WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28th, 1933 PPPOE ® FOR YOUR INSPECTION The merchant and manufacturer who advertise, ac- tually are placing their merchandise before you for inspection. They invite your most critical attention and an uncompromising comparison. And their advertisements, so to speak, say to their products: “We have introduced you to the public— now stand on your own merits.” 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- perous. 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- ments. x, 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 spend their money. ® Read the advertisements. They are news. QPPEE® Candy Special SPEARMINT KISSES, Ib.................. 12¢ ) CREAM JELS, Ib... ....... SnCu dns sas ..20¢ TOASTED NMIBS, 15....................... 25¢ 1 MARBLE TOP FUDGE, Ib. ............... .20¢ a a aa MARSHMALLOW PEANUTS, Ib... 20¢ Io clams dhe imi ct of Your poison-free blood will give you new ‘‘Pep.”” Mild - Relisble At Your Druggist Lucky Strike, 15c each Camel’s, 15¢c each Old Gold, 15¢c each Chesterfield, 15¢ each Piedmont, 15¢c each 2 20 in Each Pack i Cl a Ab acini op 5 | EACH right Star mm $1006 Krall’'s Mea Nest Malin St, ————————————— Nn H. A. DARRENKAMP. 3 Doors East of Post Office 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 stxfaced more than 1100 plow shares without one dissatisfied cus- tom Any make cast share cost but 35¢ to reclaim and will equal two neW shares in wear. Ask your neighbor. Some ot! money saving suggestions which should appeal to you at this seasons oe New steel soles Bectric welded on 3 section harrow frames 34 inch thick $4.50; 1» nell Wick $5.00 complete; Harrow Teeth lengthened from 3 to 5 inches, $4. r 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 With our modern Supe any low operating costs, we have increased our patronage to a 20™wile radius of Elizabethtown. For Electric or Acetylene Wel General Blacksmithing. Auto Springs, Iron~gr Steel let us quote you on yo eeds Prompt Service R, UU, TRIMBLE: Beil Phone Reasonable Rates ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. Established 1916 ¥ 3 5 As Yo recover. results will sw] Use Our ory mw CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. 2 B.Hostetter & Son PHONE 68 == MT, JOY. NEW HOUSE CHEAP—I have 1 6-room House along the trolley at flerin that I want to sell before April 1st. Has all conveniences and will sell for only $3,650 for a quick sale. This is Ne. 371 in my ino. E. Schroll, Realtor, Mt. Joy. BR: EY. —B3 rr PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To Say This Week Ich wore der unner dawg drows far- ella fisha un ch hob ebes g'saena os | mich ordlich hardt denka hut maucha. Es wora dri farrella in ma luch. Tswa glaena un en grosse. De grose, denk [large stock sold at ich wore de mommy fun da tswa glae- na. Se hut anyhow ocht gevva uff se of We en mooder doot uff era. kinner [$1.15 to $1.35 and smaller sizes as We ich ons luch cooma bin sin se drin room g’'shussa os we wedder-laicha. Ich hob mich hinich en bluck g’hucked un gawardt bis se sich widder g'settled | 5, hen un derno hov ich my fly uffs wos- | ser g'schmissa. Anes fun da glaena is | sold at 2 to bletzlich ruff cooma far de fly fonga. the spring onions at 1-2 to awver se hut so farfailed. Now en fly is nix os a pawr hinkle federa on en fish-ongle ga-bunna so os se gooked os | dency with the 5-8 baskets selling we en fetty oldte g’schmase mick. Gor nix goodeg far fish tsu fressa awver se gooka shae. Ich hob widder nig'sch- missa un de oldt mommy is ruff coo- ma, de fly bagooked, un derno widder shae tzurick un sich naiva era kinner g’hucked. Se hut g’saena os es usht en humbuck is awver se hut gawist ous arfawrung os es g'farliche bisnis is far um selly fly room.foola, un ich hob se sana era kinner en lecture gevva., Se hut, so ho ich g’tzailed, se obga- worndt, un ena ous galaiked wo easy od se in druvel cooma kenta won se' net era finger derfun holda daida. Se hen era tsu g’horriched mit so grosser ochtum os ich gaglawbed hob ich kent kens fun ena fonga. Ich hob widder ni g'schmissa un es hut kens sich dorrak- ed. Derno bin ich draw un hob en fly on my lime os gagooked hut we en eme. Sell hut de glana grawt uff- rearich g’mauched un se hen mit di-! vel’s g'wold draw wella, awver de oldt | wore now shure os es en hoax is un se is ovvich era kinner room g’schwunna | un era floosfeddera g’shiddled os won | se orrick excite ware. Ich hob saena de kinner mit era mommy, ariga so won se maena daida se wista besser, os wons shawd ware so en grosse, fetty eme full boonich fardt gas lussa--un es ware anyhow ken shawda far bro- veera—"“so bots nix so shots nix.” Iv- ver a wenich hut de oldt mommy en onera wake nows gagooked, un so g'schwint os en wedder-laich is anes fun da glaena in de hae g'shussa un de naixt minnut wore se in mime korreb. De oldt farrel hut ga-dobed os we en weedicher bull-hund, awver ich hob grawt widder ni-g’schmissa un ivvera wennich coomed de onner glae farrell ruff un ich hob era mowl ous-g'sch- litzed awver hob es not greeked. De mooder wore droverich. Ae kind dote un es onner gagribbled, usht wile se! g’'maned hen se wista mae os de mood- | er. Ah, doh wore en lessen. Yunga maid sin de farella. So gooka far flies. De mooder sawked. “Gebt ocht, dare mon isnix nutz, Si feddera sin shae awyersi| hartz is shtawl. Are will eich usht fonga. Doh is g’fore, un ware sich in de g'fore commed drin um.’ Horrich- ed now—lust ene gae.” “0 mommy,” sawga de maid. “arei is sd shae os en engel un so sees os hoo- nich, Es con nix letz si far mit eme awenich uff der shtrose room flirta. Dere sint tsu partickler,” un de wile od de mommy shlofed nemma se de on- gel. Won se net g'fonga warra don war- ra seanyhow gagribbled, un era loeva end mit druvel un sorga. Gebt ocht uff der mon won shaena feddera waerdt for en shtawla hartz | | tsu decka. EEE... APPLE TIME AGAIN? When every pool in Eden was a mirror Which unto Eve her dainty; charms proclaimed, She went undraped without a single fear or Thought that she had need to be ashamed. "Twas only when she'd eaten of the apple That she became inclined to act the prude, And found that evermore she’d have to grapple With that much debated problem of the nude. Thereafter she devoted her atten- tion, Her time and all her money to her clothes; And that was the beginning of convention. And modesty as well, I must sup- pose. Reaction’s come about in fashions recent; Now girls conceal so little from the men That it would seem, in name of all that’s decent, Someone should pass the apples round again. From Pathfinder Origin of the Sandwich The Earl of Sandwich was so fond of playing cards that he hated to leave them long enough to get his meals. So he ordered his food served to him at the card table. In grder that the plates would not interfere with the game the Earl had the meat served between pieces of bread. At least that is the story of the ori of the sandwich. THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Produce & Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR. NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Snap beans were in lighter supply this morning. Demand was good Market News Service. Flat green and the market was slightly strong er, according to the Federtl State Market News Service. Flat green beans sold at 65¢ to $1.00 while the good wax stock was selling at 75¢ to $1.00 with poorer as low as 35¢ per 5-8 basket. Maryland and Vir- ginia green beans ranged from 65c to $1.25 per bushel as to quality | bunches, Beets were quoted at 1 to and carrots at 1 1-4c to 2¢ per bunch with a few higher. Parsley and condition. Nearby peas were in very light supply and sold mostly at 50 to 7c with poorer as low as 25¢ per 5-8 basket. Asparagus was higher and very $1.50 to $31.75 with a few at $2.00 per dozen bunch crate while the large was bringing low as 50c. Rhubarb met a slow demand and sold mostly at 40 to 75¢c per 100- 5c, celery at 4 to Tc and le per bunch. Cabbage showed ten- a weaker mostly at 25 to 35¢ while a few were as high as 40c and poorer as low as 20c per 5-8 basket. Spinach was quoted mostly at 40c to 60c per bushel with poorer at 15 to 30c. New Jersey yellow onions sold at $1.00 to $1.50 per 50 pound sack. Bunched red radishes showed a wide varitation in quality and pric- es ranged from 25 to 75c¢ per bushel with a few exceptional lots higher. Nearby sour cherries sold mostly at 70 to 90c per 12 quart basket with a few at $1.00 and poorer as low as 60c. Raspberries brought 6 to 9c per pint with a few large at 10 to 1lc. New Jersey blackberries were quoted at $3.25 to $4.00 while Delaware stock was bringing $2.00 to $4.00 per 32-quart crate. Penn- sylvania strawberries sold at $3.00 to $5.00 and New Jersey huckleber ries at $3.75 to 4.50 with a few at $5.00 per 32- quart crate. Beef steers and yearlings fully steady with Monday's close. Bulls steady, she stock and cutters steady Stockers SL of 8 S| S| higher; loca Receipts: 409 cattle; 30 calves; 506 nope; 58 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 4.25-5.25 Cutter, Common and Med 3.00-4.25 | VEALERS I 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 5.00-6.00 | Common and medium 4.00-5.00 | HOGS Good and choice 1.75-5.50 | Medium and good 4.25-5.00 SHEEP Choice Lambs 7.50-8.50 Yearling Wethers 5.00-6.50 Ewes 1.75-5.00 | . A Bird Neighbor | Perhaps the best known of all | the birds in this series of sketches is the sprightly Wren, called offic- ially the House Wren. This bird is so well known that a description | seems superfluous. It is found ev- erywhere in country and town, and one cannot, in Spring and early Summer, find a place where its ra- pid, musical song cannot be heard. The technical name of this spe- cies, Troylodytes, meaning in Greek | : | —dwellers in dark places—fits the | Wren exactly, as it loves to hop around under brush heaps, build- ings, lumber piles or any other dim- ly lighted place, the object howev- er, being its love for spiders on which it largely feeds. The House Wren builds its nest in any inclosed place which is six or more feet from the ground. They use, of course, any box or house erected for their accommodation. Holes in trees were used hefore men put up boxes, but the queer and edd places in which nests have been placed would fill a volume. | The writer has in his collection a | nest composed entirely of rusty | wire which was built in a bird house. | It is a well known fact that the | Wren will fill, with nest, any cav- ity which it selects, and a case is on record of a bird which built its | nest in a barrel standing on end in a loft. It filled the barrel with sticks up to the level of the bung hole, through which it entered. Six chocolate colored spotted eggs are laid and Wrens always raise two broqds in a season. rr CQ When in need of Printing, (anything) kindly remember the Bulletin. | about 16 inches deep by 12 inches wide. | POULTRY CHOICE OF CHICKS IMPORTANT FACTOR High Producing Stock Best Guess for Success. By Prof. V. © Scott of the Nevada Agri- cultural Extension Service. Service. Farmers who bought healthy chicks from high producing stock have taken the initial step toward making money in the poultry business this year, If your flock has produced well with a comparatively low death rate, take a lot of credit yourself for having done a good job at feeding, cleaning houses and yards, and keeping up the health of flock; but also give a lot of credit to the hatchery which supplied you with chicks, and put in a repeat order. This should be a fair year for poul- trymen who know how to keep down expenses and at the same time to keep up good production, and the selection of the right kind of chicks is an im- portant part of the problem. In addition, keeping of chicks healthy by means of clean brooders, being sure to never overheat or chill them, and not cheapening the quality of the feed are important, About 110 chicks for every 100 hens now on hand are needed by the poul- tryman to provide for normal produc- tion next fall. There 18 no good reason for not buying the usual number of chicks: more money will be made with houses filled to their normal capacity. With storage stocks below average, there should be a brisk storage this spring, which should prevent a seri- ous slump In prices. Tells of Green Crops Best for the Turkeys Forage crops are essential to the steady health and development of tur- keys. Enormous quantities of green feed are consumed by them. Several of the green crops that are suitable as forage crops are alfalfa, sudan grass, rape, bluegrass, red clover, eats or barley, rye or wheat, and wild letture, advises a correspondent in Successful Farming, Alfalfa is considered the front rank forage crop on which to run turkeys. It is perhaps the most widely used. Sudan grass is a good dry weather crop and Is suitable for areas where dry summers are frequently experi- enced. Tender shoots are constantly forming and this provides the growing urkeys with ample green feed when t is usually scarce otherwise. Rape is sometimes used as a supple- nent green feed when turkeys have he run of a cornfield. It is sowed in e field. The chief objection to it is 8 tendency to become coarse too on. Bluegrass is good but it does t contain as much forage per acre as does alfalfa. "A good.bluegrass pas- ture, however, will solve the green feed problem, Clovers are also de- sirable, except sweet clover which be comes tough and fibrous too quickly. The four grain crops—oats, barley, rye, and wheat—are good as early forage crops. They ripen soon, how- ever, and thus become useless as a source for green feed. These crops are spring-sowed, Wild lettuce is ex cellent where enough of a crop can be raised to amply supply the birds their wants. PAGE SEVEN HEALTH TALK WRITTEN BY DR. THEO APPEL, PORE B. SECRETARY OF HEALTH — “Though sunlight has erly been considered to ial to health for hundreds of years there are many persons who appar- ently are not suffciently impressed with this fact. Drawn shades in the majority of windows in numerous homes, not only in rural sections but in cities as well, represent quite conclusive evidence of this state- ment,” said Dr, Theodore B. Appel Secretary of Health. , “While undoubtedly custom has much to do with this situation no sanitary excuse can be offered for its perpetuation. And this, even the the thus darkened rooms are remow ed from the living quarters and are but occasionally used, “To limit living to one rooms in the cold and cool particularly where there is ons sized family, is bad practice from a very prop- be benefic- or two hygienic standpoint. This becomes especially true when one of the rooms is also used as a kitchen, Fresh air and sunlight are quite as acceptable, indeed as essential to the human when inside as when out doors. And this is equally © tre whether it be the winter or the summer season. Therefore, to con tract one’s living to a single room or, at best two rooms large though they be, is most decidedly not a good housing principle, “Growing children particularly need the best kind of inside atmos- phere. However, adults and child- ren alike will benefit by socalled open house living. It is well known that sunlight is a great antiseptic and healing agent. For example, in the sanatoriam for tuberculous it is universally though scientifically applied. Then again, architects of modern office buildings, hotels, factories and homes invariably take fresh air and sunlight into very serious consideration when draw- ing plans. Even the restricted thoughtful city-dweller is more and more insisting upon accessible sun- light. “It would seem to follow, there- fore, that sunlight is equally de- sirable in all dwelling places, irre- spective of their location. Persons who for one reason or another, or for no reason at all, persist in lim- iting sunshine and fresh atmosphere to one or, at the most, two rooms could perhaps with benefit to them- selves and their children, seriously consider the present day vogue for maximum health conditions inside the home. Consistently to shut out sunlight even in the more untenan- ted portions of the house is a bad and insanitary practice.” Window Screens, Doors WN MADE TO ORDER “CABINET WORK CANE Lowest Prices Phone 91J4 JOHN §. BUFFENMYER — New York Farmer Gets Mass Egg Production L. A. Hazard, a farmer living near | North Evans, N. Y., claims to have found the secret of intensive egg pro- | duction. He says that he frequently gets two eggs a day from a hen and that he has reduced the cost of oper ating his plant to about 8 cents a doz en eggs. His method is to confine each hen by itself in a small cage, The hen is provided with ample food and water, but is never released. All the energy which the fowl gen- erates is devoted to egg-laying. The hen is kept from exposure to any of the numerous contagious diseases of fowls and from the fatal quarrels com- mon to hen yards. As no exercise is permitted, the fowl never toughens its muscles, and even as an old hen still provides tender meat for the pot when | it no longer is profitable as a layer of | eggs. —New York Times. Feed for Laying Hens Feeding the laying hens green feed | tends to keep them in good health and to promote egg production. Green feeds are one of the best sources of | vitamins for poultry, Mangels and | turnips provide some succulence, but | very little green feed. When cabbages | are available at reasonable cost some | may be fed, but good quality alfalfa | also should be supplied. Alfalfa is valuable, not so much because of its protein content, as formerly believed. Alfalfa is rich in minerals and vitamins. | Developing Capons Capons are docile and can be kept together. Their flesh remains soft in texture and they fatten easily. Rhode Island Reds, Plymouth Rocks and Brahmas are among the most popular breeds to caponize. They should be | operated on when eight to ten weeks”| of age, at which time they will weigh | one and a quarter to one and a half | pounds. A common mistake is to wait | until the birds are much larger. March hatched capons ean be finished for t Thanksgiving and Christmas markets. | - a Buys Utah Municipal Plant The Southern Utah Power Company, Cedar City, Utah, recently purchased | the municipal power plant and distri- | buter system at Kansas, Utah, which taxpayers voted nearly three to one | in an election held last January. The plant revenues had not been sufficient which were installed in 1926. — Ie en. Advertise in The Bulletin {all I ask "PAY WEEKLY | Stop in Our Office and “Get Our COAL BUDGET PLAN Phone 5W HARRY LEEDOM | | oY | Clean Coal MOUNT JOY, PA. | Jne-20=tf | 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 41J ONLY $3,750 A SIDE—That’s for a Dandy Double House, with Double Garage. House bas modern heat, baths, light, gas, stc.,, and is nicely located on Delta St., Mt. Joy. It’s a good investment. See Jno. E. Schrell, Mt. Joy, jan7-tf You can get all the news of this lo- cality for less than three cents a week | to meet payments on the Diosel engine | through the Bulletin. Stim oy business by advertise 4