The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 07, 1924, Image 6

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THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CUUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8 A.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 7th, 102¢


By Carle Sughroe
Unies



OLKS READ "WH' LOCAL
NEWS IN "HS PAPER







NO WEN READ “HE
’
Pd
Rs

O KNOW WHERE
So
BIR,
a AAP Povey
ARE GOWGH


E. Main St,
 

Mrs. Mina Dierolf
MOUNT JOY, PA.
mar. 26-tf

BY DR. DAVID H.
REEDER
D
CIGARETTES
10°
GENUINE
‘BULL
PURHAM
TOBACCO _
but any one can give most excelle
© a a %
100 Uses reasons as to the disadvantages,
{why be sick?

mos useless things we buy.
1
|
han we pay for the well days, a

to the well days.
will keep us well.
I do not believe that any one e
uccessfully




rall’s Meat Marke





t
number of sick days per person
he United States is eight, and
the average
Gardeners It has been shown by
Wg
Pulverized® and sterilized
sheep be applied
in many ways § s a fertilizer.
days per family is forty.
Now if it is necessary to have
doctor forty



v a i
EE il os Tie a | tl Prorat or re 104 omy ose for days fimo fs! 008
SMOKED MEAT 2 HAM, DRIED growing crop in eld Or gar-'gays time for the person who cares |
BEEF, BOLOGNA, , ETC. den, lawn, or to your most del-|for the sick, then we certainly do
Jlse Fresh Beef, Veal, k, Muttos jcate house plants.} We have have an enormous loss.
H. H. KRALL just received a car & the Old| It is admitted by even the mo
West Main St, MOUNT JOY. | Reliable Sheep on Brang |, physicians that one 1a















i 2
SR


LBROY C. BATES
“PO WITH ELECTRICITY”
ELECTRIC
Wiring, Fixty
of All









hand Appliances
ds



66 West Main S
Bell Phone 18R4 Mount
mar,








Pa.




Save Pennies—
Waste Dollars
Some users of inti
save pennies
: ior work are fone
vertising value in ie work
they get. Printersasa rule







Our Printing Is
| Unercelled





YOUR NAME
tion list?


CONTRACTOR

 
 
 








 


 


1
Try a ton or a few bags,
For Sale at
E. H. Zerchers
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Shaky HE
USED CARS
wy
prevention.
{ I have before me
| tatement of a very f
'¢ian who does me the
‘dressing me as “Dear
| e writes
ment he tells me of the diet whie
{be gave to a wealthy
(bad been treated previously by man
i amous physicians and in m
‘sanitariums and hospitals,
First, he refused to do a thing un.
Friend” whe









evrolet Coupe 1923.
vrolet Touring 1928.
8ree to do just as he was tol
eat what he was told to
jnothing else.
d to do
oupe 1918.
ring, $75. Running {the diet. This was a large man, a|ish color of macaroni which they
condition. id eater. Most of the doctors had make.
1—Brand New\Ford Coupe 1924, cautioned him against over eating

run less than thi¥y-five miles; will nd told him that a
save you money. © \Was necessary, but asi
| iting a few articles of food there
bad never been a specific diet used
n hom, so he continued to be sick
nd was getting worse instead of
{ etter. He promised to obey orders
‘and his Promise was faithfully kept.
First, an absolute fast of three
days, nothing but water but lots of
An enema of warm water

E. B. ROHRER,
Chevrolet Sales
MOUNT JOY, P
Sky
HERSHEY'S
RBER SHOP

 
hat,
ach night before retiring.
On the morning of the fourth day,
he juice of half a lemon in a tum.
bler of cold water, no sugar. One
our later one glass of orange juice
nothing more. At noon a double
handful of watercress, nothing more
nd for supper, a head of lettuce,
othing more, :
This diet and nothing else was
ontinued for ten days and then a
eW other vegetables were added for
nother ten days. Very little
as made for the third ten da






















change
ys, but
 



hree months to pay
both are strong,
pappier than for
No, they won't
be better nourished
before this change an
ree from the disease
S excess fat,
OLLEGE DAIRY ANIMAL
AWARDED SILVER MEDAL
the doctor. They
healthy and much
years.
starve, they will
in a year than
d they will be
matter, known








|

WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX.
PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN
Actual Economy: Sickness is one
of the most expensive as well as the |
Yes I mean it. We buy our sick |
days and pay much more for them |
then we must pay the doctor and lose
valuable time in order to get back
It costs much more for a diet that |
makes us sick than for a diet that |
show where any real
“enefit is to be gained by being sick,
carefully
ompiled statistics that the average
family consists of five
persons the average number of sick
times each year, and
patient that | wheat of high quality.
any great | mong which is the Pentad or red
less the patient would positively a.
eat and
| Now you, perhaps, would not be
; | nterested in the disease its 1f
3100, Tos: elf or the
Touring, $ | ther methods of treatment, but in
restricted diet
de from prohi.
| COW-TEST RECORDS SHOW
MR, VM GOMMA ANE
THIS SPOTLIGHT PUT ©
MY CAR AM TR NEAT Guy
WHO PRESETS
WITHOUY DUAN HS
LIGHTS (SS GONNA GY
{

Lu)
i
|
A
|
|
ATM
|
|
|
|
|
PA.

nd |
an |
nt
so
in
as
a.
\ . .
ranged in five groups according to
production of buterfat. These five
| | groups averaged 100, 200 , 300, 400
and 500 pounds, respectively. The
| | daughters of the first or 100-pound
| group produced 74 pounds more but-
terfat than their dams. The daugh-
ters of the second group produced 55
pounds more butterfat than their
dams. The daughters of the third
group produced 9 pounds more but-
terfat than their dams. The daugh-
ters of the fourth group produced
26 pounds less butterfat than their
dams. The laughters of the fifth or
last group produced 86 pounds less
butterfat than their dams.
From these figures we may con-
clude that good purebred bulls are
needed for every dairy herd
that purebred bulls. selected
|
quired when the production records
of the dams are above 300 pounds
of butterfat a year. As the average
production of herds advance, better
and still better bulls are needed to
increase production.
rts at A esr
SOUTHWESTERN TOWN TRIES
ELMS INTRODUCED BY U. S.

a

ty |
|
{ durum wheat is falling off and the do
| mestic demand is on the increase
st | farmers are urged by the
If | States Department
ithe people would live right and use [tion to fit the needs of the domestic
{practical common sense methods of | market. It appears that almost half
on the
the personal | market during 1912, 1920, and 1921
amous physi- | contained over 10 per cent of wheat
honor of ad- { of other classes and was graded as
Firms engaged in the
to me, and in his state- milling of durum wheat find it diffi-
{ of the durum wheat offered
n | mixed wheat.
h {cult to obtain sufficient pure durum
y| Certain durum wheats, chief a-
{durum variety, have been grown
| quite extensively, and while absorbed
on the foreign market should be dis-
continued and replaced with varie-
ties suited to domestic milling for
| macaroni manufacture. Two var-
|ieties of amber durum, the Acme and
Monad, also are not desired by the
domestic trade because of the gray-
When making a change of seed,
careful consideration should be giv-
en the choice of varieties to be used.
The Kubanka is the best-adapted
variety for all the varying conditions
in the durum-wheat sections. It is a
high-yielding wheat, considerably re-
sistant to rust, of good milling qual-
ity, and well liked for the manufac-
ture of macaroni, the principal use
of durum flour. The new Nodak!
variety recently developed in North
Dakota as a selection from ‘Kubanka
is a distinct pure strain of that var-
iety, which is equal or superior to it’
in yield, rust-resistance, and macar-
oni-making qualities. Other durum
varieties have been found more pro
ductive than Kubanka in certain sec-
DOMESTIC MARKET FOR DURUM
WHEAT IS ON THE INCREASE
Because the foreign demand for
United
of Agriculture
the sick days could be well days if {to modify their durum-wheat produc-
farm family can be produced right

One of the benefits from the in-
troduction of plants from all parts
the world by the United States
























and !
from | >
very high producing ancestry are re-| /,
4% THE ADS XT ee SPENT Soest
TH’ (3K GRO JOLY | States is only 160 pounds annually,
HOME HEALTH CLUB a rtm - The records of the dams were ar-
er Expe

begin to tell
done for me.

lying down. I have n
nor tired feelin
who takes the


Richardson. She


’
newspaper of Carlsbad, N. Mex.
“The local park commission,” says
the paper, “is deeply indebted to the
Bureau of Plant Industry for the
interest and assistance which that
bureau has shown in helping this
section of the ‘treeless’ southwest in
providing quantities of shade trees.”
The Department of Agriculture,
en thus praised by
I do all
y druggists everywhere.

rience
paper Isaw the Lydia
. Pinkham’s Vege- !
able Compound ad- |
wertisementand saw |
taken three
thes, and cannot
it has already



o mofe headaches
. I hope every woman |
egetable Compound will
get as much benefit out of it a§1 have.”’
—Mrs. PERCY W. RICHARDSON, R.F.D.
No. 2, Skowhegan, Maine.
You have just read how Lydia
ham’s Vegetable Compound helpéd Mra.
ave it a trial
she saw what it had done for other wo-
men. For nearly fifty years Lydia E.
: % | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has
partment of Agriculture is emphasiz®{ be
ed in an article published in a local |}
. Pink-








after
women. For sale








through the Office of Foreign Seed
and Plant Introduction, secured seeds
of the Chinese elm some years ago
and has distrbuted many trees
throughout the country. As a result
of this effort, it may now be said
that the species is fairly established
in the United States, where it pro
mises to become a popular and val-
uable shade tree in many regions.
For it is a single feature of this
plant, whose native home is in north-
ern China and Manchuria, that it
succeeds equally well in the arid
southwest, the Eastern States, and
the northern Great Plains region.
BE
GARDEN WEEK OBSERVED
FROM APRIL 20 T0 26


National Garden Week, April

AE Same m
din

o 26, will be observed in Pennsyl-%,
ania with appropriate programs in
he schools, churches, and ecivie or-
anizations, and through radio talks.
“Farmers as well as city people
should give more attention to their
ome garden,” declares W. B. Niss~
ley, vegetable extension specialist at
tate College, who is one of the ra-
io speakers for the week. ‘Seven-
y-five per cent of the living for the
n the farm.”
He urges everybody to adopt the
logan “a garden for every family
nd every family in a garden.” He

tions. Mindum is the best-yielding
variety of durum in Minnesota.
banka and makes macaroni of ex-]
cellent light yellow color. Peliss is
the best-yielding variety in the high-
e was well, stro : er and drier sections of Montana and ; Se
ad a clear oe Hous sd Wyoming, where rust does not occur. letin interest readers of the Bul-
. wife ha iv ]
Parned to like the raw fruits and It also gives a good color in macar- having the misfortune to
egetables. They discharged oni manufacture. suffer backache, urinary dis-
00k and saved i ge the In order to meet the requirements | orders, vel, dropsical swellings,
Saved enough on food in of the domestic market, durum-wheat | pains, or other kidne
growers should obtain and maintain
purer and better seed and replace
the Pental, Acme,
ieties as soon as possible. For this]
purpose the Nodak appears the most
promising new variety at this time.
rer tl Gent ee
VALUE OF PUREBRED BULLS

A tabulation has just been com-

Penstates
ear-old
he Penns
ust
—
Pogis Hattie, a three-
ersey in the dairy herd at
ylvania State College, has
: completed a year’s record of |
ilk production that places her as
| he fourth highest cow in
her class
= Pennsylvania. In the 365 days
[She produced 10,61 :
i 1 pounds of milk
i nd 614.79 pounds of fat. uh
* | In recogniti i
o ste ro ak gnition of the achievement
P rl g jof this dairy animal, the dairy de-
partment at the college has received
i

MOUNT JOY, PA.
I do all Kinds of




 


pleted by the Bureau of Animal In-
dustry, United States Department of
Agriculture, in which the records of
384 grade daughters of pure-bred
dairy bulls were compared with the
records of thier dams. The average
yearly butterfat production of the
dams was 309 pounds, and that of
t
It ,*house”
is about as resistant to rust as Ku- that a “house”
and disorders, will read wi
gratification\ this encouraging state-
ment by a
and Monad var-|¥
. 8. Sho prop. blacksmith
shop, 126 W. Yonegal street, says:
‘Doing a lot Bf heavy, straining
quent
every little while.
er
got down
bing, knife-like pain
small of my back. Fok quite some
until I “got
Pills.
and after I had used a &ouple of
boxes my back was well a :
stored to their proper wo
oints out the difference between a
and a “home” by saying
is not a “home” un-
ess it has a garden.
i.






. JOY MAN'S LUCKY FIND
ount Joy man. Ask






bothered |
There were oth-
in passage\ I was
indications wl
to shoe a\ horse, a sta
t&ok me in the
ime I put ap with thse troubles
started
soon
Doan’s hdlped me
My kidneys, too,
er. ”

the daughters 313 pounds. The
daughters excelled the dams with a|
margin of only 4 pounds of butterfat |
a year, but the fact that they ex-|
C
60c at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
o., Mrf., Buffalo, N. Y.
Ever Think Of It?
Mr. Business Man did you ever
0
*

 





e will guarantee
you full value |
, YOUR MONEY

 
2 silver medal
Jersey Cattle Club.
from the American
Pogis
celled such high-producing dams at P . Co)
all speaks very well for the class of | Bulletin is a salesman, visiting many,
stop to think that every copy of the
DOO
j many homes each week and soliciting
D0
utomobile Uphol- Was born and rajseq
farm and is a purebre
best blood lines of th
i

H. S. MUSS
FLORIN, PENNA.
feb. 6-3

Read the






on the college
d carrying the
e Jersey breed.
If you want to succeed— Advertise
purebred dairy bulls that is being
used in the cow-testing association
herds from which these records came.
In this connection, estimates show
that the average butterfat produe-
tion of milk cows in the United
| business for every advertiser in its
columns?
rid of a band of gypsies one day|§
last week.
——— I=
Columbia had quite a time getting | 8




Kook-Rite the New E
That ean be attached to a |





ethods emplo







Repairing lating -P
DOODOOC






to Lydia E. Pinkham'’s |
able Compound. Hopes |
Women Will Benefit by
and is thorough and com
"tion.
gp, Me.—*‘I was sick most the best that skill and care ca :
a@d could not get around to duce.
|
I
what it did for other
wamen, so I thought |
I %ould try it.
{
|
I
y work now !
and keep up the whole daylong without '
















 


~——because architects of the Middle
Ages topped their churches with lofe
ty spires to suggest a Hfti
‘the spirit. Modern sci
 




a higher standard than which
s recommended by the Government.
Purest, Mineral Oil is %odorless
colorless, tasteless—the ic lubri-
cant in cases of faulty elimination.
It quickly softens the food, waste
ac-
to
|



One of 200 Puretest
for health and hygiene. Everylitem

 


E. W. GARBER
MOUNT JOY,, PA.



 




 




 

Tee
Our dairy
with the
devised to mak milk
clean and safe. % Mar.
tins Dairy milky for
your protection. %
. he ,
6 W.DONE
zh aT
 



THE
Wingert & Haas
at Store

hp Largest Line of
Sprig. Ha
In the
Plain Hats A Spécialty


JOHN A. HAAS, Progr.

your




144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa.


2
Hours: 7 to 9 P. M. and by Appoins-
ment 3
Bell Phone 76R2 Resident
i.
J. S. KUHND.C.


High & Mt. Joy Sts.,
“W. H. DISHONG
NT AILOR
Mt. Joy, Pa.


PA.
a

ressing
Will call for and deliver all orders twice a wosh.
may. 26-tf
DOOOOO
wd RA RFI I HPI A A OB OOOO OOOO MONOMER A sd WEE
“Furniture
ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FURNIL
TURE AND
Westenberger, Maley &
128-131 E. King St,
8 O'Clock Closing Saturdays