The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 14, 1928, Image 7

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Seedless Calif. Raisins ............. 2 pkgs 15¢
i New Orleans Molasses .......... can 17¢, 32¢
} ASCO Gelatine ®.................... pkg 15¢
; Farmdale Evap. Milk .......... 3 tall cans 29¢
Asco White Dist. Vinegar .......... 2 bots 25¢
Princess Jellies %............. 3 tumblers 25
Sunrise Catsup 3 bots 25¢
ASCO Corn Flakes ................ 3 pks 20¢
Gold Seal Oats &................ 3 pkgs 25¢
{ Ritter’s Cooked Spaghetti .......... 3 cans 25¢
Fresh Pack Succlitash ............... can 15¢
| Hershey Milk Chocolate . ...... 1-2 1b cake 19¢
BREAD ASCO
SUPREME COFFEE
| Big wrapped loa 8c 1b 39¢
Schmidt’s Puritan Gireal Beverage .. 3 bots 25¢
ASCO Grape Juice ;....... Fen pint bot 23¢
ASCO Ginger Ale 4 .............. big bot 10¢
Rob Roy Pale Gingér Ale .......... 2 bots 25¢
4 Clicquot Ginger Ale; ................. bot 16¢
Sunshine Short Cake: Ca 1-2 pound 16¢
Macaroon Snaps ... pound 24¢
>
~ Cranberry Big Boy Joan of Arc
SAUCE CEREAL Kidney Beans
"WEDNESDAY,
OV. 14th, 1928
STORES CO.
)
yur Duties
of Houseki ping are considerably lightened when
you do your Marketing in an ASCO Store. A wide
selection of Wholesome Foods cater to each partic-
ular taste.’ |
BIG CANNED FRUIT SALE!
Daachos ve § Se
ASCO
slices of this delicious California Fruit.
Del Monte
19¢ : = 29¢
Royal Ante Cherries
Hawaiian Big
Pineapple Can 200
Paradise Island
Asco or DEL MONTE















tall
can
« hig
o Can

ASCO
Del Monte
Reg. 234 ASCO



Fruit Salad Apricots
19¢ or 18¢ : 2 28¢


Squ re
25¢
Meat 1b 10¢
ASCO Pure
VANILLA
bot 25¢
10c can Corn
-
Reg. 29¢ oa
Asparagus Tips

ASCO or DelMonte can
Asca Mince
New Made |
Delicious
ER

ASCO | Gold Seal
SPICES © FLOUR
pkg 7c 5 1b 25¢
Asco Buckwheat
and Pancake
FLOUR!
3 pkgs 2bc


10c can Peas
Med can Tomatoes
All 3 28¢


Victor
Vi lain loaf
ictor plain loa COFFEE
5c 35¢
J ;
Asco or Ritter'sPork © Beans 3 cans 25¢

BEVERAGES AND CAKE SPECIALS!


tumb 15¢ phe 15¢ can 10¢

Fine White
ONIONS
per Ib
Chipso and Quick Nap.
Fairy
Toilet S0AP
5 cakes 21¢ | 2 i 15¢
These nt Effective in Our !
New Crop
CRANBERRIES
per Ib 19¢
Soap Chips big pkg 21c
DUZ 3: 19¢
dk





; MOUNT JOY STORE
i Z




HEADACHES and NERVOUSNESS
i The majority are caused by Defects of Vision.
They readily yield "when the Eyes have proper Optometric
help. ie
J Have Our Examine Your Eyes
hone 2413 Office Hugg: 8.30 A. M. to 5 P.M.
* L WEBER &%
DR. NEILSON W. PINKERTON,
40-42 N. Queen St.
/
f noviadt




For a Good Clean I
AVE HAIR GUT
at a right price.go to
"Wiliams
ain St., MOUNT JOY, PA.
dies’ and Children’s Hair
Cutting a Specialty.
rtise in The Bulletin.
We Have on Hand at All
Times a Supply of
Fresh Dressed
Chickens


15,

Krall’'s Meat Meh
West Main St., MOUNT JOY
Subscribe for The Bulletin,

8 Choice
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
The Produce and
Live Stock Market
CORRECT INFORMATION FUR.
NISHED WEEKLY BY THE
PENNA. BUREAU OF
MARKETS FOR THE

BULLETIN
Draggy, beef steers and yearlings
steady, no choice kinds. here, top
$13.00, average weight 1290 lbs,
numerous sales medium weights
12.50-12.75. Bulls, she stock and
all cutters practically unchanged
for week, bulk sausage bulls 8.75-
10.00, butcher heifers 10.75-12.00,
cows 8.00-9.00, cutters 5.00-6.00.
Stockers and feeders steady under
light country demand, one load
choice 790 pound Angus steers $12.-
50, most sales 9.75- 11.50, yards
show good clearance. Calves fully
steady, top vealers 17.50.
RECEIPTS: For todays market,
cattle 18 cars, 8 Canada; 3 St.
Paul; 2 Chicago; 2 Va; 1 Pa; 1 St.
Louis; 1 Md; containing 595 head,
90 head trucked in, total cattle 685
head, 23 calves, 176 hogs. Receipts
for week ending Nov. 10, 1928, cat-
tle 221 cars, 52 Va; 42 St. Paul;
34 Canada; 30 Chicago; 22 W. Va;
12 Tenn; 7 Pa; 4 Omaha; 2 Iowa;
2 Indiana; 1 St. Louis; 1 Buffalo;
1 N.Y;1 Texas; containing 6849
head, 271 trucked in, total cattle
7120 head, 298 calves, 1128 hogs,
{360 sheep. Receipts for correspond-
ing week last year, cattle 180 cars,
47 Canada; 40 Ohio; 34 Va; 28 St.
Paul; 9 W. Va; 8 Pa; 6 Buffalo; 3
Md; 2 Ky; 1 Ind; 1 Ohio; 1 N.Y;
containing 3656 head, 280 trucked
in, total cattle 5936 head, 1469
hogs, 138 calves, 200 sheep,
Range Of Prices

STEERS
Good 12.75-14.00
Good 12.75-14.00
Good 12.75-14.00
Medium 11.25-12.75
Common $9.00-11.25
HEIFERS
Choice $11.50-12.50
Good 10.25-11.50
Medium 9.00-10.25
Common 7.50-9.00
COWS
$8.00-10.00
6.50-8.00
5.75-6.50
4.00-5.75
Good
{Common & medium
| Low cutter & cutter
BULLS
Good and choice 9.50-11.50
Cutter, common & med. 7.00-9.50
FEEDERS AND STOCKERS
i Good and choice $10.75-13.00
| Common & medium 7.75-10.75
Good and choice 10.50-12.75
Common & medium 7.50-10.50
VEALERS
Good and choice 15.00-17.50
Medium 12.50-15.00
{Cull and common 7.50-12.50
| HOGS
| Heavyweights 10.00-11.00
| Mediumweights 10.25-11.00
| Lightweights 10.00-10.75
| Packing sows (rough & smooth)
7.75-10.00
Lancaster Grain and Teed Market
Selling Price of Feeds
Bran 41.00-42.00 ton
Shorts 42.00-43.00 ton
Hominy 42.50-43.50 ton
49.00-50.00
67.00-68.00
ton
ton
Middlings
Linseed
Gluten 51.00-52.00 ton
Ground oats 40.00-41.00 ton
Soy bean meal 58.00-59.00 ton
Cottonseed 41% 57.00-568.00 ton
Dairy feed 16% 39.00-40.00 ton
Dairy feed 18% 42.00-43.00 ton
Dairy feed 20% 48.00-49.00 ton
Dairy feed 24% 53.50-54.50 ton
Dairy Feed 25% 56.00-57.00 ton
Horse Feed 85% 44.00-45.00 ton
Alfalfa (Regular) 43.00-44.00 ton
Alfalfa (Reground) 46.00-47.00 ton
rrr Gp Qn
AUTUMN
Oh! melancholy Autumn,
The leaves you have painted brown
And when the storm comes sighing
You rudely cast them down.
f| The chestnut burrs you’re shaking
loose,
Their treasures we behold.
The chip-monk’s busy storing;
For days are growing cold.
The birds you sent down
south,
To live in warmer skies
And round the citrus blossoms
They are catching butterflies.
away
{{ Oh! melancholy Autumn
We’ll make the best of you,
For the leaves you have
red:
So sparkle in the dew.
painted
Then golden apples in the bin
No better can be had.
Now when we think you over right
You are really not so bad.
I a a EE
MANY DIE TOO YOUNG,
HEALTH STUDY SHOWS

Checking the ages of those whe
died in the past year from heart
disease has convinced officials of
the State Department of Health
that many of the deaths would
have been preventable.
reported as having died from
heart disease. The percentage of
young persons was entirely too
large, a study of the statistics re-
veals.
Officials of the department said
that an annual health examination,
especially during youth, and fol-
lowing the advise of a competent
physician should raise the present
expectation of life from 57 or 58
years to 65 years.
etl Eee.
By subscribing for the Mount Joy
Bulletin you can get all the local
news for less than three cents a
week. tf

During the year 20,495 persons)
FARM WOODLOTS ARE
GOOD TIMBER SOURCE;
LITTLE FIRE DAMAGE
Farm woodlots include the most
productive forest lands in Pennsyl-
vania and have suffered least of all
forests from fire, according to a
statement issued today by State
Forester Joseph S. Illick, of the
Pennsylvania Department of For-
ests and Water. They occupy 4,-
000,000 acres, or approximately
one-third of the forest area of the
State, and have almost two-thirds
of all the standing timber.
That the farmers of Pennsylvania
believe in forest tree planting is
shown by the fact that two-thirds
of the 65,000,000 forest tree seed-
lings distributed by the Pennsyl-
vania Department of Forests and
Waters for reforestation purposes
nave been planted on wasteland or
sparsely stocked areas by the farm-
ers of Pennsylvania.
State Forester Illick pointed out
that the farmers need not wait for
young planted forests to mature
before they can engage in improv-
ed methods of harvesting wood
crops. To increase the rate of
wood production it is necessary to
remove selected trees throughout
the forests from time to time, a
practice which is known as “thin-
ning.” By such means the farmer
is enabled to secure a continuous
timber crop from his forest and
not remove the entire stand, as
commonly practiced by lumbermen
and can always keep a forest cover
and a reserve stand of trees devel-
oping to maturity.
Fuelwood is in continual demand
on the farm, and the farmer finds
it profitable to remove crooked
and defective trees and undesirable
species, thus constantly making
way for improved growth condi-
tions, Illick said. While he is tak-
ing out firewood he can also cut
supplies of posts, mine materials,
ties, and poles, for which there is
usually a ready market, or these
may be held after cutting until fa-
vorable market conditions develop.
All of these products may be cut
in the winter time, so the farm
woodlot provides work during the
slack period, when other parts of
the farm are idle, and affords a
source of income. A great major-
ity of farm woodlots of the State
are ‘well located for the marketing
of forest products, and in this re-
spect have an advantage over the
forests in the more remote and the
mountainous sections of the state.
eee ell QP.
SMALL GAME SEASON TIME
WHEN ACCIDENTS OCCUR
The small game season is
danger period for hunters and
time, when, because of the
number of nimrods in the
every precaution should be taken
in the handling of firearms, John
B. Truman, executive secretary of
the Game Commission, said today.
Truman pointed out that of the
sixty-five fatal accidents during the
1927 season, forty-nine of them
occurred during small game sea-
son. Out of the 279 non-fatal acci-
the
the
large
woods,
dents reported, only twenty-four
happened during the season for
the big game.
Truman also said that the care-
less hunter very frequently pays a
heavy penalty for his acts. Thirty-
seven of the fatal accidents last
year were self-inflicted. Of the
non-fatal accidents, sixty eight
were self-infiicted and 211 were
due to the carelessness of other
hunters.
Carrying loaded guns in convey-
ances caused four deaths and in-
juries to ten others. This practice,
Truman asserted, is one of the
“most deadly and most useless,”
of which hunters are guilty.
ren eet ere we.

A NEW RECORD IN
HIGHWAY BUILDING
The United States this
spending a record sum
ways. The 12 months’
reach $1,360,026,000.
This is 21 per cent
last year and five per cent more
than in 1926, when the former
high mark was established.
The movement toward building
good roads is a product of this
century. The perfection of the
automobile, the growth of industry
and the social and business :
sity of improved transportatio
teries all contributed to the r
America in a few brief years
developed the finest highway
tem in the world, and every
is witnessing still greater progress.
Highways and prosperity move
year is
for high-
total will
more than
year
together. Every dollar spent in
good roads building is a dollar
that is a sound-dividend-returning
investment. It has been said that
Rome was only as great as her
highways and the same is again
true of any modern nation today.
State College Radio
Daily agricultural talks and time-
ly farm and garden hints are to be
broadcast from the Pennsylvania
State College radio station WPSC,
beginning Monday, November 12.
Each day, except Saturday and
Sunday, farm programs will be
started at 12:45 P. M. It is pro-
bable that a weather report will be
given at the beginning and end of
each program. The station will op-
erate on 1230 kilocyveles or 243.8
meters wave length. $
re SE Uren
Save Soil for Plants
Leaf mold or other rich soil
should be placed in a box and stor-
ed in the cellar before the ground
freezes. This will come in handy
for repotting| plants during the
winter,

#

ess this application will
| greatly refresh, and if at all care-
fully done cause not the slightest
Home Health Club
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX.
PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER


I have recently had a number
of inquiries regarding a cure for
“night sweats,” and have promised
that I would give a lecture on the
subject.
In taking up what some might
call such a simple subject I have
found by experience that it is a
part of wisdom to go into the full-
est details in a simple plain way in
segard to the cause or such condi-
tions, as well as the reasons for the
method of cure which I recom.
mend.
It is true that there are many
people who prefer to shut their
tyes and open their mouths, pre-
pared to swallow whatever their
doctor may see fit to prescribe.
Such people will not stop to read
these lectures. The faces of the
majority of family physicians grow
serious and alarm will show itself
in spite of what he may say, when
he is told that a certain member
of the family has been troubled
with night sweats for some time,
and he inquires how long since the
trouble began, and if he is a very
conscientious - family physician, he
will also secure a drop or two of
the blood from the unfortunate
victim and examine it.
It is one of the most common
symptoms of weakness in the vital
system, and by allowing the leak-
age to continue the weakness
steadily increases. Leakage is a
good word to use in this connec-
tion. About 80% of the human
body is composed of water, all of
which is held under the -wonderful
skin, the most wonderful fact of
which is that it is liberally perfort-
ated over its entire surface with
holes or pores, very similar in
character to the large opening wea,
call mouth. This large opening or}
mouth is under the cintrol of the
voluntary muscles, and therefore
opens and closes at will, but the
small mouths or pores of the skin
are not under the control of the
will and therefore no conscious
thought upon our part can cause
the nerves and muscles to act or
affect them,
Now, if 80% of the body is wa-
ter, then He who created this won-
derful structure or case called the
skin, knew that so much water was
necessary to the proper life and
health of the being infolded within
that skin, and it was so constructed
that when a certain degree of heat
exists outside of the body the nerves
controlling the involuntary muscles
surrounding the pores of the skin
would cause them to open, and a
portion of the water is allowed to
come out and cool the surface.
When the body is placed in a cer-
tain degree of cold the nerves
controlling these openings causes
the muscles to contract, and the
moisture retained. You can
readily understand why great ac-
tivity which causes the fires with-
in the body to burn more rapidiy
will at the same time start the
sweat out all over the body, but it
does not explain why a man or
woman in great mental or physical
agony will sweat drops of water
when standing or lying perfectly
still and in the cold. All of this
I could explain to you, but time
and space will not permit,
When the system has been weak-
ened no matter whether it by
the dreaded disease of consumption
by worry, overwork, or any other
cause, the matter in hand now is
to cure the night sweats. It can
be done in a very direct and inex-
pensive way. Take a tablespoon-
ful of common salt, a teaspoonful
of cayenne pepper, a pint of good
white wine (or cider vinegar),
mix these together and pour on it
a half pint of boiling water. Let
it boil down one-half, strain out
the pepper, and with this liquid
is
is


Everywhere they say
“the New Buick is un-
rivaled performance”
Motorists e here are turn-
ing to the Silker Anniversary
Buick with ak enthusiasm
never before adcorded any
automobile. Why... Super-
lative beauty and style, match-
less comfort, and new
and unequaled perfoNnance.
The Silver fInniversary |
WITH MASTERPIECE BODIES BY FISHER

S. F. ULRICH
Elizabethtown, Penna.
When Better Automobiles Are Built . . . Buick Will Build Them





\ Announcing
R C A Radiola 60

advances made in radio to
Come in today and let us de
strate it to you—no obligation.
H. S. Newcomer & Son
Mount Joy, Pa.



sponge the patient at bedtime all

over the body from head to foot,
as gently as possible, but so the
liquid gets really through the
sweatiness and affects the skin. A
small sponge or bit of rag can be
used for the purpose.
I have seen the night sweats dis-
opvear on a single application, but
it is well to continue it for three
or four evenings, or even repeat
yr six times if the relaxation
e skin is not sooner removed.
if the case is one of greatest
inconvenience.
ree tI Wiis
PUPILS STRIVE FOR
ATTENDANCE RECORD

dents in districts under their super-|
vision. During the first year that |
these certificates were issued 178
were awarded to pupils in Hazle|
township. During the last term;
240 were awarded to pupils in this |
district, an increase of 34.8 per |
cent. Eighty-three of the pupils]
who received awards at the close of |
the school term had been perfect |
in attendance during some preced- |
ing year.
trio
The Mt. Joy Bulletin costs only
$1.50 per year.









FOR

You want coal that burns and is fee from stone, clinkers, ete. A trial
Josevh B. Gabrio, Hazleton, sie Vill readily convince you that it pays to buy good coal. Prices very
perintendent of the Hazle town- &r] GIVE S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS
ship public schools, has reported WITH CASN SALES ONLY
an interesting increase in the num- 0,
ber of perfect attendance awards A
issued during the past seven years. 3
In 1921-22 the State Department HARRY LEEDOM
of Public Instruction began to is- -
sue perfect attendance certificates.
These certificates are distributed Teleplions SRS MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
by county and district superinten-
“PLUMBING and HEATING
Also
PROMPT SERVICE
JOSEPH L.
Phone 172R12

inds Repair Work
PRICES REASONABLE