The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 15, 1935, Image 6

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3
Daddy’s Playground
MAYTOWN, PA.
MEMORIAL DAY







Beginning at 1 P. M. (Standard Time)
Practice shooting from 12 to 1 P. M. Standard Time

From 8 to 12 in the Evening
MUSIC BY THE
Registered Target Shoot
Susquehanna Mountaineers



5
NO ADMISSION and FREE PARKING
EVERYBODY WELCOME



2












ing. See the Registered Target Shoot.
pate, it’s great fun just to watch.
3
Shells and Light Lunch will be for sale at the grounds
agement has gone to great expense to bring them to D
ground ALL EVENING. \
\
and have the best time of your life.
For detailed information phone \
J. H. KEENER, The Marble and Granite Man



High knockless power that gives you downhill speed
on upgrades is only a part of the smooth, brilliant
performance BLUE SUNOCO puts. in your car:—
year-round quick starting, shooting acceleration and
mileage economy complete its ideal combination of
the four all-important qualities. Test a tankful eos
it always sells at regular gas price.





Clarence Schock
Mount Joy, Pa.



We Ask Patronage. We Give Service
Lumber—Coal

For This Locality’s Complete News Service
Read—The Bulletin
Don’t be among the missing at Daddy’s Playground, two blocks
from the heart of Maytown, Memorial Day, afternoon and even-
Even if\you don’t partici-
Those Susquehanna Mountaineers are just grand oyer the radio
but wait until you see them play! They're marvelous! The man-
dddy’s Play-
A
Plenty of Parking Space and facilities at one of the finest shoot-
ing grounds in the state. No annoying crowd or congestion: Come
\
i
NO. 9, MARIETTA, PA.



THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
00 YOU KNOW WH =. Gasofine Isn't Dangerous — IC's The Man Befind The Match?
WEDNESDAY, MAY
Drawn for this paper
15th, 1935
By Fisher

[oo v= LENTLE REWMOER
OF OUR HUMBLE EFFOATS
WHO HAVE" WATCHED US
EVERY DAN, LIST ~
MOMENY WE OO NOT
INDVLLE WN
HUMOR. OR SucH. BuT
WHEN & FACETIOUS
IN A CONLE R.NN LARALZE
HOLDING @ «ITTLE
MATCH OVER A TANK
INGUIRES “1S THIS
4ASOLINE ” WE
REFRAIN FROM ADDING
a TOUCH TO THE PICTURE
WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENED
{NV THAT QUIET TOWN |S
ox RaveD [05°
&




INTERNATIONAL CARTOON CO., N.Y 425




———
MY LAD, THERE'S ONL
® |39 MECES OF You
MISSING WHEN WE



OWL LAFFS
Be IM
am EE matters.
nt nr Sr bl
a ee.
Ef ——————————
ue a hi
me
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A WISE OWL

The soft ball season is in full swing
again, and women who always compli-
mented themselves on not being golf
widows now find themselves baseball
widows.

Which reminds me. Two fellows sit-
ting on the bleachers, at the first game,
were having a difficult time hearing
the umpire and the usual baseball talk
because of four very annoying women
who were sitting right in back of them.
Finally, one of them said, real loudly:
“There are two kinds of women, the
talktive kind and the other kind.?
His friend, thoroughly disgusted, asked:
“what other kind?”

Following, is a sign I saw on a farm
gate out near Milton Grove: “Peddlers
beware! We shoot every tenth peddler.
The ninth one just left.”

I amost forgot. Two little girls out
at the baseball diamond were having
quite a heated discussion as to whose
family were the better. The one little
girl proudly boasted: “My ancestors
came over on the Mayflower.” Not to
be outdone, the other child said: “Mine
came over on the April Showers, a
month before the Mayflower.”

After the game, some of the players
on the new Greyhound team were sit-
ting on the bench when Bruce Pennell
said: “Boy, I feel like used gasoline.”
Wonderingly Busty Mateer queried:”
“How is that?” And Bruce answered:
“Exhausted.”

Maybe if we streamline our next de-
pression it'll pass faster.

A very timid? ? ? child in the fifth
grade of our local school was asked to
give the most important date in history.
He very promptly replied: “1925.” The
teacher asked: “Why, what important
event happened in that year?” To
which the youth replied: “I was born.” |
While they were on the subject the
teacher asked: “Were you named after
your father?” The boy answered: “Sure,
he was born first”. ...And they wonder
why teachers get “cross.”
I was having a hamburger in one of
those Pullman Dining Cars, you are
parked along the highway here and
there, when the fellow next to me ex-
claimed: “Look here, waiter, is this
peach or apple pie I'm eating?” The
waiter asked: “Can’t you tell from the
taste?” The customer replied: “No, I
can’t: And the waiter said: “Well, then,
what difference does it make?”

“I saw a man yesterday that weighed
two tons,” remarked a Marietta Street
boy to his pal, “yer crazy,” protested
the other. “No,” explained the youth,
“he was weighing lead pipe.”
An unknown called up the Lancas-
ter police station saying: “Lo, is ish a
police station?” The reply was “yes.”
“Ish there a drunk there named Jim
Drake? “the unknown continued:” No,
there is no one here by that name,”
came the reply. “Thanks,” said the in
ebriate, “Thish room ish locked and 1
thought I wash in jail.”
At a very small and distant borough
I was standing on a corner interesting-
ly listening to the cop explaining his
many duties to a citizen. The latter in-
quired: “How do you tell when a car's
going fast enough to pinch it?” The
cop importantly explained: Wal, my
motorsiekle goes just thirty-five miles
an hour, top speed, and that’s the
speed limit. So if they're going too fast
fer me to ketch, I pinch ’em”........ A
very efficient officer, I must say.

The citizen, after figuring out that
answer remarked: “You talk as if you
had a mouthful of grapes.” “How's
that?” Asked the officer. “Im lunches.”
answered the taxpayer.

Met a very dirty man on the streets
of Columbia and I nosely asked: “How
do you like your chimney sweeping
job?” And he smartly answered: “Oh,
it soots me.”...... So now I'll mind my
own business.
A WISE OWL
rr OA A
POULTRY
CHICKS NEED ROOM,
GOOD, CLEAN FEED

Simple Flat Trough Provides
Ample Space
By Cora E. Cook, Extension Poultry Specialist,
University Farm, St. Paul.—WNU Service.
Every one will agree that a good ra-
tion is essential to raising good chicks,
but not every one recognizes the im-
portant part feeders play in raising
these good chicks efficiently and eco-
nomically.
Enough feeder space should be pro-
vided so that all chicks can eat at one
time. Lack of space causes slow and
uneven growth and, frequently, trou-
bles with cannibalism, for an idle
chick gets into mischief. A four-foot
feeder, feeding from both sides, will
take care of 100 chicks up to about
three weeks. Then more space must
be provided. It takes two feeders for
100 chicks during most of the grow-
ing period.
Feeders that get filled with litter
and filth discourage eating. Set feed-
ers up on stands and clean out any
litter that does accumulate.
Feeders that are too expensive dis-
courage providing as many as are
needed. A simple flat trough made of
lath, a four-inch board and a revolving
reel lengthwise of the feeder to keep
chicks out of the feed, are easy to
make and entirely satisfactory.
As chicks grow the feeders can be
raised higher from the floor and thus
use floor space to better-advantage.
Floors can be kept much cleaner
and chicks protected against disease
if feeders are placed on shallow plat-
forms, covered with three-quarter-inch
mesh hardware cloth. These should be
just big enough for the feeder and to
collect the droppings and waste feed
and water,
Pullets Are Healthier;
Tuberculosis Eliminated
“Twenty-five years ago avian tuber-
culosis was probably just as prevalent
in the East as in the Middle West.
Now the East is comparatively free
from this type, undoubtedly due to
the general practice of keeping pullets
only,” says H. R, Smith, live stock
commissioner, Chicago. “Where im-
portance is given to poultry raising
as a major industry economy in egg
production is essential. Pullets pro-
duce more eggs than older hens. If
Middle Western flock owners would
follow the Eastern practice in farm
flocks, tuberculosis could be elim-
inated.”
Avian tuberculosis, in addition to
causing heavy losses to the poultry in-
dustry, causes heavy mortality in
swine. Since bovine tuberculosis is
being brought under control, a higher
percentage of infected hogs are found
to carry the avian type of disease.
Vigor Should Come First
In all animal husbandry, vigor must
come, first—must be considered before
color, relationship, type or anything
else; for if vigor in the breeder is not
present one is headed for disaster.
This mysterious element, cites a writer
in the Missouri Farmer, which i8 some-
thing akin to the “it” in movie stars,
can only be detected by sight, can only
be gauged by the judgment of the
breeder. It is gauged by the bright-
ness of eye and the alertness of the
bird or animal. Heavy layers have it,
else they would not be so prolific. A
famous breeder of chickens once said
that he was not afraid of lack of vigor
in a 300-egg hen and would not hesi-
tate to inbreed such a producer.
Ducks Are Sensitive
Ducks are far more sensitive than
ordinary fowls, and mistakes in man-
agement frequently lead to a ‘complete
moult. Do not imagine that free-range
ducks can secure half -their living dur-
ing winter months. Ducks in full lay
will consume about five ounces of food
daily—approximately two ounces of
grain and three of wet mash. For
grain use wheat, or equal weights of
wheat and corn, fed in troughs in the
morning, and they love to shovel it
out of a trough containing a small
quantity of water.—Montreal Herald.
Do Not Overcrowd
The poultryman who placeMoo many
layers in the laying heuse is headed for
small profits and trouble. In small
buildings 5 square feet of floor space
should be aHowed for each bird and
In larger oges 3 square feet. If the
birds are crowded they will be uncom-
fortable, competition for feed at the
hoppers and for water at the fountains
will be keen, they will be more suscep-
tible to disease, and mortality is sure
to be heavy. One should aim to have
the laying houses not too full and" not
the opposite, ’
In the Poultry Yard
The surest way to prevent frozen
combs is to provide heat during zero
weather.


Turkeys, especially when kept in
confinement, require ample supplies of

Stimulate your business by ad-

vertising in The Bulletin,
water and grit,
- Tr A CE I



CO-ORDINATION, _ |


You Poor Fisu!
WHY © You
RoW AWAY
ouR
WE Pot WAS
“fous,
THE REST OF 1S
ALL DROPPED AT
re. TIME.
“THAT LITTLE GAME'—— .~-
po ©
Nou OPENED , PAUL, -
WHY DIDNT You
Svow Your BREARERS
AND TARE THE Por.
RAN
) DON'T
BN
:
CHARLEY, HERE, OPENED \
\ DREW TO A JACK AND
TDN'T BETTER « ~
{ HAD MY BACK To THE TY | Y
SABLE USIN' THE ASH
AY ON THE BUFFET |
bo ODR'T SEB Av
«ov BRDS ‘LAY, AND
AS \ “TURNED ARQLND
| TRREW AWAY MY
nw

\ WAS A FOO.
=”
wv BREAKERS
io THREW ‘6M
AWRY. —
\ NEVER DREAMED
Hou'D ALL DITCH.
SW
DEAL ME IN
oN THIS.
TS GONNA
BE SOME
Por. wow!
“THE Por
FADES ! You DIDNY
PLAY LAST
HAND, —
SQUARE VP
WITH THE
AND
GEY CARDS .
&
GETS \T.

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


One of the most maligned words in
the dictionary is overwork. It is
employed as an excuse te avoid un-
attractive social engagements. It is
used to impress others with one’s
particular importance. It is frequent
ly mentionedd as the reason for
one’s business failures. And it cer-
tainly is most unjustly blamed for
many bodily ills,” states Dr. Edith
MacBride-Dexter, the Secretary of
Health. :
As a matter of fact overwork is
not nearly the hobgoblin it is paint-
ed to be. Abstractly speaking, over-
work is a very decent term, behaves
itself on most occasions, and does
little damage to the lives of most of
us. And more likely than not,
where lack of health is concerned,
overwork has had little if anything
to do with the situation.
Actually work of a normal amount
or even above average is not prone
to do one any real damage. On the
other hand, certain practices asso-
ciated with the work or with living
are likely to be the real offenders.
Those who, for example, are victims
of impure air, illogical diets, auto-
intoxication, worry, lack of exercise
and insufficient sleep are usually the
first to blame work for their sorry
condition. And, no doubt, even an
average amount of work can easily
turn into a sense of overwork when
one’s capacity to do the job has been
weakened by enervating habits.
The other day, for instance, a pro-
minent physician was seeking to find
a cause for the nervous breakdowr
of one of his friends. The friend
promptly and decisively blamed it
upon overwork. Both men, as the
doctor pointed out to his patient,
were of the same physical and ner-
vous make-up, with conceivably ap-
proximately the same amount of the
natural resistance. Said the physi-
cian, You blams your shake-up to
overwork, yet I work regularly hard
er than you do and put in much
longer hours, and I'm O. K. No, I do
not think overwork is the trouble. It
is your living habits that have caus-
ed the trouble.
Which, after all, is merely anothev
way of saying that the best bulwark
against ill effects from hard and sus-
tained work is the conscientious adop
tion of a well-rounded and properly
balanced health program. And by
this suggestion is not meant a fan-
atical adherence to a long set of fan-
cy rules, but only reasonable sense
of the primary duty every one owes
to himself to get plenty of fresh aiy
and some exercise, to eliminate the
excessive use of stimulants, to obtain
an average amount of sleep, to eat
moderately; in short, to treat one's
body with the respect that it de-
minds. oo od
It can safely be said that the man
or woman who fully appreciates that'
nature has some say in one’s meth-
od of living and then applies that
knowledge, will not only not become
a victim of so-valled overwork but
will increase the capacity to do more
work with less effort than is exerted
when health is given secondary con-
sideration, if any at all.
Erosion Control Pays
Erosion control saves the soil for
the farmer and saves expenditure for
control of floods and other results of
WE HAVE.....
QUALITY
MEATS
2
Krall’'s Meat Market
West Main St, Mt: Joy
cui Stone
of go
Building
Before placing your order elsewhere
see us. Also manufacturers of
CONCRETE BLOCKS
SILLS and LINTELS
J | N. Stauffer &Bro
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Swiss Watches and



Repaired
Prompt Service and
Prices Reasonable
DON W. GORRECHT
“Mount Joy, Pa.
L. E..ROBERTS
NOTARY PUBLIC
Specializing on Auto Titles, Licenses,
and Operators Licenses
Marietta St. and
Corner Main & New Haven
MOUNT JOY, PA.
WEAK AND SKINNY
MEN, WOMEN
AND CHILDREN
Saved by new Vitamins of Cod Liver
Oil in tasteless tablets.
Pounds of firm healthy flesh instead
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McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets, they're
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ou simply must try McCoy's at
Remember if you don’t gain at least 3 Ibs. of
firm healthy flesh in a month get your money
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s-approved by Good Housekeeping
Juatitute, Refase al substitutes—
st on the original M
wean there are none better. 8
Small Wrist Watches|

Dr. John D. Killheffer
"OPTOMETRIST
MN
OVER THIRTY YEARS EXPERIENCE
Elizabethtown—1§ East High Street
Tuesday, Frida d Sai
9 A.M. to 4:30.P. ML
Manheim—19 W. Stei treet
Mon., Wed., Thurs., 8 to 6 BR, M.
Evenings, Tues., Fri. and x
Telephone, Manheim 11)
jan
PRINTING
[PRICES are LOWEST
THE BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY
[PMY SALE WAS A




’
TIE USED OUR WAU
CUTE
IN HIS ADS
Furnished by
THIS HEWSPAPER
COULD NOT DO HER
WH EN every-
thing you at
tempt is a burden
—when you are
nervous and irri-








this medicine. It
may be just what
a you need for extra
energy. Mrs. Charles L. Cadmus of
Trenton, New Jersey, says, “After
doing just a little work I had to lie
down. My mother-in-law recom-
mended the Vegetable Com d.
I can see a wonderful change now.”
VEGETABLE COMPOUND



THE BULLETIN

HOW ARE YOUR SHOES?
DONT WAIT TOO LONG



runaway water,



MOUNT JOY
Stimulate your business by advertis~
Bulletin,
ing in the

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