| WEDNESDAY, ROPE YP Ads ts hapes DEC. 10th, 1928 fom LS FUTUR STOTT SSD, ANH ATE Christny Greeting Those who are their Christmas to come into the Stores and get their re- quirements. A varied se- lection of Quali Mer- chandise awaits yot in the Stores A “Where Quality Counts” ASCO 1b: MINCE meatl 9c DC Calif. Peaches in Rich Syrup, Specially Briced! 3 Calif. High Grade of ASCO . # > Libby’s De Luxe Peaches Big Can 19¢ Del Monte aR These are regularly 23c a can. i Libby’s Rosedale Peaches ........ Big 17¢ Peaches ....... Big Gan 15¢ » J Prim FLOUR 12-10 Bag 476 Gold Seal Family UR 1B | LARD ASCO Pastry oN 9 3 Bread Supreme Victor Bread ... Best Rendered Pure BREAD CRUMBS At Your Service $ 15¢ Bc wd tof & A big wrapped loaf 8¢ a pan loaf 5¢ Juicy Florida Grape Fruit Cooking Herbs ... pkg 5c Parsley ........ bunch 7c 2 for 15¢ 3 for 25¢ Red Currant Jelly tum 15¢ Poultry Seasoning pkg 10c ) { J Christmas Candies Choice Quality Hd. Cand. 1b 25¢ 5-l1b Asst. Chocolates 1b box 39¢ Christmas Mixtures 1b 25¢ Choc. Co. Cher. lb box 3Sec Tiled Christ. Stock. ea 10c of Cildren’s Gifts While They Last! rine Coast. Ex Wagons ea $3.65 Toy Auto Buses .. ea 49c Sleds That Steer ea $1.50 Christ. Treg Holders ea39¢c Tinsel Garis 18 ft pk 25c $1.10 Lucille Ex Fancy Choco. Scooters .§..... ea $2.25 5-1b gift box ... $2.50 Blackboards ea 39¢c gestions at $1.00, $2.0 #7 In our Stores there are several Christmas Basket sug- 0 and $3.00. A listiof products they contain is shown in the Counter Circular; of you can arrange these useful gifts as you see fit. Med. can Seedless Raisins . BY #, Reg. 10c can Tender Peas Reg. 10c can Sugar Corn Tomatoes Seeded Raisins ... All 3 | for 28c¢ estions 06 Sugar Rolled Dates ............... Ib pkg 19¢ ASCO Stuffed Olives .......... bot 12i¢, 23¢ Atmore’s Plum Pudding .............. can 29¢ R. & R. Plum Budding ......... i..... can 29¢ Rich Creamy Cheese Ib 35¢ Delicious Sweet Cider ......... jug 23 and 39¢ Selected Calif. Walnuts ........ SRO Ib 32¢ Soft Shell Almonds ............ Fn Ib 32¢ Fancy Mixed Nuts ............ $F... Ib 28¢ Van Dyk’s Pitted Dates ........ pkg 19¢ Supreme Fruit Cake ........... i-. 2 1b cake $1 Old Fashioned Cranberry Sauce . tumb 15¢ Asco Prepared Pumpkin ............. can 12¢ ja pkg 10¢ J i a “... 2 pkgs 15¢ Removed a large utes fr Street, Columbia | v MO Also All PROMPT SERVICE Phone—179R5 OFFICE HOURS: oy, 9t0 12 A.M. and 1 to 5 P. M. Also Evenings. PLUMBING and HEATING JOSEPH L. HEISE 4 + VEALERS These Prices Effective in Our REE Ea XE Good and choice 15.00-17.50 MOUNT JOY STORE ® | Medium 12.75-15.00 Cull and common 7.50-12.75 HOGS Heavyweigths 9.75-10.25 OL 000 Me oy a $ 9.75-10.25 PA-JA’S NDIA DOCTOR “Rape Worm, 41 feet long with two heads in twdhours and ten min David H. Seipeh, , Pa, at 541 Manor on i Ea 0 Ny UNT JOY, PA. Kinds Repair Work PR EASONABLE ity FLORIN, PENNA. / THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. IN THE BIG The Produce and CORRECT PENNA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN | a. x x |v heavy which fi Slow demand they have Live Stock Market KN INFORMATION FUR. (| NISHED WEEKLY BY THE | Receipts of sweet potatoes during the last few days have been unusual- combined with the met during ROCKCANDY MTS. | BY A. PERIS We are pleased to following publish poetry from the pen of Mr. A. Peris, and original manufacturer of sal- ted peanuts in the shell. a trip to the mountains in Clinton County recently, the poetically inclined and here's the result: Where the hunters love to stay, In the big Rockcandy mountains, And the guys you have to live with Florin’s author extensive While on the felt |is heavier accordingly than red stock jand the price of Yellows has drop- {ped more than Reds. Most yellows jare selling at .75 to .90 with a few | fancy bringing $1.00 per 5-8 basket. [Reds are bringing .90 to $1.10 with : | Poor stock selling at .75. | Savoy cabbage sold at .75 to | $1.25 per bushel according to qual- 3. ag this time has resulted in a heavy | Talk Dutch all night and day, xi Supply of stock remaining unsold | Where the bear and deer are jtoday. The supply of yellow stock | Swarming And the coons and wild cats too, When you go out at night, Better take a light Or a ‘“Sprits-cat” might get you. In the big Rockcandy mountains, I sleep upon the floor. "Course there’s lots of beds, But it hurts our heads ity while pumpkins brought $ [to 4.00 per barrel. Cut PR RY and parsnips sold at .50 to Wired celery was about steady { brought. .06 to .15 per bunch. Apples continued to meet a demand with little change in pr To A la few fancy higher while Stay | Sold at 1.25 to 1.50 with fancy s 2% we Xi bringing $1.75 to 1.85 per bust Ph! The potato market was ste { Pennsylvania stock sacks sold at 1.25 to few at 1.40 while 100 % | brought 1.00 to 1.15. nl MARKET: Slow | 58 i Ki pound s Comparisons with | steers and yearlings week ago, carrots brought .50 to $1.00 per 5-8 basket i Delicious brought $1.25 to 1.75 with in 120 pound 1.35 with a thruout week. beef .75-1.00 lower, 3.50 .85. and slow ices. man tock hel. ady. acks To hear our buddies snore To the feller that I sleep with I'm giving a silver cup, For when he’s asleep He snores so deep That he wakes his ownself up. In the big Rockcandy mountains The grub we get to eat Is sour krout and pot pie, Which smells like unwashed feet. The coffee’s something awful. It tastes like beg bug stew. When you eat a steak Or a piece of cake, It darn near poisons you. In the big Rockcandy mountains A 3% 1$8.25-9.25, cutters $5.-6. | taining 762 head, 08 | ending Dee. Y | responding week last year cattle 85 =| Lancaster Grain and Feed Market = | Selling Price of Feeds = | Bran 44.00-45.00 tn Shorts 44.00-45.00 ton Hominy 48.00-49.00 ton Middlings 49.00-50.00 ton Linseed 68.50-69.50 ton Ground oats 42.00-43.00 ton i Gluten 51.00-52.00 ton , Soy bean meal 62.00-63.00 ton | Cottonseed 41% $58.50-59.50 ton Dairy feed 16% 38.50-39.50 ton i Dairy feed 18% 41.50-42.50 ton Dairy feed 20% 49.00-50.00 ton Dairy feed 24% 54.50-55.50 ton i Dairy feed 25% 57.00-58.00 ton | Horse Feed 85% 45.00-46.00 ton Alfalfa (Regular) 43.00-44.00 ton al 1M TOE 4. building their own sewage. disposal 4 plant. 8 the State College circular on sep- | tic tanks. “3% | oa anything from a card to a book, we all grades sharing decline, top $12.60 average wt. 1200 1bs., bulk of sales $10.50-12. Fat heifers sharing steer decline, bulk $10.00- {11.00 Bulls steady, bulk $9.-10.25. {Cows and all cutters in active de- | mand, firm, bulk butcher cows Stockers {and feeders lower, top vealers | $17.50, HOGS: Slow, steady, top west- erns $10.25. | RECEIPTS: For todays market, {cattle 29 cars, 21 Chicago; 2 St. | Paul; 2 St. Louis; 2 Pa; 2 Va; con- 80 trucked in, total cattle 832 head, 49 calves, 170 i hogs, 23 sheep. Receipts for week 15, 1928, cattle 83 jcars, 37 Chicago; 16 Va; 6 Md; 5 i St. Paul; 5 Pa; SW. Va; 3 Si. Louis; 3 Tenn; 2 N. Y; 1 Canada; 1 Ind; 1 St. Joseph; containing 2,167 head, 315 trucked in, total cattle 2482 head, 520 calves, 2,400 hogs, 165 sheep. Receipts for cor- a cars, 36 Chicago; 19 Canada; 10; Va.; 8 Pa.; 4 St. Louis; 3 St. Paul; 2. NY: Ind. 1 ‘St Jos.; containing 2274 head, 578 trucked in, total 2852 head, 113 calves, 1742 hogs. Range Of Prices STEERS Good $12.00-18.00 Good 11.50-13.00 Good 11.50-13.00 ¥ | Medium 10.50-11.50 Comrhon 9.00-19).50 Nerves > Choice 10.75-11.50 Good 10.00-10.75 Medium 9.00-10.00 Common 7.50-9.00 COWS Choice 8.50-10.00 Good 7.25-8.50 Common and med. 6.00-7.25 Low cutter and cutter 4.00-6.00 BULLS Good and choice (beef) $9.75-11.50 Cutter, com. & med. $7.25-9.75 FEEDERS AND STOCKERS Good and choice 10.50-12.25 Common and med. 7.50-10.50 Good and choice 10.25-12.00 Common and med, 7.25-10.25 Lightweights $9.50-10.00 Packing Sows (rough & smooth) 7.50-9.50 Alfalfa (Reground) 46.00-47.00 ton rns ee) eee me Running Water a Benefit With the weather growing cold- r the housewife who has running water in her kitchen can be thank- ful she does not have to go to the pump every time a pail of water is needed. Your county agent has information on how to install the plumbing and there also is a com- | munity septic tank form in your [county for the use of farmers From him you also can get ne tle see When it's job printing you need, [are at your service. tf a a hi When it's job printing you need, anything from a card to a book, we Where the days are cold and gray Ice bergs drape your whiskers And it snows most every day. There’s two stoves in the cabin But no wood is in the shed. If you want to keep from freezing You have to go to bed. In the big Rockcandy mountains Where the roads are made of clay; When you start for home, Your car skids round And you go the other way. One guy gets heart failure, The other laughs and chokes But the white head nut That hit the rut Thinks nothing of such jokes. In the big Rockecandy mountains To pass the time away A three-hand game of poker Is a good game for to play, But the trouble is with some guys The winnings are too small So a side bet must be added Or they will not play at all. In the big Rockcandy mountains Where men are boys again And guns are guns when loaded For we’re all out for game But the gink that takes the out Of a pal’s gun on the sly Is a downright hunk of boloney. If he ain’t I hope to die. shells In the big Rockcandy mountains It is very safe to say In many, many ways. That insect guns are useful There’s the ordinary bed bug, The mosquito and the gnat, But the worst one that I know of Is a great big white-head sap. In the big Rwgkeandy mountains Some hunters went last week For birds or hares other game That they might ch to meet. Their pointers were retreivers And broke well, I’ve heard If they retreive a thing at all, It must be a dead bird. A flock of quail were flushed they say, And the shooting it was big But no birds dropped from the sky, So the dog retreived a pig. Now that’s the kind of dogs to have When you want lots of fun, For a guy could then get of game With just an empty gun. out plenty In the big Rockecandy mountains With dogs broke in like that A man could get a cow or two For the dog would bring her back. And you never shot your gun If you were in the jungle The dog might catch an elephant, Now wouldn’t that be fun. Anyway, the hunters To whom I make this crack Can thank their dogs for one thing | Which is the game pig they | brought back. In the big Rockeandy mountains Nine hunters went for bear, Two of them played dog nurse, Which took them everywhere. And followed them all day, They tied them to their buttonholes ! Over rocks and rills Up great big hills And they couldn’t get away. They were two sad bear hunters When the dogs had led them back And here are hopes That the ornery blokes Sets down and chokes For bunking our men Out of a nice crisp ten In the biz Rockcandy mountains. rte ere QE | Home Health Club WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX. PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER | HOW COLDS ARE TAKEN: No one can answer for what a sudden { cold will do. The most vigorous ‘may unexpectedly rush into pneu- monia and be dead within a week; the young and delicate may fall in consumption. The man or wom- an who neglects or trifles with a cold or flu and considers it a small is perfectly simple, then so the better, it can be very little trouble, and all danger is averted. But it is not an easy thing to tell how severe the course of a cold is going to be or to rea- lize how suddenly a trifling cold may rvch into the gravest condi- tions. Prompt action can never do harm, and it may prove im- | mensely profitable. This is espe- cially true in the case of i] when the dangers of delay are | serious. i First, I will mention the colds of | { which we are conscious at the time | | it is contracted. These are usually { due to direct exposure to dampness | | or draughts, while the temperature | of the surrounding atmosphere is | | much lower than the natural temp- | erature of the body, which is 98 de- grees Fahrenheit. A person stand- [ing in a windy place or facing the ! wind when the cold air is laden with | moisture is very apt to “catch | cold.” Under such circumstances | the cold air contracts the millions | of little blood vessels or capillaries on the surface of the body, and by {such a contraction the blood is i squeezed out of them and the sur- | face becomes pale or blue, and the i fullness disappears, giving a pinch- | ed look to the skin. As there is a certain quantity of blood in the body, and the contrac- tion of the minute blood vessels on | the surface does not consume any blood, it is evident that the | driven from the surface must accu-| mulate elsewhere, and so cause an | extra amount in some other part | of the body. Driven from without, | the blood crowds the inner vessels} and distends them, and causes an excess in one or more of the inter- nal organs. Just which one of the inner or- | driven inward by the contraction iety of circumstances. As a gener- | any cause have been previously | weakened, will be the first ones to| being weak will not have sufficient | strength to throw the extra blood | outward again, and thus it will en) cumulate and probably result serious disturbance. To make this clear, I will mention a few instan- ces of “cold catching” and its re- sults. If there has been a draught | of cold air about the head and the in | per air passages and nostrils will have been chilled by it, and conse- | quently somewhat weakened. When the surface then becomes chilled, | the blood rushing inward will first | distend those weakened vessels of! the nostrils and upper air passages, ' and the result will be what is com- | monly known as a “cold in the! head.” If the lower air passages have been chilled by breathing cold into bronchitis or pleurisy and end! | matter that may be left to get well of itself is making a mistake | | in too many instances. If a cold | much | ended with! blood | ; gans or structures of the body will| ¥7 be affected by the excess of blood | of the surface depends upon a var-| al rule these inner organs, if from have their blood vessels distended | by an increased proportion of blood. These vessels themselves | throat, the blood vessels of the up- | A | hap | sheer\delight on | Chris and a mas Day ousand days to come 5 The Silver Anniver rsary | BUICK With Masterpiece Bodies By | 'S. F. ULRICH, Elizabethtown \ ut ny 1d Them | RR va he Se ~~ “pr. Built . . . Buick Will Bu § for Ghristmas \ WE HAVE Toys for the Children Roller Skates, Bicycles, Express Wagons, Scissors and Pocket Knives for the Boys and Girls. Silverware, Nickleware, Aluminumware, Glass- ware, Lamps and Baskets for Father and Mother. R. C. A. Radios, Electrig rators, Electric Ranges, ElectricWashers, Electric Sweepers®, We have many useful gifts. Come and see, 3 H. S. Newcomer & Soi MOUNT JOY, PA. 0) h air and the blood vessels have been weakened, then there will be bronchitis, or the engorgement of the blood vessels of the upper air passage may be so great and so long continued as to cause those of the lower air passage to become crowded with blood. This is when a “cold in the head” .so often “goes down.” It may even extend into the lungs and is very liable to do so, if the lungs are constitution- ally weak. a. PROTECT SHADE TREES FROM MICE, IS ADVICE | Shade and fruit trees may be] protected from the winter gnawing | of mice by wrapping the lower | part of the tree trunk with heavy paper The Department of Forests and Waters as a result of ments covering a period of years, | has found that mice usually begin | working under the snow and when | they come to a tree they began to gnaw if it is not protected. A small mound of ground from] eight to twelve inches in height | raised about the base of the tree | may ordinarily prove effective but the cheapest and surest practice is to wrap the trees with ordinary building paper. After the paper is wrapped around the tree and tied, earth should be placed around the lower end to prevent the mice from beginning to work there, for if they get a start the paper will not stand in their way. The paper should extend completely down to the surfade of the ground. tll Qe “Closed Door” Insures Health A low chick mortality of 9.3 per cent was reported by Pennsylvania experi- | Clean Up Corn Borer Before heavy snows come, farm- ers and gardeners living in the! corn borer infested area of the’ State will find it valuable to clean up all trash and remnants in the corn fields and sweet corn patches. Tf dry enough, these can be burned. Where the amount is small, bury- ing will dispose of it effectively. je at your service. tf poultrymen who raised their chicks in complete confinement this year. These reports were obtained for a total of 12,309 chicks brooded un- der the “closed door” plan outlined by the poultry extension depart- ment of the Pennsylvania State College. A low chick mortality and freedom from intestinal parasites are two advantages of the plan. will readily convince you that | reasonable. Telephone 5RS CHANDLER'S DRUG STORE, Mt. Joy Read The lit. Joy Bulletin | % FOR GOOD, CLEAN GOAL You want coal that burns and is free from stone, clfkers, ete. A triad it pays to buy good cod, Prices very &F] GIVE S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS *% WITH CASH SALES ONLY pL HARRY LEEDOM MOUNT JOY, PENNA. Holds enough ink at one filling to fill two other pens of equal size. “Nig hh Five well-kno ilar size and price the Chilton Pen sellis average ink capacity of t was 38 drops—while the 81 drops. Certified by Bigelow, Kent & Willard Consulting Engineers, Boston, Mass. tain pens of sim compared with $7.00. The five \