The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 01, 1932, Image 6

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RS Ss
“Avoid look? like this
Our business is to ‘Wpprove your
appes ranch
Weaver's Barber Shop
W. Main St,
You Get What You Pay F
apr. ad


Adin the
Son SRT
WILLTFIND TH
YOu. are seek



SALE WAS A
REAL KNOCKOUT ‘

A
IN HIS ADS.
"Furnished by
THIS NEWSPAPER








Crushed Stone. A manufac-
turers of Concrete, Blocks,
Sills and Lintels.

J. N. Stauffer & Bro:
MOUNT JOY, PA.

MT. JOY, PA.
30 W. Main St.


MT. J PA. |



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AER MA
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THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA,
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1st,


Li De
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THIS CLU
THEM T



I'M A MEMBER OF
AM SORRY TO SEE
OUT LIKE THIS .
COME
WITH
Ny
B AND |
HROW YOU
INSIDE
ME.


Pal 1!
VT
5] ff SO AFTER | HAD EATEN
MY DINNER HERE | TOLD
THE WAITER TO CHARGE
THE BILL 70 YOU. | KNEW
THAY YOU WOULDNT
MIND, AND: ++



By MB.
I'LL HAVE THE
LAW ON YOU
FOR THIS.
sof







CO-OPERATES WITH
U. S. IN STOCKING
OF STATE STREAMS
The Fish Commission is maintain-
ing a policy of close co-operation with
the United States Bureau of Fisheries
in furnishing fingerling trout for co-
operative nurseries maintained by
sportsmen’s associations in various
parts of the State Oliver M, Deibler.
Fish Commissioner, said today. Over
500,000 fingerling brook trout have al-
ready been sent to these nurseries,
where they will be reared to legal and
above legal size for stocking.
Distribution of trout from co-opera-
tive nurseries is confined to streams in
the areas where these nurseries are
located. Keen interest has been taken
by organized sportsmen in maintain-
ing these nurseries, and good results
have been attained in a number of in-
stances.
In order that the requirements of the
nurseries be cared for, the Fish Com-
mission purchased one billion addi-
tional trout eggs for hatching. A list
of nurseries ‘to receive these trout was
furnished by Henry O'Malley, United
State Commissioner of Fisheries.
Every possible assistance is being
given to these nurseries by the Fish
Commission, Commissioner Deibler
said. If a co-operative nursery re-
quires aid in distribution of the fish
reared employes of the
help in stocking the fish.
Had the Fish Commission not fur-
nished trout, these co-operative nur-
series would have been given no fish,
owing to the fact that Federal hatch-
eries which had been supplying the
nurseries, had an unsuccessful year
in trout-hatching.
rn Bree
Oil City—Steeple of St. Joseph's
Church, Pearl Avenue, repaired.
Red Hill—Plans underway for grad-
ing of Third and Fifth streets and re-
pairs to be made to Washington street.
Butler—New quarters of West Penn
Power Co. opened in Farmers National
Bank on South Main Street.
Coatesville—Plans under discussion
of rebuilding State’s share of Lincoln
highway between Storode Avenue and
Third Avenue.
DuBois—Contract let for construc-
tion of section of Federal road in Ben-
nezette township, east of here.
“0, Geel—
Grandma's
Walking
Downstairs—






Sold
by
Druggists
Use
WELDONA
Tablets
Write for FREE, fully illustrated 24-page
book, “History of RHEUMATISM,” with
chapter discussing germs of rheumatism, to
WELDONA CORPORATION
Desk 7, Atlantic City, N, J.
Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat
In Just 4 Weeks
Mrs. Mae West of St. Louis,
Mo., writes: “I'm only 28 yrs. old
and weighed 170 lbs. until taking
one box of your Kruschen Salts just
4 weeks ago. I now weigh 150 lbs.
I also have more energy and fur-
thermore I've never had a hungry
moment.”
Fat folks should take one half
teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a
glass of hot water in the morning
before breakfast—it’'s the SAFE,
harmless way to reduce as tens of
thousands of men and women know.
For your health’s sake ask for
and get Kruschen at any drugstore
—the cost for a bottle that lasts 4
weeks is but a trifle and if after the
first bottle you are not joyfully
satisfied with results—money back.



commission ;

will
“ew
Sure, the
Wiff Will Let
Bull Buy
the Car but—
Who's Going
to Drive It?—~
Ask the
Missus!


WT UTAE OL
IN NINE: € -
1 Got The wires C
{TermsseN To BUY



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LTTLE (AR AND SOME NKE Lo
Rwe out on Th
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AD EVERY MOR A wl EH “Hop 3
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Benne Th STREET (ARS
AL To Howow *'
INDPED Tour WoT
Jou worm - Tve ALREADY
MADE ARCHNEEMENTS FoR.
SOME ING BROPPNG
TRIPS WITH MRS.



 




By The Lancaster
Automobile Club
“A time-worn proverb has it that
two heads are better than one, but
that was spoken before the dawn
of the motor car era,” said S. Ed-
ward Gable, president of the Lan-

caster Automobile Club, in a recent
bulletin. One clear head beind the
wheel is far, far better than two,
three or more trying to control the
car from points of disadvantage in
the rear or other seats according to
Mr. Gable.
His statement continued—
“It takes a clear head and strict
attention to the road to operate a
car in a safe and sane way in these
days of fast-moving motors and the
heavy traffic. In this connection the
so-called rear seat ‘driver’ comes in
for censure and a word of admoni-
tion. All too frequently do passeng-
ers in the rear seat, or the one
sitting aside of the driver, try to
tell him or her what he or she
should or should not do. Such ac-
tion, which naturally restrains the
operator's mind and distracts his
attention, is to be severely con-
demned.
“Every driver should be ready at
all times to meet an emrgency. He
must be quick-thinking and on the
alert every second, with nothing
other than the task at hand to oc-
cupy his attention. This the law
requires and common sense dictates
and if a man or woman is not cap-
able of operating a car without the
instructions and suggestions from
the rear seat, then he or she has
no business at the wheel. Further-
more, if passengers do not feel at
ease riding in a car without giving
instructions and making sugges-
tions regarding its operation they
should stay at home or use some
other means of conveyance in which
their suggestions and instructions,
if uttered at all, can do no harm.
“ Much has been said and written
in jocular vein about the ‘back-seat
driver’, but when all is said and
done this type is a serious menace
in any motor car. And the difficulty
is that neither the law- makers, nor
the drivers who so often are sub-
ject to this annoyance, can get at
the root of the evil. Correction of
this condition must come through
the so-called ‘rear-seat drivers’
themselves. If they can be made to
realize that instructions and sug-
gestions from passengers to the
driver hinder rather than help in
the careful operation of the car
and are the cause of many accidents
they perhaps will be guarded in
their utterances.
“If every driver in
gives undivided attention to the
task at hand, unmolested by com-
ment from passengers, there will be
far fewer accidents and near acci-
dents on our streets and highways.”
et Ces
Industrial Notes
The following record of industrial
activity lists items showing invest-
ment of capital, employment of labor
and business activities and opportuni-
ties. Information from which the
paragraphs are prepared is from local
every car


PROBAK-nor
a sour blade



ercises held for
opened for business,
building of bridge across Neshaminy
on Buck road near here.
papers, usually of towns mentioned,
and may be considered generally cor-
rect.
Irwin—R. E. Bibson opened store in
room formerly occupied by T. O. Bell
on Pennsylvania Avenue.
Bryn Maur—Formal dedication ex-
recently completed
Penn-Wynne public school,
Oil City—Plans underway here for
construction of proposed Senior High |
School unit.
Littlestown—Luke H. Jacobs took
over Strouse Baer Co. plant and

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I (On With Langhte We

1 asked a lady in town if her hus-
band still plays golf. She said: “No
but he still speaks the language.”
I said to a fellow here: “You said
you had taken the President's advice
and put in your order for a new auto
—why don't you get it?”
He replied: “I'm waiting for his next
advice as to how I'm going to pay for
it.”
In front of the Union National bank
the other evening I heard one mar-
ried man ask another if he was going
to have a vacation this summer. He
said: “If my wife goes away I am.”
Recently a fellow from our neigh-
borhood went back to the hospital at
Lancaster, even though he was dis-
charged as being perfectly well. I asked
him why and he told me he got home-
sick to see the nurses.
Wish you could have heard two of
our local musicians discourse “sweet
strains.” after imbibing too freely
Memorial Day. One played eight se-
lections on his ukulele before he knew
it wasn’t tuned.
A woman up town bought her hus-
band a box of cigars on his birthday.
He never smokes any of them unless
he’s driving a truck or cleaning out
pig pen.
I met a chap Monday who was in
very bad shape. He looked as though
one of the Grey Hound busses ran
over him but he told me that he owed
an osteopath $300 and he let him take
it out in trade.
We have a fellow here in town who
actually refused a job offered him. He
says he gets a lot more out of charity
than he did if he worked.
Down on Mount Joy street our re-
porter saw a girl crying. He asked
her why and she said she wasn’t ery-
ing. She had been trying to bounce
a good sized onion like a rubber ball.
John Booth, the East Main street
merchant, tells us he believes every-
thing he hears. He believes some
things are true and he believes others
are not true.
Ladies here's a new one. I just
heard of a young married woman not
very far from town, who puts sand in
spinach when she cooks it. She claims
when they eat it, the sand keeps the
silverware shined.
A young chap here said he suggested
to his girl that they make it a Spring
wedding and immediately she agreed
by springing into his arms.
Then he suggested making it a Fall
Sita and did he let her flop. Oh
y.
One of the most inconsistent things I
ever heard was six fellows sitting in
that little frame office of Ed Ream’s



Newtown—Work going forward in
St. Marys—Concrete work on new
factory building of Erie Resistor Co.
underway.
discussing how to get rid of the smoke
nuisance in their neighborhoods and
at the same time four were smoking
cigars and the other two pipes.

That's as bad as the time I went
HEALTH TALK
BY DR. THEODORE
B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF
HEALTH


“Approximately 300,000 young
people contracted a contagious dis-
ease during 1931. Of this number
80,742 were measles cases with 398
deaths: 20,252 were scarlet fever,
with 216 fatalities: and 4,828 were
diphtheria, with 353 of them ter-
minating life. Other damaging
factors included cerebrospinal men-
ingitis, with 455 cases and 186 fa-
talities, and infantile paralysis with
412 cases and 82 deaths. Chicken
pox with 29,107 reported cases, and
mumps with a total of 15,277 cases,
add to this impressive display of the
childhood caladies and their death-
dealing power. Can anything be
done about this situation?” states
Doctor Theodore B. Appel, Secre-
tary of Health.
“Unfortunately, these ‘diseases do
not lend themselves readily to the
mass control with the possible ex-
ception of scarlet fever. The mat-
ter thus resolves itself into one of
individual concern.
“The problem can be measurably
solved if those charged with the
custody of the young will exercise
reasonable diligence in observing
manifestations of illness such as
coughing, sore throat, vomiting,
feverishness, any unusual redness
of the eye, any rash or breaking out
of the skin, and then remove the
youngster from contact with others
until a diagnosis by the family
physician can be made.
“On the face of it, this
pear to be a hardship. But when,
for example, it is realized that
while sore throat and coughing may
indicate an ordinary cold they may
also be the beginning of scarlet
fever or measles, either one of
which affliction may cause death,
the advantage of this counsel at
once becomes apparent.
may ap-
“Or, to put it another way. If
parents generally would be more
solicitious concerning their child-
ren’s welfare and thus not attempt
to self-diagnose the manifestations
which to them appear to be trivial,
many cases of severe contagious di-
sease could be successfully treated
at their onset. Moreover, quaran-
tine being thus established at an
early moment, the contagion factor
would be incalculably reduced.
“In short, early diagnosis and the
isolation are the only real weapons
in this vexing and ravaging prob-
lem. Parents of the young children
must cooperate sgyerally. Other-
wise the childhood diseases and re-
sulting unnecessary deaths will
continue unabated.”
etl) CII ere.
Muncy—A. A. White Co. awarded
contract for construction of Reading
Railroad bridge over Muncy Creek, to
replace present bridge.
Downingtown—Bids opened for erec-
tion of new Junior high school to be
erected on property on Manor Avenue,
Lewistown—Charles Latos opened
State Restaurant at 10 East Market
Stret.
Iwin—New Irwin Public School for-
mally opened.
Fayette City—Plans being rushed for
proposed bridge connecting Fayette
and Washington counties at this place.
New Germantown—Howard Soule
purchased road house near this place.
Tionesta—“The Forest Republic”
“Democratic Vindicator” merged re-
cently.

along with a crowd to a hunting camp.
We took a leg of fresh pork and hung
it up at the ceiling so the mice
wouldn’t get it. That night we played
five hundred and all but yours truly
smoked. Next day we had an argu-
ment. Some fellows claimed we
bought fresh pork and the others
claimed we bought smoked pork.
Well, when we ate it I thought they
had cooked one of the fellow’s wool
socks.
A WISE OWL



Ne Hurry To Get Back
when an Electric Range is au-
Noa cooking the dinner . . .
and when an Electric Water Heater
keeps a plentiful supply of really
Hot Water on hand . . . ready for
instant use.

 

Here’s ur Opportunity to
Invest
Electrical, Appliances
that give you moke hours of leisure

*
Never Before at Such Low Prices
$7.65
vo $6. 00







Payments
low as
ELECTRIC RANGE ......
Down
ELECTRIC WATER HEATER "°%"}
24 Months to Pay

COMBINATION OFFER
Down Payments
Range and Water Heater . ac iow as
30 Months to Pay
YOUR LOCAL DEALER \
Can supply you with these appliances °
10.50



or other makes of standard quality \
5
%


N Pennsylvania \
Qwer & Light Company,



F. HH BAK
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Ww
OOOOO0OCO0D00LO00000
PRICE Of MILK
REDUCED
Owing to the fact that the“grice paid to the producer for milk,
‘has been lowered, we are pasSipg the benefit of this cut on to
the consumer.
Beginning Monday, May 23, 1932 o%r price for milk delivered
to your door is ONLY 8 CENTS PER QUART or 4 CENTS PER
PINT.
Remember, all our house to house delive
8 a. m. so that you have fresh milk in time fd
are made before
breakfast.

C. M. COOLE
Phone 54W
Milk, Cream, Buttermilk, Cottage Cheese
QUALITY SERVICE COURTESY
1932:
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