THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. MICKIE, GO OLY AND ASK FIVE BUSINESS MEN “THE SECREY OF SUCLESS WE ARE GONNA PRWY A TR { \WYERVIEW WITH FIVE PROMINENY |= MEN ON HOW YO ATYAW ie 2 80 GIMME J YH DOPE OM \Y By Charles Sughroe © Worern Union WEW, AHEM, IF NOU WANY YO KNOW HOW | &OT ‘ HAROM YEW NOU \@ NECESSARM SUCCESS IW FE, AND YO YME “OP, \ CAM \ BUY NOU MIGHT QUOTE ME AS SAMING WHAT HONESW Yo IN Za i AFTER SIX DAYS Featuring Moses and the TEN COMMANDMENTS | This film traces the story of the Bible from creation to the time of King Solomon, when the wise king sang his song of songs to his lily of the fields. And this pucture is the Bible. Before your eyes you see: HE GARDEN OF EDEN E CREATION OF ADAM AND EVE THE SLAYING OF ABEL BY CAIN THE BUILDING OF THE ARK THE ERECTING OF THE TOWER OF BABEL THE BURNING OF CITIES THE COURT OF PHAROAH THE STORY OF JOSEPH AND HIS BRETHREN THE SUFFERINGS OF MOSES AND HIS PEOPLE THE PLAGUES OF MOSES THE MIRACLE OF THE RED SEA THE TREMENDOUS BATTLE SCENES MOSES AND THE TEN COM- MANDMENTS THE COURT OF SOLOMON THE ROMANCE OF SOLOMON AND TAMAH THE SACRIFICE TO THE GREAT GOD BAAL ALL PRESENTED IN A MANNER THAT WILL ASTOUND YOU. This Picture Cost Over $3,000,000 to Produce CTT ix Days ASA : Will be Shown at | MOOSE THEATRE _. Elizabethtown, Pa. RID _ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 34 Admission—Adults 50c; Children 20c TL 0 x BN oh ces the llanced ration from home-grown crops. Ear corn with shuck .. Alfalfa or clover hay ... Boy bean with vines ...... Green, ve for d, 7 cost of feed 25 to 509, = Ss ncreases production 15 to 307,—== monthly feed bill. The Letz Dixie will Home-Made Feed and mix anything grown—makes a per- CAPACITY No. 244 Dixie with FORDSON TRACTOR orn fodder with corn 2500 to 5000 Ibs. PER HOUR .... 3000 to 8000 ‘rom Home-Grown rops wet, or oily material will not clog the LETZ Dixie. Built in three sizes for 4 to 25 h. p. engines. two to three times the capacity per h. p. of anyroughage mill made. or call immediately for further particulars, prices and samples, 5. NEWCOIER & SON MOUNT JOY, PENNA. | The Best Heating » GOAL Baker's Coal will give you more heat, whether e, stove or grate, than any other coal you can buy. , the truth of our statement. KER, Mount Joy, Pa. A having Co. Farm Bureau Silos were worth $581 their owners in Lancaster ter County Farm Bureau. operators shows that those ures for 1922 and 1923 follow: Annual Labor Income Besides showing a very definite margin of difference in labor of the farmers owning silos, this tabu- lation points out the fact that the annual labor income increased to a much greater extent last year in the case of the silo owners, than it did for those farmers not having a silo as a part of their equipment. The above figures certainly show that the silo is ona of thc best in- vestments a farmer can make. Whether the livestock kept on the steers, he cannot Ten year’s State Col- of corn in farm is cows or afford to be without one. steer feeding records at lege show that one acre acres of corn fed in any other man- ner. Some farmers claim that the silo is too expensive, and say that they do not have the money to erect one. Suppose that the cost of putting up a durable and fireproof silo does run to seven or eight hundred dollars. as shown by the figures compiled by the Farm Bureau, would entirely justify his borrowing the money to add this very important item to his farm equipment, and would further provide him with 2 good argument for making the loan. BR MEXICAN BEAN BEETLE GIVEN CONTROY STUDY Control measures for the Mexican bean beetle, a most destructive in- sect pest of growing beans, recently found in Washington and Greene Counties, this State, are being work- ed out by the Bureau of Plant In- dustry, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. The specialists state that the first step to be taken this fall in control- ling the insect is to plow under or burn all old bean stalks and vines just as soon as the crop has been harvested. It is found that thousands of the eggs, larvae, pupae and new- ly emerged adults may be destroyed in this manner. This fall cleanup will also kill other destructive in- sect pests that may be expecting to live through the winter on crop re- mains. Successful control measures such as spraying and dusting bean plants | with chemical have been worked out in the southern states and there is every reason to believe that similar measures can be developed to give adequate control in Pennsylvania where conditions are obviously dif- ferent from those in the South. each to County last year, according to the cost ac- counting department of the Lancas- A sum- mary of records kept on a number of farms in the county by the farm farms having silos returned a labor in- UNLOAD “THEIR POOR STOCK. OM come greater by $581 than those | HER EVRY CHANCE “(HEM GET! which did not have silos. The fig- HEH! Wert Margin in Favor of Silo No Silo Silo 1922 $1,070 $771 $299 1923 $1,423 $842 $581 TH’ OLE GROUCH [ HEHY “HERE GOES \ | MRS. CLOSERIST, WHO TAKES | PRIDE IN HER "BIZNESS ABIL. | SHED SURFER QUITE A JAR SHE KNEW THAT STORE KEEPERS HATE Y¥' SEE WER COME IN, AWD CALL HER Al 'OLD CRANKY” SHE IMAGINES RERSELF YO BE A GOOD BUMER, BUT MERCHANTS Al 'BOLL WEEVIL DAMAGE | LIGHTEST IN YEARS | Boll weevil damage throughout the Cotton Belt has been abnormally a silo will make one and one-half small this season, for a number of times as much beef as an acre of reasons, according to the Bureau of corn not so preserved. On this ba-' Entomology of the United States is, ten acres of corn fed through Department of Agriculture. Emer- the silo has the same efficiency in gence over the Cotton Belt as a the production of beef as fifteen whole was generally rather light, |with the possible exception of some | extreme southerly points such as ithe Gulf coast of Texas. In most 'of the cotton terrtory the initial emergence was only from one-fifth Ito one-tenth of last year’s. Weevils, I therefore, were not abundant | . . enough to cause any particular in- | The returns that it would yield him, | Jury to the bottom crops of cotton.| Continuing its spread, long pro- | Following this, from Alabama west- {ward the season has been abnormal- ly dry. In many sections there was no precipitation other than light local showers from May to the mid- dle of August. This absence of rain insured a high degree of climatic control of the weevil, accentuated by the unusually small plant growth of the season. While there may be in almost all localities a few fields which produced a more or less normal growth of cotton and were somewhat damaged by weevils, these are the exception rather than the rule. At Tallulah, La., where the Bureau of Entomo- logy maintains an experiment sta- tion, there is in a normal season some weevil damage in almost ev- ery field of cotton. this year not over half a dozen fields out of more than 500 under observation, have experienced any damage what- ever from the weevil. Recent rains may have somewhat stimulated the multiplication of the weevils, but the majority of crops are so completely mature that this will chiefly affect the probable abun- dance of weevils entering hiberna- tion. In Georgia and South Carolina weevil damage has been very much heavier, though probably not as heavy as in these States during the preceding years. rn A ARs Good Breeding Stock Shows Value In support of increasing evidence that well-bred livestock pays a bet- ter return on investment than scrub The Bureau specialists explain | that the Mexican bean beetle is the | | most destructive insect to table beans, known and that it was found in| | Pennsylvania in very small numbers] | only a few weeks ago for the first, | time. This insect has been spread-| | ing northward from Alabama for { the past four years at the rate of | 100 to 200 miles per year. Since, | beans are not grown on a commer- cial scale to any extent in this State, | | the greatest loss will result mn home; | gardens. Noticeable damage will] not likely occur for several years, | however, since the infestation is still’ very light. Persons desiring full particulars about this new pest can get the, same by writing to the State Bureau | of Plant Industry at Harrisburg. | rrr | No Short Cut to Success i There is no easy road or short cut to success. It means constant hard work and saving, and many sacrifices. However, the ultimate satisfaction of accomplished something or having succeeded is greater than all the so-called pleasures indulged in by the lazy man or th. spendthrift.— Secretary of the Treasury Mellon. stock, a Massachusetts dairyman notived the United States Depart- RAIN INSURANCE COMPANIES DEPEND ON WEATHER BUREAU on which insurance companies establish = their rates for rain insurance is based as far as practicable upon statistics of aver- age rainfall for various parts of the country, including the distribu- tion of rainfall through the year and for the various hours of the day, obtained from records of the Weather Bureau of the United States Department of Agriculture. In determining the amount of rain- fall that has occurred in a particular place during a period covered by a policy, the companies also make use of the official records of the Weather Bureau whenever there is a station of the bureau at the place in ques- tion. There are more than 5,000 Weather Bureau stations of all Information in the United States, all of which are equipped with standard rain gauges. However, at the great majority of these stations the rain gauges do not make a continuous automatic record, and therefore [special arrangements must be made with the observers if readings are desired for times other than the regular hours of observation, Where there is no Weather Bur- leau observer available, the com- |pany’s agent and the policy holder [jointly select a competent person to |read, at the required time, a rain gauge which is furnished by the in- | surance company. There are about | 30 companies writing rain insurance in this country. They have organ- ized a Rain Insurance Association | with headquarters in New York City, and one of its principal funec- | tions is to maintain a list of persons | throughout the country who are | qualified to read rain gauges. | ER |MEXICAN BEAN BEETLE REACHES PENNSYLVANIA {phesied by the Bureau of Entomo- [logy of the United States Depart- | {ment of Agriculture, the Mexican | |bean beetle by August 25 had ex-| tended its range eastward in Virgin- | ia to Craig and Carroll Counties, | being now nearly half way across the State. In West Virginia it had | advanced from the southwestern | border of the State eastward to Marshall, Tyler, and Wetzel Coun- ties, covering about three-quarters | of the State. In Indiana it is only | found along the southeastern bor- der of the State in Floyd, Clark, and Jefferson Counties. In Kentucky it extends over practically the entire eastern two-thirds of the State. In Ohio about the southern three-quar- ters of the States is infested, in- festations ranging as far west as the State in Butler and Hamilton Counties, and northward to Han- cock, Wayne, and Tuscarawas Coun- ties. It has just invaded southwest- ern Pennsylvania, being found in Washington and Green Counties. In Wyoming the pest has extended its range 30 miles north of last year’s infestation. The seriousness of this pest has been frequently described and there seems but little that can be done to control its rapidly increasing range The department recommends magne- sium arsenate spray or dust as the most promising control measure, but advises plowing under heavily in- fested fields as soon as the crop is off. —— HESSIAN FLY DECREASES IN N. Y.,, INCREASES ELSEWHERE ment of Agriculture of his exper- ience. He purchased a purebred heifer bred to an excellent pure- bred bull of the same breed. The heifer cost $800. He sold the first bull calf for $300, and the second one for $400. The next calf, a heifer, sold for $125, and the milk | produced by the cow during the 38 months covered by the report, sold for $1,275. The total income thus received totaled $2,100, and the farmer still owns the original ani- mal. The cow has made very credi- table milk and butterfat records in the meantime, qualifying for the advanced register. “I think this stock,” the farmer states in conelusion, “shows the value of getting good purebred stock for a foundation, Even after making the deduction for feed and labor, there is a much larger re- turn than from a grade.” i Partners in Crime There is some co-operation amomg | wild creatures. The stork and the | wolf usually work the same neighbor hood.—Macou News. A general reduction of Hessian fly infestation in the wheat-growing section of New York State is indi- cated hy a summer survey just com- pleted there, received by the Bureau of Entomology, United States De- partment of Agriculture. The sur-; Vey this year covered 16 counties, | which was 8 more than were covered | last year. The average infestation | for the region covered in 1923 was 8.5 per cent. This year the same! region had an infestation of 6.3 per | cent, while the average infestation | kinds, including cooperative stations, | AN OPEN LETTER T0 WOMEN Tells of Mrs. Vogel's Terrible Suf- fering and How She Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Detroit, Michigan. — ‘‘My troubles were severe pains in my back and ter- rible bearing-down pains in my right side, also headaches and sleepless nights. I first began having troubles when I was 15, and they have in- let was left at my door, and Iread what Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound has done for women and decided to try it. After the first week I could go to sleep every night and I stopped having that nervous feeling and got a better appetite. The doctor had always said that an operation was the only thing that would help me, but I never had any faith in an opera- tion. Since the Vegetable Compound has started helping me I do not suffer the severe pains, feel stronger, and am | able to do my own work. I am more { than glad to tell my friends that it helps where other medicines have failed.”’— { Mrs. Gus VOGEL, 6608 Pelouze Street, | Detroit, Michigan. . | Arecord of fifty years service must | convince women of the merit of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Barrel : Fresh Syrup, Special Per Quart '....... 15¢ Per Gallon - High Grade Notions and Groceries Strickier’s Store MOUNT JOY, PA. aug. 20-tf of their sim- Because plicity, and superior points of mechanical construction, Delco - Light Water systems give more years of de- pendable pumping ser- vice at lower cost than can be obtained in any other way. See us now for details and terms. OEPENDABy 2 DELCO-LIGHT CE Heb MAYTOWN, PA. FEEL your hair How long is it? How many days since it was cut? 10 is Right. Haircut every 10 days. Go now, to Hershey's Barber Shop for the 16 counties where counts | were made amounted to only 5.9 per cent, showing a decided decrease ! in infestation. | In Ohio, on the other hand, in-! festation has increased in the north- | eastern counties, in some cases run-! ning as high as 24 per cent. Indi-! cations of somewhat serious fly con- | ditions are also reported from In-| diana, Illinois, North Dakota, and Kansas. Emergence is predicted as! about normal in most regions. | —— tl re | Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin If you want to succeed—Advertise ‘ € For Falling Hair Try Our Special SHAMPOO Weaver’s Barber Shop Cor. W. Main & Manheim Sts. AN ALL AROUND DISH Every man, woman and child has a fond spot in their food mem ory for good old fash- ioned bread and milk a nd Mrtins Dairy milk especially pleases them, THE MARTI Pw SANITARY DAIRY : Your Millman” § TTT Used C ars Special Dodge Touring 1922 Ford Touring. 1922 Ford. Ford Coupe. Essex Coupe. P. Franck Schock MOUNT JOY, PA. Mt. Joy Theatre Thursday, 2 Rendezvous Friday, 3 PARAMOUNT NIGHT Big Brother with TOM MOORE and All Star Cast Saturday, 4 — Enemies of Women LIONEL BARRYMORE and ALMA RUBENS Tuesday, 7 — Love Letters SHIRLEY MASON Educational Spee Jacks THE Wingert & Haas Hat Store Largest Line of STRAWS and PANAMAS In the City Plain Hats A Specialty JOHN A. HAAS, Propr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. STONE Before placing your ordes elsewhere see us. We have cut prices to pre- war prices. MOUNT JOY, PA. Stitchers Wanted IDEAL WORKING CONDITIONS STEADY WORK, GOOD PAY THE LeBLANC COMPANY Formerly The Herrmann Aukam & Company Factory sept. 26-#f Ice Cream, Groceries and Confections BRANDT BROS. Mount Joy Street, Mount Joy, Pa. It pays to advertise in the Bulletim J. N. STAUFFER & BRO. - > a tr ~~