The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 10, 1917, Image 6

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THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY,
|

PA.



at —

RE rt
CLARENCE SCHOCK
MOUNT JOY, PA.
LUMBER -COAL
SBR


Five Per Cent.
With Security
When that Certificate of Deposit which pays
you only 3 1-2 or 4 per cent. Interest comes due,
bring or send it to this bank and get FIVE per cent
Interest with over One Million Dollars Security.
| Hiylow
Maytown, | enna.
Capital $50,000
M. R. HOFFMAN, President.



Surplus $50,000
N. F. ARNTZ, Cashier



SBE SBD EE dds dol dds Be lokedodonds od doidodors dacs dod dole DSBS OSI d id tls ss ss assssn
2


buy A Maxwell

If You Want a Car That's
Tried and True

I sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying ears.
service Sundays or night time as well as during the day.
a trial. I also handle the .
Studebaker
One of the Best Cars of That Class
BRUBAKERS’ GARAGE
Bell Phone Marietta St.
Mount Joy, Pa.




I have taken the agency for the Maxwell Automobiles, which is one of the
best squipped and easiest riding cheap cars on the market. It is by no
means a new car, but one that has been tried for years and has proven
satisfactory. Any one in the market for such a car will readily be con-
vinced of its merits after a demonstration which will be cheerfully given.
I not only sell cars, but I am prepared to take care of the people to whom
I am at your
None but com-
petent mechanics employed. If your car needs attention, give this garage








ALBERT STRICKLER
Bell Phone at Residence and Yards

oY, PA.
ETE



EE rT EEE:


Bremer
— :
R SUR ne |
DISTINCTIVE |
Printing
ERR.

oe oe oe!
A


bo 530 8;
dq, Printing that will
attract attention and
put your advertising
in a class by itself —
printing thatcontains
Seefeld eoderde

a ——-
3
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Seodvefeofordbieoderdrofeodr bode dodo dodo desde drop



originality in con-
ception and excel-
lence in its execution
— this quality of
originality and in-
dividuality character-
izes all the printed
work we turn out.












We are equipped to
handle any kind of Job
Printing, and when it
comes to Service, we
can only refer you to
our customers or ask
that you give us a trial.












| West, but
| a stri
| pany.
IMAKING UNIQUE
LIABILITY RULES
Driving Load of Lumber to a
Corncrib Not One of the Vo-
cations Covered by Risk.
ELEVATOR
WRONG
| Many Appeals Are Dismissed—Reck
less Man, Who Took It Against
Orders, “Furthering Employ-
{ er's Business.”
f ——

—Harrisburg
Thirty or more decisions were an
| nounced at the office of
Workmen's
cluding a dozen in which compensa
f
|
|
tion awards made to employees of rail
roads engaged in interstate comme=ce
and governed by decisions of Federa
| Courts were set aside.
Among
farm labor was refused
James W. ho:d
re could be no compensa
| engaged in
| Commissioner Leech
ing that th

tion given for a man driving a team |
loaded with lumber for a corncrib, un-
der the existing State laws. He add
ed
“should have presented 1
Legislature, or


to the
The Board
| the whole question passed
the appellate courts.”
In affirming an award in the case of
the Pennsylvania Sugar |
Chermiak vs.
Company, the Board
man was engaged in
found
to obtain drinking water he
and that his errand “was fully as much
in the furtherance of his employer's |
business as though he had been going |
to fetch tools or any other necessary
{| equipment. This being so, it is im
hibited by his employer, but was so
’
ness.’
| er Hosiery Company, a Berks County
case, it was held that an employee who
Fell down stairs after completing a
| day's work and was not injured be-
i cause of the condition of the stairs, was
not entitled to compensation. In the
opinion, after a rehearing, of Carr vs.
the Pennsylvania Railroad, the man is
awarded compensation for being nurt
through being shoved off a bench dur-
Ing a rest period at a station.
Appeals dismissed include Kelly vs.
| Midvale Steel Company, Philadelphia;
Wallace vs. Meadow Hill Coal Com-
pany, Scranton; Geffken vs. Martin,
York; Roskowski vs. Pittsburgh Coal
Company, Pittsburgh; Quigley vs. Mec-
{ Dowell Paper Company, Philadelphia;
Pfeffer vs. Republic Iron & Steel Com-
pany, Youngstown, O.; Love vs. Mar-
shall Coal Company, Pittsburgh; Bry-
| all vs. Delaware & Hudson Company.
Scranton; Herbert vs. Pennsylvania
Railroad, Pittsburgh; Achey vs. Phil-
adelphia & Reading Railway, Philadel-
phia; Chovic vs. Pittsburgh Crucible
Steel Company, Pittsburgh; Hazlett
vs. Buchman & Rosen, Washington:
Sasnofsky vs. South Fork Coal Mining
Company, South Fork; Walters vs.
Philadelphia & Reading, Pottsville:
Granville vs. Delaware, Lackawanna &
Western Railroad, Scranton; Blumen-
stine vs. Philadelphia & Reading, Har-
risburg.
The other cases come under Federal
decisions.
Box Cars:-For Coal Trade.
The Public Service
Bureau of Rates and
this notice:
As an aid to relieve the difficulties
at the bituminous coal mines, caused
by insufficient cars for shipment being
available, the Public Service Commis-
sion has granted the coal-carrying
railroads authority to amend the “car
distribution rules,” effective immedi-
ately, to permit the assignment of box
cars to mines, regardless of the num-
ber of coal carrying cars supplied, and
not to be charged in the distributions.
This practice will be carried out
only for west bound shipments of coal,
and is designed to make use of box
cars, which are now moving West
empty for the grain movement East,
which is very heavy at this time of the
year.
increase the output of coal, which will
relieve not only the markets in the
alsn will have a beneficial
influence on coal supplied in the East,
in that it will conserve coal-carrying
cars to this traffic which might other-
wise be nec sary for coal moving in
other directi
Commission’s
Tariffs issued

ons.
| Reinsurance Local Now.
sdesferfesdoslesfeiferferfeode defo odrfeedodede do fodeodeded |
" go
Workmen's Insurance
the reinsurance of
State
placed
The
Board has
the State Fund, covering its catastro- |
com- |
phe hazard, with an insurance
pany licensed to operate in Pennsyl-
vania and incorporated. William J.
loney, manager of the State
no companies incorporated by this
Commons Ith to write excess
surance risks, and consequently it was
impossible to place the business with
y Pennsylvania insurance com-




State Imposing Penalties.
The Attorney General's Department
brought suit against the Economy and
| Artisans’ Building and Loan Associa- |
| tions, of Scranton, for $100 fines each
| for failing to make reports on condi-
tions to the State Commissioner of
Banking for 1916. Suit also
brought in behalf of the State Fire
Marshal against F. G. Kruegerman, of
Scranton, for recovery of $575 fines
for failing to remove a building owned
Fill The fines are
$25 a day for each day of failure to
yeport.
was

RIGHT
the State
Compensation Board, in-
the appeals dismissed was |
3 : : : |
one in which a claim for compensation ; at
for dependents of a man killed while
t the counsel for the appellants
arguments
may yet be
| urged to go before an appellate court.
would be pleased to have | in
upon by
that the | by
furthering his |
employer's work, even though in going |
used a |
prohibited elevator and was killed by |
it. The Board holds that at the time at Bridgeport declared a 15 per cent
the man was not in his lunch period, | bonus to its more than 300 employees.
| material that he selected a means of | council.
transportation which was not only pro-
dangerous that the attempt to use it
was reckless to the point of foolhardi- |
In the case of Hemmig vs. the Fisa- |
t will also enable operators to |
Fund, |
| 6aid that prior to this time there were
rein- |
| tenced to Lancaster county jail.
|
{
HER ge
= PENNSYLVANIA :
= BRIEFS ©
Annan E
A demonstration took place at
Ashland in honor of departing con:
scripts,
Minersville gave the drafted men
of the Seventh district a great send-
off.
Suggestions for holding of a rural
life day in various counties have been
made by the State Board of Educa-
tion.
Bucknell University opened with an
enrollment of 170 freshmen and a
total enrollment of more than 500
students, a loss of about 200 from
the three first classes.
| Dickinson College enrollment at
, Carlisle is 320, as against 370 last
. year, and the biggest drop was in the
senior class, which numbers 40, and
gave heavily to army service.
Schuylkill county's judges will have
© to run again in November, having
- failed of election at the primaries.
Only 293 votes were polled at the
both parties in Doyles-
of these were Repub-
1 primaries by
town, and 225
licans.
John W. Coar, veteran tax collector
Lansdale, was defeated for the
Republican renomination at the pri-
maries by Harry W. Shultz, 24 years
"| old.
Arch Johnson, vice-president of the
- | Bethlehem Steel Company, received
about 80 per cent. of the votes cast
for Mayor of Bethlehem, and his name
ballot unopposed at
-{ will go on the
the fall election.
The result of the primary election
gives Harrisburg two Republican can-
didates for Mayor, to be voted for
November—Daniel L. Keister, for-
mer member of the Legislature, and
reorge A. Hoverter, alderman of the
Ninth Ward.
Twenty-two Ohio cows were sold
John K. Kulp at Pottstown at
prices ranging from $70 to $125.
A coal famine threatens to close
many Reading .industres.
The Diamond State Fibre Company
This is the largest bonus ever given
by the company. The last was 11 per
cent, three months ago.
Peddling during curb market hours
has been forbidden by Hazleton town
The price of potatoes throughout the
Lehigh Valiey is gradually coming
down, and it is expected that they will
soon sell for less than $1 a bushel.
{ The crop is a very large one. Some
| farmers predict that potatoes will sell
| as low as 50 cents a bushel when real
harvesting commences.
THE MARKETS
NEW YORK.—Wheat-—Spot, steady}
No. 2 red and No. 2 hard, $2.27, and
No. 1 Northern Duluth, $2.80, Govern-
ment price, elevator; No. 1 Northern
Manitoba, $2.41, Government pricef ob
New York.
Corn—Spot, strong; No. 2 yellow,
$2.17%, and No. 2 mixed, $2.15% ci £
New York.
Oats—Spot, steady; standard, 66%ec.
Butter — Creamery, higher than
extras, 44% @45%c; creamery extras
(92 score), 44@4414; firsts, 43@43%;
seconds, 41@42%.
Eggs — Fresh-gathered extras, 45@
46c; extra firsts, 43@44; firsts, 40% @
42; seconds, 38@40; State, Pennsyl-
vania and nearby Western hennery
Cheese—State, fresh, specials, 253%c¢;
do; average run, 25@25%.
Dressed Poultry—Chickens, 24@32¢;
fowls, 22@30; turkeys, 20@33.
PHILAEDPHIA. — Wheat — Gov-
ernment standard inspection: No. 1
red, $2.29; No. 1 soft red, $2.27; No.
2 red, $2.26; No. 2 soft red, $2.24; No.
3 red, $2.23; No. 3 soft red, $2.21; No.
4 red, $2.19; No. 4 soft red, $2.17; No.
5 red, $2.15; No. 5 soft red, $2.13; No.
6 smutty, $2.10.
Corn—Western, No. 2 yellow, $2.20
@2.22; do, No. 3 do, nominal; do, No.
4 do, nominal; do, No. 5 do, naminal.
Oats—No. 2 white, new, 66% @67c;
standard white, new, 65% @66; No. 3
White, new, 65@65%; No. 4 white, new,
| 64@64%.
Butter, — Solid-packed creamery,
fancy specials, 47c; extra, 45@46;
extra, 44; firsts, 43%. ceconds, 42%;
nearby prints, fancy, 49; average extra,
47@48; firsts, 44@45; seconds, 43;
special brands of prints, jobbing at 52
@55.
Eggs—Nearby firsts, $12.60 per case;
nearby current receipts, $12.30 per
case; do, seconds, $10.95@11.25 per
case; Western firsts, $12.60 per case;
do, firsts, $12.30 per case; do, seconds,
10.95@11.25 per case; fancy selected,
carefully candled eggs were jobbing at
60@51c per dozen.
+ Cheese — New York, full cream,
fancy, June, 263; @27c; specials, high-
er; do do, fresh made, best, 26@26%;
do, choice, 25% @26; do, fair to good,
241, @25.
Live Poultry—Fowls, as to size and
quality, 23@27; roosters, 19@20;
epring chickens, not Leghoras, plump,
vellow-skinned, weighing 1% @2 Ibs
Ts OB

uo

Mifflin county farmers are placing
an unusually large amount of ground |
in wheat. |
Further efforts will be made during |
the week by the Public Safety Com: |
mittee to put the Hazleton curbstone |
market on a firm basis.
General C. B. Dougherty, of Wilkes-
Barre, has been selected by the State
Armory Board to act as vice-chairman,
succeeding the late Adjutant General
Thomas J. Stewart.
The Montgomery County Fish Asso-
ciation has planted 7,400 blue catfish,
three-fifths inches long, and 5,500
small mouth black bass, two-fourths
inches long, in the Perkiomen at
Schwenkville and vicinity.
More than 50 young men and women
at present having their homes in Kutz-
town are following the teaching pro-
fession, not to mention 5,000 others
who are following the same work in
very section of the country, and who
were born in Kutztown.
During the parade held in honor of
the drafted men who will soon leave
Reading, $580 was thrown upon a flag
carried by Boy Scouts, and this money
will be used to purchase tobacco.
On six acres Solomon DeTufk, of
Criesemersville, harvested ‘1,460 bush-
els of potatoes.
Berks county farmers have started
selling potatoes from the fie.ds at 90
cents a busnel.
Because of an alleged excessive
raise in rent, J. H. S. Griess & Co., who
for years have operated the Gabel grist
mill, a Pottstown landmark, will retire
from business October 1.
According to Controller Heebner's
report to the Montgomery County Com-
missioners there is a balance of $133,-
000 in the county treasury.
Twenty cows sold by Holman & Gra-
ham at Phoenixville brought from $87
to $160 per head, only two selling for
less than $100 each.
Close to 700 freshmen have enrolled
at the Pennsylvania State College for
its wartime session. The total attend-
ance in all departments is 1,804, about
600 short of the registration last year.
The school of agriculture suffered most,
William Michaels was killed, Wil-
| liam Fitzen fatally injured and a third
man less seriously hurt when the for-

| me's automobile struck a telegraph
| pole between Lykens and Williams-
town. Fitzen received concussion of
| the brain. He huried twenty
| yards into a field. The car was going
| down a steep grade and Michaels lost
| control.
More than 170 c*ildren of West
Chester cared for community gardens
at their respective homes in competi-
tion for the various prizes offered by
the Chester County Trust Company
and the New Century Club. The first
| prize of $5 in gold awarded to
Robert Gamble.
| Marysville has eighteen school chil-
{ dren who are violating the compulsory
| attendance law.
| The Gimar Association, of Reading,
presented a medal to Edwin McDowell, |
of -that city, for saving R. C. Schelly,
Harrisburg, from drowning in the Sus-
quehanna.
Miss Margaret S.
was
was

Rankey has been
apiece, 26@27; smaller sizes, 23@25;
white Leghorns, 23@25; ducks, Pek-
ing, 21@22; do, Indian Runner, 19@
20; do, spring, 22@23; guineas, young,
per pair, weighing 1% @2 lbs apiece,
75@85; smaller sizes, 55@65; guineas,
old, per pair, 50@55; pigeons, old, per
pair, 25@26; do, young, per pair, 20
122
BALTIMORE. — Wheat — Sales on
grade were: No. 4 soft red, $2.17 bu;
No. 5 soft red, $2.13; No. 5 soft red,
smutty, $2.10; sample grade soft red,
class 1, $2.11; do, do, do, do, class 2,
$2.02.
Corn — Cob Corn — Quotations at
ebout $9.50 per bbl for carloads prime
nearby yellow on spot, but require-
ments small in volume. Contract open-
ed dull and lower. Spot mixed corn,
$2.04 nominal.
Oats—Standard white, 66 asked: No.
8 white, 65% asked.
Rye—Western, spot, No. 2, export,
$1.94 per bu; bag lots, new, nearby, as
to quality, $1.60@1.80 per bu.
Hay—No. 1 timothy, $21.50; do, No.
2, $20@20.50; do, No. 3, $16.50@19.;
2, $20@20.50; do, No. 3, $16.50@19;
@19.50; do, No. 2, $15@18.50; No. 1
clover, $16.50@17; do, No. 2, $14@16;
do, No. 3, $9@11.
Straw—No. 1 straight rye, $16.50@
17; do, No. 2, $15.50@16; No. 1 tangled
rve, $12.50@13; do, No. 2, $11@11.50;
No. 1 wheat, $10@10.50; do, No. 2, $9@
9.50; No. 1 oat, $10.50@11; do, No. 2,
$9.50 @10.
Butter — Creamery, fancy, 45@46c;
do, choice, 44@44%; do, good, 43@
43%; prints, 45@46%; blocks, 44@46;
ladles, 38; Maryland and Pennsylvania

Whites, fine to fancy, G6@59; State, caused by the dirt and dust that fills the
Pennsylvania and nearby hennery rooms. There's the expense of buying
browns, 47@50. several stoves (because one not


 
 
 

| ea a=
All Stove Troubles Fade Away |
Beforc This Pipeless Furnace /
Stoves and base-burners are trouble’
makers, work makers, expense maker
There's the trouble of setting them up
the Fall and taking them down in the
Spring, with unsightly pipes disfigufing
the home six months out of twdlve.
There's the work of bringing in coal and
taking away ashes, with the extra work












 

































 

 
 
 

sufficient to heat a home), the expense of
maintaining three heating units, ‘and the
expenses of replacing furnishings which
You canbuy a 5

 

are damaged by dirt and dust.
Home Ventilator Furnace
The Original PATENTED Pipeless Modol J
Manufactured only by the Homer Furnace Co., Hémer, Mich.
for little (if any) more than you pay for a good base Dyer, fo it will give yo'
furnace perfection. The heat will be distributed evenly thro ut the house—and
plenty of it. No small registers scattered about, no wall flues fo invite fire danger,
no cold air drafts, no pipes in the rooms, no space wasted, ng trouble to install, no
bother at any time, no heat in the cellar. A “Home Ventilator” in the cellar, one
combination hot- and cold-air register right cbove it, and the heating system ie
complete. #
‘Write or telephone us for more particulare,
G. MOYEK, Mount Joy, Penna.
Read the Booklet “From Pig to Pen”
Ee
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
Facts Concerning The Homg Ventilator Furnace
An announcement made by competition would indicate that a DEC-
LARATION OF WAR had been made on all types of furnaces by the
one they are handling, and if this article were allowed to go unheeded,
the result would be that possibly many people would be mis-led into
purchasing some furnace other than the HOME VENTILATOR, being
under the impression that they were getting the original.
We take pleasure in informing /the people of Mount Joy and vicinity
that G. Moyer of your town is prepared to furnish you with the HOME
VENTILATOR FURNACE, wal Has been on the market for the past
seven years and is absolutely the ORIGINAL PATENTED PIPELESS
FURNACE using the combination ‘hot and cold air register.
TAKE SPECIAL NOTICE—Mr. G. Moyer has copies of patent pae
pers, both of ours’ and competition, which will easily show that the
HOME VENTILATOR FURNACE was in use and PATENTED LONG
BEFORE ANY OTHER FURNACE of this type was HEARD of.
A LITTLE HISTORY—Back in 1910 when the only furnace was the
old pipe job, Mr. S. D. Strong, President of the Homer Furnace Come
pany, Homer, Michigan, conceived the idea that if a furnace could be
made which would satisfactorily heat residences, stores, churches, school
houses, etc., and at the same time save the heat which was being wasted
in cellars by pipe furnaces, a ready sale would be found. Against the
advice of older and more e¥perienced furnace men, he perfected and
manufactured a few HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES. The result was
a REVOLUTION IN THE HEATING WORLD. Farmers, who here-
tofore could not have furnaces because their vegetable storage would be
spoiled, bought “HOMERS,” installed them in the vegetable cellars, heat-
ed their houses so muck cheaper than with stoves, and so much more sat.
isfactorily, that since that time THOUSANDS OF HOME VENTILATORS
HAVE BEEN SOLD, ffom Maine to California, and from Florida to Cane
ada.
Now—when othe manufacturers saw the enormous strides made by
THE HOME VENTILATOR, there eyes began to open, and from the
sickly grin they tried to maintain they were brought up against the solid
fact that to SAVE THEIR BACON, they MUST manufacture something
as near the HOME VENTILATOR as possible without infringing on the
rights of S. D. Strégng. SMALL MANUFACTURERS sprung up trying
to get a foot-hold in the pipeless world, but the HOME VENTILATOR
has been too long established and had too big a start to be affected, and
the sales of the Homer Furnace Company still lead by many lengths. IN
THE LAST FIVE MONTHS, 4000 HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES
HAVE BEEN SOLD TO RESPONSIBLE DEALERS.
DON'T BE/DECEIVED into buying an imitation of the HOME VEN-
TILATOR FURNACE. Don’t let other manufacturers experiment at
your expense. | When you buy, buy the ORIGINAL. Five minutes com-
parison will cgnvince you. Weigh the 24 inch fire pot of the HOME VEN-
TILATOR (when we say 24-in. we mean inside measurement) then weigh
that of any ofher furnace of the same size. Result? About 40 percent.
in favor of the HOME VENTILATOR. The HOME VENTILATOR is
equipped with heavy galvanized casings throughout; no flimsy black inner
casings to rast out, and which are good only as talking points, and the
buyer pays/ for these talking points by getting a lighter furnace.
The HOME VENTILATOR FYRNACE is sold under a guaranty to do
the busingss or no sale, and every casting is guaranteed for five years, ex-
cept the grate, and our reason for not guaranteeing this is that some-
times a cfireless user will allow ashes to accumulate underneath, and same
is liable to melt out. However this happens only rarely.
After manufacturing HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES for sevem
years, our repair business will not amount to $1.00 a day, which we
judge if a fair evidence of the durability of our castings.
Odr modern plant at Homer, Michigan is equipped to manufacture
rnaces per year, and enables us to turn out a furnace which is ®
the installer, and castings second to none.
emember—
. Moyer of Mount Joy is prepared to furnish you with the ORIGI-
NAL/ PATENTED PIPELESS FURNACE, and the one from which al}
others of this type are copied either directly or indirectly.
BUY THE “HOMER” and be safe from infringement proceedings.
15,000 in use. For further information call om
. Moyer, Mount Joy
9000
joy t

rolls, 37; Ohio rolls, 36; West Virginia
rolls, 36; storepacked, 35% @36; Mary-
land, Virginia and Pennsylvania dairy |
prints, 37@38.
Eggs — Maryland, Pennsylvania and
nearby firsts, 43c; Western firsts, 43;
West Virginia firsts, 43; Southern
firsts, 42.
Live Poultry—Chickens—Old hens, 4
Ibs and over, 25@26; do, do, small to
medium, 25; do, do, white Leghorns,
25; old roosters, 15; springers, large,
26@27; do, small to medium, 25@26;
do, white Leghorns, 24. Ducks—
Young Pekings, 3% lbs and over, 21;
do, puddle, do, do, do, 20; do, Muscovy,
do, do, do, 20; do, smaller, 18. Pigeons
—Young, per pair, 20; old, do, 20. |
Guinea fowl, young, 115 lbs and over, |
each, 40. {


Live Stock



CHICAGO. — Hogs — Bulk, $17.60@
The World's Greatest Tire
BLACK "BOB
SERVICE AND MILEAGE 18 "WHAT TELLS—INVESTIGATE
5000 MILES GUARANTEE
PACK BOB TIRES KETT IN REPAIR UNTIL WORN OUT—
EREE OF CHARGE. Mzaufactured by
MITREARY TIRE COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA
Seld by
LP. Heilig, Mount Joy



18.65; light, $17.10@18.60;
$17.10@18.75; heavy, $17.05@18.75;
rough, $17.05@17.25.
Cattle—Native beef
mixed,
cattle,
7.50@

17.90; a new high price record; West-
ern steers, $6.70@15.75; stockers and
feeders, $6.50@11.25; cows and heif-
ers, $5.15@12.90; calves, $11.50@16.25.
Sheep—Wethe s, $9.00@12.75; ewes,
$825@11.75; lambs, $13.00@18.60.


appointed teacher of Reading's first
open air school.
L. K. Hostetter, of Landis Valley,
has been in the bee business only |
since 1904, when he started with two
hives. Now he has 110 hives. It is |
believed that the bees in his colonies |
number over 6,000,000. This season’s
vield of honey may reach 10.000
pounds, and it sells. at 20 cemts.
Charged with keeping disorderly
houses, Obed Musser, aged 75, Lancas-
ter, and Mannie Clum, an extensive
Columbia real estate owner, were sen- |




{
!
{
| 10.50; heifers, $7.50@13; stockers and
feeders, $7.25@14.75; bulls, $6@8
calves, $7@13.50.
Sheep Lambs, $17.75@18.60; year
lings, $12@13.50; wethers, $11@13;
ewes 10.50@12.
| $12@13.50;

@18.75; heavy, $18.00@18.80; packers
and butchers’, $17.75@18.75;
$17.40@18.40; pigs, $16.50@17.25.
Cattle—Prime fed steers, $16.50@
7.25; dressed beef steers, a
Southern steers, $7@11; cows, $5.75@
light,


PITTSBURGH. — Cattle — Chaica
prime, $14@14.80.

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KANSAS CITY.—Hogs—Bulk, $17.75 |
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FURNITURE OF QUALITY
We Will Show You How To Secure Splendi galities and
Handsome Styles At Savings Well h Your While
A number of the newest and finest things are now being put on
exhibition for the first time. Our colction of Bed-Room Furni-
ture, showing Period styles, in all the different kinds of wood, Is
well worth seeing. The i of the Dining-Room, Living-
Room and Library.
OCATION and our facilities for handling
o offer exceptionally low prices at this time.
OUR INEXPENSIV
Furniture, enable


stenberger, Maley & Myers
5-131 East King Street, Lancaster, k