‘WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21st, 1928 J pay us a visit toda Stores. Always the Most ASCO or DEL MONTE SLICED PINEAPPLE Sweet Sugar CORN 3 29 Red Ripe Tomatoes ASCO Golden C 0 CHOICE HOME GROWN RICE 2 ox: 15€ | 3cans54¢ 2 Read--Buy -=Save! Here is your guide to economical buying, Mrs. Housekeeper, if you are interested in Saving Money on your Food needs without sacrificing the Quality, see how far your Dollar real- ly goes in these bright up-to-the-minute Grocery of the Best for the Least, Where Quality Counts! Big can 23¢ A Healthful ready-to-serve Fruit for every meal. Your Q for Quality Canned Foods! ASCO Fancy SUGAR CORN 3 cans 43¢c Maryland Tomatoes og 25¢ cans rn 5c PrimRice ........ ‘a Cali. Peaches Domestic Sardin Thousands upon Thousands of have stopped baking since they / ~¥ Big = Wrapped Sec = ene Loaf oe 3 pkgs 20¢c > ! Choice | Re*% to Serve Foods! Japanese Crab Meat .......... can 29c¢ California Sardines ...... big can 12%¢ 3ecans 20c Fancy Norwegian Sardines .... can 15¢ big can Choice Pink Salmon .......... can 19¢ ASCO Wet ........... can 19¢ Gorton’s Fresh Mackerel ...... can 23c 0 ASCO Beans with Pork .... 3 cans 25c Heinz Baked Beans ........ 3 cans 25¢ Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise ...... jar 20c 2000000000 “100 Prunes 5: 121-2 Quality the same, only difference is size of fruit. Particular Mothers first ate our Bread. Victor p 0 Bre ad Loat w 290 Reg. 1214c ASCO: SOUR KROUT 2%*"19¢ Partly cooked. Requires very little cooking. Save 6c. ASCO Vanilla Extract bot 13c, 25¢ ASCO Corn'Starch ,........... pkg 7c Star Soap ASCO Evaporated Milk ....... can 10c ASCO Ripe Tomatoes ...... 3 cans 29¢ i ASCO Buckwheat ........ . 3 pkgs 25c Beakes))p ASCO Pancake Flour ...... 3 pkgs 25¢ . ASCO Golden Syrup ....... 3 cans 25c te ASCO Sliced Peaches ...... 2 cans 25c Chipso Reg. 14c Babh-O ........... 2 cans 25c¢ bi ASCO Ammonia ........... 3 bots 25¢ | DIG 21¢ Ivory Soap .......... 4 med. cakes 25c Pkg There’s a reason why the Most Particular Coffee drinkers use no other Blend—but ASCO. Quality counts. ASCO COFFEE b35¢ With that Rieh, Rare Flavor—Satisfies Fully. Victor Blend Coffee ib 31c | Bail. 49¢ These Prices Effecti MOUNT JOY STORE ve in Our MELHORN’S FRUIT and POULTRY FARM “PENNA. SUPERVISED LHICKS” This breeding farm specializes in sup- pe) plying Baby Chicks from only the most free range, and standard bred Leghorns, now under carefully selected matings, official trap nest supervision. All males and females have been proved and leg banded by an inspector of Pennsylvania Department of Agricul- ture for two successive years. Buy “Supervised” chicks that prod big, beautiful Standard S. C. White Leg-* horns that you will be proud of. PI your orders early as all orders will be fill- ed in rotation. WE AIM TO PLEASE J. E. MELHORN, ap- uce ace Phone Call 63R3 MOUNT JOY, PA. Local and Long Distance Hauling Movings:—None too Short, None too Long “wSee me for prices before engaging your truck. 4 44 East Main S REASONABLE RATES AS. Z. DERR: MOUNT JOY, PENNA: 11 The Produce and BULLETIN were more liberal and there was a fairly I size. California ‘grass” bunches while Georgia brought $6.00 to $8.00. |is shipping straight | Wednesday 11 cars | advanced and only small | fro both Georgia and South Caro | lina are expected in the near fut | ure, tand Federal Bureau of Markets. Supplies of nearby | moderate and slow. at $2.50 to $3.25, $2.25 to $3.00 $1.50 to $1.75. bed dandelion brought stronger under a good demand ‘ra finey lots bringing $1.25. Potato prices ‘were ed a weaker tone. market was firm with bulk Penna. round whites bringing $4.65 to $4.75 per 180 pounds. ping points were standstill and there were sales to establish quotations. York shipping points were about $3.85 to $4.00 per 150 pound sack f. o. b. Shipments for the entire country totaled 924 cars, of which Pennsylvania shipped 11, Maine 176 and New York 16. MARKET: Slow, beef steers steady with weeks early decline, compared with week ago good and choice grades .25 lower, spots off more on heavies, common and med- ium grades about steady, top $13.00 paid for 3 loads 1200 Ib. averages, bulk of sales $11.25-12.25. Bulls, about steady, cows and all cutters steady to weak, heifers showing weak tendency, bulk butcher bulls $8.25-9.50, Heifers $10.00-10 75, butcher cows $7.50-8.50, cutters $4.25-5.50. Calves sharply lower, 75 to $1.25 under last weeks eclos- ing price, top vealers $16.50. HOGS: Steady, little action. RECEIPTS: For todays market, cattle no shipped receipts, 334 head trucked in from local feed lots, 19 calves, 219 hogs, 3 sheep. Receipts for week ending March 17, 1928, cattle 21 cars, 12 Pa; 3 Chicago; 3 St. Paul; 1 Va; 1 Md; 1 Ga; con- taining 570 head, 873 head trucke’} in, total cattle 1443 head, 385 ca ves, 1223 hogs, 13 sheep. for corresponding cattle 23 cars, 17 Pa; 8 Va: ago; 1 Ky: 1 Ind; containing 5! head, 945 head trucked in, tot cattle 1475 head, 75 calves, 3! hogs. Range Of Prices STEERS Choice 13.50-14.75 Good 12.25-13.5¢C Good 12.25-13.50 Good 12.00-13.25 Medium 11.00-12.25 Common 8.00-11.00 HEIFERS Choice 10.25-11.50 Good 9.25-10.25 Medium 8.00-9.25 Common 6.75-8.00 COWS Choice 8.25-9.25 Good 7.00-8.25 Common & medium 5.00-7.00 Low cutter & cutter 3.50-5.00 BULLS Good & choice 8.25-10.00 Crs, common & med. 5.75-8.25 Feeder and Stocker Cattle Good & choice 8.75-11.25 Common & medium 6.50-8.75 Good & choice 8.50-11.00 Common & medium 6.25-8.50 VEALERS Good and choice Medium Cull and common HOGS 15.00-16.50 12.75-15.00 6.00-12.75 Heavyweights 9.00-9.50 Mediumweights 9.25-9.75 Lightweights 9.00-9.75 Rough Stock 7.50-9.00 T ancaster Grain and Feed Market Wheat 1.40 bu. Corn 1.00 bu. HAY (baled) Timothy 12.00-16.00 ton Straw 10.00-13.00 ton Selling Price of Feeds Bran 50.00-51.00 ton Shorts 48.50-49.50 ton Hominy 47.50-48.50 ton Middlings 50.00-51.00 ton Linseed 62.00-63.00 ton Gluten 50.50-51.50 ton Ground oats 50.00-51.00 ton Alfalfa (regular) 43.00-44.00 ton Cottonseed 41% 60.50-61.50 ton Dairy feed 16% 44.50-45.50 ton Dairy feed 18% 47.50-48.50 ton Dairy feed 20% 51.00-52.00 ton Dairy feed 24% 55.50-56.50 ton Dairy feed 25% 59.00-60.00 ton Horse feed 85% 51.00-52.00 ton Alfalfa (np nd) 46.00-47.00 ton - 0a No riotbeds Now Now e time to start hotbeds for early vegetables if not already started, They should be placed in 5 eltered corner where they will Live Stock Market + Express receipts of asparagus in Philadelphia be yd active de- WN (mand for good stock. Most of the asparagus was medium to small in | the pains. sold at | 1 $5.00 to $8.50 per crate of a dozen | observed and it applies to all ani- stock | mals, horses, mules and men, yes, California carloads and | this: were moved. ¥ | The season in Georgia is not as far lots are being expressed. Carload shipments according to the Pennsylvania apples were trading was rather Prices held firm with Romes selling at $2.25 to $2.90, Stayman Winesaps at and Ben Davis at Pennsylvania hot $1.75 to $2.00 per 5-8 basket. Rutabagas, The mushroom market was slightly generally steady on the Eastern markets to- day although shipping points show- Pennsylvania round whites sold at $2.90 to $3.15 Maine ship- practically at a too few New steady with round whites quoted at THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Home Health Club PRESSLY FOR THE RULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. ZEEDFR CORRECT INFORMATION FUR. | ———— NISHED WEEKLY BY TEE Applying trcatment at home: PENNA. BUREAU OF {get many letters MARKETS FOR THE suffer with ckache and stiffness, soreness of i that they sc [fore the evid manifested. A little brings out the fact that these peo- ple are themselves to blame for ' to be getting old be- There is a certain principle to be - | vou probably observed that as soon - as the horses come to the end of the race, the owners or caretakers at once covered their dripping wet bodies with warm dry blankets even though the day was hot and but little air stirring. Their heads, it is true were quickly sponged with cold water and they were allowed just a little to drink, but they were kept warm. ~ Never allowed to cool off quickly. As a rule the man that cares for and parsnips and white turnips sold | works with beasts of burden uses mostly at .35 to .65 per 5-8 basket | more good judgment in their care while beets brought .85 to $1.00 than in the care of himself. T have many times seen him come where the coat of both a man and beast were saturated with perspira- tion and he would stop in the cool shade, then immediately cover the horses so they would not chill and “stiffen up,” while he would throw off his coat and lie on his back up- per 120 pound sack in Philadelphia | ON the damp ground. I have seen while Maine Green Mountains |him put the team in the barn, cover brought $3.65. The New York them, let them stand until co8l be- fore watering and feeding, cover them to prevent chill, then later re- move the blankets and rub them dry while of himself he took no such care but instead washed his head and hands in cold water and sat in the cool evening breeze and then wondered why he was so stiff and sore the next morning, while the horses were fresh and active. If he had taken off his wet cloth- es, sponged himself with hot water and put on dry clothes and just a little heavier than those he took off, a coat or some kind of top garm- ent, or had dried his clothes quick- ly by a fire while covered over them with a dry coat, blanket or even a linen duster, he would have pre- vented much suffering. If you have the facilities and want to feel just as good tomorrow as you did before you got stiff and sore or the backache, take off all the clothes wet with perspiration and take a hot bath. Put on dry clothes and a wrap or coat, then enjoy the cool evening breezes and rest, with the assurance that you will feel ready for another round tomorrow. : A thorough hot fomentation plied in the manner the Home Health a4 ap- described in o determin? year a week. This means the sacrifice of older men, less keenly alert men, victims of past industrial accidents, this tye TY swifter pace. It means a few hours every labor market. To maintain present production on a shorter work week, is to make no new jobs; it only throws out men who cannot get jobs under harder competition. To cut produc- tion along with the cut in hours, in order to give new jobs, is to in- crease costs to everybody; a des- perate hazard, almost certain to destroy any industry that tries it. meet A me MAPPED MT. GRETNA FROM AIRPLANES For several days last week air- planes from the 103rd Observation Squadron of the Pennsylvania Na-| i 1 Guards, together with 3,000,- | nor Dick’s Point, near Mt. Gretna, being two extreme points. Clean up Corn Remnants In corn borer infested areas all corn stalks or corn remnants of the 1927 crop in the field, in the barn- yard, or elsewhere about the farm, unless ensiled, should be destroyed by burning, plowing under, or finely shredding, say State College entomologists. add eive pleaty of sunlight. ETTER WRITTEN EX. I| the way from people that | Atlantic States ‘les and a complaint nce of old age should | inquiry women and boys and girls, It is perty in order to prevent some greater disaster, He, therefore, is When tired, keep warm. compelled to offer this product at a When very tired, keep Very price, which, on account of these warn. conditions, he is forced to accept If you ever attended a horse race and which is not only ruinous to exceedingly | : (from plowing or other hard laboor Most sales ranged from .50 to $1.15 ony 2 5a per 3 pound basket with a few ex- everybody who could not stand the | more leisure for the swift, though | “profitless” 1 do not mean to say they pay at a greater nerve sacri-| that there are not some in the fice and an earlier breaking point; |lumber business that are making but it means fewer jobs, with the | money, but taking the industry as slower worker a jobless derelict on |a whole it is not, has not, or can 000 candle-power searchlights | unpasteurized raw milk is sold to | mounted on large trucks, have been sumers. Two motorized labora- | engaged in photographing and map- tories, with personnel, were direct- | ping the Pennsylvania State Mili-|1¥ engaged in this work. Two milk | {ary Reservations at Mt. Gretna. control districts were organized: | Four of these powerful lights one including Lewistown, Northum- | have been used in at night work. berland, Turbotville, Montgomery, | These lichts are directed straight | Hughesville and Danville, while the into the air, to assist the aviators Otpier gomprises Pottsville, Shenan- in fixing and locating the equila- | “%3%, MeAdoo and Tamaqua. teral triangle. { Three corners of the area have Borer Moths Fly At Night been mapped at Inland near the In answer to the question, “When Schuylkill Co. line; Little Round do corn borer moths fly?” State Top near Middletown, and Gover- | College entomologists say, “They Our Freight Rates Are Very Unfair (From page six) tory extending from New York all | down through the South! and Gulf States. Let us take a look at what is almost certain to happen, Take 5,000 men of your acquaintance today, in any walk of life, or take 1,000 or pos- sibly 500, and among that lot you are certain to find someone who | through some unfortunate happen- ing through disease, death, accident, or from conditions beyond control, or perhaps of his own making, who is compelled to sacrifice some pro- him, in his strained condition, but is ruinous to any one in any con- dition. This urfortunate perscn may be some colored man out from Tampa, Florida, who has manufact- ured the material and wants to give it away for the sake of having em- ployment in hauling it to market, even though he looses the cost of manufacturing and his stumpage, or he may be some man whose timber is located within a few miles of the very mine where this timber is wanted, who is in a similar con- dition, Always when these quota tions go out they are eertainto fall into the hands of someone who either has been unfortunate, or who, had the timber given to him, or who lives right up against the market. That fixes the price for the entire industry, end the result has been this price is so low there is nothing left to furnish an in- centive to grow trees on these hills of Pennsylvania. If you take the case of sawn timber, you have a condition that is far worse because you not only have this local com- petition but you have competition from all over the United States, Canada and from European coun- tries, for Austrian Spruce is being laid down on our Atlantic seaboard ports in competition with our west coast products. We have a protective tariff to protect some of the preferred in- dustries of this country, and those same interests that have so long advocated the protective tarriff, and with whom we have no particular quarrel, also demand that we pre, serve and protect the forests, while at the same time they deny us the very means of protection that must be had. Our Government is selling timber in our forest re- serves at prices that are not equal to ten per cent of the cost of re- producing it, and at the same time they are giving the railroad rates to bring it into Pennsylvania below the cost of producing it here. They have guaranteed the railroad a re- turn on their investments, and they have given them rates which we must pay for transporting our pro- ducts that makes it impossible for us to have a profit on our invest- ment. Public service corporations are authorized to increase their capital and the Government guar- antees them a fixed return. We are asked to reforest and protaet our 1 we are guaranteed And the national banking s will not permit our National nks to even loan us the money to | OW trees. There is only one solution to s problem, and that solution lies hin those who are engaged in industry, and must come ough a greater cooperation, | rough the Industry working to- bther as a single unit. or through onsolidation of some kind. Of you who have met here as mem- | bers of the Pennsylvania Farmers’ { Protective Association must go out LY 4 ® » radiantas the Rainbow Spring beckons! And Buitkowners will reet the season in cars which take first place in rich, alluring beauty. Glowing colors—colors that rival the exquisite hues of the rainbow—colors as distitictive as the fieet, low lines of Buick bodies by Fisher. Not only in beauty, but in performance, too, B leads ig way. Its hi) Valve.in Head six-cylinder engine provides the thrilling abilities so highly desired on tempting Spring days. Visit the Buick showroom and see the most colorful cars Those | & Buick has ever produced. Their beauty will captivate you—and a eration will make Buick your choice. SEDANS $1195t0 $1995 + + COUPES $1195 to $1850 SPORT MODELS $1195 to $1525 wt, Mich., tax to be added. The G.M. 4. C. All prices f.o.b. Frias, 4 SE S. F. ULRICH ELIZABETHTOWN. - SCHELL’S SEEDS THE SEEDS THAT GROW McCormick-Beering Farm Equipment Good Equipment Makes a Good Farmer Better. GOLUMBIAN STOVES Sold Exclusively in Mount Joy and = JRL Ee yl 9 | || = vicinity by J.B. Hostetter & Son MOUNT JOY, PA. and get others to unite with you in | this work, and through your organ- | ig | ization and through other farmers {and lumber producers organiza- | | tions we must unite on this subject if we are not to continue in this profitless undertaking. When I say not pay a profit to those engaged in it so long as we continue to con- spire against each other through the merciless price-cutting and com- petition, and the high cost of op- erating as single units. Ralph A, Smith RE SPECIAL HEALTH UNIT GUARDS MILK SUPPLY Pennsylvania State Health Depart- | ment reports that during the past | year the division of milk controll: has inspected 200 pasteurizing | plants and that 500 inspections | were made on dairy farms through- | out the Commonwealth from which | fly mostly in the dusk of the even- ing or at night.” The moths are not attracted to lights in sufficienc | numbers to make them effective for | trap purposes. Many kinds and | colors of lights have been tested but none has proved effective. eet ree. Push Early Lambs | Feed garly lambs grain that they wy ow rapidly. They Re 4 be i tion to market inf oe tern competition The bureau of engineering of the 3 Furniture Needs The importance of correct furniture and furnish- ing in the modern home cannot be over epmhasiz- ed, if you wish to entertain your friends in a husband proper furniture manner that will do yourself and your credit. The best way to insure is to come here to make your selections. H. C. BRUNNER West Main Street, | 2300 You want coal that burns and is free from sto: will readily convince you that it pays to buy reasonable. , clinkers, ete. A id coal. Prices tr) GIVE S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS HARR BUICK MOUNT JOY, PENNA. © i PENNA.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers