The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 27, 1928, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27th, 1928
C O OW tic spirit of the new
SON voGue
HU


and perf
WAR
TAX OFF
EFFECTIVE
NOW
On Hudson and
Essex Cars
Hudson Prices
$1250 Up




Her advanced
fo thrilling new Limits
Hudson’s exclusive fashion of line, color and
appointment is adding thousands of beauty lovers
performance. Inthe new models a wider variety
of colorsare presented than ever before in history
and performance is advanced to entirely new
standards of motordom.
These are advantages responsible for the most en-
thusiastic owners and buyers in Hudson history.
E. B. ROHRER, Mt. Joy, Pa.
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
The Coupe
$1265
(Rumble Seat $30 extra
-—

: i as
to the hosts who want its supremely brilliant | cheese, a packed it
|
|





(On With Langhter)



Tyndall would quite likely return
it to the sender.”
to ship
a corpse. At the first stop he went
ahead to the baggage car to see |
that there was no trouble. He
stood by the box in a disconsolate
attitude and shaded his eyes with
The other fellow said—*‘Mr.

|
\
—
To avoid chartering a special car’
|
{his hand. The baggage man was


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0000000000000 200000000

Notice is hereby given prohibiting
the sale and use of fire works of every
description and the discharge of revol-
vers prior to July 3. Fire works may
be sold on July 3 and 4 only and dis-
charged Tuesday and Wednesday until
midnight.
We urge upon all citizens to be law-
abiding in reference to the use of fire
works.
H. H. Engle,
- Burgess
May 23, 1928
@





|
|
POPPER
eee
may23-6t @



Saving is Constructive
Saving now means satisfaction,
\ comfort and happiness in the
It will afford training



Ask for a Money Barrel
at our savings window
First National Bank
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Surplus $229,000
Capital $125,000

We offer every advantage to
encourage systematic saving.






Martin Bros.

No Grassy Milk
No Garlick Milk
No Sour Milk
We are prepared to serve you
with Fresh, Pasteurized, Clar-
ified Milk daily.
Will give you the best of
‘service in Mt. Joy and Florin.
sympathetic. ‘‘A relative?” he ask-
ed. |
better place.”
are mine.”
c
giving a young fellow advice. He
said—*“Even if she does rouge nice-
|ly, find out if she can cook. Two
can’t live on rouge.”
t
age over bachelors. “The meek
shall inherit the earth.” i
Ss
2
a good many
well developed but over-exposed.
|
“Yes, it’s my brother.”
“Well, you have one consolation.
He’s dead all right.”
A certain maid told her mistress
that she was leaving. The lady!
said—*I suppose you're going to a |per 5-8 basket and at .75 to $1.00
per $1.00 per bushel. There were
The maid replied—“Oh no, |
ma'am, I'm getting married.” |
A Florin woman inquired of her;
| daughter—*“Are those teddies you
| are wearing?”
Daughter’s reply—“Oh no, they
|
Harry Nissley, the down town
banker, says there is but one thing per pound and there was some
with which people should be extra- fancy sweet cherries that brought
vagant and that thing is COUR-'
TESY.

Two women on East Donegal
street had a conversation. One
said she don’t take any stock in
those faith cures brought about by
the laying on of hands.
|

The other said—“Well I do. I
{cured my little boy of the cigarette
habit that way.”
Up at Ellis’ the other night a
ertain newly married man was
By heck at last I'm convinced
hat married men have one advant-
|
|
Did you ever notice that a lot of |

guys who are against prohibition in | .04 per bunch. Rhubarb was in
public are against a bar in private. lighter supply and sold at .011-2 to
That goes for a lot of the “birds”
in this town. {

I am convinced that to date
ummer is all wet.
Nn |
It having come to pass that the |
rich man can’t obtain a seat in the
i Senate and it is equally impossible
| for a poor man to be elected Sena-|with Big Boston selling at .50 to
| tor, perhaps it might be just as well .75 per crate. Turnips sold at .25
to abandon the Senate.
i |
Heard an argument about the |
wonderful development of so many |
of our ladies nowadays and the |
writer wishes to add that he thinks | 1
of them are not only | with a few sales at $2.25. White blotting paper : ;
| potatoes were weak with South |OoVer the glass. The gl
Just read a paper in which the |
| printers made a slight error. They
| had the marriage licenses in the |
joke column.
She was only an artists daughter |

ment. This good preacher, like |steady, cows and all cutters weak, | always persists in alight
many folks, says seeing is believing. | 25.50 lower, bulk medium bulls
My version is that although I
ee people every day, there's no
mn
them,
The best way I know to avoid
trouble is to keep your eyes open
and your mouth shut.

I asked a certain lady here if
she thought it would be possible to |
have her husband make a speech
at our local club, She said—Heav- |
ens, no. . He can’t even address an
envelope without getting excited.
A WISE OWL
“
come
Farm fires, it is estimated, cause
the death of 3,500 people every
year and a property loss of approxi-
mately $150,000.000. Fires on the
farm are caused in numerous ways,
most of which are avoidable. Fires
caused by defective chimneys and
flues last year caused a loss of more
than $20,000,000. The careless use
of matches and smoking caused
fires which resulted in a loss of $9,-
000,000. Improperly installed heat-
ing equipment and careless opera-
tion caused a loss of $6,500,000.
el ee.
Provide Roosts Early
Roosts or perches should be
placed in the brooder houses by the
time the birds are four weeks old.
Pullets that are not crowded and
are roosting early thrive better and
will make better growth.

Phone 49R4 MT. JOY
june6-3m
9 4 :
of the nearby’ strawberries offered
on the Philadelphia market today.
Supplies were lighter with truck re-
ceipts totaling approximately 1,500
{crates, but the demand continued
islow. Price ranged from $2.00 to
$3.00 per 32 quart crate with fancy
large selling at $3.00 to $4.00.
There were some fancy Pennsyl-
vania berries that topped the mark-
|et at $4.50, according to the Penn-
Two fellows sitting on a park | sylvania and Federal Bureau of
bench the other evening when one | Markets.
said—*“I'm going _to drop a letter
in the post-office addressed to the
dumbest man in Mount Joy. I
wonder who they'd deliver it to?”
sold at .07 to .10 per pound with
| $1.50. Nearby sweet cherries sold
at .10 to .12 per pound. New Jer-
sey gooseberries sold at $2.50 to |
{$3.00 per. 32 quart crate while]
North Carolina blackberries sold at |
$2.75 to $5.00. Apples moved slow-|
The Produce and
Live Stock Market
CORRECT INFORMATION FUR.
NISHED WEEKLY BY THE
PENNA. BUREAU OF
MARKETS FOR THE
BULLETIN

Heavy rains affected the quality
Nearby cherries held steady and
12 quart baskets bringing $1.25 to

CAN THE FARMER PRODUCE

MORE AND BETTER WHEAT? Educating The
If we can raise a better wheat,
mill it into better flour and bake
it into better bread, the consuming
public will demand several times :
Pennsyl- | VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR
vania ‘consumes annually the flour| MOTORISTS FURNISHED THE
as much as at present.
from fifty million bushels of wheat.
It produces only half this amount
and if the Pennsylvania farmers
will but produce more better wheat
they will find a profitable home Vit 4s necessary to build roads. They
market.
Pennsylvania has the soil and cli-
matic conditions to produce a high- |cope with them is to be fortified
er grade of wheat. But to do this | with detour
more scientific methods must be
employed in the selection of the
seed, the preparation of the seed |weekly bulletin.
bed, harvesting and care of the
grain until it is delivered to the [troublesome to the motorists,” says.
mill.
The time is fast approaching |thing, these detours are mot nearly
when the farmer will begin the p,q as they used to be. As highs
paration of the seed bed for next
year's crop of wheat. First, how
deep will he plow? Has he a hard-
pan beneath the furrow slice?
What will he do to “preserve the
moisture for the growing season?
{ Second, Every ton of wheat sold
to the mill costs the farm from
which it is taken from five to six
dollars in fertility. Every ton of
0 1 | opain that goes to the s yards
200 pounds of limberger!ly and showed a weaker tendency. | S780 that goes to the stock ya
in the form of meat animals costs
¢ | Romes sold at $2.00 to $3.00 per
in a rough box and checked it for |bushel and Winesaps at $1.00" to
mand at $1.74 per 5-8 basket while
| delphia market today and sold at
| Strawberries were in light supply
| butcher cows $7.50-8.50, cutters
good reason why I must believe|g450-5.50. Calves weak to .25}Common
the farm on which it was fed from
one to one dollar and twenty cents
in fertility. Every ton of grain
that goes to the creamery or milk
depot in the form of butter fat
causes a farm loss of only 20 cents
in fertility. Can the farmer main-
tain soil fertility if he devotes him-
self exclusively to any one of these
activities?
In all three transactions there
is a residual consideration. The
Big Boston brought .50 to .75. straw worked up into manure by
Peas were in heavy supply with the animals contains nitrogen, phos-
A re hm pp. Wm ic acid and potash. The full
large varieties selling at .25 to .75 acid ane hots :
value of these plant foods is pre-
served if the manure is hauled dir-
ectly from the stables to the field
and spread evenly over the ground.
Uniform inerease in soil fertility
is not possible, however, unless the
manure spreader makes even dis-
tribution at all times. The beaters
on the manure spreader must never
wrap if even distribution shall be
maintained.
The Farquhar “Non-Wrap” Beat-
ers invented by C. E. F. Schaefer,
the York County farmer, have pro-
ven in the 20 tests and demonstra-
tions held in Lancaster, Lebanon,
Cumberland, Adams, Franklin and
| York Counties that when assisted
by the 16-point pulverizer, they
will produce an even distribution
no matter what kind or the condi-
tion of the manure. Among the
five hundred nineteen farmers at-
tendine these demonstrations not
one had an adverse criticism to
make regarding the spreader or its
efficient and even distribution, but
all were enthusiastic in commenda-
tion of the spreader and its per-
formance as working a distinet ad-
vance in agricultural machinery.
Lime or calcium in some form
not only renders the insoluable min-
erals in the soil readily available as
plant food but maintains sweet
soil a desirable environment In
which the root system of the wheat
may obtain maximum development.
A well developed root system pro-
motes stooling, produces a more
vigrous growth and matures the
grain so that the quality is enrich-
ed by added gluten. A lime sower
and manure spreader are indispen-
sible in producing more and better
$2.25.
Nearby wax beans met a fair de-
fava beans sold at $1.00 to $1.40.
Beets held steady at .03 to .04 per
bunch while carrots sold at .02 to
.031-2 with a few sales at .04.
Spinach brought .40 to .60 per
bushel and kale .25 to .30. Lettuce
was more plentiful and Iceberg
sold at .25 to .50 per bushel while
a few lots of fancy peas that
brought .01 to .02 per bunch, rad-
ishes .50 to .75 per bushel and |
spring onions $1.00 to $1.25 per
100 bunches.
The first homegrown raspberries
of the season arrived on the Phila-
.15 to .20 per pint. Sour cherries
met a good demand at .08 to .10

$15.00 to $16.00 per 32 quart crate,
and the market was stronger for
for the best stock. Most sales
ranged from $2.50 to $3.25 per 32 |
quart crate while extra fancy Pen-
nsylvania berries topped the market
at $6.00, according to the Pennsyl-
vania and Federal Bureau of Mark-
ets.
The recent heavy rains have re-
sulted in lighter receipts of nearby
peas and the market today was
stronger. Large varieties sold at
.75 to $1.00 with a few fancy lots
as hich as $1.25 per 5-8 basket.
Nearby string beans met a good de-
mand at $1.75 to $2.00 per 5-8
basket while fava beans brought
.50 to $1.25.
Beets were in heavier supply and
the market was slightly weaker
with prices ranging from .01 1-2
to .03 per bunch. Carrots were
rather scarce and brought .03 to
.02 per bunch. Radishes sold at
.50 to .75 per bushel and spring
onions sold at .50 to .75.
Cabbage sold at .50 to .60 per
5-8 basket and at $1.75 to $2.25 wheat. in
per barrel. Kale sold at .25 to .30
per bushel and spinach at .50 to
.60. Lettuce was draggy and Ice-
berg brought .25 to .50 per bushel
A weak solution of formalin
makes a very good fly poison and is
less dangerous than an arsenical
preparation. Three teaspoonfuls of
the commercial formalin are used
to .40 per 5-8 basket, squash at with a pint of milk or water Swiets
$1.00 to $1.25 and onions at .40 ened with a little brown ugar.
to .50. This poison may be used conven-
Sweet potatoes held firm but iently by partly filling a drinking
moved slowly. Most sales ranged
oy = with
from $1.75 to $2.00 per 5-8 basket
ing a saucer or plate, lined Ww
cut the same size,
lass is then
. : =n | turned side dow and a
Carolina Cobblers selling at $1.50 |turned ups ide down qu
to $2.00. Eastern Shore of Virgin- small stick or match placed i
ia stock sold at $1.25 to $2.25. the edge of the glass. When tie
MARKET: Beef steers firm with |solution evaporates from the
weeks advance, compared with week [ing paper, more will 1
ago .25 higher, all grades and
weights sharing advance, no choice



automatically.

but—boy what a crowd she can medium and heavy weights here, as alae Te
draw. plain light and medium weights | Another of life's unsolved mys
| predominating, bulk of sales $12.75 | teries is why, when u have d
Rev. Kercher and I had an argu-|.13.25. lls steady, heifers | swatter in your hand, a fl nearly
ng on Some
thing fragile. SRE
$8.50-9.50. Heifers $10.00-10.75,

Medium
lower, top vealers $16.75. : COWS
HOGS: Strong, .25-.50 higher, |¢ hoice
top westerns $12.00, bulk nearby | Good s
{Common & medium
| feds $10.75-11.00.
RECEIPTS: For todays market, | Low cutter
cattle 10 cars, 5 Chicago; 3 St.| BULI 8
Paul: 2 St. Louis; containing 335 | Good & choice (beef)
head, 1479 trucked in from local | Cutter, c« mmon &
| feed lots, total cattle 814 head, 23 | VEALERS
| calves, 123 hogs, 34 sheep. Receipts | Good & choice
for week ending June 23, 1928, | Medium
cattle 59 cars, 22 St. Paul; 12 Chi- | Common
cago; 11 Pa; 5 St. Louis; 3 Va; 2] HOGS
Ohio: 1 W. Va; 1 Canada; 1
tucky: 1 Del; containing 1879 head, Mediumweights
pied.

sheep. Receipts for corresponding
week last year, cattle 48 cars, 1]
Pa: 9 St. Paul; 8 St. Louis; 5 Chy-|
cago; 4 Ohio; 3 Va; 2 W. Va; 2 | Bran
Kansas City; 1 Kentucky; 1 N.Y;
1 Pittsburgh; 1 Texas; containing ; ]
1169 head, 1271 head trucked in, | Middlings
total cattle 2440 head, 631 calves, | Linseed
Selling Price of Feeds
| Hominy
Good $12.75-14.00 | feed 20%
Medium | Dairy feed 24%
Common 9.00-12.25 | Dairy feed 25%

EIFERS Horse feed 85% 55.50-56.50 ton followed by a style revue’ in
Choice ¥ 10.50-11.50 | Alfalta (regular) 45.00-46.00 ton |which models displayed the latest
Cood 9.50-10.50 | Alfalfa (reground) 48.00-49.00 ton creations In rabbit fur.
) \
{
a motor trip is to get all the in-
formation available regarding the
detours, as well as about the gener-
al route. This avoids delay and
inconvenience enroute and does
part of the service furnished to
brakes prevented a smashup in tHis
glass with the solution and invert-
error. A youth, driving slowly on
; out from |
| sweetie hi }-
the glass, thus renewing the supply | sweetie and while thus engaged al
{lowed his car to zig-zag across the
a


8.50-10.00
7.94-8.50 | the Keystone driver pulled to the
6.00-7.25 | side of the road and stopped, allow-
& cutter A the foolhardy passer enough
5 | others was responsible. If the Key-
2187 trucked in, total cattle 4066 |: 10.75-11.
head, 667 calves, 726 hogs, 295 | picking sows 8.00-10.75
Lancaster Grain and Teed Market
41.50-41.50 ton
i Shorts 47.00-48.00 ton|
50.00-51.00 ton |
51.50-52.50 ton |
61.00-62.00 ton | .
2 ton | dence, garage, a number of build-
61.00-62.00 ton | large feed building, and a storage
70.50-71.50 ton |house, all of which have been fur-
46.00-47.00 ton |nished by local rabbit breeders
Good 13.00-14.00 | ho © Feed 18% 47.50-48.50 ton without cost to the department. An
) 50.00-51.00 ton | interesting feature of the dedica-
54.50-55.50 ton | tion program was a dinner at which
57.00-58.00 ton rabbit meat was featured. This was
G5 5s | Gluten 50.50-51.50
663 Jugs 25 sheen: . { Ground oats 57.50-58.560 ton
Range Of Prices | Soy bean meal
STEERS | Cottonseed 41%
Good $13.0014.00 | py 50 Feed 16%







































































































































Motoring Pt
BULLETIN BY LANCASTER
AUTOMOBILE CLUB i

“Detours are essential as long as
often are a nuisance to the motor-
ist, but the best and easiest way to
| information before
| starting on a trip,” advises (the
Lancaster Automobile Club in its
“Detours always have been i
the Auto Club, “but as a general
ways have become better detours
have been improved, and today it
is unusual for a driver to come a-
cross a detour that is scarcely pass-
able, as the case in former days.
Particularly so is this true in Penn-
sylvania, where the State Highway
Department makes every effort to
have the detours in good condition.
“But whether detours are good
or bad, the thing to do in planning
much to insure a pleasant journey.
Information regarding detours is a
members of the Lancaster Automo-
bile Club and hundreds take ad-
vantage of this feature.
“Motorists naturally are anxious
to have their vacation trip made as
enjoyable as possible. There are
very few routes they can take at
this season without being confront-
ed with several detours, but if they
are fortified with information as to
the location, length and condition
of these detours they can avoid con-
siderable trouble and delay. .
“The day of haphazard touring
is over and the wise motorist, pre-
paring for a tour, gets complete in-
formation before starting.”
The startling week end toll of
motor casualties in Pennsylvania
and New Jersey prompts the Key-
stone Automobile Club to emphasize
the importance of care in the op-
eration of automobiles. There can
be no decrease in the number of
accidents, in the opinion of the
Club, “so long as reckless, careless,
hare-brained, incompetent drivers
range the highways.” :
“A member of our staff, a care-
ful driver with a record of ten
years’ operation without an acei-
dent, was so impressed with his ex-
periences last Sunday afternoon
that he turned in a report, showing
how boorishness, selfishness and
downright recklessness on the part
of other drivers had imperilled his
life not less than five times on a
two-hour trip. y
“His first experience was with a
motorist who rounded a curve at
high speed, on the left side of the
road. Watchfulness and go
instance.
“Twenty minutes later the Key-
stone driver took to the ditch to
escape collision with a car, the driv-
er of which was so busy pointing
out the scenery to a companion he
had no eyes for the road and ap-
proaching traffic.
“Aware of the danger that lurks
in the old ‘covered bridge,’ the
Club driver sounded his horn and
slowed to ten miles an hour as he
approached a bridge of this type.
To his consternation, a car emerged
from the covered structure, on the
left side of the roadway. Quick ap-
plication of the brakes brought his
car to a stop, allowing the other
machine to swerve to the right.
with not more than an inch to
Are.
“All these havvened within the
first hour. The driver figured three
narrow escapes was a full quota
for a day, but he was to learn his



the right, suddenly was imbued
with au desire to kiss and caress his
road, just grazing the Club driver
as he attempted to pass.
“Five minutes later the most ser-
ious of the day's experiences was
recorded. As the Keystone driver
| neared the bottom of a sharp in-
| cline on one of those ‘toboggan’
8 25.9.50 | roads, he saw a car attempt to pass
7.00-8.25
two others in the line of oncoming
traffic. The other drivers sense
the danger and speeded up, while
room to slide back into his proper
| lane.
“In every instance, lack of care
ation for the rights of


and conside
stone driver had not been alert in
the handling of his car, any one of
the incidents might have resulted
{in serious injury.”


A new rabbit experiment station,
under the direction of the Biologi-
| cal Survey of the United States De-
| partment of Agriculture, has been
| established and was recently dedi-
| cated at Fontana, Calif. The sta-
tion is in a beautiful orange grove,
and is provided with an administra-
tion building, superintendent’s resi-
lings containing rabbit hutches, a