The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 22, 1933, Image 3

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    MARCH 22nd, 1833
WEDNESDAY,
Radio Magician’s Best Tricks
In Listener’s Home








That venerable American Institution, the Family Circle, which some-
how or other got Icst in the shuffle of the Jazz Era, has returned with its
dents nicely hammered out.
. * . » -
Its restoration has been traced directly to the nishtly broadcasts of
radio thrillers which, served up to listeners in serial form, have added
hundreds of thousands of ncw recruits to the chair warmers’ brigade.
. .
Father was a man who could take his poker straight or leave it
he generally took it. Then one night while getting ready
for the club, he heard installment 8564 of that chilling, thrilling radio
mystery drama “Chandu the Magician.”
Ad * - *
Within 15 minutes he traveled from "Frisco to India and points East
and back to his own whistlestop and had learned how to make elephants
disappear.
* = * * *
Now he’s so deeply rooted to the chair in front of the radio waiting
for Chandu to tell nim how to fill a royal straight flush, that mother has
to dust around him.
- * * * *
He’s found that some of the greatest “magic” that Chandu has per-
formed was done right in his own living room. Keeping Junior and Sis
quiet for fifteen whoie minutes was one incredible feat, Making the cook
late for her date with the cop on the corner was still another.
* * * * *

As for Dot, the Debbie, the night that six particularly gruesome
murders were committed in episode 9632, Chandu got that bashful beau
of hers to propose finally. The living room lights were turned low. The
sixth murder was committed with more hair-raising shrieks than a
walking hamsteak makes when caught under the garden gate.
* * * * *
Which was the cue for Dot to throw her arms around the neck of
her Bashful Beau with well-feigned horror. “Lemme protect you always’
said the Bashful One gallantly, rising to the occasion.
* * * * *
And so they were married, Some magician, that boy, Chandu!

ROCKVILLE BEE WAS
A DECIDED SUCCESS
Saturday evening, was 2a decided
success, despite the inclement weath
er, an extremely large attendance
of patrons and friends enjoying the
splendid program appended:
Selections, Bye Bye Blues, We,

The spelling bee held at the Rock
ville school, just west of Elizaheth-
town, on the Harrisburg on

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Have You Met
+ The Lady Who Never
Reads The Ads?
GO INTO her kitchen. The shelves are filled with
familiar brands of soup and soap and foods of all
sorts. Her electric iron and ice-box have been ad-
So have her rugs and towels
and table silver. Somebody must have been read-
ing “the ads”. . . asking for known quality
Few women now are content to miss the mar-
velous comforts of the times. Almost every one is
planning to make next year easier and pleasanter
than this year. You read the advertisements with
and the most practical ideas about keeping house
—and about all other branches of the modern art
Naturally, your interest and your confidence grow
when you see the same product appearing over and
over again. Improved = better now than ever, but
an old friend, anyway. Something you can rely on
Follow the advertisements in this paper carefully.
They are full of interesting facts and useful ideas.
Lonesome Road Blues, Shanty in Old
Shanty Town, You Tell ’Em I Stut-
ter, Hand Me Down My Walking
Cane, Fit as a Fiddle, all by the
popular Red Rose Boys.
1st spelling class for children 14
years and under, taught by Mr.
Eshleman, with Miss Risser and
Messrs. Andrew Martin and Emer-
son Rohrer as the judges: 1st prize,
Junior Zerphy; 2nd, Jean Wolge-
muth; 3rd, Sarah Fry.
Selections, Put on Your Old Grey
Bonnet, When It's Lamp Lightin’
Time in the Valley, Return of the
Gay Cavalier, Echoes in the Valley
Just a Little Streak when Old
Friends Meet by Red Rose Boys.
A coon sketch by the Hollinger
Brothers of Elizabethtown.
Selections, Silver Haired Daddy,
Springtime in the Rockies.
Spelling class open to all, taught
by Simon Landis and judged by An-
drew Martin and Emerson Rohrer;
1st prize, Miss Mabel Eshleman;
2nd, Mrs. Gish; 8rd, Miss Landis;
4th, Miss Risser.
Selections, Somebody Loves You,
Home on the Range, Hold the Tiger
Waltzing in a Dream, by the Red
Rose Boys.
Coon Sketch by the
Brothers, of Elizabethtown.
Selection, Somebody Stole My Gal
by Red Rose Boys.
General Information class taught
by Emerson Rohrer, judged by Si-
mon Landis and Andrew Martin:
1st prize, Mrs. Christine Gish; 2nd
prize, Mr. Lloyd Weidman; 8rd
prize, Mr. Amos Hummer,
All prizes given were cash prizes.
Selections, Has Anybody Seen My
Gal, I'm Looking Over a 4 -Leafed
Clover, Scrapiron March, Pagan
Love Song, All American Girl, Rock
abye Moon, Who Broke the Lock,
Good Night Sweetheart, by the Red
Rose Boys.
The electricity at the school was
furnished Mr. C. R. Frey, the
teacher, through the courtesy of
Hollinger
| Weidman’ refreshment stand.
Mr. Frey wishes to thank all who
in any way helped to make the bee
a success.
a...
The Result
“1 won't wash my face!” said Dolly,
defiantly.
“Naughty, naughty!” reproved grand-
mother. “When I was a little giryp I
always washed my face.”
“Yes, and now look at it!”

License Tags Lock on Cars
The new motor license tags of Mis-
sissippi feature a lock which makes
it impossible for the tags te be re
moved from automobiles without their
being defaced.

Genius
“You crossed a carrier pigeon with
a parrot?’
“Yes, so that if the bird lost its
way it could inquire.”—Gazzettino Il-
lustrato (Venice).
KJ
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THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
POULTRY
FACTS
FOLLOW EIGHT “C'S”
TO BETTER CHICKS

North Carolina Poultryman
Gives Good Advice.
By C. F. Parrish, Extension Poultryman,
North Carolina State College.—~WNU Service.
The eight “C's” for better chicks
may be grouped as clean eggs, clean
incubators, clean chicks, clean brood-
er houses, clean range, clean litter,
clean feed, and clean management.
Right now poultrymen are entering
their busiest season and are looking
for the best methods to use in growing
healthy, hardy chicks which will pay
a profit. We do not know the best
way to grow healthy chicks, but we
do know a program to follow which
will almost invariably make for suc-
cess in the industry.
No one can produce healthy chicks
without clean eggs produced by hens
that have been blood-tested and found
free of bacillary white diarrhea. These
eggs must be placed in incubators that
have been thoroughly cleaned and
dried before the eggs have ever been
put into them. Then, every poultry-
man should be careful about the
chicks which he brings to his place
from some other breeder or practical
poultryman. Only strong, clean chicks
from disease-free stock should be pur-
chased.
The next step

is to have clean
brooder houses and place these on
ground where chicks have not been
reared before. Good range is also im-

Battered Barber

By DOROTHY DOUGLAS


© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate,
WNU Bervice
ATTERED didn't begin to express
the havoe wrought in Barber's big
frame, when they carried him off the
football field and swiftly to the near-
est hospital,
After they had finished with him—
the nurse and surgeons—Barber looked
out from his multitudinous bandages
with mournful eyes and sensed the
truth,
“No more football—for me?” he es
sayed a smile, “You've been over-
generous with your bandages, haven't
you?' he queried,
“Not more than you needed, my lad,”
said one kindly surgeon. “Aside from
a seriously smashed knee, you have a
twisted wrist, a dislocated collar bone
and a slightly cracked nose bridge.”
“But apart from that I'm quite all
right,” Barber's twisted smile hurt
the tender hearts of those nurses who
had helped the surgeons patch up the
battered player. ‘“‘Suppose I'll have
to take to addressing envelopes for a
career.”
“Or writing poetry,” suggested the
surgeon, “It's certain you'll never
play football again and—the country’s
going to miss you, my boy.”
The nurses turned away, Barber's
fine mouth, despite the effort he made,
was quivering. A football hero he
was and now he lay physically shat-
tered and rudely sundered from all
that made life interesting.
There was one, however, who looked
| upon Barber's plight with eyes that
had a glint of triumph in them. She,
the girl whom Barber wanted to
marry, had persistently refused to

portant. Tt is wise to grow out the
chicks on range where no poultry |
droppings have been spread and |
where some green crop has been |
|
Clean litter on the floor is
needed. Straw, shavings or peat moss
is good for chicks. Sawdust is poor.
The dole system does not work in
feeding chicks. Give them all they
will eat in such containers as the
chicks cannot foul or waste the feed.
planted,
Care and Marketing of
Quality Eggs Important
Caring for eggs until they are mar-
keted is an important step in produe-
ing quality eggs, it is pointed out.
Methods of caring for eggs are out-
lined as follows:
1. Keep eggs in a clean cool place,
free from all odors,
2. Prevent excessive evaporation of
moisture from the eggs by covering
container with a dampened cloth or |
sack while they are being held.
5. Clean soiled eggs with steel wool
rather than wash them.
Suggestions for marketing eggs of
quality are:
1. Market eggs at least twice weekly.
2. Secure an egg-candling chart from
the United States Department of Agri-
culture, for which there is no charge,
and learn to determine quality of eggs
by candling.
3. Do not market an egg unless you
are convinced that it is of good qual-
ity.
4, Pack eggs for shipping or deliv-
ery with the small ends down,
Fresh Air Essential
Fresh air is very essential for the
laying stock. Houses should not be
built to admit the fresh air through
cracks, causing draughts. Arrange the
ventilators so that the air can be
changed in the house at will. One of
the best ways of accomplishing this
is to have the windows so arranged
that they can be opened every day.
In the winter an hour or less would
probably be sufficient, but it is essen-
tial, even in cold weather, to allow
the house to be purified by ventilation.
For this purpose many persons are
using burlap screens which give good
satisfaction. Some breeders advocate
the open scratching shed, where noth-
ing but screen wire is between the
outside air and the fowl as they are
exercising during the day, Ventilation
shafts have not given the best satis-
faction.
Give Birds Good Care
Give the breeding birds a properly
balanced ration and allow them free
range in nice weather if you expect a
large number of eggs that will hatch
a high percentage of strong chicks,
Feeding Dry Mash
Three to four pounds of dry laying
mash made crumbly by the use of milk |
or water adds to the palatability of |
the feed and can be given daily to |
{
|

each 100 chickens. Some prefer to give |
the wet mash at neon and others in
the afternoon. Just when it is sup- |
plied does not make any difference in
the results obtained. In using either
lights or a erinmbly mash or both every
feed daily 12 to 14
to each of his 100 |
operator should
pounds of grain
hens.
Raise Turkeys Successfully
Turkey eggs can be hatched in in-
cubators and the poults can be raised
successfully with brooder stoves.
Growing and mature birds can be
yarded and kept away from contam-
inated soil.
set All Eat at One Time
Have enough chick feeders so that
all the chicks may eat at the same
time. A reel-type feeder four feet
long should provide for 100 chicks
more than a week old.
Inherit High Values
| had a
| athletes could not
marry a professional football player.
Perhaps, now that football as a pro-
fession had been snatched from him,
he would listen to reason and take up
some business which would mean a
regular salary and some kind of def-
inite future assured.
Marcella never quite knew whether
it was a touch of snobbishness on her
part or whether she dreaded merely
being the wife of the famous Robert
Barber,
“At any rate,” she had often said
to Barber, “I would much prefer to
love a man who made his living by
means of his brain power instead of
by Lis athletic accomplishments.”
‘You don’t love me, Marcella, or
you wouldn't mind my profession be-
ing what it is—it is perfectly hon-
oriable.”
So in the hospital Barber lay there
thinking over all that Marcella had
said and realizing that she certainly
richt to her views, Certainly
be called interest-
ing as a whole,
And as week upon week went by
and Barber still lay in the hospital the
time began to hang heavily upon him,
Tired of reading. bored with cross-
word puzzles, quite fed up with his
own inner resources Barber fell a prey
to depression,
It was his little red-haired nurse
whom he nicknamed Crimson Ram-
bler becas:e of her hair and her nat-
ural tendency to ramble happily all
over the place in search of amuse-
ment for her patients, who brought
him some modeling wax,
“It’s what love to play
with on a rainy day. Now you just
start right in and try to model me or
that bed post—whichever interests
you most.”
jarber laughed and pressed the soft
clay with fingers now sensitive to suf-
fering and strangely unlike his own
strong hands. As a matter of fact,
Parber had always had a secret long-
ing to model things but had crushed
down the feeling lest he be considered
a first-class nut,
And so, in another week's time,
there was a most amusing array of
tiny figures standing upright on his
bedside stand. Nurses short and
nurses tall—nurses smiling and nurses
glum—and a generous sprinkling of
white-robed surgeons and a kiddie or
two all joined in that curious group
of small images,
Jut above all
taken on a new
about him,
ually giving way to something akin to
fires bursting outwardly into
children
Jarber’s eyes had
interest in things
hidden
flame,
And that career of art, started in so
curious a way, was to carry Barber to
the very heights, for the little figures
standing so bravely there in the hos-
pital, held that In their workmanship
which only the master hand can con
tribute.
Marcella felt her heart beat trium-
phantly, for surely now she would say
ves to the question which Barber had
so many times asked.
 
It was through the Crimson Ram-
bler that the dragging forth of a
sculptor-to-be tock place, for in her
ramblings about she came across one
in a position to express
nurses, sur
who was well
a verdict on those little
geons and children,
And when they were carried care
fully away to the great one’s studio
for inspection, a tear squeezed through
the dark brown lashes of Crimson
Rambler.
Barber saw it and his heart gave
a great bound.
“Darling!” he cried swiftly and
seized the white hand hanging limply
beside his bed. “Would you have
loved me if IT had still been a foothall
player?”
“TI would love you if yon were the
h man.” Crimson Rambler ad
(1
EE
Start Maple Grove
+0 2 x
3 They will save you time an ; Qualities transmitted by breeding| Wild seedlings of sugar maple up
Neg y ’ y d money . and bring you & flock to the chicks include high egg [to 10 feet high may be pulled and
better things. & production; large egg size; egg |transplanted satisfactorily in the
shape, color, and shell texture; spring. In planting a sugar bush,
4 the trees should be set about 15 ft.
0 0 0
rags
LX
62042562 42.62.6262 0. 0s
PDD PUPP DDR ede deeded
freedom from broodiness; the fast
® | feather growth; freedom from pull-
o orum disease, commonly known as
8 B. W. D.; breed type, size, and col-
or; and health and vigor.
oy —— ——
Subscribe for The Bulletin





apart each way. Some persons
grow a sugar bush by planting a
row of trees along each side of the
road.
Cee
Patronize Bulletin Advertisers


2
TT
AI




EW people realize how serious is
the extent to which a compara-
tively small number of very
heavy trucks add to the cost of high-
way upkeep and construction, says
the Railroad Employees and Tax-
payers Association of Philadelphia.
The United States Bureau of
Standards has found that roads built
to earry three-ton vehicles without
undue wear would satisfactorily
meet the needs of 95% of all motor
vehicles now in use. To stand up
reasonably well under the wear of
four out of the remaining five per-
cent, roads of double this strength
are required; while to be equally
safe and durable for the remaining
one percent, consisting almost en-
tirely of heavy trucks, highways
three to five times as strong are
necessary.
In other words, one heavy vehicle
out of a hundred using the highways
requires a type of roadbed capable
of three, four or five times the re-
sistance to wear and breakage that
5 Cent
Or A Box\of 2 dozen...
5 Cent

The depression was grade
Lucky Strike, 15¢ ach
Camel’s, 15¢ each Xx
Old Gold, 15¢c each
\
Chesterfield, 15c each 2 5 C
Piedmont, 15¢ each
20 in Each'Rack
Wings |
Bright Star
Sunshine
White Roll

coanut Cream Eggs, 6 for.......
Esra 75¢
5 Cent'Peanut Butter Eggs, same price
t and Fruit Eggs, same price
would be satisfactory for passenger
cars and other vehicles of moderate
weights. Where such super-high-
ways are not provided, the heavy
truck rapidly wears out the roads,
greatly adding to upkeep and mak-
ing early rebuilding necessary.
In either case, the burden of taxes
upon farm, home and other property
owners is greatly increased.
In the State of Pennsylvania, the
Association points out, the total costs
of highway building and upkeep dur-
ing the eight years ended with 1930
was $867,000,000. Of this amount
the users of the highways paid in
license fees and gasoline taxes only
$324,000,000, or 37 per cent. The
remainder, nearly two-thirds of the
total, and amounting to $543,000,000,
was raised by additional taxes upon
farms, homes and other property and
by bond issues.
All bonds outstanding for highway
purposes are mortgages upon farms
and other real estate in the common-
wealth.
PAN’S BIRD EGGS, Ib., 10¢
Black and Colored
Bacon’s Light Peanut Butter Eggs
5¢ each or 80¢ a box
Jacob G. Hess’ Penny Cocoanut Cream Eggs
10¢ a dozen or 120 in a box for 75¢
Renny Peanut Butter Eggs, same price
..25¢
2 for
“EACH
1
1190
H. A. DARRENKAMP
3 Doors East of Post Office
MOUNT Joy, PA.


esight

YOU INSU
Proper, scientific examination of
Dr. Neilson W. Pinkerton, Opt.
Office Hours 8:30 to 5
Phone 2-0713

UR AUTOMOBILE, PIANO, HOME & LIFE, etc.
WHY “NO UR EYESIGHT?
Pes =n the application of
PROPERLY FITTED GLASSES cons eyesight insurance—
and comfort. That is what our service is. a,
Appel & Weber.
40-42 N. Queen St., Lancaster, Pa.

Insurance


mar.1-5
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For This Locality’s Complete News Service
Read—The Bulletin


A
|


CLARENCE SCHOCK.
© MOUNT JOY,PA. -, = “&












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