JPAGE SIX THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. HITT AND RUNN—Console Thyself Buft-Romember. the Doctor Is Quite Liable to the Same Mistake! BY HITT E000 MORNG MR Ro - AND HOW 1S YOUR. WIFE FEEUNG TO-Dav ? TID YOU en, wer MEBCINE aT WE ~ PROMPTLY AT @ BELLS - 1 @ANE HER A HOT oul OF Tie BROWN BOTTLE - SUE [TX WENT RIGHT To SLEEP AND 3 ot 0 INTERNATIONAL CARTOON CO.NY. will EITHER — YOu GAVE ot ANT LRELY Thar SHE HER THE NWRONO MED! — SUMMON THE Swim-Kaps 25¢ to 89¢c Y etry body else worry about} your hair getting wet eith- er. Swim-Kaps dre attrac- tively styled, water-tight and comfortable fitting. Get at least one for your vacation swims. Sold only 3 at Rexall Stores. swimming. does. Don’t | Be nder’s Mill property, | we as blown off the house and consid- {erable damage caused by water. MY SALE WAS A REAL KNOCKOUT “ HE USED 0 OUR NU C11 IN HIS ADS Furnished by THIS NEWSPAPER Bladder Irritation If functional 48 Hour Test? Cystex today. Put it to the See for yourself how if it "doesn’t bring quick ment, and satisfy you Try Cystex today. Bladder Irritation disturbs your sleep. or causes Burn- fing or Itching Sensation, Backache, 1%g Pains, or muscular aches, mak- ing wou feel tired, depressed, and discouraged, why not try the Cystex Don’t give up. Get test. quickly it works and what it does. Money back improve- complete y. Only 60c. W. D. Chandler, W. Main St., Mt. Joy. onile For pyorrhea For prevention { against gum infec- tions, use Zonite, the new powerful antiseptic. Also guards against colds, coughs and more serious dis- eases of nose and throat. | the | the | The two barn doors were land the load of hay blown against the | front of the building, the wagon tong- weather-board- pipe along the spout- |ing, prevented the load of hay going thru the front of the barn and | ue piercing ing. An iron HENRY GCARPENTER INSURANCE ~ MOUNT JOY PA. + Loony fund of Insurance except life anywhert'in Pansyluania. STORM DAMAGE (From Page One) At Samuel B. Nolts the roof was { blown off the house. At Bender's Mill The pump house in the yard at Mi- chael Musser's farm was blown into |a nearby field. Davis, the former the entire roof At Raymond At Fred Ibach's a portion of the | barn roof and the pig sty roof were [ blown off. On the Hoffman Hershey farm ten- anted by Londa Zurin, a very large tobacco shed was completely de- | | molished. At Isaac Hiestands an implement ished was badly twisted. At Salunga On the Breneman Estate farm, tenanted by Wm. Fackler, west of town, a silo was blown down and part of the roof off the house. At Norman Baers two large tobac- co sheds were blown down. A venti- lator from one of these sheds was found half a mile away. t A. M. Kolp’s the entire roof was blown off a large machine shop. At H. W. Eshlemans a tobacco shed was blown down and six trees felled. One of these trees about 18 inches in was blown off even with the ground, not even spintering it. The break is almost as even as it could have been sawed. At C. A. Spahrs the entire west half of the roof was blown off the house. At Benj. Rohrers a was blown down. On the John Mumma farm tenanted by his son Jay, the tobacco shed was blown down and the side taken out of the barn. tobacco shed At John Swarrs, near Qyster Point, the large tobacco shed was complete- ly demolished. At Landisville At Michael Musser’'s the g of his house was blown in. Many trees were uprooted, neys blown down and slightly damaged. The following tobacco sheds in this immediate vicinity, were blown down. Harvey Mumma, two; Amos Cooper, four; Weidler, 1; Geo. Derr, roof off; Ray Greider, one; Mr. on the Nissley farm, one; one and a corn barn; one; Amos Cope, one; shey, one; Amos Herr, one; Nissley Estate, one; John M. one; Jay Mumma, one; corn able end Neff, Earl Long, ' Warren Long, Swarr, barn down and barn damaged; Minnich Machine Works, one; John H. Steh-| man, one. At Willis Baers part of the house roof was blown off. Camp Meeting Grounds The term, “a cyclone is very applicable here. cottages are Fourteen badly wrecked, many of the gig ees as arge as ree fe i : : € giant trees as large as three feet buried and killed three head tiffical {of mules. Mr. difficult to describe. {under the forebay at the time. Stones At one place a large oak crashed thru in diameter, are down. The scene here, is really the roof of four cottages and its quite | common to see a large tree across al house. Sunday many people were sight | seeing and the scene here is one that will not soon be forgotten. It will the felled trees has the contract to do this work and already has a number of men at: work. At Donegal Springs On the Cameron farm tenanted by Harry Geib, the large blown down. The building was 40x80 | feet. The chimney was also blown | off the house. When the barn was blown down, Mr. Geib, his son and hired man were stable. The an experience never to be forgotten. On the Cameron farm tenanted by Jacob Williams, the straw shed was blown down. On another Cameron farm tenanted by John Roland, the men had just placed a load of hay in the barn floor. thru the down into the dung yard. On the Cameron property, the Isaac Hoover farm, barn roof was blown away. At Frank Felty Estate farm, a blown down. At Ephraim Hersheys a shed 40x30 feet was demolished, wind-pump blown down and lodged on the barn and a large willow tree tobacco bolt of lightning chimney. Near Maytown At the home of Phares Bollinger, Maytown, a tree in front of his home was uprooted. As the wind ripped it from the ground the roots lifted a ce- ment pavement leading to the home and pushed it through the base of the home partly into the cellar. A large barn on the Duffy estate, tenanted by George M, Shuman, was destroyed by fire caused by lightning. The loss will reach $13.000, it was re- ported. Live stock and implements were saved. It marked the fifth time a barn on that farm was destroyed by fire, three times within recent years. On the David Hess farm, formerly the Nissley farm, two large tobacco sheds were blown down and the roof blown off the brick summer house. The large barn was also damaged. At Samuel Kraybill's farm part of the roof was blown off the house and a tobacco shed razed. At Hiram Risser’'s farm tenanted by Mr. Shumaker, the entire east side of the roof and barn were blown out. Large tobacco shed blown down, hog pen unroofed as well as the corn barn There is a fine large lawn in front of the dwelling and many of the beauti- ful large trees were uprooted. Just as the storm started an autoist drove in aside the barn. A few minutes later a large walnut tree was blown down, all around the car, but none of the heavy branches fell upon the ma- chine. At Jacob Strickler's farm the edge of the asbestos shingle roof was blown off the new barn only erected a few years ago. At the Albert Hoerner farm nearby, two tobacco sheds were blown down, mashing implements stored therein. A portion of the barn roof was also blown off. On the Paris Epler farm a tobacco shed was wrecked. Several smaller razed near the town. At Abram Shaffners the antive to- bacco shed was blown down, most of sheds were also it being carried across the road. Around Rowenna On the Amos Shank farm part of the barn roof was blown away and a tobacco shed completely demolished. On the Hassinger Smith farm part of the barn roof disappeared and a tobacco shed was wrecked. At Frank Arnolds the entire barn was blown down, {co shed and John Kreider, one; Jno. one and house- | John W, Her-| Benj. '! struck it,’ | i shed, require about a month to clear away {roof A Columbia man | barn was | in the horse | began. former described it as blown off from formerly one-third the s, on the Cameron shed was tobacco across the hog pen, crushing it. A struck the house a very large tobac- several smaller build- ings. Here a cow was injured when {the barn collapsed and she was later . shot. chim- | properties At the Abram Engle farm a por- tion of the barn roof was taken off ‘and a very good tobacco shed blown down. Here the wind was so strong that it blew a large load of hay which was on the barn floor at the time. thru the front of the building and down into the dung yard. Here it |also blew a garage away in which jthere were two cars, An old car was blown some distance and de- molished while the new car wasn’t moved a foot or even scratched. A large brick building in Rowenna, formerly used as a shoe factory but now used as a tobacco warehouse by | Messrs. Eli Hoffman and Harry Rich, land which was filled with cased to- (bacco, was blown down. Above Bainbridge On the J. M. Shoop farm, in Conoy township a barn was blown down. The gable end of this structure was of stone and when it fell it com- Shoop, was standing irolled about him but he escaped un- | hurt. At B. W. Burkholders part of the { barn roof and the side and a tobacco | shed were blown down. At Alvin Martin's a silo, tobacco pig pen and part of the house were blown away. Mr. Martin also has another small {farm nearby at which place the barn was blown down. A good sized strip of woodland on {his farm was bowled over like that much grain, On the Mrs. Grace Bachman farm |a tobacco shed was blown down. Here a strange incident occurred. A {workman on the farm tied a pair of mules in the shed just as the storm entire shed was stood the two blown off the Neither After the blown down, there mules, one on a door building, the other aside it. about thirty feet of received a scratch. On the Elmer Hoover farm two {large tobacco sheds were blown down. At the Norman Gruber farm the house roof as bown off. On the Coho farm, a tobacco shed 120 ft. long and a silo were blown down. Around Bossler’s Church Thruout this section of West Done- gal the storm was very severe. Con- siderable hail fell about the size of a hulled walnuts and as a result there are a number of wheat crops that will not be cut. The heads of the stalks were completely severed. The writer saw one man discing his corn down and will plant tobacco. Many - potato patches are ruined, nothing remaining but a short stem of the stalk. One farmer had all the vegetables in his garden completely ruined. At Harry Oberholtzers part of the house roof was blown off. At Henry Millers a tobacco shed and silo were razed. At Ira Longeneckers a tobacco shed was blown down, roof taken off another shed and the house chimney demolished. At Elias Garbers two silos were blown over and crumbled. At Martin Rutts the balcony, part of the house roof and the chimney were blown away. At Clarence Garber’s a tobacco shed and silo were destroyed. Mr. Kraybill's barn, on the Simon Garber tenant farm was blown down. At Simon Garbers farm a portion of the house was blown down. At Milton Haines farm, a tobacco shed and part of the barn were blown down. Every window pane in the house was broken except where the shutters were closed. At Morris Heilmans, on the Hoff man farm, west of Ramsey's the to- bacco shed is as flat as a victrola record. At Clayton Farmers nearby the to- bacco she was blown down. Near Ramseys At Leander Gantz the entire tobac- co shed was demolished, At Norman Hersheys two big to- bacco sheds were blown down. On the brubaker farm a tobacco shed was blown down. On the Harvey Souders farm the west side of his tobacco shed was wrecked and his corn so badly cut by hail that he plowed it down and will plant tobacco in the field. Worst Storm Ever In conversation with many of the oldest citizens thruout this section, no one can remember of a storm such as this. Its nearest rival was the time the Columbia Bridge blew down. At that time it felled as many trees but very few, if any buildings. No Person Hurt A very singular coincidence is the fact that of all the buildings blown down, lumber carried about in the air, trees felled, branches blown a- bout, trees crushing houses on the Landisville campmeefing grounds, not a single person was hurt. Three mules and one cow is the animal toll. tment AP Weems BAYARD AND WHITE ON CHILEAN TOUR Two prominent Pennsylvanians will be members of a group of 22 American scientists and agricuttural leaders who will visit Chile this summer for the celebration of the centenary of Chilean nitrate of soda. Professor J. W. White, soil tech- nologist of the Pennsylvania State College agricultural experiment sta- tion, and E. S. Bayard, editor-in- chief of the Pennsylvania Farmer and a trustee of the college, will be the Keystone representatives. While in Chile the Americans will participate in several official functions in honor of the role ni- trate of soda has played in the de- velopment of world wide agricul- ture. The use of Chilean nitrate as a fertilizer began in 1830 when 850 tons were shipped to the Unit- ed States and Europe. In recent vears the annual production has averaged nearly 2,500,000 tons, more than a third of which has been used in this country. Highlights of the trip will include a reception by the President of Chile, visits to the principal cities and typical farms, and an extended fagasta and Tarapaca, in which are found the principal nitrate deposits a QE Ingenious Diet Test There is in existence an illustration bearing the date 1614 which proves to us that even so long ago there was an interest in diei. History tells us that one Sanctorious built himself a weighing chair so that he could see just how much foed he ate daily. This chair was an ingenious device connected with a high steel rod on which there was a movable weight. The weight was pushed over to equal the weight of himself and the food which he was about to eat. Then sit- ting in his chair he would eat until the chair dipped, when he would end his repast. Magpie Going to church op Sunday night is not the habit of but one In Long Gully, Victoria, Australia, did so. It perched on a seat near its owner. Its presence In the church aroused much interest am:cng the younger members of the congregation. Toward the end of the service the magple left the church and aws!ted its owner, In the strange it became confused, and while f+«lowing its own- er across a road In the dark was run over by a motor car and killed. Popular Old Tune The tune, “Listen to tlie Mocking Bird,” was composed by Richard Mil- burn. The story is that Septimus Wenner induced Milburn to whistle this piece while Wenner wrote it down. The song was afterward published by Mr. Wenner in Philadelphia in 1855. It is interesting to know that the 1853 edition of the song reads, “Listen to the Mocking Bird; Music written by Richard Milburn, Words by Alice Haw thorne.” Alice Hawthorne was one of the pseudonyms used by Mr. Wenner. BO In order that a pubilc sale, festi- val, supper, musical or any like ev- ent be a success, it must be thoro- ugbly advertised. Try the Bulletin man is more and more prominent place in modern life. The heartless rule of the individual first and always, has more humanitarian principle of the ministration in preventive tour through the provinces of Anto- | HEALTH TALK WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “The spirit of the brotherhood of occupying a given way to the good to the group. Welfare socie- ties, philantropies which aim to im- prove living, and scientific mass ad- medicine eloquently support this statement,” said Doctor: Theodore B. Appel, the Secretary of Health, today. “To detail the advance in gener- al sanitation and medicine would al- most require an account of the amazing progress that civilization has made in the past fifty years or more. Suffice it to say, that never in its history has the United States been such a wonderful and beautiful place in which to live as it is today Even so, tremendous progress could be quickly realized if a more gen- eral use of the preventive features would be displayed by the individual “For example, toxin-antitoxin for the children immunizes against diphtheria. But it cannot accomplish this mission by remaining in its orig- inal package. It must be administer- ed. More parents should see that this prevention is afforded their children. “In a more general sense, citizens could well develop a keener realiza- tion of the power of disease preven- tion. With health officials and doc- tors especially interested in prevent- ing disease and with a whole heart- ed and daily interests in this matter being exhibited by everyone, the great blessings of present day exis- tence could be made surprisingly greater. To this end the following suggestions are offered: “I. Annual physical examination. #92, Twice a year dentist. “3. Sufficient sleep, proper types and amounts of food, adequate daily exercise. “4, Care and life's activities. “5. Elimination of excesses. “6. And above all else, an every day determination to attain caution in all of tal and physical efficiency. “Science has done much and will undoubtedly do more to add to hap- | However, it is | whole | piness and health. now more than time for a hearted cooperation on the part of the individual in health Those who are not giving it, take notice!” — — Snake Held Sacred by Hopi Tribe of Indians Snakes would lead a care-free exist ence on the Hopi Indian reservation in Arizona if it were not for the white folks. The Indians would not think of harming a reptile. They are not snake worshipers, but each year during the month of August they hold a snake dance, in which real, live creatures are used, rattlesnakes and any other type taking part. This is a very religious observance, a- thanks- giving for past favors and a supplica- tion for moisture for their crops. One gets a better understanding of the devoutness of this prayer when we consider that the Hopls live in a very arid section of the country and depend so wholly upon their crops. The water is supposed to be stored in vast reservoirs in the heavens above and beneath the earth and the snakes are chosen as the est intermediary between the Hopi supplicants and the gods who control the waters. One does not wonder so much at the {a faith of the Hopis in prayers being answered when very often in the prog- ress of the dance showers come up. Many times the spectators get a good drenching before they can get down off the mesa or even descend from the roofs of the houses from which they have witnessed the ceremony.—Louise R. Marshall in Dumb Animals. Funeral Honors Would Have Astonished Auntie A dear old New England spinster, the embodiment of the timid and shrinking, passed away at a famous health resort, where she had gone in the last stage of a lingering illness. Her nearest kinsman, a nephew, or- dered her body sent back to her home town to be buried—as it was her last wish—in the quiet little country churchyard. His surprise can be im- agined when, on opening the casket, he beheld, instead of the placid fea- tures of his Aunt Hepzibah the ma- jestic form of an army general in full regimentals, whom he remembered had chanced to die at the same place and time as his aunt. At once he sent a telegram to the general's heirs, ex- plaining the situation, and requesting instructions. They came back as fol- lows: “Give the general quiet funeral. Aunt Hepzibah interred today with full military honors, six brass bands, speech by congressmen and governor and saluting guns.”—Pathfinder Mag- azine. WEDNESDAY, Man Could Live Forever AND could remain in strong health and mental activity all the time, there might be less need for Trust Companies, although even then they would find their useful- ness. But, man being of few days and prone to error, the Trust Com- pany has been invented to sup- plant the individual in those rela- tions in which certainty of life, judgment and integrity are impor- tant. This institution also offers a broad and liberal banking service FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TRUST CO. OF MOUNT JOY We Pay 4 Percent on Savings visits to the and to . maintain one hundred percent men-; interest. | Phone 5R5 | ADVERTISING Advertising and not competition is now the life of trade, according to the advertising experts who me? to attend the International Adver- tising Association convention. The delegates at this meeting heard a number of interesting things. Among these was the statement by Charles Stelzle, New York ex- pert, to the effect that if churches do not advertise their ‘“ware”’— spiritual upbuilding and moral betterment for both the individual and humanity—they cannot hope to arouse interest among the mass- es and fulfill the obligations plac- ed upon them as parties to the general spiritual movement. 0 oo Another speaker declared that “advertising is greater than any single moral force we know of to- day. Advertising brings about changes for the betterment of life itself, changes which fuse into the social and political life of the na- ion.” It is now generally admitted by economic forces everywhere that advertising is the most important development of modern business. And it is also coming to be realiz- ed that newspaper advertising is the best kind of paid publicity. In the convention just mentioned the delegates who were advertising ex- perts, agreed that newspaper ad- vertising affords the best publicity medium for the churches and all church activities. Advertising is no longer a theory. It is a science. And it pays. —F O R— GOOD CLEAN COAL Fill Up Your Coal Bin Now All Our Coal Prices Are Reduced For This Month We Give S. & H. Green Trading Stamps HARRY LEEDOM JULY 2, é AAS kn OOOO MOUNT JOY, PA.