WEDNES , AUGUST 6th, 1924 ” THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. | LOWEST PRICED QUALITY AUTOMOBILE Every Chevrolet is fully equipped when sold. It has electric lights and starter, gasoline tank in rear mountable rims and extra rim and tire carrier, 3-speed fransmission and reverse, speedometer and all necessary indicators orf the instru- ment board, curtains open with doors of open models. § All closed models have high grade Fisher Bodies with plate glajs : windows. There is nothing more to buy but the license. Costs lefist per mile for gasoline and oil. There are more than 10,000 dealers and se throughout the country. Repairs are made on a low-ca m, ’ de- vige stations flat rate E. B. Rohrer Chevrolet Sales and Service Statiof MOUNT JOY, PA. MEE era Pals » 5 ¥ Perhaps you've learned that Good Looks%and Economy are nog on speaking terms. Good Looks offen spurns Economy ‘for Extravagance. ut wh ut when it comes to painting, they're regilar pals. Tasteful ainting with good paint insures their permagent association, Looks’ favor by protec ng her against 3 1 €atner. Ar AT ¥ Our trained painters provide the good looks. W/e use pain gnade of Dutch Boy white-lead and oil because it stinds the +=gives real economy. ; Our low prices will make you ask us when we can 5 7 “Save the Surface and You Save All." . LORAW & SON FLORIN, PENNA. ERE SHOPPINC | A -— ~ hly gathered fruits await your rom the very choicest of the will please you with their Attractive assortments of f approval. And you may choosé season’s ¢fferings at prices whi opportunities for economy. All 28c¢. 15¢ Red Man, 2 Packs for 25c. All 15-emt Packs of Cigaretts, 2 Packs All 8-cert Cigars, Standard Brands, 4 for All 5-ceit Cigars, Standard Brands, 6 for 2 All Periy Goods 10c a Dozen, or 5c per hal We male a specielty of BACHMAN’S CH “have Almond Bars and 5-1b. Plain Bars that at $1.50 Fox Bar We also have aspecial price on Bachman 10-1b bars H. AE. DAERRENKAM 3 Doers East of Fet Office MOUNT JOY, PA. gizes Chewing and Smo Tobacco, 3 Packs for 25¢. ozen. LATE. We are selling coating. -— N 1 0 CM 01000 A mim Bigger Vales--Lowe Than Sver Before Use Quriall Order Service The Produce and Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR. NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PENNA. BUREAU oOF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Market dull, early trading light, beef steers compared with week ago better grades strong to 25¢ higher, others barely steady, top grain feds $11.35, weight 1590 pounds; top grass fed $9.90, weight 1,350, bulk of sales $7.75-9.00. Compared with same week last year, top $10.00, bulk $7.50-9.00. All other classes killing stock steady. Stockers and feeders country demand more active, quality fair to good, bulk $5.50-6.50. Calves steady, top vealers $12.50. Hogs, no fresh receipts, Receipts for Saturday: Cattle, 29 cars, 8 Va., 6 St. Louis, 6 St. Paul, 5 Chicago, 2 Canada, 1 Kansas City, 1 Kentucky containing 834 head; 65 head driven in. Total cattle, 889 head, 41 calves. Receipts for week ending August 2, 1924: Cattle, 171 cars containing 5,135 head, 264 head driven in. To- tal cattle, 5,399 head. Calves, 159. Hogs, 92 head. Sheep, 64 head. Compared with same week last year: Cattle, 176 cars; 5,488 head, 177 head driven in. Total Cattle, 5,665 head; calves, 162; hogs, 301; sheep, 125 head. STEERS: Good to choice $9.00-10.00 Fair to good $8.00-9.00 Mediwm to fair $6.75-8.00 Common to medium $5.75-6.75 BULLS: Good to choice $5.75-6.50 Fair to good $5.25-5.75 Medium to fair $5.00-5.25 Common to medium $4.00-5.00 HEIFERS: Choice to prime $8.00-8.50 Good to choice $7.25-8.00 Medium to good $5.25-7.25 Common to medium $4.25-5.25 COWS: Good to choice $5.50-6.50 Medium to good $4.25-5.50 Common to medium $3.25-4.25 Canners and Cutters $1.50-3.25 STOCK STEERS Good to choice $7.00-8.00 Fair to good $6.26-7.00 Medium to fair $5.25-6.25 Common to medium $4.25-5.25 STOCK BULLS Good to choice $5.50-6.25 Fair to good $4.50-5.50 Common to fair $3.50-4.50 CALVES: Good to choice $11.00-12.50 Medium $9.00-11.00 Common $5.50-9.00 HOGS: Heavyweight, 200-250 $10.50-11.00 Mediumweight, 150-200 $10.50-11.00 Lightweight, 100-150 $9.50-10.50 Rough Stock $8.00-9.50 Lancaster Grain and Feed Market Wheat $1.15-1.25 bu Corn $1.18 bu Hay (baled) Timothy $23.00-25.00 ton Straw $10.00-12.00 ton Selking Price of Feeds Bran $37.00-38.00 ton Shorts $39.00-40.00 ton Hominy $50.00-51.00 ton Middlings $42.00-43.00 ton Linseed $55.00-56.00 ton Gluten $49.00-50.00 ton Ground Oats $49.006-50.00 ton Cottonseed 43 pe. $59.00-60.00 ton Dairy Feed 16 pc. $37.00-38.00 ton Dairy Feed 18 pe. $40.50-41.50 ton Dairy Feed 20 pe. $43.00-44.00 ton Dairy Feed 24 pe. $50.50-51.50 ton Dairy Feed 25 pe. $51.50-52.50 ton Horse Feed 85 pc. $52.50-53.50 ton —— Br Cees GET AT THE CAUSE! Many Mount Joy Folks Are Showing How to Avoid Needless Suffering nothing more annoying than kidndy weakness or inability to properly c@ntrol the kidney secre- | tions. Nigh® and day alike, the suff- erer is tormejted and what with the burning and There’ backache, heagache and dizziness, life is indeed burden Doan’s Pills—a stimula%t diuretic to the kidneys—have br8ught peace and comfort to many Meunt Joy people. Profit by this Moun Joy residents experience: C. H. Metzler, mec 49 W. Main St, says: “I wign't feeling any too good and the fxouble was all with my kidneys. In\the first of \prder by Crow Is Denounced as Farmer's Enemy Investigations of the ‘crow which have taken place recently on a scale wider than ever before have proven that he 18 one of the most destruc. tive creatures known to useful and game birds, and to poultry and crops. In fact, hie depredations are so wide spread and fraught with such evil re- sults that sportsmen all over the coun- try are banding together to sh him 80 that the game which remains can have a better chance of coming te ma- turity. A census taken among the game wardens In Pennsylvania re- cently showed that an overwhelming number of the men in the fleld were positive, from actual observation, Of the destructive habits of the crow, and they advised that campaigns be under- Home Health Club WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX. PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER CATARRHAL DEAFNESS: It Is a very common thing for people to complain of failure to hear well and also they usually blame it on eca- tarrh, they blame the catarrh on the climate and sometimes they move hundreds of miles to get away from a bad climate, much to their dismay they find catarrh just as prevalent in the new location and just as many people complaining about catarrhal deafness, taken against him. Some naturalists have claimed that not only directly In most cases climate has very does the crow damage the farmer, by | little to do with catarrhal condi- attacking young poultry and destroy- | tions, ing crops, but that ladirectly he Is vastly more destructive. His indirect work Is done when he destroys mil- lions of the eggs of useful birds, and therefore prevents the coming to ma- turity of these auxiliaries of the farm- er who would, had they been allowed to exist, have accounted for myriads of Insects. In fact, naturalists have sald that the farmer's bill for insect! cldes would be greatly lowered were the crow prevented from killing use- ful birds who are the natural enemies On the frontiers of almost any new country the pioneers are free from catarrh. Their children are less free, and their grandchildren suffer just as much as in any other older community. No. It is not due to germs or the evils of ecivil- ization, but to diet, to indoor life and more abundant food. The hardy pioneer is’ hardy be- cause he is lean, and from force of of the imsect pests. circumstances, not overfed. His In the West hunters are employed | life is mostly in the open. to kill off the predatory animals which I know from experience. But few prey on the cattle, s#d great sums have been saved by their activities. It appears that organized effort against the crow will also save great sums In ether parts of the country if this particular menace to bird life is reduced in numbers. The various campalgus against the crow have fol- lowed on the heels of the great con- servation movement to protect game which is now finding such a response among sportsmen in all parts of the country, With the efforts made to provide proper refuges for useful birds comes the question of protect- ing their young against the predatory creatures which prey on them. of my readers could tell me of frontier life that I have not per- sonally experienced. Even to pass- ing through the most severe North Dakota blizzard in a tent on the open prairie. Living for weeks on bread made from wheat, ground in a coffee mill, yellow turnips made up the balance of the bill of fare, eighty miles to the nearest store and no roads but the trackless snow. In writing to friends about the cli- mate, later on, I stated facts when I told them that no one had a cold, sore throat, or trace of catarrh. I thought it was the climate. On the cite of our camp there is now quite a city and I get letters from there complaining about ca- tarrh and the climate. A famous poet once exclaimed, “Oft in ourselves doth die the ills Direct From Heat To obtain electricity direct from heat is a dream that is likely at some time to be realized. At presemt there are numerous methods of obtaining heat but the power obtaimable is very minute. However, a method hag been devised which employs two insulated (or cures) which we ascribe to carbon reds heated In an electric fur- heaven.” nace or oxy-acetylene flame, In a new Read what the famous doctor way. The two carbons are kept sepa- James D. Edwards, father of the rated at one end, but the other ends aus 4 ig . are connected through & current meas- | 25teopathic finger technique in the uring instrument. Whea one of the | treatment of deafness says about carbons is suddenly displaced a cur- | causes: rent of several amperes will flow. By “Some mothers are in the habit displacing one of the carbons period- Ically an alternating current can be generated. When a slight voltage is applied to of instructing their children to for- cibly blow their nostrils while -oc- cluding the anterior nares with a pocket handkerchief. In the early We don’t use factory hash, We don’t buy up cigar and don’t pack dust and sw pipe scrap. and stems. W&don’t cheapen BEECH-NUT | Chewing Toba with indiscriminately pur. chased crops or blk it by mixing in bitter, | rancid, thick ground, leaves. ' BEECH-NUT is aly ays a clean, pure, pro- * duct, especially cut to Must the right size and prepared through to sealihg without one touch of hum an hands. That's why it’s still the bigge: selling brand in the world. The truest id 10c. ever had, / - 4 $2.4 - J EMM DOOOOO EVERYTHING FOR POULTRYMEN Write, Phone'(3866 Bell), or Bring your to | South Queen Street hb SPRECHER & GANSS, Inc. THE BIG PO TRY SUPPLY HOUSE INCUBATORS 5 P. P. LIVE CHICK BOXES Hot Water—Hot Air Wood Shipping Coops BROODERS EGG CRATES Coal Stove or Oil Celluloid Leg Bands OATS SPROUTERS EGG TESTERS Cabinet and Open Pan Galvan- Thermometers ized Brood Coops Hydrometers SAN NON-FREEZE FOUNTS 1-2-3-8 Gallon Sizes Green Bone Cutters Root 8nd Vegetable Cutters MASH FEEDERS Powder % and 1 Bushel Sizes Liquid. Disinfectant Wall and Jar Founts Feeds and Remedies for Birds Grit and Shell Boxes and Chickens Baby Chick Feeders Ground Shell'and Grit Parcel Post Egg Boxes Poultry Netting WRITE TO-DAY FOR COMPLETE LIST. the carbons the current increases to more than ten amperes at about 450 | Periods, the eustachian Passagewny degrees Fahrenheit, is almost horizontal, hence the prac- | These experiments are Interesting, | tice of closing the anterior nares | inasmuch as such a result would | while blowing the nose should be | hardly be expected & avoided, as thiz is often the cause | r « e ays ane Soins Hing re of acute otitis media and pocket | note fore on *h : : 2 3 handkerchief deafness. Furthermore, | Such ibis : { nasal irrigation, sprays or syringes, | but in a high vacuum. discoveries scale seemingly often mark the beginning of wonderful | should not be prescribed in early] developments. childhood. Instillations of oil, drop- | = Em per method, is a safer and better | Odd Birth Certificate procedure. In acute head colds the | The egg, with the greatest clalm to | writer preseribes the following: Cam-| distinction Is one which was used as phor, grain three, menthol, grain | a birth eertificate! This unique “doc- ument” was submitted to a meeting of a school attendance committee held at Norwich In February, 1899. Mrs. Bell, a widow, had been called upon | three, and phenol, drops three to one ounce of liquid albolene; one | dropperful of this solution in each | nostril three or four times a day. | In acute otalgia or earache due to|® Furniture ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FURNI- TURE AND CARPETS? QUALITY AID SERVICE MAKE FOR SATISFACTION. WE ASSURE, YOU OF ALL THREE WE ARE “DEPENDABLE Westenberger, Maley & Myers 128-131 E. King St., ig, 6 O'Clock Closing Saturdays “, %, Lancaster, Pa. — ET STE / to prove that her daughter had reached i the school exemption age. | swelling of the eustachian muscisa “i . n She produced an egg, colored in thiz oil may be warmed and dropped | While You . tints of purple, yellow and cream, with | into the external auditory canal, and | % the name of her daughter and the | I oy ot |. 3 { should be repeated every hour or|= . = date of her birth picked out in white I fa ig 2 |= hy Th k f I J In almost copperplate lettering. In ad- | "Wo until relieved. This focal treat. } 3 N in 0 t ® dition, two %exts had been written on | ment is, of course, only palliative; |= BR the egg—“The Lord shall guide thee | osteopathic manipulations of the = = continually” and “Teach me to do Thy | cervical, submaxillary and upper- | @ ’ 5 . will.” This was the only record Mrs. | dorsal areas are the corrective mea- ‘a That S 1c time to place your = Bell had of her daughter's birth, and | » = by 2 - pr f |. 9 2 after the “certificate” had been passed Sugar, (white granulated) starch a order for "ext winter S Coal. ¥ = ound 22d Be eommitieg 8s and exeess of salt, lack of fresh!= " it 28 eVidente: { outdoor air and outdoor exercise a Then when ‘ need heat you = | causes veakness of the mucous ® Modest Request jeauses weakness . 02 | = Sr . was quite certain that | Surfaces, poor elimination and tox-'® 8&5 will have Coal 6 and. : The metorist was qu : ther factors also aid or |i = he had not heer exceeding the speed | €mia, other Iactors or con- | limit, so he was astonished when the | tribute to cause catarrh, without | = village policeman brought the car to | catarrh there is seldom a case of EH be H BAKER oun 0 ® a standstill | impaired hearing. Osteopathic finger) = . . 9 y = “1 say,” protested the driver, "1|, yu or technique overcomes a-| REET TE TT — = wasn't doing more than ten miles an hour, I swear I(t.” bout eighty percent of eases of ca-! tarrhal deafness and autogenous | place they were put out a cold. My kidneys were t only sore, but they were sluggis too, which resulted in the kidney tions passing too seldom. At when I did any stooping, a pain ran through my back. use of Doan’s Pills brought god | results.” \ Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't} simply ask for a kidney remedy— | get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Metzler had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N, Y. Business Place for Sale A business with store stock and fixtures including eigars, tobaceo, confections, ste. in business district of Mount Joy. A dwelling in con- nection can alse be rented. Imme- diate possession. Apply to Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. td nt A Rees A the finding of a four-Maf i £ jenotes bad luck instead o good hh It pays to advertise in the Bulletin “Oh, that’s all sight, sir,” replied the +3 * Fiat wrk) 7 officer. “I wasn’t worrying about that, | therepy with proper diet will remove but I'd be obliged If you could spare the cause in a still greater percent-! % I'm going to a age of cases. All readers of this paper are at liberty to write for information on any subject pertaining to health. Address all such communications me a little gasoline. wedding tomorrow and I want to clean my gloves.” Volcane in United States The United States has a live vol- to Dr. David H. Reeder, Home cano of its own In Berthen Health Club, LaPorte, with neq Lown Jan ES oe. 2 at least six cents in postage for re- has beer more er less active ever Ply, giving full name and address. since. The mountain is nearly two miles high, and there Is enough fire Heisey Reunion Aug. 14 inside it to rum the machinery of all! op. goaeonable time for holding Be factories in this country family reunions is with us again, and the Heisey folk will hold their 13th Searchlight rays so powerful as to reunion Thursday, Aug. 14th, 1924, develop “sunburn” upon any person Elizabethtown College Chapel, who gets in elose proximity, eome from With Programs at 10 A. M. and 2 P. a light censtructed by the’Sperry-G¥ro- scope company on Long island. The light is 60,000,080.000 candlepower and Reunion in August it has a lens with a diameter of 60 The annual summer reunion of inches. Fhe beam ean be flashed over the Hoffman association, comprising of 50 mies members of this clan from several TT 14D 8 Misses. states, will meet at Millersburg, You may as well try to conduct August 16. Special program are be- your business withou’ capital as to ing prepared for the day. : try and get along without advertis- —_—— ing. There's no use, it won't go. All Ever Think Of It? the leading and most successful mer- | yg, Business Man did yeu ever chants use the columns of the Mount stop to thimk that every copy of the Joy Bulletin, tf Bulletin is a salesman, visiting many, ——— many homes each week and soliciting To ‘be perfectly propertioned, a business for every advertiser im its columns? mar should weigh 28 paands for —— A ree every foot of his height. If you wamt %o sucesed— Advertise | Danger in Searchlight ———— A eee ee. |W. H. DISHONG | TAILOR "BAINBRIDGE, PA. Repirng-Clang:-Prssing Will cafll for and deliver all erdess twise & week mar. 26. = CIDA III I OO ADO OOOO OOO OMOEA ol : On J. I'l. Ferrell (PHYSICIAN) Specialist in diseases tomach, Ulcers of Stomach, Dys- x pepsia, Sourmess, Bloating, Dis? after eating, ete. Diseases 8 of Liver, Bowels, Nerves, Rheumat nd all diseases of skim. x Modern methods of treatment. Office Hours: 2:30 A. M. te 8:30 P. M. Daily, Sundey 2 Office: 118 N. Prince St., Lancaster,