The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 24, 1929, Image 6

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‘PAGE SIX
By F. O. Alexander
© Western Newspaper Union

THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
Soothing Language Gets the Order



 
 


 


FEELINS IN MY DAY AGT



1}
pe oan 2” Ii
he 2, Nad y ax).
0; FRAN Am ish
PE Vo EVE ey
= \\
A Ruined
Tobacco Crop
3 NN AE :



Doesn't mean a
Ruined
Tobacco Grower


|


If the Crop was |
Covered by a |
Hail Policy
You cannot afford té take the risk.
The Hartford Fire Insurance Com-
pany can. Let us explain this hail
policy and the record and resources
of the Company that writes it.
Widmyer-Prangley Co.
48 Pho Street
Lancaster. Pa.
Henry H. Koser, Landisville, Pa.
D. L. Landis, Elizabethtown, Pa.
E H. Gish, Elizabethtown, Pa.
july 10-6t
The Mount Joy
Building & Loan
Association

confronting
woman who
The great problem
the average man and
long t@ own a home is often that
of finamcing it. But millions of
happy home owners, who have been
confronted with this problem have
proved conclusively that where the
ambition is a worthy one the way
can be found.

During the past year we have as-
gisted in paying for six homes in
Mount Joy and community.

Pay for Your Home as Rent
Sharehelders May Borrow on Their
Stock
STONE
Before placing your order
elsewhere, see us.
Crushed Stone. Also manufac
turers of Concrete Blocks,
Sills and Lintels.
J. N. STAUFFER & BRO,
MOUNT JOY, PA.





Elmer H. Young
ure |NSURANGCE service
MOUNT JOY, PA.
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
= 7 WEI 1 MAY 6 BLUNT AN
. 7OUTSROKEN MRS. FINNEY,
: SPaSE 1 HURT MARYS The BOYS
ANY,
MEANIN

"Newnan
\

INDUSTRIAL NOTES
New Wilmington — Williamson's
new store building is opened for
business.
Coatesville—3$75,000 bond issue
sold to provide funds for the con-
struction of Black Horse Road and
open South Third Avenue from
Harmony to Kersey streets.
Franklin—Eckerd Chain store es-
tablished store in this vicinity.
West Chester—New theater will
be erected in near future.
Waymart—Polish National Re-
formed Catholic Church Seminary
recently dedicated.
Oil City—New hospital building
practically completed and will be
ready for occupancy by July 20th.
Brownsville—Bison Theatre will
be extensively remodeled and equip-
ped.
East Brady—Last link is under
construction on highway to Pitts-
burgh completed north of here.
Honesdale—American Store Com-
pany established in renovated H. K.
B. building.
Fayette City—New bank may be
organized here in near future.
Wilkinsburg — Lighthouse Ser-
vice Station recently completed ex-
tensive alterations and additions
made to plant.
Fair Oaks—Repairs being made
to Big Sewickley Creek road.
Approximately 4,300 miles of
State Highways designated as Thru
Traffic Highways in addition to ex-
isting 1,200 miles of Thru Traffic
Highways, making total of 5,500
miles of Thru Traffic Highways in
Pennsylvania.
Harrisburg—Bids opened for the
construction of educational build-
ing in Capitol Park.
Wilkinsburg—E rection of Cal-
vary Presbyterian Church building
completed.
Conshohocken — Factors-to-You
Furniture Company established new
business here.
Weatherly—Citizen’s Fire Com-
pany No. 1 reopened newly refinish-
ed and refurnished rooms.
Two bridges being widened at
Scale Siding on Weatherly White
Haven highway.
Muncy—The Presbyterian
building redecorated.
Resurfacing underway on three
miles of Lincoln highway, TU. S.
Route No. 30 between Ligonier
and Youngstown.
DuBois—Contract awarded fo¥
paving of about a mile and one-half
of new streets.
Paving completed on Route 66
between Kittanning and New Beth-
lehem and construction started on
8-span viaduct over Pine Creek.
Palmerton — Community Swim-
ming Pool at Kunkle’s Grove of-
ficially opened.
Work started on section of Route
No. 88 between Lank’s Hill and
Finleyville borough line.
Brockway—Contract awarded for
remodeling and enlarging Methodist
Episcopal church building.
McMurray—$60,000 school build-
ing and athletic field combined will
be erected to left of highway and
will be known as Peters Township
High school.
Allentown—$200,000 home of the
Order of Owls officially opened.

church
Milton—Tasty Tea Shoppe has
changed ownership.
Ambridge—Work is progressing
rapidly on remodeling of old Regent
Theatre for Ellwood Amusement
Company theatre which will cost
$35,000.
Ambridge — Radio & Electric
Supply Company moved to new
quarters.
Norristown—Work on Montgom-





| ery County courthouse annex rapid-
{ly nearing completion.
| Oil City—Sears, Roebuck & Com-
{ pany prepare for opening of store.
| —— A eee
A DOMESTIC REVOLUTION
Automatic heat is causing a mi-
{nor domestic revolution. Oil and
gas burners are replacing old-fash-
| furnaces. The once-despised
celalr is being converted into a den,
or a smoking or reading room.
The tremendous progress made
in the past few years in automatic
heating is indicative of the Ameri-
can genius for finding new and
better means to perform old tasks.
A re
Cull the Poor Layers
Although culling can be practiced
as soon as the chicks are hatched,
nearly 40 percent of an average
flock of hens will probably have to
be culled between June and Sep-
tember. By eliminating the poor
producers which quit early in spite
of proper feeding and management,
less labor and feed will be needed
to obtain equal returns from the
flock.
tt et A reer |

Being sick is twice as depressing
ih ailment has an ugly name.


TS BETTER
, TAN SAVIN'ALOTA
= SUGAR COATED FOV OE-
ROL THAT You DONT MEAN: -
1 NEVER VET SEE WHERE
FLATTERY Gol You ANY
PLACE
JAH \ | Va
Aw HR i






 

 








1 HAVE BEEN GIVEN YOUR.
RECOGNIZE THE TRUE MERIT OF A

STAGE IS ALL SET
FOR AUTO CLUB PICNIC
Everything is in readiness for the,
annual picnic of the Lancaster Au-
tomobile Club to be held at Hershey
Park, August 1. Indications are
that it will be the biggest and best
of the many successful outings held
by the club.
Special provisions
made for the kiddies, as well as
for the adults who attend. Strips
of tickets entitling children 12
vears of age and under in the fam-
ilies of Club members to free rides
and souvenirs now are being given
have
out at Club headquarters, 10 and
12 South Prince Street, Lancaster.
For the convenience of those who
cannot arrange to call at the office,
these tickets will be available at
the park headquarters of the Lan-
caster Club on picnic day. These
tickets entitle the children to free
rides on the miniature railway, the
merry go round, the ferris wheel
and the aeroplane swing, and to a
lollypop, a balloon and an Eskimo
pie.
One of the outstanding features
of the picnic, which this year will
be held in conjunction with the
Motor Club of Harrisburg, will be
the baseball game between the
Williamsport and Harrisburg teams
of the New York-Pennsylvania
State League. This is a regularly
scheduled league contest transfer-
ved from the Harrisburg grounds to
the park diamond especially for the
Auto Club picnic. The game will
start promptly at 2 P. M. Admission
will be free.
Concerts in the morning and af-
ternoon by the Lancaster Military
Band, swimming in the fine new
pool, addresses by a number of men
prominent in organized motordom
throughout the State and Nation
and dancing in the evening to the
music of C. Lloyd Major’s orchestra
also will be on the program.
In line with the general growth
of the Club an augmented list of
prizes will be offered this year

will be 125 awards,
five $5 gold pieces, fifty $2.50
fifty Official A. A. A.
There
oold
pieces and
Tour Books.
All motorists

and their friends,
members of the Auto Club
or not, are cordially invited to at-
tend the picnic.
— YW
ADDITIONAL SUPPLIES FOR
THE GENERAL HOSPITAL
whether
Supplying eighty additional hos-
pital beds with linens will be the
increased work of the Women’s
Auxiliary of the Lancaster General
Hospital when the new wing opens
during the late summer. The new
building, which will be used for
maternity cases, will make room
for increased number of patients in
the main building.
The Auxiliary assumes the re-
sponsibility of supplying the Hos-
pital with linens and patients’ gar-
ments. During the past year twelve
thousand garments were supplied.
The hospital considers the service
rendered by the group of Auxiliary
societies as one of its greatest as-
sets. The sixteen county Auxiliar-
ies supply many of the necessities
and are generous with their gifts
of dainties to the patients in the
wards.
The increased service rendered
by the Hospital calls for greater
service from the Auxiliary. Mrs. B.
Frank Witmer, chairman of the
membership committee, invites all
newcomers into the vicinity, who
are interested in hospital service,
into Auxiliary membership.
Mrs. William N. Appel is
dent of the Lancaster
The presidents of the sixteem coun-
ty branches are: Mrs. L. Ruppin,
of Akron; Mrs. Frank Coleman, of
Chestnut Level; Mre. C. 8S. Dutten-
hofer, Churchtown; Mrs. H. U.
Case, East Petersburg; Miss Arlene
E. Case, East Petersburg, Juniors;
Mrs. J. F. Mentzer, Ephrata; Mrs.
H. L. Batten, Leacock; Mrs. Ralph
Snavely, Leaman Place; Mrs. Sara
K. Jenkins, Lititz; Mrs. H. C.
Stauffer, Manheim; Mrs. B. C. At-
lee, Millersville; Miss Mary E. New-
pher, of Mount Joy; Mrs. J. W.
Zehring, Mountville; Miss Anne J.
Uren, Rohrerstown; Mrs. J. H.
Reitz, Rothsville, and Mrs. H. G.
Johnson, Strasburg.
eG Qe ee
presi-
Protect the Potatoes
Flea beetles can be controlled by
spraying with arsenate of lead or
calcium arsenate, say State College
entomologists. Add three or four
pounds of the material to 100 gal-
lons of {bordeaux mixture.
ake Care of Flowers
jas require plenty of water
se cultivation. Remove sur-
s to insure the beautiful
A dressing of bone meal
beneficial.








been |
Auxiliary. |
SHE MAKES BIG GAIN
BECAUSE OF A LOSS
Mrs. Amy Boulter of 135 West
Eighty-third street, New York, a wid-
ow with two young sons, just has been
handed a certificate for two hundred
shares of stock in the Radio Corpora-
tion of America. The stock replaced
two hundred shares of original no par
value common stock represented by
two certificates which were lost after
Mrs. Boulter put them in the mail on
May 22, 1923. The transaction which
just has been completed was the hap-
py end of a long wait by Mrs. Boulter
for the expiration of the legal period
in which the shares represented by
the lost certificates might have been
presented for exchange.



MRS. AMY BOULTER
Many times in those years while
she was supporting herself and her
sons by nursing and renting some of
the rooms in her apartment, Mrs.
Boulter says now, she wished she
could sell her stock.
When the time of waiting was up a
few days ago Mrs. Boulter found that
the $811 she invested through a bro-
ter on the i plan in the
then new enterprise of radio had
grown to approximately $20,000.


America’s Great Debt
to Alexander Hamilton
Without any question it was Alex-
ander Hamilton who laid the founda-
tions for the material prosperity of
the United States.
He was the founder of our whole
financial system. As our first secre-
tary of the treasury in President
Vashington’s cabinet, Hamiiton de-
vised the governmental funding sys-
tem, the internal revenue bureau, the
sinking fund, the national bank, the
federal mint and currency system.
He was the father of the protective
tariff and was the first to propose and
vigorovsly defend the doctrine of the
“implied powers of the Constitution.”
He was first to advocate internal
improvements and the building of
roads and bridges.
Talleyrand, one of his old friends.
passing Hamilton’s window very late
one night, wrote:
“]l have seen a man who made the
fortune of a nation and labored all
night to support his own family.”
After his death his private affairs
were found to be in a terribly tangled
condition and it was only through a
special act of congress that his widow
was supplied with funds.—Thrift Mag-
azine,
YOUNG OFFICIALS IN
YOUTHFUL INDUSTRY
The announcemert the other day
of the list of officers for the Radio-
Victor Corporation of America, just
formed to handle the sales and dis-
tribution of the products of the
Radio Corporation and the Victer
Talking Machine Cempany, shows
a preponderance of youthful officials
in this company which combines
the interests of two of the biggest
and yeungest industries.
David Sarnoff, executive vice-
president of the Radio Corporation,
who is chairman of the Board of
Radio-Victor, is 38 years old. Inci-
dentally, he climbed to his present
high position from a start as a mes-
senger bey. An average of well
under middle age is maintained by
the cther officials: J. L. Ray, Presi-
dent; I. E. Lambert, Vice-President
and General Jounsel; A. E. Reoch,
Vice-President in charge of Produc-
tion, Service and Traffic; H. C.
Grubbs, “Vice-President of the
Victor Talking Machine Division;
Quinton Adams, Vice-President of
the Engineering Products Division;
Meade Brunet, Vice-President of
the Radiotron Division, E. A.
Nicholas, Vice-President of the
Radiola Division; BE. C. Grimley,
Treasurer and Comptroller, and
Francis S. Kane, Secretary.






When it's job printing yeu need,
enything from a card to a boek, we
are at your service. tf

( OVE BY EVER SO MANY AR =
D7 NEIGHBORS, AD WOMEN oF SOCIAY
J PROMNENCE, - DISTAGUISHED PEOPLE
WHO HAVE SATISFIED ME HAT YOU
MAGAZINE FOR TE ELITE, AND,
Ww APPRECIATE 175 CONENIS
DEMS oF ME FINEST READNG
|


THANK. You, MRS.
SNOOP... HE MAGATINE T=
will BE SEAT To You REG-














: — i ——
We SEEMED
MoST Too REFINED
AN GENTEEL-LIKE
\ FOR JUST A CAN- 9
WASSER, DIDNT HE ©


 











 





NEGLIGENT DOG OWNERS
WILL BE PROSECUTED
Two hundred thousand unlicensed
dogs roamed the streets and fields
of Pennsylvania before the present
State Dog Law was enacted eight
years ago, according to the Penn-
sylvania Department of Agricul-
ture. These roving dogs killed or
maimed thousands of domestic ani-
depredations by dogs exceeded all
illegal killing. Mad dogs were a
serious menace to human life.
Today the number of unlicensed
dogs is very small compared to the
number licensed and each day the
number is being reduced. Sixteen
thousand, two hundred and sixty-
five, worthless dogs were disposed of
last year and 9,906 during the first
six months this year. Almost 450,-
000 dogs are now licensed, 15,000
more than for the corresponding
time last year, and only 40,000 less
than for all of 1928.
Splendid co-operation by many
cities and boroughs, persistent and
thorough effort by the dog law en-
forcement agents of the Bureau of
Animal Industry, and prompt action
by most dog owners have brought
action by far-reaching benefits to
Pennsylvania. The sheep industry
is coming back. Damages caused by
uncontrolled dogs are decreasing.
Last year damages paid amounted
to $71,336, compared to $210,774
in New York state which has about
sylvania.
being lessened.
joying a better standing in
community. |
Thus, the real purpose of the dog!
law which is to protect property, |
human life, livestock, poultry, and |
good dogs from the ravages of the |
worthless, uncontrolled dog, is
ing accomplished.
WHO WILL BE THE GOAT?
The stage is being set in San|
Francisco for a big municipal own- |
ership campaign for the city to ac-|
quire the private street railway. |
All the changes will be rung to

be- |

create feeling against the private |
company in the endeavor to get |
the people to put up the millions |
necessary to acquire the line. What
{a joke it would be if the private!
company, instead of opposing the |
movement, would simply say:
“Gentlemen, we refuse to be the
goat. This is not our battle. It is |
the people’s battle. If the city]
wants the line it can get it by pay-|
ing us a price arrived at as the law
and the courts provide. Let the!
responsibility for establishing mun- |
icipal ownership rest on the propo-|
nents of the proposition without op- |
position from us, for in the last!
analysis it is the people who ave |
stricted when government goes in-
having their rights and liberties re-
to competition with its private cit-
izens. It is the people who will put
up the bond money, it is the people
who will make up the losses in the
taxes due to tax-exempt municipal
enterprises, and it is the people
who will hold the sack for any mis-
takes made by political manage-
ment.
“If the people think that city
officials can run the line better than
private owners, that is their affair.
If the voters wish to put up mil-
lions to buy the line and loss other
millions in taxes which we now pay
but which a municipal line would
not, that is also their business.
“If citizens think they can get
cheaper fares merely by the process
of municipal ownership, that is
again their business although it is
self-evident that a municipal dollar
will go no further than a private
dollar in purchasing labor and ma-
terial.
“We refuse to be made the goat.”
Cee
FOLLOWING RAILROAD

Automobile builders are adopting
all-steel bodies for reliability and
safety. Recently Fraulein Stinmes,
daughter of the great German fin-
ancier, took a 50,000-mile motor
trip through 27 countries. Twelve
thousand miles were over roadless
country; in some instances blasting
was necessary to get through. Tem-
peratures varied from 120 degrees
below zero in Siberia to the intense
heat of deserts. The two cars used
went over rocks, up almost impass-
able mountains, in snow and sand.
The specially constructed all-steel
bodies survived the journey without
damage. It was one of the most
rigid tests of automobile construc-
tion ever made.
While the ordinary driver exper-
iences no such difficulties, the all-
steel body is of equal importance
to him as a safeguard in collisions
and aecidents.

mals and poultry. The sheep in-|
dustry had heen practically wiped
from many sections. Wild game

the same number of sheep as Penn- |
The mad dog menace is |
Good dogs are en- |
SAFETY PRACTICES |
Read the Bulletin
WEDNESDAY, JULY 24th,
1929

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

rn
PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY

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



ay
with New AutoMatic Washer


Only $99.50
Pay $9.50 down and
we’ll deliver this most
modern of all washers
to your home -— then
$2.50 weekly conveni-
ently pays the balance
THIS OFFER FOR A
SHORT TIME ONLY,
Now - for the first time, you secure the two most
efficient washing principles in one washer - an
overhead agitator for full washings and the heavier
and more bulky pieces and which when reversed,
may, if you prefer, be used as an underneath or
submerged agitator for washing a few pieces, or a
tubful.



A 3-Piece Ironing Set FREE!

Electric Iron
Step Stool [4
® d


MOUNT
JOY, PA.

£3



The Habit
of Saving
Our part is
a good, safe,
bank in which
deposited and
you interest.
Trust
Capital $125,000


is easily acquired and its gratifica-
tien soon becomes a delight.
Start an Account Today
First National Bank and
OF MOUNT JOY
to provide yeu with
conservative savings
your savings ¢an be
on which we pay
Company

Surplus and Profits $255,000 /B