The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 01, 1930, Image 4

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WEDNESDAY,

1, 1930























Four generations of the Monaghan family, all of whom, in addition to
other members of the family, havelhad wonderful results from the use of
Dr.
x
Luntz’s herbal Flaxolyn.
i

Phila. Doctor’s
Flaxolyn










 

United rs ium in Chicago. We have used ver
in, to 1» sind. It has sults 1 never found
cian up in gnything e :
zed herbal h “Mg ast June. She is i
and old 1 spl} 1 completely re
gorou liev 1. She says she feels
1as 8 new teeth, the
as
ting 1geS
most interes mess
. Luntz comes from Nokomis,


 



igned by Miss Agnes
: “I am enclosing a Rig
four generations of our me
wonderful results | ly
had
 

olyn [ first be :
xolyn ough D lyn. 8 the m received
famous Lind Sanitar- follow below.
3

How Flaxolyn Saved This
Philadelphian From the
Human Scrap Heap
the “Pep” (7

Old—All
41
Wrung Out of Him--Lost 18 Pounds
Years


























—Jack O’Neil Was a Physical
Wreck. THEN HE GAVE FLAX. |
OLYN A TRIAL. Now Read His |
Amazing Story! Tells of New Kind |
of Sleep. |
No reporter could do justice to the remark- |
able story of Mr. O'Neil’s fight for health, |
therefore let him tell every word of it]
himself. Mr. O'Neil lives at 148 N. 8th St. |
and you can verify what he says: |
“lI am a dock man, 41 years old. My job |
means all hours and long, hard ones, and |
takes the pep out of me. I lost 18 pounds |
and was a wreck. I never had any disease |
in particular, just a run-down system from |
overwork and lack of sleep. |
“One by chance I read
day about herbal |

Flaxolyn and the great good it does, and
i give | Mr, J,
three | praise
different per: |
the
|
N. 8th St., Phila. Whose
certainly is heart-felt
all ed so sincere 1 decided to
Flaxolyn a trial. After taking it
felt like an entirely
having felt s good effects from
first day 1 took it. regained my
regular weight, 172 lbs., and am still doing
the but don’t mind the Jani
ough I don't ive any
used to, the
 
sleep I seems to do me a lot more

have
 


friends about Flaxolyn,
am sending you my
THuly and sincerely yours.
St. Hotel.”
*T am
and in
Jack O
work,
same
rage

 
kind

f Can Tell You
{ What It Means To§Suffer Endlessly
—and Then Sudde See the Shin-
{ing Light of Hope. ¥hat Was What
| Flaxolyn Proved to Be!


yy
nose fer
for ten
1s, due to to
ive out of your
dls and

yea from Cc
 
poisons
you




nervous
sn Sm
sallowness

























 
> f you as our perpetual
And then supfose you found
hat set you from your
and enabled you Ro work and
with ease; t made ®life not only
but happy. You, t would be
erjoyed That experience told by
Marv E. Sweger, 6033 Reinhart St.,
Phila. No wonder Mrs. $weger calls
vitaminized Flaxolyn “positiv wonder-
Flaxolyn at @&nce. You
the tonic A
up your eyg. Color
{ v ce the pd#le, pasty
; a wmce that po health, sleep-
I le and constipation,
the tten guarantee tha} if you

1 may obtain your y back
Stor
B. N. DILLINGER, Manager
Street MOUNT JOY, PENNA
morn



ELIZABETHTOWN
Watchnight
St. United
last night.
Mrs. Drumheller, mother of Mrs.
Vere Treichler of this place, fell and
broke her arm while on a visit to her
daughter in Pittsburgh.
The Auxiliary of the American Leg-
ion held a very successful card party
pinochle and five hundred, in the Leg-
Friday evening.
At th: Christmas 2vening services
of the local Church cf the Brethren,
on streec, an offering was
lifted for foreign missionary purposes.
which amounted to more than $1009.
McLaughlin Bros. purchased the
building formerly occupied the
Dauphin Axle Works, c¢n Brown
from the A. 3S. Kreider Shoe
Mfg. Co.,, and will use it for storage
in connection with their drayage busi
ness.
An application for the amendment
the present charter of the Christ
Reformed church Elizabethtown,
was made Thursday it was announced
the local
the Lancaster county
services were held in
Paul's Brethren church
ion rooms

as
street,
to
at
officers and members of
organization in
court of common pleas.
by
Nearly 10,000 persons from all
parts of Pennsylvania and sur-
rounding states including Ohio,
New Jersey, and others as far as
Kansas, have witnessed the Christ
mas display at the fire house,
according to vice president, Rhine
H. Smith.
The Men's Chorus of the Elizabeth-
town Brethren church, has now heen
in existence for about a year, and has
rendered programs, whole or in part,
at the places as follows: Brethren
Home, Swatara Hill Stevens Hill,
Home church, Heidelburg, Bunker-
town, Schuylkill, Green Tree and
Fredericksburg Brethren churches.
An application for a charter for a
new corporation at Eliazbethtown, to
be known as the Wagner & Hinkle
Inc.,, was made December 26 to Gov-
ernor John S. Fisher. The corpora-
tion proposes to buy and sell produce,
food stuffs, and, 6 merchandise of all
kinds. The incorporators are Harry
Wagner and Morris Hinle, both of
this boro.
Many more from
Lebanon, Dauphin and
ing counties, are expected to wit-
this feature within the next
or two. The display illus-
what Elizabethtown will
nrobably resemble ten years from
today, with a modern airport,
electrified railways, and other mod-
ern improvements and facilities, It
also contains about 35 cedar trees,
than 1,000 balls, about 700
and other similar features. |
Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Rider Routé
3, last Sunday entertained a
of friends at a pig roast at their
These were present: Mr. ani
John Ebersole, Elizabethtown;
and Mrs. Harry Reider, Middle-
Mr. and Mrs. William Snyder
and son Harry, Mr. and Mrs. William
Mr. Mrs Elwood Shank
and daughter Jean, Herman Hite,
Elizabethtown; Mrs. Paul Sloat, Har-
risburg; Samuel Kinsey Middletown;
Mr. and Mrs. William Gerlach, Abra-
Lancaster,
surround-
ness
week
trates
more
lights
number
home.
Mrs.
Mr.
town;
Boech, and
ham Zerphey and son Ralph, Eliza-
bethtown; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Kos-
er and children, Jay, Ruth, Junior,
Esther, Ira, Sara, Jane, Guy, Emma
Lou, Manheim; Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Reider and children, Alvin, Milton,
Christian, Emma and Ruth.
Officers of the Christ Reformed Sun-
day school elected their officers for
the ensuing year, at a recent meeting.
The officers included: Superinten-
dent, Jacob N. Olweiler, who succeeds
himself for about twenty-five years;
assistant superintendent, B. C. Mill-
er; secretary, Roy C. Heilman; as-
sistant secretary, Miss Thelma Ruth;
treasurer, Irvin H. Stauffer; pianist,
Miss Sarah Poorman; assistant plan-
ist, Mrs. Alda Roland; librarian Sam-
uel Seiber; assistant librarian, How-
ard Hain; chorister, Prof. Tillman H.
Ebersole; superintendent Primary
department, Ruth Burkholder; super-
intendent Junior department, Mrs. L.
C. T. Miller; superintendent Young
Peoples department, T. H. Ebersole.
These newly elected officers will be
installed at the next regular meeting
of the Sunday school department.
The Hlizabethtown Friendship
fire company, No. 1, will hold their
annual election night on Monday,
January 6, in the countil chambers
of the fire house, when the new
officers for the ensuing year will be
elected and installed. Following
are the officers recently nomina-
ted for the respective offices:
President, Ambrose 8S. Plummer;
vice president, Rhine H. Smith,
Harry A. Stauffer and Harvey H.
Seiders; secretary, Simon B. En-

zle; treasurer, Jacob N. Olweiler;
fire chief, W am D. Plummer,
Clyde K, Coble; hose director,
Amos D. Haldeman, Gus Steiner
Richard C. Meades; Cyrus Steiner
and George Kersey; chief driver,
Robert A. Coble, Roy Shaeffer,
Robert Brandt, Cyrus Steiner;
trustees, Harvey H. Seiders, Harry
W. Bretz, Amos B. Drace, Solomon
Becker; delegate to state conven-
tion, Harry A. Stauffer; delegate
to county convention, William D.
Plummer, Clyde Coble, George
Kersey, Harry A. Cyrus
Steiner, Donald Kersey.
— ~~

A New York dancer sues a thea-
tre for $100,000 damages claiming
he was severly burned when her
ancing costume caught fire. We
haven’t seen a dancing costume for
eral years, the burning of which
would ‘seorch anybody,
————
We know that the radio has ar-
“ived when we see some tightwads


* buying them,
same

NEW RADIO TRENDS
STRESSED IN SHOWS
Simplified Tuning and Screen
Grid Tubes Are the
Big Features.

Simplification in tuning, popularity
of screen grid tubes and exceptionally
artistic cabinets for radio receivers
are among the outstanding features
of the radio shows which now are in
progress throughout the United States,
Quantity production has brought the
greatest values ever offered
An innovatio.a is the offering by ona
of the largest manufacturers of the
first battery operated Radiolas whose
performance is comparable to those ft
socket power. This development,
made possible by loudspeaker refine-
ments and the increased efficiency of
the screen grid at a low current cone
sumption, is be.ng welcomed by own-
ers of homes unwired for electricity
Although the screen grid leads in
the new models as a radio frequency
amplifier, another new Radiotron, ue
UX-245, is used widely as an outstande-
ing part of the audio systems I'he
UY-227 and other standard tubes also
retain their popularity for the sp ic
uses for which they are best suited
The famous super heterodyne cire
cuit is employed in one of
est Radiolas, attracting attention
the o
the shows, but quantity production v:s
put this model for the first time in a
of ti
price class within the reach
vast majority of listeners


The entire control mechanicm of cone
modern radio recciver, HHluminated
dial numbers show on the escutchecn
window when the set is turned on.
Simplified tuning in some models ex-
hibited takes the form of tuning and
volume control from one combination
knob. In others it is aided by a magni-
fied tuning scale which throws illumi-
nated numbers of a size which can be
read easily upon a transiucent com-
position window in the escutcheon.
Radiola tuning scale is the re-
search laboratory’s answer to the prob-
lem of tuning receivers placed in posi-
tions where the light is not good.
In the Sixth Annual Radio World's
Fair in New York a radio Pageant of
Progress, prepared at a cost of more
than $100,000 by the Exhibition Divi-
sion of the Radio-Victor Corporation,
traced by means of historic apparatus,
replicas and true to scale models the
story of radio from Marconi to the
present. Similar historical exhibits of
radio are being placed by Radio-Victor
in other shows. George Clark, man-
ager of the Exhibition Division, is sec-
retary of a committee cooperating
with the Smithsonian Institution and
government officials in creating a na-
tional museum of radio, which eventu-
ally will house many of the exhibits
being shown by his company.
Television dem nstrations under the
auspices of the Radio Corpcration at
the New York show indicated real
progress, but the engineers whose bril-
liant work was responsible for the im-
provements were careful to point out
that other problems still remained to
ye soived before television would be
practical for home sets.
OWNERS OF RADIO
IN EVERY STATE
An interesting insight into the wide:
vy distributed ownership of the radio
industry in the United States is given
by the summary and classification of
the stock of the Radio Corporation nt
America, the largest radio organiza
tion in the world. The latest state-
ment shows stockholders in every
state in the Union. Ninety-nine per
ent of the class A common stock is
ywned in (he United States, much of
it being in the hands of small inves-
rors.
Although there is a good showing
n the industrial East, as in the case
f all stocks, New York State having
1,201 class A common stockholders,
illinois bas 357 stockholders in the
classification. California lists
134 class A common stockholders, al-
most as many as New Jersey, which
has 140.
Among the thirty-foun elzn coun-
ries in which there are holders of
:lass A common stock are such widely
separated points as Argentina, Aus
ria, British Guiana, Honduras, Egypt.
ndia, Venezuela, Norway, Japan and
lreland.


———

A Newark man, measuring four
feet and ten inches in height is
said to have been the smallest man
in the A. E. F. during the World
War. But it is, to be remembered
that a little man can shoot just as
hard and far asia big man.
re ell

The Lincoln Highway, which
runs from New York to San Fran-
cisco, is 3,323 miles long by actual
computation,



QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0
DOOD
e the new For
bodies at our
showrooms
%
%
+ 4 °
is an unbroken sweep of line—a flow-
ing of contour heretofore thought,
%
possible &nly in an expensive automo-
bile. Now, ‘more than ever, the new
Ford, is a “value far above the price.”
CLARENCE S. NEWCOMER"
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.

PICKED FROM
THE CARD BASKET =

(From page 1)
daughter, Margaret, were guests at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Sumpman on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Heilman
and daughter, Marie, of Elizabeth-
town, visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Germer on Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eby, of
Pittsburgh, spent the Christmas
holidays here with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Newcomer.
William F. Richards a student at
the Cazenovia Seminary, Cazenovia,
N. Y., is spending the holidays with
his uncle, Mr. Christ Walters and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Heisey
daughter, +Florence visited their
daughter, Mrs. Mark Basehore at
the Lancaster General Hospital on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Geib, and
Misses Anna and Emma Geib were
and
entertained to dinner at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Christ Shirk on
Sunday.
Miss Eva Martin of Harrisburg,
formerly of town, for the past
week was visiting Miss Violet Hilt
and friends. Also the former's
brothers and wives.
Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Gingrich, of
this place, and Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Meyre, of Lancaster, spent
nesday at Lititz with the former's
sister, Mrs. Annie Snavely.
Dr. and Mrs. Gates and
ter, of Norwood; Mrs. L.
and daughters, Misses ail
daujoh-
Wertz
and
Fannie, of Philadelphia, spent a
few days here at the Ffpiscopal
rectory.
Mr. and Mrs. J. G. on of
102 East Donegal streef{ spent the
holidays visiting their fson and his
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Witmer Eberle
at 1633 Park stre it, Harrisburg.
Mr. Witmer veri is at present
covering the news happenings in
the Pennsylvania State Capitol
for the Harrrisburg Patriot.
The League of Nations is pre-
paring for a tariff holiday in Eur-
ope, and we hope that Congress
will soon get busy and pass a suit-
able tariff bill here so that we can
have a tariff holiday in the United
States.
—--
It is said that it takes the aver-
age Chicago girl six minutes to do
her primping before going out.
Now, we know that Chicago is the
swiftest city in the country.
Bl f—-'™’' tt
Most of the women who are wor-
rying about being a few pounds
overweight could solve the problem
easily by doing their own cooking.
———
It is said that the air in Califor-
nia makes carrier pigeons dizzy.
Maybe this is what is the matter
with a lot of our movie actors.

 
2. 111 A
c=
| a



~~
RRO Si

#

Own Home
%


. %
road to independehge.

ing this Series.
Earn 6 Percent. |
*
THE MOUNT JOY

ASSOCIATION
11
 
From the new deep radiator to the
rving tip of the rear fender, there
i’
POO
QOOOOC
1 TE
“Prepare To Own Your
Start now With Building and Loan stock.
A regular mofgthly savings will start you on the
. %
Join the many started that way by join-
Your Savings
4TH SERIES STILL OPEN {OR SUBSCRIPTION
BUILDING and LOAN,

















”




=
If you want a nice Calendar
yours for the asking af.
Mount Joy, Pa.
ext year 193%, 1t 1s
D. B. BRUBAKER'S STOR
Under Supervision State Banking Department
\,' a
coma % =
I 11 RE ui




 
 






time, says:
“H. Z. Mitchell’ ‘Sentinel’,”
in the National Editorial Contest.
welfare.
excelled by any publication, of any kind.
possible customer.”
{


THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER OF GREAT VALUE
ACCORDING TO STATEMENT OF NOTED
EDITORIAL WRITER—PROVEN BY FACTS
Arthur Brisbane, one of the best minds of the
. Z. published at
Bermidjii, Minn., wins the prize as best weekly
This is
good time to remind the public in general, and
national advertisers in particular, that country
weekly newspapers are the most important or-
gans of public opinion and protectors of public
“And, their advertising per mill line, is not
“The reader of a country weekly buys every-
thing from shingles on the roof to cement in the
cellar floor, and every advertiser has in him a

a
 

 



A