ml AS RN I IESG 5 RRR | i "WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 1930 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. PRODUCE & LIVE STOCK MARKET CORRECT INFORMATION FUR NISHED WEEKLY BY [HE of PENNA. BUREAU OF 1 he Advantages | MARKETS FOR THE i BULLETIN hopping of ASCO & opping Receipts of mushrooms were lib- feral on the local market and show- are many and varied. .ASCO Stores are conveniently lo- cated, and thousands of Homekeepers who have been trained by their mothers to recognize real economy, are enjoying the savings which they obtain by shopping the ASCO Way. Where Quality Counts Your Money Goes Furthest! 12 1b bag 39¢ xX NF PRIM PASTRY 5 lb bag FLO UR 19¢ EXTRA SPECIAL! Choice RICE 1b 5¢ Try a Rice Pudding! Sale Canned Peas! Reg. 23c ASCO Finest Tiny June Reg. 17¢ ASCO PEAS 3 cans 59¢ PEAS 3 cans 45¢ Reg. 17c Asco or Del Monte PEAS . 3 cans 47c California Seedless RAISINS 2 pks 13¢ California Seeded RAISINS 2 pks 17¢ 8 Medium June Reg. 14c ASCO Tiny June PEAS 2 No. 1 cans 25c Farmdale Sweet Tender PEAS 2 cans 25¢ Weekly Specials! N. B. C. Chocolate Maited Milk Cakes ... 1b 27¢ 50 lbs. Coarse Salt ...... al ei Ee Plain Tastyroll Noodles ........ «2 pkgs 25¢ Plain Tastyroll Pot Pie Bows ....... 2 pkgs 25¢ Eagle Brand Condensed Milk ......... can 18¢ R ranged from 25¢ to 4 sey whites bringing $1.00, 3 |ing to the Pennsylvania and U. S. fd Market News Service. 4 ed the effects of the warm weather. | The market was weaker and the de- {mand slow. Pennsylvania stock 90c per 3 1b. basket with a few fancy New Jer- accord- Root crops were dull and sold slowly. Nearby beets brought 25¢ {to 40c per 5-8 basket, carrots 30c {to 65c, parsnips 40c to 85¢ and white turnips 50c to 65c. Wired celery was about steady with the | best stock selling at 12¢ to 16¢ per [bunch. Poorer stock sold at 7¢ to 10c Nearby rutabagas met a fair demand at $1.25 to $1.35 per 100 {| pound sack. Hot house rhubarb ranged from 50c to $1.00 per 5 pound box while hot house radishes brought 3c to 5c per bunch. Virginia turnip greens sold at $1.25 to $1.50 per moved slowly. varieties brought 75¢ to $1.10 per 5-8 basket while the red varieties brought $1.00 to $1.15. The potato market was were fairly liberal with 127 cars on track. Pennsylvania round whites ! declined and sold at $2.25 to $2.75 | per 100 pound sack with a few small lots of fine quality higher. Maine Green Mountains were | quoted at $2.55 to $2.75 | with 120 pound sacks brought $3.00 to $3.15. Idaho Russets 90c to 95¢ per 25 pound sack. New stock was in fairly A Selected by experts—it is roasted to perfec- | tion in our own roasteries. ASCO COFFEE . . Ib 29¢ 39¢—%48¢=10c Saved! ies! Victor Blend Coffee 1b 25¢ ; 4 pa Cat A mild blend of great popularity. He A = fo Acme Brand Coffee Ib tin 35¢ pan lapted to percolator use. 9 rn of] SCC ar 10 nf Ww ASCO Jar iJ ig a bottle <4 4) KJ rn NDT ; : i oF C 4 f i >» I NJ 0 bah | LOG CABIN can | & ADT on TTT) «il i wm JABLE SYRUP og AN — ; . Fo) VERMONT MAID jug 23¢ | YTABLE SYRUP fo B snl ASCO Pancake Flour 3 pkgs 25¢ the finest inzredients—you can depend on getting the best. Bread Supreme “=. VWICTOR PAN LOAF .....: SHURE ER Loaf 5¢ Save on Home Needs! ASCO Finest Crushed Corn ........... can 15¢ Campbell’s Assorted Soups ......... 6 cans 55¢ Gold Seal Family Flour .......... 5-1b bag 25¢ Gold Seal Rolled Oats ............ 3 pkgs 25¢ American Toilet Paper ............ 3 rolls 25¢ Reg. 14c CHOICE RIPE "TOMATOES Solid pack. 2 big cans 25¢ A big value. Regular 9c Safety Double Tip Matches 4 pkgs Z25¢ Matches 3 big bxs 10c Extra Special This Week! SMOKED: BUTTS .......... 0. .... 1b 25¢ ASCO Service brings to your very door the World’s finest products, at prices most modest. These Prices Effective in Our MOUNT JOY STORE 1 18 YEARS Of consistant and continuous service in contracting CARPENTER BUSINESS Bids will be cheerfully submitted for your next job no matter how large or small. I handle and use Johns Manville Asbestos Products Wl 11 il ill a 0 i ll | 111 ETT 1 1 TT 1 11 A. G. WALTERS CONTRACTOR FLORIN, PA. : NEW BRONZE BEARINGS R For All Make Electric Motors. Comutators also Trued Up. ¢ : ’ 5 WEAVER MANUFACTURING CO. MACHINISTS Phone E'town 168R13 RHEEMS, PENNA. jan. 22-tt Po Sp (1930, cattle 19 cars, 4 light supply and the demand was £6.00 per ba . Truck 5 bro Ron teady, bull 75, beef bulls 0.25 cows $7.50-8.¢ cl rs Ne tion on stockers an Ce 50c to 31.00 Wwe kK’ ( Ose, top VE 1] Hi Steady at we ! vance, top 160- 1b. Receipts: For today’ market, | [cattle 2 cars, 1 V 1 Tenn.; con- taining 48 head, 123 head trucked in from nearby, total cattl 171 head, 27 calves, 219 1 sheep. Receipts for week enc bh. 21, } Tenn; 3 Pa.; 2 St. Paul; 2 Md.. 2 Mich.; 1 Va.; 1 Chicago; 1 Ohio: contain- |inng 473 head, 723 he trucked in from nearby, total cattle 1196 head, 47 Ss, 1947 he 148 sheep. Receipts for corresponding week last year, cattle 24 cars, 7 Virgir 5 Penna.. 3 Chicago; 3 W. Virginia; 3 Tennessee; 2 Maryland 1 Mich.; containing 582 head, 964 head trucked in from n total cattle 1546 head, 459 cal 1789 | hogs, 85 sheep. i Range of Prices STEERS Good $12.00-13.00 Good 12.00-13.00 | Good 12.00-13.00 ! Medium 11.00-12.00 | Common 8.50-11.00 | HEIFERS Choice 10.25-11.25 Good 9.25-10.25 Medium 8.50-9.25 Common 7.75-8.50 COWS Choice 8.00-9.00 Good 7.00-8.00 Common & medium 6.00-7.00 Low cutter & cutter 4.00-6.00 BULLS Good and choice (beet) 9.50-10.75 Cutter, com & med 7.50-9.50 FEEDERS AND STOCKERS Good and choice $9.75-11.75 Common and medium 7.25-9.75 Good and choice 9.50-11.50 Common and medium 7.00-9.50 VEALERS Good and choice 14.00-16.00 Medium 11.50-14.00 Cull and common 7.75 11.50 HOGS Heavyweights 12.00-12.50 Mediumweights 12.25-12.75 Lightweights 12.25-12.75 Packing sows (rough and smooth) 8.25-12.00 Lancaster Grain and Feed Market Selling Price of Feeds Bran $37.50-38.50 ton Shorts 38.00-39.00 ton Hominy 39.50-40.50 ton Middlings 41.50-42.50 ton Linseed 57.00-58.00 ton Gluten 41.50-42.50 ton Ground Oats 40.50-41.50 ton Soy Bean Meal 44.00-45.00 ton Hog Meal 47.00-48.00 ton Cottonseed 41° $46.00-47.00 ton Dairp Feed 167% 40.00-41.00 ton Dairy Feed 18% 41.50-42.50 ton Dairy Feed 20% 45.00-46.00 ton Dairy Feed 24% 47.50-48.50 ton Dairy Feed 25% 49.00-50.00 ton Horse Feed 85% 45.00-46.00 ton Alfalfa (Regular) 41.50-42.50 ton Alfalfa (Reground) 44.50-45.50 ton bushel. ! Sweet potatoes were very dull and ! New Jersey yellow | weaker | and the demand was slow. Supplies |! brought | Historic Records Show Jews as Fighting Race It's a singular thing that people in general should hold so strongly to the idea that the Jew is cne who practices resistance. ! to prove that he was no more meek than that turbulent, rebellious figure, Moses. That in the Middle ages and, later, in Russia, he was massacred I cruelly and completely and did not hit | back was due to the fact that, having no weapons, he could be crushed by armed mobs and licensed soldiery. Long before Napoleon placed Jews | among his marshals the fighting qual- ity of the race was known and praised. From the days of the Maccabees on there was no insurgent so much dread- ed by the Roman as the people of that narrow littoral that lies between Syria | and the Egyptian outposts. The story of the World war is full of the names of Jews in all the armies, and very certainly the British | are not soon going to forget the gal- | lant soldier from the Anzac forces | who repeatedly swam ashore at Gal- | lipoli and lighted flares on the beach to guide the incoming hoat.—Louisville | Herald Post. to Count Above Three One writer says crows cannot count In Kent and another says they can in Staffordshire. | | | | Crows Appear Unable { Many years ago an | old farmer in Queensiand told me that { they could count up te three. | The crows ate his maize but kept | away if he hid among it, so he tried | going with a friend, who presently | went back. The result was that the | crows kept away. He tried going with | two friends, who both went back. Re- | sult the same. But when he himself | went back the crows at once returned { to the maize. | After many trials ne concluded that | they could only count up to three. If i four or more men went into the maize and three came out again the crows { went to the maize, and though many | were shot the others never learned to count beyond three. 1 suppose crows are like men, some of whom never seem to learn how many beans make five.—~London Times. Florida Spaulding Rose sold at § per barrel with poorer stock as low {as $3.00. Apples were steady and {met a moderate demand. Rail re- | cei} Pennsylvania Yorks sold | Forms of Honey [or may be had in three forms— in the comb, extracted and granulat- ed, but only occasionally in the ter wm. Before the pa ce of the pure food and drugs act much adulterated ! honey was offered for sale. When uninformed persons saw crystallized honey they often jumped to the con- | nt { presence of cane gar w cause of the granula- | tion, | v that suspicion the bot- | tlers of yY heat it to about 145 | degrees renheit and seal it in jars nw 3 i} 1. which gi ly retards ind i \ 1 prevents granula- tion. | If it is desired to bring erystalized | honey again to the liquid form, gentle ti n a water bath will give ithiout in any way changing the character of the honey. Furs Long Prized g ry carries the re 's, further fur hist 10.000 ye indeed than there The fers to Adam’s and Eve’s use of furs, later and used in the tabernacle. Queen 2,182 years fore Christ, 8,000 tiger back to Babylon after an Indian cam- The story of and quest for the Golden Fleece is nothing if not a chronicle of the trade. Duri the first 1,500 years of our era, Byzanti are records of its use. and to otter badger skins Semiramis, brought his paign, Jason as we call it to now was a Germany, at comparable present. Lei; X-Ray in Criminology That a man is a carpenter may be revealed under the X-ray by the shape of the hones in his fingers. This is one of the novel conclusions of a re- cent investigation that recalls the fic- tional detective feats of Sherlock Holmes. Experts found that peculiarities in the shape of a workman's fingers re- vealed that they had long used a plane or similar wood-working tools. It is hoped eventually to gather sufficient data to detect any man’s occupation by his physical characteristics. Island Status Unsettled Wrangell island is in the Arctic ocean, about 109 miles from the Si- berian coast. A harbor in the south- eastern part is in latitude T0 degrees 57 minutes north and longitude 178 de- grees 10 minutes west, The island is about T0 miles long and 25 miles wide. hted in 1867 by the captain ited Stites sailing vessel. In 1831 i the United States naval vessels landed on the island and ciaimed it for this country. The ques- tion of ownership is unsettled. from Jewel-Incrusted Bible The world's Bible is that taken with other treasures, from the palace of the ezars at Tsarskoye Selo of its covers, which measures five and a half inches by seven costliest One only and a half, is encrusted with dia- monds and emeralds in the form of a iioral spray, with an interwining mon ogram “A” of rubies, and on the other is a cross of fine diamonds The clasp is of sapphires, and the text in tiny gold leaf print. i liters Protect from Lightning For lightning protection, it is well to ground to earth every elec- tric entrance to any farm building on the outside even though the system is connected to a water pipe on the inside. re Qe Of all glad words of tongue or pen the gladdest are these “En- closed find check!” . lil lire the virtue, if it is a virtue, of non- ! { There is nothing in history to Justify i | such a view and, indeed, everything ! der back | Bible re- ! be- | skins furrier's mm, or Constantinople | fur center | | MEDAL T0 GPERATOR 11,000 MILES AWAY , Malcolm P. Hanson, With Byrd Near Scuth Pole, Hears | Tribute. | | { One of the most striking methods ot making an award of merit ever de vised was the recent presentation of The Veteran Wireless Operators’ Association medal in a speech by David Sarnoff in New York to Malcolm P. Hanson, radio operator with Byrd, listening by radio in the Antarctie wastes near the South Pole. Mr. Sarnoff, Executive Vice-Preste dent of the Radio Corporation, ing Hanson, mentioned also the farti tude of the wife of the operator, who had consented that her husband go on the hazardous expedition for the sake of science. After she had received the medal for safe keeping, Mrs. Hanson, deeply touched, spoke to her hushand across the vast distance. Within a fi Malcolm P. Hanson, Holding Awarded to Her Husband, 11,000 Miles Away. Hanson’s reply came by aph through the receiving R. C. A. Communications, d, Long Island. In at the Radio presentation to tho Fair, w an uncou THIS IS CLARENCE S. NEWCOMER BROADCASTING FROM STA- TION MOUNT JOY You'll never find such buys as these—-IN USED CARS. 1929 FORD 4-DOOR SEDAN New 2—1929 MODEL A COUPES Very Good 1928 TUDOR FORD SEDAN 1928 PONTIAC COACH 1926 TUDORS AND COUPES 1927 AND 1926 FORD ROADSTERS With or Without Slipon Bodies 1924 AND 1925 COUPES & TUDOR SEDANS 1926 STUDEBAKER SEDAN Good Condition 1924 ESSEX COACH 1924 GARDENER SEDAN, CHEAP 1927 CHEVROLET COACH Very Good MAXWELL COACH, CHEAP DODGE TOURING CAR . Very Good Condition FORD TOURINGS, ROADSTERS & COUPES 2—1 TON INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS Stake Bodies |v nade, nted throng heard tt) over the network of the 1 adecasting Company Sarnoft t to a man I contribution | ition. Although | nile istant from this 1 room ( 1 nd,’ | is { | | | | | )n Square | | is | | | | | { | | > instru: | g nta of Radio, to listen to the | d my \ Tha alone is thy of mmemoration, even in this f extraordinary progress in | ne Talcolm P..H mn, as Chief Radic 0 yr of Ji A Expe 1 rded the an n 1! o Wireless Lie tu CO 5 1528, to ymniuni § IA I | 8 W 1e | its ro | % . . rf ic ar ards of |§ C i 7 Dist b ] fo Sey jh county Distributor fer 1 and well 1 [3 related how Hanson | i) planted his slender steel towers on the | i Fli9e | e it ice barrier, cheered |i i rrier, | & 3 mrades with news from home [ Life ve the world for the first time 1 ( int of a polar |§ 7 io : To Tan i'n 11ngs aicne would | 3% ¥ | 1 a contri ion to history, $ ivy bess = 1 beers 13 Also Dealer In | he , but Hanson added to radio |S lge by testing signals against | he phenomena and made a under condi- To Mrs. Han- yolar sky, observed t Austr radio behavior ticns hitherto unknown. son, Mr. Sarnoff said: “Your sacrifice was all the greater because after your husband sailed for the Antarctic, you bore him a child. No medal can ever reward or repay you for your own courage and heroism.” RADIO TELEGRAPH EXPANDS SERVICE Recent additions to the radio tele graph service from the United States are of special interest now as indica tions that America is striving to hold her own in a radio telegraph leader ship, which is made more difficult to maintain by the British merger of radio telegraph and cables. The an- nonncement that R.C.A. Communica tions, Inc, will begin work at once ; to establish an inland telegraph net: | work in fourteen strategic cities in | the United States, with plans for 29 | inland stations, as wave lengths are | granted, also has added to the coun. | try-wide attention to this modern | | | | | M i » Sk ra of rece soon means of communication. Within the last few weeks three | new direct international circuits have | been announced by W. A. Winterbot- tom, Vice-President in charge of Com: municatons of RC.A. Communica tions, Ine. to Spain, Syria and Costa Rica. Several reductions ¢f rates for radin telegraph service a!so have been an | nounced recently by Mr. Winterbot | tom. It was the competition of radio telegraph which forced a reduction of | | | cable rates by which users have save! 360,000,000 in the last —- ER eight years. Improve Girls’ Rooms | Showing how to provide conven- | ient arrangement of appropriate | furniture, use a harmonious color! scheme, and make care and clean- ing easy, the Girls’ Own Room pro- ject has improved thousands of, farm girls’ rooms at low cost. Your] county home economics extension | representative can explain the plans | —_— Most of us don't know we're Advertise in The Bulletin. in trouble until we are caught. 1.0s: a radlo Clarence S. Newcomer jan15-tf | ST TT TO 5 0 RP OU RATE Sparton, Zenith and Temple Radios dec18-tf KES RARE RS RoR RA PLT FETE TATE Te SAFE TETAS FETE: Lo YOUR EYES ARE VALUABLE Some have realized their value, and have taken the proper care of them. Others have neglected the most important organ, and left the Eyestrain break down the nerves and cause headaches and that tired, wornout feeling. You cannot afford to neglect your eyes. Life’s work and happiness depends on them. OUR OPTOMETRISTS ARE QUALIFIED TO GIVE YOU PROFESSIONAL SERVICE We surface and grind our own Mail your broken glasses to us, and receive them by return mail. We have a fully equipped shop. APPEL and WEBER Optometrists and Opticians 40-42 North Queen Street LANCASTER, PA. Phone 2413 Office Hours, 8:30 to 5:00 The Store That Always Meets You With a Smile lenses. CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. EL | UMBER-COAL | EC |