The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 16, 1927, Image 7

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    Another Big , Worth
While Flouy Sale!
In the Stores Where Yo
the Most of the Best
Gold Seal
Family Flou
24 1bbag $1.05: 9
The highest grade fami
Ceresota
Gold Medal
Pillsbury
Best. Pure
Open kettle rendered. HEy
For Making Home-M#
Cake}
Baker’s Gra. Coconut cn 16¢
Baker’s Shr, Coconut 7, 14c
Asco Bak. Powd. 5, 10, 20c
Royal Bak. Powder 16, 23c
Rumford’s Bak. Pow. 9, 17c
Pure Vanilla Ext bt 13, 25¢
Lemgn Extract ... bot 13c
Asco Gr. Cinnamon .can 7c
Chocolate Decorettes tin 10c
Cinnamon and Sugar can '
When you drink your first cup of
what you have been missing. It’s
Coffees grown.
ASCO Cofiee|
Just try a cup and you'll
Teddy Bear
CORN or PEAS
2 « 28¢
Teas of The B
Plain Black on
ASCO T
1-4 1b pkg 14¢
Orange Pekoe, India Ceylon,
1-4 1b pkg 174
Pride of Killarney Tea 14
Eat Good Bread—It is
Victor Bread’
Bread Supreme ....... bi
Rolled Oats Chick Fee
1b 4c 1b 4c
90 Ib bag $3.45|100 Ib bag $
OOOO000000000000000000000C
Reg. 20c California Tuna
Light Meat
Makes a very tasty meat
uf Receive
the Least!
§ 12 Ib
tag 99C
Ib bag $4.20
flour milled.
hag. O9C
» 14c
ahead and save.
e Tarts, Pies and
rer Rab. Molasses 17, 30c
XXX Conf Sugar pkg 10c
rown Sugar ....
Ib 6c
co Ev. Milk .tall can 11c
egetable Shing ..lb 1215¢
isco 1b can 25¢
owdrift Short. 1b can 23c
If. Raisins ..... pkg 10c
ker’s Choc. Cake 12, 23c
hmingo Icing Sugar pk 9¢
SCO Blend you'll realize
combination of the Finest
37c
Ib
@ste the Difference!
Red Ripe
TOMATOES
3 «= 23¢
ter Kind!
Mixed
AS
: 1b 55¢
Old Country Style
: 1b 65¢
pkg 19c: 1b tin 75¢
good for you!
f Pan Loaf 6c
wrapped loaf 9¢
EHH
Scratch Feed
Ib 3%c
85 100 1b bag $3.40
ish 17¢
substitute.
Easily Prepared Le
Horse Shoe Red Salmon
Choice Pink Salmon cn
Marshall’s Herring cn
Imported Sardines .can 15¢
Domestic Sardines 3 cns 2fc
Kippered Snacks can 7c
Asco Wet Shr.mp .can 20c
Calif. Tuna Fish can 121c¢
G. S. Macaroni ..3 pks 25¢c
Rich Creamy Cheese 1b 33c
25¢
15¢
27c¢
Ga
Ww
Mi
As
Fa
Pr
As
As
Cafhp. Clam Chow can
Dr@#d Lima Beans 3 lbs
ten Foods!
12¢
10c
te Soup Beans 3 lbs 25¢
ed Vegetables . can 12¢
b Thr'd Codfish .pk 10c
@ White Mackerel .9, 29¢
25¢
10c
on’s Clam Chow. cn
iffic. Apple Butter cn
cf Pearl Tapioca .pk 14c
c@ Shoe Peg Corn cn 15c¢
Hawaiian Sliced Pineapple]
can 1 5¢
Hazel Syrup, hops flavor
Highest Quality Merchand
and Courteous Service all
“Home Town” ASCO Store!
These Prices Effective in (Bur
MOUNT JOY
ed es 55¢c
ise,4 Sensible Prices
awats you at your
Store

5-1924 Coupes
New Paint
With Slipon Body
925 Coupes
ood Paint
oon Tires
3
1
1-1923 Roadst
With Slipon Body
New Paint, Good Condition
1-1924 Touring
Good Paint
1920 Roadsters
With Slipon Body
Cheap
1-1921 Touring
Good Cond.tion, Cheap
Ford Ton Trucks
With Bodies and Cabs
Starters
In Best of Condition
—1924 Chevrolet
Panel Body
2 Used Fordson
Tractors
hauled and in the
chanical condition
H. 8. Newcomer
Ford Sales and
East Main St.
Service
8 sley bought $1.00 per 5% basket, ac-
¥ brought
{ly at
THE MOUNL UI Dannii, MUJNL JUY, LANUASIER UU, PA.
The Produce and
Live Stock Market
eed {
{| CORRECT
NISHED WEEKLY BY THE
PENNA. BUREAU OF
MARKETS FOR THE
BULLETIN
Spring Green on Market
The first dandelion greens of the
season appeared in Philadelphia to-
|day and sold readily at-$3.25 to
$3.75 per bushel. Other early
vegetables appearing
market include leeks, scal-
and parsley. There was a
moderate demand der leeks and
most sales ranged from 3c to 4c per
{bunch, scallicns sold at 1c to 1 and
{one-half cents per bunch, while par-

| cording to the Pennsylvania and
Federal Bureau of Markets.
The potato market held firm but
was slow. Pennsylvania
whites so’d at $2.75 to $2.80
[per 120 pound sack while Maine’s
$3.25 to $3.50. Maine
stock in 150 pound sacks sold most-
$4.35 while Pennsylvania's
brought $350. On the jobbing
market the best stock sold at $1.40
to $1.50 per bushel.
| The apple market continued dull
with Staymen jobbing at $1.00 to
$1.25 per bushel, Delicious at $1.75
and Golden Delicious of only fair
quality at $1.00. Carrots moved
slowly at 75¢ to $1.10 per 5-8 bas-
ket, beets at 25¢-40c and parsnips
at 75¢ to $1.00.
| MARKET: Draggy, beef steers
steady, practically unchanged com-
pared with week ago, medium
grades predominating, top $11.00
paid for 1475 pound averages, sev-
leral loads mediumweights $10.00-
$10.25, bulk of sales $9.00-10.00.
| Bulls, she stock and all cutters clos-
{ing steady, bulk cows $4.50-6.00,
medium bulls $6.75-7.50. Stockers
and feeders inactive. Calves steady
at week’s decline, top vealers $15.75
HOGS: Slow, steady, top westerns
$13.50, bulk desirable weights $13.-
00-13.25.
RECEIPTS: For today’s market,
cattle 3 cars, 1 Pa.; 1 Tenn.; 1 Md.;
containing 66 head, 315 head truck-
ed in from nearby farms, total cat-
tle 381 head, 15 calves, 723 hogs.
Receipts for week ending March 12,
1927, cattle 34 cars, 12 Pa.; 6 Va.;
{5 Tenn.; 4 St. Paul; 2 Chicago; !?
Canada; 1 Iowa; 1 Ind.; 1 Md.; 1
| Md.; containing 854 head, 774 head
Itrucked in, total cattle 1628 head,
{78 calves, 1615 hogs, 123 sheep.
Compared with previous week, cat-
tle 38 cars, containing 875 head,
1953 head trucked in, total cattle
| 1828 head, 101 calves, 1015 hogs,
12 sheep.

Range Of Prices
STEERS
Choice
Good
Medium
Common
$10.00-11.25
9.00-10.00
8.50-9.00
7.00-8.50
BULLS
Choice
HEIFERS
Choice
i Good
Medium
Common
A
oS N®
Choice
Good
Medium
Common
Low cutters
STOCKER FEEDERS
Steers
hod
DOW toy
U1 =3 DO DO DO
1 Ot
1
Choice
Good
Medium
Common
CALVES
Choice
Medium
Common
HOGS .
$12.50-13.25
12.75-13.50
Heavyweights
Mediumweights
Lightweights 13.00-13.50
Rough Stock 10.00-12.75
Lancaster Grain and Feed Market
Wheat $1.30 bu.
New Corn 70c bu.
HAY (baled)
Timothy
Straw
$18.00-20.00
$10.00-12.00
Selling Price of Feeds
$39.50-40.50
42,00-43.00
40.00-41.00
44.00-45.00
56.00-57.00
44.00-45.00
Ground Oats 41.00-42.00
Alfalfa (Regular) 39.00-40.00
(Cash at Warehouse)
Cottonseed 41% $46.00-47.00
Dairy Feed 16% $35.00-36.00
Dairy Feed 18% $38.00-39.00
Dairy Feed 20% 42.00-45.00
Dairy Feed 24% 46.00-47.00
Dairy Feed 25% $49.00-50.00
Horse Feed 85% $42700-43.00
Alfalfa (Reground) 43.00-44.00
ret Qe
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
Bran
Shorts
Hominy
Middlings
Linseed
Gluten
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
ton
Play at Milton Grove.
On the evenings of March 17 and
19 at 7:45 the pupils of the Milton
Grove High school will present the
play “Ruth in a Rush.” There will
be special music and the public is
invited. Miss Mary F. Strickler is
the teacher. 2t
en A Gp en

i call
land estates to the
|
Rd
ter now draws any pension.
| Baron de
Every citizen of Montpellier,
France, claims that he is entitled to
himself baron. In 1537 the
Caravette, who lived in
bequeathed his title
city. Hence, it
is argued, every child born in the
city may adopt the title.
rere a rrr
Montpellier,
The latest evolution in the line of
fancy singing birds is a pure white
“canary, not an albino.
——— QF Qe
No former British Cabinet Minis-
INFORMATION FUR-!
, abroad by

PAGE SEVEN

'World’s Record Golf
Expected This Winter
The world may look forward toward
January ninth as the day on which
the greatest thirty-six holes of golf
ever played will be turned in. The
golf will be played by the winner of
the Los Angeles $10,000 open cham-
pionship and will be to the credit of
George Von Elm or of the man who
beats him.
Von Elm is only in his middle twen-
ties. And although he has never had
the distinction of being a boy wonder
he is within a few months of the age
of Bobby Jones of Atlanta who has
always had that title.
In winning the national amateur
championship at Baltusrol Von Elm
was one under even fours for thirty-
five holes. He has a record of 63, that
is nine under even fours, for eighteen
holes at the Rancho Club in Los
Angeles. And the Rancho Club course
may be selected for the finals of the
L.. A. Open championship.
If it is the champion, who is still a
youngster and whose game is getting
better, will be playing in his first big
tournament since winning the cham-
pionship. He will be playing at home
before his thousands of friends whe
have presented him with a magnificent
sedan and who have otherwise
crowned him king.
He will be pressed by one of the
greatest fields of golfers ever put to-
gether. He will be driving with the
narrow stance, and the full pivot—
this is the altered style that helped
him to the championship. He will be
playing in perfect golfing weather for
the records reveal January days in
Los Angeles to be bright and sun-
shiny, with comparatevely little wind
and neither too hot nor too cold.
With the driving he did to win the
amateur championship at Baltusrol his
gixty-three at Rancho would have
been more than likely a sixty-one.
The man who beats Von Elm the
day of the finals is likely to have in
his record the greatest round ever
turned in. Hundreds will be in the
play. The prize is the richest in golf
and it is played at a time when most
of the golf courses of the United
States are closed. This will permit
scores of professionals to be in the


home clubs at other seasons.

Help Her Keep Her Feet!
yo


Th
Relief needs $1,000,000 to meet this emergency.

- .pect Sixty Countries to
Observe Golden Rule Sunday
ORE than sixty-nations through-
M out the civilized world are ex-
pected to join in the observ-
ance of International Golden Rule
Sunday this year, according to Gor-
don L. Berry, Executive Secretary of
he International Near East Associa-
ion, under whose auspices the day
will be celebrated.
Originally intended to promote
peace and better understanding
throughout the world and to attract
world wide attention to the situation
in the Near East, where American
and foreign philanthropy are caring
for an army of war orphans, the day
his year will have the additional pur-
pose of aiding victims of the earth-
quake in Armenia, a large number
of them children now under the care
of the American Near East Relief.
On Golden Rule Sunday people
throughout the world are asked to
serve in their homes the simple meal
of a Near East Relief orphanage and
then to contribute as generously as|
their means will permit to relief work | i
child welfare work in Bible
Lands. The children thus cared for
are being trained as apostles
more peaceful world.
Reports submitted to Mr. Berry in-
ticate that last year fifty-one na-
tions joined in the observance of the
day. Official sanction to the idea in
this country was given by the en-
dorsement of President Coolidge and
rulers, statesmen, and
and
diplomats.
The appeal for aid to children in
Bible Lands has received a universal |

|
{
|
{
|
|
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|
of af#
GORDON L. BERRY
response in. all civilized countries.
Practical application of the Golden
Rule is the sole purpose of the ob- |
servance. Golden Rule Sunday will
be celebrated everywhere as a day of
self-sacrifice and kindly thoughts
toward children in distant lands
Southland who have to remain at thelr *
to test your battery. We can show
you how to get longer life and better
service out of yi
the Westinghouse, a |
capacity battery, in a
proof case. No case or
e piece acid
r renewals.
Make this Station Your Headquarters
When in Town %
Tryon's Garage. Mount Joy

Ry for
both stores,
find both style ar A:
at ‘prices that
your valuable time going
new Spring shades. You will
quality in
Why
for your Spring hat,
our line of hats and
will spend car fare and
when we can give you thégame thing for less mon-
ey? Let us prove to you thafawe can save you mon-
ey. Give us a trial. Nice ass
West Main St.,
And a much larger assortment at our store
bethtown.
Mrs. F. C. Fisher
35 S. Market St., ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.





an inspector of Pennsylvania Agriculture.
Buy Certified chicks that produce big, b Standard S.
White Leghorns that you will be proud of. We
I also have the NEWTOWN BROODER STOVES
WE AIM TO PLEASE
jful,
C.
J. EE. Melhorn
Phone call 63R3 MT. JOY, PENNA.
INI
"GOODRICH TIRES |


TIRE AND BAT
208 E. Main St.

CLARENCE SCHOCK
MOUNT JOY, PA.
AL A
ASK
ey
| LUMBER-COAL
-