great influ-!
enza epidemic of 1918. The Oste- |
opathic physician emptied the lym-
phatics of the chest and pumped :
them, so to speak, dry. Instantly
they were refilled with fresl
lymph and the resisting power of
the patient was increased &
an extent that the disease was
quickly routed and the patient got
well. When treated by the drug
method, the lymphatics fought botk
disease and drugs, sometimes fo
weeks and could never restore hin
to his former health.
By the skillful manipulation of
the body, an, Osteopathic physicia:)
has entirely eliminated a ‘cold ir
the head” in one treatment and
“a cold in the chest” and the pre-
vention of pneumonia in a com
paratively short time and no evil
after effects will follow.
Many of the old school or drug
physicians are now adding the Os.
teopathic technique to the ara
mentarium. Especially for the
treatment of hay fever and catar-
rhal deafness.
——— eli
The government recently start-
ed paying Omaha Indians $369,000
which had been owing to the
tribe for seventy-four years under
a treaty ceding certain lands for
settlement. As the payments
started, bootleggers, gamblers, and
confidence men gathered in the
towns surrounding the reservation
eager to prey upon the beneficiar-
ies.
rr ll Ae
Paderewski is probably the onl;
musician portrayed on a postage
stamp during his lifetime. Poland
took this method of honoring her
pianist-premier in 1919.
—————————
Theatrical censorship in Vienna,
established in 1850, has been void-
ed by a court order, but the pena!
code prohibiting objectionable per
formances remains in force.


being placed in Chestnut street,
for tene®electric standards to be
installed between Front and Fourtl
streets.
Scranton—Madison and Clay Ave
road construction program for
1926, will entail expenditure of
$400,000.
“auth Langhorne—Streets bein
oiled.
Columbia—$100.000 church to
be built for St. John’s Lutheran
congregation.
Anthracite mining industry at
peak cavacity, with practically ev:
ery colliery in full operation.
Lansdale—Salaries of grade and


high school teachers raised.
such



E. A. Kessler
4-6 East Main Street
MOUNT JOY












Where Quality Counts Your
Money Always Goes Furthest!
Read over this advertisement carefully—it contains
many items you need almost every day at very appre-
ciable savings. Drop in your nearest ASCO Store.
Notice particularly the Quality of the Merchandise
and the efficient Service rendered. Then we know you
too, will become a regular and enthusiastic ASCO
shopper.
\,
Clerks’ Summer Half-Holiday
OUR STORES WILL BE CLOSED EVERY THURS-

ASCO Sliced Bacon pkg 20¢
Sugara cyred—sliced thin and trimmed of all waste
ASCO Evap. Milk 2 tall cans 19¢
Richer and more economical than Fresh Milk for Cooking
and Baaking.




Special for this weekk. $1.25 value—save Twenty-seven cents
Rich Creamy
10735¢ | Shaves Ib 20 §
Buy Your Bread Needs Where Quality Counts
and Save Those Extra Pennies!


Victor





DAY AFTERNOON AT 1 P. M. DURING
JUNE, JULY AND AUGUST 3
i
summer
"



es that please, service that
satisfies and coal without TASTY READY TO SERVE FOODS!
comebacks. . En
° ASCO Alaska Red Salmon ...... tall can 37c
Choice ‘Pink Salmon ........... tall can 15¢
Call the HEAT FOLKS J ASCO White Meat Tuna Fish ...... can 25c
for good, clean coal Pog Fancy California Sardines .... big can 12c
PY Domestic Sardines 3 cans 20c
1 Marshall’s Kippered Herring big can 27c
Daniel M. Wolgemuth ASCO Beans With - Pork ~....... 3 cans 25¢ A
151R4 174R6
Reg. $1.00 Heavy Gauge ) Both for
Aluminum French Fryer»! O8c
and 1-lb can CRISCO J >


Bread si Pan Fy i
Wee Loaf i
Supreme Bread A |
. ae [ ] i
Quality Green Grocery Victor Raisin Bread .............. loaf 10c he
Fruit, Fish, Oysters APPETIZING SPREADS AND RELISHES!
lams RN ws hg
AT Cs TIMES ASCO Peanut Butter ...... tumbler 10c, 17c .
Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise ...... 8 0z jar 23c ®
3 2 ASCO Sandwich Spread ....... 8 0z jar 23c o
3 ASCO Prepared Mustard .....:.... jar 12e .
| Taste Tells India Relish ............ bot 15¢ A
H. W . Buller Fancy Stuffed Olives bot 13c. 23c o
‘ Meaty Queen Olives ........... . .bot 10c, 20c hd ]
Florin, Penna. i
H Dust bi H walls bi o
ouse Roi 13930 | wp
Powder .| Pineapple oF
° Save Five cents Slices slightly broken ®
Painter
®
When in need of a good job ASCO Coffee Ih 42; .
of painting, see me before ot If you are paying more, you are actually throwing ®
letting your contract. PY money away. ASCO Blend is the equal of many coffees Ad
PS being sold elsewhere for 55¢ a pound. Try ASCO, you'll J
PRICES REASONABLE PY Taste the Difference and save the difference as well. Py
mar. 17-tf Sy PY
YI nf
Si = & Gold Seal Flour 12 Ih hag 69c K i
STON E Highest grade milled. For Better Baking use Gold Seal By J
i
i ind! ° ;
Betiors placing. your. order Teas of The Better Kind!
elsewhere, see us. Plain Black or Mixed © J
Crushed Stone. Also manufac- ASCO TEAS 1) -
turers of Concrete Blocks, Sills 1-4 1b pkg 14¢.:.1b 55¢ fy
and Lintels. Orange Pekoe, India Ceylon, Old Country Style, [J
1-4 1b pkg 17¢ : 4b 65¢ 3
J, N. STAUFFER & BRO Pride of Killarney Tea .1-4 lb pkg 19c : 1b tin 75¢ wf"
MOUNT JOY, PA. - 3egin this week and Buy all Your Table Needs at one Ay
Kaylor’s Garage of Our Stores. You'll be. amazed at your Savings fi
General Auto Watch for Our Big Five-Hour Thursday Special! hy
]
REPAIRING
CAR GREASING A SPECIALTY
All Kinds of Tires and Accessories
Phone 119R3
Marietta St., Adjoininz Groff Bldg.
Our HOT OIL treatments
will make your hair grow
more luxuriant and lus-
trous.
You'll be delighted.
MILADY SHOPPE
70 E. Main St,. \ Mount Joy


X
SA Salt =
iid


These Prices Effective in Our
MOUNT JOY Store








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