WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1930 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. The Quality omparison The very best test you can apply to any butter, is to use it on fresh, hot corn. Louella Butter keeps its delicious flavor, and improves the delight of fresh corn on the cob. Use Louella Butter on all fresh vegetables—use it for hot brown butter sauce— compare the Quality—the delicate taste—and we feel sure you will agree Louella is all we claim for it, and more! The Finest Butter in America! Louella Butter 1b 47c In pound prints or wrapped quarters. RICHLAND BUTTER Creamery prints of merit. Ib 45¢ big bot 10c¢ ASCO Pure Cider or White Distilled Vinegar Reg. 10c Princess Apple Butter 2 cans 15¢ Fancy Large Santa Clara Prunes 2 lbs 25¢ Delicious and Satisfying! ASC® COFFEE ...... 1b 20¢ = 2 39¢—29¢ 10c saved! Ce Victot Blend Coffee 1b 25¢ 35¢ ‘The choice of thousands. use. Acme Brand Coffee 1b tin Especiglly adapted to percolator Ib tin 43¢ 1b tin 43¢ 25¢c Big can 29¢ 23c 19¢ Boscul COFFEE Del Monte COFFEE Hawaiian Sliced PINEAPPLE DEL MONTE BARTLETT PEARS Asco or Del Monte FRUIT SALAD ASCO CALIF. YELLOW PEACHES These Will Save You Money! ASCO Finest Tomatoes ......:.... med. can 10¢ Fancy Meaty Queen Olives ........ qt. jar 29¢ Crispd Flo Bars... Lo 0 vis 2 lbs. 25¢ Florida Grapefruit 3. . buffet can 10¢ Post Toasties: ............... 8... 3 pkgs 25¢ One Dethol Sprayer and | 69 both for jo c 1-2 Pint Can Dethol Insect Killer Reg. 15c¢ ASCO Finest or Golden Bantam Sugar Corn 2 cans 25¢ 2 cans 25¢ Big can Medium Size Ivory or Lifebouy SOAP 3 cakes 20¢ Regular 14c FARMDALE PEAS Tender Cut Stringless Beans 3 cans 25¢ Farmdale Stringless Beans 2 can 25¢ Thirst Quenchers! i Lord Baltimore Beverages .............. bat 5¢ ASCO Ginger Ale .............. 3 pt bots 25¢ Rob Roy Pale Dry Ginger Ale ....... 3 bots 25¢ Plus usual bottle deposit. Large Wrapped Loaf We bake it in our own bakery. t- Bread Supreme 8c Victor Bread, Big Pan Loaf Be At your nearby ASCO Store—always the Highest Quality Foods and Table Needs at money-saving prices. These Prices Effective in Our MOUNT JOY STORE |that much of the trouble might have the sympathy for them would be min- De : L HE BOUGHT IT THROUGH TH \'/. PRODUCE& LIVE | STOCK MARKET! | CORRECT INFORMATION FUR NISHED WEEKLY BY TE PENNA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Market: On fed steers and year- | lings fully steady with week's 25¢ advance, grassy kinds about steady, | top fed steers, $8.60, average wt. 1300 pounds, best Virginia grassers $7.70, bulk of sales $7.00-7.50. Bulls firm; she stock and cutters weak to unevenly lower, bulk fat heifers $7.00 $7.50, beef bulls $6.- 75-7.560, butcher cows $5.50-6.25, cutters $2.75-3.50. Stockers and feeders about steady, light weight medium grade predominating, coun- try demand narrow, most sales $6- 7.00. Calves steady, top vealers $11.00, few selects $11.50. Hogs: Slow, steady undertone. Receipts: For today’s market, cat- tle 10 cars, 4 Maryland; 2 St. Paul; 2 W. Virginia; 1 Virginia; 1 Tenn- essee; containing 250 head, 271 head trucked in from nearby, total cattle 521 head, 54 calves, 192 hogs. Receipts for week ending August 2, 1930, cattle 72 cars, 22 Virginia; 18 St. Paul; 11 West Vir- ginia; 11 Pittsburgh; 4 Maryland; 2 Chicago; 1 St. Louis; 1 Tennessee; 1 Indiana; 1 New York; containing 2003 head, 998 head trucked in from nearby, total cattle 3001 head 825 calves, 646 hogs, 101 Receipts for corresponding last year, cattle 156 cars, 45 St. Paul; 27 Virginia; 22 Canada; 17 Chicago; 16 St. Louis; 6 West Vir- ginia; 4 Kentucky; 2 Texas; 3 Kan-| Buffalo; New York;| Iowa; 2 Ohio; 1 4994 sheep. week sas City; 2 Tennessee; 2 I N. 1; head, 572 tru in, 1 1 5566 head, 1019 calves, 988 hogs, 754 sheep. Penna. ; Range of Prices STEERS Good Medium Common Medium Good HEIFERS Choice Good Medium Common COWS Choice Good medium and cutter BULLS Gooo and choice (beef) Cutter, common & med. (yrlgs, excluded) VEALERS Good and choice Medium 9.00-10.2¢ Cull and common 6.50-9. FEEDERS AND STOCKERS Good and choice 7.00-9. Common & medium Good and choice Common & medium HOGS Common and Low cutter 10.25-11.; $10.50-11.0 $10.50-11.0 10.50-11. 10.25-11. Lightweight Lightweight Mediumweight Mediumweight Heavyweight 10.00-10.5( Heavyweight 10.00-10.50 Pkg. sows, medium and good 7.50-10.00 HOMEHEALTH CLUB WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX PRESSLY FOx THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER Infantile Paralysis: The of paralysis will interest a much larg- er class of readers than one might at first expect To walk along the streets of a city and see the poor de- formed creatures who go thro life with a shriveled limb or perhaps an arm as well as a leg always causes an involuntary feeling of pity to come over the most careless and hotless. When one realizes at the same time subject been overcome by while the sufferer proper treatment, was still young, gled with resentment against those who had the care of the case, or ev- en against the parents for making more strenuous efforts to correct the weakness. Ignorance? Yes, plain language I admit, but a fact nevertheless, and I trust that it may be no longer the plea. Many cases of infantile paraly- sis, arise from overfeeding, indiges- tion and constipation. Of three caus- es, or combination of causes that of constipation is the greatest factor. As I stated in previous articles, con- stipation as it should be considered is not alone a torpid condition of the bowels, but consists of activity of all of the organs of elimination, liver, kidneys, and sweat glands, of the sin. All of the waste or refuse matter of the system must be eliminated or a poisoning of the blood follows, auto intoxication. Perhaps I need not say much more about that part of it. To prevent infantile paralysis be certain that your children have good wholesome food and that they masti- cate it well. Allow them no liquids of any kind while partaking of food that should be thoroughly chewed. See that they drink plenty of water between meals and have fresh fruits as often as possible and plenty of it. Then constipation is not likely to trouble them. If the constitution already exists see that these matters are attended to af once, and in addition to the diet and other rules to ob- see that the child has proper nt from the most skillful os- teopath that you can secure yourself applying hot and cold water treat- ments that have been describebd in the lecures on hydrotherapy. I shall n otsoon forget Bessie, a lit- tle girl that was brought to me sever- al years ago. The right arm and leg were almost useless, I treated her according to the Home Hs:alth Club methods for about four weeks. But the mother who was a very bright woman carefully watched every move- ment and noted -everything that was done, I took pains to show her not only he reason for each step in the treatment but just how and when it should be given. There was rapid im- provement from the start and after the return home the treatments were continued for about a year when all trace of lameness had disappeared and Bessie was the strongest girl of her age in the neighborhood. Plain sense and persistence in the proper treatment have made Bessie a strong healthy woman and the let alone policy would have found her today a disfigured cripple with no hope for re- lief. Watch the babies and keep their stomachs and bowels clean, a swell as their bodies and clothing and infan- tile paralysis is not likely to trouble them. SEES HEAVY CLAIMS ON FUTURE BANKERS American Bankers Association Official Declares That Banking Changes Creating Large Bank Systems Will Call for Broader Social Viewpoints. Larger scale group or branch bank- ing will inevitably bring a new era of banking organization and administrative methods and new eco- nomic views,” Rudolf S. Hecht, Chair- man of the Economic Policy Commis- | sion of the American Bankers Associa- tion, recently told the members of the American Institute of Banking. tion of the association and he empha- sized the point that the new era in banking demanded “that we must step- up our education so that banking shall be fortified for new responsibilities.” | What the Future Calls For “We must broaden our social concep tion of banking,” Mr. Hecht said. “Not only for the technical operations of the both as individuals and an organized profession ve must charge ourselve | don, destination Quebec, with a fluky serious consideration of the so- | ) | gas tank-—but I'm a | of places to land!” with cial problems that are involved. Al- ready we hear murmurings and fears and doubts as to whether the changes tems do not constitute the looming of a new financial menace, a monopolistic threat not only to the individual unit | banker, but to the financial liberty of | society in general. I am stating these things merely as facts that must be taken into consideration in our studies. “Public opinion cannot be ignored by any business, least of all by bank- ing, which is admittedly semi-public in character and is, therefore, subject | to special supervision by the consti-! | red boat tuted authorities. If banking develops tendencies that give rise to public fears, we must so conduct ourselves as to reassure all doubts. “For this is true,~that business suc- | ceeds only by serving society—that no | business can permanently prosper which does not both render service to the public and at the same time con- | vince the public that it is rendering | that service. Banking, therefore, must take cognizance of what the public is saying of this new era in its develop- ment. , “It must be part of the technique of modern banking administration, whatever form our enlarged institu- tions take, to avoid the creation of monopolies, or even the appearance of | 17° financial | power as to be able to exercise an un- | such a centralization of due influence over public or private finance or other lines of business. The publie’s right to the safeguards of fair | competition must be observed. Must Preserve Individual Initiative “It must also be an agement that individual initiative and opportunity shall be maintained. If | | | night. America has outstripped other nations in the distribution of the benefits of its progress, it is due to the fact that there are no barriers of social caste or business tradition against advance- ment for character, ability, and initia- | American business has learned | tive. that it serves itself best by encourag- ing by every practical means individ- ual ambition and initiative, and hurts itself most by repressing or neglecting them. Competition for efficiency, both within an organization and between organizations, will prevent any insti- tution from long enduring in which maintenance of opportunity and recog- nition of initiative are not controlling principles of management. As heads of the greatest of our financial and in- dustrial institutions stand men who started from the humblest of begin- nings. ecutive authority and reward stand men in positions in keeping, generally speaking, with their individual merits. I, personally, see no reason for fearing that the enlarged banking organiza- tions which the future may hold would necessarily supply future bank em- ployees with any less opportunity for achievement than unit banking. “Again, a major consideration of ad- ministration in any multiple form of banking organization must be its pub- lic relations in every community it touches. Its foremost consideration must be actually and visibly to serve the economic upbuilding of that com- munity. No system will be long tol- erated whose local members work, or are suspected as working, to draw economic strength from one place to enlarge the finanical power of another. The local unit bank has always been part and parcel of the communities where it lives—and no system can last | which does not make it a major prin- ciple of operating technique to serve, and not exploit, the communities into whose business lives it enters.” ¥ operations | to the United States and bankers will | have to develop “new conceptions, new | { dare | you're : : | ished new banking must we fit ourselves, but | | and | down to | The | Ail ft company, Through all the grades of ex- | Pee’ se ss eee CW) RD Cupid Has Wings od +; 2S og, Pods bos 2, 20s et By GENEVRA CCOK 4% ete Poe ee ee ee ess Pose 8 (Copvright.) ONA GREY was curled comfort- ably up in the birch seat over- looking the lake, reading a story from the folded newspaper in her lap. Clif- ton Spruce leaned over her shoulder. “Really, Mona,” he began. “You ought to be beyond such—what's the name of it? ‘Cupid's Dart!'—such sentimental silliness! You know very well there's no cupid—with his ar- rows and big soft eyes, and wings— above all things, those absurd wings!” “But, Clifton,” Mona lifted lovely gray eyes to his, “it’s the things he stands for—like love, love at first sight, and romance—" “Well, there aren’t any of those things, either. That’s sentimental non- sense, too. Look at us—we're prac- tically engaged; that is, we will be engaged when I feel I can offer you a sufficient income to live on properly; and if things come off all right when I get back to New York tomorrow, I'll be able to dc it soon. And there won't be any cupid about it—oh, there's the boat. Well, goodby, Mona. Hope you have a good summer.” For three days Mona gazed dream- ily and lonely out over the sparkling lake; her aunts had opened the cot- tage early this year, and few people had yet joined the summer colony. On the morning of the fourth day, as she swam lazily out past the rocks, she was startled to hear the whir of motors in the air, and there hovering over the lake was a big silver plane. It circled above her head, then swooped very low, skirting the water, and at last came to rest on the sur- face like a silver-gray dove, Mona, her eyes round with ishment, retreated to the rocks until the backwash from the landing had subsided, and the seaplane swayed in the middle of the lake. She glanced quickly around her. No one was in sight. Perhaps the pilot would dived gracefully clean strokes aston- quietly nced assistance. She swam with ong, and : 3 | out toward the plane. The institute is the educational sec- | Tall, dark. with a bronzed face and the man in the cockpit leaned toward her. *““I suppose you're a nymph?’ he called softly. Mona smiled up at him. “And I suppose you're—"" shé could only think of one with wings! She wouldn’t call him cupid!=—*l1 suppose one of the angels!” she fin breathlessly. The young man “You guessed wrong that said—*I'm only Dirk Bran- eager eyes, person laughed time,” he marvelous picker By and by Mona swam back for : : | an and paddled out across the that are coming about in banking in | the canoe and pads the extension of group and branch sys- | plane for Dirk they paddled sparkling lake to the Jrandon. Together across to the cove. “When 1 come back from Moose- ville,” he told her—he would have to walk the mile and a half to the little Maine village at the foot of the lake— “I'm coming over to the cottage to see you. May I?” Mona lifted her gray eyes happily to his. “I hope you will,” she answered softly. When he came back from the vil- lage just at sunset he was in a bright with an outboard motor. He flashed up to the dock past the rocks, called to Mona, who had run the shore. “I’m here for the season,” he called gayly. “How do you like the new chariot? I rented it. Would you like to go out to the ship? Star, I call her” On the way out he told her: “They’ll have to get some stuff from Portland to fix the Silver Star up with. That'll take week. Then it'll about another week for me to repair it, check?” He grinned at her hap- Silver about a | pily. “See that little cottage over there by that point? Well. ve rented it! I'm testi the plane for the Zoomwell and I can test {t here just as well as on some lake near He could. and he did. And for five weeks Mona lived in the aura of ro- mance. Then one night Dirk told her that in three days the last test flight would be made, he would be assured | of the safety of the Silver Star, and J | Sunday item of man- | 00 afternoon he would take her up for her first dight. Mona tossed about restlessly all She didn't know what to do about Clifton. Of course, she wasn’t engaged to him, really—and yet— In the morning she telegraphed him: “If you love me, come at once— this week-end. MONA.” valked in terror. The that telegram, Dirk Brandon All day she minute she had sent she knew that it was that she loved. Friday night they paddled together up to the island. There of the darkness Dirk told Clifton. “And if he comes, said, “he’ll—he’ll tell ” When they reached the cottage, there was a telegram, “Mona,” it read “Don’t be silly. Do you think I’m Cupld? Big deal on here. Will write Monday, Clifton.” Monday afternoon a happy man and girl in the Silver Star circled over the office of Clifton Spruce in New York. “That’s his skylight,” cried Mona. Dirk accurate aim sent a tiny weighted package through the open skylight | To it was attached a small white note. “Dear Clifton,” it read. “You see I've found there really is a cupid aft- er all. And he has wings. MONA.” A A Qn Pick Blossoms Daily Sweet peas should be picked daily to prevent them from going to seed. Apply a heavy mulch of grass clippings to conserve moisture Water thoroughly and often in dry weather. rere A QR. Turn useless articles about your home into cash. Advertise them in our classified column. err Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin take | in the hush | her that | he loved her. Mona told him all about Dirk,” she | me I'm crazy | swooped down and with |® LASSES MIXING MACH In Your DispLAY ADVERTISING Realizing the great. 1 uty 3 is rnishing he WNU. CUTS COPY In New Releases Fach. Month ~ A Service FREE TO ALL ADVERTISE Come in and let us show you how easily we can assist you in preparing your copy for advertising and circular work. If you can’t call at the office, ring 41R2 and see how quickly our advertising representative will be at your service. Don’t follow in the same old rut—Pep up your advertising at our expense. The BULLETIN MOUNT JOY. PA. CR TEU OWE < elco | | IC t ence as well as to handle funds Obligation % J LIE % 3 % 4% % % % % 10 OE National unt Joy Bank mn EE NEE tL o 11 OE aes Receiver, Guardian, Registrar of St Bonds, Trustee, etc. 0 RL 00 T J | 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’ ‘Sentinel’,”” published at Bermidjii, Minn., wins the prize as best weekly in the National Editorial Contest. This is & 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 publie 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.” IL J 0 | “.. MOLASSES FEED MIXING - ~~ WE HAVE RECBITLY INSTALLED A MIRACLE PROCESS MO- . NOW WE CAN MIX ANY FORMULA YOU WANT AND ADD MOLASSES TO IT. GIVE US A TRIAL. OE) WE ARE ALSO IN A POSITION QUANTITY. SELL MOLASSES IN ANY WOLGEMUTH BROS., FLOR{N;\PA. Phones: 151R4 and 57R6 A OOO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers