The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 01, 1928, Image 6

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PAGE SIX
. FINNEY OF THE FORCE

By F. & Alexander
© Western Newspaper Union
CHR MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA,


WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 28&

&
Thereby Ruining the Moral

SONNY Of SEE VERE
j LATE AGIN FER SCHOOL
SHAME ON YEZ #/

 


 

 








> as i
7d | HAVENT VEZ HEARD THE
“1 |X) STHoRY AV THE LITTLE BYE , ie
B wf WHO GOT LP IN THE MARNIN, yy
(rs J| eavFORE ALL THE CIHERS AN/Y
CAN Food a Big BAG OF / =
\\ Al, |
Crli = El
YUH Teh nn :




























































 

Ly
COME EARLY
We have & complete as-
sortment of candy from
which you m#ly make your
selections.

We Suggest—
Artstyle Assorted
Milk
Chocolates
A variety of creams and
chewing with that
incomparable Artstyle Milk
Chocolate coating.
$1.25
One pound Box
E. W. GARBER
The Rexall swore
MOUNT JOY, PA. ~
Fresh Opened
OYSTERS
Fre
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Received Daily

{|




albert

E. A. KESSLER
QUALITY GREEN GROCERY
4 E. Main St. MOUNT JOY, PA.
Bell Phone 43R3

Rotary Sewing Machines
All styles, including Elee-
trics, Oil, Needles, Repairing
and parts for all machines at
A. H. BAKER'S
133 E. King St.,
LANCASTER, PENNA.
Ind. Phone 116Y

Milady Beauty
_ Shoppe
70" Main Street, E.
MARCELLING, SHAMPOOING, FA-
CIALS, MANICURING, SCALP
TREATMENTS, ETC.
For Appointment Phone 119R4
EXPERT HAIR CUTTER
In Attendance
For Children, Ladies & Gentlemen




iN . |
Famous Chincotague
S , Oysters
[ce Cream, Groegries and
Confections
BRANDT BROS.
Mount Joy Street Mount Joy, Pa.
. HOW ARE YOUR SHOES?
"DON'T WAIT TOO LONG




ten about February 1
Industrial Notes
Middletown — Construction of
storage house and garage at Metro-
politan Edison Company plant in
progress.
Bristol —Newly renovated Farm-
ers’ National Bank on Radcliff St.,
opened for business,
Sykesville — Workers engaged
in and about Soldier Mine prepar-
ing for reopening after shutdown
of 39 months.
West Newton — First National
Bank of West Newton remodels
quarters.
Sykesville —Ideal Shirt Company
will double floor space of plant.
Indiana — Rochester & Pitts
burg Coal Company and Jefferson
and Clearfield Coal & Iron Com-
pany merge into Rochester & Pitts-
bure Coal Company.
Pittsburg — Ground will be brok-







 

to Mayview homes 1
Philadelphia — Plans ng
construction of 10-story building at
13th and Chestnut streets to
occupied by Blun Store.
Philadelphia $8,000,000 to |
$9,000,000 will be spent vearly by
this eity on street improvements.
Qil City — Cornerstone laid for
new Colonel Drake T ter.
Greensboro Gas Company pur-
chases interests of Dunlap Gas
Company.
Belle Vernon “Monessen Daily
Independent” adds new Babcock
Optimus press to equipment.
Media — New clubhouse of
Women’s Club here dedicated. {
Media — Tile & Trust Company
moves to larger quarters,
Lansdowne — New filling sta-
tion and salesroom will be erected
at Baltimore and Rigby avenues.
Haverford -— Building permits
issued here during recent week
totaled $86,675.
Somerset — Somerset
testing association
to start operations March 1.
Harrisburg — Bids receiving for
reconstruction of pavement in Up-
per Turkeyfoot township.
Philadelphia — Bus terminal will
be constructed at 13th and Filbert
streets at cost of $2,500,000.
Philadelphia — Plans approved
for new Eastern penitentiary to be
erected near Skippae.
Danville — Bethlehem Steel Cor-
poration purchase Danville Struct-
ural Steel Company.
Harrisburg — 1928 annual Con-
vention of Pennsylvania Newspaper
County
Publishers Association will be held
here January 27-28.
Duquesne — Plans discussed for
planting of 400 trees in city beauti-
fication campaign,
Harrisburg —
purchase 261,000
for reforestration
Pennsylvania will
additional acres
and game pre-
serves.
Harrisburg — Bids will be open-
ed soon for new D. L. Morgan
Highway from Montdale to Scott
township.
Wilkinsburg — Approximately
$5,000,000 will be expended by Bell
Telephone Company for improve-
ments in and around this city dur-
ing 1928,
Pennsylvania
yielded
State.
Harrisburg — Bids received for
reinforced concrete roads on route
251 in East Franklin and Sugar-
creek townships.
1927
potato crop
120 bushels
per acre for
Scranton — Plans discussed for
making improvements to Hillside
Home.
Harrisburg — Bids requested for
construction of highway in Sharen
township.
Cecil — Gilmore mine near Ven-
ice resumes operation.
Harrisburg —7,000 miles of Pen-
nsylvania road will be kept free of
snow this winter.
Homer City — Local
awarded - contract
of high
burg.
Pottstown — Plans
erection of new bridge
street over tracks of Reading Rail-
way.
Coatesville — Coatesville
concern
for construction
school building at Ebens-
making for
Hos-
pital remodeled and enlarged at
cost of $300,000.
Philadelphia’s construction pro-
gram for 1927 totaled $117,221,-
245,
Lewistown — Plans being drawn
for new Elks building here.
Bala-Cynwyd — New chemical
engine purchased by local fire de-
partment,
Oil City — Building permits is-
ed $41,385,000,
Harrisburg — Construction of
$3,000,000 new State office build-
ing in progress.
St. Marys — Extensive improve-
ments made to interior of Commer-
cial Hotel.
St. Marys fire loss for 1927 was
{lowest in number of years.
Pennsylvania Power & Light Com-
pany extends service to Uniondale,
Herrick Center, Pleasant Mount,

oy Treslarviller and Hamlin.
for additions
will be formed, |
at Evans!
sued in Oil City during 1927 total- |
WAITING FOR CHANGE |
By C. Wibur Groff, |
Elizabethtown, Pa.
Now listen all you people while a |
story I will tell, |
It’s just a fable of a young boy |
who in a town does dwell,
It is just an untrue table, so don't |
think me pert, |
Before I start I want to say, “I
hope you don’t feel hurt.”
It happened on a Wednesday, one |
prominent day of the week, |
When this little, supposed in-|
cident, took place way down on |
Market Street, |
It happened at a gum-box, outside!
of a down town store, |
By the dumbest-dumbell in the |
world that ever dwelled before, |
The boy in his teens had a five-cent
piece,
That for a penny-piece of chew-
ing-gum he wished to release,
He boldly put the nickle in and got
the chewing-g
But here I am going to show you
that he surely was dumber
than dumb.

l for the chewing-stick
r nearly one whole hour
He said it sure was tiresome and
took all his will power,
 
3ut why did he wait for such a
time at this same place and

might of
course you
nown before, He w

for “Four cents-ch :
EN I I ..pi'op
MANY COUNTRIES CONDUCT |
BETTER-SIRES DRIVES |
Many requests received by the
| United States Department of Agri-
culture early in January for liter-
ature and assistance in livestock
improvement work by the use of |
purebred sires indicate unusual]
{activity in this field. The success
{of two counties—Graig County,
‘Va.,, and Russell County, Ky—
| during 1927 in eradicating all grade
| and scrub bulls has shown that this
{ much-sought goal is actually attain-
{able. In Virginia many other coun-
{ties have adopted systematic agri-
| cultural programs in which the use
of purebred sires is one of the
| chief aims,
| Newago County, Mich., of which
Harold C. Stinson is county agent,
|is preparing for an early drive a-
| gainst inferior sires in which a
| bull-eradication map similar to the
lone successfully used in Graig
| county, Va., is expected to figure.
| Other counties, judging from re-
quests for literature, are depending
|in part on such methods as scrub-
| bull trials, posters, and enrollment
blanks. The blanks, when filled
Jy entitle stock owners to pure-
bred-sire barn signs.
Department records show that
the first county in the United States
to win freedom from the domina-
| tion of scrub and grade bulls was
| Union County, Ky., this distinction
{being won in 1926. Two more
{ reached prospects for 1928 are es-
{ pecially favorable in view cof the
| growing public interest and support
which the breeding of improved live-
stock is receiving.
a
CHIPPENDALE CHAIR
SELLS FOR SUM OF $3,000
An antique chair bought for a
modest sum in Lancaster county
some time ago sold for $3,000 at an
antique sale in York,
The chair was bought at a home
about six miles east of Lancaster,
according to J. H. Schmuck the
dealer, who made the sale.
It is a Chippendale and it is said
to have been made in 1760 in
Philadelphia. It is of solid
|It was bought by a New York firm
| interested in antiques.

The bidding on the chair started |
at $1,000.
A piece of Stiegel glassware
| made in Lancaster county by Baron
| Stiegel, colonial glass blower,
brought $340,
i lpn
} Have Better Cows
| Recent years have shown gradual
[decline of cows in Pennsylvania.
With an increased production per
cow, however, the total supply is
somewhat greater now than before.
This indicates a healthy trend and
points the way to a better condi-
tion in the dairy industry, State
College specialists declare. *

Coatesville — 36
were erected in
past year.
Philadelphia Mint’s total coinage in
1927 had value of $69,902,474, in-
crease of $19,498,093 over pre-
vious year.
Scranton — Federal Water Ser-
vice Corporation of New York pur-
new homes
Coatesville during
chases Scranton Gas and Water
Company.
Sellersville — Contract awarded
to Pennsylvania Power & Light
Company for extension of white
way lighting system on Main street.
Hamburg -— Original Dollar
Cleaning Company plans establish-
ment of branch here.




IF WERE UP ERRIY
BE RAYWARDED:,
| point to indicate that
THAT SHOWS THAT








I
How ABOUT
THE GLY WHO

2" GOT UP BEFORE THIS
A eo AN LOST THE
ee oF GoLd/!


THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN
LANCASTER
|
! Wingert & Haas
| Hat Store
| Winter Hals
dave Arrived in Various
i Colors and Shapes
PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY


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










Heal
A
WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE |
HEALTH
“Too much cannot be said in fav- |
or of the winter outdoors. And it |
is a satisfying fact that each year |
more and more people crawl out of |
their shells, brave biting breezes |
and profit greatly thereby,” said |
Dr. Theodore B. Appel, Sacretory |
of Health, today. “But there is an- |
other side of the question that per- |
haps has been minimized in this
logical pursuit for
doors indoors.
“That is the step that many peo- |
ple fail to take. They arrive at the
rather illogical conclusion that win- |
ter air was particularly manufac-
tured for outdoor use only; and
that this being the case, every ef-|§
fort must be made to see that none
t gets inside.
“It is positively surprising to
t lengths many will go in their
~ the winter
sections



whole houses will be up—
blinds drawn and shutters closed.
’So that the air can’t get in,” they
say. In countless city: homes the
practice of keeping out fresh_ air
is indulged in to an unhealthy and
unsafe degree also. One, of course,
cannot be blamed for using all
modern devices to keep out cold
and eliminate drafts. On the other
hand, to seal up a house efficiently,
turn on the heat and permit it to
is foolish.
“It is beside the
talk to discuss the disadvantages of
this practice from the sanitary ang-
e. It nevertheless is quite to the]
by thus at-
tempting to make caves of
tions people are taking
with their health.
“It is neither to be supposed nor
expected that one will want to try
to heat up the outside by opening
the house in summer fashion. But
there is such a thing as raising the
windows and opening the doors,
preferably before bedtime, and thus
permitting the good, cold, fresh and
healthy outdoor air to come inside.
chances
“A super heated home with its
breathed and re-breathed atmos-
phere is a fine place for germs.
Moreover, living day in and day out
in that kind of air, even if one does
buck winter outdoors occasionally,
and make it possible for the germs
to set up business in your body.
“Therefore, not only seek the air
on the outside that winter so de-
lightfully and happily affords, but
see to it that once or twice in ev-
ery twenty-four hours, in addition
to the ventilation during the night,
that you invite the outside air in.
It is sensible, safe and healthy hos-
pitality.” .
Rl LL hA arrtik A A OL
THE HIGHWAY OF LIFE
By
Joe Shaeffer

There are many highways and by-
ways,
‘Where man alone can go,
And subways and waterways,
Where he can end his woe.
But there’s one highway, where,
Peace or joy -or strife,
The highway known to every one
As the highway of life.
Upon this highway long and old
There man must fight his way,
Oftimes he fights his way alone,
Until his parting day.
He mingles with the hearts
And souls of men whose
gone,
| Where once their souls were
Fresh and new but they had end-
ed wrong.
He watches oft with eager eyes
And sees his friends pass by
Upon the same old highway,
Where he must live and die.
But every side as up he climbs
He sees there cold and still,
The forms of buddies long since
Passed, who never made the hill.
And then he sees the deeds
Of men,—some old and
still new,
Of men whose life has left
A print, when the battle of life
was through.
But on he climbs his life to
End,—his vision like a knife,
Up to his goal,—his glory, his
Grave,—on the old highway of
life. ?
life is

some

rr ree
Paint Sash To Save Them
Hotbed and coldframe sash will
keep for many years of protected
by paint and kept dry when not in
use. In putting in new glass, serape
back to sound wood and give a
coat of paint before putting on the
putty. The putty should be applied
under the glass as well as over it.
Liquid putty is very good for this
purpose. Redwood and cypress are
good materials for sash,


remain that way until Spring comes |’
is prone to reduce one’s resistance |
Bs
B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF B



 
 

outdoor air. It
has to do with bringing the out: oA
[
point of this! §
habita- | i


 
 
 








 
 



 
 

 
 
 


 
 


 
FLORIN, - - -
Authorized Dealer for the
Following Sets:
FADA
R. C. A.
ZENITH
CROSLEY
—
PHONE 163R11 MOUNT JOY



 
 







WANTED!
More people to use the Bulletin’s Classified Col-
umns when trying to dispose of any article for
which they have no future use, for which some
neighbor or someone further distant would be glad
to purchase.
As a selling agent along this line, the Bulletin
has shown that it has no equal in the county.
We have dozens of satisfied users who will tes-
tify to the worth of this statement.
Try a CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT
and reap the benefits.
The cost is only 5 cents a line with a minimum
of 25 cents.



 


 
 







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ee
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