The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 15, 1933, Image 7
il ‘WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15th, 1933 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. © ee FOR LeR® EEE inspection. EERE now stand on your own merits.” perous. ments. spend their money. 0000000000000 ©©) YOUR INSPECTION The merchant and manufacturer who advertise, ac- © tually are placing their merchandise before you for They invite your most critical attention S and an uncompromising comparison. And their advertisements, so to speak, say to their © products: “We have introduced you to the public— © If the manufacturer and merchant did not have con- @ fidence in their wares, they would hesitate to call at- 6 tention to them. For advertising rigidly tests the © maker, the seller and the merchandise. Business so tested, and found not wanting, is pros- © In the long run, you can depend on the man who ad- © vertises, as well as on his product. That is one reason 9 why people have found that it pays to read advertise- © It is through advertising that the excellent things of 9 the world are brought to the attention of those who © are seeking for the best and most economical way to @ Read the advertisements. They are news. © ® © © © @ CeREEe® © © @ @@ LEE @ QO LE @EE® © @EE@ @E® PEEE® Special for This Week We just received a fresh supply of Specials, Ib. . 25¢ Fresh Peanut Clusters, Fresh Almond Clusters, 354 Light and Dark Coated Almonds, Ib........... .50¢ A full supply of Bachman Chocolates Lucky Strike, 15¢c each | 2 for 25c 20 in Each Pack Wings | EACH a i 10c¢ H. A. DARRENKAMP White Roll 3 Doors East of Post Office MOUNT JOY, PA. Camel’s, 15¢c each Old Gold, 15c each Chesterfield, 15¢c each \ Piedmont, 15¢c each Store and Dwelling A 2Y, Story Frame House—2Y, Story Frame Store Building—Garage—Also Butcher Shop. Any person desirous of having a grocery store in a very good community should investigate this proposi- tion. Will sell the above with or without stock as pur- chaser desires. Possession any time. No. 440. Phone 417. Jno. E. Schroll, reat MOUNT JOY, PENNA. A EOP (0 A MOUNT JOY, PX oe % Announcing A Complete Radio Service All work guaranteed Prompt Service Prices Reasonable Estimates given free Call 5J George A. Shickley 219 Mt. Joy, St. MOUNT JOY, PA. | Not Just Another Pili To Deaden Pain But a wonderful modern nmedi- cine which acts upon the conditions which CAUSE the pain. Take them regularly and you should suffer less and less each month. PERSISTENT USE BRINGS PERMANENT RE- LIEF. Sold at all good drug stores. Small size 50¢. LYDIA E PINKHAM'S TABLETS FOR RELIEF AND PREVENTION OF PERIODIC PAINS CT ET YO Gl Dy Radway’s Pills For CONSTIPATION ROE What They Are: A mild reliable vegetable which does not gripe, cause distress or disturb digestion. Not habit form- ing. Contain no harmful deugs. What They Do: Millions of mea and women, since 1847, have used them to relieve sick ba nervousness, ous a tite, complexion Peis ig i conditions are At All Druggists Radway & Co., Inc., New York, N.Y. | WE HAVE QUALITY MEATS Krall’'s Meat Market MOUNT JOY West Main St. MOUNT JOY, PA. Produce & Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR- NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Market opening slow with liberal supply of all grades and classes of cattle on hand. Beef steers steady: 24 Virginia cattle averaging 1100 lbs. sold at 4.35. She stock and cut- ters steady. Bulls firm, Stockers and feeders fully steady with fair de- mand for the good quality; common and plain stock steers slow. Calves steady, to stronger on choice vealers general top 7.50-7.75; extreme top in choice select vealers 8.00. Hogs slow, about steady, big run; top on choice retail-small killers 525-550; choice Western hogs in carlots 5.00-5.15; re- locals 500 and downward. Sheep fairly active at stronger prices; the choice local lambs $7.25-7.75. No southern lambs on hand. Receipts: 2774; 208 calves, 2434 hogs; 54 sheep. STEERS Choice 4.75-5.25 Good 4.25-4.75 Medium 350-4.25 Common 275-3.50 HEIFERS Choice 4.25-4.75 Good 3.50-4.25 Medium 2.50-3.50 Common 1.75-2.50 COWS Choice 3.00-3.50 Good 250-3.00 Common and medium 2.00-2.50 Low Cutter, Cutter 1.00-2.00 BULLS Good and choice 3.75-5.00 Cutter, Common and Med 3.00-3.75 VEALERS Good and choice 7.50-8.00 Medium 6.75-7.50 Cull and Common 4.50-6.75 FEEDER & STOCKER CATTLE Good and choice 5.00-6.00 Common and medium 3.00-4.00 HOGS Good and choice 5.00-5.50 Medium and good 4.00-4.50 SHEEP Choice Lambs 7.25-7.75 Yearling Wethers 475-575 Ewes (all weights) 2.25-4.75 rere re Six Shooting Matches This week the Bulletin printed a lot of posters for shooting matches to be held by the Bainbridge Fire Company, at Bainbridge for a lot of turkeys, geese, ducks and chickens 12-gauge guns and factory loaded shells may be used. These are the dates of the matches Tuesday, November 28. Tuesday, December 12. Friday, December 22: Friday, December 29. GE Advertising Pays The farmer plants his seed and while he is sleeping the corn is growing. So with advertising. While you are sleeping, eating or convers- ing with one set of customers, your advertisement is being read by hun- dreds of persons who never saw you or heard of your businessand never would if it had not been for your advertisement appearing in this pa- per. nmr at Meer Burn Peony Refuse State College plant disease special- ists urge growers to remove and all the dead tops and stems of peony plants to check the ravages of blight Where the blight has been severe it will pay to remove the top inch or two of soil under the diseased plants and replace it with soil where peo- nies have not grown for several years, rr —— Feed Needy Bees To provide warmth in cold weath- er the bees form a tight cluster and through physical activity convert honey into heat. If food is short the bees should be fed sugar syrup made by dissolving 2 1-4 parts of granu- lated sugar in 1 part of water. The syrup should not be boiled. ret eee Grade Fuel Wood Grading of fuel wood for kind and size is important. If the customer wants one kind of wood the load should not be mixed with some oth- er species. Some hardwood species are twice as desirable for heating as | soft woods. mill A ices Reduce Garden Insects Fall plowing of the garden will help to cut down the insect popula- tion of 1934. SLIMMING DIET Here is a other of tie weight reducing menus prepared for this paper by Dr, Shiriey W. Wynne, Commissioner of Health of New York City, Adjust the diet to your needs by taking amaller or larger portions of the food in- dieatad in plain type. De not change the quantities of the foods in bold face type. These are the protective foods, and must he taken as indicated. BREAKFAST Orange Juice 1 siiey i * Culfes k « i " ne 5 I H 1.2 cup - i 1 them dre HN) 1 glass @ miik 150 DINNER reani of celary soup 10M ‘ wh lalls with 2 1/2 omsto sauce aden xX “plad (1 2 cup grated raw beets with 1 (hap. belled dressing—1 emiom) 130 1 slice watermelon 15 150 i glass of milk .. Don't try te reduce too fast. A quarter of @ pound a day is enough. | | | | { | | | { { | { motor np to the country { } | ¥: | | me where your family lives—all ahout | them At Her Best By ALICE DUANE ®, by MeClure Ne waspaper Syndicate WNU Service “\\/ ELL, I just won't go,” Hot, rebellions tears stung Lynn Atwater's hig gray eyes. “I won't go I can't go!” She glanced again at the letter In her clenched hands, It was from her aunt. And Aunt Matty, Lynn had to admit, was doing her share of things— cooking and sewing, cleaning, washing and Ironing, for Lynn's younger sister and brother. No matter how much money Lynn could give her, she could never repay Aunt Matty fer the love and attention she had given Betty and Jack. : Aunt Matty never fell down on her Job. Lynn kept up her end, too. She sent every cent she could spare to the little country town where Aunt Matty and the youngsters lived. But what is a good income for one isn't a very adequate income for three, It took a lot of serimping on Lynn's part to keep Betty and Jack going, even with Aunt Mary's generous help. The letter in Lynn's hands, beneath its amusing recital of family doings, showed real need for more money Jack was growing so fast that he was just walking ont of al wrote Aunt Matty. They were eating in the kitchen—the dining room ceiling was cracked. Mr. Mitcham, who had come to look at it, had said it must be replastered, Well, thought Lynn, Aunt Matty had always had enough to live nicely and keep her little house in beautiful con- dition. She must be spending heaps on Jack and PBetty—she was, of course, in spite of the best Lynn could do. So she wouldn't go. It all came back to the sume decision. She couldn't go. And probably she'd live, and live, and live, and then die, an old maid. For weeks Lynn had been saving a bit here, a bit there. Enough, she had hoped, so that she might accept Elise Carlton's invitation to a house party in August at her father's Adirondack camp. Elise had been one of Lynn's friends at college. It seemed strange to Lynn that. Elise still had another vear of college before her. In her hol- idays at home, this last vear, Elise had looked Lynn up and had enter tained her at dinner several times at her Park avenue apartment. There Lynn had met Rarton Stark. And. Elise had said, Barton was to be a guest at the same house party to which Lynn was invited. Barton was good looking, rich and about thirty, with charming manners. He had showed interest in Lynn. But he had never looked her up. The thought of meeting him at Elise’s house party had helped Lynn through the hot, grinding work of July. And now she couldn't go. Even if she let Elise buy her railroad ticket—and Elise had put the thing so tactfully that Lynn could hardly refuse—she must have money for clothes. Now she knew there would be no money for clothes, and that the house party was off, with all its possibilities. two letters—one to Elise, saving that duty, horrid duty, had interfered with her vacation plans: she had decided she just must spend the whole of her short two weeks in the country; the other letter to Aunt Matty, enclosing a check for all her saved-up vacation money. “And be sure you have the new ceiling up by the time T come home, [I've decided to spend all my vacation with you,” she added, “and I'd hate to have the ceiling fall on my head.” The rest of the summer was insuf- ferably hot to Lynn, without the al luring prospect of the house party be And the night before her vacation began—Friday night—she felt utterly discouraged and unhappy. She was pressing and packing such his clothes, fore her. shreds of a wardrobe as she had, when | her doorbell rang She pushed the button that opened | the front door. and then waited im patiently at the head of the stairs for | bounding up ! her visitor. And there. the. stairs. was Barton Stark The shabby little room disappeared | ~for Lynn. Jarton saw it, in all its significance. But in its midst he saw Lynn, flushed and tremulous as she welcomed him, trying not to show too great surprise and pleasure. “You see, I was at Elise's camp.” 3arton talked in a practical, matter-of fact voice, and gradually Lynn's em harrassment disappeared. “And 1 ex pected you were coming tomorrow But she told me vou weren't coming So here 1 am!” He walked over te Lynn's one win dow and gazed from it as if it had looked out over a beautiful garden or | the sea instead »f a cluttered city “It's a lovely night,” he exulted ‘Let's go have dinner. now Then you come back and finish packing and get And in the morning let's Elise told a good sleep Is there any sort of a hotel or | inn there?” i White Horse. breathed Lynn Mitcham keeps it. The But it’s clean.” there. And every “Oh, ves!” iwful. Mrs “Well, I'll stay | (day we'll see each other and we'll mo | i { or the youngsters and vour aunt round a lot—would they like that Lyon? “Oh, yes!” would you?’ Lynn's face suddenly lit up with a mile, ‘You're askine me?’ she re | torted } i | unbalanced { a day per cow over the cows getting | present ! Hassinger & Risser Elizabethtown, Pa. | prices the ertra cost of the balanc- | od ration would be 3 or 4 cents per ! i ee etl A re Balance Rations Pay In a comparison of balanced and rations cows receiving the former in an 18-week test gave} an average of 1065 pounds of milk the unbalanced ration. At cow each day. re Qe Patronise Bulletin Advertisers She sat down and wrote ! “Quite | QUIVERING NERVES ham’s Vegetable Compound. 98 of 100 women report benefit. It will give you just the extra living again, the help this medicine can give. When you are just on edge : « + when you can’t stand the children’s noise ... when everything you do is a burden...when you are irri. table and blue . . . try Lydia E. Pink- ergy you need. Life will seem worth Don’t endure another day without a bottle from your druggist today. Ble ECol lems placing your elsewhere. see us. arers of Concrete sills and Lintels. MOUNT JOY, PA. ‘rushed Stone. Also manufac J. A. Stauffer & Bro. | our en- «| SPEED! NOW and then you will want Job Printing done in a hurry. Because of our facilities we are in a position to get your job done promptly and give you the kind of quality you de; d. orde s Blocks || BULLETIN MOUNT JOY ; Phone 41J Lost Her Prominent Hips Gained Physical Vigor— A Shapely Figure. cause! Take one half teaspoonful pounds of fat have vanished. doesn’t convince you this How to Heal Bad Leg Ing it upward from the ankle to knee, the way the blood flows in veins. No more broken veins. more ulcers nor open sores. more crippling pain. directions and you are sure to helped. your money unless you are. How One Woman Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat Double Chin — Sluggishness If you're fat—first remove the Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water in the morning—in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—you feel younger in body—Kruschen will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get a bottle of Kruschen Salts from any leading druggist anywhere in America (lasts 4 weeks) and the cost is but little. If this first bottle is the easiest, SAFEST and surest way to lose fat—your money gladly returned. Fil Tell You Free Simply anoint the swollen veins and sores with Emerald Oil, and bandage your leg. Use a bandage three inches wide and long enough to give the necessary support, wind- 7 Ii TI | © Qp® of \ N\ / \ A 9 > “THANKS, HARRY. I'll be ready about eight. You know, I was beginning to think you didn’t like me because you never came around after our telephone was taken out. Now I understand You couldn't get in touch with me. Gee! I'm glad we have a 2 a ain!” S Columbia Telephone Co. 22 North Third Street COLUMBIA, PA. Swiftest and Best i RHEUMATIC No Z| PRESCRIPTION Your druggist won't keep 85 Cents EXPERT | REPAIRING JOHN H. MILLER | | | 48 West Main treet Phone 211) ‘WATCH and CLOCK MOUNT JOY, PA mar.30-t Pain—Agony Starts to Leave in 24 Hours Just ask for Allenru—Within 24 hours after you start to take this safe yet powerful medicine excess uric acid and other circulating poisons start to leave your body. In 48 hours pain, agony and swell- ing are usually gone—The Allenrn prescription is guaranteed—if one bottle doesn't do as stated-—money back. HOW ARE YOUR SHOES? DONT WAIT TOO LONG BRING THEM IN CITY SHOE oy ” MOUNT JOY REPAIRING CO. pa s Reasonable - THE BULLETIN! UNUSUAL USED CAR, VALUES 11932 Pontiac Custom 4-door i Sedan .... 1931 Pontiac 6 W. W. ton coupe with truck... ivi ian, | 1931 Pontiac Custom 4-door Se- { 1931 Chevrolet Sport Coupe | 1930 Pontiac 2-door Sedan { 1929 Buick Standard Coupe. . { 1929 Buick 2-door Sedan 1929 Whippet 4-door Sedan.. | 1929 Whippet 2-door Sedan { 1929 Buick Sport Roadster. | 1928 Buick 2-door Sedan.... | 1927 Oakland 4-door Sedan | 1927 Pontiac 2-door Sedan. . | 1927 Jordan 4-door Sedan 1926 Packard 4-door Sedan | 1926 Hudson 4-door Sedan... 1926 Chrysler 2-door Sedan 1 1930 Chevrolet 1l%-ton truck Stake Body. 4 speed. PHONE 233 Ciaran $565.00 REPAIRING Swiss Watches and | | ‘Small Wrist Watches Repaired Prompt Service and Prices Reasonable 72 DON W. GORRECHT 375.00 | MOUNT JOY, PA. 335.00 | 100] MILK, CREAM and 221 Chocolate Milk 135.00 | 125.00 With Quality You Can Taste . 265.00 BEST PRICES ON ICE ww ~~ Hallgren’s 85.00 | : =o Modern Dairy 135.00 | 269 Marietta Street Phone 101M 65.00 | MOUNT JOY, PA. 55.00 | MILK & CREAM AT CODE PRICES 275.00 | Electric and Acetylene WELDING R. U. TRIMELE | ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. |