The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 24, 1929, Image 4

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® pace FOUR
Religious News
in Our Churches
NEWS PERTAINING TO ALU TH}
CHURCHES IN MOUNT JOY
BORO AND THE ENTIRE
SURROUNDING COM.
MUNITY
Donegal Presbyterian Church
Rev. C. B. Segelken, D. D., Pasto
Church school at 9:30.
D. C. Witmer, Superintendent.
Florin U. B. Church in Christ
Rev. J. C. Deitzler, M. A., Pastor
Bible school at 9:30 A. M.
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.
Temperance Program
Church of Brethren at Sal-
will render a Temperance
The
unga
program, by the Walfare Board, on |
Sunday evening, April 28. Many
good speakers will be present.
219 West Main St.
Mt. Joy, Pa.
All who want something better
than they can get in the under
world come to the Bible Pentecostal
day and night Mission, cn Saturday
at, 219 W, Main St.

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 lMeeting.
Cordial welcome to all.
The First Presbyterian Church
Rev. C. B. Segelken, D.D., Pastor
Church School 9:30 A. M.
H. S. Newcomer, Superintendent. |
Morning worship
10:30. “The Awakening of a Soul.”
Evening Worship and Sermon at |
7:30. “The Burning Bush.’

Wednesday evening at 7:30
Prayer and Praise Service.
Morning Worship at 10:30 A. M.
Theme: “Man’s Fall is not all of a
sudden.”
Junior society at 5:15 P. M.
Intermediate Society 5:45 P. M.
Senior Society at 6:30 P. M.
Evening worship at 7:15 P. M.
Theme: “The Magnetic power of
the WUp-lifted Christ.”
Prayer service Thursday 7.30 P.M
You are cordially invited.
St. Luke's Episcopal Church
’d. William S. J. Dumvill, Rector
{but 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:
30 A. M.
Even-song and address 7:30 P. M.
ing 7:30.
A cordial invitation
to all.
is extended
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.
“The Trifler.”
Anniversary of the Christian En-
deavor Societies at 7:30 P. M
Both the Senior and Junoir En-
deavorers will have part on the
program, The pastor will speak on
the theme—“More Beyond.”
The Third and Fourth Quarterly
Conference will be held on Thurs-
day Evening, April 25, at 8:30 P.
M.
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.
“The Everlasting Love.”
Rev.
C. E. 6:30 P. M. Leader, Mrs.
Hoffer.
Sermon 7:30 P. M. {A Positive
Welcome.”
Junior choir Wednesday 4 P. M.
Mid-week service Wednesday 7:45
P. M.
Mens chorus Wednesday 8:30
P.M
Choir rehearsal Thursday 7:30
P.M
You ara cordially invited to wor-
.ship with us.
———— ee eee
GIRL SCOUT TROOP ADDS
TWO NEW MEMBERS
Meeting was called to order by the
captain and opened by singing “Am-
erica.
lain. Roll was called and dues were
collected.
Two new members were admitted:
Arlene Horst and Helen Dillinger.
Eight Girl Scouts received their pins.
They are as follows: Carcena C.
- Engle, Esther Barnhart, Geneva
Bushy, Ruth Bishop, Fanny Dillinger,
Elizabeth and Pauline Heilig.
Those present went to the Junior
High School to drill, with Scoutmaster
James Hilt in charge.
After singing “Star Spangler Ban-
“mer” and taps were blown by the bug-
‘ler they adjourned.
—— Gre
Provide Plenty of Hoppers
ace. It is a wise plan to watch
ks and supply more hoppers
and sermon x
Choir rehearsal Tuesday 7:30 PM | |
Prayer was read by the chap-
Stunted chicks are likely to be the
o an insufficient amount of hop- |
ver the chicks are crowded to

yg
yA
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
——
"Life-Saving Work Begins
In Feil Days of Childhood




1
each year, something would
F 96,000 persons were rushing over
the falls of Niagara to their death |
be |




improved sanitary conditions and de-
creased the hazard to life. Thousands
of public health nurses co-operate
done about it. [with physicians to guard venturesome
Laws would be passed. [and indifferent people from coming
[ Signs would be posted along the | 100 close to the whirling waters of |
bank reading, “No swimming—no disease. But this is not enough.
boating,” so that no bather, however | Signs have been posted all along
hardy, would take a chance. | the bank proclaiming the early dan-
Even in the calm pool way above | 8¢T signals of tuberculosis: Too |
the rapids, swimming would be for-| easily tired, Cough that hangs on,
bidden to children who might go | Loss of weight,” “Indigestion.” Peo-
beyond their depth, get caught in an | Ple approaching the dangerous dis-
undercurrent
doom,
Of course,
over the f


lls of Niagara each year.
3ut that number do go to
death tuberculosis—a
just as certainly preventable as
drowning in dangerous waters.
something is being done
from

not enough.
Laws have
partments, clinics and sanatoria.
|
Soon confusion will reign supreme
through the household—the windows
will be stark and undraped—furnish
ings moved out of their corners and
left standing in the middle of the
| room—mattresses will adorn the
| front yvard—old eyesores dragged to
| light from the closets—and disposi-
| tions will be worn to a frazzle! The
| annual spring house cleaning season
will be upon us.
Mother and the girls can be trust-
ed to bring order
| week or so. But the Holland Insti
tute of Thermology of Holland, Mich.
gends out a reminder that the house
Keeper's Jonah—how to get the heat-
ing plant into spick-and-spau condition
—is usually up to father and the boys.
Really, the women-folk have a vital
Interest in seeing that this job's
done, and done right. Investigation
shows that 75 per cent of the dirt
In a home comes in from outdoors.
out of chaos in a
and be swept to their
96,000 persons do not go
their
disease
is
And
about it—but
{
|
| been passed providing
| life-saving stations such as health de- |
The
| enforcement of legal regulations has |to pick them out of the stream.
{
|
trict are warned by tuberculosis as-
sociations and other agencies through- |
out the country to beware—before it |
is too late. But this, too, not |
enough.
There is little hope for those in the
last stages—they are going over
falls.
is
culosis have a chance,
discovered and helped to the shore,
there to rest in the fresh air and sun-
shine while being strengthened by
| nourishing food. Yet it is hard work
Some
| while a quarter of it emanates from
the heating plant. If the ecliinney
and whole central heating plant
kept clean, the amount of house-dir
increases by leaps and hounds
This increases the burden of house
keeping every day of the year,
the cogt of laundering, makes it nec-
essary to spend more for dry-clean
ing, and keeps the housekeeper wish
ing she could have new draperies and
new upholstery.
Dirt in the heating plant is expen

raises
sive in another way, too. For the
United States bureau of standards
has conducted tests which rhat
an eighth of an inch of soot in rhe
pipes cuts down heating efficiency: 28
while a quarter-inch
heating system's
43 per cent.
cleaning of the sys:
once every year
of economy,
re-
perform
per cent,
duces the
ance by
So thorough
tem at least
wise measure
is a
In-

the
the |
Those in the rapids of early tuber- |
if they can be |




















refuse to recognize their danger. They
enjoy the pace that kills.
{ For the children in the calm pool,
| however, life-saving measures are ef-
| fective. Better still is it to keep them
out of the pool entirely, Then they
will never get into the rapids and
cannot go over the falls,
The pool may be called “Childhood
Tuberculosis.” In a sense this is a
a for it is not quite yet tu-
| berculosis—rather the condition which
| precedes the disease. The glands of
| the lung are affected, and only slight,
| if any, damage has been done the
| lung. This condition, discovered with
| the aid of the X-ray and other tests,
[ tells the expert when a child is
| marked for later lung disease. But
| not if he is dragged out of the pool
| before he floats toward.the rapids.

During April emphasis in the fight
against tuberculosis is being laid on
saving the children in the pool, by
means of a campaign for early diag-
nosis which is in progress throughout
| the country.
Invention of Giant Vacuum Cleaner
Makes Housewife’s Spring Job Easy
stitute of Thermology coue¢ludes
Within recent years there has been
invented’ a giant vacuum cleaner
which goes from house to house on
| a motor truck. Connected with the
various openings of the heating plant,
and operated by a 40 horse-power
motor it sucks all the soot and dirt
from the entire heating system into
a huze bag that looks something like
a baby blimp.
This “mechanical chimney sweep”
does its work so cleanly and quickly
that the heater can be cleaned while
the laundress or the decorators are
at work in the house. Many such
vacuum cleaners are at work through-
out the country, but for the best
results the Holland Institute of
Thermology advises the householder
to engage one with a high-powered
motor and ample suction, since this
will do a much more efficient job
than an Improvised affair




AMERICAN WOMEN SUFFER
FROM “SLOW SMOTHERING”


“Women in American homes are dis-
criminated against in the healthful-
ness ana comfort of the air they have
to breathe, as compared with their
! children,” declares the Holland I[nsti-
tute of Thermology of Hollang, Mich.
“The housekeeper in the average
dwelling is subjected to a process of
slow smothering comparable to slow
starvation, and the result Is infinite
from headache, strained
nerves, lack of ‘pep’ and general las
situde.”
Supporting their contention
most women are “lung-starved,”
air-conditioning engineers of the In
stitute point out that the average
adult takes into his or her system
about four pounds of food and the same
amount of water, but 27 pounds of air.
daily. There's nothing about the
respiratory system as compared with
the digestive tract. the engineers point
out, which makes good air less vital
to health and comfort than good food
and water.
“Many state laws require that 20
cubic feet of air per minute per pupil
be supplied in schools, and preseat-day
ventilating standards dictate the same
alr-supply for theaters, . hotels . and
even many factories... To meet these
standards, ventilating systeins ars in
stalled which completely change the
air in eact part of the building from
6 to 30 times an hour.
“But in the average home the only
supply of fresh air comez fro leak.
that
the
age around doors and windows The
owner of a small honse can’t be ex
pected to install expensive ventilating
equipment. Yet it is possible. without
this expense, to improve the eiality
of air in the home hoyond comparison
with its usual condition.”
Tests conducted at the
experiment station of the
of Nlinois have shown, the
hi!

University
the
tHe lorn ow
semeclo
point ont nm

air heating system changes the air in
each room of the house from one to
one and a half times ac hour.
The latest development of this type
of equipment is “super-cirentation,” by
which the air is moved by a mechan-
ical propeller instead of gravity. This
results, according to tests conducted
by the Holland engineers in co-opera-
tion with the University of Michigan,
in a complete change of air from four
to six times an hour.
“Suppose the housewife is confined
to her kitchen. which 1s 10 hy 10 feet
in dimension with an eight-foot ceil
ing. The super-circulating system, if
it works at an average of five air-
changes an hour, supplies 4,000 cubic
feet of re-circulated freshened air dur-
ing that time. This is more than twice
the 1,800 cubic feet required to give
her the same amount that the law as-
sures her children in school.”
ARe-circulation is a recognized prin
ciple in the ventilation of theaters,
schools and auditoriums. It works
just iike circulation in the body, blood
being pumped to the lungs and there
purified by oxidation before being dis-
tributed to the rest of the body. Just
so, air in the living rooms of a home
heated by the super-circulating system
is drawn through cold air returns to
the furnace, where it is purified by the
intense heat inside the easing, and
then is re-circulated through the home,
The reason why air-motion Is so fm-
portant to health, comfort and the
beauty of the skin is that the normal
body heat is 98.6 degrees. When more
heat than that is generated, It must
be passed off to the air. If the alr is
moving, it carries away the excess
body heat quickly ¢nough to keep the
person from developing a fever or feel-
ing “dopey” and eppressed. Also, ft
evaporates the body mdolsture so rapid-
lv as to preven’ the perspiration
whieh is one sign of txcesgive body heat.

When it’s job printing you need,
| anything from a card to a book, we your business than by local news-
tf paper advertising,
are st your service.
There is no better way to boost

Great Queen of Song
Attempted Too Much
The failure of many artistes whe
remain unknown comes from the fact
that they do not Know in what direc-
tion their power lies. The failures
of great artistes nearly always come
from their lack of knowledge of their
own limitations. Few can, indeed, go
on for long years with a record like
that of Madame Adelina Patti, of
whom it is suid that she had but one
real failure in her artistic life. She
was over fifty years old and had been
a leading opera singer for over thir-
ty years when, attracted by the op-
portunities which the role of Carmen
gives, she undertook to sing it at
Covent Garden, London. With her
voice still beautiful, her stage tech-
nique at its strongest and her im-
mense popularity, even she could not
adapt herself to a role that was con-
ceived for a different type of voice
and a different type of person. She.
the greatest singer of tine century,
failed to do what scores of lesser
artistes were doing well, and what had
proved the inspiration of some of
those who were nearest to her in
greatness,

“Break” Too Apparent
Even for Englishman
This has been held back for obvious
reasons but it's too good to keep. It
seems that one of an English party
who were recent visitors in Los An-
geles, was quite taken with a movie
girl, who pretended to be a star bu
wasn’t, Nevertheless, she was very
‘pretty, too pretty, in fact, for a de
voted admirer to question. ~
She had him hooked, too, and then
made one of those dumb slips which
even an Englishman gets,
“Are you sure you love me?’ she
demanded, after they had held hands
all through a talkie,
“My dear, you can bank on it,” was
the answer,
“Oh, goodie! Which bank, dearest?”
she cried and it was all over but the
regrets.
A i
Abe Hackart, aged 54, of Neffs-

tf
ville, is missing since last Thursday




MOUNT
B. BRUBAKER
Brubaker’ s Special Coffee . 39c¢
The Real Coffee Flavor

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24th, 1929

JOY, PENNA.

Kaffee Ha

gg...» tc
:
:
;
C




SELOX
Barge Box 13¢
CHIPSO, Large Pkg 19¢
Small Pkg 2 for 15¢


fs rv, ieee
STP


Large Box Mother's Oats
Round pkg, quick J

Post Toasbies
2 “for
Corn Flakes or
1
Ketchup bottle


Tender Peas %....... 2 cans 25
: \ a5¢ idea of what canned goods should
Crushed Corn yea can 10¢ taste like.
t . m .
Shoe Peg Corn. %....... can 15¢ Premier (Tiny Tot) Peas . can 24¢
S¢
10¢
a Premier Pineapple large can 32¢
Wright’s Mayonnaise bottle 25¢ by
and bottle French Dressing FREE Premier Bartlett Pears lge can 34¢
S
-emier Cherries (Royal Anne) 9
Hershey Butter .......... Ib 54¢ Premier erries ( 39¢ {
C

Premier Canned Fruits give you an


(Telephone) Peas can 19g
can
Bantam) Corn
can 22¢
large can 25¢
Premier

Premier (Crushed) Corn
1¢
Premier (Golden
Premier Peaches

yaar



IDEAL COCOA
One Pound Tin 29¢




Brok. Almond Choc. 1b 4F
Ideal Peanut Bars
Fresh, 10 for 25¢




0 Corticelli Silk Hose
Rayon Vests & Bloomers ea §1
Gauze Vests ...... 25¢ and 3
Rayon and Silk Scarfs 39 and 9
Gloves ...... 50¢ and
AAS,
Ladies’
51.5 31.98 Ladies’ Hoover Apron Dresses
Chipman’s Silk Hose ...... $1.00 Bodies’ SmockSh vn 95¢
Ladies’ Apron Dresses ...... 60¢
00






Infants’ Dresses ..%. . 60¢ to $1
5¢
Girls’ '& Misses’ Dresses §1-$1.65
ac Kiddies’ Pantie Dresses $1
$1 Romper Suits... +... voc Mee» $1




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SAA


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Advertise in the
Mount Joy “Bulletin”




LOOK

are A-1 and finish is first class. Has
spare tire, bumpers, radiator orna-
ment and other extras. Can be finan-
ced.
“WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS”
1928 CHEVROLET OPEN EXPRESS
2 TON DELIVERY TRUCK
In first class condition throughout
and a real bargain.
“WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS".
1927 CHEVROLET COACH
In first class condition throughout.
"Fully equipped. A real family car at
a remarkably low price.
“WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS”
- 1927 CHEVROLET SEDAN
Tires and upholstery like new. Me-
chanically perfect. Full equipment
Must be seen to be appreciated.
“WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS”
1926 FORD COUPE
A little cash will handle; upholstering
and finish excellent. Mechanically per-
fect. Full equipment.
“WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS”


N. Market and Summit Sts.

- «ey
Y ~~ i Li
ge .2d Tag
at these.
standing Used
Car Valine
CHEVROLET SEDAN, 1928
Mechanically as good as new. Tires
Buy on a Sound Basis!
We stand behind every Used Car’
bearing the Red Tag
with an OK
that counts’

 

Ka
used car department is operated under
the famous Chevrolet Red O. K. Tag system.
Under this plan, we attach the Chevrolet Red
0. K. Tag to the radiator cap of every recondi-
tioned car exactly what vital units of
the car have been checked or reconditioned by
our expert hanics. -
We believe fen fairer system of used car mer
chandising has been worked out—for it
assures the customer honest value.
Due to the great pop
let Six, we have on han
of the new, Chevro-
at this time a wide selec.
tion of “O. K.’d” used ca: : ken in trade on new
cars. Come in and look they. over. You are sure
to find exactly the car you want at a price that
will amaze you, Terms are exceptionally easy,
Reinoehl Chevrolet Co.--Used Car Lot_
Open Sundays
ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.
‘“‘with an OK that counts’