WEDNE DEQ THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. PAGE SEVEN 4 announce that she { t her studio. course in Theory Special attention to Application for enrollmet person. Studio, 40 W. * MRS: R. P. McGANN Nee Jennie Wharvell will receive a limited number A thorough and complete Imony, and Technique, will be taught. beginners. be made by mail or in Donega | i The Door of The large and ever-growing who pass through the doors of Opportunity! family of ASCO Shoppers Our Stores daily, are continu- \, ally benefiting by the many opportunities presented to save don their Food and Household Needs. These big, bright, well-stoc making it possible for Thousan p live better for Less % en you enter the door & In the Stores Money. of your Neighborhood ASCO Store. Where Quality Counts, ked Stores are continually ds upon Thousands of families Opportunities await you Your Money Goes Furthest! Del Monte AGUS TIPS 3 cans 85c¢ Gold Seal’ Spaghetti or Macaroni 3% 20c Good, ubstantial food for the Winter months. ASCO Butterine A very wholesome spread. gess Apple Butter ...... 3 cans 29¢ @; Beans with Pork ..... 3 cans 23c ASCO Pure Preserves ..... big jar 23c ASCO%pP Prince Je ASCO ie" 18¢ RICH CREAMY fi CHEESE *35¢ ure Jellies tumbler 15¢ lies 3 tumblers 25¢ Gold Seal Rolled Oats ...... 3 pkgs 25¢ porated Milk . .. ASCO C lif. Apricots ...... 2 cans 25¢ . tall can 10c RED RIPE TOMATOES 2 big cans 2 5¢ CHRISTMAS CANDIES! Leave Your Order Today Holiday French Mixtures i Hershey’s Chocolate Kisses . . . . 5 Ib gift box $1.15 21-2 Ib box 98¢ Sweethome Hard Mixed Candy .. 2 1b tin a9¢ Lady Eleanor Fancy Assorted Chocolates 5 poundigift box $2 Green or Belmont Chocolates .5 1p gift.box $1.65 Sweethome Assorted Chocolates . . . . Hard Mixed Gloss Candy ........ Ib. box 39¢ 5 1b tin $1.35 y Bread of Quality and Purity! Victor Bread an loaf ? 6¢c Bread Supreme wrapped loaf 4 C Supreme Fruit Cake 2 Ib cake $1 .00 You can Reduce Your Asco Dutch Cocoa 1-2 1b 20c Asco Farina . . 3 pkes 25¢ Asco Buckwheat . . . . pkg 10c Asco Golden Syrup . .can 10c Pure Vanilla Ext. bot 13¢, 25¢ Asco Corn Starch . .. .pkg 7c Prim Whole Rice ..3 pkgs 25¢ Pure Salad Oil .. bot 8c, 7c Asco Baking Powd can 10, Sweet Sugar Corn 2 cans 25c Tender Sweet Peas 2 cans 25¢ Large Calif. Prunes 2 lbs 25c ..1b 19¢ 2 cans 19¢ Fancy Evap. Peaches Asco Tomatoes |... Household Expenses— by buying all Your Needs at our Stores. These Prices MOUNT JOY Store Effective in Our He HARDWARE PLUMBING, HEATING AND TINNING ml rms When in need of anything in serve you. We have secured the services Prepared to do only the best of Ha our line, we will be pleased tg He, by of a Plumber and are work. Weare prompt and will cheerfully furnish estimates. Give us a call, ae Brown West Main Street v ROOO00O0OOOO £3 0) 3 * 3 ye The Produce and Live Stock Market CORRECT INFORMATION FUR- NISHED WEEKLY BY THE PENNA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Owing to lighter supplies the mushroom market was slightly stronger in Philadelphia and 3-ib. baskets ranged from .40 to .90, with a few extra fancy whites sell- ing at $1.00 per basket. The mark- et for mushrooms held about steady in New York City and 3-lb, baskets of fancy whites ranged from .75 to $1.00; browns and creams brought .60 to .75; and buttons sold at .50 to .75. Flats and opens sold as low as .25 per basket in both Philadel- phia and New York, according to the Federal and Pennsylvania Bur- eau of Markets. Wired celery moved slowly in Philadelphia and most sales ranged from .05 to .10, with extra fancy reported at .12 to .15 per bunch. Beets sold at .01% to .02 1/2 per bunch and bunched carrots brought the same prices while topped car- rots sold slowly at .35 to _.5Q per 5/8 basket. Leeks were dull at .02 to .03 per bunch. Cabbage was low and sold mostly at .20 to .25 per 5/8 basket. Sweet potatoes were in light demand and 5/8 baskets of yellows ranged from .50 to .75, with fancy house sweets selling at .90 to $1.00 per basket. Red sweets ranged from .65 to .90, with fancy house sweets as high as $1.15 per basket. Nearby spinach was scarce and sold mostly at $1.00 per bushel. Potatoes were in light demand and 5/8 of redskins ranged from .45 to .55 per basket while 120-lb. sack of round whites sold at $2.25 to $2.40, with fancy at $2.50 per sack, The apple market was firm and nearby truck receipts brought $1.10 to $1.25 for Staymen and $1.10 to $1.15 for No. 1 Romes in 5-8 bask- ets, Delicious sold mostly around $1.65 per baskets Yorks, Winesaps and Paragons sold mostly at $1.00 to $1.25 and No. 2’s sold at .65 to .80 per basket. MARKET: Beef steers and other killing classes met a slow draggy market thru out week. Beef steers closing steady, most sales $11.25- $12.25, some held above $15.00, 100 head including prize winners from Toronto, Canada show, here for special auction sale Monday. Bulls, she stock and alll cutters practically unchanged for week, bulk bulls $7.25-$8.25, butcher cows $6.00-$7.00, cutters $4.75- $6.00, stockers and feeders steady to strong, some sales .25 higher, bulk $9.00-$10.00, liberal holdover of late arrivials for Mondays mark- et, calves steady, top vealers $16.50 few select $17.00, hogs steady. RECEIPTS: For todays market, cattle 21 cars, 11 Canada; 7 Chic- ago; 1 St. Pm); 1 Pa; 1 N. Y; eon- taining 591 head, 54 trucked in, total cattle 645 head, 11 calves, 163 hogs. Receipts for week ending Dec. 3, 127, cattle 138 cars, 58 Canada; 26 St. Paul; 17 Chicago; 14 Va; 4 Buffalo; 3 N. Y; 2Md; 1 St. Louis; 1 St. Joseph; containing 3913 head, 291 trucked in, total cattle 4204 head, 312 calves, 1072 hogs, 265 sheep. Receipts for corresponding week last year, cattle 168 cars, 34 Va; 34 Chicaga; 25 St. Louis; 22 St. Paul; 14 Canada; 11 Pa: 6 W. Va; 5 Tenn; 4 Ky; 4 Md; 3 N. Y; 3 Buffalo; 1 Kansas City; 1 Ind.; 1 Mo; containing 4523 head, 161 trucked in, total cattle 4684 head, 1469 hogs, 135 calves, 34 sheep. Range Of Prices STEERS Choice Good Good Cood Medium Common HEIFERS $10.25-11 59 $9.00-10.25 $7.50-9.00 6.20-7.50 Choice Good Medium Common COWS Choice Good Common & Metium Low cutter & cutter BULLS Good and choice $7.50-8.75 Cutters, common, medium 5.50-7.50 Feeder and Stocker Cattle Good and Choice 9.00-11.50 Common & medium 6.50-9.00 Good and Choice 8.75-11.00 Common & medium 6.25-8.75 VEALERS Good ®and choice Medium Cull and common HOGS $14.50-16.50 12.00-14.50 $6.00-12.00 $10.00-10.50 10.00-10.50 Heavyweights Mediumweights Lightweights 9.75-10.25 Rough Stock 8.00-9.75 Lancaster Grain and Feed Market heat $1.25 bu. HAY (baled) Timothy Straw ton ton $ 12.00-15.00 $10.00-11.00 Selling’ Price of Feeds $42.00 43.00 42.00-43.00 48.00-49.00 47.00-48.00 56.00-57.00 | Gluten 47.00-48.00 "Ground oats 47.00-48.00 ton Alfalfa (Regular) $40.00-41.00 ton Cottonseed 41% 53.00-564.00 ton Dairy Feed 16% $40.00-41.90 %on ! Dairy Feed 18% $43.00-44.0C , ton ‘Dairy Feed 20% $47.00-48.00¢ ton ‘Dairy Feed 24% $51.00-52.00 dn Dairy Feed \25% {ton Horse feed 85% on Alfalfa (reground) 44.00-45 on Pp ey id \ Cir ton ton ton ton ton ton Bran Shorts {| Hominy ' Middlings Linseed . PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To Say This Week Ware Sull De Priscilla Hira Liever Boonasteil: Du 'husht em Heinerich Hullerbuck so bully goot- er advice gevva waega sime u-ben- nicha boo os ich mer net helfa con dich aw umrode froga. Ich hob en duchter, Presciila, os boll uff eld is, un de will hira, awver se will net hira ware ich hovva will. Mer breicha se aw notewennich da- hame un ich mane se set nuch so socha sich ous em kup shloga. Kunsht du mere rode gevva we se derfun tsu holdta, DANNY MAISLICH Well, Danny, my arshte froke is, wid du hira odder di duchter? Won’s dich is don sedsht du di agener willa hovva, awver won di duchter, Prescilla, hira will don set se de waul hovva ware se hov- va will far en mon. Ich sawg des wile du sawsght in dime brief os se boll uff eld is, un ich bahawb 0s won en maidel net era fersh- tond hut on selera eld don greeked se kenner. Won se nuch in era kelverl-eeb ware don daid ich dere by shtae, awver se is oldt ganunk far selver picka un de noddure sawgt era tzimlich naixt ware se net gleicha con. Luss mich dere sawga, en oldter mon yunga leit era picka is en missliche bisniss, un se hira maucha ware se net wella is orrick g’farlich. Es is ken house- holdting os net ols ebmohls glaena shtrawatts hut, un won es dreeb wasser net grawd hell wardt don socha se far en uresoch, un won der fodder de match ga-mauched hut don blama se ene far era drov- vel, un es naixt os du haersht saw- ga se, “My dawdy hut my fraw ga-picked un are mawk aw now by era laeva.” Is sell net wore? Waisht du net fun house-holdtinga 0s grawd sella wake uff ga brucha sin?” Uff der onera hond won tswae mit eram agena willa sich farmar- ed hen don is es era agener bariga, un se shticka generally dertsoo so long os meeklich. De gadonka os shtride ga-bruffatzeid is warra by era freind we se g’hired hen is os we der crack funera whip ivver era ken, un se shtarta widder nei mid frisher mood far broveera annoner widder recht tsu gleicha. Dohare set en fodder orrick ochtsome si we weit os are gait in sella socha. Es set ends mit gooter rode un en farshennicher protest—awver by freeda, ken g’wold. Are doot’s ba- ria mit biddery draina. Du sawgsht aw de Prescilla set nnt hira wile dere se nuch dahame breicht. Yaw, un we elder os dere wardt we mae notewennich os dere se breicht. En harlicher hirerawd is en grosse g’nawd. De chanca sin net blendy, un es con nemond af- forda aney tsu farleera. Won du de Prescilla moll nimmy wid don will aw nemond shunsht se mae. Nix is mae important in weldliche socha os we en fraw odder en mon soocha—un luss mich dere sawga, Danny, recht hira hut gor shtarns feel tsu do mit der naixt weldt. Es is nix shurer far en mon tsu’'m div- el driva os en schlechte fraw. Won Danny, le=b '|dr mon schlecht ous draid don doot de garecht fraw farw ika we en dulla-bawn un gait generally yung ins grawb. Won de fraw schlecht is don doot der mon’s generally shtanda far awile, awver by de- grees draid are in en sow un far- recked so, Now, Danny, ich hob dere net g’sawt wos du do sulsht, awver du consht di ageny cinclusion tzeega wos ich mane. ll GPs “Sanitary’”’ Pigs Win Prizes Four pigs raised by a Georgia farmer cooperating with the Unit- ed States Department of Agricul- ture in a parasite-control experi- ment won first, second, and third prizes and also the championship of their breed at the Southwest Georgia Fair held recently. The pigs were raised under a system of sanitation designed to control para- sitic worms which are a trouble- some parasite on hog lots. These pigs, according to a report of Dr. E. M. Nighbert, in charge of the experiment, were the first animals exhibited by their owner and were shown in good competi- tion. They were 6 months and 12 days old and averaged 202 1-2 pounds. An accompanying exhibit on swine sanitation showed the man- ner in which the pigs had been raised, and attracted much favor- able attention and comment. Many swine owners who were impressed by the practical benefits of parasite control returned later bringing their friends. Br In view of the advancing values of standing timber and prices now prevailing in the olde a reg- ions, Thornton the Forest Service art- ment of Agricul sonable to expec® the next crop. merchantable may be te Home Health Club WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX. PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER Fat folks: (This article is an encore) A regular reader of my Health articles, writes me about her weight. Her husband is thin and she is fat, wants to know what the trouble is, as near as she can tell they both like and eat the same things, A bit of information on the subject. “When you were normal weight, about 120, did you ever try to con- vey 70 pounds of flour, sugar or a chunk of a boy up a long stairs?” “Why no, I could not possibly carry 70 pounds across the room, let al- one up a stairs.” “Well that is just what you are doing every day, carrying around 7% pounds of disease matter in the form of Tat and it gives you no strength whatever, instead, pre- vents your museles from doing their work with the greatest ease.” “But what makes me so fat, doctor, I don’t eat nearly so much as my husband and he is thin as a rail?” “What fast?” “A small dish of breakfast food, two pieces of toast and a cup of coffee. My husband ate a couple of eggs, two pieces of toast, the break- fast food, a cup of coffee and a half a cantaloup.” “Your husband secretes enormous quantities of saliva. I happened to know that he drinks his coffee after he has finished eating. He digests starches perfectly. He doesn’t eat candy and uses little sugar. His muscles are as hard as iron and his elimination is good. He always eats something raw at each meal so he is quite likely to keep well for many years.” “You, on the contrary, not secrete much saliva, which is an alkaline secretion and you make it worse by drinking your coffee and several glasses of water in order to wash down your food. You do not chew your food properly and you cannot digest starch. Nearly every- thing you eat is starch, sugar or fat. You eat cream and sugar in your coffee. Lots of butter on your bread and you eat lost of candy, jams, jellies, cake and pies and you are fond of fat meats, soups and gravies. You are constipated and on account of the sweets and mushy starchy foods without the natural mineral salts your teeth are decay- ed and there is absorption from them, so on the whole you are a mass of diseased fat.” “Well what can I do doctor, I simply can’t live withaut good home baked bread, I take the prem- ium every year at the fair for the finest and whitest looking loaf and the taste is so good.” “I think you not only can live without the white bread, but you will enjoy life much more, just try laying off that 75 pounds of white starch or flour that you have been carrying around in the form of fat and see how much more ab- undantly you can live.” I received a letter from a fat woman this morning, no excuse me, a woman who was fat six months ago and is now proud of herself that she sent me too photographs to prove the difference and in her letter she says that she feels so light and strong, he cannot resist taking long walks and can climb the steepest hills with ease. Now isn’t that worth while?” I know a man and wife who put themselves to normal health and weight over 30 years ago and neit- her of them has gained or lost in did you eat for break- do est variation has not exceeded two pounds and when they started out to eat right the man was skin and bones and sup- posed to be dieing of cancer while the woman was called a rolypoly. Four years ago I had a patient that weighed 225 pounds and was only 5 feet 6 inches tall, He was forced to use two canes and even then it was hard for him to get about. He ate candy and with in- gridents, not drugs, that would cause rapid elimination. He ate it and lost 50 pounds in three months, He is still active and healthy. My mother would call that, “Whipping the devil with his own whip.” It is hard for people who have not the will power, to change their habits of eating but anyone can who will. The one thing against which I must caution all fat folks, is drugs. Do not under any circum- stances, take any form of so-called anti-fat medicine, Eat right and eliminate waste and vour weight will be normal. All readers of this publication are at liberty to write for inform- ation pertaining to health. Address all communications to Dr, David H. Reeder, 3131 Main Street, Kan- sas City, Mo., giving full name and address and at least six cents in postage. tll Geen. A 6-pound hen in a year produces her own body weight, ing 240 eggs a year produces ab- out 5 times her own weight. For such hard work a hen must be vig- orous and in the best of health. oN at any time laying 144 eggs about 3 times and one lay- ELIZABETHTOWN. -: Make Christmas last for \thousands ‘of m Make someone suprenkly happy this Christmas. GiveaBuick Delivery will be made, if yoy at your home Christmas mo The liberal G. M. A. C. time payment plaw is available if. SF ULRIC weight since that time. The great- | 4 8 Scoen body styles $1095 to $1295 HE knows how the Chry- sler has we ublic preference in the four great price fields by initiating vital improvements in% appearance, comfort, performance, depetiglability and long life. Seven body styles— $1495 $1745 All prices f. o. b. Detroit, Eleven body styles— Eg oo sax $2495 to $3595 Havana Ribbon Londres, Bolds Perfecto, Summans, Wenesta, Shissler’s Wm. Penn, Square Any of these, 50 1dres, lenrietta Juniors, Stock, Home Comforts, Lew Morris, 6 for 25. Rocky Ford,” Merchant, Pu Deal, Noble Kni in box for $2.00. All 2 for 15c Cig#s, 4 for 25c; all 10c Cigars, 3 for 2. Special price on box lots, Camels, Piedmonts, Ghesterfields and Lucky Strikes. two 15¢ packs for 25c. We have a fine assortment’®f Pipes. Ask to see them. All 10c Tobaccos, 3 packs fi iT 25¢c. All 15¢ Tobaccos, such as Red Man, Red Horse, Bag Pipe, Beechnut, etc., 2 packs 25c. Prince Albert, 2 cans 25c. All Fruits in Season. % We also carry a complete line of Péany Candy. All flavors of Chiques Rock Soft Li a ice, Su % H. A. DARRENKAMP © 3 Doors East of Post Office MOUNT, JOY, PA. CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. ETE ES Era. —