x THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. PUBLIC SALE of — ON THUERSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1924 of LuncasterfCounty, Pa., the under igned admini thereon erected are a LARGE BANK BARN outbuilding vation, ab most pro su farms inL: peach 5, ete. of never failing ing to view same prior to day of MARKETING BY PENNA, APPLE GROWERS NEEDED Pennsylvania grown | largest ! en markets in this State were more than Ir SR ee | double those of as revealed by the Bureau of Markets of the Pennsyl VALUABLE REAL ESTATE > By virtuclbf an Order of the Orphans’ Court, Agriculture. Last year 7454 cars of apples were which per cent, or 840 cars, originated the total | 6 | trators of t} estate of John G. Rest, will sel! a Public Sal 1 the premises, on the road leading from th Stite Highway to the former Nissly Mill, about 2 mi West of Florin, the following: in this state, while in Tract of Laf§d, Containing 115 Acres More or Less Situated 1 Mt. Joy Township, adjoining lands of Jacob K hn, A. L. Nissly, Jno. E. Eshleman, B. F. and P. R. R. Company. The per cent of these, or 8397 cars being Pennsylvania apples, re- | equal to the fig- | when Pennsylvania | the | f apples from | 1923 totaled | + 840 | were sold in STORY HOUSE t For Tobacco, Corn Barn and other This farm is in a high state of culti- 45 acres inalfalfa and one of the i ', Co. There is fruit OWL-LAFFS | BY eo OO. W.L (On With Laughter) 1s to result. The Bureau of Dairy- lof Agriculture has kept in advance {of these growing indestries by mak- | ing feeding tests of humerous such | by-products as fee¢ for dairy cows, | | Some of these f eds tested have {only recently been prepared in a| | commercial way. Their value as! | feed for dairy cows may be summar- | |ized here, | Christ Mumma told me that a oil fellow up town asked his wife why records a) | MORE BY.PRODUCTS USED | AS INDUSTRIES INCREASE | | New industries are continually be- | {ing launched, and with every one of | the m there are certain by-products | {produced which must be used in | ome way if the greatest efficiency ing of the United States Department Fish meal, which is made from | the waste in the canning of sar-| dines by pressing out most of the | and then drying and grinding the | residue, was found to be worth | are availible, water on the premises. ale, on the undersigned residing in Sale to commence at 2 o'clock P. Also on Bulletin the followi A 2: St g real estate: on ry Frame HOUSE - ing plant A GOOD FRAME STABLE outbuildinzs Situated on Mount Joy Bo yd in exe ce a fine home. Sale ot 7.5( terms mad: know n by John N. Hetrick, Atty ELI G. REIST, S he same day in the Evening, at the >, East Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa., 159 0 rooms with lath : HH. 10 rooms with Bath and Chas. S. Hrank, Auct. KATHARINE H. REIST, } {vear: S f these Administrators of John G. Reist, deceased | (year; most of thes EE SY i Sstate ji Eg ; i to ve Furnace Comfort for the Whole House 100 LBS. OF COAL FREE This Offer Gocd Until August 16 Order Your Heatrola Now This Free Coal Offer Makes It Worth Your While R10 og ii 1 MOUNT JOY, PENNA. A BE wr B= E1011 | The Modern Method of -iome Heating Uses no More “uel Than a { this State, i See This Wonder Heater on Display in Our Show Windows H. S. Newcomer & Son the white lead, finding it adulterated with non-lead pigments, According ice: 118 N. Prince St to Dr, James W. Kellogg, the Bur- eau’s assistant director, the offend- ing .product was sold in Harrisburg for nine to eleven cents a pound. Pure white lead, he said, is worth abont fourteen and one-half sents a pound. He pointed out that in- ferior white lead is usually sold for several cents a pound less than the best grades. -£/THING FOR POULTRYMEN BOOOOOOOOC DOG pounded leads are sold as “standard” white lead, This prastise is unlaw- ful, as the product must be labelled with the word “compound.” Paint- ers, and all paint dealers, are cau tioned against selling the adulterated nd misbranded produets, Xu lead. ed against all persons selling mis- branded or adulterated products. stalled on more than 3,100 farms during 1923, according to reports to the United States Department of griculture by farmers and farm women who, through the efforts of agricultural extension workers, were interested in demonstrating ways in which this convenience may be economically placed in farm homes and farm buildings. It is a good plan to thoroughly clean and disinfect the storage cel- lar, ove the old rotten fruit, ; oh 350 years and fines totalling $695,- iy wash or some disinfect- 014.93 have been imposed by state and federal courts on 1,012 of the &. 6620 persons arraigned in 1923, ant, 8 the room a thorough New York and Washington lead tall other states in supplying the | larger Pennsylvania markets with japples in carload lots. Records ob- | tained for three years by the Bureau how that th two states supply about two-thirds of the carlot apples, {Seventy per cent of the apple re- | ceipts in 1921 came from these two { in 1922 { l 2p balanced by more The cities showing the increases in Pennsylvani were Bethlehem, Johnstown, lelphia and Pittsbu zh, Receipts from Virginia soared (from 84 cars in 1922 to 464 last Her ( our d rote [her was a you lad named Who alwa; lo dainty and ec ¥ ei 1 b I r f1 I | esire to \p I Lancaster 1 res are be- there are | f marriage licens ic page. went through | [the Philadelphia market. West Vir-| ginia and Maryland likewise jumped, this one, If it takes two hours to a considerable proportion of the 327 cars from West Virginia going into to run back. Pittsburgh and two-thirds of the 234 Maryland cars being unloaded jin Philadelphia. Apple receipts Oscar Sheetz would like to know valk ten miles, how long will it take A young fellow who lives out {near Strickler’s church came to from Michigan totaled 113 cars, or town last evening wearing the loud- double the 1922 unloads: these con- {sisted of early fall apples, and the majority were sold in Pittsburgh, although Willkes Barre and Scranton {absorbed 24 cars between them. | Delaware apples appeared in the same quanity as in 1922. est necktie I ever saw. I said: | “What's the idea?” He replied: My auto horn isn’t working.” Jack Miller told another radio fan about | that he bought his radio outfit for ja song. The fellow said: “So did I oon aa | et Over 2300 cars of apples came |but the only darn thing I can get m [from the western boxed apple states|ofttimes is the we th mm | during the year. This necessitated freight expenditure of ove EB [$1,000,000 With New York fur. |} Bl. in the 31 per cent, and the marketing OHIO CONCERN PAYS FINE FOR SELLING POOR PAINT | Determined to wipe out adul-| { (terated and misbranded paints in| : : x7 ’ | it > : {fill up with water. When she’s the Pennsylvania Depart- | ment of Agriculture has prosecuted | the Brooks Oil Company, of Cleve- | land, Ohio, for selling so-called ! Department chemists analyzed Some of the reduced or com- 34 per cent of the carlot|m 15 largest markets, | f 11 per cent, it] ducers and | { center | ¢ lieve me her father is some slicker. He caught this same girl and the hired man kissing each other while sitting in the hay mow a few days ago and he said: “What’s the matter vith you two actin’ like that? Have you got hay fever? failure and the girl hasn’t been able to explain as yet. tho. I grew up a country boy and you can take it from one who knows. A hay mow as a spooning place has Dr. Kellogg explained that all 1924 model automobile beat seven pure white lead, as well as impure | different ways. zine oxide, reduced by addition of cheap, inert pigments are required by the State law to be plainly label- led as a “compound” in the brand or trade name, He said prosecution was recently brought in Philadelphia can ask any successful farmer any- where. for the sale of a so-called stand- | €0Trect meaning of a Ba fhelor of ard white 1éad, which contained less |: : than four per cent of pure white | Ing neat appearing man of wealth who has reached middle age and The Bureau of Foods and Chem- | €5¢aped matrimony.” istry is investigating all painting materials on the markets in Penn- . ron} : : cently disappeared. The father sylvania. Prosecution will be order- said: “That boy’s wandering in his mind.” Just then I interrupted him and said: “That’s all right, he’ll soon be back. He won’t go far.” TT —— Pa A Great Convenience Running-water systems were in- Prepare Fruit Storage 1 S Arts. He told me “any good look- er report.” I a be oni 1g 0 think that a nou ty p ( of th ito- obil re Sc ( ua v of them in t I 1 ho t I ol C ng I Is 0 i A re H, a Tv o 1 3 Wey boating on the I Gret } I 1 1 to tell wher 1 them drove of the boat : “There now, it will about an hour for her to ” nerly full we'll come in. and was teaching her to drive the car. He said: “And now we'll change gears.” She remarked: “I wouldn’t change them. The car seems to be running fine as it is.” Frank says he can’t see how they can get so dumb in twenty years. Well, she may be dumb but be- The fellow darn near had heart Can’t be too hard on that pair En if you doubt my words you + such a joke that the daily putting each day’s r on the com- € ma h: + So Mm anc Pk of Reports B A ( A tl nost | she didn’t fry a slice of that ham pound for pound 20 or 25 per cent | he bought. She replied: “Why more than prime cottonseed meal, | as saving that for your funeral.” although not so paratable. Can you imagine how happy he must, peanut feed, the residue from every tir he eats a home cook- cold-pressed unhulled peanuts,, was’ meal? | found to possess a nutrit value | of 74 per cent of that of prime cottonseed meal. Potato meal ially prepared was worth 78 cent as much as corn meal. potato meal appears to be almost as valuable as corn meal for dairy cows; but the maximum value that can be assigned to velvet-bean meal | is but 65 per cent of that of cotton- seed meal. Potato silage and corn silage were | found to possess about the same | feeding value. Apple-pectin pulp, a | by-product in the extraction of pec- tin from apple pumace, compared | with dried beet pulp, was found to be less palatabie and less efficient as feed. Hydrolized sawdust is unpalatable, contains but little nutriment, and can be fed only in small quantities. The maximum value that appar- ently can be given to hydrolized sawdust is 14.5 per cent of that of corn meal. Supplementing with cane molasses a ration already suitable is not economical. Compared with an e- qual weight of hominy feed, the | molasses appears slightly less valu- able. Molasses renders feeds of poor quality more paratable and in- duces a greater consumption of nu- | trients, a matter of nportance in high-producing eee Aer VIGILANCE AGAINST ANTHRAX | URGED BY DEPARTMENT | Cattle and sheep are most suscep- | [tible, but none of the domestic ani- | {mals are exempt. Anthrax is caus- | Philip Schock sold a new road-|ed by a germ which multiplies rap- | sis . , ster to a young lady out in Rapho Dutch Process White Lead, which | 2 was found to be unlawful, As a result of the legal action a fine has been paid to the Bureau of Foods and Chemistry, idly in the body, especially in the [blood, and produces poisonous sub- { stances which cause death. The | germs probably are most commonly [taken in with food, though they may gain entrance also through wounds. The symptoms of anthrax very greatly, according to the acuteness of the attack. The early stages usually are characterized by high fever, rapid pulse, and labored breathing. In the most common form of the disease there are also local external swellings or tumors. Death ensues in from a few hours to several days. Medical treatment is usually of no avail in acute cases. The most effective method of dealing with anthrax is by prevention. The pre- ventive measures recommended are (1) protecting individual animals by vaccination and (2) burning or deeply burying the carcasse of ani- mals that have died of the disease, so as to avoid infecting the ground. BR EK. Walked Five Miles Daily By wearing a pedometer, an Iowa I asked “Doc” Hollowbush the I spoke to a man whose son re- Just for dirty spite she didn’t . Cc ater then mest dnp oh M4 lyon varieties that are “true to A WISE OWL IS QF Many Sentenced in 1923 Sentences aggregating more than the aid of a member of the cooper- ative agricultural extension service of that State, she studied the placing of her kitchen equipment. After rearranging it to meet her particular! needs more effectively, her pedo- meter showed, according to reports to the United States Department of Agriculture, that the distance she had to walk in preparing one day’s|= meals was but 2.5 miles, exactly; = half that required before, leaving her, she states, more time to read, A recently married woman at|write, and sew. Florin said to her husbkand: “You don’t love me any more. I'm going out into the yard and have a good cry.” He said: “Please cry over the roses as they need a good water- ing.” for fruit men who grow their own seedlings and wish to propagate their stone fruit trees for next year. This method of securing your or- East Petersburg played a very good game on Brown's athletic field here Sunday, the river boro lads winning 3to 1 farm woman found she usually vale | ed 5 miles each day in preparing meals for her family of three. With rr ARN I Budding Fruit Trees The time for budding has arrived hard stock is cheaper and gives Marietta Won Sunday The All Stars of Marietta and 0000000000000 @ { @ @ ®) @@ Wonderful Growth! Last Friday, We Opened Six New Stores One in Baltimore ...,..., iui One in Centralia ....,,,.... '"" Wd. One in Dover ...,,... "7 0 ay N. J: Ove in Media...) SA eed Pa. Oue in Paulsboro. ........ 0000 N. J. And One Eig Combination Store in Delaware Gardens, N. J. This Friday, August 29, We Will Open Six More One in Pottsville ,............... One in Rutledge ,..... .. 00 Pa. One in Pittston .. eens hf aan Pa. One in Philadelphia ,....... 000 Pa, Ore in South Springfield ......... Pa. One in Cambridge ..,....... V2 Md. Just Think of It! : Tis wonderful growth is due to the increasing demand f Al CO Servic it means that more and more people are rea zing every day that it DOES Pay to Trade Vhere Qual- unts They I 1ing that their money goes further 1 an American S than elsewhere, Z 5s H ul Ives appreciate the thorough Quality of ASCO Products, and they see aving of money there is in hoppin U io I'WELVE Ne Stores within Two Weeks. It will | U Service to more and mor people, By or NTR AC CIRO TT - " ASCO GINGER ALE bot 10c Dozen bottle 8," $1.17. ASCO Sarsaparilla and ASCO 3 3 ¢ I n ] charge for bottles, and we urned., Asco Pure Grape Juice pt bot 23¢ FOR YOUR LABOR DAY PICNIC! Princess Prepared Mustard _ tum Te Princess Grape Jelly .... tum 10¢ Asco Pork and Beans .... .can 9¢ PottedMeats ..... .. can 5¢, 10¢ Cooked Corn Beef .... . .. can 23c Taste-Tells Mayonnaise . Jar 12¢, 24¢ Schlorer’s Mayonnaise . .Jar 15¢, 24¢ Asco Catsup iran aan big bot 121¢ Delicious India Relish .... . bot 15¢ ASCO COFFEE Pound 38c You'll Taste the Difference! Asco Evaporated Milk tall can 10c PICNIC LUNCH ITEMS! Imported Sardines . . .. ....can 15¢ (in Pure Olive Oil) Underwood’s “Sea Gull” Sardines big can 17¢ on tall can 14¢ fos ry PF tin 15¢ ASCO TEAS 1 Bb pkg 14c Five Delectable Blends. Choose your favorite. A Tea for Every Taste! MORE LUNCH SUGGESTIONS! Light Meat Tuna Fish can 15¢, 20c, 35¢ Asco Cider Vinegar . ...... bot 16¢ Asco White Distilled Vinegar . .bot 13¢ Hawaiian Sliced Pineapple big can 30c Hawaiian Crushed Pineapple . .can 23¢ California Apricots . .. 2 tall cans 25¢ California Sliced Peaches . big can 20¢ Asco Peaches (big halves) .big can 27¢ Rich Creamy Cheese . . .. .. ..+. 1b 2%c All Our Regular 5c Package N. B. C. Cakes and Crackers pkg 41c LOUELLA BUTTER Pound 48c Taste It! The Finest Butter in America RICHLAND BUTTER Pound 45c carton of 12, 42¢ Gold Seal EGGS Strictly Fresh EGGS doz 37¢ O01 Advertise the' “Bullet MOUNT JOY, PENNA. While You Think of It . That's the time to place your order for mext winter's Coal. Then when you need heat you will have Coal on hand. F. H. BAKER, Mount Joy @ 1 £42