" Re as RL Ae NES “= > Simi Sh WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26th, 1924 Mid “Co rd You gan now get “ballgon-type”’ tires fpr your present dar with- outchangifg rims. Epoch-making impro in rid- ing comfort, plus yearly of hundreds of dollars in tive dil car bills—that is what the new Midgelin Comfort Cord offers you. It is Byice as big as ordinary cords, is infld to onby half the pressure and sells about the same price. E. B. ROHRER, Mount Joy, Pa. u 2 y d Chr ysler © ‘ars Maxell a t ion of Maxwell Cars pro- the average car. These portance. They come in gPassenger Coupes, Club ervice and their beauti- gchine at the price. undeniable mark of nkable impress which ®And this impression ARS—The dont] ingly different frog ues of great i and duces an eff plea cars embody hidden Road 3 Sedans Tourings, 2- They are built for d Sedans. ¢ assed by any 1M “THE ‘CHRYSLER SiX—Carries thd quality—that elusive, indefinite, but unmis characterizes any object of inbuilt worth. S gained merely from a fleeting glance of car is no illusion. The hvac was built to specifications of Waterial and work- manship not surpassed by any known motor car man- ufacture. Chry Ly performance in its every ghase tells that a distinctly new kind of motor car has been buil§, The compact, small bore motor devel Ops in excess of sixty jve- horse-power. Pick-up is a revelation to the owner of any car. The complete ahsence of vibration is finally a fact. Hills are £2 en as though there were no hills. Gasoline mileage is in twenty to the gallon. I have a good Sli htly used Overland Sedan w as a demonstration that I will sell cheap. % If you want a new machine, don’t buy until you stg I have arranged with Mr. Harvey Hawthorne, who a garage here, to take care of the service end of al cars WE ALSO SELL TIRES AND ACCESSORIES M. B. HIESTAND MOUNT JOY, PA. & OE Bell Telephone Store Open Sal gy Evenings Until 9 O'Clock PINT | WAISTS O08. : & Tailored waists to wear with the taNaged suits. In 2 striped white dimities, others of tan, with fty Peter Pan Collars and Cuffs. Also fancy voile Waists™qr the Matron, in White only, all sizes. mgr zs Use Our Mall Order Service | barrel, | adelphia. | CORRECT THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8 A THE PRODUCE AND 1 | : | LIVE STOCK MARKET INF NFORMATION FUR. NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PENNA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN The apple market continued to be | quoted New at $4.00 similar Philadelphia York A2% inch Baldwins to $4.50 per barrel with stock from cold storage burgh selling at $3.60 to $4.00 per Pennsylvania A2% inch Ganos brought $3.60 per barrel. Baldwins $4.00 per barrel and 2% steady. inch starks $3.00 per barrel in Phil- | York New quoted AlZY% | | inch McIntosh at $7.00 to $9.00 per | | totaled 2’1 DOO o0 : 4 | Le 2 3 AICS 3 ? 8 SINGLE COMB WHIT wl ORN BABY CHICKS b 3 from pedigreed Ferris Strain Ms at reasonable prices. CUSTOM HATCH 8 M a ov Pou BR 9 | Fou Kil g Bell Phone 133R6 MOUNT JOY, Pepa 8 Ever Think Of { Mr. Business Man did you ever; If anycne wan stop to think that every copy of the] Donegal town. farm, elong the Bulletin is a salesman, visiting many, | Donegal ereek, with the best of lime many homes each week and soliciting | stone soil, here's your chance. 107 business for every advertiser in seven acres of which is good columns? meadow. Farm divided into 6 fields Good E. Donegal Farm { summer house, shedding for 10 acres {of tobacco, running water at barn house. Buildings in exceptional shape, farm is eonvenient to markets, is an excellent producer and can be bought at $180 an acre. If interest- phone or write Jno. E. FX Realtor, Mount Joy. tf en ne GD QP er { New barn, 40x90, 8-room brick house i HER E GARBER PIAN Mount hin It pays to sdvertise in the Bulletin Be, 53 real good East | Tsholding barely steady, i i i | i { } tle, 787 hogs, i | i barrel. In Pittsburgh, round bushel Rough stock $6.60-8.60 Lancaster Grain aid Feed Markets | Prices to Farnsers RHEEMS | Grammar School Here Will Hold An Wheat ......... + $1.13] Entertainment Thuraday Even. COME vive vanes JS] ing, April 3 | Hay (baled) | Timothy ton' My, and Mrs. Harry Rohrer spent | Straw + .$14,00- 14.00 ton {last Wednesday at Lancaster shop- in Pitts- | Selling Price of Feeds: | ping on East King street. Bran ..$36.00-37.00 ton, Thus far only one quarantine case Shorts .$35.00-36.00 ton has occurred which was placarded Hominy ‘ .$40,00-41,00 ton [scarlet fever, in Rheems. | Middlings ........$40.00-41.00 ton Miss Sara Thompson, and brother, Linzeedd .......... $50.00-51.00 ton | Newton, are on the sick list with se- Gluten ...... ..$46.560-47.50 ton | vere attacks of the grippe. Ground Oats ..... $43.00-44.00 ton Church of the Brethren will hold | Cottonseed 43 pe. $55.50-56.50 ton | their regular morning services at { Dairy Feed 16 ne. $34.50-35.00 ton Rheems next Sunday morning after Dairy Feed 18 pe. $38.00-39.00 ton ! Sunday school. | Dairy Feed 20 pe. $41.00-42.00 ton | Eli Brubaker, the village butcher, | Dairy Feed 24 pe. $49.00-50.00 to» | who was quite ili with an attack of | Dairy Feed 25 pe. $650.00-51.00 ton | pneumonia spent one day on his farm | Horse F=ed 86 pe. $45.00-46.00 ton | near Miton Grovg. i Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Pontz and { Miss Flossie Spicer, of Lancaster, baskets of New York 2% inches and | Baldwins ranged from $1.00 to Apple shipments Pennsylvania Western New up $1.25 per bushel. cars with reporting DH cars. York reported barrels of A2 % inches | and up Baldwins at from $3.50 to | $3.75 per barrel in carload lots, fob usual terms. Similar stock, f o b cash track for export, sold for $3.50 per barrel. Offerings of potatoes were liberal and met steady market. vania round whites in 150 1b. sacks ranged from $2.50 to $2.60 per sack in Pittsburgh, with similar stock in bulk selling at $1.75 to $2.00 per ewt. in Philadelphia. quoted western Maryland McCormicks fairly well graded at $1.50 to $1.60 per cwtl Michigan Russet Rurals ranged from $2.00 to $2.85 per 150 lb. sacks in Baltimore and Pittsburgh. Green Mountains from Maine in 150 lb. sacks brought $2.75 to $3.00‘per sack in Philadel phia and $3.25 to $3..5 per sack in New York. Shipments of potatoes for March 20th totaled 768 cars; Pennsylvania loaded 14 cars (all sales quoted at shipping points on the bagis of carloads delivered sales). Western New York reported round whites at $2.05 per 150 1b. Michigan sacked Russet Rurals from 95¢ to- $1.00 per cwt. Bulk Green Mountains from Maine mostly $1.45 per ewt. Sacked round in Wisconsin and Minnesota anged from $1.00 to $1.10 per cwb 92 score butter brought 47 1-4c¢ to 47 1-2¢ in New York and Philadel- phia and 46¢ in Chicago. New York egg market was about steady with nearby white extra firsts at 27 fresh gathered extra firsts 23 1-2 and fresh gathered firsts at 23 1-2¢ to 23 3-4c. In Chicago, fresh gath- ered firsts brought Philadelphia quoted nearby firsts at 24 1-2c¢ and nearby firsts at 23 1-2c. Philadelphia quoted No. Winter wheat at $1.12 1-2 to 13 1-2 and No. 2 Red Winter: gar- licky at $1.07 1-2 to $1.08 1-2. Bal- timore wheat market was also slight- ly lower, with No. 2 Red Winter at $1.10 and No. 2 Red Winter gar- licky at $1.11. Market showed little activity dur- ing the past week. Beef steers top $9.85, bulk sales $7.75-8.75. Compared with year ago--top $9.25, bulk $7.25- 8.25. Bulls and heifers steady. Cows weak to 2bc lower, a good many cows from nearby farms are being marketed at present prices, ranging from $3.00-4.50 with few choice quality up to $6.00 Calves closed steady with week’s decline, top vealers $13.00. Hogs show a stronger tendency compared with week ago, $.5¢-50c¢ higher, top $9.00 bulk $8.60-8.85. $1.- Receipts for Saturday's market: 1. cars cattle from Penna contain- ing .7. head. .16 head driven in. Total, 488 cattle, 5 calves, 165 hogs. Receipts for week ending March , 19.4: 41 care cattle from the towing points: 33 Penna, 2 Md, 1Va, 1K 7. Tenn., 1 In- diana, 1 Iowa containing 929 head. head driven in. Total, .484 cat- 45 calves. Compared with year ago: 5b cars entuc : 555 cattle containing 1197 head. 293 nead driven in from nearby farms. Total, 1490 cattle, 8 calves, 764 hogs. Range of Price: STEERS: Good to choice Fair to good Medium to fair Common to medium $9.50-10.25 $8.25-9.50 BULLS Good to choice $6.25-7.50 Fair to go yd $5.25-6.25 Tedium to fair $4.25 5 Common to medium $4.00 1 to prime .5( to choice 3.0 m to 1 5 um Tc i ot) nmon to medium Fi 1. ¢ a To cnoice i edium to g00¢ Jommon to medi Canners and cu STOCK BULLS Ut bo tv Pennsyl- | | | Baltimore | sacked | | | | i brought | sack. | dest | | 1 | | 1 i 27¢, | , | the United States. 21c and 211-4c. | extra | | { | | 2 Red | spent one day with B. Henry, notary public, of Rheems. Mr. and Mrs. Banks Detra, of Eli- | | zabethtown spent Sunday at the [8 of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Abe Butzer, Rheems. A. L. Nissley and Rev. Henry Lutz of near Mt. Joy, transacted business at the J. L. Heisey and sons ware- house, Rheems, Thursday. The Brethren in Christ held their week end prayer meeting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Simon L. Hei- sey last Saturday epening. Mrs. Reuben Nissley, of Mt. Joy, Mrs. John Stehman and Mrs. Aaron Landis spent one day at the home of Mrs. Susan Wolgemuth, Rheems. Herman Snyder, formerly pro- prietor of the Rheems concrete gar- age, has accepted a position as first class mechanic at the E. B. Rohrer Oe of the factory road development is lack of appreciation of the modern science of highway building and using. We know too many things about roads which are not so! Many of our highway ideas are twenty years behind the times. We haven't caught up with the engineer. For instance, “all roads wear out. The enormous money invested in them is thus a capital loss.” Roads do not wear out. The sur- face of a good road wears, of course. ' So does the roof of a house. But replacing the house roof doesn’t | 52128 of Mount Joy. mean that the rest of the house| A: B- Heisey, the Rheems stone and sand merchant transacted im- portant business at Lancaster last Saturday making the round trip in his new car with pleasant company. The Church of the Brethren held their regular evening services at Rheems last Sunday with the usual attendance. The Revs. Kaylor, Esh- leman, Shearer, and Brubaker offici- The surface of a road If it wears out it must be replaced. But that doesn’t mean that the right of way, the grade, foundation, and all the material is any less waluable than at first. “Trucks destroy roads. Therefore trucks should pay for roads?’ That, too, is a fallacy. A truck no more roys a road, when truck and isn’t good. is its roof. road fit, than a baby carriage troys a garden path, It is lack of Gabriel Risser flitted from the maintenance which destroys roads, | Ephraim Hernly farm near Rheems it is allowing too light a road to be |to the Jacob Greiner farm near { built for the traffic it will bear, Green Tree church last week. Mr. which destroys roads; it is failure | Martin Risser, a beginner, filled the to enact wide tire and : maximum | vacancy. 1084 Jaws yi destroys roads, : Phares Heisey, of the firm of J. L lere isn’t money enough to pay Heisey left for Syracuse, N.Y for national highways, We will all Wednesd ln ry be bankrupts!” More fallacy. There Bane Sday evening: lor two new are fourteen million moter ears in tracks, one of then 10 be placed the Rheems Feed Warehouse as a delivery truck. Harry Engle, J. A. Hipple farms at Rheems, sold ten rs to a Lancaster merchant that netted an advance of $3.40 ne: hundred 1bs. and an average gain in weight of over 300 Ibs. per head. Herman Snyder and Phares Hei- | sey returned from Syracuse, N. Y. | Saturday night with a new Sanford track for the J. L. Heisey and Sons warchouse. They were detained on account of Main highways being blocked with snow. Jacob Heisey, who underwent a successful operation at the Lancaster | hospital several months past return- ed from Philadelphia last Saturday expecting to resume his duties, de- livering Mother's Bread on the route he established the past two years. Arrangements are being made to grow twenty acres of slaughter to- bacco on the J. A. Hipple farms at Rheems in 1924 where they are look- ing for a number of experienced to- bacco farmers to take care of this highly fertilized land adapted for growing tobacco. The coad piles and sons ¢ If they are worth on an average of $500 each (which is an underestimate), they represent an investment of $7,000,000,000. Did we get bankrupt buying them! We did not! Why should we get bankrupt buying sever billion dollars worch of roads—and the interest on seven billions will build today more national highways than we have as yet engineers and machinery to build. Transportation has been, for us Americans, nothing but rail and water for all our history. Now we are compelled to translate the word into “highways” and “motors”. Motors we underst and—highways, as yet, we only partially comprehend, and “motor transport”, as a whole, is yet a sealed book to most of us. The first step in opening it is to get rid of fallacious thinking—to realize that what used to be, is no more true today, than what is proper road width and cost today, will fit conditions fifty, a hundred years hence! stee FAREWELL PARTY FOR MR. AND MRS. JOHN RODKEY Last Thursday evening a farewell surprise party was tendered Mr. and Mrs. John Rodkey, of Kinderhook, who will move to Columbia on April 1. Their neighbors ony deeply regret their that vicinity after idence. Mr. T farm he recen sixty-four 5 with his father at years. Mrs. Rodke; farm for about twents About forty-fiv at the J. L. Heisey val yard, Rheems are be- and all customers iting the convenience of 1 the electrical load- week. It requires s to unload a cor coming |are appreci rie ends i lc i. Enterline concrete cted by the Kline nd the famous con- rce of 15 me- 7 for the ty. Music and gam 7 completed of the evening and all induleed ir past six refreshments. orm : The following pers wars in at- ay School Haye tendance: Mo and Mrs hristian a Interesting old F. Rodkey and son; Mr. and Mrs. | : In ine Rhcems Fred Rodkey, Aaron Zeamer, Mr Thur sday, April 3, at and Mrs. William K. son; Mrs, Ida M. Eisen} A. Elizabeth Green > Greene, Mri and Mrs Minnich and superintendent of the | CUT RATE hursday, Friday and Saturday : of This Week : 50c MENPHALATUM ............. oy 39 25¢ MENBHAL! M sani 16 @ BOC NUIOE: .. 49 @ $1.00 NUJOL . ‘ea ne nuns BOC Uf $1.00 DEWITT'S KIDNEY PILLS 69 & { 60c CHAMBERLAIN’S COUGH SYRUP ...... 25¢ CASCARA QUININE PILLS lle lL 25¢ BRANTRRETHS PILLS eves 7c @ $1.00 PIERGE’S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION, oe 89c @ $1.00 PIERGE’S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY ....... 89 & | a : Su, 0 : i To Hills With “YHE WONDER MOTOR FUEL” ie TS extraordinary, encrgy of | this high-power motor fuel, always insur- | ing myre mileage to every gallon, that | makes BETHOLIN E the preference of most m&orists. %. FOR SALE BY J. W. ES NELMAN-—MT. JOY, PA. REXOLINE MOTOR OIL for perfect lubrication DISTRIBUT@RS MT. JOY PURE OIL CO. Mount Joy, Pefpa. HII CIMINO IF YOUWARE TROUBLED WITH PILES STOP IN' AND GET A TRIAL SIZE BOX OF THE BEST PILE RELIEF ON THE MARKET, SOLUTION. NONE BETTER, stop FOR A TRIAL BOTTLE. io ‘E. W. GARBER THE REXALL STORE Mount Joy, Penna. Mr. and Mrs. daughter; Divet, Moore Miss Mr. Mrs. Nora and son: Dorothy ( 1 ~ OY and vu + ch 1 It ! tow who g 0 farm 5 d or 2 i al his ad Bes ge tention to two statl i> 3 This seed may be satisfa actory on vo t 10 | but it is od nd several | Good to choice $6.00-6.50 | Fair to good $5.00-6.00 Common to fair $4.00-5.090 CALVES Good to choice $12.00-13.00 Medium $10.00-12.90 Common $5.50-10.00 HOGS: Heavyweight, 220-250 $8.75-9.00 Mediumweight, 150-200 $8.75-9.00 Lightweight, 108-150 $8.50-8.75 is less hardy and more subject to disease than home grown seed. | hundred hens that are producing’ I Nalive seed should have the pre efer- | {52 2 8 SF LY perch [aie In; | ence. {1924 he will discontinue farming to- | : Ibgeco and increase the acreage of | Congress is cngaged in Bouse: wheat, corn and potatees. For the | past twelve years he farmed 15 to cleani | caning and it wouldnt hurt the 18 acres of tobacco annually | | country a bit if a few congressmen got mixed up in the trash out. ——— and : i Swept Once in a while the government ——— ee __ finds a dollar-a-year man somewhat It pays to advertise in the Bulletin | | Ny JOY AND FLORINEDAILY. IF YOU CARE TO BE SERVED WITH PURE DISTILLED AND SPRING WATER ICE, PLEASBCALL BELL PHONE 49R4 OR IND. PHONE 856R2. % ICE FOR SALE DURING THE ENTIRE SEASON AND AT ALL TIMES ATEMY PLACE OF BUSINESS AT BREWERY. 4 H. J. E North Market Street agle %. MOUNT JOY, PA. Is the Only Kind Rockers, Mirrors, Hall Racks, Picture Frames, Ladies’ Desks, Extension and Other Tables Davenports, China Closets, Kitchen Cabinets, H. C. BRUNNER,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers