The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 01, 1930, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX


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SAY YOU BIG BUM-
YOu CQOT- WHAT DYg
THINK | AM A COONS
On or Evid
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INTERNATIONAL CARTOON CO. Bj.

Tas (S WHAT You NEED
AND XN LARGE DOSES



1 eon want thebest
+
can afford to pay for it
—theRadio {oryou .e
1S = \
£4 A
KELLOGG
After all, it doesnt cost mu:
more than our low priced =
There's a wonderful model ss
low as $175 without tubes. See it. {



MOUNT JOY, PA.


 


our customers lo8
your parties.
MOUNT JOY, PA.

sters because are
tempting. Fresh A
In our serve
only the best Salt ater Oy-
sters obtainable. Frie
Oysters have no ; give
them a trial; serve th at
Stumpf’s Restaura
A
B. Hostetter & Son




onile
For pyorrhea
For prevention
against gum infec-
tions, use Zonite,
the new powerful
antiseptic. Also
guards against
colds, coughs and
more serious dis-
eases of nose and
throat.






Be sure you get the genuine
Pinaud’s
Fau de Quinine
—the world’s most
famous hair tonic
Checks dandruff
— keeps hair
thick and strong







At your favorite store or tear this
advertisement out and mail io
Pinaud, Dept. M, 220 East 2151
St., New York, for free sample








 
STONE
Before your
elsewhere, see us.
Crushed Stone.
turers of Concre
Sills and Lintels.



 

order
go manufac-
Blocks,
Joy
J.
to
ly

meetings
evening,
1930 MEETING
APPOINTMENTS T#
BRETHREN IN CHRIST WEEKLY
PRAYER MEETING APPOINT-
MENTS FOR THE COMING
YEAR
Following is the complete list of
weekly
ments of Brethren in Christ in
appoint-
Mt.
1930. These
Thursday
prayer meeting
for the year
are held every
JANUARY
Clayton Brubaker
9 Eli Engle
no
16 Aaron Heisey
23 Grosh Sisters
30 John Myers
FEBRUARY
6 M. B. Hossler
13 Ezra Zercher
20 Oliver Greenawalt
27 Amos Wolgemuth
MARCH
6 Morris Stauffer
13 Benj. Greenawalt
20 Albert Strickler
27 Avery Engle
APRIL
3 Jacob Wolgemuth
10 Morris Stauffer
17 John Grosh
24 Henry Zerphey
MAY
1 Eli Engle
8 Harry Fishburn
15 Amos Wolgemuth
22 John Melhorne
29 Jacob Heisey
JUNE
5 Lavina Hostetter
12 Jay Sherk
19 Warren Heisey
26 Jacob Gruber
JULY
3 Amos Wolgemuth
10 Eli Engle
17 Eli Hostetter
24 John Myers
31 Grosh Sisters
AUGUST
7 M. B. Hossler
14 Oliver Greenawalt
21 Avery Engle
28 Ezra Zercher
SEPTEMBER
4 Benj. Greenawalt
11 Harry Fishburn
18 Albert Strickler
25 Jacob Wolgemuth
OCTOBER
2 Morris Stauffer
9 Aaron Heisey
16 John Grosh
23 Jay Sherk
30 John Melhorne
NOVEMBER
6 Harry Brubaker
13 Amos Wolgemuth
20 Clayton Brubaker
27 Eli Engle
DECEMBER
4 John Myers
11 Grosh Sisters
18 M. B. Hossler
25 Avery Engle
ml Gp
5385 YEARS OF SERVICE
FOR 187 BELL EMPLOYES
Telephone Company’s Assistant

Auditor Is Dean of Veteran
Anniversarians.

What is believed to be a record im
this State for continuous service
one industry has been established by
187 employes of The Bell Telephone
Company of Pennsylvania, who this
year are observing service annives=
saries of 25 to 55 years inclusive.
This group, comprised of men and
women who have had prominent parts
iin the company’s vast program de-
{signed to provide the best possible
communication network, has a total of
5385 years of service.
The dean of the veterans is William
McLaughlin, assistant auditor, with
55 years of service.
Three men are observing their 50th
anniversaries, five others have beem
connected with the industry for 48
years each, and six have 40 years of
service.
35-year careers,
ployed for 30 consecutive years and
105 have been engaged in telephone
work for 25 years.
Sixteen employes boast of
51 have been em-
446,000 EIPLOYES
An industrial army numbering more
than 446,000 is maintained for the
sole purpose of providing the best
telephone service possible for sub-
scribers of the Bell System, according
statistics recently released by the
American Telephone and Telegraph
Company. The Bell Telephone Com-
pany of Pennsylvania and the other
Associated Companies employ 367,000,
the Western Electr'e Company 74,900
and the Bell Telephone Laboratories
5300. More than half of the employes
are women.
tam rn AAR eerie ees
3,000 pieces of mail not proper-
addressed and bearing return
address, received at the Lancaster
postoffice over Christmas,
sent to the dead
Washington D. C.
will be
letter office at
|

1
i
A
America
through
5, Ant) AUSTRALIA
{EY TELEPHONE
Ii Dein NSTRATION
T.&T. Co. Qificials Exchange
Greetings With Communica-
tion Experts in Sydney.
talked to Australia
regular telephones for the
first time recently when officials of
the American Telephone and
Tele-
graph Company exchanged greetings
with Australian telephone officials in
Sydney.
onstration of the
connecting
The occasion was the informal dem-
practicability of
the trans-Atlantic tele-
phone channel operated by the A. T.
&
T. Co. and the British Postoffice
with the new short wave radio tele-
phone channel operated by the British
Government Postoflice between Great
Britain and the Australian continent,
that soon may be opened for commer-
cial use.
The short wave trans-Atlantic radio
channel now in regular use for Euro-
pean service was utilized in the dem-
onstration, permitting the voices of
the speakers to be carried approxi-
mately 15,000 miles by the short wave
systems of the United States and Aus-
tralia.
From New York, the ealls passed
over wire lines to the company’s trans-
mitting center at Lawrenceville, N. J.,
thence by radio to Baldock, near Lon-
don, then by wire to the British gov-
ernment’s
transmitting station at
Rugby, and again by radio to Aus-
tralia.
An interesting aspect of the con-
versations was that while they took
place at 4 o'clock in the afternoon,
New York time, clocks in Sydney read
6
A. M. the next day.
Trans-Atlantic telephone service to
European countries constantly is being
extended, the most recent additions
including all points in Czecho-Slo-
vakia and to Turin and Genoa, Italy.
With the extension of the service to
Genoa, the birthplace of Columbus
was provided with direct telephone
communication with the continent he
discovered. Following his discovery,
two months were required to carry the
news to his home.
Today the human
voice travels the seme distance in a
fraction of a second.
phone service
points in Austria.
On November 6, trans-Atlantic tele-
was extended to all
For the last year
it had been available to Vienna.

FIRST-AID EXPERY



MISS MARY F. JACKSON
Supervising health course instructor in
Pittsburgh for The Bell Telephone
Company of Pennsylvania, who is the
first woman in the company’s service
to complete the Red Cross course in
first-aid work.
BELL COMPANY ADDS
|
|
|
65,000 TELEPHONES
T0 PENNA, NETWORK
Gain for Ten Months in 1929 is
51 P. C. Greater Than Aver-
age of Last Five Years.

With an increase of approximately
65,000 instruments during the first ten
! months of 1929, the number of Bell
| telephones in operation in this State
{ has grown more rapidly this year
than during any previous year in the
history of the Bell Telephone Com-
pany of Pennsylvania, according to
Leonard H. Kinnard, president.
This increase is more
preceding five years.
There now are more than 1,200,000
Bell telephones in service in Pennsyl-
vania, as compared with about 690,000
in the year 1919.
Today nearly half a million homes
and business establishments
State may be reached by telephone
which a decade ago could be reached
only by messenger or by a personal
visit, indicating the increasing value
in convenience and time-saving which
the service provides.
of milk is
souring,
than 50 degrees Farenheit
the growth and re-
injurious bac-
favorable to
production of
BR
Cool Milk Properly
Immediate and adequate cooling
necessary to prevent
of less
is un-
A temperature
the
teria.

than 51
per cent. greater than the average for
the corresponding period during the
in the



 
 

Q ry
outed
Coffee

SEW OLR X
7)
Veoetabl €
Soup
Nt ern avisa
Rolls and butter .10
Peach urpr
' Total


7,
AN
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30
10




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os







A Dollar Dinner For Four
ITH the above account on
view, who can deny that by
the aid of careful shopping
and taking advantage of food sales
a delicious meal can be prepared
for four adults for one dollar?
The can of vegetable soup needs
only to have water added and to
be heated before serving, and the
can of spinach may be sautéd and
seasoned with celery salt and onion
salt and served.
To prepare the sausages, sauté
two sliced onions in two tablespoons
bacon fat until golden brown. Add
one number 2% can of tomatoes
and bring to boiling; add salt and
pepper to taste. Add one-fourth
cup rice and cook gently until rice

is tender. Add contents of a 9
ounce can of Vienna sausages anc
heat through.
For the peach surprise eight
peach halves from a can are needed
Chop two tablespoons figs and two
tablespoons pecans and mix, using
enough evaporated milk to bind to-
gether. The seven cents left from
your dollar will cover the cost of
these. Place the peach halves to-
gether, filling the holes with the
g and pecan mixture. Place in
sherbet glasses and top with
whipped, evaporated milk. To
whip the milk, put the can into
water, heat to the boiling point,
then chill rapidly, then whip. Serve
immediately, *





He you know you could buy |
~
ham with the flavor sealed in
Why
pick
ham
it? “How?” you ask.
Just go to your dealers and
out a selected, mildly cured
which is vacuum cooked and steri- |

lized in its own can. All its
are sealed in and the hau is
a
Ces


ered to you fresh, orful and
tender. The skin and bone and
other waste are all renioved. To |
serve whole, simply pop inio the |
oven and brown. For medium sized
families the whole ham we
six to ten pounds and whic
bake in sixty minutes may be pur
chased.
the three to five-pound can of


which will bake in thirty mihutes. |
Toothsome Uses
Everyone knows the usual ways
of using ham, in sandwiches, cold
with salads, baked, fried, with eggs,
and so on, but there are other meth-
Flavor-Sealed Ham
will |
Smaller families will prefer |
ham |
oan rt on
A XRAY

which just delectable
ods
i and more unusual.
("TF
thick
are as
or instance, cut ote or two inch-
ham and

siices of hros
  
t t in the biking pa our
crusiied pmcapple over the ham and
add one-half
slowly until tender. Re: to hot

cup weiter





platter and pour hot pineapple
syrup around it.
Tomatoes stuifed with hom are
| delicious. Remove a thin slice from
the top of each tomato and remove
seeds and pulp. Run canned ham
thr the ind md mix
with i a $s
and th { |
salt. i Nn
|. ture, cover w HS
| and bake thirty minut:
| ate oven
| Celery and ham may be creamed
| torether and served on toast, gare
nished with minced par:zley.*



iE
WA |
dy A 2
7
ce AY
VE 4
f

A
JA
—-
an now he
the distribution or
ast showing
rersion of
‘omplished fact
Manna from the Sky
me ot the large





this

is se
every
men
o

ons towns. Nothing is sold from
this. but the permanent
shelvine ‘n the cabin holds a displav

af pick
and a il]
and fruits,
line of

LMOST everything nas taken
to flying. but it comes as a sur-
prise to hear that even a grocery
found zooming around
the empyrean. Yet this modern
at
if not showering of
1anna has recently become an ac-
manufacturers
nd distribntors of canned foods has
out a tri-motored plane with
irlete line of his products and
ing flying grocery to
ir port in the country. Sales-
ompany the ship to describe
the contents to retailers at the vari-
es, preserves. tea and coffee
-anned vegetahles
Comiortable seats are


arranged in the plane 1or passengers,
and large windows allow a view of
the country over which the airplane
passes.
The airplane is the latest model
Ford all-metal monoplane. Accord-
ing to “Canning Age,” it is “a
duplicate in design of the airplane
used by the Transcontinental Air
Transport as a ‘flying office’ for
Colonel Lindbergh and Colonel
Lamphier, that used bv Mrs. Lind-

)» to Mexico in 1927,
e now in use with
Antarctic Expedition.”
bergh in her t
and of the
Byrd's
While this flving grocery is not
designed for selling, hut rather, for
the display of foods. who knows
how long it will be before airplanes
will be bringing groceries to out-
of-the-way communities at reaular
intervals? The ramd advances in
aviation hrine hic well within the
reaim of possilility.*




¥
WEDNESDAY, JAN.
1,

1930













 




well-to-do and man.








4
Suppose You See Us About \It
\


First National Bank &
Trust Company
OF MOUNT JOY













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at






 


Bi
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DISPLAY






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Tealizing the great Yo
Imbortance of CUTE”
this Newspabet 1s
furnishing She wu.
CUTE COPY
J ERVIC E
In New Reizases E
Month ~A Service
WFREE TO ALL ADVERTISE


In -
ADVERTISIN
Come in and let us show you how easily we can assist yow
in preparing your copy for advertising and circular work.
If you can’t call at the office, ring 41R2 and see how quickly
our advertising representative will be at your service.














 
 
 

 































Don’t follow in the same old rut—Pep up your advertising
our expense.
The BULLETIN
11 TO 2


110 LO
MOUNT JOY, PA.
11 EE 1


 


101
hg
MOLASSES FEED MIXING

PR a
WE HAVE A MIRACLE PROCESS MO-
LASSES MIXING MACHINE. 'NOWAWE CAN MIX ANY FORMULA
YOU WANT AND ADD MOLASSES.TC IT. GIVE US A TRIAL.
%,
WE ARE ALSO IN A POSITION TO.SELL MOLASSES IN ANY
Ra,
QUANTITY. %
h 7 FN a
WOLGEMUTH BROS, FLORLY,
Phones: 151R4 and 57R6

Also All Kin air Work
PROMPT SERVICE
JOSEPH L. HEI
Phone—179R5


THE OFFICES OF
JOHN. HIPPLE
Attorn@yqat-Law
Formerly, 40 North Duke St; Lancaster, Pa.

My,
Are Now Located at
RHEEMS, PENNSYLVANIA
Telephone: Elizabethtown 96-R2 9
hy J
\ {
 
 




 
11)
PA.
CES REASONABLE
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