WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6th, 1922. THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U.S. A. 111 TEL RC 1 0 0 0 1 1 6 OC HOME HE A [EALTH CLUB n . ® WEEKLY LETTERS WRITTEN EX- PRESSLY FOR THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER A LONG JOURNEY: times quite astonishing to find how far ones influence may travel. Our short Home Health Club talks are supposed to be read by all of us . here at home and I try to make them | just as interesting as I can while i ke eping the main object, helpfull- | ness, uppermost. One of the slogans so often used in the club work was suggested by a good old grandmother many years ago | and it was. ‘Pass it on.” Happily | this is agreeable to most people. We all like to help others and when we = find something that helps us we just a can’t help passing it on. Some one was greatly helped by one of my recent articles so he just marked the paper and sent it to a | friend in South Africa. It proved to | be just the information needed and { as soon as it was fully appropriated, | the urge to help some one else again (caused the paper to travel still farther | Last week I received a letter from | | We ‘carry a full line of IMPLEME 1.35 some- We now offer you the EMERSON and BELLEVUE MANURE SPREADERS, MISSOURI and JOHN DEERE GRAIN DRILLS. We offer you a low price on either The Msso ning drill and has points that noother drlll to submit prices to you before you buy. Sharpless Separators We have very low prices on them. The No: 2 sell§ now at $45. 00, the No. 3 sells at $55.00. We have a strong guarafjtee on them and positively skims clean at any speed. Fertilizers We sell Baugh's fertilizers. These goods are low in ic and in good drilling condition. 8 SEEDS is our stronghold, will soon have Alfalfa and, Tim- othy Seed of the Highest Quality. Consult us in anything "t G. MOYER MOUNT JOY, 41 at all times. i Drill is a light run- We would like =| | n = = the last man to get the paper. He is the superintendent of a dia- mond mine in Kimferly, South Africa and he just wanted to tell me how , much he appreciated the knowledge | he had gained. | To still further show his apprecia- | tion he said that he had clipped the | article from the paper and sent it to an old friend in London. A few days later I received a let- {ter from a banker in London, telling me about receiving the article from { his friend in Kimberly and how much t had helped him. In fact he said he { had sent it to his son who was the | publisher of a paper in Canada and { asked him to publish it with due jeredit because it would help some one ; ; wi ———— else just as it had helped him. Il SOT JNT TOO VGH OCC YOR WO (UOC OO WHT Ii 11 Toe AE, RL NN) OL | Now do you think that the good = person who sent the paper to South B Africa ever dreamed of taking cred- mit for doing so much good. The Battery is one of first and foremost essentials toward the If yO want a good battery try a | . One can never tell what far reach- | d G id ing results may follow a kind act or {an impulse to help the other fellow. ries for a long time and they of the guarantee. In Business Since 1888 1 3 VO | m| Every time you induce some one =, to subscribe for this paper you help | yourself by helping your community iand you help me to help others by | spreading the influence of the HOME | HEARTH CLUB. Another way to help others is to tell the editor how well you like this as { well as the many other helpful fea- tures in the paper. Most of us think we could run the paper much better and we are always ready to find fault and point out the mistakes but 8 as a matter of fact it takes more | brains than most of us possess to i edit and publish a real newspaper. | The real education of our modern | civilization is just beginning when we step out of high school and col- lege. And the publications like this are the greatest educators outside of | school ever developed since the his- | tory of humanity has been written. | Even the advertisements are edu- ‘cational. The best brains and the most skillful artists are employed and tremendous salaries paid to secure writers and artists whose work will compell attention. It is within the last quarter of a century that health educational work i was established by the HOME HEALTH CLUB a permanent part working of your car. ® Diamo We have been handling these ba give good satisfaction. We stand ba Battery Repairing MR. HARVEY HAWTHORNE has just finis tical course in Battery Construction and herea REPAIR and REBUILD ALL BATTERJES at our -'ace of business. We are now ready for youk work and will GUARANTEE OUR WORK TO BE SATISFACTOR REAM’'S GARAG MOUNT JOY, PA, d a complete prac. r we will a Ee BE = 1 LL OL 10 O00 0 0 of newspaper work but today a pub- lication which does not have a well edited health service considered not up-to-date. Club Notes High blood pressure is the condi- is Your Seed tion which worries Mrs. A. T., of Mo. Cle aned Dear Doctor Reeder: I have not been at all well this summer and so I went to our family doctor to find out why. He said he thought I had high blood pressure and that I would | have to be careful about my diet. He gave me some medicine to take but I cannot see any change after taking with the | it. Will you please tell me what | causes high blood pressure and how | can T know for sure if I have it. What will it do and how can T be | careful of my diet when I don’t know | what will make it better or worse. - I | am scared but IT don’t know a thing | 8 about what scares me. | | Cleanest Cleaning Cleaners Which takes out the cockle agd garlic. Not better than the best but better than the rest. Consult me before placing youl order else- wherz. Satisfaction guaranteed a¥, RISSER’S MIL Peter H. Risser \ R. D. No. 3 MOUNT JOY, PA. to me | Answer: From what you have | written T would judge that your doc- tor doesn’t know any more about it than you do. If he suspected blood pressure he should have tested it in | order to be sure before handing out | a scare. He should also have sought | out the cause and adopted measures to remove it and he should also have | told vou what foods to avoid. If you ‘have h ig blood pressure then it is | quite certain there must be a cause. Usually autotoxemia. I cannot tell "where the source of infection may | be: Teeth, tonsils, post-nasal sinur, | liver, kidneys, womb, a dozen places might be named but that would be guess work, which you don’t want. You must secure a correct and com- plete diagnosis and then intelligent treatment will give the desired re- lief. The danger is of a stroke. The foods to avoid are meat, beans peas and cheese, sweets and an ex- cess of starchy foods. If TI knew more of your actual condition I could advise you more intelligently. All readers of this publication are at all times at liberty to ask any questions pertaining to health. Ad- dress all communications to Dr. Da- vid H.” Reeder, La Porte, Indiana, with at least 6 cents in postage. We AOCO000000000000000000000000000CCO0000000CTIVV0H0000T0 From our orchards. These app and are fine, a splendid cooker. When and Where to Buy The time to buy is now. The palce to buy is from merchants who adver- tise their wares for the benefit of the public. Read the advertisements in this and every other issue of the “Bulletin” and you will save some real money. The summer reduction sales are now on. Mount Joy mer- chants are offering real bargains. "There is no reason why you should For sale at my home in Mount Joy, Sou Freight Station. ELI G. REIST PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To Say This Week Ich denk du husht shunt uft g’'woo- nered we ich en laeva mauch. Olles ! 0s ich nuch so weit aw g’fonga hob is mere dorrich g’shlipped. My rigel- wake doot net batzawla, my biskotza burglar-proof safe is ken success wile kotza tsu rawr sin, un my hexa ducteri bringt gons wenich ei wiles ken hexa mae hut. Olla mon si ex- perience is en lessen tsu onery mon, un my grosser droovel far der windt raisa in en worning tsu karls woo net wissa wos en dawler wardt is. De fact is, en is easier geld lose wara os es ie bringa, un uftmohls shtarta yunge menner nows mit ma howfa geld fun eram fodder un es seemed s sin net g’satisfied bis se es lose war- ra. Es seemed era heifly geld reibed se os we en hickerniss in ma shtiffel. Se sin net rooich bis es oll is, darno ae mahl coomds ena ei os se on de arawet missa un os es en dawg hard shoffa nembt far en dawler fardeena. Des sin ae sart norra waega geld. En onery sart geld norra sin karls woo mer de rale first-rate karls has- ed. Woo olsfart blendy geld hen, sin liberal, un kenna et ous era agena deer gae oony a pawr dawler shpen- de da. Won du n bill collecta wid ena don hen se nee ken geld, awver won du se drows aw-dreffa doosht don doona dich royal treata—farleicht mit dime agena geld. Du konsht i sheer net base warra ivver se un duch grawbts in dere os we en mouse won se ousera malekisht fretta will. En onery sort geld norra sin selly karl woo hoch ni shtarta in bisniss, driva de beshta gile, un wara de beshta glaeder. Se kawfa un fakaw- fa, schwetza waega tzae dawsend dawler os wons usht tzae cent ware, locha ivver leit woo hardt shoffa far en laeva maucha un laega ena ous we easy os es is geld tsu maucha won se usht schmart g’nunk wara. De leit googa uff tsu ena os won se harra wara. Yader ebber drowed ena un de menshta leit windsha won se usht a pawr dowsend dowler hetta far ena tsu gevva usht far ‘safe keeping.” shae gooked shlofa oona ga-drockdgered shoolda. Der droovel os mer selver mauched is der hardsht, un kenner shpraid em fae brode-grimla uff’s lineduch os we shoolda druvvel. Doh hare comsht du dich druc fer-' lussa, won oll my shpeculations dor- | rich folla ae ding is sure, un des is os nemond g’shtucka waerdt—wile ich | geld laena wet won ich kent, un kent | net won ich wet. EE FEDERAL-AID ROADS INCREASED 600 MILES Nearly 600 miles nearer the goal of a completed system of highways for the United States is the report of the Bureau of Public Roads of the United States Department of Agri- culture for the month of July. The final goal, the construction of a sys- nochts si mit sich mer con duch a network of trunk line and second- ary roads reaching into practically every county is still a long way off, but we are 5,392 miles nearer than at the beginning of the year accord- ing to the bureau. Completed Federal-aid roads now total 18,299 miles with 14,912 miles under construction and approximate- ly 60 per cent complete. Including projects not yet under construction Federal-aid roads in all stages now total 40,338 miles. There is no indication of any slack- ening of the greatly increased rate of progress which be gan with the sea- son of 1921 as the States continue to pour in plans for new projects and place them under construction as ra- pidly as possible. Nearly twelve and one-half million dollars was obligated to new projects in June and July, and in the week ending August 5 reports were received of the letting of 68 new projects and announcements of 57 to be left. At the present time the force of the bureau is taxed to the limit with the examination of new plans and projects, inspection of roads under construction and the planning of the Federal-aid highway system which is go elsewhere, jee gotten into final shape. tem of approximately 180,000 miles | of Federal-aid highway consisting of | ‘THE PRODUCE AND | LIVE STOCK MARKET CORRECT INFORMATION FUR.| NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PENNA. BUREAU OF | MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Range of Prices Beets: Homegrown and N. J. good quality, 5¢ bunch. Beans: Homegrown, green, good supply, 10-15¢ one half peck; yellow | 10¢ one fourth peck. Cabbage, Homegrown, new stock, fair supply, good condition, 4 8c per head. Cauliflower: Cal. and homegrown, supply fair, good quality, 10-25¢ per head. Corn: Homegrown, good supply, 10 and 20c¢ per dozen. Cucumbers: Nearby, fair supply 2-5¢ each. Pickles: Fair supply,” 25- 60c per 100. Ege Plant: Nearby, supply fair, 10-25¢ each. Squash: Nearby, good supply, 5-8-10c¢ each. Onions: Nearby, yellows whites, 15-20¢c qt. box, green bunch, Spanish 8-10-15¢ each. Lima beans: Homegrown, supply liberal 15-18¢ qt. box. Parsley, Homegrown, 1-3¢ bunch. and 3-8¢ good quality Peppers: Nearby, fair supply and suality, 2-5c¢ each. Potatoes: Nearby Irish Cobbler, new, good quality, 20-25¢ one half 90c-$1.10 bushel. Sweet Potatoes: 25-35¢ 1-2 peck. Radishes: Homegrown, N. J., supply fair, good sup- ply, fair condition, 3-5¢ bunch. apt Nearby, fair supply, 10c . box. Eton s: Nearby, supply good, 3- ‘box: 14 at. basket 40-50c. trios: Nearby, fair supply and condition, 20¢ one fourth peck. Rhubarb: Homegrown, good supply 3-10¢ bunch. Celery: Nearby, fair supply, 10-20c stalk. Fruits Apples: Homegrown Transparents and red varieties, good supply and condition, 20-30¢ 14 peck. Jananas: Jamaica, good quality, 20-35¢ per dozen. Grape Fruit: Florida, good supply, 10-20¢ each. Crab Apples: box. Cantauoupes: Fla. supply, 5-15¢ each. Lemons: Calif., good suality, 20-30c¢ per dozen. Oranges: Florida and California, supply good, quality and condition good 30-75¢ dozen. Nearby 10-15¢ qt. Calif. fair and supply and i annoyed me Store and it didn’t ta | Mrs, Zeller had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. Gli grocht ebbes. Der shreef coomed Torches! Sam sown: oe : un derno warts ous g’funna os era $1 00-$1 or : Mi 1. bn * backets be shi ik wa ; grosser show oll gadoo is warra mit Carme 21.25 = |i iain I OO armen $1 oner leit erm geld, un derno farwoo- Blackberries: - Homeerown fair | @ nerts leit os se so farflompte kelves Sarl 3 18 200 at oe alii = B® wora un hen net dorrich se saena |’ Poly: cs: Lo Tov Cait sanplv u : kenna darfore. Awver farleicht tsu 10 ae oe box. REY Tow supp) | : shpote. Se missa widder frish ni aw- Wild harris: Nearby, fol wm.iH Hh : M F a fonga en dowsend dowg shoffa far de x y Toa rue Sup) \ = : ply 15-20¢ qt. box. 1] " Nai dawsend dawler fardeena os se rem "Plums: Homecrown.. all varieties WITH x raskel gevva hen, usht far eme tsu Oo Sok bids ¥ en ~ | Wisa we feel confidence os sc eme |p, on Nearby, all varieties 10-20¢ |B \ . : o’ hen. ears, Nes Y, { ‘ S -2 | = i i n. : qt vox, |m E act is, shpeculata mit oner leit Watermelons: a good supply l x =" eram geld is g'farliche bisniss. Es 20 E00 each Sm : Supply 8 geld os do mauched won du glick Gianos: Nearby, mited supply 20¢ n : s 3 husht is di, uns geld os du farleersht qt Sil Ga MALE =m s is dina friend. Glae awfonga un Bit \ oF Ax 1 ; a i B® grose uff gevva is en gooter motto Batter) : eo mint od) See our Five Exc ve Showrooms : #5 : = : oes: 38-40¢ dozen, mostly 30-40¢ far yunge leit Won du en hoonered A ya ta 1 AF : ; . wv Poultry: chicken, $1.25 : : : dawler fardeenst in ma yohr un 995 a ch rs 75¢-$1.00 each = All kinds of Electri 1 Appliances N shpendsht nine-un-ninetzich don bisht San; ba OK 1 ; iA B x du harlich; un won du en hoonert i} a im No dawler fardeensht un shpendsht en ! an hoonert un ae dawler don bisht du i STR IGHTEN THAT BENT BACK a : N. Duke St. mowderlish. Der besht wake is cash | | Q ' batzawla we mer sail So nic’ a { No¥eed to suffer from that tired, | pe . LAN ishted do con, un nic Lawta as mee] 028d dhe in your hack, that lame. ® = : 4 ’ 1m Kawia os mer | ness, tRpse distressing “urinary dis- = Jet ass Li old hare cooma doot { orders, Mount Joy people have found ars batzawla. Ich wet liever en far- {| how to g# relief. Follow this Mount | ® { E LS ~ issner ruck wara os batzawled is os { Joy residegt’s example. lm Loek For Our Big lectric ign we en doochner ruck os ich ken ras- | , Mrs. G.§B. Zeller, 309 E. Main ade derfore hob. Wons shunt “77 | street, says %‘My kidneys were badly |B s : ons shunt net so i disordered a sharp, darting pains | Rill I couldn’t get very! far with my werk. My back ached all day and at Right I suffered even | worse. This tr8gble ran down my | health and to ad { kidneys began to { blurred my sight spells followed. On | vice, I began takin { Pills, procured from to my misery, my ive out. Specks nd often dizzy | . vy mother’s ad-| § .Doan’s Kidney arber’s Drug them long to ny back and G drive the pains out ie oan’s cured ! regulate my kidneys, me of all signs of kidn trouble.” Price 60c, at all deg@lers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney #emedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that EIA 3 BH AREA PLAN OF TUBERCULOSIS ERADICATION INCREASES The plan for eradicating tuberculo- sis in cattle from entire areas, such as counties, is daily growing in popu- larity according to reports coming to the United States Department of Ag- riculture. The idea has taken hold in | Michigan and is spreading rapidly. | Already five counties have been freed of the plague, and reports from the inspector in charge for the ment show that the boards of super- visors appropriated money and made provision for, cooperating with State and Federal forces. When one coun- try joins the ranks for eradication its action stimulates others to follow. The prospect for ultimately ridding the country of the disease never look- ed so promising as at present, those in charge. eet renee. Govern- say Good E. Donegal Farm. If any one wants a real good East Donegal township farm, along , the Donegal creek, with the best of / me- stone soil, here’s your chance.) 107 acres, seven acres of which i$ good meadow. farm divided into six fields new barn 48x90, 8 room brick house. summer house, shedding for 10 acres of tobacco running water at the barn and house. Buildings in exceptiona’ shape farm is convenient to markets is an excellent producer and can be bought at $180 an acre. If interest ed call, phone or write Jno. E. Schroll Realtor, Mount Joy. tf. T You'have never before had, the opportunity of securing as m¥ch motor car value at so lowja price. Take advantage of opportunity and place your orde now when you can obtain prompt delivery. Terms if desired. H. Newcomer i Mount Joy, Pa. | GOOD FURN ITURE be the guly kind | sell —Furniture that is Furniture Rockers, Mirrors, Hall Racks, Picture Frames, Ladies’ Desks, Extemsion and Other Tables, Davemports, China Closets, Kitchen Cabinets. In'§act Anything in the Furniture Lime UNDERTAKING AL COAL AND KINDS OF COAL ON. HAND FOR IM. Y. CARDS ARE NOT USED ANY MORE. Both Telephones PST UR EL RL) OL 1 Mn PR RA A ND LS |