TR A CSA CUTEST BS 2 2 30 ol 3 Xe i be 3 - La - PAGE SEVEN inspection. and an uncompromising comparison. @ now stand on your own merits.” perous. ments. spend their money. P0000 RE YOUR INSPECTION The merchant and manufacturer who advertise, ac- tually are placing their merchandise before you for They invite your most critical attention And their advertisements, so to speak, say to their products: “We have introduced you to the public— If the manufacturer and merchant did not have con- fidence in their wares, they would hesitate to call at- tention to them. For advertising rigidly tests the maker, the seller and the merchandise. Business so tested, and found not wanting, is pros- In the long run, you can depend on the man who ad- vertises, as well as on his product. That is one reason why people have found that it pays to read advertise- It is through advertising that the excellent things of the world are brought to the attention of those who are seeking for the best and most economical way to Read the advertisements. They are news. 0000000000000 PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To Say This Week . Ich hob feel dorrich g’'mocht sidder un ich wore gore luders gronk, Esis ivver mich cooma mit freera, uns arsht os ich g’wist hob sin de kolda chills naixt hov ich awfonga shidala un es hut mich rum g’'schnart os de jacket knepp ob g’'floga sin. Ich bin ins bed un se hen g’shicked far der ducter. Are is cooma, hut my pulse g'feeled, noch minera tzung gagooked, mere ts- besser wara, un gli is de nochricht om barrick nows os der Boonastiel ware oldte fraw hut an hondfoll Sam Shenkelmoyer hut g’sawed es “besht ding in der weld” far der gick- ser ware mare-reddich uff de feese binna. En onery hut g'sawt hasa uffa- deckel uff de brusht; en essich-loomba um der kup, un “besht ding uff der weldt” far es freera, un so hen se fart gamauched bis se mich ga-blonsed hen g'hot. Ich hob mich nimmy farraega kenna os ich mich net forsenked un fabrendt hob, Derno is es tae maucha awgonga. Yader ebber hut grawd g'wist wos es “besht ding in der weldt” is far de gronket, un se sin ons ga-grider kocha. I do leever. Shofe-ribba. Old- ter-mon, Maderly. Rowda, Solvie, Wwindel, Warmet, Dorich-wox. Sorsa- fril wartzel, Olond wartzel, draw denka hen kenna hen se tsu ga- risht by am si kivvel full un mere ei- Candy Special SPEARMINT KISSES, Ib... 12¢ CREAM JELS, Ib... ......... bre 20¢ TOASTED NIBS, Ib. ....... Eo. Siig 25¢ MARBLE TOP FUDGE, Ib. .............. .20¢ MARSHMALLOW PEANUTS, Ib. .... Lin 20¢ mm rr Lucky Strike, 15¢c each ; Camel’s, 16¢c each | 1 2 Old Gold, 15¢ each Chesterfield, 15c each \ 2 Piedmont, 15¢c each 20 in Each Pack Wings \ Bright Star EAC \ Sunshine 1 O > White Roll C \ H. A. DARRENKAMP 3 Doors East of Post Offizc MOUNT JOY, PA. FARMERS, ATTENTION! Let us rebuild your plow shares—saves you real time and money, when both are at a premium. We have in the past 8 months, hard surfaced more than 1100 plow shares without one dissatisfied cus- tomer. Any make cast share cost but 35¢ to reclaim and will equal two new shares in wear. Ask your neighbor. Some other money saving suggestions which should appeal to you at this season— 5 .e New steel soles electric welded on 3 section harrow frames 34 inch thick $4.50; 12 inch thick $5.00 complete; Harrow Teeth lengthened from 3 to 5 inches, $4.00 per set of 25 teeth; Corn and Tobacco Plant- er Shoes laid at $1.25 each. We use Silico Manganese Steel on har- row teeth and planter shoes. With our modern equipment and low operating costs, we have increased our patronage to a 20 mile radius of Elizabethtown. For Electric or Acetylene Welding, General Blacksmithing. Auto Springs, Iron or Steel let us quote you on your needs R. U. TRIMBLE ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. Bell Phone Established 1916 Prompt Service Reasonable Rates Read—The Bulletin LARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. 4 j UMBER-COAL S20 EERE g'shit Now, mind you. yader fun den- na socha wora es “best ding in der g'numma wile ich mer net helfa ho ) ° Community Sale Every Fino oo rn 2% cooma don hov ich shunt es mowl uff g’'maucht we en yunge omshel, far es Near Mount Joy ledsht “besht ding in der weldt” der Until Further Notice hols nunner g'shit greega. Ich hob woll g’'wisht wos os “besht ding in der t g'wist os ich der gickser hob unis ~~ Baby Chicks, Fruit and net“grawd cooma mit der schwartza Merchandise buddle." Ich hob ovver g'shpeered os es net long asta con. De ane-un- C. S. Frank & Bro. denk yaders hots “besht ding in der weldt” si wella far der gickser ob- driva. un ich hob g'shpeered os es shtorrick tsum end gait. Gli hov ich WEN HAVE QUALITY MEATS Krall’s Meat Market Nest Main 8t., MOUNT JOY Closed All Day July 4th ga-drawmed ich ware dote un uff em wake noch em himmel. We ich on de deer cooma bin un hob ga-glubbed huts g’hasa: “Ware is drows?”’ “Der Boonastiel.” “We bisht cooma.” “Ga-luffa.” “Du consht net ri. Usht de richa un de hocha woo office hava un kenna uff gile un in carrages cooma kenna doh rh Ich bin room gadraid mit ma schwara hartz far tzurick uff de weldt. Uff em wake tzurick hov ich der Bench Har- rison aw-gadruffa un hob eme g’sawd os es kent nemond ni oona are daid rida odder fora. “Now, Boonastiel,” hut are g’sawt, “gev ich dere en blan, Du lust mich dich on de deer rida, un sella wake kenna mer oll tswae ni.” “Oll recht, groddle druff.” Are hut mich on de deer garidda un ga-glubbed. “Ware is drows?” “Der Bench Harrison.” “Wee bisht cooma?” “Uff ma gowl.” “Oll recht. bin di gowl drows aw un coom ri.” Es wore so noddeerlich we uff der ardt, woo dor efficeseeker der awrem mon on der deer fun sinera office ride un bindt ene derno owsa aw, os ich grawd g'wist hob os ich nuch net dote bin. De oldta wiver hen awver oll gmaened ich ware dote, un se hen mere es mowl uff brecha wella far a mere nuch mae ga-grider ei-shtitta, xr WANT AD awver se hen net kenna un ivver dem LOCATE TMG FHIDER, coomed der Billy Bixler ni un hut Oya Ere | g'sawd won der Boonastiel nuch net Use Our boi 5 gons dote ware don kent are ene tsu-m & SERVI dd 3 laeva bringa. Are hut en buddle foll fum Hullerheck sinera beshta keffer- bree cus sime sock un mere’s on de naws ghova. Es hut mich uff ga-bud- bled we en oldt barlow sock-messer un es hut mich uff ghucked mit ma longa “Ah-h,” we der Sam Stuck ols sawg- ed won are recht dorshdich is. Ich bin widder uff de feese un du waersht gli nuch mae fun mere hara. a Utilize Proved Sires The proved sire project of the agri- cultural extension service furnishes as- sistance to dairymen in working out exchanges of dairy sires. Some sires have unusual ability in transmitting high level of production to their daughters. Discovering these sires of merit and keeping them in service as long as possible is the objective. —— eee You can get all the news of this week thru the Bulletin. YT) LY re. es Pah REFRIGERATION J.B. Hostetter & Som PHONE 68 -— MT, JOY, PA. NEW HOUSE CHEAP—I have i 6-room House along the trolley at that I want to sell before April 1st Mas all conveniences and oil ac’) ‘ for a quie’ sale. is avo. 871 ip ray lise ino. E. Schroll, Realtor, Mt. Joy. nix fun der weldt g’wisht un ich hob | | | | | | | ( wa gride pilferlin gevva un mich $1.00 dawler gacharged. Ovver ich bin net hasket with Produce & Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR. NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Spinach brought higher prices to- day due to lighter supplies and a better demand, according to the Federal State Market News Service Most stock sold at 75¢ to $1 per bushel with a few exceptional lots higher and poorer as low as 35ec. Turnip tops brought 25 to 35¢, kale to 30c per bushel. The best aspara- 20 to 30c, and cabbage sprouts 25¢ gus sold readily at the unchanged prices while poor and white stock moved slowly. Very large was quot ed at $1.75 to $2.50 per dozen os ich dere der ledsht brief g'shrivva | bunch crate with a few exceptional hob. Ich hob en ghot—der ‘“gickser” | lots higher and poorer lower while large was bringing $1.25 to $1.75 and smaller sizes as low as 60c. Raspberries were higher with the mere der buckel nuff g'sphroonga Most stock selling at 10 to 13c¢ per ob ga-jumped on der holsonkel, Es Pint although a few brought 14 to 15c. New Jersey strawberries rang- ed from $1.00 to $3.50 per 32-quart crate as to quality and condition while Pennsylvania berries were selling mostly at $3.00 to $4.50 with a few higher and poorer as low as $1.00. New Jersey sour cherries to $1.10 per 12-quart loose stock selling at 6c per pound. New Jersey flat green beans sold grunk, un de leit sin by cooma. yader|at 90c to $1.25 per 5-8 basket with gagrider | a few higher g'hot os es “besht ding in der weldt” | stock was selling at si hut sulla. Gli hen se es bed umringt | and wax at 40c to $1.25 as to th g’hot un awfonga on mere ductera. De | quality. Maryland and the Virginia round 75¢ to while green $1.25 to the | green beans brought $1.25 to $1.75 | | | | Schwatz | Jersey cabbage brought wartzel. un olla onera sort tae os se Pr 9-8 basket weldt” un ich hob olles ga-dultich ei-| weldt” ware,, ovver der ullerheck huts drisich sart ga-grider hen awfonga nonner tzarra in mime mawga. Ich| | per bushel. Nearby peas ranged from 35c¢ to 85¢ per 5-8 basket with a few Telephones as high as $1. Parsley was scarce and brought $2.00 to $2.25 per bushel. Radishes sold at 75¢ to $1.00 per bushel. Nearby lettuce was unchanged with Iceberg ranging from 15 to 60c per bushel as to quality, although most sales were at 15 to 25c. Beets ranged from 1 1-4 to 3c per bunch as to quality while the carrots were selling at 2 to 3e, white turnips at 1 1-2¢ to 2c and kohl rabi at 1 1-4 to 2c per bunch. Rhubarb and spring onions brought 50c to $1.00 per 100 bunches. New 25 to 50c with Pennsylvania barrels selling at $1.00. Market. Beef steers and yearlings about steady with week 25c decline Bulk of sales 5.50-6.00. Bulls steady bulk of sales 3.00-4.25, the good to choice 4.25-5.25. She stock and cut- ters fully steady with Monday's average. Stockers and feeders about steady, bulk of sales 4.50-5.50, good to choice 5.50-6.00. Calves slow, and about steady, top $6.50. Hogs slow steady, choice westerns 5.75. Sheep fully steady, choice lambs 8.25-8.50. Receipts: 301 cattle: 8 calves; 6 hogs; 35 sheep. STEERS Choice 5.75-6.25 Good 5.25-5.75 Medium 4.50-5.25 Common 3.75-4.50 HEIFERS Choice 4.75-5.25 Good 4.25-4.75 Medium 3.50-4.25 Common 3.00-3.50 Cows Choice 3.50-4.25 Good 2.75-3.50 Common and medium 2.00-2.75 Low Cutter and cutter 1.25-2.00 BULLS Good and choice 4.25-5.26 Cutter, Common and Med 3.00-4.25 VEALERS Good and choice 6.00-6.50 Medium 5.25-6.00 Cull and common 3.50-5.25 FEEDER & STOCKER CATTLE Good and choice 5.00-5.75 Medium and good 4.50-5.25 HOGS Good and choice 5.00-5.75 Medium and good 4.50-5.25 SHEEP Choice Lambs 7.50-8.50 Yearling Wethers 5.00-6.50 Ewes 1.75-5.00 SUNDAY DINNER SUGGESTIONS By ANN PAGE Shas Sundays are play days for wage earners. Why should not the housekeeper have a restful and pleasant day also, even though hers is a seven day job! If her family will co- operate, she can plan and serve meals which require a minimum of time to be spent in the kitchen. Food stores are helping the house- wife in this matter and are fering foods which can be e and quickly prepared on Sur or prepared on Saturday for day use. Why not spare you during the hot months? The low ¢ and medium cost dinners sugzest the Quaker Maid Kitchen can be ; pared with little trouble. Fresh foods which will prove te ing this week-end are watermelon cantaloupe, new cabbage, green peas and lettuce. Ingred for salad making and dressing not be forgotten by the week shopper. Low Cost Dinner Pan-broiled Shoulder Lamb Ch Sliced Ham Boiled New Potatoes Pe Bread and Butter Cantaloupe Coffee or Tea M Medium Cost Dinner Lamb Chops or Veal Cutlet with Chili Sauce Creamed Parsley Potatoes Spinach with Hard-cooked Egg Mint or Apple Jelly Bread and Butter Tapioca Cream with Sliced Bananas Coffee Milk Very Special Dinner b wita Mint Sauce or Fried Chicken Boiled Rice New Pas Pickled Peaches Rolls and Butter Chili Sauce Aspic on Lettuce Spanish Cream Coffee Milk USES CHICKENS TO SAVE SUGAR BEETS Farmer Allows Cockerels to Feast on Insects. A Colorado farmer saved his sugar beet crop last year by letting his 300 young cockerels run in the field and feast on juicy worms and webworms which infested it. At the same time neighbors around him lost practically all of their beets to these destructive insect pests. When Le first noticed the worms moving in on his young beets, the World war veteran and former Colo- rado Aggie student pulled both brood ers in which the Leghorn cockerels were housed to the edge of the fleld and turned them loose, The birds spread out all over the field and followed along the rows, gob bling up the worms on one plant after another, the farmer told the extension poultryman for the agricultural col lege. It was much cheaper than spraying to kill the worms, he says. At the same time the young roosters grew rapidly. Not a single beet was lost to the worms, he says, but a few plants were destroyed by being trampled by the chickens near the brooder houses. This could largely be prevented, it is believed, by placing the brooder houses some distance apart, and perhaps not too close to the beets. It is suggested that other sugar beet growers might try the plan in con- trolling insect pests, It is recommend- ed that cockerels used for this pur- pose be fed a grain ration for two or three weeks to put them into condition for the market. Large flocks of young turkeys have been used to control al- falfa webworms in many instances. Keep the Cooties Off Biddy, Out of Henhouse Any ex-soldier can sympathize most heartily with the plight of a hen or a pullet shut up with a good infestation of lice to make things lively for her. The A. E. F. boys know how to get rid of their unwelcome visitors but unfortunately Biddy cannot “read her her shirt.” Neither can she dip clothes in hot water or use a flat- iron, It is easy, however, to put her through a delousing process which will leave her clean and free from vermin, Just a little nicotine solution painted along the tops of the roosts will fur- nish fumes which knock dead the lice that are on the birds. Experiments carried on privately and by experi- ment station officials, under the most carefully controlled scientific condi- tions, prove this solution to be almost infallable as a louse destroyer. If mites are present in the house, this treatment with the nicotin solution will destroy numbers of them. How- ever, in addition, the house should be thoroughly cleaned up and sprayed with a solution made up of three tablspoonfuls of nicotine solution to a gallon of water to which a cube of soap one inch each way, has been added.—Wisconsin Agriculturist. Summer Feeding Pays Flock owners sometimes feel that because their hens are not laying so much in the summer it is not neces- sary to feed them as well as they do earlier in the year. This {8 a mistake, for neither body condition nor egg pro- duction can be maintained under these conditions, says a writer in Successful Farming. Adult birds should be given careful attention as to feeding, since the maintenance of egg production will add considerably to the profits. This means seeing to it that they get a good egg-laying mash all the time and that this mash is supplemented by a graln ration fed at the rate of about ten pounds per 100 birds per day. An additional reason for feeding an egg- laying ration {s that it is impossible to cull accurately unless an egg ration is fed. The proper feeding of adults also serves to prevent a molt. The longer a molt can be prevented, the better. As a rule the later that birds molt, the shorter time {it takes them to get over it. Poultry Briefs A bantam rooster hatched at Lees- burg, Ga., {8 so small its owner keeps it in a bird cage. - - ¥ Grain is fed primarily for maintain- | ing the body, whereas the mash con- | tains the nutrients necessary for egg production. * * * The largest Asiatic roosters are the | abnormal giants of races in which the males that are best in flesh develop- ment weigh about 12 pounds. * * Massachusetts Extension substitute for “luck” in growing chick- ens “clean chicks, clean brooders, clean lands, clean feeding and water- ing, and clean worth- while program. * - The tobacco plant contributes still another valuable product to the poul- try keeper. It is a new nicotine com pound that is effective as a single dose flock treatment for intestinal para sites. Don’t confuse this with tobacco dust, which Is a repeat proposition. ————l Oe Tip Berry Canes The young canes of blackberries and the height where they should be “tipped | back™ in order to form low, branched | fruiting canes for next year. Pinch off about an inch of the tip of new black raspberry canes when they are 15 to 20 inches high and blackberry canes when 22 to 28 inches high. Do not tip red black raspberries are reaching raspberries, EE HEALTH TALK WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “A few days ago the papers noted the passing of a famous trainer of men —William Muldoon. His method was unique only in that it was unusual. And he made more than a million dol- lars out of it, What is more remark- able is that the price of his services, judged by the benefit accruing to the purchaser, was so small as scarcely to justify mention though it ran inte hundreds of dollars for each case. What he really sold was will-power—one of the rarest commodities on earth,” states Dr. Theodore B, Appel, Secretary of Health. “Men who imagined they were kings in their own right and thus above the rules ordained for lesser folk, found their way to Muldoon'’s Camp in large numbers. Attaining unusual material success they falsely imagined that their bodies were secondary to their wishes. Thus, snubbing nature and lacking the moral stamina to snap into line again, they would enter the famous camp for reconditioning. In so doing, individual desires were checked at the door. The Muldoon discipline immediately took hold—and the results in the majority of instances were startling, “There was nothing fancy about his system. Nature merely was given su- preme and unalterable command. Te bed for eight hours each night, proper foods in proper amounts, rest, exercise and recreation as decreed by Old Dame Nature and the elimination of habits which tend to undermine vitality—that was about all there was to it. “The sort of ‘discipline offered by Muldoon to his clients is not only need- ed by sportsmen and overwrought business men, but by most of us. Of course it is easier to prescribe than ta do. However, to the extent that one is able to control his desires and habits so as to conform reasonably to nature’s dictates, to that extent is one likely to reap the finest prize the world has to offer—abundant health and vigor. Therefore it perhaps might be well for the majority of us to take stock of our habit deficiencies and truthfully admit the physical handicap to which they are subjecting us. Then, apply some of the Muldoon technique to our own lives for our health’s sake. Now then, how about that will-power?” —- Ee You can get all the news of this lo- cality for less than three cents a week through the Bulletin. FREE to Stomach Sufferers 25¢ Pkg. of Bell-ans for Indigestion (Offer Limited to 1 Week) If you are looking for “something better” for that gas, sick headache, heartburn, etc., take advantage of this offer. Bell-ans tablets are a non-laxative combination of willow charcoal, sodium bicarbonate U.S.P., carminatives and pharmacopeial flay- oring oils blended to give 60-second relief in ordinary indigestion and S5-minute relief in severe indigestion. The makers take the risk that you'll like this 35-year young tablet enough to prefer it. Six Bell-ans, Hot Water, Sure Relief! Bell & Co., Mfg. Chemists, Orangeburg, N. Y. Dear Sirs—Please send, without obliga- tion, one 25¢ pkg. of Bell-ans for Indi. gestion for trial. Name (print)... SOR emer City. i Poultry. | man W. C. Monahan offers as the best SPEED! NOW and then you will want Job Printing done in a hurry. Because of our facilities we are in a position to get your job done promptly and give you the kind of quality you demand. BULLETIN MOUNT JOY Phone 41) iss Watches and Prices Reagonable DON W. GORRECHT MOUNT JOY, PAN