The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 28, 1934, Image 6

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Any day in the , “all breeds.
Phone 88R13 Zabethtown,%Pa., or
Route No. 2, Park, Bever-
ly. Also goods, butcher fogs.
Auctiop#every Thursday night} at
7 o'clock. Don’t miss any of these sales.
Always bargains for some one.
mar.28-3t- G. K. WAGNER

Success of a Russian surgeon in
transferring the cornea of the eye of
a corpse to that of a living woman
resulting in her regaining her sight
after several years of blindness was
reported from Moscow recently.
rl A en
Excavations at the city of Jericho,
15 miles from Jerusalem, indicate
that four different cities have occu-
pied the site.
core ert i Mi
Of course your wife has poor judg |
ment, think whom she married.
A Gp A
Advertise in The BuHetin




LISTEN TO THE MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA. Columbia Broadcasting System
Broadcast by
GRUNOW ELECTRIC
Every Tuesday 1
REFRIGERATOR CO.
Night at 9:30 P. M.
mow Electric Refrigerators
NOW O}
SPLAY AT ROHRER’S GARAGE
Also—Atwater-Kent and Philco Rad
Dexter Washing Machines


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He is not in business for today or tomorrow
only—but for next year and ten years from next
He knows the value of good will.
You get better merchandise at a fairer price
than he could ever hope to sell it if he did not
have the larger volume of business that comes
from legitimate advertising and goods that bear
out the promise of the printed word.
DOOOOOOOOOOE
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Don’t miss the advertisements. This very day a
they call your attention to values that tomorrow 3
x you will be sorry you overlooked. 2a
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and inspect.
JNO. E. SCHROLL, Realtor
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
Far Cheaper Than You Can Build
VERY MODERN HOME
On an 80-foot front lot, house has 8-rooms and bath, slate roof,
large porch, hot water heat, oil burner, hot and cold cellar, all
cemented, possession any time. This is one of the best built homes
in Mount Joy. Only reason for selling, but one person in the fam-
ily. I will cheerfully show this property. No. 442.
Modern 7-Room House
On a 60-foot lot, corner, bath, oil burner, slate roof; house recently
painted and papered. 2-Car Garage, poultry house, fruit, etc. Come

CLAREN





MOUNT JOY, PA.
)
AL)
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO, PA.


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© GET BY OM TO-DAF AND- STEWING §
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COMMA GET FOR SUPER © — )
FNL PORTED CHEESE



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BUT — BY THE WAY — WE HAVES
A SPECIAL TODAY ON SOME [mes

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A WISE OWL

While standing up at the Post Of-
fice Monday night Busty Mateer hol-
lered to a passing motorist: “Hey,
mister, your back wheel's going for-
ward.” The motorist called back:
“That's all right, buddy, I'm on my
return trip.”
Johnny Charles says he don’t be-
lieve in spending so much money on
his girl. Instead of buying her vio-
lets every day he sent her a pack of
seeds and she can raise them her-
self.
Our local Dumb Dora thinks that
refined sugar is used only by the
Four Hundred.
I was talking to Stuffy Klugh,
who weighs about 220 pounds and
has a very ruddy complexion. In
the course of the conversation he
said: “I may not look it, bu I suffer
said, “I may not look it, but I suffer
continuously from T. B” “T B.)’1
“I have though, Two Bellies.”
Sharps Corner, found one
tion separating the nests. “Abe
didn’t hesitate a minute but immed-
iately started and tore down the
whole chicken house in order to free
the poor hen.

A certain spinister from town told
me she always wears awfully tight
shoes and when I ask her why she
replied, “It's the only chance I have
to be squeezed.”

A well known man from Florin
said, “Don’t divorce your wife. Give
her an automobile. The shock will
kill her, and you can use the mach-
ine for the funeral.
I won't tell you who this was buf
they live near Florin. A little boy
was being very naughty and his
Mother scolded him saying, “If your

Grandmother saw you doing that
she'd turn over in her grave.” The
little fellow replied, “Oh, well, she
needs the exercise.”
Red Metzler asked, “What's your
new girl's name?”
Mikey Weaver answered, ‘Mar-
celle.”
Red replied, “Do you think she'll
be PERMANENT?”

A very tired man from Elizabeth-
town said to his wife, “Rachel, I'm
half dead!”
Rachel replied, “now I can collect
half of your life insurance.”

Speaking of insurance. On Mon-
day a man went into “Bud” Carpen-
ter's office and asked, “Is this a fire-
insurance office?”
“Yes,” said Bud, “can we write
you some insurance,”
“Perhaps you can,” replied the
man. “You see my
to fire me next Saturday and I'd like
to get some protection.”
when he opened his pocketbook and
took out a penny to pay him the In-
dian blinked from the light.
his Mamma and she said, “Johnny,”
I wish you'd be a good little boy.”
“Why can’t you be like your father,
good for nothing?”

“I've been married five years,” a
man told me, “and I've got a bushel
of children.”
“How's that?” I asked.
He replied, “My name is Peck. I've
got four children. Don’t four pecks
make a bushel?”

Woman was made before mirrors—
and she has kept in front of them
ever since.




Nt




| UWBER-COAL

“My mother sent me down to the
butcher's today to see if the butcher
had frogs legs. I came back and
told her I couldn't see his legs, as


| balanced diet occupies
| the stage.
replied, “you certainly don’t look as|
though you had T B” He answered |
Last week Abe Faus, from out at |
of his
chickens in a knot hole in the parti- |

boss threatens |
Edgar Hagenberger told me that |
yesterday afternoon a Scothman |
came into Darrenkamp’s store and |
A little boy was being scolded by |
Johnny said, “T'll be good for a |
nickel.”
The idea!” replied his Mamma,
HEALTH TALK
WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B.
APPEL, SECRETARY OF
HEALTH
the so-called
the center of
Some while ago it was
calories; this as followed by vitamins.
You will note in all the literature
and conversation on those various
subjects little if anything’s said about
the joy of eating. It is all a question
{ of health. But even health has its
limitations,” states Dr. Theodore B.
| Appel, Secretary of Health.
{ “In making this statement
| is no desire to treat
| over-weight with undue levity. Phy-
sicians are in accord that a moderate
degree of over-weight is easily hand-
led before the age of thirty-five; and
that after that age definite over-
weight is associated with an increas-
ed death rate. Moreover, after mid-
dle age in many cases it represents
a real menace to health both because
of excess fat and the habits of living
that are responsibile for the fat in
the first instance.
“But it is one thing to become fan-
atical on some diet fad and quite an-
other to approach the subject of
food intake with a proper degree of
wisdom. The fact is that while vita-
mins and calories and balanced diets
all have their proper places in scien-
jce and in disease manifestations,
much of the individual concern de-
ped to these subjects by thousands
of reasonably healthy persons is
| largely a matter of waste effort.
| “Of course, extreme over-weight
calls for a diet to be prescribed by a
| physician who has made a study of
| the individual case. However, when
| there is merely a tendency to over-
| weight a modification of the average
{ normal diet usually is all that is re-
quired. This will involve eating
lightly of the fuel foods such as fats
| starches and sugars, but by nomeans
eliminating them; and concentrating
somewhat on the bulky foods. This
procedure, it will be noted, is not at
all involved, nor even spartan.
“The average person can let the
| balanced diet features, the vitamins
and the calories to the eminent scien-
tists who make proper use of them,
to the doctors in cases of individual
| over-weight, and to the false health
| propagandists who play them up for
what they can get out of them in
dollars and cents.
“The wide variety of foods avail-
able to the average Pennsylvanian is
sufficiently balanced to please the
most exacting scientists and contains
all the vitamins that even a fanatical
laboratory man would insist upon.
“In short, eating is one of the great
joys. Barring illness or downright
over-weight it need not become what
it has become in many homes, name-
ly, a painful rite. Be balanced on
diet and in other food fads also.”
ene eee
Gratitude
A man in the “Near” East who had
quite a reputation as a skinflint lost
his pocketbook a while ago, with
$200 in cash in it. He put an adver-
tisement in the “Lost” column in
the paper but a month elapsed and
he had heard nothing on the sub-
ject. He had about given up all
hope of ever seeing his $200 again
when a farmer came in and returned
the pocketbook. The skinflint looked
in the pocketbook and found the
money was all safe. The farmer
thought perhaps the capitalist might
give him a slight reward. On the
conrtary the skinflint gave him a
sour look and said: “The money's all
here—but where's the interest?’
rr A Ann
“Just at the moment

War Gas as a Weapon
The charge has been made that gas
is a cruel weapon. Soldiers deny
this and cite World war casualty fig-
ures (dead and wounded) to prove
their point, asserts a writer in the Chi-
cago Tribune. There were 224980
American soldiers wounded and 34,
249 killed. Of the 224,080 treated in
hospitals, 70,552, or 31.4 per cent, were





there |
the subject of |
{
|
}
|

affected by gas; and of this num-
t ber, 1,221, or 173 per cent, died
Of the remaining, 133,537, or 59.4
{ per cent of casualties suffering
| from s produced by weapons |
other tha 12,470, or 81 per cent,
died. Of those killed on the battle
field, there were not more than 200
s due to gas. Miscellaneous gun
led 33.4 per cent; shrap-
el. 15 per cent: shells, 7.8 per cent:
{}3 per cent;
9.1 per cent


|S WOU

|
|
i
| n
|
cabors. OK


he had his pants on.”
{ Since every body has a theme song
(Karl Germer thought he ought to
{have one for the Tap Room. So when
{I went in there last night Karl said,
{ “We will now sing our theme song
entitled, ‘Our beer may be excited
but it will not lose its head.”
Spook Snyder came to work with
ihis socks on wrong side out and I
{ask him why and he said, “There's
la hole in the other side.”
| ———
At a recent public sale here the
auctioneer held up a lot of tobacco
spears. Two of them were crossed
to resemble a shears. Doc Kuhn, not
knowing what they were, made the
! purchase. Imagine his disappointment
iwhen he was handed spears instead
of shears. A WISE OWL
rifle bullets, |
|
designated for library use. Pennsyl-
vania, one of the wealthiest stat
| stands last on the list of state lib-







WHATS
THAT 7
You HAD
DIAMONDS AND
WOULDNT SEE
Jims Lin BEY!

















SAY, LISTEN = || | CERTAMY
STicK IN THE Mup Dio!
WHATS THE | 1 nap Four
BiG BAZ. {IN MY HAS
You CART SMEAR pre ong
Tw ST? a | PmcEn
You DIONT
HME FIVE.
Diamonds !
——



Library Service In
Lancaster County

Do you know what Lancaster
County’s present library service is?
The A. Herr Smith Public Library
on N. Duke Street, in Lancaster, is
carrying on a limited service to the
county; in Columbia, Marietta and
Elizabethtown there are branch li-
braries, run by the generous efforts
of volunteers; in 43 other locations in
the county there are ‘deposit sta-
tions”’—that is, schools, stores, etc.,
where books are brought for local |
distribution. At first reading this
sounds fine, but the system creaks
and groans under its burden of in-
adequacy. The distribution and col-
lection of books is entirely a haphaz-
ard affair, with no definite time of
distributing and collecting, and no
person definitely responsible. At pre
sent, Miss Critchfield, head librarian
of A. Herr Smith does what she can
on county library service; now and
then an interested person connected
with a deposit station brings in books
for exchange; but Lancaster County
covers a great many miles, and reg-
ular, adequate library service under
these conditions is impossible. It is
the usual, rather than the exception-
al case for books to be stranded the
better part of a year in the same de-
posit station.
One of the most important services
of a public library is helping the
children with books that supplement
school work; what of the rural child
under a county system as meager as
ours? Lancaster County School Sys-
tem is not a standardized one—one
township may have an entirely dif-
ferent set of text books from its
neighboring township; some schools
are favored with adequate school li-
braries, others’ have none. It is la-
mentable but true that the school
still using text books published in
1903 is the one with no library of its
own. The scarcity of school books
may keenly affect the rural child,
vet no library is within reach.
This is the actual county picture—
what would be the idea? The goal
towards which we should work is
that of a county book truck, a min-
iature library on wheels, travelling
thru the county on schedule, a train-
ed librarian in charge, distributing
and collecting books. Collections
would be placed in every village in
the county, in every crossroads store
Books would be within easy reach
of everyone, young or old—books of
all kinds—stories, histories, hand-
crafts, biographies. The librarian
would travel about keeping in |
stant touch with each community,
shifting books from one place to an-
other, keeping the collections fresh
and attractive.
This is not an imaginative dream
—in a number of progressive states
the book truck is a reality. 32 of
our 48 states take care of county lib-
rary service thru taxation, a certain
small percentage of tax money being





rary appropriation, hence lLancaster’s |
county library is as poor as |
is. This is not the best time to
mention increasing taxes, yet an ade-
quate library tax would cost the
average family less than the price
of one good book a year.
What can we do to help make the
dream a reality? Spread the idea of
county book service—talk to your
county commissioners about it—get
your neighbors to talk about it, and
tell them to tell your county com-
missioners they want county book
service.
If you want to know more about
county library service, write to:
State Library,
Library Extension Division,
Harrisburg, Pa.
WP
You can get all the news of this
locality for less than three cents
week thru the Bulletin.





BURR COOK, pictured above, was born an inlander but deep in him
from childhood was a love of the sea. As a newspaper man in the
Atlantic coast cities, he made friends with waterfront characters. retired
masters, Bedford moss-back and hardened bully-boys of steel and steam.
His imagination fired by the stories he heard, he did some sailing on his
own account. Then the war claimed him and after his return from France,
he began writing sea stories for radio. He has been writing them now
for more than four years. They form the Cape Diamond Light program
heard every Thursday night over an NBC chain. The major portion of
Burr Cook’s yarns are based on fact.

7. noun ang


AN
IMPORTANT
NEW NOTE IN
FORMAL
DINNER
FROCKS



WEVE been treated to a good-
ly number of original crea-
tions this season but none quite so
new as the formal frock which
covers one’s shoulders, and either
features an extremely low back
decolletage, or else demurely cov-
ers one up. These frocks may be
worn to afternoon social gather
ings and also for an evening date
of more formal proportions. A tiny
hat is always ensembled with the
dinner gown . . . and a hit of veil
adds a welcome touch.
Satin or velvet is usually chosen
for these long, graceful gowns sie
velvet works in particularly well
with the mermaid silhouette as
shown in the frock illustrated. A
slenderizing silhouette, one that
lends grace and charm to its wear-
€T, 1t is receiving its full share of
popular approval. The width at
the shoulders is much softer this
year than in previous seasons . . .
Sod jel more wearable. (McCall
7 . (By courtesy of The MeCall
Company ‘