THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO. PA. en Heart” Are Two Different Things! BY HITT tt and Runn—-A “Weak Heart” and a “Ward Ey Y oy “ited Rc: | 42779 LETS SEEVOUVE BEEN SWINGING THE SLEDGE WN THE BLACKSMITH SHOP HAVENT You [as SUS Gor] A HEART = 0 “A uy 8] HARRIGAN- PUT Tris FELLOW] TO WORK WITH CONNICT 3 ho % i 0 SPRING COATS $10.00 $1495 $25.00 Tweed Coat Suits and Ensembles $10.00 $15.00 LOVELY DRESSES In Prints, Crepes and Chiffons $9.75 $12.50 $16.50 Beautiful House Dresses Sizes from 1415 to 52 $1.95 $2.95 UNDERWEAR * * * oO * J 0 * oO J J 7 LJ * bs LJ * * * bs J » * * J J * £2 Js LJ 0 £2 (2 0 0 7 * gC * * Ls 6 * * 5 GOLD MARK HOSIERY “Will Wear Well” MARIE'S SPECIALTY SHOPPE 23 East Main Street Mount Joy, Pa. Phone 33 « gS « 0 5 ~ 0 « « ga ne x a 0 x 0 A x ol a a 0 AS « x AS 03 5 « Ea a x a RS x x 5 = a x £5 AMMO OO JOO 1 ED 0 I 1 The Union National Mount Joy Bank MOUNT JOY, PA. 11100) ETE TT 101 DL 0 Ro. DO = - = Capital, Surplus and Profits, $562,000.00 = a : Can Serve You as Executor, Administrator, Assignee, Receiver, Guardian, Registrar of Stocks and Bonds, Trustee, etc. =» i =u jun12tf 10 1700 TL MOLASSES FEED MIXING WE HAVE RECENTLY INSTALLED A MIRACLE PROCESS MO- B® LASSES MIXING MACHINE. NOW WE CAN MIX ANY FORMULA = YOU WANT AND ADD MOLASSES TO 1%. GIVE US A TRIAL. WE ARE ALSO IN A POSITION TO SELL MOLASSES IN ANY QUANTITY. Ww WOLGEMUTH BROS. FLORIN, PA. Phones: 151R4 and 57R6 THE OFFICES OF JOH: BS. HIPPLE Attorney<at-Law Formerly, 40 North Duke St.,, Lancaster, Pa. Are Now Located at RHEEMS, PENNSYLVANIA Telephone: Elizabethtown 66-R2 wi | the stick-up man at the party. ‘took a type of courage to do what HEALTH TALK WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “Some weeks ago a robber in- vaded a fashionable party, held up the guests at the point of a gun and deprived them of thousands of dollars in jewels and cash. The papers naturally gave prominent and generous space to this crime and added rather significantly that the criminal had got away,” said Doctor Theodore B. Appel, Secre- tary of Health. “While of course such matters are to be deplored, there is a large army of men and women, young and old, who are also rob- bers and apparently proud of it. However, the significant thing in these cases is that they do not get away with it. Inevitably they pay for their crimes and sometimes with the extreme penalty of death itself. “To call these persons robbers to their faces would likely surprise them. They would indignantly deny it and produce all sorts of alibis, But the fact remains never- theless. “Of course, there are no laws except the laws of common sense to restrain them. But this fact in no wise minimizes the actual crime nor makes the punishment any the less severe. Indeed, from a per- sonal viewpoint these robbers are more illogical and weak than was It he did and after all his spoils were limited to jewelry and money, which are replaceable things. “But consider the man who day in and day out robs his body of its just desserts; who robs his stomach of its proper and limited athount of food; who robs his sytem of the daily exercise that it demands; who robs his body of the crying need for adequate sleep; who robs the body of its nerve equilibrium by lLabitually over-stimulating it and indulging in foolish excesses and who through carelessness and thoughtlessness fails to take an annual physical appraisal and in some cases as a direct result there- of robs himself of health and not infrequently of life itself. “True, the hustle and bustle and the tremendous pace which ac- company present day existance of thing. Consequently such prac- tices are socially accepted. But they are crimes just the same. For the lesser offenses—headaches, in- digestion, half aliveness; for the major ones, nervous breakdowns, heart disease or death. There is no escaping them. Nature makes one pay in the exact proportion to the enormity of the crime involved. “Therefore, don’t assume too superior an attitude the next time seem in a way to demand this sort ! vou read of a robber’s deeds. Make sure that you are not one | yourself.” em A In order that a public sale, festi | val, supper, musical or any like ev- | ent be a success, it must be thor- | oughly advertised. Try the Bulletin to be appreciated. way to boost local news- tf There is no better your business than by paper advertising. To Keep Human “Motor” in its Best Condition a new way of putting some waoll-known rules of advice, which we hedeve will appeal to every motorist who thinks as much of himself as he does of his car. They are taken from “The City Health,” and ought to be wiemorized hy all people, young and vol. who wish to keep fit: ull your machine up alongside a fil.ing station regularly three times a day and put into it high-test fuel such as leafy green vegetables, fresh fruit, milk, dark bread and real but ter. Do not use substitutes—you wouldn't do it with a limousine. This high test fuel is remarkable in that it builds up your automobile as well as puts pep in your motor. Run your human automobile into the garage each night for eight hours of rest. Remember to turn on the fan by opening windows and getting plenty of fresh air, This will prevent flat tires. Run your automobile body onto the wash rack daily. Keep the chewing apparatus clean. Rrush it night and morning. Give your human car plenty of wa: ter to prevent a dry radiator. Visit expert mechanics regularly (the doctor once a year and the den tist at least twice a year). They can help you overhaul your machine and discover a little knock in the motor before you even hear it.—Hampshire (Muass.) Gazette. Dolphin Supreme Among Persecutors of Whales Those “thresher sharks” of fabulous dimensions are reported from the south coast as fast becoming a formidable rival of the sea serpent and the big gooseberry, writes Looker-on in the London Daily Chronicle. They are fairly common during summer around Cornwall, where they do vast damage to pilchard and mackerel pets, in which they completely wind them- selves, like a caterpillar in his chrys- alis. The thresher shark is also called the sea fox, from the remarkable tail which he uses to frighten shoals of fish, and so make them more easily caught. There are sailors’ yarns that this whiplike tail is sometimes used for flogging whales to death. But the ~eal persecutor of the whale is the glad- dolphin or sword grampus (Dol phinum gladiator), a very carnivorous fellow, who kills and eats whales, seals, and even his brother porpoises. Contrasting Inaugurations Franklin Pierce, who took office in 1853, is said to have been the first President to deliver his inaugural ad- dress without notes. His voice was remarkably clear and he roused great enthusiasm by his handsome appear- ance, dignified bearing and unusual powers of oratory. Jackson, whose induction into high office in 1829 was attended by some of the wildest scenes in inauguration: day history, delivered an inaugural that stands as one of the briefest on record. It took him only a few min- utes to read it. Expect Too Many Potatoes Outlook figures released by fed- eral agricultural officials indicate that farmers in the United States intended to plant 3,570,000 acres of potatoes this year compared to 3,370,000 acres harvested last year. Yields in line with the trend of recent years will provide a crop too large for consumption | needs and, therefore, profitable production. For the School Lunch Box J September and the begin- ning of the school year the struggie hegins to fill the lunch box with food which will keep well, be appetizing and at the same time be economical and 1 In this class ypular pea put up In el lined can to pre - Peas are and mone com- | vita the lets contain makes suitable food for Pea and Walnut nix the follow- one and one- Roast. Ti ine together lightly: half cups of pea pulp, one cup of soft bread crumbs, one-half cup of chopped walnuts, one-fourth cup of butter, two-thirds cup of canned tomato soup, one slightly beaten egg, and salt, pepper and onion juice to taste. Put the mixture in a buttered baking dish or loaf pan and bake in a moderate oven, 350° F., for 30 to 45 nutes or until set and brown T may De served at the family ; cold, sliced, the ices wra axed paper, at vacked in Peas i eas, a cup of d half cup of diced potatoes, one 1 1 ed beets and one tablespoon of ed onions may be mixed with maise and put in a waxed paper cup with a tight-fitting cap. Gelatin salads may be packed in the original mold* HOME HEALTH CLUB PRESSLY FOx THE RULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDEFR BACKACHE: We recently gave vou an article on backache but it proved so popular many wanted more information, Such a common complaint, so common as to be almost entirely disregarded by the average doctor, and yet a normal healthy person should not suffer with a backache any more than an ache of the toes or calves of the legs. So very little is actually known of humanity in general and by many physicians as to the real significance of pains or weakness in various portions of the back that it is not at all surprising that the warning pains are disregarded until a chronic ailment is firmly established, and then all kinds of drugs and dope are dumped into the poor defenselesss stomach in order to supress the symptoms, while no effort is made to remove the cause. It is quite common for many persons to acquire a firm be- lief that the kidneys are diseased because they have a constant pain in the “small of the back,”” as they express it. They think that must be right over the kidneys, while as a matter of fact the kidneys, when in their normal position are much higher. Draw a line or place a cord around the body on a level with the naval and you will find the level of the kidneys in the back. That, however, would not enable you to know that your kidneys were diseased, as pain is seldom evident in that locality when the kidneys are really diseased. In weakness or disease of the organs of generation there will, as a rule, be pain, weakness and misery in the sacral region of the spine, while gastric disturbances are usually to be found in connect- ion with pains at about the lower WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN a. 1930 MAR. 12, WEDNESDAY, DON'T SLAVE JUST SAVE i And Make Your Money Slave | For You | Every dollar you save and put into this savings bank becomes your slave. It will work for you day and night; costing nothing, giving you no trouble, putting | are you to mo thought. And its returns steady and certain. The earlier in life you begin to gather these workers, the earlier in life you can stop working altogether and let them support you. | A Single Dollar Is Enough to Start FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TRUST GO. OF MOUNT JOY We Pay 4 Per Cent on Savings ~. %* ee — points of the clavicles or shoulder blades. In many cases, especially in those who dre overweight, the arms and hands “go to sting, prickle and are very painful. I have never yet found such a condition without an exceedingly sore and tender spot on the spine just between the shoulders, or at a point between the third and fifth dorsal vertebrae. Lumbago is one ditions from which suffer periodical others seem to be afflicted with what might be called chronic lumbago. This is so called from the fact that the Ilumbago region of the spine is the seat of the trouble. The pain is agonizing during the acute stage and usually keeps the sufferer in bed anywhere from one to three weeks. It can, under the Home Health Club method of treatment, be at once relieved and a complete recovery effected in from one to three days. of the con- many people attacks, while Almost any pain in the: back, unless caused by displaced verte- brae, will be benefited by the same simple treatment, which is that of a thorough hot fomen- tation. The very best results are obtained by first sponging the back with hot vinegar, after which rub thoroughly with warm olive i oil, or, better still, our good old herb friend, Grandmother’s Oint- ment. Then apply the fomentation and continue it for forty or fifty minutes, and when it is removed again apply the ointment or olive oil; cover the patient snugly in bed and let him sleep. As a rule one such treatment brings relief and from two to three effects a cure. They should not be given oftener than once a day. The complete details for apply- ing a thorough hot fomentation are given in volume 3 of the Home Health Club books. I wish I had space enough to tell you all about pain in the back and of the various organs which are affected thereby, but it would require quite a book to tell all of it. The human body has 206 bones and about 682 muscles, Don’t try to count the nerves, because when one has a toothache or lumbago it seems as if there are ten thousand of them and they are all erying at once. etl Ieee. Provide Electric Outlets Besides having at least electric light in every room, nected to a switch at the one con- door, it | is suggested that numerous double, | interchangeable outlet receptacles | be provided. More outlets around { the baseboards and less fixtures | are rapidly coming into use for | lamps and also for candlesticks on | buffets, mantlepieces, tables, and bureaus. | —_—— a | | | | Rotate Farm Crops Good rotations yields, reduce and provide a better and more pro- increase ~~ erop | fitable diversity. Spring is the time | | to put them into effect, ————— Oe Subscribe for The Bulletin. sleep,” ) | | LJ | | production expenses, | THE STATE THEATRE THE SHOW PLACE OF LANCASTER COUNTY COLUMBIA, PENNA. Matinee Daily 1:30, Evening 6:45-9 Three Shows Saturday Evening, 6-7:45 and 9:30 Thursday, Friday and Saturday March 13-14 and 15 MARILYN MILLER With ALEXANDER GRAY In “SALLY” Merging the Best of Stage and Screen Monday and Tuesday, March 17-18 DOROTHY MacKAILL IN “THE GREAT DIVIDE” A First National Picture 12 Reasons Why You'll Like Wayne “All Mash” Feed Saves time Saves work Saves worry Is Economical More sanitary Less mortality Avgids guess work Insure rapid growth No feed is wasted in litter Supplies all neegssary nutrients Keeps chicks growing uniformly Every mouthful a balanced ration JOHN E. ESHLEMAN Florin, Penna. 2 Phone 172R2 LOOK FOR THE SUNRISE BAG Tires Than On Any Other Kind YES, WE MAKE “TRADES” Well allow you for umused “mileage” in your old tires and give you eur year-round service on the new ones. See our latest Goodyears— greatest values in tire history due to Goodyear building millions more tires than any other company. GRISSINGER®S Phone 192 130 E. Main St., Mount Joy marl2-1t 3 i 3 i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers