The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 20, 1924, Image 7

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THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.



a
Jor Economical Transportation

In 1922 Chevrolet jumped from seventh to second
place in sales of all cars, and to first place in sales
of fully equipped modern cars.
Purchases by farmers were the chief factor in this
remarkable development.
Farmers want automobiles not only of low
price, but also of low later cost for operation
maintenance,
They want room, comfort, and the ability to stand
up under hard conditions.
They find that Chevrolet, fully equipped as jolla
the best value per dollar in the low-priced field,
peighbors tell them it costs less per mile to operates
Prices F, O. B. Flint, Michigan
E B. Rohrer
Chevrolet Sales and Service Station
MOUNT JOY, PA.
The Produce and
Live Stock Market
INFORMATION FUR
WEEKLY BY THE
PENNA. BUREAU OF
MARKETS FOR THE
BULLETIN
CATTLE: Market slow and drag
compared with week
CORRECT
1ED
v beef steer

ago better grad fully steady com-
kinds 2b5c off top grain feds
1,300 top
$7.75-9.00,
vd with last
bulk $7.75-9.00.
on
weight
two load
ers $10.00
0.36
bulk
game weel vear
Bulls
steady
p $10.50
I + than
d to cl ce $6.00-
$5.00-$6.00 top
weight 825 lbs.
weeks advance top
Hogs:- steady no
» bulk of nearby
for todays
Va.; 9
b Chicago; 2
-$11.00.
10.1 Receipts
| market
cattle 37 cars 12
|Tenn.; 6 St. Louis;
| si Paul: 1 Kenty.; 1 West Va.;
{1s Nor. Car.; containing 992 head
142 head driven in total cattle 1,134
head 40 calves, 15 Receipts
for week ending Aug 16 cattle 196
cars containing 5,453 head 186 head
driven in total cattle 5,639 head 251
calves 100
with same
an
sheep.
hogs 15 sheep compared
week last year cattle
37 ears containing 3,761 head
143 head driven in total cattle
2,904 head 325 calves 430 hogs 149
sheep.
STEERS:
Good to choice
| Fair to good
| Medium to fair
Common to medium




24d that Good Looks and Economy are no$
you's Weg
eens. i jw .ooks often spurns Economy
4 SP
| dora Lga.2
But when!it comes to pamving, thes
dnting with good paint insures thei
*onomy earns Good Looks’ favor by protecting
fime and Weather.
Our trained painters provide the good looks. We use paint
nade of Dutch Boy white-lead and oil because it stands the gaff
—gives real economy. J
Qur low prices will make you ask us when we can begin. 5
“Save the Surface and You Save AU."
J. G. LORAW & SON
: FLORIN, PENNA.
Right From
the Bottle
That’s really the best way
to drink our excellent and
refreshing Root Beer, or
any flavor in Soft Drinks
you may desire. The most
enjoyabla drink you ever
tasted, you'll say when you
try it.

All 10-cent sizes Chewing and Smoking Tobacco, 3 Packs for
25¢.
Be Red Man, 2 Packs for 25c.
All 15-cent Packs of Cigaretts, 2 Packs for 25c.
All 8-cent Cigars, Standard Brands, 4 for 2Sc.
All 5-cent Cigars, Standard Brands, 6 for 25c.
All Penny Goods 10c a Dozen, or Sc per half Dozen.
We make a specialty of BACHMAN’S CHOCOLATE. We
have 5-1b. Almond Bars and 5-Ib. Plain Bars that we are selling
at $1070 Per Bar.
have a special price on Bachman 10-1b bars of coating.
fv
I-A. DARRENKAMP,
3 Doors East, Post Office MOUNT JOY, PA.
CNOVANS
Store len Saturday Evenings Until 8 0O’Clock
| Augut Furniture Sale
Bigger Values-—-Lower Prices
an Ever Before

Use Qui
BULLS:
Good to choice
Fair to good
Medium to fair
Common to medium
HEIFERS:
Choice to prime
Good to choice
| Medium to good
Common to medium
COWS:
Good to choice 5.50-6.50
Medium to good .00-5.50
Common to medium $3.00-4.00
Canners & cutters $1.50-3.00
STOCK STEERS
Good to choice $7.00-8.00
| Fair to good $6.00-7.00
| Medium to fair $5.00-6.00
Common to medium $3.50-5.00
STOCK BULLS
Good to choice
Fair to good
Commnion to fair
CALVES:
Good to choice
Medium
Comnuis

$5.50-6.50
$4.50-5.50
$3.50-4.50
$10.25-11.00
$9.00-10.25
$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 $1.15-1.22 bu
Corn $1.18 bu
Hay (baled)
Timothy
Straw
$15.00-26.00 ton
$10.00-12.00 ton
Selling Price of Feeds
$37.00-38.00 ton
$39.00-40.00 ton
$52.00-53.00 ton
$42.00-43.00 ton
$55.00-56.00 ton
$49.00-50.00 ton
48.00-49.00 ton
$59.00-60.00 ton
Bran
Shorts
Hominy
Middlings
Linseed
Gluten
Ground Oats
| Cottonseed 43 pe.
Dairy Feed 16 pec. $37.50-38.50 ton
! Dairy Feed 18 pc. 41.00-42.00 ton
| Dairy Feed 20 pc. $43.50-44.50 ton
i Dairy Feed 24 pec. $51.00-52.00 ton
| Dairy Feed 25 pe. 52.00-53.00 ton
Horse Feed 85 pe. $52.50-53.50 ton

Good Detective Work
on Part of Chemist
An epidemic of abusive anonymous
letters broke out in a small suburban
town near Albany recently. The
town’s chief of police finding he was
making no progress in his investi-
gations, enlisted the aid of consulting
a chemist Interested in curious prob-
lems of crime susceptible to scientific
detection.
Scrutiny of a hundred or more of
the letters convinced the scientist the
unknown writer was a middle-aged
woman, says Capper’s Weekly. All
kinds of writing paper were used, but
always a sharp-pointed steel pem and
the same kind of Ink.
Dust in the ink indicated an open
ink-well was used by the writer. At
this point the chemist made up a let
of pelets, using a different chemical
for each, but every chemical capable
of identification if mixed with ink.
Then, in the guise of an inspeetor of
electric wiring, the chemist gained
access to the houses of all suspects.
Whenever he found an open ink-well
he dropped a pellet in it.
The next anonymous letter led him
to the woman responsible for it. And
in a few days she was trapped in the
act of sending off another one. That
ended the case in a regular Sherlock
Holmes style.
Business Place for Sale
A business with store stock and
fixtures including cigars, tobacco,
confections, ete. in business district
of Mount Joy. A dwelling in con-
nection can also be rented. Imme-
diate possession. Apply to Jno. E
Schroll, Mt. Joy. tf
er eR Ue ee
birthday in America this year.
Pb

atter |

ircat Metropolis Has
Many Nicknames
leader In
Some
London is probably the
names, as in many other things,
of Its names had a vogue for a while,
then, with the pa ry of time, dropped |
J name w y |
Masts,” whi rred to |
of commerce that |
shores. With
iship this name
f others before fit.
“The City
of are nicknan for London
to survive for a |
mes it disputes
out « 15, Such a nicl
the “City of h ref
the great arg
came and went from it
the advent of
that seem d
while i 1 our
also challen
» “Hub of
Q. Henry
has made }
dad of the Sul
have dubbed L
Babylon.”
Other writers have given it other
at but it re ined for an I
e ) gi 1e it loves tl
st. This i ternal L which
has been current nce Thome
wrote “Go vou will, Eternal |
London haunts you still,” A Scottish |
name that it loves |
the . This is “The City of Dread-
ful Nights,” which had its origin in
the name James Tl jong to |
a poem on London night life.
British statesmen have dubbed it |
“phe Metropolis of the Empire,” while |
called it the “Imperial
referred to it as |
Empire.” It has |
ndon,”
18 Moore
poet gave it the
others have
City.” Lloyd George
the “Heart of the
also been known as the “City of Pal- |
and “The City of Poets.”
aces”
Birds in East Indies
Have Elaborate Homes |
3ut few of our birds go to as much
trouble building their nests as the
mound birds of the East Indies. They
are only about as big as an ordinary | inet
barnvard fowl, but they build a mound |
taller than the man and some
times fifteen yards round.
The birds work hard until this huge
pile is reared,
tallest
when the hen bird lays |
red eggs in the heap and the
them.
her large
heat hatches
led stork of Africa
s to a three-roomed |
The hammer-}
builds what ami
tenement, made f enormous sticks
branches of a tree.
could creep into the
says London Tit- |
fixed between the
Any ord v boy
lowest comp nt,
Bits. Irom t
to another flat decorated with bright |
pebbles and bleached bones. Above this
is the nursery, the walls of which are
lined with mud to keep out drafts.
A curious nest is the one the 'swift- |
let builds in Borneo, and which is |
known to commerce as the edible nest |
of the Chinese gourmet. The bird
builds in caverns around the coasts, |
and nest seekers go with torches and |
tear them down and export them. It
is said that edible nests to the value
of £300,000 are imported into China
every year. The nest is woven from
a secretion the bird produces-—hence
its food value,
a passage slopes up |
Egyptians Used Bells
Campanologists attribute the origin
of bells to the Egyptians, who are
credited with having used percussion
instruments to announce the sacred
fetes of Osiris. In China bells were
known 3.000 years before the birth of
Christ, says the Detroit News.
Two Arabs, who journeyed through
China in the Ninth century, have
handed down an interesting account
of the great popular justice bells, then
fn use throughout the whole of that
country.
In each town there was a bell of a
large size fixed to the wall above the
head of the prince or governor, and to
it was a&tached a rope a mile or so
in length and laid so temptingly along
the main thoroughfare that the hum-
blest sufferer from injustice seldom
hesitated to tug at it without fear. As
soon as the bell sounded the governor
sent for the petitioner amd “serious
business, craving quiek dispatch” met
with instant and honest recognition.
Gardening Among Words
Will our British academy ever be
given the power vested In the Acade-
mie Francaise of admitting foreign
words into the language?
The academie has now accepted
“athlete,” “alpenstock” and “football”
as genuine “French” words, but, al-
though we ude a number of French
words in ordinary talk and writing,
there is no central authority which
can decide en the absorption of these
words inte the language, says London
Tit-Bits.
One of our games, court tennis, Is
full of French words, lke grille, de-
dans, tambour, and so forth. A word
continually used by us is “coup,” and
there are many others. Why not sep-
arate the sheep from the goats offi-
cially?
Lost—the East Wind
An Irish maid came to her mistress
and said: “Faith, ma'am, 'tis serry 1
am, but I'll be troublin’ ye for me
wages. I'm l'avin’ the day.”
The mistress pressed her for a rea-
SOR.
«ig scared of the master 1 am,
he's that quare in his head.”
“Why, Mary, what dn earth do you
mean?”
“Well, ma'am, ‘twas yisterday that
[ found him on his knees. He was
perrin’ here and perrin’ there, and I
says to him. ‘Kin I hilp ve, sor? An
thin he says te me, he says: ‘Yis, I'm
lookin’ fur the Red Dragon an’ the
East Wind. Kin ye see thim any
where? An’ so, ma'am, ye'll plaze
be givin’ me my wages, for I'm scared
te stay."—Evervhody’s Magazine.
Er ee
You may as well try to conduct
your business withou! capital as to
try and get along without advertis-
ing. There's no use, it won't gi All
the leading and most successful mer-
chants use the columns of the Mount
Joy Bulletin. tf
eee ttl Eee
A ship’s captain is empowered to
Hog cholera will celebrate its 91st | conduct a marriage ceremony aboard | freely, not only
his boat if the occasion arises.
»
| of N.
| of healthy children are well as us-
{nal because I r
| stop the practice of making
| suffer such tortures and expense for
|
| ever knew of was an old tramp who
| pest house, and the only medicine
| he had was whiskey.
| am glad we still take our old home
| paper and
| ceived
| “Department of Commerce”, Wash-
|
| Wyoming,
! showing the number of deaths from
| all causes during the two years of
{ 1922-23, and. out of 6,233 deaths in
| Delaware during the two years there
| was just one death from small pox.
| sanitary precautions there were five
| deaths from small pox, in twec years
| very simple cause of accidental falls]
| cough 51.
| cough 186 and accidental falls 260.
| ed 63, and whooping cough killed |
\ . .
vaccinations
Home Health Club
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX.
PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H.
REEDER
all pox scare: The children
Sound.
Dr Reeder: We
pidemic here a couple of
had a
me ] POX (
least some papers
months ago, at
id w did The
manded that everybody be vaccinat-
families wer
health officer de-
nd many of t
nd almost helpl
t yet recovered.
3s with sore
manv have
have been working
o care of people made
vaccination. My household
fused to submit. I
1 glad because it is admitted
that the one case from which the so-
d epidemic started was only a
now
mild case of chicken pox.
Cannot something be done to
people
a sickness that is much less
I have
fear of
dangerous than vaccination.
been through several real epidemics
of small pox and the only death I
was kept in a poor shack called the
It was prob-
ably the whiskey that killed him. I
get your Home Health
Club articles to keep us well.
And: Just a day or two ago I re-
a special report from the
, D. C., giving the mortality
s for the states of Delaware,
Vermont and Maine,
In Wyoming where these is less
while the

out of a total of 4,110,
=, de lq \ ma
That Cheers
A little BEECH-NUT Chewing Tobacco
now and then
Is just the thing {or regular men.
More punch than a pipe. Fine for fatigue
and indigestion—good for the teeth and
gums.
Big do-ers are all chewers. Inventors and
jurists, deep thinkers and hard workers,
crack athletes, star golfers, ball players,
keep BEECH-NUT Chewing Tobacco sales
beyond the 250 million package mark.
Wagzy leaf, cut just the right size—chosen
from the best crops—unvaryingly blended—
flavored with the purest ingredients—all
stems and litter rémoved—prepared and
sealed without one touch of human hands.
10c is flattered every time it meets &
package.
p
(i Oo
INCORPORATED


| killed 47 people and whooping cough |
Maine, small pox|
killed 34. In
| killed three in two years, whooping |
In Vermont small pox|
a ' tool
killed three in two years, whooping |
In Delaware accidental falls kill-
33. Now if it could be shown that
prevented small pox
then there might be some reason |
for it, but cold statistics show that |
the most thoroughly vaccinated coun- |
tries in the world have the highest
death rate from small pox. My ob-
servation of the results of vaccina-
tion is that it has caused much
more suffering than the disease, and
indirectly more deaths.
I have been personally working
among the cronic cases of sickness |
for over thirty years and I have
noted the steady advance of deaths
from cancer. I have never yet
found a case of cancer in any hu-
man being that had none of the!
blood taine of specific blood poison, |
either through inheritance or through’
vaccination. About 75 per cent. of
other cronic ailments. under modern
and accurate methods of diagnosis,
show the same cause. The ordinary
blood test will not show these re-
actions.
At onc time all
between human beings many
apart, could only be made by mes-
senger, later on by letter, then by
telegraph, telephcne and now by
radio. Each new method was at
first ridiculed and most people said
it was a fake. Time proves cor-
rectness of things that are true.
For more than a decade the new and
more scientific methods of diagnosis
have been under careful observation
by a comparatively few, painstaking,
progressive physicians and now
more and more medical men are
finding the great value of knowing
the cause and that this cause can
easily be determined by the newer
methods.
As soon

communications
miles
as this knowledge be-
comes more general the laws of
vaccination will be repealed or be-
come inactive, because physicians
will refuse to make people danger-
ously sick in order to avoid a pos-
sible liability to disease much less
dangerous.
I think that fear of small pox
causes more real suffering than the
disease ever caused.
A great majority of all
ments originate in fear anyway, and
if we could only realize what a right
mental attitude would de for us we
would not suffer so much. I am
glad you were not afraid.
All readers of this paper are at
liberty to write for information on
any subject pertaining to health.
Address all such communications
#0 Dr. David H. Reeder, Home
Health Club, LaPorte, Indiana, with
at least six cents in postage for re-
ply, giving full name and address.
ne I Ay A
Care of Cream Separator
Running a little cold water




Experienced Motorists Do Not Experi-
ment— They Stick To
SETH
“THE WONDER MOTGR_FUEL'
There is no mystery about the remarkable success agi
established preference among motorists for this unequsied motor
fuel. Superior quality and many exclusive advantages did it.

---and for Perfect Lubrication Use &
REXOLINE
MOTOR OIL
DISTRIBUTORS
Mount Joy Pure Oil Co., Mount Joy, Pa.
FOR SALE BY
J. W. ESHELMAN, Mount Joy, Pa.
SHERWOOD BROS, IN
Originators and Manufacturers C,
Baltimore, Md.
G. M. Baker, District Sales Agent, Reading, Pa.





our ail-|¢

through the cream separator as
a substitute for thorough cleaning |
means that the next batch of cream
run through will develope the un-|
desirable odors and poor keeping |
{ qualities that bring lower prices. |
|Hot water kills the bacteria which |
the quality |
it should be used
with the cream |
with all dairy utensils.

{cause the lowering of
lof cream
anda
{separator i
i
Funniture
ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FURNI-
TURE AND CARPETS? "3
QUALITY AID SERVICE MAKE FOR SATISFACTION.
WE ASSURE YOU OF ALL THREE
WE ARE DEPENDABLE
Westenberger, Maley & Myers
125-131 E. King St, Ld
Je) 6 O'Clock Closing Saturday:
CLARENCE SCHOCK
MOUNT JOY, PA.
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