The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 30, 1925, Image 3

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








WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 30th, 1925
{
SD | F
md! doit Su |
Pi
YX
3 vd G+10-10
% 7
i”
~
ARR ght Driving

 









ring strata, the
when
are out
fanapproach.
b-both have
fated by the
Beam iead-
ure of the

you dim
of the eyes
ing drives
been eli
Controilak
light, x Tes
Eectter Buick§
Davtiine vi
inch of the
light all the tid


fility every
! Bright












Ww
r one of
A Prove
iC 2ne-
And this is ox
many 1920
ments whick
gineering
Better B OTSe
power and mc wione
in Duco fin iple
Sealed Valve-ir d
gine; light-ped:
clutch; approved maghan-
ical 4-wheel brakesg and
many other exclusivi
vancements now
waiting for your teg
phone call, any day
any evening.
BUICK MOTOR COMPA!
Division of General Motors Corporatio
FLINT, MICHIGAN 1
the BetterBUIC
S. J. ULRICH


Ro%ry Sewing

 
All styles, Of Needles, Re-
pairing and part
chines at
 


133 E. King St.,
LANCASTER, PENN
Ind. Phone 116Y




H. H. KRALL
SMOKED MEATS,
BEEF, BOLOGNA,
Also Fresh Beef, Veal
Krall’s Meat
West Main St.,
ST GARAGE
eneral Auto




CAR WASHING D GREASING
A
Special Prices
GCODRICH TIRES AN
Phone 119R3
Marietta St., Adjoining Groff Bldg.
aug. 26-3m
TUBES


Is
Phone 66-R4

Ny
BREAD CAKES
BUNS
f all kinds, Fresh Daily
s propmtly filled and your
usiness solicited
ed goods are as crisp
in your own
convince you.
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
aug



 
PERIENCE OF
NERVOUS WOMAN
Blue, Discouraged —
by Taking Lydia
ham’s Medicine
Ohio, — “I was nervous
sleep, had crying spells
and the blues, and
didn’t care if I lived
or died. My right
side was very bad
and I had backache
and a weakness. |
Cincinnati,
and could no





















her information. I
ck Lydia E. Pink-
hm’s Vegetable
poun d, Blood
dicine and Liver
ia E. Pinkham’s |
pve had good re-
hm able to do my
anything that
5 tell me how
i. K.CorIELL, *
iti, Ohio.
Pills, and
Sanitive Wash.
sults in every v
work again and
comes alo My fries
’



Willing to Answe
Philadelphia, Pa,— ‘I hage used your
medicines for a run-
down system with a severe
After taking Lydia E. Veg- (
etable Compound and using E.
Tinkham’s Sanitive Wash I
a different woman and have g
every way. I am willing toansw
asking about the medicine
HoLT, 2649 S. 11th St., Philadelphid
Sold by druggists everywhere. \



(
I







We are
tionery we use. V
flee or and said to his wife: “Where's : oe i
reflects character a Helen? “a fe: “Where's options of farmers to increase acre-
readily as personal af elon? Gone to see the Barber ,..°some 4,000,000 acres above last
Lord Baltimore isgone of the moiler’s re- BES carried out and average
" > Te <q i . ‘ 3 “aA <
our most popular nu Pep. Dud said: “If that girl gets vields are secured, the Departs}
cause, although moc psy ar ahead Pll spank her ‘en "sg piculture points out in “pts
ice. it reflects i if she is eighteen. tos 2 sad I
price, it qualit ‘ | wheat outlook report released re-
All popular sizes and s H : : . cently
: > : ere are a few Taxigabs by Lh :
may be purchased in attigctive office devil: by our | This situation, the department
boxes. 24 sheets and 2§ en- i says, would place winter wheat on
velopes.

ge Rexall ste



4 Museums, Fairmount
3 Zoological Garden and e B
many other objects of inter =
Similar Exc. Sunday, Nov. 2
%

TOBER 11
Train Leaves
.7:49 A. M.


 
Mount Joy :
Stopping at prin
between Harris
V
 




Hall, and Academy of
Arts, open 1:00 to 5:00 ;
Commercial and Univegsity =
V
of “The Quaker City.” t
Pennsylvania R. R.
The Standard R R of the World %
EERE SRE EEE RN
Gorecht
N STREET


Jewele
Watchmaker—Engrawv





h
—AND—
onfections
BRAND



50-52 S. Queen St., Lancaster, Pa.
'd
use the same methods employ-
leading shoe factories,
sults are fully as good
umpire,
when he’s out.
etters | The
eel like {0
you hit him on the
sionally ?”
one
sure
in an
Desperately she faced three of them.
A Knife
om.
tears
this,
vowed that she'd never, never again
as long
onion.
Swiss cheese contains
metocarphiliwhiz,
# Dakota to
gainst ground squirrels.
of poisoned bait it is expected that
many times the numbér of ground
year will be |
destroyed, and that the total cost |
to the county will not exceed $350. |
One feature of the campaign will | In recent ye
be a week set |
Squirrel Week,” to induce general
Ice Cream, Groceries paign will be
! sion of the county agent.
the largest attempt at flickertail con-
trol that has ever been undertaken
{in South Dakota, and the results will
p
ROS. | follow Codington next year.
Mount Joy Street, Mo

= =


0. W. L.
(On With Laughter)

a



A man on East
1is wife is exactly
She never
Main street says
like a base bail
thinks hes sate
dressed in her father’s
clothes,
Eloped one day to France;
headlines in the papers read,
in her father's pants.
Mumper, out at
was whipping one of a team
i horses but he always hit him on
side. I said: “Why don't
other side occa-
George replied: “O, that
matter. A
side of him
to cone.”
A girl
Fleas

George
rove,

same
loesn't

jong as 1 get
the other is
going

Main street woman was
awful fix the other evening.
A West
clutched close to her bos-
Her breath caine in pants and
were in her eyes. Oh, it is
iorrible to be in a situation like
and right then and there she
as she lived—peel
Henry Engle says a poand of good
4539 holes.


told me that over in
the holes that are extraci-
A fellow
italy all
ed from doughnuts “are used to fill
macaroni.
Whan soaked in bicarbonate of
old electric
make excellent
light
bulbs frosting for
cake.

They put a hobo into the county |
jail and the
him to break stone
next day they wanted
) but he refused,
it was wrong. He said the
says: ‘‘What the Lord
saying
bible
joined let no man put asunder.”


A certain man here came home
An open car gathers no women.
Usually the most dangerous curves
are those beside the driver.
A little asked
Dutchman another
if he could mention one letter mean-
ing something
came, “X”, meaning eggs.
to eat. The reply
A WISE OWL.
$330 or $12,000.
The bounty system in the past
has usually proved both expensive
and
getting rid of undesirable
or predatory animals.
cal Survey of the United States De-
partment of
advocated the
trained hunters who know
undertake
work,
force of
specialist in rodent-control work to
organize
unsatisfactory as a means of
rodents
The Biologi-
Agriculture has long
employment of
how to
eradication
employs a special
supervisory hunters and
systematic
and it
counties
essential to
campaigns in
where cooperation is
success,
Last year Codington County, S.
Dak., spent $12,000 in bounties for
various animals, approximately $10,-
000 of it on flickertails, or ground
PXrk, = This year the Biological
Survey has delegated the leader of .
South
campaign a-
By the use
he rodent-control work in
direct a
killed last
quirrels
aside as “Ground
ooperation, and follow-up work
will be urged throughout the sum-
mer.
has made
Each county commissioner
himself responsible for
is own district, and w. cle cam-
under the supervi-
This is
robably induce other countries to
There are 28,500 habitable rural
wellings now vacant in Missouri.

Spirit of the Age
That which we call the spirit of the
age Is seldom a definite and compre-
| hensive thing, like a sequential sys-
City S { tem; it is a fleeting cloud-pleture, in
i which the beams of light fall apart
Repairing Company




, NASTY, PIPEY A
5¢ STRAIGHT $225 FOR
N.W. FREY & SON. LITITZ. PA.

| ere they hardly have completed their
image.
form the representation of an age,
and when they constitute its distant
though evanescent expression. — Ha
genbach.
All these varying colors do
a a I A a A —A€ AK A AL
A butcher convicted of selling
bad meat, in the olden days of Brit-
ain, stood in the jillory while the
meat was burned to
him.
windward of
Milton |
another ;
hath
HEAD LETTUCE SHOULD
NOT BE WASHED
UNTIL READY FOR USE

average housewife may be a virtue,
but when it comes to putting head |
lettuce in the refrigerator for fu- |
ture use, it is a wise cook who will
1
t
1
|
|
Cleanliness as practiced by he |
|
|
|
|
refrain from washing thé" lettuce un-
il ready to use it immediately. Head
eltuce and many other vegetables
| as well, as commonly found on the
market, are highly contaminated
y with bacteria from the soil. Washing
head lettuce any great length of
time prior to using gives these mil-
lions of microorganisms the chance
of a lifetime in their race to devour
tiie leaves before the family has a
chance.
In a


SOOCOOOO0
number of rather extensive
investigations to determine the
amount of initial bacterial contam-
ination occurring on head lettuce
and the changes produced by the
conditions of handling and storage,
the Bureau of Chemistry of the
United States Department of Agri-
culture found that fresh lettuce is
decidedly cleaner, bacteriologically
speaking, toward the center of the
head, but the central part eventually
becomes as highly contaminated as
the outer leaves. The spread of the
bacteria from the outer leaves to
the inner leaves is hastened when
the lettuce head is washed, even
| though it is later placed in the ice
box. The bacterial spread may be
retarded by keeping the lettuce head
in its original dry state and in cold
storage.
While these microorganisms oc-
curring in the soil and contaminat-
ing the field plants, except the few
known pathogens, are generally con-
sidered to be noninjurious to the
consumer, very few of them fail to
{ thrive on harvested plants where
they produce, under favorable con-
ditions, a slimy, decaying material,
wholly * unfit for consumption. To
insure an edible and nutritious pro-
duct, care must be taken not only
by the grower in supplying good
quality but also by the various
agencies handling the produet on
its way to the ultimate consumer.
It is a common practice of the
{ housewife to wash a head of lettuce,
! either in a pan of water or under
{ the faucet, before she places it in
i the ice box. Generally each leaf is
removed and washed separately, and
then after more or less vigorous
shaking, placed in a bag in the ice
box.
This added moisture produces
' better conditions for baterial growth.
Lettuce would keep longer and bet-
ter if allowed to become a little
! drier, instead of being soaked in
| water, says the department.
Gee


i THE WINTER WHEAT
OUTLOOK FOR NEXT YEAR
| Winter wheat production in the
i United States next year will be con-
| siderably in excess of probable do-
mestic requirements if reported in-

a world market basis. The fact that
our market is now on approximately
| a domestic basis is considered large-
"ly to have brought about the present
favorable market position of wheat
producers. :
The winter wheat area sown this
fall will be in the neighborhood of
46,400,000 acres, if farmers carry i
out the intended increase of 9.7 per
| cent. Allowing for average abandon-
! ment the area to be harvested next
' summer would be about’ 40,424,000
acres compared with 32,813,000
acres harvested this year.
<
Q
|

usiness Brings
Money



RH
PRAY
The greater the amount of business we ca
ter in this community, the more mone
will be in circulation. And upon each o
us rests a certain share of the responsibility 18
making this community a greater business cen-
ter. A tried and proven means of reaching the
people of this community with news of your
store is through the columns of this paper. Let
us show you how we can help you prepare
your message.
HE BULLETINS
JOY, PA.
So [oe [ofe [of [of Lefe [oe [of

Should the yield be the same @s
this year, 12.7 bushels per acre, aN
lowest since 1904, the crop would
reach 513,000,000 or 23 per cent
more wheat than was harvested this
year. A crop of 586,000,000 bush-
els or about 40 per cent more than
this year would be produced should
the yield per acre equal the average
of the past ten years, which was
14.5 bushels.
The spring wheat crop has aver-
aged 253,000,000 bushels in the past
five years, which added to 586,000,-
Q00 bushels of winter wheat would
make a total of 839,0(),000 bushels.
This would produce in exportable
| surplus of from 160,000,000 to 240,-
000,000 bushels in the face ci an
upward trend in world production.
European countries have n
xpanding wheat are to |
at the area in 19 E
s is now 92 per cent
1 pre-war av ye. i
ia, Argenti

 
 
 




pean cour
the esti 8
wheat arcas in Ausfralia,
and Canada have alco been Incr
ed, so that the wheat acreage
these three countries co
now about 53 per cent
pre-war average. : :
Farmers, in planning their pla:
ing, thd . department says, snould |
consider not only the outlook for |
total wheat crop but also the out-
look for the class of wheat produced.
the United States |
i has consu | for feed, seed, and In |
i mill grindings, approximately 230,- i
1 660,000 bushels of soft red winter, |
{ 200,000,000 bushels of hard red |
| winter and about






above iae



 


50,000,000 bushels |
| of white wheat, in addition to prac-
tically all the hard red spring whe: t
produced. The experience of the
past few years indicates that these
quantities of these classes can be
disposed of within the United States
without competing in foreign mar-
kets.

FINED $200 FOR
SELLING BAD EGGS

Selling bad eggs to a bake shop
is a costly practice, at least one
Philadelphia dealer has discovered.
He was caught in the act by a
state pure food official and as a
result paid a fine of $200. The
party receiving the decomposed |
eggs was ordered to pay the cost]
in the case. i
Years ago, selling rotten eges |
to bake shops and noodle factories |
|
was a common practice in Phila-
delphia. It was not stopped un-
til a rigid law was enacted and
aggressive, fearless food law en-
forcers placed in the city.
A A mn,
Here's a Nice Home
Who wants a nice brick property, |
on corner with wide lot on side, on |
Marietta street, one of our most |
beautiful residential streets, ori
only $4,500. This property won't
last long at that price so don’t de- |
lay if you are interested. tf:





Last spring
makers around 40 centsig
Today, it is over 90 cents
miles represenied the average
of a cord tire, while today, 15.0
miles — and more only the
usual performance for a Firestone
Gum-Dipped Cord.
Due to large, concentrated pro-
duction, specialized machinery and
simplified factory methods, together
with economical distribution, Fire-
stone is able to keep tire prices low
—no matter where the price of
crude rubber goes.
And, because of special
Firestone processes, chief
among which is Gum-Dip-
ping, motorists are today
getting thousands of extra
-
AMERICANS SHOULD PRODUCE THEIR OWN RUBBER... Wisma,






















3 Ore
ns
ound
[7 ROW

5 "
t was not so long ago tha




is ORO
 

~
lay-out serv-
>uses and trucks
QD the cars of hundreds of thou-
san® of motorists everywhere —
Cords are giving
unhear§ of mileage, dependability
and
Get the coming months
of pavements and
bad roady, Assure yourself
of comfort
and equipping “~~
now with Firgstone Full-
Size Gum-Dippey Balloons.

 
 


 

 








 
 

 



 

 


 
 


The
of Quality
MOST MILES PER DOLLAR
H. S. NEWCOMER & SON
Mount Joy, Penna.