The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 02, 1930, Image 6

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    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



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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-
<overer of Herbal Flaxolyn:
“Dear Dr. Luntz: When your
Flaxolyn was first brought to my
attention I must confess that I
was mighty skeptical about the
claims which were made for it by
many of my friends who said they
had taken it. One man was so en-
thusiastic about Flaxolyn and told
me how wonderfully it had helped
him, that, somehow or another, he
convinced me that it might have
merit.
“Being rather run down myself
at the time, and recognizing the
symptoms of auto-intoxication, I
decided to try Flaxolyn myself. I
felt that if it didn’t do me any good,
at least it couldn’t do me any harm.

“I want to tell you now that I
am well satisfied that Flaxolyn has
genuine merit — it acts upon the
stomach, liver and the intestinal
tract in a natural and efficient way.
“As a rule I do not endorse any
| internal preparation, but I am so
p 4
well satisfied that Flaxolyn can do
an immense amount of good for
the people here, that I am perfectly
willing to allow my name and pic-
ture to be used in an open endorse-
ment of Flaxolyn.
“I am not sufficiently versed in
pharmaceutical circles to know
what it is in Flaxolyn that makes
it superior to any other prepara-
tion it has been my fortune to come
in contact with, but I do know that
I can sincerely recommend it as a
remarkable aid to health.”

You Need Not Be Sick to Receive
Flaxolyn’s Great Benefits
Flaxolyn is not only for sick
people. The man or woman who
feels 100 per cent fit at all times is
rare. If you ARE sick, or generally
ailing or rundown and tired out,
you certainly should try Flaxolyn.
In fact, it is a duty to yourself and
to your family that you give this
proven, meritorious prescription a
fair trial.
If, however, you are not really
sick, but feel that you could use
greater strength and greater en-
ergy; if your friends tell you that
you are not looking your best and |
issn ns GUARANTEE sscosssssc
Flaxolyn must bring a satisfactory health improvement by the sixth
pleasant spoonful, or return the partly-used bottle to the drug store and
get your money hack.
Don’t delay taking -Fiaxolyn. This pleasant-tasting, health
product cannot hurt you and it may do you a tremendous amount
of good. There are any number of folks right here who tell how the
new Flaxolyn has put new pep in their step, new keenness in their
appetite, new brightness in their faces, and new zest in their
lives. Druggists can now supply you with new Herbal Flaxolyn.
you want that wonderful, natural
good color that comes from a
healthier condition, it would be a
mighty good thing for you to get
yourself a large, economical bottle
of Flaxolyn and try it out for a
while. See how it helps to bring a
new sense of physical fitness. It
drives out those intestinal toxic
poisons which are so common even
with people who think they are
healthy. It activates the bile flow
from the liver and stimulates the
digestive fluids, so that you get
more benefit from the food you eat.
Iw
Central Cut-Rate Stores
45 East Main Street,
MOUNT JOY, PA.

HEALTH TALK
WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE
B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF
HEALTH

“The other day a certain com-
munity was shocked to learn of a
fatal automobile
vietim being a beautiful and
popular young woman merely em-
phasized the fact that one does
not need to be driving at a sixty-
mile-an-hour pace in a motor car
to be subjected to real risks from
this ubiquitous invention,” said
Dr. Theodore B. Appel, Secretary
of Health, /
“As a matter of fact, this un-
fortunate girl was walking to
work and was knocked over and
crushed by a large truck as it was
rounding a street corner. More-
over, an investigation of the auto-
mobile fatalities since January 1st
in the city referred to developed
the unexpected information that
every victim had been a pedes-
trian.
“This fact is mentioned not so
much to point out the necessity of
applying the Stop, Look and Listen
rule when crossing street inter-
sections, essential as that rule is,
but rather to indicate that the
possibilities of bodily injury are
by no means limited to riding in
high speed motor cars, airplanes
and express trains,
“In this connection, consider
accidents in the home. Four million
of them were reported in the
United States during 1929, of
which 24,000 proved
number which is but 14,000 short
of the American fatalities of the
World War!
“The study of the National
Safety Council on this matter is
most illuminating, Forty per cent
of a total of 28,429 cases investi-
gated were attributed to falls—
on floors, ice, over objects, off
ladders, chairs tables, benches and
nearly 500 in bath tubs. Thousands
of others were hurt by sharp in-
struments. Many others collided
with the inanimate objects. Burns
took another huge toll. Explosives
of gasoline and fireworks were the
cause of another large casualty
group. And hundreds of others
were asphyxiated.
“Thus it appears that dangers
are quite conveniently to be found
at home. Therefore, it might be
well to remember the following
injunctions:
“1. Do not start a fire with gas-
oline or coal oil. .
“2 Do not attempt gymnasium
stunts in the home, such as stand-
ing on ladders, chairs and window
sills, unless you have a firm found-
ation or are otherwise protected
from falling.
“3 Keep your medicine chest in-
accessible to children and never
take any medicine yourself from a
bottle in the dark.
in a closed garage.
“5 Do not point a gun at any-
one, even though you are sure it |
isn’t loaded.
“6 And finally, use reasonable
care and caution in performing
your daily chores or duties.
“Thoughtlessness kills and in-
jures too many people in Penn-

| of preventable
| dental deaths. Stay out of the 4,-
[000,000 class this year. The ex-
{ plish this much to
| sult.”



When you move
your new neighbors will be curious to find out all a g
So you'll want window Shades <gn] want them quic he Come
wate to find just the colc
want in our complete line of £ Col umbia toned-color shades. i
to us. Won't take you a m
We do the rest—measure
shades and install them Bert); y—all in double
You'll like the unusual beauty, of these window shades—
you'll like the efficient way we hang ’em—you’ll like our price.
Shades. Your choice of .
See the New Washable
wide range of colors.
JOHN M. BOOTH, Dept. Store
your wing





vy
Ja
make up the


11 quick time,

| treatment of these injured
{an average of $2,600 a day.
i prompt service

{ the public
sylvania at the present time.
Thoughtfulness will materially re-
| move the present deplorable rate
injuries and acci-
ercise of ordinary care will accom-
be desired re-

600 GET CHECKS
' DAILY FROM FUND
{From Page ¢ Page One)
iloss as provided by the Workmen’s
Compensation Act.
The daily disbursements of the
i Insurance Fund to beneficiaries av-
{ erages $8,500, or an average to each
| individual of $14, In
addition to
disbursed, in the
persons
hat sum there is
Attention is called to the fact
| that “there are sixty-eight field men
| engaged in this work who are so
| Tocatec
throughout the State that
may be, given to all
| employes, thereby making it. pos-
sible that the least delay occur in
i the payment of compensation to in-
{ jured persons. Where it is found
| possible to assist the claimant in re-
ea‘ning thi

ealth and to re

; itate him to the extent that he may
again earn livelihood, consider-
» personal attention i given on

welfare.”
A iin ni 5
Reduce Grain Slowly
Even though pleasant weather
is approaching do not educe too
suddenly the amount of
poultry specialists of the Pennsyl-
vania State College remind.
accident. The |

fatal—a '

“4 Do not start your automobile | Pedoral Bldg., Harrisburg, Pa.

| ties, seedbed
land sometimes
scratch |!
grain~fed to the flock each day, |
i your business than by local news-
paper advertising. tf

YOR THE LUVVA LUKE
YOU ANT SAID A WORD FOR AN
OUR ANT INSPEPTIC ARE
NO: FT ANT THAT BULL
1 WAS ust THINKIN
THINKIN WHAT WM Gouna
D0 Foi COLLARS


[ASKS DOG OWNERS
TO PROTECT GAME
Dog owners throughout the State
today were urged by officers of the
Game Commission to keep their
charges tied or under control during
the coming breeding season for
game birds and animals.
Game protectors are instructed
each spring to make a special effort
to round up all dogs with game
propensities.
Dogs without collars caught chas-
ing game may be killed on sight by
the game wardens or land owners.
The owners of dogs with collars
that are caught annoying or killing
game are liable to prosecution.
THIEVES STOLE
80 CHICKENS
(From page 1)
west of Elizabethtown on the Har-
risburg highway, more than 50
chickens were stolen. Here the
robbers were unable to force the

‘locked door to the hen house, and
entered by a window after cutting
from the tool box in the barn.
Traces of blood and scattered
feathers indicated that the fowls
were killed here also. Frederick
Page is tenant on the farm.
Pupils at the Rockville school
‘near Elizabethtown were handi-
capped by lack of writing mater-
jals Thursday morning, and were
forced to use the blackboards for
most of their work. When Miss
Pauline Anderson, the teacher, ar-
rived she found that theives had
taken the entire stock of pencils,
pens and writing tablets. A quan-
tity of coal was also missing. Miss
Anderson’s desk had been rifled of
$3 in coins, collected by her from
the sale of garden seeds to pupils.
Deep ruts in the mud in front
of the school, with torn muddy
burlap bags scattered about, gave
mute evidence that the robbers’
automobile had become stuck there
when they were ready to depart.
The bags, it was found were stolen
from the barn on the farm of
Joseph Goodman, on the other side
of the Harrisburg highway from
the schoolhouse.
- rr AAk-@fP>@=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
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Bell Phone 176R12
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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

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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





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