as” = GC 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. 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. incase Read the advertisements. They are news. 9 CORPO Radway’s Pills For CONSTIPATION Candy Special SPEARMINT KISSES, Ib....... oo 12¢ CREAM JELS, Ib... . .. Ri te rsdn 20¢ What To rei A mild reliable vegetable laxative TOASTED NIBS, Ib. 25¢ i on Bo x dr ing. Contain no oe MARBLE TOP FUDGE, b................. 20¢ ing WORE They Doz MARSHMALLOW PEANUTS, Ib........... 20¢ hoodies igo, ine brea wi war conditions are Ac Druggists Radway & Co., Inc., New Yock, N.Y. Lucky Strike, 15¢c each Camel’s, 15¢c each Old Gold, 15c each Chesterfield, 15¢ each Piedmont, 15¢c each 2 for 25c 20 in Each Pack WE HAVE QUALITY MEATS Wings Bright Star | EACH Sunshine 10c¢ Krall’s Meat Market White Roll West Main St. MOUNT JOY Closed All Day July 4th 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 surfaced more than 1100 plow shares without one dissatisfied cus tomer. Any make cast share cost but 35c 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— os New steel soles electric welded on 3 section harrow frames 34 inch thick $4.50; 1% 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. Fpr Electric cr Acetylene Welding, General Blacksmithing. Auto Springs, Iron or Steel let us quote you on your needs Prompt U.'TRIMBLE Reasonable Rates py 7A PA. Bell Phone Established 1916 CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. mT J.B.Hostetter & Son PHONE 68 MT. JOY, PA. NEW HOUSE CHEAP—I have 1+ 6-room House along the trolley at erin that I want to sell before April 1st. Has all conveniences and will sell for only $3,660 for a quick R50 «@als. This is No. 871 in my LL Ino. E. Schroll, Realtor, Ms. Jey. Ng ROADSIDE | MARKETING By T. J. Delohery ADVERTISING PRINTING V kets do enough business to war rant continued advertising unless it he small classified space, the value of advertising printing as a follow-up to newspaper publicity should not be overlooked, Cards, folders, dodgers, blotters, la- bels, stickers, food charts, recipes and other such material tie in very well with newspaper advertising, to say nothing of helping to make new cus- tomers which come from the recom mendation of satisfied buyers, The kind of printed material to use depends upon the market, what is sold and where it is located. [n the past few years operators of roadside and farm markets which are off the main highway or a bit difficult to find, are including maps in their printing and advertising to guide prospective cus tomers. HILE few roadside or tarm mar Recipes are well liked; in fact, di- rections on cooking will belp sales, especially of new crops. When broc- coli first made its appearance on the roadside market which we patronize, my wife didn't know how to cook it. The farmer told her. And Italian squash makes a delicious dish when stuffed with meat, It, too, was pre- pared according to the advice of the vegetable grower. A poultry farmer who sells dressed chicken direct wishes he could obtain recipes which would guide his customers. He advo- cates different weights and ages for certain purposes—that is, roasting, stewing, etc., but when housewives do not follow directions and don't get the desired results, they often blame the chicken. One of the best pieces of printed advertising I have seen Is a so-called health chart. It was used by road- side market owners in Cook county, Illinois. The heading: “For Those Who Are Healthy and Those Who Would Like to Be.” The chart, made up of three columns, listed the min- erals and vitamins essential to body health, told their effect on the system, and then listed the fruits, vegetables, eggs, nuts and other farm produce in which they were contained. The chart attracted an unusual amount of interest. Doctors comment- ed upon It as being a fine thing to place in the hands of consumers. Not one piece of this literature, which was avallable in racks hung in front of the markets, was thrown away after first glance. In Essex county, New Jersey, where roadside markets are grouped in an association, County Agent IR. A. Har- man helped the farmers draw up a| series of four advertising cards. On the front side of each card, which measured 314 by 51 inches, was a picture of the association sign or em- blem which was on display before all member markets. “Fresh Farm Prod- ucts,” in large heavy type, was the display line on the first card. The second line said “Quality Goods—Hon- estly Packed.” Below was sufficient room to stamp in the name and address of each member. On the reverse side was a little history of the organiza- tion telling what it meant to both consumer and farmer, alike, All of the four cards were sea- sonal. The second card had “Fresh Vegetables” in large letters on the front side, with recipes for canning tomato juice, making tomato cocktail, sauted tomatoes, stuffed tomato salad and some information on heme ecan- ning in general. No. 3 carl stressed Sweet corn, with recipes and the last of the series was devoted to “Fresh Candled Eggs”—day-old eggs. The val- ue of fresh eggs produced by chickens fed balanced rations of feeds rich in vitamins and minerals, and their value in feeding babies and adults as well, was stressed. Recipes on various egg dishes fill the back side of the card. “The cards did a fine job of adver- tising,” said County Agent Harman. “They carried the message of the as- sociation and have made customers for the roadside markets displaying the association sign. It was nothing un- usual for customers to ask for several of each card. Presumably they keep a set for reference and pass out the others to friends and neighbors.” Printed paper bags are now regard- ed as fine advertising—and cheap, too, since the printing costs little extra if done at the time the sacks are ordered. John Haley of Centre Groton, Conn. relates the story of a woman telling her friend that she had been In the country buying vegetables from a farmer, only to have the friend de- clare she bought from a dealer, point- ing out that producer-owned roadside markets in that section used bags on which their names and addresses were printed. Package Inserts are good advertis- ing, especially if they carry messages on future crops. Tales of new machin- ery or equipment which produce better fruits or vegetables, aid in making for better quality or cheapen production. The more homey and friendly these messages, the better. Customers real- ize you are a farmer and not a trained advertising writer. A geod example of a package insert is that used by F. R. Dolman, Ohio fruit grower. It says: FOR 30 CENTS I'll sell one bu. of apples. Not the fancy grade, Not the choice, but The best apple on the Ridge for the money. @®. 1933. Western Newspaper Union. Kill Insect Pest Army worms, a species of gutworm, can be controlled by using pn bran mash. The formula includes 20 pounds of bran, 1 pound of paris green, 2 quarts of stock molasses, and enough water to make a moist but not sloppy mash. The juice, pulp, and rind of six oranges or lemons will make the bait more atiractive. The bait should be broadcast late in the afternoon or after the heat of the gun is lessened. 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 Most nearby fruits and vegetables sold rather slowly this morning and the market was dull with the prices on many commodities lower, according to the Federal-State Market News Ser- vice. Nearby green and wax beans were mostly of poor to ordinary quality and sold at 10 to 35¢c with a few good qual- ity at 40 to 60c per 5 basket. Home- grown peas were in light supply and the best sold at 65 to 75¢ with poorer as low as 20c per 5 basket. Cabbage ranged from 10 to 40c per 5s basket with most sales at 20 to 30c. Pennsylvania barrels brought 75¢ and bushels 35c to 40c. Cabbage sprouts were quoted at 10 to 25¢ per bushel. Spinach ranged from 10 to 50c per bushel as to quality and condition. Nearby Big Boston lettuce sold at 15 to 30c per crate with Iceberg bringing 5 to 25¢ per bushel, Kale and mustard greens were quoted at 15 to 25¢ per bushel. The first New Jersey cucumbers of the season brought 75¢ to $1.00 per 53 basket. Green squash brought 40 to 60c with poorer as low as 25¢ per 5; basket while white squash was selling at 50 to 75c. Nearby peppers brought 60 to 75¢ per 3 basket with a few higher. New Jersey potatoes No.2s 25 to 30c per % basket. U. S. No.l Maryland and Delaware Cobblers sold at $1.70 to $2.00 per 100-pound sack. Nearby tomatoes held about steady with 53 baskets ranging from 75c to $2.00 with a few higher as to quality. Beets sold mostly at 34 to 1l%c and and carrots at 1 to 2c per bunch. Near- by celery brought 2 to 6c per bunch. Nearby blackberries ranged from $1.00 to $2.25 and huckleberries from $2.00 to $5.00 per 32-quart crate ac- cording to quality and condition. Red Raspberries sold mostly at 3 to 6c per pint with a few exceptional lots as high as 8c. Clackcaps brought 8 to 10c per pint. Sour cherries ranged from 50 to 85c per 12-quart basket. Pennsylvania currants brought $2.50 and New Jer- sey stock $2.00 per 32-quart crate. A few very small early peaches sold at 25 to 30c per % basket. Small Yellow Transparent apples were quoted at 15 to 25¢ per 5; basket with a few 21 inch Starrs at $1.00 per basket. Pennsylvania Department of Agri- culture Bureau of Animal Industry, Lancaster, Pa. United States Depart- ment of Agriculture Bureau of Agri- culture Economics Cooperating July 1, "1933. Market, slow about steady on all grades of slaughter cattle, somewhat weaker, with a liberal supply for Mon- day’s market. Stockers and feeders steady, liberal supply. Calves slow, steady, top vealers average 6.50. Hogs steady choice wetserns 4.75a5.50. Sheep, slow, little demand at this time, choice lambs 7.00a7.75. Receipts: 659 cattle; 4 calves. 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 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 4.75-5.50 Medium and good 4.25-5.00 SHEEP Choice lambs 7.00-7.75 Yearling Wethers 4 50-6.00 Ewes (All weights) 1.25-4.50 RECIPES Tried and True LEMON SAUCE The following simple, yet delic- ious lemon sauce is good when used as a sauce for cottage pudding or other cakes. 1-2 cup sugar 1 cup boiling water 1 tablespoon corn starch 2 tablespoons butter 1 1-2 tablespoons lemon juice Few grains nutmeg (if desired) 1-4 teaspoon salt Mix sugar and corn starch. Add boiling water gradually, stirring constantly; boil five minutes. Re- move from fire, add butter, lemon juice, nutmeg and salt. A very tasty vanilla sauce may be made over the same recipe, with the ad- dition of 1 teaspoon of vanilla in- stead of the lemon. BE A ———— Control Bean Beetles Spraying or dusting bean plants with a quickly acting arsenical poison is recommended by State College en- tomologists for control of Mexican bean beetles. Your county agent will give detailed informatien on the mixtures to use. ——— Thin Garden Plants Crowded vegetable plants should be thinned out early. They compete with each other for food, moisture, and sun- light. were slightly | easier with No.1s bringing 60 to 75¢ and | | | 4°88 production, D0: AY DEVELOPS POULTRY WHICH CANNOT FLY Penguin Variety Gets Away From Fence Problem. “Penguin” poultry, which cannot fly over a two-foot fence, may end for all time the quarrels that so often arise between people who keep chickens and their gardening neighbors. This hap- py possinllity is due to the discovery of an inherited character in poultry called “self-clipping.” Dr. D. C. Warren of the Kansas ag- ricultural experiment station, who has studied the inheritance of this char- acter, finds that the flight feathers of the wings are defective and break off as they grow, so that the wing remains permanently “clipped.” This condition Is Inherited according to the so-called Mendelian laws as a dominant char- acter. By mating “flightless” birds with normal fowls and selecting those which produce only flightless offspring, it Is a rather easy matter to transfer this character to any of the standard breeds of poultry. While poultry breeders who intro- duce this characteristic Into their flocks will not need high fences, they may have to rearrange their chickens’ sleeping quarters, for many hen roosts would be altogether out of range of penguin poultry, A few months ago a somewhat sim- ilar mutation in the guinea fowl was reported. In this, while the end result was the same, it was arrived at by nature in a different way. The flight feathers do not develop at all in the “Kiwi” guinea, and the character is inherited as a recessive character rath- er than a dominant, Sanitation Urged for Checking New Disease Strict sanitation is the only hope for checking the new poultry disease, leucosis or leucemia, which is spread- ing as a threat to the $37,000,000 worth of poultry raised on Illinois farms, ac- cording to the animal pathology and hygiene division at the college of ag- riculture, University of Illinois. No specific treatment for the dis- ease is known at this time. Control of it must be attempted through gen- eral sanitary measures, together with the disinfection of premises before new stock Is introduced. It also is advis- able to avoid breeding from infected flocks. Leucemia is a fatal disease mani- fested by blood changes. Although it has not been definitely proved that it is carried through the egg, the evi- dence indicates that this is the source of the disease on many farms. Symptoms may be manifested In fowls four to six months of age, and the disease may continue in a chronic form to cause heavy losses, In mature fowls the disease is marked by low egg production, unthriftiness, blind- ness, large livers and paralysis. If suspicious symptoms of the dis ease appear, flock owners are advised to take typically aifected fowls to the local veterinarian for autopsy and diagnosis. Laying Time for Pullets It has been found that pullets from the same hatch, the same breeders and raised under the same methods during the growing period will vary as much as several weeks in the time they start laying. In any flock, other things being equal, the early starters are the hest winter layers, the most intensive spring producers and the most persistent layers into the follow- ing summer-fall period, Most of the breeding stock of the following year will be found among the early start ers. Mark the precocious pullets in order to identify them from the late beginners next year when the pullet laying year draws to a close and the question of keeping breeding stock comes up. To do this involves keep- ing the dates of each hatch. The simplest means of identification is a different toe punch for each hatch of chicks, although many poultrymen prefer to wing-band all chicks nsed in their pedigree work.—Los Angeles Times, Buying Chicks The number of chicks one should buy in the spring should he decided by the number of pullets he wants to house next winter. To he reasonably sure of having any given number of pullets after discarding the culls, buy three times that number of chickens. Cockerels usually outnumber pullets in a lot as hatched. One should count on 55 per cent cockerels, The small- est loss that can be safely figured in estimates is 10 per cent, according to an expert. Feeding Moist Mash Moist mash can be fed as a supple- ment to dry mash to aid in increasing Moist mash is made by mixing enough water or milk—the latter preferred—to make it erumbly. It should not he wet and sloppy. It Is fed in the mash hoppers on top of the dry mash. Only as much is fed to the birds as they will clean up in 20 min- utes. It is recommended by experts that it be fed in the middle of the afternoon. The object in feeding moist mash is to increase ezg production. Prune Fruit Trees Part of the pruning scheduled for next winter may be done now by re- moving the suckers which have started this season. With a heavy pair of gloves to protect the hands, suckers may be torn off more easily now than they can be cut off next winter. Small bark wounds eaused by the tearing ¥! heal quickly if they are not touch- . Rubber shoes worn by the oper- ator will prevent skinning off the bark on the orotshen ‘ HEALTH TALK WRITTEN BY DR. THEODORE R. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “Tetanus, commonly known as lock jaw, no longer stages an annual Fourth of July attack. Thanks to the wisdom of the majority of City Fathers, or- dinances forbid the sale of dangerous explosives within the community's limits. This protective legislation plus the more exciting automobile excursion has undoubtedly saved many children from accidents it te y explosives along the hig way, ta justify a warning at this time,” states Dr. Theodore B. Appel, Secretary of Health, “In 1909 nearly two hundred per- sons, the majority of whom were chil- dren, were tetanus victims in Pennsyl- vania. Last year the number reached but sixty for the twelve month period, and only ten of these deaths occurred during the period which possibly could be connected with the Fourth of July. However, one death from this dread disease is even too big a price to pay for celebrating the country’s Natal Day. It, therefore, might be well for mothers and fathers to err on the side of safety where giant fire crackers, toy cannons and pistols are concerned. Even fireworks should be handled carefully and their use supervised by the older members of the family. “However, if in spite of this pre- caution, an explosive accident occurs, medical advice should be sought im- mediately and this, whether the pow~- der wound appears to be in conse- quential or otherwise, “Again, thoughtful persons will re- spect the ever increasing automobile hazard, and govern themselves accord- ingly. Undoubtedly a number of per- sons will be injured on the highways on the Fourth because of their regli- gence or the carelessness of the other fellow. Indeed, the highway accidents and fatalities that have occurred on the last few Fourths make the automo- bile the real menace today. Careful driving should consequently be the rule, It is, of course, perfectly logical for everyone to try to extract as much fun as is possible out of the Fourth of July celebration. Pleasure and relaxation are extremely important factors in the event. But, most assuredly, common sense and care should not be discard- ed in the process.” When in need of Printing, (anything) kindly remember the Bulletin. Window Screens, Doors MADE TO ORDER CABINET WORK FURNITURE REPAIRING PICTURE FRAMING CANE SEATING Lowest Prices Phone 91J4 Prompt Service JOHN S. BUFFENMYER FLORIN, PA. jne.28-4¢ PAY WEEKLY Stop in Our Office and Get Our COAL BUDGET PLAN Phone 5W HARRY LEEDOM Clean Coal MOUNT JOY, PA. 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. 8 BULLETIN MOUNT JOY Phone 41) ONLY $3,750 A SIDE—That’s all I ask for a Dandy Double House, with Double Garage. House has modern heat, baths, light, gas, stc., and is nicely located on Delta St, Mt. Joy. It's a good investment. See Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy, janT-tf You can get all the news of this lo~ cality for less than three cemts a week through the Bulletin. Stimulate your business by advertis- ing in the Bulletin