The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 11, 1930, Image 7

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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1930



THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.

 



Prove Yourself!
Shop regularly at your nearest ASCO Store—and
keep account of your’ Savings! You will be well
able to make use of what you Save! It pays to
trade where you get
The Most of the Best for the Least!
SPECIAL
5-1b bag Gold Seal

Reg. 23c ASCO
Strawberry, Peach,
Raspberry and jar 19¢
FLOUR Pineapple
and a 5¢ can ASCO PRESERVES
Baking Powder ASCO 1b 20¢
Oleomargarine ,2, 39¢
Libby’s Cooked
Corned Beef 2¢ens43c
Tomato Sauce Dressed
Sardines 2 big ens 19¢
EXTRA LARGE FANCY CALIF. 1b
PRUNES 27 25¢
8c
Crisp Brown-Crusted Loaves!
10c
both for 25¢
Triangle or Rock Crystal
SALT 3 pkes 10¢
Very Choice California
Apricots big can 19¢





Large Wrapped
Loaf
Bread Supreme
Victor Pan Loaf
Weekly Specials!


Natl. BE. Co. Robena Pin Wheels ......... Ib 25¢
Octagon Toilet Soap... ....... | .. 3 cakes 20¢
Medium Ivory Soap... .......... .. 3 cakes 22¢
Kirkman’s Borax Soap ................ cake G¢
Post Toasties ....-.... ... . ... .. 3 pkgs 25¢
Quaker Puffed Wheat ............... pkg 12¢

ASCO CORN FLAKES
Kellogg's Rice Krispies
3 pkgs 20¢
rkg 10c
The Flavor and Price Both Satisfy
ASCO COFFEE .... Ib 29¢
39¢—29c 10c saved!
Victor Blend Coffee
Acme Brand Coffee
Boscul Coffee
ROB ROY pts
GINGER ALE 37 25¢




Plus deposit.

ASCO
Golden Bantam
CORN
D cans 95c
Campbell’s
Assorted
SOUPS
ASCO TEAS
ORANGE PEKOE
OLD COUNTRY STYLE
INDIA CEYLON
1-4 1b pk 17c: 1-2 1b pk 33c
ASCO Plain Black or Mixed
1-4 1b pk 10c: 1-2 1b pk 19¢
Pride of Ib tin 75¢
KILLARNEY TEA




ASCO tumb 10¢ cans
Peanut Butter — 6 95¢
ASCO 3 pkgs 20¢ Campbell’s
TOMATO SOUP
3 cans 25¢
Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise jar 19¢
ASCO FINEST SHRIMP can 19¢
The wise Homekeeper is well versed in where to purchase the
Highest Quality Foods and Table Needs at money-saving
prices, hence hundreds of thousands of satisfied
ASCO customers shop the ASCO way daily
Gelatine Desserts
Ice Cream Salt bg 15¢





These Prices Effective in Our
MOUNT JOY STORE





 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER OF GREAT VALUE
ACCORDING TO STATEMENT OF NOTED
EDITORIAL WRITER—PROVEN BY FACTS
Arthur Brisbane, one of the best minds of the
time, says:
“H. Z. Mitchell’s’ ‘Sentinel’,”” published at
Bermidjii, Minn., wins the prize as best weekly
in the National Editorial Contest. This is a
good time to remind the public in general, and
national advertisers in particular, that country
weekly newspapers are the most important or-
gans of public opinion and protectors of public
welfare.
“And, their advertising per mill line, is not
excelled by any publication, of any kind.
“The reader of a country weekly buys every-
thing from shingles on the roof to cement in the
cellar floor, and every advertiser has in him a
possible customer.”







| ON YOUR VACATION
Don’t risk discomfort and inconvenience
That ill result if you lose or break your glasses
Take An Extra Pair With You
You will also find satisfaction in having two styles of frames,
for different occasions.
Our Optical Service is Accurate
APPEL and WEBER
OPTOMETRISTS and OPTICIANS
40-42 North Queen Street LANCASTER, PA.




 

 
PRODUCE & LIVE
STOCK MARKET
i CORRECT INFORMATION FUR
| NISHED WEEKLY BY TE
PENNA. BUREAU OF
MARKETS FOR THE
BULLETIN

Market: Beef steers and yearlings
weak to unevenly lower, better
grades all weights showing most de-
cline, compared with week ago 25c
to 50c lower, top $11.80, average
weight 1422 pounds, several sales
medium weights $11.50-11.75, bulk
of sales $10.00-10.75. Bulls about
steady; she stock and cutters steady
to strong, bulk fat heifers $9.25-10,
beef bulls $8.50-9.25, butcher cows
$7.50-8.25, cutters $4-5.25. Stock-
ers and feeders nominal. Calves
steady, top vealers $13.00.
Hogs: Nominally steady.
Receipts: For today’s market, cat-
tle 3 cars, 2 St. Paul; 1 Chicago;
containing 97 head, 656 head truck-
ed in from nearby, total cattle 753
head, 34 calves, 145 hogs, 81 sheep
Receipts for week ending June 7,
1930, cattle 16 cars, 8 St. Paul; 2
Chicago; 1°'W, Va.; 1 St. Louis. 1
Tenn.; 1 Penna.; 1 Kentucky; 1
Texas; containing 478 head, 2510
head trucked in from local feed
lots, total cattle 2988 head, 1032
calves, 909 hogs, 1080 sheep. Re-
ceipts for corresponding week last
year, cattle 26 cars, 7 St. Paul; 3
Chicago; 2 Kentucky; 1 Virginia; 1
W. Va.; 1 Ohio; 1 Wis.; containing
494 head, 2016 head trucked in
from nearby, total cattle 2510 head
551 calves, 1232 hogs, 1825 sheep.
Range of Prices
STEERS
Good $10.50-12.25
Good $10.50-12.25
Good $10.50-12.25
Medium 9.25-10.50
Common 8.00-9.25
HEIFERS
Choice 9.50-10.50
Good 8.50-9.50
Medium 7.75-8.50
Common 7.00-7.75
COWS
Choice 7.25-8.50
Good 6.25-7.25
Common & medium 5.25-6.25
Low cutter & cutter 4.00-5.25
BULLS
Good and choice (beef) 9.00-10.25
Cutter, com. & med. 7.25-9.00
FEEDERS AND STOCKERS
Good and choice 9.50-11.50
Common & medium 7.25-9.50
Good and choice 9.25-11.25
Common and medium 7.00-9.25
VEALERS
Good and choice 11.25-13.00
Medium 9.50-11.25
Cull and common 7.50-9.50
HOGS
Heavyweights $11.00-11.50
Mediumweights 11.25-11.75
Lightweights 11.25-11.75
Packing sows (rough and smooth)
8.00-11.00
Lancaster Grain and Feed Market
Selling Price of Feeds
Bran $37.00-38.00 ton
Shorts 37.00-38.00 ton
Hominy 39.00-40.00 ton
Middlings 41.00-42.00 ton
Linseed 54.50-55.50 ton
Gluten 42.50-43.50 ton
Ground Oats 41.00-42.00 ton
Soy Bean Meal 47.00-48.00 ton
Hog Meal 46.50-47.50 ton
Cottonseed 41% $51.00-52.00 ton
Dairy Feed *16% 38.00-39.00 ton
Dairy Feed *18% 40.50-41.50 ton
Dairy Feed *20% 44.50-45.50 ton
Dairy Feed 24% 48.50-49.50 ton
Dairy Feed 25% 50.00-51.00 ton
Horse Feed 85% 44.50-45.50 ton
Alfalfa (Regular) 38.50-39.50 ton
Alfalfa (Reground) 41.50-42.50 ton
*Dairy feeds containing smaller
percentage of ‘Mill by-Products”
considerably higher.
Ruins of Clonmacnoise
Venerated by Irishmen
Clonmacnoise occupies a delightful
spot on a series of small eminences
upc n the banks of the River Shannon.
Only a small part of the great abbey
building is still traceable, but there
are numerous ruins of churches and
other structures once connected with
it, some of them far off in the sur
rounding valleys.
The principal ruin is that of the
great abbey church and cathedral,
built in 909 by Abbot Colman Conaill-
ech, with the assistance of King Flann
Sinna, son of Malachy I, in whose
honor the abbot erected before the
entrance a great stone cross with
Irish inscriptions and sculptures rep-
resenting Biblical scenes, which have
given it its name of Crosna-Scraptra,
“Cross of the Scriptures.”
Near it are two round towers which
answered the combined purpose of bel-
fries in time of peace and places of
refuge and defense when danger
threatened.
In the Thirteenth and Fourteenth
centuries this church was rebuilt by
Tomultech MacDermott, and is now
known as the Teampul MacDermott.
The last of the Irish kings, Roderick
O'Connor, lies near its altar with his
father Turlough.
Clonmacnoise is still the favorite
burial place of Ireland, and many hun-
dreds of faithful are laid to rest every
vear in the sacred dust upon which
St. Kiernan trod, and after him so many
generations of the great and holy men
and women of Erin.—Washington
Star,
RR
Water Sweet Peas
One of the secrets of growing
sweet peas is to give them plenty of
water at all times. A mulch of grass
ed os we tswa wol-shtraimicha |
kawder, bis endlich hut der Sam |
“ganunk” ga-grisha un mer hen se
ous-annonmer.
Sell hut de experience meeting
uff ga-brucha im rodda-nesht for
seller dawg, un mer hen ous ga-
maucht os yader ebber hut arawet
ron sich selver tsu wesha won are
si agener karraber sowver holdta
will.
Moral: Won olla mensch si
PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH

What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To
Say This Week

|
os rodda
g'hard
gebt, un ich hob shunt uft gadenked
Ich hob shunt
os sell ‘der foll is mit menscha. Doh
ons Hullerhecka warthouse is so
an rodda-nesht. En gonser winder
hucka se hinnich em uffa un
schwetza waega olles os awgaid. Ken
‘Weipgfmensh is sowver os de
shtrose lawfed, un won se shtuppa
set un anes fun da rodda friendlich
bawilcooma don sin gli en holb dut-
zent uff era g'shporr Won en
monskarl nett tsu da rodda kared
awver gaid sinera bisniss noach, bat-
zawled si agener tox un shoolda un
enared si familia, don tzeega se en
ob about olla onera dawg. Won ols
es free-yohr coomed don gaena de
rodda ousanonner. Yader ebber is
froh won ols der soomer coomed 80
os de rodda nows shpringa kenna in
de felder un awenich waetza somla
far era familia. Won se shoffa don
schwetza se net so feel un de hesser
gloss fun leit hen rue.
Ich wore der onner dawg om
rodda nesht ins Hullerhecka bar-
shttoop. Dartt wore der Mike Blotner
der Bench Hess, der Jeck Hawna-
yarick, der Bill Michelroyer un der
Sam Seeshuls. Se hen ivver yader
ebber nows 'gmauched os der wake
cooma is, Es wore ken goot ward
g'sawd far ken mensch—nemond
hut nix rechtes gadoo g’hot un
yader ebber wore en keyune, en
schpitz-boo, en loomp un en raskel
Endlich hut der Mike Blotner g'™-
sawd:
“Ich wooner wos de leit waega
uns sawga won mere net derby sin?”
“Es woonered mch aw,” hut der
Bill Michelroyer g'sawd. “Supposin’
mere daida amohl unser agny opin-
ons expressa waega anonner; grawd
de pinklich woreheit sawga waega |
nonner os we mer daida won mere |
net doh warra.”
HOME HEALTH CLUB
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX. |

BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER
WHAT TO DO: Yes, and how to
do it. I presume many of you will
want to swat me for discussing a-
gain the same old subject of the
fly, the typhoid fly, but I would
have a big job if in turn I were to
swat every one of you that has
read and approved of what I have
told you about the fly and has
done absolutely nothing to prevent
its breeding. |
Now, it is a fact which you can-
not reasonably dispute that if your
horses and cows were free from
the cruel bother of flies during the
entire summer, they would be able |
to render you greater service
be in better condition in the fall. |
Isn't that so? Putting it on a pure-
ly cash basis, regardless of the
health or lives of your family, it
would pay you and all of your
neighbors to prevent the fly from
breeding. But if you have only one
case of typhoid fever in your family
in five years it would pay to elimin-
ate the flies from your premises.
Impossible? Not a bit of it.
vou have lots of stock around your
barn, then you must have lots of
land, and should have a manure
spreader. There is always some
field or pasture where it can be
spread at any time, and the land is
better and the value of the manure
is greater if spread while fresh.
Just a bit of time every morning
and you have a job finished that
must be done at some season and
why not now? Keep the barns clean
and the manure scattered out on the
fields where it does good instead of
harm, and the flies canno: find a
breeding place around a filthy back
door, the slop barrrels, garbage can,
or the hog pen.
If the flies swarm around your
back door and breed in the dirty
mess where kitchen slops are thrown
then I must say that neither you
nor your housekeeper are clean.
Yes, I know I am far enough away
to be safe, but after you get your
place into a sanitary condition, just
come over and take breakfast with
me on the back porch.
If you have only one cow or even
three and a couple of horses, then
build a pit or tight box as a recepta-
cle for the manure and other waste
or garbage that to ba carted
off. Put screens over a portion if
you want the air to get in, but fix it
so the flies cannot get in there to
 
If

is

“Well,” hut der Sam Seeshols g'-
sawd, “Ich ware drin derfore won
nemond base daid warra.”
“Never mind,” hut der Bill
elroyer g'sawd, “mere fixa sell. Der |
arsht os base wart muss es uff
setza fars house, un mer maucha
der Gottlieb Boonasteil doh der
judge. Mer wissa oll unser schwach-
heita, un es daid uns goot cooma ols
ebmohl unser failer hara. Ich geb
nix droom un gae es arsht uff der
shtand un denno will ich hovva 0s |
der grawd rouse schwetzed. Hold
nix tzurick. Ich hob nix tsu far-
shteckla un ware ga-wiss net base.”
“All right,” hut der Bench Hess
g'sawd, “shtell .dich dart ins eck
un horrich.”
er Bill is ins eck g'shtetpped.
“Kensht u der Bill Mickelroy-
er?’ hut de Bench g’frogt.
“Yaw,” sawgt der Mike Blotner,
“se hase ene ols ebmols der Bulla- |
oyer, wile are amohl e nbull g'shtola |
Mich-

hut un ene gamesht un farkawfed |
far si agener!”
“Sell is on——Ileek!” hut der Bill
ous em eck ga-grisha. |
“Toot, toot, Bill,” hov ich g'sawd, |
“du farleersht de drinks.” {
“p—de drinks!” Sell shtand ict
— nett” |
“Se sin usht in g'schposs.” |
“In g'schposs? Hoons boona! Se
sawga in g'schposs was se in arnsht
mana. Selly bulla shtory war far-|
gessa un se bricha now so older |
dreck net widder uff shttarra.” {

Ich hob ene endlich gadishttered |
greeked un der Jeck Hawnayarick |
hut widder aw-g’fonga: |
“Ks wase nemond we er Bill si|
geld g'mauched hut.”
“Ich wase we are en hoonert un
tswonsich dawler g'mauched hut,” |
sawked der Sam Sheeshuls.
“We?”
“Are hut's ga-collect far de kar-
rich uff-fixa we are forshtaer wore
un hut’s si laiva net ivver ga-draid.”
Der Bill is on der wondt in de hae
g’'shprunga os we en maltee Kkotz
won se de gichtera hut, un mit ame
joomp are mere ivver de oxel
nows un de naixt minnutt hut are
Der Sam on hols g’hot. Se sin ivver
dish, un stee lun benk nows garull-
is
gonser lavens-lawf uff de shtarn ga-
dooked het don daida fiel leit era
heet net ob in de karrich.
eet A eee.
Thin Some Apples
Fruit thinning is more profitable
on trees carrying an excessively
heavy crop than on those where
the set is slightly more than what
is wanted. The return is likely to
be greater on fancy varieties like

Jonathan and McIntosh than ‘on
Ben Davis and Baldwin,
———— ——
Get Latest Information
Farmers’ Week and Dairy Ex-
position at State College, June 17
to 19, will present a complete pro-
gram of farm and home infor-
mation. Entertainment will be

clippings will help to conserve the
moisture.

provided in addition to the edu-
cational features.

in it. That makes an ideal breeding |
place for mosquitoes. One more
| thing, if you must sprinkle your
lawn, do it in the morning, never at |
night. The eggs and larva of the |
mosquitoes are in the water with |
which you sprinkle and during a |
warm summer night they hatch or |
ito swat the fly.
deposit their eggs and you simply
prevent the breeding upon your
place of countless millions of the
dirty pests. Then make it a rule to
kill every fly you can. Trap them
with screen traps, fly poison, sticky
fly paper and any other device
PRESSLY FOK THE BULLETIN |m
and |=

0
RO
mii
-

all
Il


 
Our Bulletin
All Leading 5-Cent Cigars remain § for 25¢ or
$2.00 for 50.
Off Brands as low as 90¢ box of 50.
All 15 Cent Cigarettes 2 pks 25¢.
All 15¢ Chewing or Smoking Tobacco 2 pks 25¢
All 10 Cent Size 3 pks 25¢
We have a nice line of weight goods in Candy at
reduced prices. :
1 Lb. Box ANGELUS MARSHMALLOWS 25¢
Just Received a Fresh Line of Schrafft’s Candies























Soft Drinks and Fresh Roasted Peanuts
H. A. DARRENKAMP
3 Doors East of Post Office MOUNT JOY, PA.
JPOP


.
O60 OO
YOUNG'S TIRE SHOP
East Main Street MOUNT JOY, PENNA.

County Distributor for
Dayton Tires
Also Dealer In

Sparton, Zenith
and Temple Radios
decl8-tf
1011 EO OO 0
0

known to be effective with them but
kill them in some way.
Also kill the rats, they carry di-
sease, kill chickens and destroy the
food. Five cents worth of plaster
of paris mixed with sugar and plac-
ed around their runaways in pans
will destroy hundreds of them. Mix
about one tablespoonful with two
tablespoonsful of the sugar and set

a small dish of water near by. Mr.
Rat will want water after he has
eaten a few mouthsful and the
trick is done. He will bury himself |
in the deepest rathole and there |
will be no odor.
Don’t leave an uncovered rain
barrel half filled or with any water
develop into mosquitoes ready for
business, but if the sprinkling is
done in the early morning the sun
kills the eggs and larva and the
lawn does not produce a big crop of
the pests to annoy you. If there is
a pond near by or a marshy place
where the mosquitoes breed, pour a |
little kerosene in it after every
hard rain. If it is to be had the




crude petroleum is just as good.
Don’t plant ferns around your




















USED CARS
ROHRER’S WEEKLY SPECIAL

58 CHRYSLER TOURING
$125.00
1928 ESSEX COACH
1928 CHRYSLER COUPE
1927 ESSEX COACH
1927 HUDSON SEDAN
1927 HUDSON COACH
1926 ESSEX COACH
1926 ESSEX LIGHT DELIVERY
1924 HUDSON SPECIAL ROADSTER
Does your motor heat? We guarantee to clean
clogged radiators.
E. B. ROHRER
MOUNT JOY, PA.



porches, mosquitoes love them and
breed under the leaves and grow to
a great size in a single season. Try
planting castor beans and note the
effect on the mosquitoes. They dis-
like them very much. Don’t forget
tt QU nn
Confine Young Chicks
If clean ground is not available
for raising young chicks they can
be grown in complete confinement.
In such cases, platforms in front
of the brooder houses give the chicks

more room and allow them more |
direct sunlight.
met sess: |
Control Sheep Pests
Dipping the sheep flock after |
shearing will save feed later be- |
cause the operation will kill lice |
and ticks which annoy the lambs
and keep them from making proper
gains. Any good coal tar prepar-
ation or stock dip can be used.
AA AI

Keep Turkeys From Pests
Artificial brooding of turkeys is
a means of avoiding worms, lice,
mites, and possibly blackhead, if
the poults are kept away from in-
fected areas.
a A Gree

Provide for Safety
The so-called gentle bulls often
prove, dangerous. For nrotection,
the safety bull pen ca» t+ It
provides shelter, 2 1 for ain
and silage feeding, a breed ng stall,
and an exercise yard.
When it’s job printing you need,
anything from a card to a book, we
are at your service.















Relief From Curse
"MY SALE WAS A |
of Constipation
EAL KNOCKOUT “ | |



Yo [ A Battle Creek physician says,
AY 7.3 | “Constipation is responsible for
Zhe | more misery than any other cause.”
WS i 1 i i iof
3 | But immediate relief has been
\ J { found. A tablet called Rexall Order-
py |lies has been discovered. This: tab-
~ let attrac vater from the system


\ {into the I evacuating bowel
1. The water loosens
waste and causes a
| gentle, thorough, natural movement
| without forming a habit or ever in-
| creasing the dose.
Stop suffering from consitpation.
Chew a Rexall Orderlie at night.
rr Next day bright. Get 24 for 25¢ to-
{day at the nearest Rexall Drug
| Store.
E. W. GARBER, Mount Joy
dry,
| called the c
the dry food


LIE USED OUR WNU
Cit
IN HIS ADS
Furnished by
THIS NEWSPAPER

NO EXCUSE FOR A
“SPLITTING HEAD”
There's no need for an aching head to spoil
your day. At the first warning throb take Dil
lard’s Aspergu Chew it a few minutes. Almost
before you realize it. you have chewed the pain
away. It's as simple as that—no trouble, and
harmless—for Dillard's Aspergum is the new and
easier way to take aspirin.





Dillard's Aspergum is the finest aspirin ia
delicious chewing gum form. You can take it
any time—any place. You need no water to

 
gulp it down. There is no unpleasant taste—
no choking.
Because you chew Dillard's Aspergum the
aspirin mixes thoroughly with the saliva so that
all its soothing qualities are effective quickly,
continuously,
Keep a package of Aspergum on hand for
quick, harmless relief from the pain of head.
aches, neuralgia, meuritis, etc. It helps break up
a cold, and soothes irritated throats, even such
severe cases as follow tonsil operations. If yous
 
HOW ARE YOUR SHOES?
DON'T WAIT TOO LONG
BRING THEM IN
CITY SHOE
REPAIRING CO.

 
 
 
 
 


druggist does not have Dillard's Aspergum, send
for free sample to Health Products Corporation,
Dept. A, 113 North 13th Street, Newark, N. J,
 







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