WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1929 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Now is the time to fix up your MODEL T FOR RIGHT now, after winter lay-ups and winter driv the time to go over your Model T and find out ju itneeds in the way of replacement parts and adjus@nents. For a very small cost, you may be able to protect and maintain your investment in the car and get thgusands of miles of additional service. To help yeu get the fullest use from your Ford Motor Company is still devoting a con section of its plants to the manufacture of Mod and will continue to do so as long as they a by Ford owners. These parts are quickly available through ers inn every section of the country. Note the in the partial list given below: ar, the derable T parts » needed ord deal- ow prices Pistomandpin = = «+ ww = « = - $1.40 Connecting rod - Ge en A. “ie - - 1.60 Crankshaft oh ww ite A - 10.00 Cylinder head - ST ww. wii - . 6.00 Cylinder - - - - iw - - ow - - 20.00 Time smear. =. eo =o ove eo wwf 75 Time gear cover - wile - "le - . i. 1.00 Crankecase - - FE “iw - - - 12.00 Magneto coil assembly - « - i. - - i. 5.00 Fly wheel - - LE oa - -- 13.00 Transmission gear shaft i - ie - iw 1.65 Transmission cover - - - .-iiw - = 6.00 Clutch pedal - oie ms woe a. 63 Steering gear assembly (less wheel and bracket) § - 8.50 Starter drive - ie - Ye - - 4.25 Generator - - RR RE wii - ag 12.5 Battery sae wee wie ef. 8.50 Carburetor - - - - - - - - lily 3.00 Vaporizer assembly (with fittings) - - -§ - - 9.00 2 Rear axle shaft - Oe gta a pat eile, Te 1.75 4 Differential drive gear - =. = - = - - 3.00 Universal joint assembly « . = .- le - - 2.50 = Dive shaftpinion - « « = « +. .§ - - 1.50 Front axle - - - « te a - le - 9.00 Spindle connecting rod «+ + - - . fF - = 1.75 Front wxadius rod - ie. - is 3 “ie 1.80 Rear spring - - i - . eo - le 6.00 Radiator—Iess shell (1917-23) - . ie . ie 15.00 Radiator—Iless shell (1923-27) - - 14.00 Hood (1917-1925) - - =. = - - - i= 6.50 Hood (1926-27) black - - - -iie $v 7.00 Gasoline tank - = oe ao, - ww 6.00 Front fenders (1917-1925) each - - - - . lie 4.00 Front fenders (1926-1927) each - ow - - 5.00 Rear fenders (1922-1925) each - - ve ie 3.75 Rear fenders (1926-1927) each - - = - . Tie 4.00 Running board - Tai - = K- 1.25 Horn (battery type) - = eis iim - - fa 1.50 Headlamp assembly (1915-26) pair - - - 5.50 Touring car top (1915-25) complete - - - iii. 27.00 Touring car top ((1926-27) complete, inclpdes curtains and eurtainrods - - - - - -§ . . . 35.00 These prices are for parts only, Hut the charge for x x = 5 2icans Price Albert .......... . 25¢ 2cans ...... 25¢ 2 cans Half d Half TAN . 25¢ 2 cans Dill’s Sia iia DO 2 cans Sir Walt@g Raleigh Te 25¢ w cans Union Le cans Tuxedo ..! All 15¢ Chewing To All 10c Chewing Toba All Be Cigars, .... All 10c Cigars 25¢ Arai 23¢ pks 25¢ .. 8 packs 25¢ iio viv 3 Sor DRC con 3 for 256 1 TTT OTT TT TT : H A. DARRENRAMP | 5 3 Doors East of Post Office MOUN'RJOY, PA. E = m S10 E10 OO 5. CxWhite Leghorn Chicks The Male Birds we rectly out of hens with trap All our eggs for hatching are pr which is made up of about 4,500 layers an is season in our mating are all di- cecords of from 210—271 eggs. from our own flock geeders, For information, call 133R6 Mt. Joy or write t} Musser White Leghorn Poultry Far MOUNT JOY, PA. mar20-tf ARELOWE EONS : lacing your order here, see us. . Also manufac Blocks, travel everknown. Frequentdepartu Comfortable, luxurious buses. Reliabl8 ¢ompetentdrivers. ‘WriteMotor Transi Management Company, Chicago, for travel literature, or inquire at depot DAGMAR INN | Phone: 9077 90 East Main St. NAR cP 19005 K © 2 | 1 A Don. W. Gorrec WELER Mt. Joy, Pa he Mt. Joy Bulletin . costs only $150 per year. | grew | __| felled trees and U. S. Department of Agriculture VERY USEFUL INFORMATION THAT SHOULD BE READ BY EVERY RURAL RESIDENT Don’t plant old celery first testing its germination. the third or fourth year seed rapidly loses its vitality. without After celery Minks are so bold and courage- ous that they attack and kill for food animals heavier ves, such as varying hare. The presence of a considerable percentage of spindle shaped tubers in a lot of seed potatoes is a sign that the whole lot is undesirable for seed purposes. Late-season in- fection with spindle-tuber of heal- ing plants in the field often gives the disease to well-shaped tubers, which if used for seed produce dis- eased plants. Spindle-tuber may reduce the marketable crop from 25 to 50 per cent. the muskrat Plant sweet potatoes in new soil, or at least in soil that has not been planted to this crop for 3 or 4 years. Healthy plants may be grown by careful seed selection and care in preparing the hotbed, but this effort will be largely wast- ed if the plants are set in infested soil. The repeated use of the same soil in the hotbed year after year is one of the chief causes of spread- ing many sweet-potato diseases, says the U. S. Department of Agri- culture, Grain sorghums like a warm soil, and seeding of this crop should not be done too early in the spring. Ten days or two weeks after corn-plant- ing time is the best date. If sow- ing is done too late, however, early frosts may catch the crop before it matures. Thick stands yield better in favorable seasons, but in dry seasons thin stands are best. Culti- vation should be begun early and repeated often enough to destroy all weeds. In testing individual ears of seed corn for germination it is advisable take not less than six kernels; 2 from near the butt, 2 from near tip. and 2 from the middle. Each pair of kernels should be tak- en from opposite rows, the rows be- ing about one-third of the circum- ference of the ear apart. This me- thod gives a good test of anv indi- vidual ear. If any of the kernels fail to germinate, or if the germ- to the ination is weak, produces inferior sprouts, or is verv slow, the ear |should be discarded. Clean-up campaigns against the European corn borer should be completed before the borer de- velops into the moth stage in late spring or early summer. All corn- stalks, cobs, and refuse should be destroyed during the year, by plow- ing under completely, by burning cleanly, or by feeding *to livestock directly from the field in the form of finely cut or shredded material or as silage. The disking in of small grains on cornstalk land or on high-cut corn stubble is a dan- gerous practice where the corn bor- er is present, says the U. S. Depart- ment of Agriculture. Brooms have been used for years to®* put out dirt. Recently Forest Service officers proved them useful in putting out fire. On a bunch grass fire, rakes are a poor fire tool because they catch on the clumps and allow ashes to run through the than themsel- | and the | (On With Laughter) - We have a fellow in our com- munity who is in a peculiar predi- cament. He has two girls and each one has filed a break of promise suit against him. I said to him, “Now you're fixed George, you yhave two suits. He said, “Not on your life. only got a pair of breaches.” I've Constable Zerphey says that the only real safe place for a man to draw a pistol is at a raffle. Now I know what is wrong with our community. There are too many men in it who only use their heads to carry their hats on. Fenstermacher tells us {of all the traveling he did by rail, he was only ever in one railroad disaster and that was when he kiss- | ed the wrong girl while going thru {a tunnel. | Sie | A boy from school came to the | office and asked for some note-book | paper. Our clerk asked him what | size and he said, “Oh, I don’t care. Just so it fits.” “Robin” A lady from town went to Wool- | worth’s Department Store at Lan- | caster to do a little shopping. She | selected an article marked 15 cents {but only wanted to pay 10 cents [for it. When the clerk objected ithe lady said, “Isn't this a 5 and 1027 The clerk replied, “Yes, but you can count it up yourself. How much is 5 and 10 cents?” 87 One of our Mount Joy street | flappers pulled a good one on some | fellows in front of the post office Sunday night. During the course |of a conversation she told them she | a musician, One of the boys inquired, “What do vou play?” She said, “I play guys like you for | suckers.” [was Grant Gerberich [one to the fellows. He said that {recently he attended a swell affair {and so many of the women were so scantily dressed. He said there was lone lady in particular that if it {wouldn’t have been for her opera- {tion she would not have had a stitch lon her back. sprung a good to think that missed all that. Then fellows a lot of us That reminds me of the remark that Ray Keller made when he came home from that trip to Mata- (moras, Mexico. He said the ladies in that town only wore three things —two of them were shoes. | | es | Saturday night a chap from town lwent to the country to call on his lady friend and just as he arrived at the farm he met her on her way to the cow stable and carrying a {milk bucket. He said, “Are you | going to milk in that pretty dress?” She said, “Heavens no, in this bucket.” a certain five blan- been told that Florin traded I've just chap up at teeth. On a recent bunch grass | fire on the Carson National Forest in New Mexico, one man with a | broom was said to be worth three with other tools. A fire fighter! with a wet broom could knock the! fire down and sweep back the ne- cessary ashes almost as fast as he could walk. It is said that the Indians, who in this arrival tobacco the country long of Europeans, burned them to ob- etore |tain ashes for their tobacco pat- ches. The value of this practice has been confirmed. Modern know- ledge shows that tobacco needs plenty of potash in the fertilizer and that without it the leaves de- velop potash “hunger,” lose their normal green color, and deteriorate {in quality. More potash than is now generally used would give iS. more profitable returns, says the U. Department of Agriculture, The quantity depends, of course, on the soil, system of cropping, and other factors, but a minimum of 40 to 60 pounds an acre should be used on most light tobacco lands. Combining a grain crop and a forage crop is generally more pro- fitable and always controls the weeds better, than growing either th crop alone. Forage crops are more valuable than they used to be and stands are more difficult to get, so it pays to give attention to the grain or “nurse” crop. The nurse crop should be used only where the an- nual rainfall is 20 inches or more. In regions subject to dry summers, however, it.is well not to use more than two-thirds as much seed when planting the nurse crop, as a thick nurse crop may destroy the young forage plants. If the weather be- comes very dry in early summer | and the forage crop is particularly | valuable, the nurse crop should be clipped high when the grain is in the dough stage and raked up for hay. But if the early season is wet, and especially on wet soils, it to delay sowing the forage | will be in cropguntil the nurse crop is 4 or 5 order next week since the trout inches%high; otherwise the forage may grow too rank. 3 kets and four Kewpie dolls won at fairs last winter at a total cost of $47 to another fellow for a single barrel shot gun that cost him $3.98 three years ago from a mail order house. One of our old maids looks every night to if there ain't a man under her bed. Last week she went to Roy Sheetz and bought twin beds so as to double her chances. see A young lady near town who goes horseback riding occasionally, had a mishap last week when she fell off the steed. She sprained her wrist, bruised her side and scratch- ed her considerable At last the bootleggers have com- petition. Sauer-kraut juice is now offered in bottles soda fountains. An exchange s ‘One babv is born in New Yo every thre minutes.” That be blamed tiresome for that A local gentleman of color says that he d not hit his wife any more since he got fined in police court, “No, sah, from now on, when dat wife zassperates me, I'se gwine kick ’er good—den she can’t show it to de Jedge. One of the fellows here in town said he wished he had all the money in the world. I asked him what he would would pay his debts as far as it would go. Met a west-ender on the street a | few days ago and asked him what he was doing. He said, “Nothing.” I told him he was getting more like his daddy every day. Guess the fish stories fishing season opened Li { fundamental sanitary rules ! nection | | camps. inel materially assist | | | do with it and he replied he | Health Talk WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “The regulations of the State Health Department call for certain in con- with automobile tourists And while regular inspec- |tions on the part of official person- in the proper { observance of the regulations, the | tourist himself really holds the key [to the situation,” said Dr. Theo- dore B. Appel, Secretary of Health. “Camps in Pennsylvania to com- ply with the rules must afford a safe water supply at all times. The display of the Department's safe drinking water sign is the best indi- | cation that this regulation is being | observed. “The grounds must be maintain- ied in a sanitary condition at all times and proper disposition of | garbage must be made. This regu- lation is easily enforced and will not be disregarded by camp operators if tourists refuse to patronize es- tablishments that plainly violate this requirement. And the same may be said for the public toilet facilities which, under the regula- tions, must be kept clean and free from fly breeding possibilities. “Other factors such as throwing garbage into a stream or otherwise polluting it js for the most part a matter within the province of the tourist himself, as is also the ex- tinguishing of fires used for cook- ing purposes. “Outdoor life in the summer sea- son is one of humanity's greatest boons. Tourist and picnicing camps add much to such possibilities. However, to attain the maximum | benefit from such camps both pro- prietor and patron must use care. Insanitary or unsafe camps can readily backfire in terms of disease and death. “Therefore, to the camp owner —keep it clean and sanitary scup- ulously adhere to all the rules and regulations. To the camp user— patronize only those camps that can show a clean bill of health and | by vour own them that care keep way. | “And incidentally, but quite as (important, do not throw picnic of- fal by the side of the road. Mil- lins of do'lars have been expended to afford the finest type of high- ways in Pennsylvania, thousands have been spent to make them safe, but individual interest and care a- lone will keep them clean. Cooper- ate!” . 'LAMPBLACK ON BELTS HELPS {AVOID DANGERS FROM STATIC | aes static electricity, as most know and as many adults will member, may be generated by rub- bin a glass rod with a silk handker- chief, or by a piece of hard rubber be VS re- rubbed with cat’s fur. This makes a good parlor trick for winter evenings, and is both interesting and scientific. But sta- i tie electricity created by somewhat “similar means in a factory or near a threshing machine may prove de- | structive and dangerous. The belt rubbing on a pulley that drives a machine may become highly charg-! ed with electricity and may give off | sparks under certain conditions, | | particularly if the air is dry. If | the air is dry the dust in and | {around the threshing machine or in | |a factory is also likely to be dry | {and explosive. A spark from a belt | may cause an explosion and wreck | the machine it is driving. | Because of this, engineers in the | | United States Department of Agri- {culture have tried to devise meth- | ox Ne ud PATHFINDER Worlds Greatest Low Prjted Tires 29x4.40 30x4.50 30x5.2] Rat 8 i ° I 4 ° |] b3 30x3 A-2 31x4 32x4 All other sizes at sii Low Prices.] Standard time Guarantee. Fre¢ Mounting Goodyear Service Stay Phone 192 130 E/ Main St. MOUNT JOY, FAS Ww OPEN STUDIO » MISS ESTHER ™&ARBER, who has received her education at Oberlin nservatory, Ohio, and Sherwood Music School, Chic dio for piano and pipe organ. , will open a stu- Market ap Call at my home, corner Streets, Mount Joy. Donegal a {ods for taking the static out of the | | belt, to conduct the harmlessly to the ground has opportunity to reach ous voltage. or 1t a danger- If it were possible to belt that lv before use a metal would the problem, but the leather rubber belts in common Ise ar practically nonconductors f elec tricity. One successful result the search was ti mixed wi lamp-black ve hicles and applied in a C ) to a belt would provide surfac t prevented he electricity. also wear well and not cause belt to stretch. In the case of rub- bel Its t belts the ind that a mixtu YY Io Tq 3 pbiack and spat prey 1( prev cause yusly, it to stretch. anc would ar tightenings of the belt be quired? Adding lampblack usual belt on the did not effective, becaus {these dressings would not then stay on the belt, and the electricity would again accumulate. rr A QM would ) t Yok marke dressings prove Million Seedlings More than 1,000,000 voung trees | will be planted on State forest land {during the spring months. This will be the largest planting since 11919. | nt Gl Growing chicks need calcium { phosphate in addition to the grain ration. This can be supplied by adding to the ration small quanti- jties of ground )leamed bone meal WISE OWL and ground limestone. pid 7 electricity | ABING and HEATING Also All Kind PROMPT SERVICE JOSEPH L. HEISE Phone—179R5 FLORIN, PEN PL Repair Work RICES REASONABLE —— OT) DO OT AR) UD) SP ) SR) SD ) DU AR Ol) D-H CHD OS CHS SO gy YOUR EYESIGHT TROUBLING YOU? e symptoms of EYE STRAIN becoming pronounced— headaches x eling, inflamed eyelids and nervousness? '’E YOUR EYES EXAMINED Get [ mn sts’ advice—they will tell you if glasses wre going to help yourssgndition. “The Store that al ;s greets you with a smile.” PEL & WEBER Optometrists and Optic Office Hours: 8:30 to 5:00. M. Phone 2413 40-42 N. Queen St. LANBQSTER, PA. SD) EE) 4D IUD Qo Essex Motor Has 24 per cent More Power Fr | Lome in the new Essex, the development of the power plant into an delivering 70 milcs an hour maxi-ium and 60 miles an hour long has led, among other features, to the adoption of new m nnecting rod bearings on which patent applications are
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers