rs iE FOUR ol ious News Pin Our Churches MERTAINING TO ALL THE | BCHES IN MOUNT JOY | [JO AND (THE ENTIRE ROUNDING COM- MUNITY Trinity Lutheran Church Rev, Geo. A. Kercher, Pastor Bible School 9:30 A. M. Morning service 10:45 A.M. Evening Service 7 P. M. Reformed Mennonite Christ S. Nolt, Pastor There will be services in the Re formed Mennonite church on West Main street next Sunday morning Bn o'clock. | Presbyterian Church egelken, D. D., Pasto: | ool at 9:30. | Superintendent. and sermon at will preach. | | { | | | | | | i | | i | | | i [ | | | { | Main St. oy, Pa. something better get in the under | et Bible Pentecostal gsion, on Saturday St. syterian Church | Faken, D.D., Pastor pl 9:30 A. M. | omer, Superintendent | and sermon at | ghteous Shall Flour- | at i evening :30 Praise Service, )gelical Congregational Church v. A. Lee Barnhart, Pastor Sunday School 9.30 A. M. Mr. S. F. Eshleman, Supt. 10:30 A. M. Morning worship. 8:45 P.M. K. L. C: E: kad) P. M. Evening worship. prdial welcome is extended to ome and worship with us. grin U. B. Church in Christ pf. Deitzler, M. A., Pastor Bhool at 9:30 A. M. ciety at 5:15 P. M. e Society 5:45 P. M. at 6:30 P. M. Raat 7:15 P. M. 7:30 P.M ursday 7.30 P.M e. ® Episcopal Church 1am S. J. Dumvill, Rector Sunday Services Holy communion the first Sunday of each month 10:30 A. M. Sunday School 9:15 A. M. Morning Prayer and Sermon 10: 80 A. M. Even-song and address 7:30 P. M. ing 7:30. A cordial invitation to all. is extended Methodist Episcopal Church Rev. Wm. H. Beyer, Pastor 9:30 A. M. Sunday School. Dr. E. W. Garber, Supt. 10:30 A. M. Sermon. 6:30 P. M. Epworth League. 7:30 P. M. Sermon. Wed. 4 P. M. Junior League. Mrs. Diffenderfer, Supt.,, Catechism class Wed. 7:30 P. M. Prayer Meeting. |. Cordial welcome to all. St. Mark’s Church of The United Brethren in Christ Rev. H. S. Keifer, Pastor Sunday School at 9.00 A. M. H. N. Nissly, superintendent. Worship and sermon 10:15 A. M. Junior and Senior Christian En. deavor at 6:30 P.M. i Worship and sermon 7:30 P. M. | Quarterly Conference April 25th 8:30, M. Dr. 8S. C. Enck, Con- ferencé Supt., presiding. You are most cordially invited to | all these services. | Church of God I. A. MacDannald, D. D. Minister Sunday School 9:30 A. M. J. S. Hamaker Superintendent. Sermon 10:30 A. M. C. E 6:30 P. M. Leader, Elmer Bailey. Sermon 7:30 P. M. Junior choir Wednesday 4 P. M. Mid-week service Wednesday 7:45 Rev. P. M. Mens chorus Wednesday 8:30 P.M Choir rehearsal Thursday 7:30 P. M. You are cordially invited to wor- ship with us. ——— Gee eee. 14,732 DRIVERS GET AUTO PERMITS Examining units of the State Highway Patrol during the month of March examined a total of 19,- 148 applicants for operators’ li- enses, of which 14,732 passed and 1416 failed. he patrol examiners directed hat the lighting equipment be cor- rected on 3345 cars in which appli- cants presented themselves for ex- amination, and the position of the registration plates changed on 2133 cars. This makes the total examina- tions for the first three months of the year 37,750, with a record of 29,400 people having passed and Six Employees to be awarded Veil Medals of Bell Co. Five Men and a Woman Cited for Conspicuous Public Service During 1928, and Eight Others Receive Honorable Mention Top row, left to right: Lindsey, Hollidaysburg; Allard Joseph John Rauh, Jenkintown; William Anthony McGowan, Bryn Mawr; and Huber Nordeck Fleegle, McKeesport. Six employees of the Bell Tele- phone Company of Pennsylvania, one | of whom is a woman, are to be award- ed Theodore N. Vail medals for con- spicuous of public service in emergencies during 1928, it is an- nounced by Leonard H. Kinnard, president of the company. Four of the awards are to be made to Bell employees “for initiative and conspicuous proficiency in the appli- cation of first aid, resulting in the saving of human life.” The awards will be made at special presentation exercises. Those to be awarded medals are: Mary Elizabeth Lindsey, operator in charge of the Hollidaysburg cen- tral office; Edward Cannon, cable splicer, and Andrew John Rauh, cable tester, both of Jenkintown; Wil- liam Anthony McGowan, cable splicer, acts Bryn Mawr; and Allard Joseph Davids, installer-repairman, and Huber Nordeck Fleegle, installer, both of McKeesport. Those cited for honorable mention are: Roy William Grassmyer, com- bindtion man, Hollidaysburg; Charlie Grover Hixson, installer-lineman, Latrobe; Miss Mary Elizabeth Oger, operator, Latrobe; Miss Hazel Irene Johnston, operator, Latrobe; William Ellsworth Grimm, chief switchman, Expert in Anoth Edward Cannon, Jenkintown; Mary Elizabeth Davids, McKeesport. Bottom: Andrew Altoona; Miss Adelina Martha Duffy, night chief operator at the Tacony ( central office, Philadelphia; Glen Con- | rad Sebring, repairman, Rochester, {| Pa.; and Miss Margaret Ruth Kleck- | ner, operator, Tamaqua. The Vail medals were established as memorials to the late president of the American Telephone and Tele- graph Company and are awarded an- nually to employees of the Bell Sys- tem for acts or services which con- spicuously illustrate Mr. Vail’s ideals of public service. Cannon and Rauh saved the life of a man and a woman critically in- jured in an automobile accident in Philadelphia, while Davids and Fleegle are credited with saving the life of a small boy hurt in a crash at Wilmerding, near McKeesport. McGowan is to be awarded a Vail medal for clinging to a pot of blaz- ing paraffin rather than risk drop- ping it upon the head of a helper on a pole directly beneath him. He suffered severe burns through his sacrificial act. Miss Lindsey is to be honored for her courage and efficiency when fire broke out in the Hollidaysburg cen- tral office. Despite choking smoke and grave personal danger, she re- mained at the switchboard to handle emergency calls. er State Opens Safe by Telephone Listens to Sound of Falling Vault Tumblers Over Long Distance Wires and Issues Instructions to Girl, Who Manipulates Combination CaSSEL The etching illustrates how a lock expert in Weiser, Idaho, succeeded in directing the opening of a safe in Baker, Oregon, by use of the telephone. Not so many years have passed since long-distance telephone conver- sations were sometimes marked by a certain degree of difficulty in catch- ing the varying inflections of the hu- man voice. Telephone users are ,now accus- tomed to the transmission of their voices to points thousands of miles away without the slightest loss cof tonal volume. Several recent events have served to bring out with unusual effective- ness the clarity with which the veice and other sounds are flashed across | many miles of telephone circuits. A lock expert in Weiser, Idaho, lis- tening over the telephone to the muf- fled sounds of falling tumblers in the door of a safe at Baker, Oregon, ut- tered directions that lead to the open- ing of the strong box. A girl placed the mouthpiece of a telephone against the safe dbor in Oregon, and manipu- lated the dial of the combination. The safe expert listened to the resultant sounds and then proceeded to give in- structions which enabled the girl to open the safe within five minutes. The venerable H. Bickford Pazmor, noted composer and teacher of voice, recently used the telephone to give his daughter, Ridiana, a half-hour singing lesson—although he was in his studio in Oakland, Calif., and she was in her apartment in New York. Pazmor had composed a song for his daughter's New York recital and his | coaching prompted his recourse to the long-distance telephone. The com- poser told newspapermen that Miss Pazmor’s lilting contralto had flashed over the 3000 miles of telephone wire with the utmost clarity and that she had heard his instructions with equal ease. Then, there is the case of the thea- tre owner in a suburb of New York, who wanted to have a certain type of organ installed in his playhouse as quickly as possible, but who first desired a demonstration of its quali- ties. A salesman explained that the nearest organ of the kind in question was in a conservatory in Chicago. At the salesman’s suggestion, the theatre owner called the school on the tele- phone and listened half an hour to the organ’s resonant strains. At the close of this novel demonstration he signified his anxiety to close the deal. The salesman still further established his high-pressure modernity by es- corting the theatrical man to a near- by airport, and flew with him to Chi- cago, where the contract for the or- gan was signed. Sitting in his office in Pittsburgh, Howard Heinz, president of the H. J. Heinz Company, addressed the firm’s British branch managers in session in London by making use of the trans- Atlantic telephone service. In com- menting on the service, Mr. Heinz said the connection was just as dis- tinet as if it had been made between pict to give her eleventh-hour two points in Pittsburgh. 8350 failed, and the correction of lighting equipment on 6976 cars and the adjustment of registration plate on 4182 cars. is —_ ne Consistent and NOT spasmodic always pays best. Fach i advertising, the pub. you quit business. C—O GM een : bing for the Mount Joy you can get all the local for less than three cents a ed States is twenty years, according to the U. S. Department of Agriculture. 1929, there were sons on farms, 32,000,000 in 1909. The farm population of the Unit- | now the smallest in It estimated that on January 1, 27,611,000 per- as compared with When it's job printing you need, anything from a card to a book, we 0€Ws are st your service. | —— tf Week. Provide up-to-date hives for the bees—that is, hives with movable frames in which the bees can build their combs. Keeping bees in box- es, hollow logs, or straw ‘skeps” is unprofitable and unprogressive. EE By subscribing for the Mount Joy Bulletin you can get all the local for less than three cents s é | THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. 120-020 400020 000420 620-620 420-620-620 4% 4% 4% <5 0 +0 + 4% 4%. ¢% 4% BS SA A SE SC SAS SAC S00 SO Xa Sa Xa RE XR XR RR RRB BRIE XA X aX 0. 9, 0 XaXaXs Ca) 2 ese 9, * 4, v0 ro 4 0.0 XaXa Xe) J + 0% o% 0% 0% 0, 0, S585 a a Xa Xa X 9, * 0 0. 0, O00 000.00, CRRA XaX 9, COR) $009 06% 0 Black Dayton Tires That Just as the Dayton’s Lead in Tires, so do the \ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1929 & 0 0. 00 V0 9% e%% o¥% 3 20030030 430930430 THEI ALICIA 002, «a Mr., Mrs. or Miss Autois If you want real service—if you want a dol- lar’s worth of mileage for every dollar you spend for tires, use * J 9, bo? % 0. 0. 9 Xa Xa Xo) J 9. yp? 05 00000, * J * 9. Oe oO 0% 9% * 9, * CR) %* %* re > * 9 * 9, J * 0. 0. 0. 0 0 pF 000 oP 0b 059 050-0502, * * ® COR) 9, COR) 9%, J * 9 >, * i SPARTAN RADIOS : 3 LEAD IN RADIO \ 3 9. 9, (9 0% 7 * 06% Let me place a Set in your home and convince you that fox, *, J 9 joer * ¢ Real Reception, Ample Volume and Sweetness of Tone, the X\ % 4 SPARTAN LEADS. 3 3 3 3 &» 9, * ee 0 * COR) 0. 0, 00% 9% 9. 0, aX YO IX 620-620 420-6%-6%6-6% 6%6-6%-6% 6%. 26% % +%6-6%-6%-6%-6% 6% ¢% 6% 6% 4%.6% ¢% <0 oO a 0 4 0s 01 16. iO RBA Sa aaa ENE Sa SERENA EX Xa Xa Xa Ng Xa Xa Xa Xa XE XE XE XE XX EX EX EX EXE EX A a a aD OPPOSITE BROWN’S MILL * 9 * UNG’S TIRE SHOP MOUNT JOY, P 9, bode 0 0 0 0% %% %% 0% 0 Used Cars 3 Days Free Trial 30 Days Guarantee 1928 Esse 1928 Hud ’24 Hudson {Spt Roadster 1924 Ford Bouring Touring 1922 Buick West Main St., 00000000000000C00000000000 Krall's Meat Market MOUNT JOY SATURDAY, APRIL 27th, along anything you care to dis BIG COMMUNITY SALE At Florin, Pa. 1929 at seven o'clock We will Reg biz line of FURNITUR DRY GOODS FRUIT, ETC. 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Yet, can give you so much at The NN. $505 due to the greatest array of prices within the reach of all. Light Deine $400 - a ror Ton CEI $545 TRL = =: I Kit Chassis, ... ., oy gs a Jase A All prices. o, b, } Fling, ile automobile values. Chey- rolet’s delivered prices | include only reasonable charges for delivery and financing. Exhibit of the New Chevrolet Six Reinoehl Chevrolet Co. 233 South Market Street ELIZABETHTOWN, Maytown Mt. Joy Marietta ELMER G. STRICKLER P. FRANCK SCHOCK JOHN LIBHART QUALITY AT .LOW COST Advertise in the Bulletin