PAGE SIX THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Hitt and Runn—The Situation Is Not Only Threatening to the Papers but to Hitt As Well! BY HITT Sw THY HOPE THIN 2000 NEWSPAPERS Wil © WANT THAY TR LIMIT 2 - o BUSES - BECAUSE OF Ti, PRT ON NEWSPRINT TNX OF Tat PRESS THE PEOPLES riuo] Tt. DEFENDER OF PUBLIC RIGHTS corm § SUSPEND PUBLICATION B 1 QUTRAGEOUS PRICE FINED BY Su0 SED “PAPER TRUST ¢~ - ora | “I 8 | Resear TERS, COMK ARTISTS ETC, FORRED TO Tug TROUGH By Tug | UT ON THAT BUT THE MILLS Sav BG fact A PARLR. FAMINE -~ 3 Set wi GF A MULTITUDE OF EDITORS, J Anofher Doctor Flaxolyn Endorses Dr. CHARLES LESLIE LEWIS “J Tried Flaxolyn Myself. Its Power to Do the Body Good Really Surprised Me!’’ Following is a letter from Dr. Lewis of Piiisburgh to Dr. Harris H. Luntz (M. D., D. 0.), the dis- @=RL-L DISABLED VETERANS SHOULD APPLY NOW veterans with dis- abilities must apply for compen- sation or treatment (other than hospitalization) before April 6, 1930. Under the present law, the United States Veterans’ Bureau may receive applications for com- pensation or evidtnce in support of claims before April 6, 1930. On World War {and after that date, under present law, new applications are void. Applications should be forward- fed to the U. S. Veterans Bureau, et mre FIX APRIL 14 FOR CLEAN-UP PERIOD fare, Forests and Waters and the bureau of fire protection of the State Police, have fixed the week beginning April 14 as the time for the State. Instructions in bulletin being forwarded to ,health officers, fire wardens, institutions, Chambers of Commerce and city and borough officials relative to this annual event eee form are Have Too Many Dairy Cows Dairymen face a period of re- adjustment. According to the 1930 agricultural outlook report, an annual increase of about one per cent in milk cow numbers is necessary to meet consumption de- mands. In 1929 the number in- creased three per cent and there are six per cent more heifers than A year ago. et GE Fight Plant Pests Seed treatment, planting disease free or resistant strains and varie- treatment, eradi- weeds, spraying, dusting are ways the plant doctors and insect eradi- cators use to save fruit and vege- table crops from disease and in- sect pests. rr ee cation of host 800 Beaver Colonies A survey made recently indicates | 800 beaver colonies in various parts ! of the State, officers of the Game Jommission today reported. The beaver was ir n 1919. Kil urbing a beaver house carries $100 fine. MI re ne Make Ornathental Lamps Artistic table lamps ean be | made from jars and vases and the hades can be made to match the shings by any homemaker with a taste of such work. ee AE II There is no better way to boost "itive manner : 1 it the wire netting with an ax taken j People guile as | they have more people suit and she | Smith’s suit ! she can afford is a suit 1 $25; she is | Erskine f The Departments of Health, Wel- | a | by his first wife at the annual Clean-Up activities in | duced in the State | + a beaver or dis- | Utilize the space to ! continuous HOME HEALTH CLUB WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX. PRESSLY FOx THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER TIME: Do you know that the thing we call “time” and speak of as ‘‘passing swiftly by’’ or as be- ing “on leaden wings,” is the only thing in our ken that stands ab- solutely- still? The world moves, and for every revolution it makes we say that a day of time has passed, and we divide that day up into hours and moments. We rush around trying to save time. We buy an automobile because we can save time by going quickly from one place to another. As a matter of fact, no time is saved by speed, simply greater movements made, more energy used, while time stands still. All efforts in what- ever direction, to make machinery that will save human drudgery is commendable, but those who have visited in the homes, the foul, in- sanitary homes of the peasantry in ancient foreign countries, where all labor is done in the most prim- by hand, find the happy and much more contented than are our own people of modern civilization. ! Moreover, their health appears to be about on a par with ours, and their ages about the same. In fact, who pass the 100 year mark than we have. The reason: Well, according to my observations the sum total of reasons could be given in two words for our failure, with all our advantage, to live longer and be happier—envy, worry. Mrs. Jones sees Mrs. Smith wearing a new knows that Mrs. cost $50, while all that cost envious about it, she nags her husband and spurs him on to make more money so she can get a suit that costs more .than Mrs. Smith’s. Mr. Jones sees Mr. Smith with a new automobile and he is envious. He worries about it and scolds his wife for being so | extravagant and they both worry. Meantime, Mr. and Mrs. Smith are watching Mr. and Mrs. Brown and are envious of their new house ,and piano, and they worry about j it. In most of the peasant homes all women dress alike, all homes are nearly alike, and envy and worry, the two great destroyers of health and happiness, do not so largely enter into life’s problems. Your job is to do something for somebody, try to make some one else happy. The person who seeks constantly for happiness for him- self is always full of worry and envy and always unhappy. Many of the letters I receive are from people who are distressed by a large family, others because they have no children. History tells us that in 1570 Mme. Frescobaldi of Florence had fifty- two children, that David Wilson of Indiana as late as 1850 had forty- seven children and the Rev. Dr. Scotland in 1760 had thirty-three children. Fidor Vassi- loff of Moscow in 1782 had eighty- { three children living when pension- ed by the Czar. He had sixty-nine twenty-seven births and nineteen born to his second wife in eight births. I won- der if any one was envious of him and how much he worried about his large family. When Lucas Saez returned to Spain from the United States in 1883 he took all of his family and the records show that he had thirty-seven children, seventy-nine grand children and eighty-one great grandchildren, in all 107 males and 90 females. His eldest son was 70 years of age. Was he rich or poor? Did he worry about it? The jolliest, happiest, healthiest old couple that I know have raised sixteen children and have a comfortable little home, possibly worth $2,000 with a small pension as their sole income. te Filling Station Blues This one comes for water, That one comes for air, This one wants directions— I'm no millionaire! That one wants the rest room, This one wants a stamp, That one seeks a pleasant Spot where he can camp. All the local idlers Decorate my stools; All the local grafters Utilize my tools. Many cars go speeding O’er the road like glass— May be me day ome one Will drive in for gas! ee — ee eee Garden Provides Liberally The farm garden makes liberal contributions to the it it is well-planned, planted, and correctly cultivated. produce a supply of fresh vege- tables and a sufficient amount for canning, drying, and storing. ‘WEDNESDAY,’ APR 2 Pay-Day Every Day When do you feel strongest and most confident of yourself? On pay day, when you have money in your pocket. You will feel all the time as you do now on pay day by saving part of your earnings and banking them here. Come in and Talk It Over With Us / First National Bank & Trust Company OF MOUNT JOY We Pay 4 Percent on Savings ff ‘ISOD IT = 1 OR Dm 1 OO Bell Phone 176R12 A) 1 LASSES MIXING MACHINE. and used WANT AD IN THIS NEWSPAPER u too.can del the same TEST Hone co NWANT AD” on L000 OO 18 YEARS Of consistant and é&ontinuous service in contracting CARPENTER BUSINESS Bids will be cheerfully submitted for your next job no matter how large or small. I handle and use Johns Manville Asbestos Products A. G. WALTERS CONTRACTOR 11 il il WE HAVE RECENTLY INSTALLED A MIRACLE PROCESS MO- NOW WE CAN MIX ANY FORMULA YOU WANT AND ADD MOLASSES TO IT. GIVE US A TRIAL. WE ARE ALSO IN A POSITION TO SELL MOLASSES IN ANY QUANTITY. WOLGEMUTH BROS., FLORIN, PA. Phones: 151R4 and 57R6 1 1 THE OFFICES OF JOHN A. HIPPLE Attorney-at-Law Formerly, 40 North Duke St., Lancaster, Pa. . Are Now Located at RHEEMS, PENNSYLVANIA Telephone: Elizabethtown 66-R2 family larder | properly | The New Silhagutic Pattern 1847 ROGERS BROS. SILVERPLATE DON W. GORRECHT—JEWELER FLORIN, feb5-3m: V1) Hr 110 : = y B a LH 11 MOLASSES FEED MIXING By I» RRR RRL IRI