HAROLD W. BULLER Estimates cheerfully given. 2 PAGE SIX THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 25th, 1928 FINNEY OF THE FORCE By F. O. Alexander (® by Western Newspaper#Union.) sat’ ~~ STRAIGHT uP - BUT THAT was BETTER / oH a LOOK WHAT T MUST HAVE STRUCK «++ | POOR THING * Peg Finney Improves Her Game ? Go 1 THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN \. BIRDIE DoT LEN LANCASTER Cor A Pr ABOOT THE . oy (Tome Home Wingert & Haas | #7 pes! Hat Store Spring Hals 6 2 dave Arrived in SAN “ Cdlors 4 Shapes IW, As ; V NW PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY JNO. A. HAAS, Propr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. i Ip WA LPR To irs NU meyanDsR] |. I AM NOW OFFERING Old Chests Chairs, of All Kinds Dressers, of All Kinds Old Bureaus Cornet Cupboards Bedroom Suites Parlor Suites Tables All Kinds of Glassware Old Clocks Old Guns & Pistols Old Clock, with Wooden Works, Running Happy Darrenkamp 231 Mt. Joy St. MOUNT JOY, PA. marl4-tf forges that every tan ht € Aad here’s a tip:—the next time you get 8 training the hair else which i i ite floss 40 . HERSHEY’S BARBER SHOP Mount Joy, Pa. E. A. KESSLER GREEN GROCERY and CONFECTIONARY imma We handle a full line of FRUITS and VEGETABLES Received Daily. Full line of Candies of all kinds Best Schrafft’s Chegolates 50c a Ib Cigars, Cigarettes, all kinds of Tobacco, Etc., Etc. Try Our NEW COLONIAL ICE! CREAM The Best to be had. 45 EAST MAIN STREET Formerly Klugh property Rotary Sewing Machines All styles, including Elec- trics, Oil, Needles, Repairing and parts for all machines at A. H. BAKER'S 133 E. King LANCASTER, PENNA. Ind. Phone 116Y LEE ELLIS POOL ROOM { ok “and , RESTAURANT Ek. i # Basement Mount Joy Hall Base Ball Headquarters FOR A GOOD CLEAN SHAVE OR HAIR CUT STOP AT THE \ W. F. CONRAD BARBER SHOP OPEN EVENINGS AND SATUR. DAY AFTERNOON «= No. 11 Lumber St., MT. JOY, PA. Wei 5: Ena Paper Hanger Contractor ouse Painter d : Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR- NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PENNA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Receipts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania fruits and vegetables were fairly heavy on the Philadel- | phia market today and trading was slow on most lines, according to the Pennsylvania and Federal Bu- ireau of Markets. | Apples continued draggy with ‘the best Transparent bringing 25c to 65¢ per 5-8 basket, Starr 40c¢ to 60c and Red Astrachan 15¢ to 40c. Receipts of homegrown ' peaches were rather light but trad- ing was practically at a standstill. Nearby blackberries sold at $2.50 to $3.50 per 32 quart crate and huckleberries at $4.00 to $7.00. Nearby red raspberries were gen- erally of better quality and sold at 4c to 8c per pint. Nearby red beets were steady at lc to 2¢ per bunch with a few sales at 2 1-2¢ to 3e. String beans sold at 25¢ to 40c per 5-8 basket with fancy stringless ranging from 40c¢ to 60c. New Jersey and New York celery sold at 30c¢ to 65¢ per bunch. Sugar corn was weaker and brought 75¢ to $1.25 per 5-8 basket, with poorer stock as low as 40c. Cucumbers brought 30c to 50c per 5-8 basket with pickles selling at 75¢ to $1.00. Cabbage sold at 22¢ to 30c per 5-8 basket, egg plant at $1.50 to $1.60 and onions at 40c to 50c. Nearby showed a weaker tendency and sold at 50c to $1.50 per 5-8 basket and at 75¢ to $1.15 per 20 quart crate. The potato market was dull with Eastern Shore of Virginia Cobblers selling at $1.40 to $1.65 per barrel depending upon quality and condi- tign. Nearby stock brought 40c to 45¢ per 5-8 basket and $1.00 per 100 pound sack. MARKET: Grain fed steers and yearlings fairly active, fully steady, top yearlings $16.25, average wt. 1025 pounds, best medium wits. $15.60, bulk fed steers $13.75- $14.75, grassy steers and cows weak to 25¢ lower. Bulk and all cutters about steady, bulk medium bulls $8.75-10.00. Heifers $10.25 -10.25, bucher cows $7.75-9.00, cut- ters $4.50-6.00. Stockers and feed- ers slow, steady tendency, most sales $10.75-12.00. Calves weak with $1.00 decline, few choice veal- ers $17.00. HOGS: Steady, few sales early. RECEIPTS: For todays market, cattle, 20 cars, 6 Chicago; 4 St. Paul; 3 St. Louis; 3 Va; 2 Canada; 1 Md; 1 Wis; containing 608 head, 201 head trucked in from local feed lots, total cattle 809 head, 12 calves, 418 hogs, 126 sheep. Receipts for week ending July 21, 1928, cattle 193 cars, 23 Chicago; 14 St. Louis; 12 St. Paul; 12 Va; 6 Canada; 6] Kansas City; 5 Pa; 4 Buffalo; 3 Towa: 2 Md; 2 N. Y; 1 Tenn; 1 Wis; containing 2779 head, 675 trucked in. total cattle 3454 head, 411 cal- ves, 853 hogs, 540 sheep. Receipts for corresponding week last year, cattle 103 cars; 31 Va; 11 Chicago; 10 St. Louis; 10 Pa; 10 Tenn; 6 St. Paul: 5 W. Va; 5 Ohio; 4 Kansas City; 4 Okla; 2 Canada; 1 Md; 1 N. Y: containing 2497 head, 381 head trucked in, total cattle 2878 tomatoes | THE ACTUAL MILEAGE ON A GALLON OF GAS “What’ll she do on a gallon of gas?” The man or woman buying a car these days invariably asks that question. E. B. Rohrer, the Hudson-Essex dealer here, says he is all through listening to ‘gas’ arguments or in- dividual experiences about the fuel economy of a 1928 Hudson Super-Six. He has fixed up an arrangement in a Hudson with which he is showing to motoriss the exact mileage which may be expected from the car. A standard Coach has been se- lected. A measured gallon of gasoline is placed in a container and connected with the pipe run- ning from the vacuum tank to the carburetor. The engine is then idled until the gasoline is drawn from the carburetor, and then started from the measured gallon of gasoline. “On a typical test,” says Mr. Rohrer, “we drive from our place of business through the city, mak- ing all proper stops, and then take the open road at about 25 to 35 miles an hour. “We do not pinch the carbure- tor down, inflate the tires abnorm- | ally, coast, throw out the clutch or do any ‘other tricks. We want to show the amount of gasoline which a buyer will use in his regu- {lar driving. Our recent averages with a 1928 Hudson are above 15 miles to the gallon, which is re- markable indeed for a large, fine- performing car like a Hudson. “Of course gasoline economy is not the main purpose in buying a Hudson. A man who purchases one of them wants to go somewhere. [He doesn’t want to notice such things as hills. He wants to com- mand the open road. We are tell ing everyone that we consider the Hudson the best roading car in the world today—not just in conver- sation but in actual test. Such a standard of performance is what makes the economy so much more interesting. “These tests will continue until we have had an opportunity to show all our friends what they may expect from Hudson. We have shown a good number now, and all of them have had their eyes opened. Old-time Hudson owners who thought they knew all about the Super-Sixes have been as surprised as anyone else. The world do move.” nse Gy Go rms CATS ARE KILLERS; DON'T NEGLECT THEM “The cat that purrs so content- edly after it has been fed is at heart a killer and if neglected will become one of the most serious menaces to game animals and the birds,” John B. Truman, secretary of the Board of Game Commis- sioners, said today. Truman urged the people who own cats to make provision for feeding them during the annual vacation of the family. Cats, Truman said, if left un- cared for or taken into the coun- try soon revert to the wild habits of the undomesticated members of their tribe. Such animals are to be blamed for the killing of many insectivorous birds and much cf the small game. rer lp Mr HIGH SPOTS IN FARM HISTORY head, 524 calves, 507 hogs, 686 sheep. Range Of Prices STEERS ( Choice 15.25-16.00 | Good 14.25-15.25 | Good 14.00-15.25 | Good 14.00-15.00 Medium 12.50-14.00 | Common 9.50-12.50 | HEIFERS Choice 11.27-12.75 Good 10.00-11.25 Medium 8.75-10.00 Common 7.50-8.75 COWS Choice 8.00-10.00 Good 7.00-8.00 Common & med. 6.00-7.00 Low cutter & cutier 4.00-6.00 BULLS Good and choice (beef) 10.00-12.00 Cutter, common & med. 7.0 VEALERS Good ant choice 15.50-17.00 Medium 13.50-15.50 Cull & common 7.50-13.50 HOGS Heavyweights 11.00-12.50 Mediumweights 11.50-13.00 Lightweights 11.25-13.00 | Packing sows 8.00-11.00 | Lancaster Grain and Feed Market Selling Price of Feeds 1924—The Mexican bean beetle found in Greene county. 1925—First parasites introduced | while depreciation was to control European corn borer. | 1925—F'irst parasites to fight the Japanese Pennsylvania soil. rr eis Better Grab This If there is any one who wants a good paying business in this section, here it is. A large limestone quar- ry with house, barn, crusher, horses, trucks, all tools, ete., now in opera- tion to be sold. Possession any time. Don% fool around if you are interested, Call phone or write Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. Phone 41R2. tf Rd Lg Hoover referred to Prohibition as an experiment and we have to ad- mit a lot of people we know have been doing a lot of experimenting. Be beetle If any man thinks a changed spirit hasn't come over America | since Prohibition let him attempt to drink some of it. 61.00-62.00 ton Cottonseed 41% 65.00-66.00 ton Dairy feed 16% 41.50-42.50 ton Soy bean meal Bran 40.00-41.00 ton Shorts 43.00-44.00 ton | Hominy 50.00-51.00 ton | Middlings 52.50-53.50 ton Linseed 59.00-60.00 ton Gluten Florin, Pa. Ground oats h_ 50.50-51.50 ton |Alfalfa (regular) 57.00-58.00 ton | Alfalfa (reground) 47.00-48.00 ton Dairy feed 18% 44.00-45.00 ton Dairy feed 20% 49.50-50.50 ton Dairy feed 24% 54.50-55.50 ton Dairy feed 25% 57.00-58.00 ton Horse feed 85% 56.00-57.00 ton 43.00-44.00 ton introduced | the seven year life expectancy of a on | Passenger automobile and the aver- | burned to the | straw and grain, were consumed by Health Talk WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “There appears to be a some- what misguided notion concerning the advantages of a vacation. Many sensible people who are entirely thoughtful concerning the holiday season and thus choose rest, quiet and invigorating change, conclude that two weeks of that sort of life will keep them running efficiently until vacation time comes around again,” said Dr. Theodore B. Ap- pel, Secretary of Health, today. “It is quite true that a com- plete rest in the woods, country or at the shore will do much to tone up a tired system. but the advantages are soon lost if one re- turns to his daily task and at once becomes indifferent to the funda- mental iaws of health. “Nature is highly recuperative. But if the benefits on the return are to be permanently enjoyed more needs to be done than can be accomplished by the application of the finest kind of care and jude- ment in the choice of the annual fortnight’s outing. “While it is perfectly proper to consider that one is more than or- dinarily wise and discreet to choose a sane and sensible outing as a- gainst the tiring and debilitating one so popular these days, that, af- ter all, is but: the beginning of the matter. The tanned cheek and the inward glow of health soon fade if negligence asserts itself upon ar- riving home. “The vacationist who returns bubbling over with vitality and re- newed vigor must realize that such a pleasant state of physical affairs can only be maintained by a daily effort on his part. “One of the pleasant facts in nature is that the laws controlling health are not obscure, difficult or even hard to follow. Unfortunately however, easy as are the health rules, it is easier to disregard them. And that is exactly where most of our trouble arises. “Why not make this year’s vaca- tion yield the biggest possible health dividends? To do this choose the proper type of vacation to be- gin with and then watch your step conscientiously and daily after it is concluded. This is the way to do it: 1. Exercise, plenty of it. 2. Fresh air, all you can get day and night. 3. Food, sufficient but never too much. 4. Sleep, at least eight hours each night. 5. Luxuries, a minimum of ther. 6. Tea, coffee anil tobacco, all in moderation. 7. Worry, eliminate it. 8. Happiness, cultivate it. 9. Play, certainly. 10. Work, hard and plenty. “There is nothing bitter or diffi- cult in the above prescription. Take it, follow it every day until next summer and learn what the advantages of a real vacation, pro- perly followed up, can do for you. merrell Qe CAR OWNERS CAN DO A LITTLE FIGUREING One dollar 2 day—$363 a year— is what the average automobile cost the average American motorist in 1927. At least that is what the figures complied by the American motorists Association reveal. Operation and maintenance of his car cost each motorist $229, figured at $136. Depreciation was based on age retail price of $953 for the year. Fuel and lubrication represented 44 per cent of the operation bill, of $101. Mechanics charged $47 for their time while replacement parts totaled $41 and the tire bill was $40. —— A CR A VALUABLE BARN DESTROYED BY FIRE A large bank barn on the farm of Albert Shenk, tenanted by Ed- win Geiman, near Hershey, was ground yesterday, the origin of the blaze being attri- buted to defective wiring. The structure was valued at $12,- 000. Crops, consisting of hay, the flames, in addition to farming implements. Want a Cheap Farm? T have a 180-acre farm 13% miles from Middletown, 20 aeres wood- land, buildings in good shape, pleasant place to live and will be sold for a quick sale. Price only $7,500. Can be earned in a few years with t co.crop. Call .or A au RIV 1 ANNIVERSARY lee NY (yA RA WYLIE S. F. ULRICH ELIZABETHTOWN. PENNA. WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT...BUICK WILL BUILD THEM RE A Ra phone Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. Pa. Phone 41R2. En 4 Essex popularity in Chicago is but part of a national and world prefer- ence that makes Essex sales the largest of any six-cylinder car in history. 735 cee War Tax Off SSEX mirrors public chorce The enormous spread of Essex success is due to an accumula- tion of values newer approached under $1000, which is per- fectly obvious te the ordinary buyer as well as the expert. At $735 and up you not only get the brilliant performance andl reliability of the famous Essex chassis; you also get a sat- isfaction, in appearance, richnessand comfort; never even con- sidered within hundreds of dollars of the price. COACH $735 Sedan (4-Door) $795 COUPE $745 (Rumble Seat $30 Extra) ) Roadster $850 All prices {. o. b. Detroit Buyers can pay for cars out of income at lowest available charge for interest, handling and ee E. B. ROHRER, Mt. Joy, Pa.