BOR CK oie SRA Ky Sa ¥ Ard Te oa A ae » Sy > OA WK OW aI, RI Sw Gh, A ¥ PE a abd > A : ; 1 Ct Hl yon NE aay LH vem BEGIN YOUR NEXT , WR Yh ~ MN = as sisi —— 3 MERRY 4 XMAS. NOW 5) < i aro ree reer re EP REA mem 3 3 2 If you had started saving #& few cents a week a year ago today, how oh, much easier it would have been %o0 buy gifts this year. And how much merrier wonld the Christmas be with more and better gifts to hand to father or mother or sweetheart, wife or daughter, or to the little kiddies that want tem most? Join Qur Xmas. Saviags Hub Which is Now Open = 5 And be ready with a nice snug bark account when Christmas comes ny again. The plan is simple, easy and saSisfactory in every detail. Here a it is: % In Class 1, you pay 1 cent the first Yesk, 2 cents the second week, x 3 cents the third week and so on for 50 weeks. Total $12.75. In Class 2, you pay 2 cents the first week, 4 cents the second week, Ba 6 cents the third, week and so on for 50 waeks. Total $25.30. In Class 5, you pay 5 cents the first weel 10 cents the second week, 15 cents the third week and so on for 50 weeks. Total $63.75. A i You May Reverse The Payments If Yeu Wish To Do So 4 For instance, in Class 2, the payments start with 2 cents and end with $1.00. If you wish you may pay $1.00 the first %veek and 2 cents less each week until the last payment is 2 cents and so an with all the classes. ; Ye also have five classes in which the paymentsigre always the same, as follows: 3 ¥ Class 10-S—10 Cents Each Week, Total $ 5.00 Class 25—25 Cents Each Week, Total $42.50 Class 50—50 Cents Each Week, Total $ $5.00 Class 100—$1.00 Each Week,. ...Total $ 580.00 Class 200—$2.00 Each Week,....Total $100:00 Class 500—$5.00 Each Week,....Total $250.1 You may join as many classes as you wish. % Interest Is Allowed On All Classes At The Rate of 4 Per Cent Every member of the family may join, from the youngest tothe old- Sot our neighbor and all their children are sure to join No ship fee. OPEN NOM Come into the Bank and let us tell you all about the plan. | THE UNION NATIONAL MOUNT JOY BANK ) MOUNT JOY, PENNA. THE PRODUCE AND | i LIVE STOCK MARKET SRR BL TE TL TS TS Ess : Mediumweight, 150-200 p28 numbers, has been used in connection Lightweight 100-150 $7.75-8.50 | With Federal Aid. The remainder Rough Stock $6.25-7.75 has been used altogether on district projects, with which Federal aid has Lancaster Grain and Feed Markets |, nothing to do. Prices to Farmers “Most of the Arkansas road dis- Wheat... ....... vores. $1.07 | tricts, in connection with which Corn, per bit. vv. . .80 | there have been serious abuses and Hay (baled) gross unfairness to the land-owning Timothy: ,....... $25.00-$26.00 ton | farmers, were created before Feder- Straw... 00, $12.00-§13.00 ton | al aid amounted to anything. Many Das 5 % Gd fon | es were practiced in these road dis- | otton e . © ; cL ~ 3 tricts, of which at that time there Dairy Feed 16 pe. $37.00-338.00 ton Dairy Feed 18 pe. $41.00-342.00 ton Dairy Feed 20 pe. $54.00-346.00 ton od. Dairy Feed 24 pe. $52:50-$53.50 ton Dairy Feed 25 pe. $53.50-$54.50 ton Horse Feed 85 pc. $43.50-$44.50 ton to'% CLL EL BETTE, 5-10¢ bunch. “He found many ea uly and condition, new stock 5-10-15 | improper payments of local fund 5, UPHOLSTERING and IN FURNITURE REPAIRING { mornin I felt all | Doan’s Rills were i I bought Store. first and b pletely rem@§ved from my syst ferent woman.¥ Mrs. Childs OUNT JOY, PA. Sept. 19-tf 7 Re COAL COAL ZES AND KINDS OF COAL ON HAND FOR IMMED. RRY. RE NOT USED ANY MORE. Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y DEL for year ft 14 ber 1923: head. excessive assessments on land own- | NO REST—NO PEACE There’s no peace and little rest { for the one who suffers from a bad back, and distressing urinary disor- ders. Mt. Joy people { Pills. Be guided by their perience. Ask your neighbor. Mrs. Jacob Childs, 125 Mt. Joy St., : “For long time I suffered from ible pains in my back, just over i Headaches and dizzy spells con and my kidneys acted ir- ly. My rest was broken and tuckered out. recommended so supply at Garber's Drug ’s helped me from the re long they so com- kidney trouble that I felt like a dif- ve the above state- ment January 2% 1916. firmed it on May $th, 1921 as foll- ows: “The cure Dean’s for me has lasted. Tam in the best ive all the credit bunch, 10¢ qt. box. assessments, ineconomiec laying out| fair supply, 5-20c stalk. the organization to maintain the head. “The governor called a special ses-| Calif. Iceberg, 20-25¢ head. September 24. The legislature pass- | fair supply, 10-15¢ qt. box. Under it no new improvement district | ity, 1-5¢ bunch. vote of the people within the district, and quality, 1-3-6¢ each. levied on adjacent land is limited. i new stock, 15-20c 1-4 peck, $1.75- 2.25 bushel. Small, $1.00-1.50 ou. qt. box. bunch. 10c each. $200,000 IN ONE WEEK | grown, fair supply, 15-20c 1-4 peck.! Over $20,000 in gifts and pledges simply ask for a kidney Doan’s Pills—the same Childs had. Forest-Milb 10-15¢ 3 peck. State College last week. It was the 25¢ % peck. record at the college. re Qe ri. ANIMALS SLAUGHTERED DURING PAST YEAR | 2.00 each. Springers, 50-8$1,00 each. | and from the new students enrolled Squabs, 25-40c each. Ducks $1.50 2.00 each. Animals slaughtered under Feder- ection December Summer Rambos and other tered under Federal Inspection | Cattle 756,250; sheep, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1924 FHE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 5 A CORRECT INFORMATION FUR. | NISHED WEEKLY BY THE | Givin Comal PENNA. BUREAU OF fra NAT HE by WANG BULLETIN | From the fourteenth to the eight- a, eenth of January there was held in : Chicaago the greattest exhhibition of! | with week ago beef steers and bulls road "NE materials, and meth-| showing weaker tendency top beef og ever staged in the history of road | steers $9.00, bulk $8.25-8.75. Com- making. pared with same week last year, top | It is difficult to estimate the im- $9.00, bulk $7.75-8.75. Cows steady. portance of such a great exposition, | Stockers and feeders inactive. Calves either from the standpoint of the closed steady, top vealers $14.00. road builder or the road buyer. The Hogs seady, demand igh, bulk to corset thus mado possib 2 butchers $8.10-8.25. : | maker of material can not but aid Receipts for Saturday's market: | both tg do better work. | The tring. cars cattle from the following points: | ing together of so many different b Penna., 56 Chicago, 2 N. J., 1 Va., | ways of road making must be of in-! 1 Buffalo containing 294 head. 72 | calculable value to the road buyer; head driven in. Total: 366 cattle, 350 | the county and State engineer, the hogs. i road supervisor, and the taxpayer. Receipts for week ending Jan. 26, | roy perhaps the greatest benefit 1924: 62 cars cattle from the follow- | . om this mutual contact of the fore- : | es which are behind the good road, ing points: 25 Chicago, 11 Pa., 6 Va, | is in the laying before the country, 3 St. Louis, 2 Buffalo, 2 Tenn., 2| the magnitude of the effort involved Md, 2 W. Ba.,, 2 Ky.,, 2 N. J., 1 St.| and showing forth to the world what | Paul, 1 Pittsburgh, 1 Kansas City, 1| progress has been made in the hard | Chio, 1 Indiana containing 1519 surface highway idea. head. 174 driven in. Total: 1693] Twenty years ago, before the au- | cattle, 49 calves, 2103 hogs. tomobile was more than a toy, the, Compared with same week last road idea was dead. “We didn’t | ! | need roads. The roads we had were year: 62 cars cattle containing 1600 good enough. To spend money for | cattle, 1561 hogs, 9 calves, 15] ,0ads was foolish. The railroads | sheep. gave all the transporttion necessary. | Roads were merely en expense, a | luxury, not an asset!” Such argu- | ments were common. There were no | [ MARKETS FOR THE | Market extremely dull. Compared Range of Price: STEERS: Why Farmersare Furning to J a Y.CHEVROLLT/ Jor Economical Trghsportetion In 1922 Chevrolet jumped from seventh to second place in sales of all cars, find to first place in sales of fully equipped modefn cars, Purchases by the chief factor in this i remarkable developgient. Farmers want augdmobiles not only of low | price, but also of Jow later cost for operation maintenance. They want rog m, comfort, and the ability to stand up under hag conditions. i They find ghat Chevrolet, fully equipped as jold ig | the best vflue per dollar in the low-priced field, : neighbogh tell them it costs less per mile to operate, Prices F, O. B. Flint, Michigan Supgrior Roadster ....$495 Superior Sedan ..... . $798 Suferior Touring ....$495 Superior Com. Chasis $398 Utility Coupe $640 Superior Light Delivery $498 Utility Express Chasis $550 . B. ROHRER RFA i Mount Joy, Penna. Good to choice $9.25-10.25 road builders, there was no road | Fair to good : $8.25-9.25 building industry. To-day there are | Medium to fair $7.25-8.25 thousands of engineers, hundreds of | Common to medium $5.50-7.75 | firms making hard road building ma- | BULLS chinery and products for hard road | Good tochoice $5.75-6.75 making, and there is not a State un- | Fair to good $5.00-5.75 | interested in modern highways, not | Medium to fair $4.50-5.00 | 2 county which isn’t talking good | Common to medium $3.00-4.50 | roads, not a farmer who doesn’t rea-| Ti penn lize the need of them. IS HEIFERS: © This great road exposition js a |= Choice to prime $7.75-8.50 reflection of the times, and the some? Good to choice $7.25-7.75 timent which is behind roads; hard Medium to good $5.25-7.25 roads, the sort of roads which mini-|¢ Common to medium $4.00-5.25 mize the hauling cost and efve ihe 4 COWS: aximum of speed and intercommun- | ¢ Good to choice $5.25-6.25 fenton Medium to good $4.00-5.25 he road exposition at the Coli- | Common to medium $3,25-4.00 | seum, in Chicago, is more thfn an| Canners and cutters $1.25-3.25 Exh it 3 a monument to the mod- ' FEEDING STEERS ern 1dea of transportation. Good to choice $7.25-8.25 yt Fair to good $5.25-7.25 | STATEMENT REGARDING Common to fair $4.00-5.25 ARKANSAS ROADS Good to F100 SR 507.50 x President Coolidge is backing the Fair to good Secretary of Agriculture to the limit | Common to fair . Cr ee 2 am oy re STOCK BULLS { kansas, where Federal funds are i. ! Good to choice $5.50-6:25 | ing withheld pending the correction | Fair to good $4.25-5.50 | of certain conditions. { Common to fair $3.00-4.25 Secretary Wallace states, regard-| CALVES ing the affair: Good to choice $12.00-13.00 “It is estimated that road improve- Medium $7.00-12.00 | ment districts in Arkansas have issu- Common $3.50-7.00 { ed bonds to the amount of about 70GS: $63,000,000. Of this only $11,000, a Heavyweight, 200-250 $8.50- 0000, about 17 per eent in round ; ; J) of them had practically exhaused Selling Price of Feeds: local funds before Federal aid was Bran $39.00-$40.00 ton | Of LUN Shorts pir ames $23.00 980.00 ton “Because of the peculiar road dis-| Hominy verre Son trict system adopted (in Arkansas|@ 125.131 E. King St., Fangs sree, Bas On Federal aid administration has been | Linseed ........ ton exceedingly difficult. In April, 1921, | Gluten ......... $51.50-852.50 ton it was discovered that great injustic-| were more than 500, but in only 100 | of which Federal aid had been grant- | An engineer of the Department | of Agriculture was sent into the| State to make a careful investigation | cure information needed to ad-| Beets: Homegrown, good supply, | minister Federal aid fun S i ses of bad! Cabbage: Homegrown, good sup- | management, careless handling and 1S, Carrots: Southern, good supply, 6¢| ers, unbalanced and discriminatory | Celery: Homegrown and N. J..|of districts, and a aceneral laxity in | Cauliflower: Homegrown, 15-80c¢|roads once they were built. Lettuce. Nearby, 10-20¢ head. | sion of the legislature to convene | Endive: 5-10c head. ed an act known as the Haarrelson | Onions: Homegrown and Ohio, |}, It is better than the old law. | Opened Fresh Daily and Served in All Styles. OYSTERS Use Only Choice Prime Oysters for Frying. Full Cones aud Platter Dinners Served T R Prom 11:30 to 1:30. My “oe STUMPF’S RESTAURANT Both Telephones Ti By West Main Street MOUNT Joy, PA NY Westenberger, Ma 6 O'Clock Closing Saturdays | | Parsley: Homegrown, good qual- | can pe created except by a majority Peppers: Homegrown, fair supply | 5,4 the assessment which may be | Potatoes: Nearby Irish Cobbler, “The department has no intention of Raking any further investigation a in rkansas except as it may be| Parsnips: Nearby, fair supply, 10c necessary to administer Federal aid funds justly and efficiently.” i — —— een Radishes: Homegrown, 5-10e Squash: Nearby, good supply, 5- | COLLEGE GIFTS TOTAL | Sweet Potatoes: Dela. and home- Spinach: Jomegrown, fair supply, | Were received by the Pennsylvania | Turnips: N. J., fair supply, 20- | biggest financial week of its kind on Butter: 50-60¢ 1b. Creamery 55-60 Most of this amount was in sub- Eggs: 46-50c dozen, mostly 48c. scription pledges from the college Poultry: Dressed chickens, $125- | alumni athletic advisory committee tJ * + x LS RS * LS & * LJ * RS CL * * J eS 0) * * * 0 * LJ LJ LJ x 5 at Penn State this year. The athlet- ic council pledged $110,000 towards Apples: Homegro apply] new physics > pion buildings; io wn, . dent sul rd $80,000 15-40c peck. Crab app d a fu received 1% peck. E a lgg en students |§ Benanas: Jamaica, good rom lass of "82. blished by provide agp where and anytime® Bell Phone 45RS 0 x ~ We are to do all kinds of hauling, anything, any- SLIDER ELIZABETHTOWN, PA" COO OOOO OOO AMERAS AND FILMS oe