MY TT EEE A IS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4th, 1933 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. FOR @E@ @eE@ ® now stand on your own merits.” perous. ments. spend their money. © © @ © © © © © © © © © © © © © © @ © © © © ® LOCOCO BOE 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— 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. © © @ ©) ® © We just recei a fresh supply of Specials, Ib...25¢ Fresh Peanut sters, b.....................20¢ Fresh Almond CI sters, Light and Dark C Almonds, Ib. ...........50¢ A full supply, of Bachman Chocolates \ Lucky Strike, each is X 2 for Camel’s, 15¢ each 285c Old Gold, 15¢ each Chesterfield, 15c each Piedmont, 15¢ each Store and Dwelling A 2Y, Story Frame House—2Y, Story Frame Store Building—Garage—Also Butcher Shop. Any person desirous of having a grocery store in a very good community should investigate this proposi- tion. Will sell the above with or without stock as pur- chaser desires. Possession any time. No. 440. Phone 417. Jno. E. Schroll, reso MOUNT JOY, PENNA. CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. | LUMBER-CoA (The Vegetable Laxative) | to cleanse the intestinal tract of | impurities caused by constipation. Your poison-free blood will give | | “Pep,” At Your Druggist | you Dew Mild - Reliable West Main St., You can get all the news of this locality for less than three Cants a week thru the Bulletin Produce & Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR- NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN ROADSIDE MARKETING By T. J. Delohery CO-OPERATIVE ROAD- SIDE MARKETS OADSIDE markets are Individual ly owned as a rule, but where a number of farmers are enguged In the production of different lines of crops but don't produce enough to keep a roadside market supplied through the season, ‘co-operatively owned wayside stands have been established and sue cessfully operated. Probably the most extensive and best-managed of co-operative roadside markets 18 the chain in southeastern Wisconsin, which was started by the first fruit growers association in that Market. Beef steers and yearlings about steady, but slow; bulk of the grass cattle selling $425-525 with a liberal supply on hand. She sto: and cutters steady with week's de cline. Bulls steady. Stockers an feeders steady with fair run expect ed for Monday's market. Bulk sell $3.25-4.50, Calves steady with few on hand, choice vealers to up to $8.50. Hogs slow with feelin easier, Choice Westerns top $6.50; choice locals 550-5.75, Sheep steadyy. with good clean up; choice Southern section of the Badger state, More me, ; . than a dozen markets, spread over sev- choice locals $6.50 eral counties in the fruit belt, have a at 3% shown a healthy increase in business ha U73 cattle; 32 calves; 436 for each of the three Years they have : STEERS been in operation. r = While the members are primarily Choice 3.00.5,80 fruit growers, some of them are now | 3.75-4.50 growing patches of vegetables, own Common 3.00-3.75 small flocks of poultry and several HEIFERS hives of bees. Thus they are able to Choice 4.75-5.25 supply the markeis with a good line ( Good 4.25-4.75 of food which keeps them open during Medium 3.50-4.25 the outdoor season instead of a short Common 3.00-3.50 time in the late summer and fall when fruit is ripe. Chiolce cows 3.95-3.75 Each market handles the products of Good 275.325 from six to ten farmers. Management Common: and medium > 0 275 and sales are left in the haads of the Low Cutter and Cutter 1.95.2 25 grower on whose property the stand is BULLS - located, or with a hired salesman. Much caution has been used in the Good and choice 4.25-5.25 selection of salesmen and market man- Cutter, gM 3.00-4.25 agers, with the result that the repre- : sentatives have been a great help in Good and choice 8.00-8.50 the increased business which the mar- | Medium 7.25-8.00 kets report, Cull and Common 5.00-7.25 The chain of roadside markets is the FEEDER & : STOCKER CATTLE outgrowth of the farmers’ efforts to | Good and choice : 5.00-6.00 increase local coasumption of their | -ommon and medium 4.00-5.00 fruit after they had put on a cam- | HOGS ! paign to improve quality. The frst | Good and choice 6.00-6.50 step in the marketing campaizn was | Medium and good 5.25-5.75 to exhibit apples, pears and plums in | - ma various food shows, [Ghote Lambs 7.00-7.75 Yearling Wethers 4.75-5.75 After canvassing possibilities of sev- , 42 eral outlets, Mr. Fallet decided on a Ewes (all weights) 1.50-4.75 co-operative roadside market; but be- fore proposing it to the fruit growers, NORMANDY OBSERVES ITS TENTH CENTURY he and C. L. Knehner, state fruit spe- cialist, made a trip through the fruit | belts of Wisconsin and Michigan to] study the various phases of the busi- | ness. Returning, he suggested a co | Cities and Towns in Gala At- operative roadside market, and Spon | tire for Event. approval, built a portable stand which was first exhibited at the state fair. | “The Fruit Market,” the official name of these stands, is a portable affair made of a striped green canvas roof, green woodwork and shelving which permits the display of several dozen harmoniously colored baskets of apples, pears, plums and crab apples, with a background of golden cider. | ‘The first one cost $60 to build and | won $125 in prizes at the fair. During fair week thousands of peo- ple stopped at the booth of which “The Farm Market,” fully equipped, Courances.—Celebration of the thou sandth anniversary of Normandy opened here recently and will be ob- served in other towns throughout the district during the summer. The fetes are not in honor of Nor mandy, the country of apple blossoms, of green pastures and rilling streams, which has existed since there were any memories of this verdant country- side, but are being held in commemor ation of the Tenth century of the Nor mandy of the Normans, Incidentally, the anniversary has been made an oc- casion for the historians and the archeclogists to make known and dis- cuss Norman history and art. The city of Coutances, with its 1nag- nificent Norman cathedral, has been decorated with the famous Viking fla bearing three gold leopards which flew from the mastheads of the Norse dra gon ships of war when they first began their raids up the French rivers in | 911. A Viking war craft with its | shields and dragon-headed prow. a re- | production of the queen's s which | was unearthed on the Oslo fjord, was jewel collectors know borne in the historical pageant through the streets, while numbers of the ter rible Norse heroes, including Rollo, the first Norse conqueror of Normandy, were impersonated. At the historical congress which was held here under the chairman- ship of Professor Prentout of the Uni versity of (aen, papers were read by French and foreign historians dealing ! Fruit Market, with the Norman race and its Tenth and Eleventh century exploits, was a part. Numerous questions were The fetes have been made the oc asked and answered by the county | casion for a demonstration of friend agent who was in attendance. ship with Norway, which sent repre “Opening on Sunday when motorists sentatives, and exchanged tele grams | were out in full force, the market | with the Normandy officials. { clicked right away,” said County — | Agent Pallet. “In fact, we sold out . B13 In the afternoon, and it was nec- | Rarest Precious Stone essary to phone a dozen farmers to Found in California rush in more fruit. The color scheme Hollister, Calif.—Few of the world's of the stand, the baskets of well-grad- one of the } ed fruit, all of which had tags telling rarest of all precious the variety and the price, made a pie- toite—i 3 on v in one i ture which undoubtedly influenced a fice d Sit. the aren orf wi | number of pur hases.” i | larger than a good sized room, in San | success of the Best "Froit Mar | Benito county. set” is responsible for the estabiish- | The traet oF soil containing the de- | ment of dhe others. Hired salesmen, | posit has been lease to Otis | operating a few of these markets | Dunn, Santa Pa Cs for permitied to handle ’ Stables | years. Economic conditions of th and honey if the farmers do net pro | three vears caused him to close ra- duee these foods. This ¢ oncession has tions. He plans to resume working been found to be an for he the deposit soon. salesman who realizes that Jig earn: The t Benitoites are clear trans- | ings are ed on sales of fruit with paren lue in color, shading into the | additional revenue in the other prod- palest lavender and white, Only one ucts. clear e Benitoite ever has been Co-operative roadside markets are advisable also where they will elimi- nate competition and, as pointed out, give smaH growers a chance to get than is possible at whole- found. Benitoites, as the rarest the world, consequently are the most valuable, according to Dunn. I'hey are gems in ) be . rice 2 3 | Drives h k 3 known to but few collectors, 1 hey are | al arkearg or ~ ke )i open : : | sale markets or w gre ef ing ig | 3 found imbedded in solid rock and the oadside outlet would e the only. Wey: 10 remove thes Ha buyi f r things to complete the . : : buying of other thi gs to c« mpl 2} ng damage is to place 1 io line Of course, the success of group- : : Ee ' oe | acid, which eats awa r t | supplied will depend largely 2 : 3 3 3% does not iniure e Be Site I gh n 2 salesman and hi b on the manager or salesman anc HS | hed cat and polished 1 ane'ass abrity to give each member a fair diauoud : liamond § deal and maintain harmony among the 8S | contributors. ©. 1933, Western New=paper Un NATURE VS THE FINE ARTS Treat Smutty Wheat | If stinking smut is present in the | { wheat is intended for seed, the grain {should be thoroughly cleaned and “How lovely nature is!” said she, [then treated with 2 1-2 ounces f | While looking at the view. | copper carbonate dust for each bush | “It is,” said he as he gazed at her; |. of wheat The treating may be “And art is lovely too.” done with home-made machines or { ‘7. one of the 70 commercial mach- As soon as the producer and the | ines in the state. - consumer decide to play both ends pec, Stimulate your business bw advertis- ing in the Bulletin ——— CR Patronize Bulletin Advertisers against the middleman—then history will be in the making. me coeliac Patronize Bulletin Advertisers a TO MAKE HENS LAY IN SUMMER SEASON Wet Mash Suggested by a New York College Man. 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. may be fed late in the afternoon, just before the night grain feeding. The hens should have only what they can eat in twenty minutes. Another plan is useful when no milk Is available. Fill a pail one-half full of dry oats and then fill to the top with water. Let the oats stand from one afternoon to the next and add enough of the regular dry mash to BULLETIN absorb the remaining moisture, Feed the same amount and at the same MOUNT JOY time as the milk mash, Wet mash feeding usually begins in | Phone 41J late July er August. Mr. Hurd sug- gests: No change in quarters or in feed formula; provide an abufidance of tender green food; have fresh Wa. oy ter at all times; furnish shade: and do not allow red mites to attack the flock. He also suggests adding two i pounds of tobacco dust to each one ny pints pounds of mash aid in Sone "FEN RY G.CARPENTER trolling worms and coccidiosis, whic INSURANCE - MOUNT JOY PA in Pennsylvania, are thought to contribute to paralysis. Fhe tobacco dust should be guaran- Gory nd of insurance except (Ife teed to contain 1 per cent nicotine sulphate, - Hen’s Offspring Best Indicator of Ability A hen may be a good egg layer, but that is no guaranty that her daughters will be good layers, even when she is mated with a sire whose female parent was a heavy layer, a three-year experiment by the United States De partment of Agriculture indicates. Progeny testing—that is, the testing of the laying abhility—of a hen’'s daugh ters Is the most reliable guide to that hen’s ability to produce good layers, the department found. The common practice of attempting to improve ege production by selecting breeding stock on the basis of egg production cannot be depended upon to bring the desired results, the experiment, made by Dr. Morley A. Jull, department poultry specialist, shows. The department tested 793 single- comb White Leghorn hens, the daugh- ters of 19 selected sires and 135 selected dams, at its animal husbandry experiment farm at Beltsville, Md. The tests showed: That the egg pro- duction of a sire's dam had little 8ig- nificance in determining his ability to produce good progeny: that a given sire mated to a given dam may pro- duce good progeny, but that the same | sire mated to another dam may pro- duce poor progeny; that the same was true for differing sires and a given dam: mated to the same sire frequently produced diverse results; that the average egg produe- tion of a group of full sisters could judging breeding Swiftest and Best RHEUMATIC PRESCRIPTION 85 Cents Pain—Agony Starts to Leave in 24 Hours Just ask for Allenru—Within 24 hours after you start to take this safe yet powerful medicine excess uric acid and other circulating poisons start to leave your body. In 48 hours pain, agony and swell- ing are usually gone—The Allenru prescription is guaranteed—if one bottle doesn’t do as stated—money back. that full sisters not be used as a basis for anv one o the sisters for possihiliti or Lice on Poultry Lice do not feed on blood like red mites but eat dried skin or bits of feather, writes a correspondent in the Indiana Farmer's Guide. They maj eat blood from small skin wounds but do not snuck the blood like red mites. The lice are constantly crawling over the skin both day and night and canse much discomfort to the hens. Hens are nervous sensitive birds and prob- ably suffer more from lice than is com monly realized. L$ | REPAIRING Not Just Another Pill To Deaden Pain But 2 wonderful modern medi- cine which acts upon the conditions which CAUSE the pain. Take them regularly and you should suffer less and less each month. PERSISTENT USE BRINGS PERMANENT RE- LIEF. Sold at all good drug stores: Small size 50¢. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S is wholesome and edible, it may TABLETS ik FOR RELIEF AND PREVENTION OF PERIODIC PAINS Poultry Gleanings Ohio ranks fourth in poultry produce ESSE Eggs Must Be Eggs Eggs, it seems, just have to be eggs In Connecticut, under a bill passed in the house of the general assembly. Under the terms of the measure eggs must be “fresh eg ’ “cold storage eggs,” “preserved eggs" or “inenbated eggs.” However, the | | | bill adds, if an egg does not conform { | designated as ns, but still to any of these classifieat he designated me cen PRINTING Sr 0 : rv rats PRICES are LOWEST |THE BULLETIN MOUNT JOY Peck n hen owned byy Ernest Bahr, at Pomeroy, Ohio, laid an egg 914 inches in ¢ Swiss Watches and I Ine ' st as a whol s ox Ro Sm all Wrist Watches wisi Eno | Repaired The first exhibit of poult it a fair Prompt Service and Ho : ewe Prices Reasonable DON W. GORRECHT pore Sine a 5 der “ws, MOUNT JOY PA. MILK, CREAM ‘and ONLY $3,750 all I Chocolate Milk With Quality You Can Taste A SIDE—Thats Dandy Double House, with Double Garage. House has modern heat, baths, light, gas, BEST PRICES ON ICE ete., and is nicely located om Delts St.,, Mt. Joy. It's a good investment ’ See Jno. E. Schmll, Mt. Joy, jan7-&f Hallgren 5 FOR SALE -A Brick mouse wun VIO EEN Dairy Slate Roof, 8 rooms, all convenien-' 269 y % ses, Poultry House 12x12, along Marea St > me 101M concrete highway, Florin. Apply te | . JUNT OY, PA. Ino. E. Schroll, Realtor, Mount Joy. | Pure Whipping Cres 15¢ a half pint No. 416. janis! \ - ask for a