5 ler Pa. Pc. | ~ | | | 1 » { | i + { i | ¥ | I f —- WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1925 Yes It’s True I will receive my first MAURICE RIVER COVE OYSTERS about FRIDAY. From then on at all times. I HAVE A Special—For 3 Days Only Thursday, Friday and Saturday A One Pound Box of Fresh, Assorted Schrafft’s Blue Banner Chocolates at 59¢ Per Pound Ask for it if we don’t mention it to you. You will see it. in the East Window on display Saturday. We also have a full line of Bachman’s Chocolate with the 5-lb. layers at the usual price. H. A. Darrenkamp 3 Doors East of Post Office W. H. Dishong TAILOR MOUNT JOY, PA. Elizabethtown, Pa REPAIRING -- CLEANING and PRESSING Drop a Card and 1 will Call Furniture Needs The importance of correct furniture and furnishing in the modern home cannot be over emphasized, if you wish to entertain your friends in a manner that will do yourself and your husband credit. The best way to insure proper furniture is to come here to make your selections. H. C. BRUNNER West Main Street, MOUNT JOY, PENNA. A Haircut Fvery 10 Days a formula for good looks LADIES’ AND CHILDREN’S : HAIR BOBBING Agent for Manhattan Laundry. Hershey’s Barber Shop MOUNT JOY, PENNA. CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, UT PA. WE rai) LUMBER-COAL | THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JCY, LANCASTER CO., PA. The Produce and MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN nts. Nn MARKET: Moderately active. Beef steers compared with week ago better, grades steady, common and medium kinds weak to 26c lower, quality mostly plain. top $10.50, bulk $7.50 to $9.00. Fat heifers and bulls slow about steady Cows weak to 50c lewer, cheaper grades showing most decline. Stock ers and feeders fairly active, bet- ter grades steady, common plain lightweights weak, top $8.50, aver- age weight 810 lbs. bulk of sales $5.75 to $7.00, run includes sever- al leads good quality, Canadian Calves sharply lower, mostly 50c 0 2. : HOGS: show a decline of about 50c¢ for week. RECEIPTS: for today’s market: Cattle forty one cars: 19 Virginia; 5 Canada. 3 St. Paul; 3 Kentucky; 2 Tennessee; 2 Chicago; 2 Kansas City; 2 Penna.; 2 West Virginia; 1 St. Louis. 1 New York; containing 1222 head, 14 calves, 172 hogs. Receipts for week ending October 10, 1925: Cattle 330 cars; 123 Virginia; 74 St. Paul; 30 West Virginia; 18 Tennessee; 16 Canada. 13 Chicago; 12 Iowa; 11 New York; 7 Penna.. 4 Kansas City; 4 Buffalo; 4 St. Louis; 4 Kentucky; 3 Pittsburgh; 3 North Carolina. 2 Maryland; 2 Ohio; containing 9849 head, 265 calves, 1531 hogs, 54 sheep. Compared with week prev- ious, Cattle 241 cars, containing 6638 head, 390 calves, 1072 hogs, 31 sheep. Fancy Apples Steady Fancy apples met a moderate demand on Philadelphia market this morning and sold at firm pric- es, according to the State and Federal Bureau of Markets, Penn sylvania A 2% inch Jonathan brought $5.00 per barrel, and A 3 inch Twenty Ounce $6.00. Re- ceipts of Pennsylvania apples were moderate in Baltimore and the market was dull. The demand and trading were slow with A 21% inch Winter Banas selling at $1.50 per bushel, Grimes Golden at $1.25 to $1.40 and Jonathan at $1.25 to $1.50. New Jersey corn, sweet potatoes string beans and lima beans were weaker. Fancy beets, carrots and lettuce were stronger. New York State peaches were more plentiful with some of the stock over ripe and soft, due to these conditions the market was weaker. Onions were also weaker with only fancy stock bringing top quotations. New York State lettuce was higher and in limited supply. The potato market was slow with prices lower. Pennsylvania U. S. No. 1 round whites in 150 pound sacks were quoted at $3.25, while bulk stock brought $1.90 to $2.10 per hundred weight, Onion Market Dull Offerings of onions were mod- erate on the Philadelphia market this morning, according to State and Federal Bureau of Markets. The demand was slow, but fancy stock held at steady prices. The bulk of the offerings were of or- dinary quality and sold at lower prices. Potatoes were more plentiful and prices were generally lower, with U. 8. No. 1 Round Whites selling at $3.75 to $3.85 per 150 pound sack. Bulk stock ranged from $2.25 to $2.50 per hundred weight. Supplies of Iceberg lettuce were heavier and the market weaker. Apples met a light demand and the market was dull with little change in prices, Nearby produce was in liberal supply. Huckleberries were weak- er, while cabbage, carrots, cauli- flower and egg plants showed a weaker tendency. Tomatoes show- ed a wide range in quality and condition and a corresponding range in price. Offerings of lima beans were mostly of ordinary qual ity and the market was weaker. String beans continue to sell well at steady prices. Spinach was very plentiful, prices held steady with yesterday’s decline, Feed Markets Weak The feed market continues weak and depressed. Feeds for prompt shipment are in liberal supply. Little interest is shown by buyers in deferred deliveries. Oil meals are easier as the result of lack of export demand and heavy produc- tion. Corn feeds steady at the recent reduction in prices, The de- mand is generally light. Range of Prices: STEERS Good to choice $9.50-11.50 Fair to good 8.25-9.50 Medium to fair 7.00-8.25 Common to medium 5.50-7.00 BULLS Good to choice -6.00-7.25 Fair to good 5.00-6.00 Medium to fair $ 4.50-5.00 Common to medium $ 4.00-4.50 HEIFERS Croice to prime $8.25-9.00 Good to- choice 7.25-8.25 Medium to good 5.75-7.25 Common to medium 4.50-5.75 COWS Goced to choile 5.50-7.00 Medium to good 4.25-5.50 Common to medium 3.75-4.25 Carners & Cutters 2.00-3.75 STOCKER-FFfEDER STEERS Gocd to choice 7.75-9.25 Fair to good $:6.75-7.75 Medium to fair $ 5.75-6.75 Common to medium $ 4.50-5.75 STOCK BULLS Good to choice $ 5.75-6.50 Fair to good $ 4.75-5.75 Medium to fair $ 4.25-4.75 Ccmmon to medium $ 4.00-4.25 CALVES Good to ihoice 11.25-13.50 Medium 10.00-11.75 Common 5.00-10.00 HOGS Heavyweights $13.00-13.50 Mediumweights 13.25-13.75 Rough Stock 11.00-13.00 Lancaster Grain and Feed Market Wheat $1.28 bu. Corn $ .85 bu. "KEYTOWN PLAN" HAS MANY FOLLOWERS s Found to Increase Sales in Many Territories That Were Formerly Covered by Personal Visits. “One of the interesting and impor- tant developments in the use of the telephone,” says The Telephone News, “Is the extensive use by many busi- ness houses of the so-called ‘keytown selling plan,” The article goes on to point out that through such an ingenious method of covering their territories, traveling salesmen lose nothing in personal con- tacts with their customers, while at the same time they acquire a surplus of spare time that can be used for in- creasing new business. A salesman for a rubber company who works out of Pittshurgh, visits Altoona every three weeks, says the article. This man spends on an avep- uge of three days in the vieinity, mak- Ing service calls on his customers, Through the “keytown plan,” the first and second visits might be used in calling the Altoona customers by tele- phone, leaving the third trip for per- sonal visits. In this way while the service element remains the same, there is much additional time gained for the solicitation of new business. It is reported that the method is being used satisfactorily by many dif- ferent lines of industry. - ell Cees Public Supports Firebugs The following editorial from the Portland, Oregon, Journal com- ments on a situation which is too common in practically every Amer- ican city: “Juries can free guilty firebugs when they want to. But the public pays. “Eight separate fires were start- ed in a house in Portland. The fire bureau was quick on the scene and put out the blaze in time to have a full view of the tracks of the fire- bug. “The furniture was soaked with coal oil, Furniture that the owner paid $137 for was insured for $1200. . “In a Portland lodging house there were two fires within 35 days. Papers and shavings piled on the floor and stuffed in chimneys, and oil-soaked rags near the remains of a burned candle were found in the rooms. Insurance of $1500 was! carried on the contents, which had been offered for sale for $450 without a buyer. “A store building was burned | March 21. Insurance of $450 was | carried on the contents. The ar- son squad says there were no con- tents in the building. “Arson has become an industry in Portland. Juries don’t convict. A cafeteria was burned for the in- surance. One of the owners said he~burned it to get the insurance. He saturated a mop with coal oil, attached a short candle, lighted the candle and left the place. The first jury hung. The confessions of both owners were before it, but it disagreed. ! “The jury at the convicted, but recommended parole. And the judge granted it. If juries and courts don’t punish fire- bugs, of course the business of burning and collecting the insur- ance will go on. “And a lot of people think it all right in the belief that the insur- ance companies pay. But where do the companies get the money? They don’t pay one cent of their own money for these incendiary or second trial other fires. They pay with the money that the insured pay in premiums. “The home owner pays. The merchant © pays. The industrial plant pays. The owner of every kind of property insured against fire pays. It goes out of their pockets in higher rates, and they the paying for every fire. “And that isn’t the worst. As if there were not enough crime, the system of incendiary fires is making more and more . criminals. Every firebug is a crook. Every new firebug is a new crook. And new crooks are being made all the time by the laxity of insurance agents in over-insuring property and by the gross and glaring failures of juries and judges to sense the vie- iousness and criminality of burning property to get the insurance.” Brute Lady—My husband is a deceitful wretch. Last night he pretended to be- lieve me when he knew I was lying to him -—T.ondon HAY (baled) Timothy Straw $16.00-18.00 ton $10.00-11.00 ton. Selling Price of Feeds Bran $35.50-36.50 ton Shorts 38.00-39.00 ton Hominy 40.00-41.00 ton Middlings $44.00-45.00 ton Linseed $54.00-55.00 ton Gluten 49.50-50.50 ton Ground Oats 38.00-39.00 ton Alfalfa Meal. reg. $41.00-42.00 ton Cottonseed 41 pe. $50.00-51.00 ton Dairy Feed 16 pec. $36.50-37.50 ton Dairy Feed 18 pe. $41.00-42.00 ton Dairy Feed 20 pe. $43.00-44.00 ton Dairy Feed 24 pe. $48.50-49.50 ton Dairy Feed 25 pe. $50.50-51.50 ton Dairy Feed 85 pe. $43.50 44.50 ton may not realize it, but they do all : Happenings at E'town College! and high completed, | A very interesting class lecture course is Full particulars of the same will | be given next week. The friends! of the college will be glad to know that two numbers of last year’s course have been secured. Dr, Ott will be here in February and the Newell Concert Company that was so delightfully received last year, will be here on Decem- ber 7th. The opening number will be November 6th, the Vernon Quintet, Dr. Ambrose comes in January with a remarkable lecture describing the latest achievements in the electrical’ field. Explaining the radio, and its uses together with many other remarkable elec- trical features, On January 29th, a most unique feature will be the Lincoln Lecture. This will be giv- en by Dr. Caswell, of Brooklyn, who bears a marked resemblance to the martyred president. In March the Welch Quartet will give their delightful musical program. You will notice that the course contains three musical numbers and three lecture numbers. A more complete description is promised next week, The Friday evening social in the dining room was a successful feat- ure of events and was enjoyed by all who attended. The illustrated lecture on Pal- estine, given by Reverend J. F. Knittle, on Saturday evening in the College Chapel was attended by a | times of the people at the present | time as well as the history and |} scenes of the sacred places in the | Holy Land. The Faculty Quartet rendered | a program in the Fairview Church of the Brethren, on Saturday even- ing, October 3rd. President H. K. Ober filled three church appointments in Shamokin, on Sunday, October 4th. In the morning, he preached a sermon on “A Call to Saintship.’ In the af- ternoon, he delivered his lecture on “Child Rights” to a very large and appreciative audience at a Rally Day program. In the even- ing he delivered a sermon on the subject of “Walking with God.” { The Keystone Literary Society | will render a public progress in | the College Chapel on Friday eve- ning, October 9th. The Athletic activities are mak- ing a gradual transition. Soccer and Volley Ball are place of Baseball and Tennis. In- teresting matches in the tournaments are scheduled to be | played this week. There will also | probably be a tournament between | the Faculty and the Students. Professor A. P. Wenger preach- | ed in the Mechanics Grove of the Brethren on Sunday noon, October 4th, : The Brown Boys who have favor and renown as singers render a public program in College Chanel on Saturday ing, October 17th. The public is invited. There no admission charge, EE GET AT THE CAUSE! taking the | tennis | | Church fore- | won | will | the | even- | general | will be | Many Mount Joy Folks Are Showing How to Avoid Needless Suffering | There’s nothing more annoying | than kidney weakness or inability to properly control the kidney secre- | tions. Night and day alike, the suf-| ferer is tormented and what with | the burning and scalding, the attend- | ant backache, headache and dizzi- ness, life is indeed a burden. Doan’s | Pills=—a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys—have brought peace and | comfort to many Mount Joy people. | Profit by this Mount Joy resident’s experience, C. H. Metzler, mechanic, 49 West Main St., says: “I wasn’t feeling any too good and the trouble was all with my kidneys. In the first place they were put out of order by a cold. My kidneys were not only sore, but they were sluggish, too, which resulted in the kidney secre- tions passing too seldom. At times when I did any stooping, a sharp pain ran through my back. A short use . of Doan’s Pills brought good results.”’. Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Metzler had. Foster-Milburn Com- pany., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. lL nm Veterans of the “Line” Philadelphia.—R. H. White, District tendent of Maintenance ir 2 Tee uperin oe hone C nat f Per isylvania, | ——— Eee. You may as well try to conduct] your business without capital as to| try and get along without advertis- ing. There's no use, it won't go. All the leading and most successful I merchants use the columns of the | Mount Joy Bulletin. tf | pe. Alfalfa Meal. Fine $45.00-46.00 ton he a a el ! ou pay 50c or 55¢ a lb. for coffee elsewhere very appreciative audience. The pound of ASCO Blend to- pictures portrayed the life and || difference—but taste the PAGE SEVEN Do You Know the Delightful Creamy, Browa-Crusted Victor Family? DO YOU KNOW WHY AND HOW THE VICTOR FAMILY IS BETTER BREAD? It is made of beautifully white downy flour—the won- derful food of the golden wheat. Purest, richest materials, every ingredient the best that can be bought. Baked in our own Six Big Bakeries by our Master Bakers —Highest Quality maintained every step of the way. Big, golden-brown crusted loaves of deliciousness, tempt- ing and health-building for you. BREAD SUPREME big wrapped loaf 10c¢ As Rich as Bread can be made. VICTOR BREAD pan loaf 7c Quality, Quantity and Satisfaction in every loaf. Regular 10c¢ PRINCESS JELLIES tumbler 6c Give the children plenty of Victor or Bread Supreme spread with Louella Butter and topped off with the delicious Princess Jelly—It’s good for them. Red Ripe TOMATOES 2 big cans 25¢ BUY A DOZEN CANS FOR $1.40 ASCO COFFEE pound 42¢ TS 3 pkgs 25¢ UNES 2 Ibs ASCO PORK © BEANS 3 cans 25c You can Now Buy the Famous Pride of Killarney Tea in Quarter Pound packages. PRIDE OF KILLARNEY TEA 2 Ib pkg 19¢ : Ib sealed tin 75c Try a package—you’ll like it. More cups to the pound. ASCO TEAS 1 Ib pkg 17¢ : Ib 65¢ Orange Pekoe, India Ceylon, Old Country Style and Java ASCO TEAS % Ib pkg 14¢ : Ib 55¢ Plain Black or Mixed New Crop—1925 Pack Fruits 8 Vegetables Continuing Our Special Dozen Prices—Buy Now and Save 25¢ Good Seal Sliced Pineapple ....... big can 25¢ : doz $2.85 Del Monte Crushed Pineapple ....med can 23c : doz $2.65 Hawaiian Pineapple (broken slices) big can 23c : doz $2.65 Del Monte Sliced Peaches ........ tall can 15¢ : doz $1.75 ASCO Sliced Peaches ............ big can 25¢ : doz $2.85 Sweet Tender Peas ............... 2 cans 19c : doz $1.10 Crushed Sugar Corn .............. 2 cans 19¢ : doz $1.10 Red Ripe Tomatoes .............., 2 cans 19¢c : doz $1.10 ASCO Crushed Corn .......... 0 0 can 17c¢ : doz $1.95 ASCO California Asparagus ...... tall can 21c : doz $2.40 Best White SOUP BEANS 2 lbs 15¢ Rich Creamy CHEESE Ib 33c¢ Asco Pearl TAPIOCA 2 pkgs ASCO SOUR KROUT 2 ASCO BUCKWHEAT pkg 10c PEAS 2 cans 19c DO YOU KNOW THAT IT COSTS LESS TO LIVE WHEN YOU BUY ALL YOUR TABLE NEEDS IN OUR STORES? big cans 25c¢ Sweet Tender These Prices Effective in Our Stores MOUNT JOY, PENNA. Let good brake lining A sudden dash from a side road, frantic jamming of worn out brakes, and your car joins the others on the junk pile. Faulty brakes are to blame for most accidents—any police department will tell you that. Perhaps that is why so many of our customers are driving in to have their brakes relined with Johns-Manville Asbestos Brake Lining. They know it is the best—and we put it on with no lost ei ryon’s Garage, Mt. Joy Furniture ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FURNI- TURE AND Q .RPETS? QUALITY AND SERVICE MAKE FOR SATISFACTION. WE ASSURE YOU OF ALL THREE WE ARE DEPENDABLE WESTENBERGER, MALEY % MYERS 125.131 E. King St, Lancaster, Pa. 6 O'Clock Closing Saturdays