The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 26, 1930, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR .
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
WEDNESDAY,
FEB. 26, 1930

ANNUAL REPORT
of the
BOROUGH ACCOUN
T
of
MOUNT JOY BOROUGH
For the year ending Dec. 31, 1929
RECEIPTS
Jan. 17 Bal. on hand ...$
Feb. 4 Jas. Metzler, 1927
Boro Tax ooo...
Mar. 1 C. N. Mumma,
laying pavement
Mar. 5 H. H. Engle
2,615.21
44.00



Mateer, Samuel, salary 47.50
Treas. of General Co.
Don. to Memorial Par. 100.00
Metzler, J., com. on coll. 262.56
Murphy, J. L., tel. charge
and stenog. work .... 6.50
Musser Amos, ins. ..... 16.25
Newcomer, Clar.,, gas 2
Newcomer, H. S. & Son,
hardware ........... 9.59
Newcomer, H. S., hdwe 181.08
Nissley, H. N., treas., sal,
1928-1929-1930 ...... 30.00
Nissley, H. N., treas.,






 


Mar. 5 Columbia Tel Co. 27.25 trans. from Boro to
Mar. 3 Post) Jes Co. Water... ..... 0... 1,000.00
ar. 4 Jas. Metzler sly, H. treas.,
Mar. 7 Edison Elee. Co. 2, trans. from Bore to
Mar. 7 H. H. Engle > =. Sinking Fund ....... 1,000.00
Mar. 7 Donegal Gas Co. 10.00 Nissly, H. N.. treas., Fire
Mar. 7 Southern Pipe 0 CO. iss ivi ras 700.00
Line Company ....... 5.50 ‘Nigslv & Schelling, paint-
Mar. 14 H. H. Engle, lic. 18.00 oe post Tes 2 : 181.00
Mar. 19 W. Tyndall, rent 62.50 Lawrence. Labor. . 370.45 |
Mar. 21 Conestoga "Trac Poffo ar gl nd sid
Co. 2610 29 rewal sogp Poder BF, labor an 5.50
Mar 20 Bon Xe, Co. : 17.00 Pa. Lime & Cement Co., aD
pr. = Jas. Metzler, col, - Stone... ... 0. 0. 722.0
A Ivar hig Be] anes wih Platt Iron Works, pump 139:0 |
pr. o H. H. ol «4.0 0 Ge 29.00
Apr. 3 Gray Iron Co, vas Ricksecl ( labor & %
SCYap i... 0 7.62 Material Lov. 12.0(
Apr. 24 M. C. Bowman, Roy eer Bigs... 18.56 ;
cutting down tree . 2.00 schock, C.. lumber. ce. i
May 7 Jas. Metzler, col. Y45:50 nt and coal ...... 275.85
928 tax nL veal 43.5 sek Indepent. Co., oil 5.00
May 7 Donegal Gas Co. 5.00 gk. B be abhor 0 10 50
May 7 H. H. Engle .... 27.25 ine "03033
May 8 Transfer Water 5 Shaw, F. H., Engi. cer .. 88.00
RECOUNT. einem sone 2,000.00 gmeltzer, Henry, sal. ... 1,400.00
May 18 Jac. Baker, use Lb Db. S.. bors... 5.60
of «vain van, ; 1.75: Showaiter, M., salary 80.00
June 3 Jas. Metzler, col. onn np | Spickler, Oliver, labor 419.10
Boro tax ........... 200.00 Sprout, Abner, labor 56.70 ,
June 24 W. Tyndall, P. in { State Workman's Insur-
J on H Burs $2.20 | ance Fund, renewals 103.34
uly 2 H. H. Engle, Burg 31. Stauffer, J. N. & Bro., |
July 2 Refund Premium | foe ee reir 770.94 |
J SIRE Steins Ins od { Thomas Enock, treasurer i
uly = H. H. Engle 5 ¥920 dues... 12.00
July 3 Jas. Metzler, tax bai Watt & Shand, pol. unif. 49.00 ,
$920... [yt Hee Tae
July 8 E. D. Henry, tools 1.08 labor & sup, ........ 40.48 |
July 11 Esrelman. Bro, 5.00 | Wertz, Amos, labor 343.85
ground rent ........ | Williams, Harry, labor 259.00
July 11 A. B. Hoffer, lab 7.00 | Witmer, Joseph, labor 54.25
Aug. SH H. Engle, lic. 5 | Young Tire Shop, gas 27.61
fees ............... 21.00 | Zeller, Jacob, salary .... 175.46
Aug 26 Trea of Popa 112.43 | Zerphey, Elmer, sal. pol 1,206.00
ire Ins., Tax refun 2.43
Mateer, Emerson, labor .
|






Aug. 26 Needle Guild Total Expenditures ...3$17,845.05
Luth chur, park lights 1.00 | Balance Jan. 29, 1930 2,348.30
Sept. 6 Jas. Metzler, col. 80,00 Tr
Sept. 10 B. W. Brown, $20,193.35
curb block .......... 2.50 | We, the undersigned auditors for
Sept. 10 Gray Iron Cast- . = | Mount Joy Borough, have carefully
ing, taps and valves 26.15 | examined the account of H. N. Niss-
Sept. 10 Jonas Barto, use | ly. treasurer. Union National Bank,
of pump ............ 2.00 | being depositor and find same to
Sept. 10 S. B. Bernhardt be correct.
Estate oc ivi 2.00 JAMES GLATFELTER
Sept. 10 H. H. Engle, lic. 24.75 CHRIST H. HERR, JR.
Sept. 21 Wm. Tyndall, P. Auditors
0. vent ............. 62.50
tf. 24 DO'S ras Co. 00
Sept. 24 Mant Gas Ins. 67.0| SINKING FUND ACCOUNT
Oct. 16 J. E. Longeneck- | Certificate to Jan. 1, ’30 $18,046.18
er, concrete work .... 8.00 | Int. on Certi. 1% vets 721.84 |
Oct. 17 H. N. Nissly, oil. 4.00 | Sinking Fund Paid ..... 1,000.00 ;
Oot. 27.7 B. Beamosder Int. on Water Bonds 12.00 |
fer, oiling :.......... 1.50 er
Oct. 17 J. E. Schroll, oil 1.50 $19,780.02
Nov. 4 N..J. Harman, oil 3.00
Nov. 4 C. H. Herr, oiling 2.00 STRICKLER COAL FUND
Nov. 4 M. W. Groff, stone 13.501 Bal. Dec. 31, 1028 ........ . $48.71
Nov. 4 Jas. Metzler, boro Coupon Oct. 8, 1929 ....... 40.00
ax... 895.00
Nov. 6 H. H. Engle, lic. 88.71
fees ................ 21.00 DISBURSEMENTS
Dec. 3 Jas. Metzler, coll . 69.00 | Jan. 7, 1929, C. Schock ....$ 7.18
Dec. 20 Eli M. Engle, oil 3.00 | May 6, 1929 F. H. Baker ... 6.63
Dec. 20 J. B. Hershey, Dec. 31, 1929 F. H. Baker .. 6.63
oiling ............... 1.50 | Dec. 31, 1929 F. H. Baker .. 24.3%
Dec. 20 M. K. Brubaker
Est., oiling .......... 2.00 $44.82
Dec. 30 James Metzler, Bal, idan. 29, 1080 ........ 43.89
boro tax ............ 72.25 Re
Dec. 30 Dr. W. D. Chand- Total... oni $88.71
ler, oiling ........... 1.50 We, the undersigned auditors of
Dec. 30 H. H. Zerphey, Mt. Joy Borough, have found the
gine +... 2.00 | account of the Sinking Fund and
Dec. 31 P.O. rent ..... 62.50 | Strickler Coal Fund for the poor,
Dec. 31 H. H. Engle . 32.50 correct.
Jan. 4, 1930 Donegal Gas JAMES GLATFELTER
Company ........... 5.00 CHRIST H. HERR, JR.
Jan. 8 D. B. Brubaker, oil 2.00 Auditors
Jan. 17 Columbia Tel. Co. 27.25
Jan. 17 Donegal Gas Co. 10.00 ANNUAL REPORT
Jan. 17 Edison Elec. Co., of the
pole tax ............ 162.00 WATER ACCOUNT
Jan. 17 Car License ... 20.00 of
Jan. 22 Southern Pipe MOUNT JOY BOROUGH
Line ............... 5.50 | For the year ending Dec. 31, 1929
Jan. 22 Western Union RECEIPTS
Telegraph ........... 18.50) yan, 17, 1929 Balance ...$ 517.49
on 102 a= | March 4 Zeller collected . 7,162.53
Total .............. $20,193.35 April 1 Zeller collected .. 225.00!
EXPENDITURES May 6 Zeller collected 39.50
Althouse, Geo., fot., oils $ 22.11 June 3 Zeller collected .. 63.25
Atlantic Refining, oil 1,305.70 Sept. 10 Zeller collected . 54.60
Bailor, Charles, 12” ... 10.50 | Nov. 7 Transfer Boro to
Bates, Leroy, lab, mat .. 15.67 Water account ....... 1,000.00
2. Cr
Bssmbacty Julbo aN 39.901 Total Receipts ........ $9,112.37
Brown Tin Shop, rep. 2.25 EXPENDITURES
Brubaker, D. B., merch. 8.75 | Althouse, Geo., fgt ...... $ 47.48
Columbia Tel. Company, Arntz. H. B. ........... .50
vent and toll ........ 86.70 | Atlantic Refin Co., oil, gas 66.55
Conestoga Delivery Co., Baker, PF. H., coal ...... 497.82
hauling '............. 1.25 | Baumbach, John, labor 1.92
Coyle, John A., profes- Budding, J. C., supplies 20.43
sional advice ........ 230.00 | Columbia Tele. Co., rent . 36.75
Dehoff, John, insurance 6.20 | Darling Valve & Mfg. Co.,
Dept. of Highways, main- supplies. 66.15
taining routes ....... 72.86 | Dept. of Labor and Ind.
Dept. of Labor and Ind., operating cert. ....... 1.00
operating certificate 1.00 | Ebersole, D. C., lab., mat. 24.20
Donavan, O. M., ins. ... 10.02 | Farquhar, A. B., grate bars 72.00
Ebersole, D. C., filing saw 4.40 | Frank, Mrs. W. P., labor. 5.95
Edison Elec. Co., lamps, Garlock Packing Co., sup 44.90
pole vent ........... 2,289.22 | Glatfelter, Jas., auditing
Engle, H. H., exp. gen- Water account ....... 3.00
eral aceount ........ 40.00 | Good, Frank, labor ..... 105.00
Engle, H. J., ice, 1928 6.76 | Goodell, J. E., analysis 10.00
Eshleman Bros. three Groff, Geo., hauling ..... 57.36
pairs boots .......... 17.00 | Groff, M. W., labor, mat 336.95
Eshelman, Isaac, carpen- Herr, C., auditing Water
ter work ........... 5.00 account oi... 3.00
Eshleman, R. F., signs 12.30 | Hoffman, Roy, hauling ... 8.00
Evans, John, labor ..... 42.70 { Leedom, Harry, coal 435.61 |
Gingrich, C., labor ..... 2.50 | Markley, Harry, labor 17.50
Glatfelter, Jas., auditing. Mateer, Emerson, labor 3.50
Boro and Sinking Acc. 5.00 | Newcomer. H. S., hdwe 17.00
Good, Frank, labor ..... 452.25 | Nissly, H. N., treas., trans.
Goodrich, B. F., Rubber Water ace to Int. ..... 1,000.00
Co., 500 ft. hose 650.00 | Nissly, H. N., treas., trans.
Greider, C. C., Ins. 5.39 Water to Boro account. 2,000.00
Grey Iron Casting Com- Nobs, Lawrence, labor 38.50
pany, castings ....... 6.00 { Raub Supply Co., supplies 565.70
Groff, George, hauling 1,440.00 | Shatz, Geo., salary ...... 1,031.25
Heisey, Elmer, labor & Schock, C., coal and lumb 175.47
material ............ 29.42 | Shatz, Mary, Labor ...... 5.00
Herr, Christ, audit. Boro Schock Ind. Oil Co., grease 2.50
and Sinking Fund 5.00 | Schroll, J. L., hauling .70
Herr & Co., wheelbarrow 5.00 ! Singleton, Robert, labor 21.00
Hershey, Frank, salary 90.00 | Spickler, Oliver, labor ... 75.25
Hoffman, Roy, hauling .. 68.80 | Vondersmith, H. M., ma-
Horst, Christian, labor .. 112.50 terial and labor ....... 1,099.65
Hostetter, J. B., and Son, Wallas & Tierman, sup 138.71
hardware ........... 27.74 | Warley Thorn Co., sup. 33.75
Kaylor, Irvin, labor 2.50 Wertz, Amos, labor ..... 63.00
Kaylor Garage, labor 2.00 | Williams, H. J., labor 49.00
Lebzelter, Philip & Sons, | Witmer, Joseph, labor 71.75
Co., tires and tubes .. 20.50 | Zeller, Claud, labor 32.50
Leedom, Harry, coal 35.88 Zeller, Jacob, sal 116.63
Leib, M. M., salary .... 90.00
Markley, Harry, labor .. 43.75 Total Expe.. .$8,402.93
Markley, Wm,. labor ... 12.25 { Bal. on hand Jan. zu, 30 709.44
Marten, E., State treas., eee
"tax on corp. loans 95.00 $9,112.37
3.50 | We, the undersigned auditors of |
MORE BROADCASTS HEATING PLANT
FROM EUROPE SOON BEST SOURCE OF
New treats in radio programs in the
next few months are forecast by Dr.
Alfred N. Goldsmith, Vice-President
and General Engineer of the Radio
Corporation of America, whose work
in research since the infaney of radio
gives his opinion weight,
“It is expected,” Dr. Goldsmith said,
“that in the coming season there will
be a notable increase in the quantity



Dr. Alfred N. Goldsmith
and quality of international broadcast-
ing and a widened interchange of pro
grams between various European
countries and the leading broadcast:
ing agency in the United States.
“Receiviag sets show a tendency
toward still greater simplification of
control. Tuning in is a single opera.
tion performed almost simultaneously.
The contro! of volume is equally sim
ple and smooth.”
BANKERS TO HOLD
GREAT CONVENTION
Cleveland, Ohio, has been desig-
nated for the 1930 annual coiv ‘ution
of the American Bankers Association.
This organization, which nuniners
about 20,000 banks with $65,000,000,000
in assets, is annually the nation's most
important, financial event 1e attend-
ance ranges between five and ten
thousand.


nd is especially significant
ory of the Association's edu-
litions since it was in this
 



e in the year 1899, that the origi-
nal resolution was presented looking
to the formation of an educational
section, This subsequently resu!i~d in
the American Institute of in
which are now enrolled 35,093 i,:nk
men and women engaged in the study
i of the technical and scientific phases
of the husiness,
Age of Superstition
It is told that during the Sixteenth
century a Swiss naturalist and physi-
eian of the name of Thurneysser kept
some scorpions in a bottle of olive
oil and that these insects were feared
by the people as diabolical beasts.
This physician presented an elk to
his native city, Switzerland,
but the people of the city regarded
the elk as a devil in disguise. “and a
pious old woman finally rid the town
of the dreaded beast by feeding fit
with an apple stuck full of broken
needles.”
Basel,
For Walkers Only!
The first invented
by John Fischer, a London mechanic.
His patent, sealed on June 17, 1783,
was for “a geometrical and pedomet-
pedometer was
rical watch which not only answers
the purpose of a common watch, but
is also distinguished by showing on


step the walker makes
and by measuring the distance.”
A combined and watch
of this type made a few years
but not by is in the South
Kensington museun, London.
ree GD Qe ee
A New York hacker is said to
be writing a book about his twenty
the dial ever

pedometer
Fischer,

|
HOME HUMIDITY
“Foolproof Humidifier” Ca.
pable of Evaporaiing 20
Gallons Water a Day.


In seeking a means to humidify his
home. in order to promote the health
and comfort of members of his family
and to prolong the service of rugs and
furnishings which are damaged by ex-
cessively dry air, the home owner finds
five types of humidifiers available.
Three can be used where radiator
heating systems are installed, and two
in connection with’ warm air circulat-
ing plants, according to the Holland
Institute of Thermology of Holland,
Mich., which has just completed a
study of the whole subject of humid-
ity in the home and a market survey
of humidifying devices.
Latest among the five types is a
metal urn to be placed on a table and
connected with an electric light socket
{ during the heating season so as to
| evaporate water poured into it. Inex-
pensive in itself and requiring little
current. this urn helps to solve the
! the room
humidity problem, but exact ficures
as to the amount of water it will va-
purize are not given
Steam System Elaborate.
Another humidifier for steam heat-
Ing systems consists of an evaporat-
ing chamber attached in the basement
to the heat pipe leading to an upstairs
room. When sufficient steam is up to
eviporate the water in this chamber,
a tube leading up through the floor
behind the radiator carries vapor into
As air circulates about the
radiator, the vapor is caught up and
disseminated through it. Although
this device is more expensive to buy
and install than the first one de-
scribed. it costs little for operation.
Bur figures are not available as to its
actual vaporizing capacity
Then there are the water pans used
I connection with radiators. These
have evolved from homemade make-
shifts to invisible containers built into
radiator cabinets of all degrees of re-
finement. often arranged so that fill-
ing is easy These enhance the “Hp
peiirance of the room as well as sup
ply moisiure. But authoritative engi-
neering tests have demonstrited that
ony when an excessive amount of wa-
ter surface is exposed can enough wa-
when the organization last met |!
ter be
provide
evaporated by such devices to
the required humidity.
Water Pans Helpful.
Warm air circulating heating plants
usally have water pans built into
thie. The heat of the firebox con
verts the water into steam. which is
circulated with the warm air to all
rooms of the home. Humidifiers
of this type evaporate hetween one
and two gallons a day. which 1s suffi
ci- nt for a small home
But ull these devices must be kept
fi'ledl. or they are practically useless.
This fact has caused. a search for an
device with sutlicient ca-
later, |
years experience as a taxicab
driver. It may make exciting read-
ing if he can get it past the |
censors.


"MY SALE WAS A
REAL KNOCKOUT “



12 USED OUR NII
CTs
IN HIS ADS
Furnished by
THIS NEWSPAPER
Mount Joy Borough, hereby certify
we have carefully examined the
account of the Mount Joy Borough
Water Account at the Union Na-
tional Bank and find same to be
true and correct.
We have also destroyed coupons
to the amount of $988.00.
JAMES GLATFELTER
CHRIST H. HERR, JR.
Auditors





Spb
pacity to keep the atmosphere in even
the home humiditied to the
proper degree -a search that has re-
sulied in the invention of a system by
which an attachment to the plumbing
pipes brings water continuously to the
and conveys
largest
warm air heating plant
it throneh the easing into a series of
three troughs in front of the firebox.
There the water is evaporated. and
then the vapor is carried by the cir-
culating warm air currents to all
puris ot the house
like the automatic devices. a hu
miditier must be “foolproof.” No any
overilow that may occur drips into the
ashpit. where it does no damage. but
on the contrary dampens the ashes as
they accumulate and produces steam
which aids combustion
Practical tests in ordinary home in-
staliations have shown that this hu-
midifier is capable of evaporating as
much as 20 gallons of water a day.
and of maintaining relative humidities
per cent. Of course.
but the tests clear-
ax high as 64
this is excessive;
Iv show this humidifier capable of
maintaining the 40 per cent relative
humidity which heating engineers and
medical anthorities agree upon as the
ideal

2 FREE BOOKLETS
TELL OF HUMIDITY,
AIR MOTION IN HOME


Home owners who are interested in
getting the most comfort out of their
heating plants will be interested ip
two new publications being distributed
without cost by the Holland Institute
of Thermology Holland. Mich. Writ-
ten in lunguage that every one can
understand. each booklet deals with
one aspect of air conditioning
“Humidity in the Home" discusses the
amount of water that must be vapor-
ized and circulated in the home each
day if a healthful and comfortable
atmosphere is to be maintained It
alse shows how the home owner can
go about operating nis heating plant
to secure the proper amount of mois
ture
“Air Motion in Home Cooling and
Home Heating” shows how the prin-
ciples of air conditioning employed in
theaters and other large buildings can
he used to dwellings cooler in
stitmer as well as warmer in winter
Copies of either one or both of these
may be secured free by ad
Ree

dre a the Holland Institute of Ther
moor Holland Mich
——— ee.
A professor in the University
of Pennsylvania suggests that
colleges ought to have a course in
stock market buying and selling.
But a lot of experts have been at
it for years and haven't become
well educated on the subject yet.
lA
Another indication that spring
can’t be so very far away is that
the baseball comment is beginning
to creep back into the sporting
sections of the city newspaper.

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T“THAT LITTLE CAME?’ mter-nat cartoon co, N.Y.—By B. Link
EVER NOTICE How SYMPATHETIC AND NICE














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THAT JIN%
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MIGHTA









DECADE BRINGS VAST RADIO CHANGE
Tenth Anniversary of Organization Formed to Foster the
Art in America Emphasizes Progress.

The story of a decade in which communication leaped
beyond the wildest dreams of
linked with an anniversary which just has been observed. The
anniversary, marking the passing of ten years since the Radio
Corporation of America was founded, is significant for the en-
tire field of radio because the corporation has been associated
so closely with the great changes which have pushed back
world horizons.
How great these changes have been
e now that radio is

it is hard (o re:
accepted casually as one of the biggest
of American industries, doing a tusi-
ness of more than $600,000,000 a year
It helps to bring some realization to
consider radio as it appeared to the
men who formed the corporation,
start business on December 1, 1919.
Broadcasting as it is today, with


years that had gone before is
—
becomes a story of men, as well as the |
story of an era Among them are
Owen: D. Young, whose broadminded |
judgment since has been recognized
by appointment as Chairman of the |
Reparations Commission: Gene: ai
Harbord, military leader with
record in peace and war
David Sarnoff, Executive
one of many on tho |
James G
a brilliant
President;
Vice-President,






GENERAL JAMES G. HARBORD
40,000,000 listeners in the United
States, wa undreamed of then. Trans-
oceanic radio telegraph and ship to
shore communication were the inter-
ests of the men who were brought to-
gether by Owen D. Young, now Chair-
man of the Board, with the sympa-
thetic cooperation of the government.
President Wilson feared the Alex-
anderson Alternator would enable the
British to dominate radio telegraph,
as they already dominated ocean ca-
bles and, at his request, the General
Electric Company canceled negotia-
tions for the device with the Marconi
Company. It was to create a radio
communication organization capable
of holding its own against foreign
rompetition and to supply suck. Ameri-
can organizations as the General Elec-
trie with a home market for inven-
tions on which huge sums had been
pent that the Radio Corporation 1 as
‘ormed, welding under one central or-
zanization America’s principal radio
nventions and research facilities.
[Now the history of the corporation
MR. DAVID SARNOFF
roll who had been |
working in telegraphy since boyhood;
Dr. Alfred N. ( mith, Director of
Research, a scholar of radio. |
The possibilities of broadcasting
suddenly were realized in 1920 and
one of the most striking developments
of modern times is summed up in the
fact that between them and the end
of 1922 the number of receiving sets |
in the United States increased from
30,000 to 1,500,000.
In the years that followed the Cor-
poration organized a decade ago to |
further America’s interests in radio |
telegraph has played its leading part
in a changing world. Always develop-
ing that first interest in radio tele-
graph, it has acquired an important
position in the closely allied amuse-
ment field. It has a substantial inter-
est in the production, distribution and
exhibition of sound-motion pictures,
with increased facilities for furnish.
ing entertainment and education on
records, on films, through the air, in
the theater and in the home.
company’s first




Radio and Sound Films Called
Telephonic Systems by Expert
The radio, telephone typewriter,
transmission of photographs by wire,
and talking movies are telephonic sys-
tems based on certain common princi-
ples, declared John Mills, of the Bell
Te2phone Laboratories, Inc., of New
York, during an address delivered at
the recent Ninth Educational Confer-
ence, Ohio State University, in Co-
lumbus.
Explaining that Alexander Graham
Bell, working on his telephone, and
Samuel Morse, striving to perfect the
telegraph, had in their hands the es-
sential elements of the vast communi-
cations units utilizing these devices
today, Mr. Mills said that, while the
elements used by these inventors are
typically those necessary to any sys-
tom of electrical communication, they
have been further developed and
adapted to new principles and mech-
anisms. Continuing, he said in effect:
In a system such as telephony, there
must be a source of electrical energy,
device to control the current as it is
needed, a medium for transmission,
and a mechanism which will translate
tha electric impulses that are trans-
mitted.
Bell developed the telephone trans-
mitter as his medium for transmis-
siom; Morse, the telegraph key, and
both used the electro-magnetic motor |
to make reception of their messages
intelligible.
In telephony, the vibrations of a
sensitive diaphragm, caused by sound
waves, reproduced identical vibrations
in the receiver of the instrument and,
in turn, they were translated back
into their original form—words.
In telegraphy, the lever of the
sounder reproduced the movements of
the key at the sending end of the
line. The interval between the move-
ments was the basis of the signal
code—dots and dashes.
The signal system eventually led to
the invention of the telephone type-
writer. Now there also are devices
for sending pictures, and television.
In the more recent developments in
the field of electrical communication,
the vacuum tube has played an im-
portant part. It was applied to
telephony with the opening of the
transcontinental service between New
York and San Francisco in 1914, and
became an important device in the
trans-Atlantic telephone system.
Talking moving pictures are tele-
phonic in origin. Transmission of the
spoken word is divided into two steps
in the films. One system involves the
use of a wax disc. In the other,

sounds are photographically recorded
$1 for 10
| Sample
| Blade.. 1O¢ Y write direct

on a strip of film.
la a ; a
A-B-C.
TOPIREPARE ADS
H you use our ww
Cute Coby Suite



#4 BI 2 ohm
Bett th pd iN
7 + 722 A
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(fee Sy
 


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RETAIL BUST SES


PROBAK
DOUBLE-EDGE BLADES
The best shave
you ever had,
..Or your
money
back
i


 







id
If your
§ DEALER
cannot
supply you,
PROBAK CORPORATION
AutoStrop Safety Razor Co,, Inc.
656 FIRST AVENUE NEW YORK

WE HAVE
QUALITY
MEATS
Krall’'s Meat Market
West Main St., MOUNT JOY
Lumber Lumber
We have on hand and make all
kinds of Building Material, Bridge
and Barn Lumber, Clear Oak for
mill work, ete. in John Earhart’s
woods near Hossler’s Church. Also
Cord and Slab Wood.
JACOB G. BAKER
Phone 1R2 Manheim R. D.
oct23-tf
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.




In order that a public sale, festi-
val, supper, musical or any like ev-
ent be a enccess, it must be thor-
oughly advertised. Try the Bulletin.