The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 26, 1930, Image 6

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Come in today and see the new
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX.
HOME HEALTH CLUB|
it rich, glossy and healthy.
A woman's figure is to many
minds of minor importance. The
tastes of fashions run all the way
)
|
MAINTENANCE ALONE
COSTS BELL COMPANY |



{The Wheel of Saving
turns the
PAGE SIX THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 193%
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JOHN M. BOOTH
DEPARTMENT STORE
MOUNT JOY, PA.

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The Union National :
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MOUNT JOY, PA. :
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® Capital, Surplus and Profits, $502,000.00 :
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GET A PAIR OF HOSE FREE
JOIN
MARIE'S HOSIERY CLUB
After having purchased ten pairs of hose, you will
receive the eleventh pair FREE. Join now and ask
for a card.
MARIE’S SPECIALTY SHOPPE
Phone 33 East Main Street
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THE OFFICES OF
JOHN BR. HIPPLE
Attorney-at-Law
Formerly, 40 North Duke St, Lancaster, Pa.
Are Now Located at
RHEEMS, PENNSYLVANIA
Telephone: Elizabethtown 66-R2


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= .
= [place in life.
| alone
"failure and lack-lustre living
a i .
| The face fashion

PRESSLY FOx THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER
“One of the first things a rookie
learns in the army is discipline.
Only a few hours are required to
make him fully appreciate that
what he wants to do and what he’s
got to do are likely to be far apart.
The law of the vast military mach-
ine of which he is a part supervises,
controls and orders his life,” said
Doctor Theodore B. Appel, Secre-
tary of Health, today.
“And as to bodily welfare there
is no question of the advantages
that the military regimen affords.
To appreciate the value of such a
system one has but to recollect the
appearance of thousands of men
who were called to the colors in
1917 and compare that appearance
with the wonderful physical change
evidenced when they were mustered
out of the service.
“To many persons the difference
appeared to be almost miraculous.
But the fact is that it was the most
natural sort of a process. Man pow-
er being the most important factor
in war, camp life was accordingly
regulated to the end that maximum
physical efficiency would result.
| Regular hours for ‘rest, work, food
land life in the open were the things
{relied upon.
“But the point is that this out-
standing lesson in personal hygiene
"and care so eloquently presented in
the form of the millions of soldiers
returning to their homes apparent-
ly has had little effect upon the
‘average citizen.
| “Innumerable persons fail to rea-
lize that all of us are engaged in a
continuous battle. Our bodies are
waging an unending struggle
against the devitalizing and disease
breeding bacteria; our brains are
measured daily with those of the
other fellows’ in the fundamental
struggle for economic existence.
Yet in spite of this very apparent
situation thousands of people per-
sist in submitting their bodies to all
| sorts of harmful practices and ha-
| bits, lose vitality and shorten their
| lives in consequence—and then en-
lvy the man who, because of great
vigor of mind and body, has been
|able to win through to success and
happiness.
| “It seems a shame that such little
things as lack of sleep, improper
| eating, lack of exercise and harm-
| ful excesses should be the means
of depriving so many foolish per-
sons from their just and happy
And these things
more responsible for
than

|


are
| so-called brain power and
sense.
| “To succeed in life one must be
{ healthy. To be healthy one must
| discipline the body. Why not
some of the dis-
upon the soldier
voluntarily take
cipline imposed

| boys, re-vamp your living habits
and get into the army of the well |
and sensible living? Then see
| what happens. You will be sur-
| prised!”
of the day is
decade ago.
far distant,
the fashion of a
and not
[ not
y Time was,
| but readily accepted recommend-
| ation,
The shape or style of the face,
{as well as the color of the hair, is
{of minor importance. It is the
i complexion of the face and the
healthfulness of the hair that is
of paramount importance. These
are the beauty marks. These are
what all women should strive for.
Beauty, welcome and powerful
as the glorious rays of the sun;
pleasing every one upon whom it
may shine. Have you ever realized
its wonderful charm? Like edu-
cation, beauty may be cultivated
daily, and I have always maintain-
ed that a woman’s first duty to
herself, her husband, her children
‘and her friends, is to be beautiful,
and to retain
: life.
{ In the Universe of Love, a beau-
[tiful woman reigns supreme. She
|is the queen to whom all
ing tribute. She can rule her hus-
not in the shape of her face. There
are thousands of types of beauti-
| ful faces. Neither is it in the color
of the hair. These, if perfect, are
aids, but in the cleaness and rich-
iness of the complexion bestowed
{by nature, cultivated and enriched
{by scientific, yet practical and
simple treatment, together
that care of the hair which keeps

from the lithe willowy figure to
require those who are overburden-
ed with fat to starve nor to spend
their time in senseless physical
culture after a hard day’s work,
nor will I stuff the lean one be-
vond her capacity.
The excessively fat person is
usually suffering with an excess of
acidity in the digestive secretions,
The reverse of these conditions
keep her sister or husband, who
eats at the same time, the same
food, and the same quantity, ‘as
thin as a rail.”
Do as I tell you and the surplus
fat will disappear like dew before
the morning sun, your health will
improve, and as you grow thinner
you will grow stronger.
Begin each meal with a large
piece of zweibach, or hard dry toast.
No butter, no liquid of any kind
while eating it, but chew each
morsel until it becomes a sweet
liquid in the mouth. When you have
finished the toast, drink four tumb-
lerfuls of fresh buttermilk, after
that you may eat your breakfast,
dinner or supper, that is, if you
want any, otherwise nothing more,
but whatever you eat must, like the
zweibach, be masticated until it is a
liquid. That’s all there is to it. Three
months will make you normal and
strong and healthy. Is it worth
while?
To take on flesh. One ounce of
salted almond nuts and one ounce
of choice raisins as desert daily
after dinner, at no other time. A
large cupful of hot milk, sipped
slowly at breakfast, dinner, supper
and just before retiring. A nap
every day, and eight or nine hours
sleep at night, regular hours, and no
worry, and you will get plump and
strong.
We shall now take the two most

business |
| when paint and powder was made |
to cover a multitude of skins. |
Greasy rough, sallow, pimply
skins they were, but the fashion
has changed and the demand is
'for clear, clean, bright, healthy
{faces with the beautiful and nat-
ural color which nature alone can
| give. A handsome face, surmount-
led by a wealth of healthy and |
| luxuriant hair, is always a silent
that beauty through
pay lov-
band with a rod of love, and her
{ smile brings the richest treasures |
{to her feet, and all this I say is
with |
important beauty requisites—hair
and complexion. You say you never
| did have any success with creams
{and powders, and cosmetics and
{ massage. Well, I am not surprised
! .
{at that. Such things are made to
sell, and if the magical virtues at-
i tributed to them were true, there
{ would not be so many brands on
sale, as every woman would have a
most beautiful complexion from the
{use of the one box that she has
| bought, and some women who have
{ dozens and dozens of them would be
Iso beautiful that the roses and
' violets would hang their heads in
| shame. No, no, a thousand times no.
{ Creams, pastes and
| but clog up the pores of the skin on
| the face and cause it to exhibit an
| abundant crop of pimples, black-
| heads and enlarged pores. A coarse
I rough skin, with plenty of wrinkles,
| is the usual result of creams. pastes
and massage, especially when the
| massage is applied by the unskilled
{ hands of the average woman.
i The balance of this vital article
will appear in the next issue.
y ———_——_—_—_—, RP - - W
cosmeties do

ARTIFICIAL VOICE







Ss A in
What is believed to be the longest
telephone conversation carried on with
artificial voices occurred when Colonel
R. B. Marshall (above), talked from
Sacramento to Sergius P. ce, assist-
ant vice-president of the Bell Telephone
Laboratories, in New York. Colonel
i Marchall, State landscape artist for
| California, was rendered mute through
an operation in which his larynx was
| removed. However, through the de-
| velopment by the Bell Laboratories of
the artificial larynx, which Colonel
Marshall is holding to his mouth, he is
again able to talk. Mr. Grace likewise
used an artificial larynx during the con-
versation, although his power of speech
is not impaired.

 
-
|
!
|
|
I Gr ee rem
Tone up Young Pigs
Exercise, sunshine,

i clean surroundings, and plenty of
green succulent feed are nature’s
tonics for young pigs. Provide
jo for the infant porkers.
the plump or some may say, big
and fat figure. Either of these
extremes are unnecessary, and I
shall give you some absolutely !
certain methods of overcoming
either condition, and I shall not
|
|
|
|


‘taining telephone service at maximum
$1,200,000 MONTHLY
Expenditure Necessary to Keep
Service at High Efficiency |
Throughout Penna.

|
|
{

Nearly $1,200,000 will be spent by
the Bell Telephone Company of,
Pennsylvania during each month of
11930 for the single purpose of main- |
efficiency at all times—by day and
| by night, in good weather and bad. |]
That the company will disburse
so great a sum each month for main-
‘tenance alone is indicated by the 1980
appropriation for that purpose, to-
.taling $14,202,000. When this figure
is reduced to the basis of average
‘daily expenditures, it becomes evident
that nearly $39,000 is to be spent
‘daily throughout the State for main-
tenance.
Keeping central office equipment
functioning smoothly, maintaining
Wheel of Success
As soon as you begin to save in an
account with us, prosperity begins
to turn in your direction.
Get In Gear!

Trust Company
OF MOUNT JOY
First National Bank &






the State-wide network of cables and
wires at their highest efficiency, re-
placing used equipment with new,
testing each of the 1,212,089 Bell
telephones in Pennsylvania constantly
to insure their efficient operation at
all times—these are among the nume
erous activities which will absorb the
company’s $14,202,000 maintenance
appropriation for the current year.
This expenditure is, of course, ine
dependent of the millions of dollars
to be spent during 1930 for new con-
struction and operation of the tele-
phone plant throughout the State.
Approximately $424,000 will
spent in Philadelphia for mainte
nance of the telephone plant during
the year. In Pittsburgh about $229,
000 will be spent monthly for the
same purpose. In Eastern Pennsyl-
vania, exclusive of Philadelphia,
$136,000 is earmarked for mainte- |
nance purposes for each month of
1930; in Central Pennsylvania, $236,
0C0 will be devoted to maintenance
menthly, and in Western Pennsyl-
vania, not including Pittsburgh,
$16%,000 will be required for mainte-
each month.
A.T.&T, STOCKHOLDERS
INCREASE T0 469,000
be


Represent Largest Body of
Shareholders of any Corpe-
ration in the Worid

any corporation in the world were |
recipients of checks, on January 15, !
when the American Telephone and
Telegraph Company paid its 161st
dividend to more than 469,000 share- |:
holders.
This total represents an increase
of 14,000 over the number of stock-
holders at the time of the previous
quarterly dividend.
The owners of the company’s stock
are widely distributed geographically,
and include residents of every state
in the United States and of more
than 50 foreign countries.
Holders of five shares or less in-
creased more than 6 per cent. during
the quarter and holders of six to ten
shares inclusive increased almost 4
per cent.
As of the current record date, al-
most three-fifths of the stockholders
owned 10 shares or less, and approxi-
mately four-fifths of the total held
25 shares or less. No one individual
held as much as one per cent. of the
total capital stock.

Telephone Directory
Unites Two Brothers

Guy and Oscar Michaels,
brothers, were separated 31
years ago. Now they are united
in Pasadena, California. Guy
picked up a new issue of the
telephone directory recently,
looked up his own name to make
sure it was correctly listed, and
found next to it “O. B. Mich-
aels.” He rang Oscar’s number.
“Are you Oscar Burton
Michaels?”
“Yes.”
“Did you ever live in Bonner
Springs, Kansas?”
“Uh, huh.”
“Are the toes on your left
foot cut off?”
“Yeos”
“Well, this is your brother
Guy. Where have you been all
this time?”
“Hello, Guy. I’ve been here.”
“Well, can you beat that?
I’ve lived here for two years
myself.”



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FORDSON . .
.. TRACTORS
Here at Last - Bigger & Better
First carload in Lancaster County just arrived at
Mount Joy, Pa. Demonstrations all this week at
our warerooms. See it on display in our show win-
dow. Come and get specifications and full partic-
ulars.
H. 8. NEWCOMER
MOUNT JOY, PA.


dhe Right &
Boosts Poultry Profits
Ask for Free
Book Howto, ,
Kise Be tty Chicks
The saving of every savable
chick is important if you want
to make the most money from
your poultry. Every chick that
dies is actually taking money
out of your pocket.
Wayne “All Mash” Starter is
economical and easy to feed. It
insures safe starting, and rapid
uniform growth.
Sold by fe
JOHN E. ESHLEMAN
Florin, Penna.
Phone 172R2
 




 


 



ANNGUNGEMENT
I have .opened my place of
next to the Gar-
with
business,
den Spot Restaurant,
a choice line of
Home-Made Candies
I invite inspection ang will

According to the newspaper
Richard Byrd is now a United be pleased to serve you.
States Rear Admiral, retired.
good water, | Where do they get that “retired?”
ra ELIZABETH GROSH
It’s the hope of getting what W. Main St. MOUNT JOY
you haven’t got that gives zest to jan29-tf
| life.

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