PAGE SIX FINNEY OF THE FORCE By F. O. Alexander (© by Western Newspaper Union) THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 11th, 1928 Needless to Say 4 THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN AN DID ¥E2 DO weil Sav THIS IT ALL WERSILF, FOR MYSELF THEY ISNT M25. SNOOP ?/ I CANT SEW WHEN ANT IT CUTE 1 POT MY HAND To GLESS T WAS BROUGH ix Iv FER SEWN = i { LANCASTER Wingert & Haas ‘Hat Store Spring Hats dave Arrived im Various Colors and Shapes / SHE SHOULD 8 8RoLGHT DOWN oN oNE! ir PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY JNO. A. HAAS, Propr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. | Educating The Motoring Public | VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR MOTORISTS FURNISHED THE BULLETIN BY LANCASTER AUTOMOBILE CLUB I AM NOW OFFERING Old Chests of All Kinds Dressers; of All Kinds Old Bureaus Corner Cupboards Bedradm Suites Arrangements are being complet- ed for the annual picnic of the Lan- caster Automobile Club to be held at Hershey Park on Thursday, Au- gust 2. The outing this year will be held in conjunction with the | Motor Club of Harrishurg and pro- mises to be the biggest event of its i kind ever held in this section. A baseball game between the Harrisburg and Elmira teams of the New York-Pennsylvania League will be one of the outstanding features. The game, it was stated at the offi- ces of the Lancaster Auto Club, is PA not a mere exhibition math, but a scheduled league contest transferr- marl4-tf ed from the Harrisburg ball park to Hershey for the motorists’ | Admission will be free. Parlor: Suites Tables All Kinds of Glassware Old ks Old Guns Pistols Old Clock, with Wooden Works, Ruhning Happy Darrenkamp 231 Mt. Joy St. MOUNT JOY, ed to members of the Lancaster Club attending the outing. The | prizes are: twenty-five $5 gold pie- | | ces; twenty-five land twenty-five American Automo- bile Association Tour Books. The Harrisburg Club will award similar prizes to its members. In addition there will be the usual free strip the B k f tickets for the children of club ack o members, entitling the youngsters Y N k? to admission to the various park our ec ® amusements. You can’t tell how badly you need a hair Band concerts, orchestra concerts, cut j y i eT nthe fom dancing and addresses by men pro- story. That's why we say: “I sawtheback | Mminent in state and national motor | Sf your neck av ois 43 the Of she circles will be among the many | days.” ig “® |other features. Among the speak- | ers will be Thomas P. Henry, presi- | And here’s a tip:—the next time you get a per-service ask for an | jent, and Ernest N. Smith, general in our su ication of Fitch's La Foma -dr, : Ly We know of mothing so excellent .| manager of the American Automo- for training the hair to lie sm | 1:1. Association: S. Edward Gable, | else which increases its gloss so amazingly, | ile Association; S. Edward Gable, | How about doing it today? president of the Pennsylvania Mot- | HERSHEY’S BARBER SHOP or Fderation and of the Lancaster Mount Joy, Pa. Club; Richard C. Haldeman, former | president of the Pennsylvania Mot-~ | F A KESSLER or Federation and of the Lancaster | Quality Green Grocery head of the Motor Club of Harris-| burg. Governor Fisher has tena- atively accepted an invitation to at- tend the picnic and give a talk, jill be there if official business Moving July 2nd, 1928 id a es sis 140 years ago and are now fewer in Roads leading to Hershey will Having purchased the stock and fixtures of the ugh confectionery and tobacco store; I will move to|geny maintained service will be that location July 2nd in addition| during the day along the main high- | ‘continue the| ways for members of the Lancaster | to that line, I will Green Grocery and as heretofore. your patronage. 3 Fish business| Automobile Club. solicit a share of «A grive through the country in the cool of the evening after a Colonial Ice Cream. Treat the| Warm summer’s day is delightful family with the very best. and refreshing,” says an official of ree the Lancaster Automobile Club 4 E. Main St. MOUNT JOY, PA. Bell Phone 43R3 “but a constant headlights detracts pleasure of the trip, especially for the person at the wheel. Persistent efforts are made by the motor pot- cies and individuals interested in highway traffic control and safety measures to have the headlights on all cars adjusted, but co-operation of individual motor car owners is lights. “And not only is the properly ad- | justed headlight essential to a plea- | sant trip, but it is of vital import- 1 | Ww Rotary Sewitl§ Machines All styles, incluflng Elec- trics, Oil, Needles, Repairing and parts for all machines at A. H. BAKER'S 133 E. King St., LANCASTER, PENNA. Ind. Phone 116Y LEE ELLIS ance to safety in night driving,” the Auto Club statement continues. | “Then, too, it does not occur to | the average motorist that, aside from the safety and other features, in properly adjusted headlights there is a factor of economy. If headlights are out of focus they fail to illuminate the path ahead to good advantage and the owner, at times is forced to resort to addi- gone light devices that would not be necessary if headlights were properly focused. There is, in ad 4 v sed. F POOL. ROOM dition, much slowing down and change in car speed where head- a and RESTAURANT Basement Mount Joy Hall lights glare and approaching drivers are in danger of colliding. This oc- casions excessive use of brakes, throttle and steering wheel, with the attendant wear and tear on these parts.” “Check on you Base Ball Headquarters mobile Club advises. It does not | FOR A CLEAN SHAVE OR| take long to have this done and] HAIR 'T STOP AT THE then you can be sure you are with- | . W. F. BARBER SHOP... OPEN EVENINGS AND SATUR. DAY AFTERNOON ie. 11 Lumber St., MT. JOY, PA. of your car are focused you would like to have those on all | cars coming toward you focused. “If every motor car owner would | heed this advice and have the lights | in proper focus at all times night | driving would be much safer and | LD W. BULLER much more pleasant, and there | pic. ys.» would be far fewer accidents.” , Painter Te Met Prepare For 1928 Shortcake | hig a As soon as strawberries are all! Paper Hanger. Cones ctor picked, start preparing the bed for | "5, | next season if it is worth keeping | Estimates cheerfully given. Cultivate, hoe, and fertilize reasonable. because fruit buds are formed in Florin, Pa. the late summer and fall. Sa pienie. | | { Seventy-five prizes will be award- $2.50 gold pieces, | enemies. | Nation, and before be marked and the usual road emer- | stream of glaring | much from the | rol, the Auto Club and other agen-| essential if the highways are to be! rid of the menace of glaring head- | once a month,” the Lancaster Auto- | in the ldw and that the headlights |1 cent, as the way | method of NATURE RESTORES BALANCE WHEN MAN DISLOCATES IT Nature, sooner or later, usually restores her “balance” when upset by the acts of man, Dr. John C. Phillips explains in a recent pamph- let of the Bureau of Biological Sur- vey published by the United States Department of Agriculture. Doctor Phillips has studied the results of efforts to import and acclimatize birds in the United States, some- times for restocking hunting coverts and at other times for their beauty or their song.” In some cases, he says, the re- sponse of the birds to the new en- {vironment is little short of marvel- lous, as where ‘two or three pairs {increase to several hundred indivi- | duals in a couple of nesting seasons {and there is an immediate impulse [to gain territory. This was plainly [seen among the English pheasants in Massachusetts in the middle | nineties, and the same thing has been repeatedly reported with the European partridge in the North- | west. In such cases the stock ems to be at first far more proli- fic than it was in its original habit- at; the number of eggs, and especi- of the broods, is in- there seems to be a immunity from natural These conditions do not hold indefinitely, for there is a grad- ual balance of nature built up a- cainst the aggressive newcomers, either a barrier of disease, an in- crease of enemies, a gradual loss of vitality in the stock, or the devel opment of some other subtile fac- tors of control. There are cases in which an introduced species com- pletely disappears after passing through a period when it is classed as a pest. This happened with the California quail and the pheasant in New Zealand. Already the op- eration of nature’s own control is seen among ring-necked pheasants where they have had 30 or more vears in their new .territories, as in the Northwestern States and in Ore- {ally the size creased and period of | gon.” The English sparrow, first intro- duced in limited numbers on the the Civil War, spread all over the Atlantic coast in the years before the end of the considered a pest. thinks that these heyday 30 or | century was Doctor Phillips sparrows had their | numbers and less troublesome. | ———- eee {NEW TEST FOR VEGETABLE OILS IS SIMPLE AND CHEAP | rs growing of In the soybeans in {the United States, two general ten- dencies are present, one for the | growing of a bean as rich in oil as possible, from which the vegetable | oil may be extracted in quantity, the other for a bean with as little oil content as may be procured. | Trouble with “soft pork’ as the re- sult of the high oil content of the beans. Plant breeders in the United States Department of Agriculture have been working for many years toward the development of high and low varieties or soybeans. In | view of the large number of anal- vses to be made in developing such varieties, the department breeders | have been greatly handicapped by | the amount of time required for {each analysis. The problem of testing the per- | centages of oil in soybeans is simil- |ar to that for other oils such as | cacao in different forms, chocolate, | cottonseed, flaxseed, mustard seed, | peanuts, and sesame seed. Work on |a simplified process of measuring [the oil by observing the refraction of light passing through the oil | has been under way for some time, land recently the marketing special- |ists of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics have perfected the sys- Item until it is possible to determine {the oil content with a quantity of seed amounting to only a small {fraction of an ounce, perhaps one lor two soybeans, | The seed is first ground to a powder, and the oil is then dissolved |in halowax. With the refractome- iter - used in the tests it is possible to determine the refraction correct headlights about | to 5 decimal places, and this figure is then compared with tables pre- pared for given percentages, Tests can be made in 15 minutes a* an {expense for materials of less than compared with the old ether extraction which required 24 hours and a much larg- er sample of the seed. Results by the simpler test are accurate en- ough for any commercial purposes, and are proving a valuable aid to plant breeders in the department and elsewhere. eee tA ee. Want a Cheap Farm? I have a 130-acre farm 1% miles from Middletown, 20 acres wood- land, buildings in good shape, pleasant place #0 live and will be sold for a quick sale. Price only $7,500. Can be earned in a few years with tobacco erop. Call or phone Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. Pa. Phone 41R2. Health Talk WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “Most of us are required to spend a greater portion of the sum- mer at home. Consequently the vexatious subject of excessive tem- perature frequently arises. While it must be admitted that eighty de- grees of heat, or even a few degrees less coupled with humidity, is not likely to add to one’s comfort, there is not much reason to rant and rail at the situation,” said Dr. Theodore B. Appel, Secretary of Health, today. “There are many people who have developed a hot-weather com- plex. Their minds are absolutely set to a discomforting existance so long as summer remains. They fret, they worry and they complain. They frequently run to the thermo- meter, and noticing a rise, prompt- ly become hotter and more miser- able, “While a hot, sticky atmosphere certainly is not as comfortable as a sharp, cool one, there is very little advantage in complaining a- bout it. Why not make the best rather than the worst of it? Why not try to keep cool instead of de- liberately getting hotter? “As a matter of fact, habits have much to do with keeping cool in summer time. A bit of applied care, and a great deal less com- plaining will remove much of the actual or imagined discomfort of the super-heated season. “For example, there is the ques- tion of food. The body actually requires less nourishment in sum- mer than during . any other season of the year. The heat-producing foods should therefore be decidedly curtailed; these include starchy foods, sweets and meats. “It is positively surprising what a difference will be noted if the diet is in the main reduced to vege- tables and fruit. This will in no case create a hardship. Moreover, a strict adherence to this rule will permit the use of the heavier foods on the cool days which in Pennsyl- vania are mingled with the more torrid ones. “So here are the rules for hot weather living: “l. Eat sparingly of meats, starchy food and sweets—they are heat producers. “2. Exercise, (a long walk pre- ferably) after sun-down. “3. Avoid excessive exercise in the hot sun, particularly if over forty years of age. “4 Keep the alimentary tract open, “5. A dally bath. “6. And finally, but means the least important, the hot weather complex. “While following the above rules will not reduce the temperature outside of you, it will reduce your hot attitude toward heat. Remem- ber, it always pays, under all cir- cumstances, to keep cool.” rm ER AI BOUNTY CLAIMS OF $1,638 ARE PAID BY STATE by no _banish Of the $1,638 hounty claims, al- lowed by the State Game Commis- sion on noxious animals during June, Dauphin county residents received only $14, a report of the commis- sion shows. Ten weasels and one | gray fox were caught in the county. Luzerne County had the highest bounty claim, amounting to $93 for | forty-seven weasels, eleven gray foxes and one red fox. Westmore- land County received $74, and Ly- coming County $68. Neighboring counties ‘he fellowing claims: Adams, $55; Cumberland, $5"; Jumata, $25; Lancaster, 246; Lebanon, $18; Mi- filin, $38; Perry, $45; Snyder, $10: and York, 3:4. Six hundred thirty claims were paid, 931 of them weasels, 125 for gray foxes, sixty-six for red foxes, and only five for wildeats. nn A Ms Water And Land In the larger part of the irrigat- ed sections of the United States, according to the irrigation special- ists of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, ‘the water has were paid a greater value than the land, there being plenty of land and a very limited supply of water. The’ values of water and land are very hard to determine separately. Im- proved land, and especially land de- voted to more valuable crops, often is regarded as having high value; vet were this land deprived of its water right it might be valueless. meee Re. For Sale in Florin A fine home with all convenienc- es, such as light, heat and bath Property is in excellent condition and nicely located. Possession April 1st. This is a corner pro- perty on Mt. Joy - twp. side. Price, $5,550.00. Call or phone Jno. E. tf | Schroll, 41R2, Mt. Joy tf Before you buy your next automobile —see the Bigger and Better Chevrolet! Here are the beauty and safety of bodies by Fisher! Here is the spirited, thrill- ing performance of an im- proved valve-in-head motor! Here are the comfort, road- ability and safety of a 107- inch wheelbase, long, semi- Quality Features Chevrolet Famous Improved head motor §107-inch wheelbase Non-locking 4-wheel a brakes Or. Sar & Thermostat control i.e! Tea: Al cooling system Streamline bodies by % Harrison honeycomb Fisher radiator Invar-strut constant clearance pistons Mushroom-type valve tappets Hydro-laminated cam- clut shaft gears Crankcase breathing system Two-port exhaust Indirectly lighted in- strument panel Ball bearing worm and gear steering 233 South Market Street Maytown ELMER STRICKLER QUALITY know what Chevrolet offers at these low prices / The COACH "585 ac 3495 Coupe ’5 95 Fito Ths Convers *695 15 > Light Delivery $ [Chassis Only] 375 Utility Truck $ [Chassis Only] 520 All prices {. 0. b. Flint, Mich. elliptic shock-absorber springs, and big non-locking 4-wheel brakes! Yet this sensational car is offered at amazing low prices —a dollar-for-dollar value that has brought to Chevro- let the greatest popularity in Chevrolet history, Come in today for a demonstration! that made valve -in« Semi-elliptic shock ab- sorber springs—=84 9, of wheelbase Safety gasoline tank at Theft-proof steering and ignition lock AC oil filter AC air cleaner Single-plate dry disc- Stewart-Warner vacu- um fuel feed Delco-Remy distribu- tor ignition Fisher “VV” one-piece windshield on closed models Steel disc wheels asoline gauge Reinoehl Chevrolet Co. ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. Marietta JOHN LIBHART COST Mt. Joy P. FRANCK SCHOCK AT LOW @® @ The man who thought a buggy was good enough Advertising is the key to modernity IN THE old days, a solid, conservative citizen might sniff and tell you he didn’t read advertising. He didn’t think so much of the horseless carriage, either. The telephone was newfangled, and an insult to the United States mails. As for radio, aeroplanes, wireless photography—if they had been born then, he probably would have thought them a bit immoral. But he’s changed. He’s been educated. His point of view has been made broader and more modern. He has been civilized—by the automobile, the telephone, radio, advertising. Every single one has opened up new paths for him, taught him new things. Advertising, especially. Advertising tells him the new- est things to wear, the best things to eat. Advertising tells his wife how to make a home up to date and attractive. Advertising tells him the prices to pay for things he buys, saves him from the old-fashioned ways of doing business—helps him live well, keeps him modern. Advertising can help you. The advertisements in this paper are here to tell you many things that make life more comfortable, more interesting, happier. Read them faithfully. They'll keep you abreast of the times. They'll prevent you from becoming the type of old fogy—who—sniff—doesn’t read advertising. Mount Joy Bulletin 0000000000000 here it is. tion to be time. $1.60 per year. Better Grab This If there is any one who wants a good paying business in this section, A large limestone quar- ry with house, barn, erusher, horses, trucks, all tools, ete., now in opera- sold. Don* fool around if you are interested, Call phone or write Jno. E. Schroll, Mt..Joy. re A A The Mt. Joy Bulletin costs only An honest farmer in the Tombig- bee overflow region recently wrote to the Weather Bureau of the Unit- ed States Department of Agricul- ture, at Mobile, Ala., expressing his thanks and appreciation for timely flood warnings. He said in part: “We find if your warnings are heed- and lost 60 herd of fine cattle, some hogs, and goats. This year we listened to your warnings and saved 83 head of cattle, 50 head of goats, and 75 head of hogs that would have drowned if left in pas- Possession any ture in a river swamp.” Phone 41R2. tf |ed it saves money and time. Last|, The Mt. Joy Bulletin costs only January (during the great flood) | $1.50 per year. ° we thought maybe you did not know what you were talking about,| Advertise in The Bulletin. eur ig % silen As