The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 05, 1929, Image 6

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PAGE SIX
By F. O. Alexander
(© by Western Newspaper Union)
FINNEY OF THE FORCE

/ WE STATE RESTS
TS CASE ASKING
TE EXTREME /-
\ PE
x Ws




JusT ONE
MINUTE PLEASE -
LADIES AND GEN-




THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER co., PA.
Us Girls Has Got Nerves 1g >
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5th, 1929
|



DOES A BODY HAVE
To LISTEN ALL DAY To
A STORY OF BLOOD AN
MURDER AN SHOOTIN =
AN THEN HAVE A GUN
GO OFF IN HER FACE 7





THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN
LANCASTER
Wingert & Haas
Hat Store
Straw Hats
Stiff and Soft Hats
Have Arrived in Various
Colors and Shapes



9 PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY


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










LLL
Go
Tm




the bank.
de-
with a rainy-day fund in
You can have it by making a small
posit at regular intervals.
Savers find our bank a most agreeable
one in which to build up their accounts.
The small depositor receives just as cour-
teous treatment as the large.
Start An Account Now
First National Bank and
Trust Company
OF MOUNT JOY
Capital $125,000 Surplus and Profits $255,000
4

okers Attention!
right, only neglect in advertising
em up.
y il
{
TOBACCO, CIGARS and CIGARETTES
All Leading Varieties at Reduced Prices
I
 



¥- CHIQUES ROCK SOFT DRINKS ON ICE
5 12 diffefent numbers, including that new drink,
a Per Bottle, Ice Cold.
BE 3
E to x
®
APRFNKAN
H. A. DARRENKAMP
3 Doors East of Post Office MOUNT JOY, PA.
=
=;
J 1 LL) 1 1
Je have several numbers of 5 CENT CIGARS that
are closing out at $1.25 PER BOX and they are
and holding


1101 1
1
11
EDUCATING THE
MOTORING PUBLIC

| VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR
MOTORISTS FURNISHED THE
BULLETIN BY LANCASTER
AUTOMOBILE CLUB
This year marks the twenty-fifth
anniversary of the Lancaster Automo-
{bile Club and in celebration of the
| event the Club's annual picnic will
take the form of a silver jubilee,
Plans already are under way for the
event which will be held at Hershey
Park on Thursday, August 1. The
outing, as was that of 1928, will be
held in conjunction with the Motor
Club of Harrisburg.
The Lancaster Automobile Club was
organized in July, 1904, with a small
Today it is the second
Pennsylvania, with a
membership of nearly 11,000, and is
one of the best and strongest of the
American Automobile Associa-
1065 clubs scattered
United States and
membership.
largest in
| great
tion chain of
throughout the
Canada.
| The annual picnic of the Club al-
ways is one of the outstanding events
of the summer in this section and is
looked forward to by young and old
alike. Last year it was attended by
| nearly 20,000 members and friends
of the Lancaster and Harrisburg
Clubs. It was the largest and most
successful éver held at Hershey Park
and indications are that the silver
anniversary event will surpass that
| and all other picnics held by the
Club.
As in previous the picnic
will start early in the morning and
| continue throughout the day and even-
ing. There will be band concerts,
| sports events, dancing and other
| features, plans for which now are
| being made by the general commit-
| tee. In addition there will be talks
by a number of men who are leaders
in organized motor circles through-
out the State and Nation.
years,

| Knockout Ended Duel
m Between R'v:l Hares



re


~ _
EOWA) a Ec [i]
MOUNT JOY, PA.
| WE
| ASK
iis
Je
LUMBER

OUR OPTICAL SERVICE
Prompt and Accurate
PRACTICAL EXAMINATION
Skilled Repairs and Lens Replacements,
We have up-to-date opticians Surfacing and
Grinding our lenses. \
We know they “ntically Correct.
APPEL & WE]
40-42 N. vi, ok
Phone 2413. Ms.
‘metrists and O
ster, Pa.
¢ ¢ en glasses to us.
[cians

© DEO mmr -
OMAP CMO UD

An English nat list describes a





| duel which he witnessed in the moons
lizit between (wo hares. the vsuse
| of their dissension being a third,
ich was a female that went on nih
ling grass duri the encounter with-
paying the least atteniion to the
st. The battlers were facing encl
) rin a real fi ing
held in front looking like
sts. Standing on their haunep
two fighters went all out




gave
many

| Black Cats and Evil
Linked in All Ages
That verdiet
| Lynn (Mass.)
| other
against a
woman charged, among
with having undertaken
by her formulas “to still erying babies
| and fighting with equal ease,”
calls up a chapter in the lore of pop-
| ular beliefs to which every age con-
tributes new material. And for sheer
interest it is the pugilistic felines, not
the lachrymose infants, which take the
cake. That black cats portend evil is
a delusion that goes hack to the most
ancient times; so, white or black, they
have everywhere heen the material for
all sorts of superstitions. In the Or-
ient cats have knowledge of the fu-
ture ascribed to them, along with a
sensitiveness which can penetrate in-
to things dark for the eye of man.
When the cat tears at cushions or ecar-
pets it is believed to be raising the
wind. There is sure to be changing
weather if it sneezes, and a frost may
be looked for when the animal sits
with its back to the fire.
rendered
things,
cats
eet) eee
Provide Shelter for Chicks
A simple outdoor shelter for chicks
{ will relieve crowded conditions in the
{ brooder house. tI will also provide
ampl ventilation and cool roosting
quarters during the summer months.
A sanitary range shelter should be
provided.
etl eens.
Consistent and NOT spasmodic
davertising always pays best. Each
time you stop advertising, the pub-
lic thinks you quit business. tf

|


A Little Secret
for the Bride.
All Items of Meal Finished
Together If Cooked
Under Pressure.
The bride's complaint—who has not
heard it dozens of times?—is always:
“I can cook separate things all right
but how does one ever learn when to
put the different parts of a dinner on
so that they all get finished together
or ready at the right time!” Genuine
despair rings in her voice, and np
wonder, because such knowledge or-
dinarily takes years of experience and
is the mark of the expert.
In fact many women keep house for |
years and never really get the knack
of having everything ready at just the
right time. As a result, the food is
cold or some of the dishes are under-
done and others overcooked, and the
family keeps right on suffering, with-
out perhaps even knowing why.
Happy the bride, then, who early
learns about cooking under pressure
instead of the old-fashioned open-
kettle method. With the pressure
cooker, the entire meal is cooked at
one and the same time and everything
is automatically ready together. And

|
(©, National School of Pressure Cooking)
A Complete Meal Cooked at Once.
making up the menu—what fun it ist)
First she decides what is to be the
main course of the meal and finds out
in the cookbook how long this will
take in the pressure cooker. Then
she selects her vegetables and dessert,
and behold? the meal is planned. If,
to balance the food values properly, a
salad is required, that can be prepared
while the pressure cooker is doing its
job and the worker has nothing to
stir or to worry about, and it is then
put back on the ice for chilling.
When the time is up, everything is
perfectly cooked and ready for the
table. The dessert can be left in the
cooker, if it is meant to he served hot,
or placed outside to cool.
This, of course, is only a short chap
savs the

ter in the storv—one almost
romance—of pressure cooking. There
are the economy of time and fuel. the
cheaper cuts of meats, |
ability to usc
the retention of the full flavor of veg- !

etables and of all those precious vi-
tamines we have been warned to save,
fewer pots to wash. With all these
wonderful features surprising

that the bride doesn’t have as many
pressure cookers on her
gift table as she vases

silver candle
and

Severe Tests Prove
Cricket Hard to Kill
Dr. Frank E. Lutz, curator of in-
sects at the American Museum of Nat.
ural History, and Alfred L. Loomis, a
physicist, put a cricket through a se
ries of physical experiments that
would have killed most creatures, but
the little fellow survived the tests and
seemed to chirp for more, the New
York World tells us.
Its first experience was in a jar
from which the air was rapidly ex-
hausted until the pressure was equal
to an altitude of ten miles above sea
level. At first the insect was quiet,
but in a few minutes it began to
clean its hind legs. Then the tube to
the jar was cut, permitting an instan-
taneous drop to the pressure of the
outside air,
“The cricket,” says Doctor Lutz,
“merely gave a little twitch as though
some one had frightened it a bit.”
The insect’s next adventure was
with compressed air. It was put in-
to a tank analogous to caissons used
in tunnel building. The pressure was
quickly raised and then as suddenly
reduced, a procedure no human being
could have survived. But the valiant
cricket paid less attention to these ad
ventures than to the previous ones.
The following day Gryllus, as scien
tists call the cricket, was treated ta
a merry-go-round ride in a centrifuge
that whirled at 1,200 revolutions g
minute for ten minutes. When the
machine stopped the cricket shook it-
self and chirped as if in thanks for
the buggy ride.


Health Talk
WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE
B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF
HEALTH
“At this time of year when out-
door sports are of general interest,
a note of warning needs to be sound-
ed to those of middle
said Dr. Theodore B. Appel, Secretary
of Health.
forty, or at least forty, suddenly de-
velops a logical enthusiasm for ten-
nis, golf and baseball at this outdoor
season. And while such
tion should be indulged to a reason-
able limit, there is such a thing as
permitting one’s affection for a sport
to get the better of one's judgment—
then something happens.
“For instance, at a recent opening
of some new tennis courts ‘father’
who happened to weigh 175 pounds
and was forty-seven years old, boast-
fully took his racket in hand ‘to lick
the kid’ who was twenty and a col-
lege tennis ‘flash.’ Well he didn’t do

it, but in his attempt he so injured
| his heart which was entirely unaccus-
{ tomed to such strenuous demands
that he is now flat on his back, bro-
ken body and spirit and, as a matter
| ken cold fact, lucky to be alive.
! “The business of imagining at
| forty or fifty years of age that one
is just as young as ever is a mighty
poor proposition if one deliberately
sets out to prove it after a winter's
physical lassitude, by way of sudden-
ly over-exercising or indulging vio-
lently in outdoor sports.
the cardinal necessities for all—young
and old alike. But sudden exertion,
or .even protracted exertion that is
not so sudden cannot be indulged in
the middle-aged who are
| uitaccustomed to it. It is not even
good for the college man. This fact
is recognized by all trainers who re-
gulate and step-up athletic activities.
“Play golf and other outdoor games
if you like them. You should even
| safely by
cular fancy.
ance.
kills.”

Dyers Making Use cf
Tree Once Condemned
+ Every country or section ot a coun
| try as it more
and more resources thal con
verted into marketable fini

grows casts ahout for
cian be
hed prod-
ucts. The American Southwest has |
| taken the common hedge apple tree |
" otherwise known as the Osuge orange,
the bow wood or the bois dare tree.
| A row of these trees compose what
| farmers call a hedge fence.
| In the old days its roots were
smoked by boys to whom tobacco wag



 

forbidden Otherwise, the hedgee tree,
with its manifold fruit of green
i balls, was unpopular. Farmers con-
demned it because, when nsed as a
hedge, it would not hold their cows
and hogs. Motorists cursed it be-
cause it shut off their al Cross-
| the hedge tree appeared to be
! A few factories bought
|
 
it to make wagon spokes and felloes
A new day, however. is dawning for
the hedge apple tree. It is being
turned into the hoppers of some of
the country’s large dye factories
I'his is developing into a real indus
try in Texas and Oklahoma,
The hedge apple tree is also excel
ent material for telephone cross-arms
and pins. What is left of
the tree is utilized in the making of
fertilizer. Long ago the Indian made
bows of this wood,
insulator
Gentility Left Off
Golman had recently engaged
an new maid She was a thoroughly
goud girl, truthful, honest, very will-
mg and obliging, but she lacked tact,
One evening, when her mistress was
zoing out to dinner and the theater
afterwards. the maid noticed that a
rope of pearls was missing.
“Oh, madam,” she cried, “where are
vonr lovely pearls tonight?”
“I'm not wearing them, Winnie,” re-
plied Mrs. Goldman. “I don’t fancy
them tonight.”
“Oh, what a pity. ma’am!” exclaimed
the new maid wistfully. “An’ they
make you look so like a real lady!”
Mrs.
A Are
ARRANGING TO CONCRETE
ROAD FAR AS MIDDLETOWN

Following completion of the sur-
vey between Middletown and High-
spire, State Highway engineers have
turned to the task of preparing for
paving of the Lancaster pike be-
tween Middletown square and the
Conewago bridge. The work may
be started during the summer. Later
it is planned to concrete other gaps,
so that eventually an all concrete
road will run from Harrisburg to
Lancaster.
age or over,” |
|
“The business man who is fat and
an inclina-
“Sunshine and exercise are among
adopt one, if you don’t have a parti- !
But don't go in for this |
just-as-young-as-I-used to be perform- |
It can cripple, and sometimes |
ADVERTISING
Advertising and not competition
is now the life of trade, according
to the advertising experts who met
to attend the International Adver-
tising Association convention. The
delegates at this meeting heard a
number of interesting things.
Among these was the statement
by Charles Stelzle, New York ex-
pert, to the effect that if churches
do not advertise their “ware”’—
spiritual upbuilding and moral
betterment for both the individual
and humanity—they cannot hope
to arouse interest among the mass-
es and fulfill the obligations plac-
ed upon them as parties to the
general spiritual movement.
Another speaker declared that
“advertising is greater than any
single moral force we know of to-
day. Advertising brings about
changes for the betterment of life
itself, changes which fuse into the
social and political life of the na-
ion.”
 
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
It is now generally admitted by
economic forces everywhere that
advertising is the most important
development of modern business.
And it is also coming to be realiz-
ed that newspaper advertising is
the best kind of paid publicity. In
the convention just mentioned the
delegates who were advertising ex-
perts, agreed that newspaper ad-
vertising affords the best publicity
medium for the churches and all
church activities.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Advertising is no longer a theory.
It is a science. And it pays.
 



Instead of throwing rent money away, as that is practically
what the renter does as he never has anything to show for
money spent, let it apply on the purchase price of a home.
I Have a 6-ROOM HOUSE AT FLORIN
ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES
WILL SELL AT ACTUAL COST
Will accept very small down payment and balance in month-
ly installments, same as rent.

If interested, call or phone
Jno. E. Schrol
MOUNT JOY, PA.
4




EE
Read The Bulled
PLUMBING and HEATING
Also All Kinds Repair Work
PROMPT SERVICE PRICES REASONA
JOSEPH L. HEISEY
Phone—179R5 FLORIN, PENNA.





 
 


 

 




 

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