The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 30, 1923, Image 3

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‘WEDNESDAY, MAY






American Dog Derby with a purse of
Miss Hutchison is herself one of the favorites
year and last year she drove for thi
annual affair at Ashton, Idaho, and is
in the Northwestern States.

BOOTH'S DEPARTMENT STORE
East Main Street,

EVERY MAN
Needs a Pongee Shirt. We have a
fine lot of Pure Silk Pongee—Japa-
nese make—that “fills the hill”? 32-
33 in. wide, per yard $1.89.
SILK AND COTTON PONGEE
36 in, wide, 65c.
OUR MEN'S 50c HOSE
is a winner. Perfect fit, plenty of
size, bright dressy finish. All this
and more is found in these socks.
They come in brown, black, grey and
white. Per pair, 50 cents.
GREY UNION SUITS
Are preferred by many men because
besides being a dark suit, they are
made of fine selected yarn and have
CONTESTANT PRESENTS WINNER WITH CUP
Miss Lydia Hutchison presenting “Smoky”
Gaston, winner of the
$600 and a silver loving cup.
in the dog classic each
s years winner. The race is an
one of the greatest events in sports
OE

Mount Joy, Penna.
EVERY WOMAN
Needs a Silk Sweater for cool even-
ings. We have just received a num-
ber of beautiful Silk Sweaters—Tux-
edo Style, belted, two pockets and
pleated back. They come in blue
and buff, brown and buff and black
and buff and are priced at $7.95.

plenty of strength and stretch.
Special Priced, 98c.
WORK SHIRTS
That give entire satisfaction to both |
wearer and seller. All we ask is|
that you compare these shirts with |
any on the market. They come in
plain blue and stripes. All sizes.
Each, $1.00.
DINNER WARE
Two new Dinner Sets have been
added to our stock of dishes. One
set has a gold band decoration and |
is made up of 100 pieces.
Priced, $24.50 a Set.
The other set has 2 gold band and
blue band decoration and is a 100
piece set. This set is
Priced at $28.00.
This ware is all open stock. Any

BLACK CREPE DE CHENE
Isvery much in demand. We carry
only the famous Pine Tree Silks—
the very best quality, so when you
tuy this' Crepe de Chene you will
know you are getting the best. 40
inches wide.
Per Yard, $1.98.
BLACK SATIN

piece will be sold separately.


26 inches wide, per yard $2.00.


oe usco”
United States Ti
ROBABLY hal
motorists of An
ride on Fabric Tires.
sands they have
“Usco” yearinand year
If there ever was a te
money’s-worth
qualifies--and to spar
Made by the n
U. 8S. Royal Cords.


Theyall like


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a
How Threshermen Gan
Help Gonirol Grain Moth
Bureau of Markets
Penna. Dept. of Agriculture

The threshermen of Pennsylvania
can assist greatly in placing wheat
production among the profitable
crops of Pennsylvania, first by in-
creasing the thresher outfits and
starting the work early, and second
by taking a greater interest and
pride in clean threshing and offering
good advice to the farmer on seed
selection when he finds the yield per
acre low and of poor quality.
The production of wheat in Penn-
sylvania during the crop year 1922
was estimated at 24,634,086 bushels,
or a slight increase over the previous
year, but because of the lack of
good marketing facilities, Angoumois
Grain Moth, garlic, and other Joore. |
ciating factors, a majority of the
farmers produced their crop at a loss.
From a tabulation of car ship-
ments from all points in the State to
Philadelphia and Baltimore where |
the grain was graded by licensed in-!
spectors, it shows that 52% graded
sample grade because of Moth infes-
tation and 51% graded garlicky.
Large Increase in Damage
The shipments have not been com-
pleted as to counties as yet, but some
of the counties, like Chester, York,
and others in the moth infested area
show a large increase in the damage
by this pest during the crop year.
Chester County, for instance, shows
859, of all its shipments Sample
Grade because of Moth and 919%
grading Garlicky; York, 639% of all
its shipments Sample Grade and
329, grading Garlicky. Franklin,
Adams, Dauphin, and Lancaster all
show a large increase in damage
caused by this grain moth, but the |
most alarming part of the investiga- |
tion is that it shows a spread into |
counties where, before this time, |
there has been no trouble from this!
pest. |
In a recent conference between |
Pennsylvania Department of Agricul-!
ture officials and agricultural exten-
sion workers from the Pennsylvania |
State College, a program was outlin- |
ed to combat the moth, and the fol-
lowing are some of the suggestions
offered to control the situation:

Production and Marketing
1. Barns cleaned of loose
grain before May 1.
2. Shock grain in field with
caps.
3. Thresh from field, if pos-
sible. If not practical, stack
outside of barn and thresh as
soon as possible; certainly be-
fore September 1.
4. If practical, bale straw.
This is advisable because it of-
fers less opportunity for devel- |
opment of Moth.
5. Bins should be made abso-
lutely air tight by lining with
building paper. Granaries should
be built separate from barns
where practical.
6. Fumigate grain at rate of |
at least three pounds (pints) of |
carbon bisulphide per 100 bush-
els of grain or five pounds per
1000 cubic feet of room or gran- |
ary space when bins can not be |
made tight. Place liquid in shal-
low pans on surface of grain.
Fumigate immediately after |
threshing followed by a second |
fumigation two weeks later. |
Bins should be held air tight for |
at least twenty-four hours after |
fumigation.
Mills and Warehouses
1. Artificial drying by heat is
the most effective method to era-
dicate Moth and all other stor-
age insects. Tt is recommended |
that commercial grain dryers be
installed in mills and warehouses |
where wheat is to be handled.
The use of such equipment will |
make it possible to subject the |
grain to a temperature of 125 |
to 135 degrees F, experience |
having shown that this is suffi- |
cient to kill all insect life with-
out effecting the quality of the
erain for seed or milling pur- |
poses. This method will also |
make it possible to raise the
grade of wheat by removing
surplus moisture.
2. The use of carbon bi sul-
phide in a mill or warehouse is |
not recommended because of the |
fire risk, the possible danger to
the quality of the grain, and the |
extreme difficulty of efficient fu-
migation of large quantities of |


FR .
Fi8 Tire
i JS. 58088






LF RE
AND
USE THE DEPEN
"APU
EAS
RANI
"JOSE YOUR HEADAC
DINE
GOOD FOR GRIPPE AND BACKACHES, TOO
NO DOPE —NO ACETANILIDE.
po
HE QUICK




GO
‘ Bottles

 
grain.
Threshermen can assist greatly in
{ this campaign if they insist on thresh-
ing out-doors from the field, or from
| a stack outside the barn. Investiga-|
Department of Agriculture, show
/ our Pennsylvania
low No. 2 Red Winter because of ex- |
cess moisture.
field and threshing early will give
wheat of high moisture content, to
be sure, but it is expected to over-
come any damage from this high
moisture by encouraging the mills
and elevators to install grain dryers
| in which the grain can be dried and
{the Moth, worms, or eggs, which may
| be present, killed, in one operation.
Cut and Thresh Early
Statistics show that the demand
for wheat by millers and exporters
is only 58.8% of the production be-
tween July and January, or an aver-
age of 9.8% per month. Yet the
producers in this State. to avoid
damage by Moth, are marketing ap-
proximately 85% of the total pro-
duetion in less than three months. an
overflow above the demand of about
20%, equal to about 5,000,000 bhush-
els each month. The mills are not
equipped with sufficient iy ca-
 
pacity to handle this surplw nd
consequently it goes for expa, [gt a
time when there is little deny’ <8 for
A x dur-






Circulation Makes Bulletin Ads Pay. Try It|siiember ususlly connses 2
aa
 
Red Winter Wheat.
ing the months of July, Augusi@cand
-duc-

 


[oa vs
i

Ey YVviavivy
= I
a=
| tions of the Bureau of Markets, State | ok
| that in normal times about 54% of |}:
wheat grades be-| b#
Threshing from the! {
’
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8. A.


Still Muddy Over There [



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sang have completed the con
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(Copyright, W.N.U)
Bill Blowhard's reputatiom as &
saxophone player is established






teers ren]
For sale—An automobile; go d.
PA | paint, tires in fine condition, looks || |
8. \like a new cas. |
|
|


A Good Spring Tonic Mixture












Spring
Fiction


&
WEN | Hows THAT
—
FEY, NEIGHBOR [ha 2
FOR A TONATO?] £4
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COME HERE QUICK
LOOKT WHATS OUT
“fis MORNIN’ J
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tion in price to the producer, result-
ing in heavy losses.
The remedy proposed by the De-
partment in the campaign to control
Grain Moth is, briefly, to cut wheat
early, to thresh early, and to have
the grain fumigated at once or run
through a grain dryer. These mea-
sures, properly observed, are the big
factors in producing a wheat of per-
manent grade. Where grain can be
put in storage on a specified grade,
either in mill or country elevator, the
drying plan is preferred since it per-
mits the farmer to borrow money on



 
’,
{his grain and removes the necessity |
of selling when the market price is |
unsatisfactory. l
In the movement to effect a more |
orderly method of marketing the |
Pennsylvania wheat crop, the coop-
erative enterprise of the farmer, the
thresherman, the miller and the ele-
vator operator is essential to success.
The construction of a few more
country elevators would also be of
great help in making it possible for
farmers to supply the mills with
sufficient grain to take care of de-
mands, but not in excess.











LEVIATHAN WILL BE READY SO ON
A few of the 2900 workers who reconstructed
5 A ¥: ad ~
AEDS LA
L_ STORES CO |
5) | SVR - Serid}
Where Quality Counts
AND WHERE YOU GET
THE MOST OF THE BEST FOR THE LEAST
 
 

Very Fine Ch 1b 9
Whole Milk +-I1€E€SE 29c
It's rich and creamy. Very “bitey’’—aged sufficiently to give
it the right snap.

Kraft Cheese (Cheddar or Pimento) tin 1214¢

Cracked Asco Gold Seal | Asco
C Pork and Oats i Corn
hi Beans Flakes
10 Ibs 25¢ 3 cans 25¢
3 pkgs 25¢ 3 pkgs 20c
Victor Bread Loaf 5¢
The loaf with a real home iike flavor.

Luscious Fruits at Temptingly Low Prices!
Gold Seal Sliced
PINEAPPLE
Big No 23 35¢
Sliced Pineapple
No. 2 can Z5¢
Asco Calif. Lemon) Cling
PEACHES
|
ig No. 234 {
BgNoan 2c |


Choice Calif. Peaches
big can 20c
Fancy Oregon Extra Fancy Calif.
PLUMS CHERRIES
Big No. 23% 19¢ Big Ne. 21 39¢
Reg. 10c Lima Beans 3 cans 25¢


Sweet and tender. Packed with all their natural freshnes
and flavor.
BUY THEM BY THE DOZEN SKIDOO
Octagon Soap 4 cakes 25c
P. & G. Naptha Soap cake 5c
Babbitt’s Soap ..cake 5c
Kirkman's Borax.. .cake 5%%c
CREAMY 1%
CLEANSER can 7 Cc
Cleans anything quick. Con-
tails glycerine and pure white
cocéanut oil in liberal quanti-

Ivory...... } t : 1
Lifebuoy... | cakes ties; which gives it a most pleas
Coaline. ... ‘3 for 20c ing, velvety profuse lather in
Palmolive. . J hard "or soft water.

IT MUST BE GOOD
When Hundreds of Thousands ofthe most particular coffee drinkers
Asco Blend every day of the year.
20c¢
insist on nothing else but
Asco Coffee Ib |
Good to the very last sip. Taste thg difference
4- %5-1b pk
ASCO TEAS %-lb pg 12¢ 2 Pkg 23¢
We have a blend for every tast@

MEMORIAL DAY SUGGESTIDNS!
Paper Napkins ..24 for 5c Asco Evap. Milk. ..... can lle
Pie Pio .12 for 9c Asco Grape Juice pt bot 19¢
Waxed Lunch Paper. .roll 3c Tasty India Relith ... .bot 15¢
Cooked Corned Beef can 23c Sour Pickles ..5.big bot 18¢c
Asco Dried Beef ......pkg 8c Portuguese Sardigies ..can 15¢
Queen Olives ....bit 10c, 20c Domestic Sardine#. .... can 5c¢
Stuffed Olives ... .bot 12¢, 22¢c Princess Salad Drejsing bot 21c
PRINCESS SUNSHINE SHORT BREAD pound, 25¢
hin Baking Co., fue bakery
A delicious cake




with a thousand i
GOLD SEAL FLOUR 12 pound bag 49¢
The best flour for Bread, Biscuits Cakes, and all kinds§of light
pastry. 1
OUR STORES WILL BE CLOSED MEMORIAL
DAY, MAY 30th \
Open the Night Before Until 9 O'Clock to Serve Yeu
MOUNT JOY, PENNA. |


ENGLANDER
WIT -EDGE. SPRING





Circulation Ma es Bulletin Ads Pay. Trv
the 8S. 8. Leviathan,
formerly the Vaterland, which is nearly completed, at Newport News, at
a cost to the Government of $8,500,000.
afloat and the largest flying the American Flag.
It is the second largest ship