The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 08, 1926, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JCY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
By Charles Sughroe
© Western Newspaper Union



 





SY (HY, THE VERY IDEA,
NN HENRY WHIPPEY, | DO LET,

SHE
© E



 
 



NES, AMELIA, WHEN
J] \¢ NEEDS GAS, |
GET To DRIVE IT 10
“A THE FILLING 7]
STATION

\ JESY LOVE
TO LISTEN


HOME, TIRED AND
HUNGRY AFTER \8
HOLES, WHAT DOES
SOUR BOLD, WET
CHICKEN SALAD
AND LETTUCE
SANDWICHES |




HAVE FOR ME
AT? NASTY,
DID YA EVER HEAR!
OF NASTURTIUM
SANDWICHES,
 

 


 






\ SEE TH FIRST DAY, |
WASNT GOING TO LIKE THIS
RURAL STUFF, 80 WHEN THE |Z.
OLD FARMER POUNDED ON
MY DOOR ABOUT FOUR O'CLOCK
TH' NEXT MORMING AN' SEZ,
"TIME TO START MILKING," |
HOLLERS BAEK, “MISTER, |
ANT GOY THE HEART TO
WAKE THEM POOR COWS UP
AT “THIS TIME O' “TH NIGHT."
 









 



TH' ITY. HERE |
BUST A $2 BILL
WIDE OPEN JEST
TAKING YOU TO
TH! STREET FAIR
AND @ARMIVAL
AN' THEN YOu
ME! YOURE OME
OF “THESE HERE






The Voice
MOU CANT FOOL ME, Z
EVEN IF YOU ARE FROM 4
REFUSE T' MARRY
>=












WEDNESDAY,
SEPT. 8th, 1926:


THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN
LANCASTER
Wingert & Haas
Hat Store
Hats, Caps & Gloves
So many kinds and styles that
you will not have any trouble
in being suited.

JNO. A. HAAS, Propr.
144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa.


oo


2%






















































fn
SUNDAY Lg! EXCURSIONS
ATLANTIC CITY
SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 12th, 1926
SPECIAL TRAIN via DELAWARE RIVER BRIDGE
All-Rail Route to the Seashore
Eastern Excursion
Standard Time Fare
Mount Joy '....... ci 7:05 A. M. $3.75
i. och deinen 7:14 A. M. 3.75
LAnCRSIBE icc oc isc serine ay 7:35 A. M. 3.95
Atlantic: City .............. Arrive 10:15 A. M.
Returning, leave Atlantic City (S. Carolina Ave.) 6:20 P. M.
Pennsylvania Railroad
The Standard Railroad of the World






Now—Put Your Cows
on a Full Schedule
This is the time to put your dairy cows in condition to
produce all the milk they can next fall and winter,
when prices are highest. Every pound of Larro fed
now will be paid back at a premium with milk in later
months Put your cows today, on a full Larro ration,
and they'll start the heavy milking season in condi-
tion to work on full schedule.
DANIEL WOLGEMUTH
FLORIN, PENNA.

The
Best
Heating
COAL
burned in furnace, stove or grate, than any other coal you can buy. A
trial will prove the truth of our statement.
F.H. BAKER, Mount Joy, Pa.
CHICA CH C9
We Guarantee
that this ends
carburetor troubles
It’s dirt and water in gas that cause
your motor to sputter and stall. Prove
it at our risk. The Alemite Gas-Co-
Lator filters your gas as you drive.
Stops both water and dirt. Guaran-
teed to end vacuum tank and carbu-
retor tronhles or your monev back.




SCH.O CHICO

Made by the makers of
the famous Alemite
High Pressure L
cating System.
EB. ROHRER, Mount Joy, Pa
LC)


EA Haircut
Every 10 Days
a formula for good looks _

LADIES’ AND CHILDREN'S
HAIR BOBBING
Agent for Manhattan Laundry.



|

GARLIC AND COCKLE
IN PENNA. WHEAT
One half of the wheat grown in|
Pennsylvania is shipped out of the
State, but to meet the consumption,
three times as much is imported as
is exported. Much of the wheat]
produced in this State is garlicky
and, as 90 per cent of the mills are
not equipped to mil garlicky wheat |
it must find a market elsewhere. |
Eighty per cent of the cars of Penn-
sylvania wheat on the Baltimore
market so far this year graded gar-
licky. The discount on garlicky
wheat ranges from 7 to 10 cents a|
bushel and the presence of only one
bublet in a sample of two quarts of
grain is all that is necessary to
permit it being graded as such.
More mills in Pennsylvania are
being equipped to remove cockle
from wheat but its presence affects
the grade. The discount ranges
from 3 cents on wheat containing
1 to 2 per cent of cockle to 11 cents
on that containing 3 to 5 per cent.
The presence of 5 per cent cockle
in flour reduces the volume of the
bread loaf one half, and gives it a
very dark color and a bad odor and
flavor. Farmers should exercise ev-
ery precaution in the selection of
seed wheat this fall te prevent the
contamination of next year’s crop,
for so doing may mean not only lar-
ger production but also a difference
of from 10 to 12 cents in the price
they receive. Seed wheat can and
should be absolutely free from all
other seeds. The germinatifn test
Quality—not
the ' deciding
should be very high.
price—should be
factor.

rl Qe
KEENER COMPETITION
AHEAD FOR POULTRYMEN
must pre-
Poultrymen in Penna.
pare to meet keener competition
from western egg producers. The
Federal-State shipping point in-
spection and the Federal Standard
Egg Grades have been adopted in
several of the western states which
ship eggs regularly to Pennsylvania
markets and New York City. This
is resulting in a more uniform
quality and increasing market pop-
ularity for western eggs.
Pennsylvania flock owners must
take the same steps if they expect
to meet this competition, State
marketing specialists assert. Many
eggs are now sold on the New York
and Philadelphia markets by con-
tracts specifying the Federal Stan-
dard grades. As a result the com-
petition which is growing stronger
each year favors the western pro-
ducer. Pennsylvania producers
meet the Federal specifications, else
they will be handicapped in the
markets and be obliged to take a
lower price for a large portion of
the 80,000,000 dozen eggs they pro-
duce annually.
The Bureau of
Department of
Markets, State
Agriculture, is at-
tempting to interest poultrymen
throughout the State in the adop-
tion of the Federal Standard grades
for eggs. Personal instruction in
grading is available wherever the
demand is sufficient to warrant it.
Circulars defining the Federal
Grades are also being distributed
to all interested parties. As soon
as the demand warrants, inspection
of eggs at shipping points will no
doubt become available throughout
Pennsy*vania,
AD) eee
FARM PRICE INDEX
ON DOWNWARD TREND

The general level of prices for
farm products declined 1382 per
cent of the pre-war level by August
15, continuing the drop which car-
ried it from 139 in June to 135 in
July, according to the monthly price
index of the Department of Agri-
culture. This is 20 points or about
13 per cent lower than in August
last year. This index of 132 is the
lowest reached in nearly two years.
Sma’l price gains in cotton ‘and
grains were more than offset by de-
clines in the meat animal and fruit
and vegetable groups. Farm prices
of corn advanced about 11 perv cent
J from July 15 to August 15 while
the price of hogs dropped about
eight points, With July 15 farm
prices, the price of 100 pounds of
hog was equivalent to the price of
nearly 18 bushels of corn, while
August 15 this ratio was reduced to
less than 15 bushels which is the
lowest since November 1925. The
farm price of rye increased seven
per cent and the price of potatoes
drapped nearly twenty per cent.
Of the more important farm
products for which prices have been
determined, only five are 159 per
cent of the price received by-farm-
ers during the pre-war period of
1909 to 1914, or equivalent to the
‘evel of wholesale prices of non-
agricultural products, which was
159 per cent of the pre-war level of
July. The five-year period, 1909-
1914, is used as the base of 100 for
the index of prices of agricultural

products.
EE
‘Consistent advertising always
pays.

Matters of Today
and Yesterday
Quakertown—Campaign is launch-
ed to raise $250,000 to build and en
dow community hospital.
Jackson—$168,822 contract is let
for constructing 22,269 feet high-
way in Little Mahaney and Jackson
townships.
Bart—$15,511 general contract is
awarded for building new high
school.
Mauch Chunk—Lehigh Valley and
New Jersey Central Railroads may
electrify lines over mountains be-
tween this place and Wilkes Barre.
Greencastle—Grandstand at King
playground, recently burned, « being
rebuilt.
Dubois—Operations resumed at
Kramer shaft of Northwestern Min-
ing & Exchange Company.
Reynoldsdale—New fish hatchery
will be located here.
Norristown—White way lighting
system to be installed on W. Marsh-
all Street.
Stroudsburg—Plans preparing for
$125,000 auditorium for the East
Stroudsburg State Normal School.
Washington—Bids opened for
hard-surfacing stretch of National
Highway between West Brownsville
and this place.
Manor—New office building
der construction on Race Street.
Rostraver—The new Pollock Run
bridge to be built at cost of $9,290.
Leechburg—Bids opened for 23,-
923 feet construction work®on the
road from Leechburg to North Van
dergrift.
Scranton—F, Wesel Manufactur-
ing Company, Brooklyn, N. Y., will
remove plant to this city.
un-

Seranton—$207,439 general con-
tract let for erection of new Elm
Park M. E. Church.
Latrobe—Incinerator plant will
be built at cost of $25,850.
Gordon—New truck purchased by
fire department.
Dauphin—Approximately $250,-
000 will be spent in plant improve-
ments and construction of new dam
in Stony Creek, by Dauphin Consol-
idated Water Supply Company.
Lansdale—Plans approved for
erection of new grade school.
Ridley—A store and apartment
building under construction.
Springfield—Bids opened for con
struction of new fire station.
Spring Mill—New Walker Bros.
manufacturing plant to be finished
early part of September.
Greencastle—John Cooper cuts
661 bushels wheat from acre and
a quarter.
Bell Telephone Company prints
1,300,000 telephone directories for
Pennsylvania, 65,000 more than
last year.
Bristol—Bids opened for erection
of mew 6-room Croyden school
building.
Brockway--Brockway Light, Heat
& Power Company making extensive
improvements to plant.
Belle Vernon—Factory No. 4 of
American Window Glass Company,
to be remodeled and changed into
sheet glass plant.
Waynesburg—Extension of rail-
road from Mathers to Waynesburg,
proposed.
Morrisville—33-acre tract on the
road between Morrisville and Yard-
ley, sold to subdivide into building
lots.
Stroudsburg—Monroe Hosiery
| Mills purchases additional land
{ along Monroe-Carbon Trail for a
plant, to be read for operation by
October 1.
Richland—$174,257 contract let
for 23,325 feet highway construc-
tion .in Richdand and Rockland
townships.
Prospects excellent for large
grape harvest in Erie County.
Lansdale—Improvements are be-
ing made to local high school build-
ing,
Scranton—Two-story
ment addition to be built to
ers’ National Bank.
Quarryville—Gelfand Mfg. Co. is
erecting cucumber pickling vats
here.
Allentown—Fairgrounds to be
used as public park.
Allentown—$300,000 bridge to
be erected at Steckel’s crossing.
Stroudsburg—E. Stroudsburg Na-
tional Bank purchases property for
addition to present quarters.
Smethport—McKean County Fair
was held here, August 31-Sept. 4.
Harrisburg—Bids opened for first
unit of proposed Soldiers and Sail-
ors Memorial Bridge to be erected
iin rear of State Capitol.
Renovo—Bids asked for grading
19 miles highway between Lock
Haven and Renovo, and nearly 72
and base-
Trad-

miles between Renovo and Sinne-
mahoning.
Belle Vernon—Improvements to
be made to Washington-Fayette
County bridge.
Scranton—Secranton Railway Co.
making survey for rerouting trolley
 


© hi
%

TREATMENT FOR
SEED WHEAT - ADVISED
Reports to the Pennsylvania De-
partment of Agriculture indicate
that there has been an unusual
amount of bunt, or stinking smut,
this" year in wheat fields in southern
sections of the State. In the last
three years the number of cars
Lancaster County wheat which
graded smutty at the terminal mar-
kets increased from 6 te 20 per
cent.
Farmers who produce smut in-
fected wheat suffer a double loss—
in both production and price. Dock-
age on account of smut, the minim-
um of which is 6 cents, may run as
high as 12 cents per bushel. The
presence of smut necessitates the
washing and scouring or some oth-
er treatment of wheat before the
grain can be made into a good
grade for flour. Local mills not
lequipped for treating smutty wheat
will not purchase it, for bread made
from the flour is dark and has a
{ pungent odor.
In contrast with loose smut,
| which appears conspicuously in the
{ heads just before ripening, bunt or
| stinking smut, is. not noticeably
{present until threshing time when
short fat kernels filled with a brown
powder with an - offensive odor are
found. These kerne's are readily
broken in threshing and the powder
which is the spores of the organ-
ism causing the disease, is scattered
among the healthy grains. Treat-
ment for the control of stinking
!smut is so simple that no farmer
can afford not to apply it to his
seed wheat.
An application of copper carbon-
ate dust is perhaps the cheapest and
easiest method of treatment. Be-
| sides, there is no danger of impar-
ing the germinating quality of the
wheat and the work may be done at
leisure time. The wheat and cop-
per carbonate at the rate of 2 to 3
ounces of dust to each bushel of
grain are put into a barre. or churn
and, after thoroughly mixing by
shaking. rolling or turning until ev-
cry kernel is coated with dust, the
seed is ready to be sown or it can
be kept in bags until needed.
Also, treatments with merecury-
chloro-pheno’ or formaldehyde are
efficient for the control of the dis-
ease. The so called hot water meth-
od, which may be used but is not
recommended for stinking smut, is
the only way to free seed from
loose or field smut. Circulars de-
seribing stinking smut and the hot
water method of treatment may be
had from the Bureau of Pant in-
dustry, Harrisburg, or from the
Pennsylvania State College, Pa.
SPOILED CANNED
FOODS RANGEROLS

|
|
|
|


Foods, especialy fish and meats,
in cans which are rusty, have an old
appearance or the ends bulged, or
leak: slightly, are unfit for consump-
tion and even dangerous to health.
The modern process of canning is
uch that, as long as high grade
products are used, freedom from
spoilage is assured, but foods that
have been spoiled or decomposed
prior to canning will not keep.
At this season of the year great
of food in concentrated
form are bought by tourists and
picnickers. Purchasers should re-
fuse to accept tins not in first class
condition and jobbers should refuse
not only to sell but a'so to receive
shipments showing any evidence of
spoilage, In general, canners and
retailers are cooperating in the
work for the protection of the pub-
lic health but this fact ought ont to
excuse any person from exercising
care in the purchase and use of can-
ned foods, especially during the
warm weather when danger from
improper handling and storing is us-
ua.ly great.
ptt Af Beinn
Save Leaves
As alfalfa leaves contain
two thirds of the feeding value of
to get the hay into the stack or mow
with as large a proportion of leaves
as possible.
rt
Disease Of Old Meadows
Land kept in meadow for
years is likely to become foul with
weeds of various kinds. The. intro-
duction of a cultivated crop and a
grain crop soon disposes of most of
the weeds.


lines, with view to relieving traffic
congestion.
Blairsville—Extensive repairs be-
ing made to Presbyterian Church.
Hummelstown—-Additional equip-
went purchased by fire department.
Williamsport—Preliminary sur-
vey made for new road between
this place and Montoursville.
Bell Telephone Company adds 6,-
000 miles new toll line in Pennsyl-
vania, New Jersey and Delaware,
Conshohocken—Contracts let for
asphaltic repairs of streets, to cost
$10,498.
Conshohocken—Speedy work be-
ing done on Whitemarsh twp roads.


about
the plant, an effort should be made |g

plea
“rubber heels”.
3
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT **

ELIZABETHTOWN, --. .-
N
oS
>
. BUICK WILL BUILD THEY

The Buick Valve-in-Head Engine now has
Resilient rubber cushions at every engine
mounting, absorb noise and save the
engine from shocks and strains.
Money can buy no finer performance
than the 1927 Buick offers you, no matter
how much you are willing to spend.
AS-15
AN NW
ATEST
1 C
PENNA.



&
J
+
Oo
Oo
x
JS
&
HK
x
x
Sd
Sd
x
+
x
+
0
+
0
x
x
0
x
+
O
+X
J
&
+
+
x
J
O
ao
a
0
Q
o
Q
Q
Oo
0


many |=

HOW ARE YOUR SHOES?
DON'T WAIT TOO LONG
BRING THEM IN
City Shoe
Repairing Uompany
50-52 S. Queen St., Lancaster, Pa.

“This Is SOFT DRINK TIME
Your Choice of About a Dozen Flavors at
5¢ PER BOTTLE
ALWAYS ICE COLD
CIGARS AND TOBACCO AT REDUCED PRICES
CANDIES
BACHMAN'’S 5-LB. ALMOND & PLAIN BARS
BACHMAN’S BROKEN BARS
MT. JOY ALMONDS AND PEANUT CLUSTERS
SCHRAFFT’S CANDIES
ALL FRUITS IN SEASON
H. A. DARRENKAMP'S
3 Doors East of Post Office

ALSO APPLES
Wholesale and Retail
AT OUR STAND. ALSO AT ORCHARDS.

Fairview Orchards
FLORIN, PA.
1



 
 

 
 
 

 

MOUNT JOY, PA.


Your Canning Peaches
Are Ready 5
 


aug, 4-3m


LI)
Let us fashion
your shingle—v. 2
AJ know how.
MILADY SHOPPE
70 E. Main, Street
Subscribe for The Bulletin.
A SURES