The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 15, 1923, Image 3

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J
Supreme delicacy of Louella Butter can be
M perfection with fresh, green corn, or with
#hat shows the true taste of butter.
SELLA BUTTER Pound 53c¢
The finest butter
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in America!
Schland Butter Pound 49c¢
Creamery Prints. Big Value


: “ | . P.& G.
if BE 5 |
3 P Rinso s Palmolive White Naptha
i Soaks Cloths |
‘1 Clean § Soap Soap
Pkg 5 '3 Cakes 20c Cake 5¢

Cleaning®Needs at Economy Prices!
Babbitt’s Lye ...% .can 12¢ Sani Flush. .....:...
Sunbrite Cleanser isan 4 lic Climax Stove Polish bot 12c
Old Duteh Cleanseff can 9c Snowboy Powder pkg 5c
Asco Ammonia » bot 9c Chipso +.......: pkg 9c, 23c
Chloride of Lime. .g&n 10c Star Naptha Powder 7c, 25¢


ddy Bear Corn can llc
®nder. Unusually big value
Reg. 121c
Sweet and
One Blend #Dne Quality—One Price
The Best Cup You Ever Drank!
ASCO CORFEE Pound 29¢
Just taste it and u'll taste the difference!
Quality Loaf 5c
avery crumb
VICTOR BREADS
There's health ig



RICH CREAMY CHEESE Pound 3lc
ASCO
C@RN FLAKES
Pkgs 20c
ASCO
PORK & BEANS
3 Cans 25¢

Se them with sliced
Quality the nnesc*y “5d Bans*™®= Pineapples or
—no waste. | Peach
FOR THE FOLKS WHO EFER
AN EXTRA HEAVY DRINKING TEA
Pride of Killarney TEA Poud Tin 65¢
Killarney is a delightful combination the Family of
Heavy Teas—Exquisite flavor.




ASCO TEAS (Five Quality Blends) #1b pkg 14c
Asco Orange Pekoe, India Ceylon, Old Contry Style,
Black Mixed.
Reg 33c Asco or Del Monte Pear &
California’s choicest fruit, Fully matured.
sugar syrup.
Tender California Asparagus (new crop) cd
Cut String Beans (new crop)
Choice Tender Peas (new crop)...
Asco Sweet Peas
N. B. C. Lorna Doones
N. B. C. Snaparoons
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
800000000000EE0E000000000
CO000000C 2CO000000000000
Sold
Boi 00. 505007550500 DTaP bosons SEE IL ee a agEas:

S

The Sweetest Talcum Ever
 

The Rexall
E. W. GARBER,





to be presented at your
Community Chautauqua







BOCOOOOOOOOO0S










|W. B. BENDER
P22 East Main Sireet, Mount Joy,


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{

THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN,
OWL-LAFFS





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BY
0. Ww. i.
(On With Laughter)



| if you people think scouring a-
| round for the jokes in this column is
| 2 cinch, I'd like any of you to try
it just for a week. But, as long as
you are enjoying them, we’ll dig em
|
{ up.
| Florin’s retired merchant A. D.
| Garber, who is quite a fisherman,
[ says fishing would be fun if artificial
| bait caught fish like it catches fisher-
{ men. Believe me he knows, he used
Ei sell it.
|
|
|
Yesterday I told Christ Mumma
that worry makes a man bald. He
| said its a dirty shame that men can’t
worry with their faces. Of course
| that wouldn’t be right either or Joe
{ Hershey would have to hunt a new
| job.
|
| Think its about time to can that
I stuff, “Mary had a little lamb.”
| Since she has taken to wearing
knickers it would be more appro-
priate to say, “Mary had two little
calves,” and only use the word “lit-
t'e” when referring to certain Marys.

Just because the point at the resi-
dence of Eli L. Nissly is called Cross
Roads doesn’t mean that the high-
ways are mad at anybody.
“Pood” Hershey says all the pretty
girls are rushed incessantly. The
others, of course, have hope chests.
Several Mount Joy folks went to
Hershey Park on Sunday and while
there took a ride on the Jack Rabbit.
{ On the first steep descension one
lady was so badly brightened that
when she said “Oh” her false teeth
fell out on her lap. Her husband
said: ‘She never could keep her
mouth shut.”

he would
brains or
“Shorty” Engle says
swear that insects have
they’d never know where you are
going to have your picnic. They
seem to have no trouble at a'l finding
the exact spot.
“Keidy”” Dillinger says there is
nothing harder to get than easy mon-
ey.
Squire Zeller told young Laske-
witz that the only reason fish have
scales is so they don’t have to take
anybody else’s word for their own
weight.
The dynamic of the hour
For business that it sour,
Is advertising power
Which freshens like a shower.
“Doc” Longenecker says he has a
patient who remarked: “It isn’t that
I dread the pain, I simply haven't
time to go to the dentist.”
If cleanliness is next to godliness,
dirtiness must be next to devilishness
I’ve heard of all kinds of mean
men but here’s the real lulu of them
all. A fellow at Union Square gave
his son a nickel if he went to bed
without supper, he went to the boy's
room later while he was asleep and
stole the nickel, then whipped the
lad next morning for losing it.
About the only work some of the
people in this town do is labor under
a delusion.
Our girls sure have their nerve.
Heard a fellow propose to one over
in the park the other night and the
first question she asked was, “Have
you a car” before knowing whether
or not he had a job.
Isn’t it a shame that as fast as
motor manufacturers place more po-
wer under the hoods, the Lord does-
n’t place more horse sense under the
hut?

"Twas All Her'n
A fat girl, by name, Adeline,
Had a shape that was far from divine
“I know it is bigger,
Than Kellerman’s figger,”
She said, “But thank Heaven, it’s
mine.”
A woman on Mount Joy street
told her husband that the neighbor
gave her an excellent receipe for
making floor polish. He said: “Are
you sure you didn’t use it to make
that pudding we had for dinner?”

A Milton Grove business man told
me this morning that there would be
fewer unhappy marriages if the
wife tried as hard to keep her hus-
band as she did to get him.

We heard a certain local W. C. T.
U. woman say: “We women are go-
ing to clean up polities, the stage,
and the movies.” Just then her hus-
band chimed .in: “How about the
dishes in the sink?” Right then the
fire-works began.

Harry Lutz, the well known rail-
road engineer of Florin, says you
got to give autoists a lot of eredit
for perseverance. Although they
lose every time they- keep on trying
to beat trains to crossings.
——
Guess that should hold you until
next week.

! Lancater.
' week
i Mary
i
|
i ducted their
! last Sunday

MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
SPORTING HILL |
Mr. and Mrs. Martin
and children spent the
Zimmerman
week-end at!

Miss Anna Nissley is spending the
at Lancaster with her sister,
|
|
|
|
Te : a
Nissley. |
!
|

Preachers of New Jersey con-
services
The
last open
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Horst spent |
Sunday at Mt. Hope in the homes of |
Me'vin Geib and Levi Seitz. i
Miss Kathryn Nissley is spending
the week in the home of Wayne Bru-
baker, near East Petersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Grube and
daughter, of Landisville, spent Sun-
day evening at the same place.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hershey and
family spent Sunday in the home of
his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Her-
shey, near Penryn.
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Garman and
daughter, Margaret, spent Sunday at
Elizabethtown in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Garman.
Mrs. Mabel Miller and chi'dren, |
Pauline, Mary and Charles, are
spending some time at Carlisle in the |
home of Mr. Edward Doyle.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Miller, Miss |
Clara Moore and Mr Harry Shipman |
of Philadelphia, spent Sunday in the |
home of Mr. A. M. Degler and family |
air

Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Brandt and |
son, Roy Elwood, and Mrs. Frank
Newcomer, of Salunga, spent Sunday
at Raymond Heistand’s, near Mount
Joy.
Mr. and Mrs. Zimmerman, Mrs.
Gutshall and Mrs. Zimmerman, of
Harrisburg, spent Thursday after-
noon in the home of Mr. Edward
Grube.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Wright, of
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Andred H.
Vogel, Mrs. Minnie Vogel and Mas-
ter Martin Smith, last Sunday
in Baltimore, Md, visiting relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Rohrer
spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. John Wolgemuth, at Mt. Joy.
They spent Sunday evening in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Mum
ma, near Elizabethtown.
Mr. and Mrs. John Weidman en-
tertained the following guests on
Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. John S. Wen-
ger and sons, Jackie and Bobby, of
Mastersonville, and Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Leferve, of Hershey.
spent
The following people of the village
spent Sunday at Hershey: Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Derstler and family:
Mr. Lewis Williams, Mr. and Mrs
Charles Wil'iams, Miss Martha Shenk
Master John Derr, and Mr. and Mrs
Norman Fetter and family, of Man-
heim.
The following were recent guests
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Horst: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Felker
and daughters, Louisa and Oliva, of
Mt. Joy; Mr. and Mrs. Levi Seitz and
sons, Elwood and Woodrow, of Mt.
Hope; Mr. and Mrs. Francis Earhart


INTEGRITY
-
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Bas Co
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192 STUDEBAKER LIGHT-S1X

Yous’
Any owner who has felt 1ds whis- y refinements,

inter’s wir
 
SEDAN
The Cipsed Car Tou: Buy Now
Use Next Winter
is a model of Studebaker
tling through the ill-fittindgloors and flimsy craftsmanship.
panels of a makeshift closedNgar knows there Construction of the chassis is an achiey
is no substitute for quality. ment in th e use of pract sion methods in I



The 1924 Model StudebaXer Light-Six Scale mx:
Sedan you buy now will not ong serve you machinir
connec
immer and next inter, but
ars.


admirably this
will endure for } tual freedon
sive Studeb:
races i of the cranks
ker practice on cars at th 1is price.
ing Light-Six motor has
made friends everywhere for its durability,
ibility just as it has for its

 
Proof of th
 

is sturdilv buil vy. hard sc¥Wi
; he is stu rdily built for long, hard ice, to The smooth ru
ride comfortably, to look well and to &erate
t modare _—
at a moderate expense power and fle
And when you are ready to trade it in a economy and reliability.
new car the depreciation will be reasonal
Studebaker used car values are high because ¢
Studebaker’s inherent merit. And there i
always a market for used Studebakers.

it is built comp
The substantial hard wood and steel body
with its broad windows and four wide doors,
its rich mohair velvet plush upholstery, and
C
sic
uick-action ¢
sh upholste
proof trar
Four wide-opening doors Eight-day clock
Attractive coach lamps. Heater. Mohair velvet
visor and windshield cleaner. Dome light I
The Light-Six Sedan is low priced because
lete by Studebaker in large
volume, but there isn’t a cheap thing about it. i
tis above par in every particular.
Studebaker’s reputation for producing high
s transportation for 71 years is worth con=
ing when you buy a car.
wl entila

ission Ack






1924 MODELS AND PRICES —f. bo. factory
LIGHT-SIX SPECIAL-SIX BIG-SIX
5-Pass., 112° W. B., 40 H. P. 5-Pass., 119°" W.B.,50H. P. Pass., 126" W. B., 60 H, P. |
ROUTING... ...cccierccons sees ..$ 995 Touring rensenns iS 1 350 T ing .. . $1750
Roadster (3-Pass.) es 919 Roadster (2-Pass.) .... 1325 SpoQister (5-Pass.).... 1835
Coupe-Road. 2 Pasa.)......1225 Coupe (5-Pass.) 1975 Cou S-Pans.).......coeee 2550
Sedan = 1550 Sedan 2050 Sedan Rr ats 2750


Terms to Meet Your Convenience
STUDEBA
ED. REAM,
TH1S 18 A
(5 ER co <
so’ Mpo ot
$ TUDZEBAIKER
Mount Yoy
BE AR

and daughters, Dorothy and Florence
of Midway; Mr. and Mrs Harry Seitz
and daughter, Marv. of Cherry Hill.
sri seem tl A lene +
50 YEARS SEES SLIGHT GAIN
IN POTATO YIELD PER ACRF

As potato growers, we are still]
in the “small potato” class, if we
are to judge our standing by the
gain in the average production per
acre made in the United States in
the last 55 years. Statistics gath-
ered by the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture during the last
half century show that the average
production per acre during the five-
year period, 1918-1922, was 98.7
bushels. Our grandfathers did al-
most as well 50 years ago, produc-
ing in the five-year period, 1868-
1872, an average of 94.5 pnsnels
to the acre. In other words our a
bility to grow potatoes has improv
ed during these vears only e-
nough to raise the average produc-
tion by 4.4 per cent
From 1868 to 1888 the average
yield decreased steadily until it was
but 74 bushels to the acre. Since
that time the average yield has
been steadily increasing until it
now the highest it has ever been.
A number of reasons for the de-
cline in yields during the first half
of this period are given by the de-
partment, the most important a-
mong them being the ravages of
the Colorado potato beetle during
the early period of its invasion of
the eastern United States, the finan-
cial depressions of 1877 and 1893,
which brought about a well-marked
decline in agriculture in New Eng-
land, New York, and other heavy
potato producing acreas, and a gra-
dual depletion of soil fertility.
This downward tendency has
been checked by a number of fac-
tors which have helped to increase
the yield and average production
per acre. Some of these beneficial
factors are the influence of the ag-
ricultural experimental stations, ag-
ricultural colleges, and the United
States Department of Agriculture,
through experimentations, demon-
strations, and extension work; the
inbuence of the Bordeaux-mixture
treatment in the control of fungous
diseases affecting the potato; and
the development of special potato-
growing sections where the average
vield is often from two to three
times the general average of the
United States.
Recently more atiention has been
given to the production of better
seed by growers who are making
a specialty of producing certified
seed and seed of high quality. The
55
is
use of high-grade seed, says the
United States Department of Afi-
riculture, would increase the re-
turns from the potato crop of the
country by many millions of dol-
lars. Good seed is one of the de-
termining factors in the production
of maximum crops of potatoes
— i —— |
COLLEGE TO TRAIN MEN \
FOR COW TESTING WORK

Because of the great shortage of
men trained for cow testing asso-
ciation work, the dairy dopariment
of the Pennsylvania State Colleg
will give a short course of six + i
beginning August 13 to traip/ men



f-


BER Sada iat ad oe 4





F. O. B. CLEVELAND
Seats Five Comfortably
CLEVELAND AUTOMOBILE COMPANY


ph Bd et - BFLEEP NIG CIPS
ea CPT SE.
aN
i CLEVELAND
IXSEDAN
It’sone of the outstand-
ing examples of fine
construction in the six
cylinder field, yet it sells
for the lowest price=-
Body by Fisher
P. Franck Schock.
Mount Joy, Pa.
+ CLEVELAND

 

A


 
 
 

 



for the positions now open. The on- | cured. A number of other coun-
ly qualifications for entrance re-|ties plan to start associations in the
quired by the college officials are near future. The counties in which
accuracy with figures, practical | associations are already organized
dairy experience, honesty and good |are: Centre, Potter, Clarion, Bed-
judgment. fard, York, Lawrence, Monroe,
Testing associations in 15 coun- | Bucks, Erie, Crawford, Huntingdon,
ties of Pennsylvania are organized | Brandford, Clearfield,
and ready to begin the testing work | Perry.
as soon as capable men can be se- “Officers of associations are offer
\
Lehigh and | Harry Rineer, of near
ing from $75 to $100 a month and
board for good testers, and several
large associations will pay more.”
says C. R. Gearhart in commenting
on the shortage.
Gladys, 6-year-old daughter of
Washington
Boro, fell out of an auto and frae-
tured her lég g