The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, December 17, 1930, Image 7

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NESDAY, DEC.
—
17th, 1930
§
i
1
Your ASCO Store
Offers You
Christmas Needs!
Your nearest ASCO Store is abun-
dantly stocked with Foods and Table
Needs for the Holidays—and you are
sure of fajr dealing and Highest Qual.
ity at lowest Possible Prices,
CHRISTMAS CHEER
$1: $2'$3
2 big cans *35¢


REG. 19¢c ASCQ FINEST
California Peaches «

ASCO big can
Bartlett Pears 25c¢
big ca can 23¢
17c
can 15¢
2 lbs 15¢
CALIF. DRIED
lbs
LIMA BEANS 2 23c
You will be delighted with the Quality and the Price.
ASCO COFFEE... Ib 27c¢
= Saved!
Ib 23¢
ASCO big can
FRUIT SALAD

Glenwood Apple Butter
10c |
Honey Drop Wax Beans


Tender Cru’ed can
CORN
Asco Shoe Peg can
CORN


Pea Beans


Victor Blend Coffee
The’, Choice of Thousands.
Acme Brand Coffee Ib tin 33c
_ Especially ‘adapted to Percolator use.
Maxwell House Coffee 1
Ib tin 41c
each 20¢
6 for $1.08


Electric Lamps
20-30-40-50-60 W.


Doing Any Baking?
California Seeded Raisins ............ pkg 10¢
Imported Cleaned Currants .......... pkg 12¢
Glace: Citron Peel .........%1....... 1-2 1b 19¢
Glace Orange and Lemon Peel Jails 1-2 1b 13¢
Lemon or Vanilla Extract ............. bot 13¢
Brer Rabbit Molasses ....... Voce, can 17¢
Baker’s Shredded Coconut ............. pkg Te
Baker’s Southern Style Coconut |. ....... can 16¢
Baker’s Baking Chocolate . . . .. \ 1-2 1b cake 22¢
Delicious Red Cherries ........ on bot 10¢
Heinz Mince’Meat can 39¢
ines s Bi
Mince "Meat Jb 19¢ Pumpin 2 Cans 19¢

Fancy Clked 2 cans 25¢
Sweet Potatoes
jar 123c¢
pkg Se 5c
b21c
Ib 32¢
2 for 15¢
Asco Seedless 2 p
RAISINS
Rubyettes
ASCO Gelgrine Desserts
Paper Shell Almonds
Fancy California Walnuts
POST
TOASTIES
Makes Wonderful “Filling” for A Bird
Bread Speen wid NOW 776
big pan loaf Be 5c
For the Children
we $295 | 8 BROOMS
Christmas Candies- Big Values!
Lucille Finest Asstd Chocolates 1b 50+: 2 lbs 95¢
Lucille Fireest Assorted Chocolates 5 1b box $2.25
Poinsettia Assorted Chocolates 5 1b box $1.29
Hard and Filled Candies Ib 25¢: 5 1b can $1.19
Asstd Mixtures (Chocolates and Berbers) Ib 25¢
Sweethome Assorted Chocolates ........ 11b 39¢
Sleigh Girl Asstd Chocolates .5 1b gift box $1.69
Finest Fresh Produce
f Belo s
2 for 15¢ I's lost ates
Victor Bread
each 20¢
Express
WAGONS


Large Size Grape Fruit ............. 3 for 23¢
Whole Coconuts J... 0. void 10¢
Sweet Juicy Oranges ............... dozen 23¢

ASCO Meat Markets are ‘Headquarters’ for Turkeys, Chick-
ens, Ducks, etc. May we have your order? \
These Prices Effective in Our | “PPI
MOUNT JOY STORE ~ X
\/





Advertise in the “Bulletin”





Funera
BAA A SARL 1 UTS
El
18 Poplar Street
Bell Telephone 210
nov19-tf

1 Penna; 1 ana; aini
370 head, 69 head trucked in, total
cattle 439 head, 132 calves, 364
hogs, 239 sheep.
Receipts for week ending Dec.
13, 1930, cattle 92 cars, 21 Chicago
16 St. Paul; 15 Virginia; 10 Saint
‘| Louls; 6 Tennessee; 5 Kentucky; 5
Ohio; 5 Michigan; 3 Pa.; 2 Omaha
2 Indiana; 1 West Virginia; 1 Md.;
containing 2616 head, 736 trucked




THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
ean ODE & LIVE
STOCK MARKET

CORRECT INFORMATION FUR
NISHED WEEKLY BY (JE
PENNA. BUREAU ' OF
MARKETS FOR THE
BULLETIN
——
Market—Beef steers and year-
lings slow, about steady, compared
with week ago common and med-
ium grades all weights 25¢ lower,
better grades scarce, about steady,
load choice yearlings $12.00, best
medium weights $9.50, bulk of the
sales” $8.00-8.75. Bulls, she stock
and cutters sharing decline, bulk of
fat heifers $7.00-7.50, beef bulls
$5.75-6.50, butcher cows $5.00-
5.50, cutters $2.50-3.25. Stockers
and feeders held steady thruout
week with good country inquiry for
| better grades, one load outstanding
780 pound weights $12.90, no oth-
ers above $8.50, bulk $6.75-7.75.
25¢ to 50c¢ lower, or 50c¢ to
[$1.00 lower than week ago, top
| vealers $12.50.
Hogs—Closing about steady
week's 25¢ decline.
Receipts — For today’s
cattle 15 cars, 7 Chicago. 2
2 St. Louis; 1 Virginia;
Indiana;
with

market,
St. Paul
1 Omaha;
containing
in, total cattle 3352 head, 739
2617 hogs, 707 sheep. Re-
ceipts for corresponding week last
vear, cattle 132 cars, 29 St. Paul;
29. Chicago; 17 Va,: 15 Canada, 10
Maryland; 8 Mich.; 8 St. Louis: 5
2 Tenn.s#2 N,
; 1 W. Va.; 1 Omaha; 1 Buffalo.
1 Ind., containing 3713 head, 391
trucked in, total cattle 4104 head,
690 calves, 2421 hogs, 494 sheep.
|| calves,
‘Kansas City; 3 Pa.;
Y.;
Range of Prices
STEERS
9.50-10.50
'8.25-9.50
6.00-8.25
Good
Medium
Common
HEIFERS
7.75-8.50
6.75-7.75
6.00-6.75
5.00-6.00
Choice
Good
Medium
Commoon
COWS
5.75-6.50
4.85-5.75
3.50-4.75
2.00-3.590
Choice
Good
Common & medium
Low cutter & cutter
BULLS
50-8.00
50
Good and choice (beef) 6
Cutter, common & med. 5.00-
(yrlgs, excluded)
VEALERS
Goed and choice
Medium 10.00-11.25
Cull and Common 7.00-10.00
FEEDERS AND STOCKERS
o
11.25-12.50
rood and cholce 7.5
Common & medium 5.2
Good and choice 7.7
Common & medium 5.5
HOGS
Lightweight
Mediumweight
Heavyweight
{ | Packing sows 7.25-9.00
Lancaster Grain and Feed Market
Selling Price of Feeds
$31.00-32.00 ton
30.00-31.00
39.00-40.00
36.00-37.00
Bran
Shorts
Hominy
M _ddlings
Linseed
Gluten
Ground Oats
Soy Bean Meal
Hog Meal
Cottonseed 41%
*16%
39.50-40.50
$41.50-42.50
Feed
Feed *18%
Feed *20%
Feed 24%
Feed 25%
Horse Feed 85%
Alfalfa (Regular)
Alfalfa (Reground)
A A ne
Dairy
gy Dalry
Dairy
Ar
Dairy
34.00-35.00
38.50-39.50
40.00 41.00 ton
Along the Cpen Rond


It is the prime secret of open
toad that you are to pass nothit
despise nothing upon this em vou
i ny both great and

thins,
 



thing has its fitting and
od within
life. The
who wit

this mosaic of

Road is not open to those
hdraw the
ance or lift the chin of prides Rejeoct-
ing the least of those
common or unclean, it
you yourself that
Grayson, in
skirts of intoler-
are callefl
is (curiously)
you reject. Dovid
Road.”
who
“The Friendly
Old-Time Fhrases
The phrase “to put on airs” is old,
having been Bed as early as 1892
“Angel cake” came into use in tha
early 1890s, and “ante” was a com-
mon poker term in 1853.
“Anti-satoon”™ was introduced in tem-
perance pamphlets in 158%, and “bask-
woods” appeared as early as 1746.

Going Into thes Pot
The expression “Gone to pot” is
probably of oriental orig.n. A tailor
in Samarkand, who lived near.a burial
ground, kept count of the deaths by
dropping a stone into a pot for every
funeral that passed When he died
some one remarked that he had goae
into the pot himself.

re AI Ree
In order that a public sale, festi-
val, supper, musical or any like ev-
ent be a success, it must be thor-
oughly advertised. Try the Bulletin



$9.00-9.50 |
9.25-9.75 |
9.00-9.50 |

ton |
38.00-39.00 ton |
47.00-48.00 ton |
40.00-41.00 ton |
ton |
32.00-33.00 ton]
ton |
ton
43.00-44.00 ton |
44.00-45.00 ton|
41.00-42.00 ton |
42.00-43.00 ton,
| one form or
|
|
|
|
|
small, wil} 0 your attention;
you are to! alt with open eves |
and a heart licity. Believe that |
everything somewhere: each |
ton | conducive
toi conserving mucous membranes in the
|
| respiratory
ton |
46.00-47.00 ton |
| to give

mM
ii
0g
AIR DAMAGES
STN AND HAIR
Increased Meed for
During Winter Due to
Super-Dry Indoor Air.
Milady would find many of her
beauty and health problems more easy
of solution were she to give consid:
eration to the necessity for a suitable
proportion of moisture in the home
air during the long winter heating
season, points out the Holland Insti-
tute of Thermology of Holland, Mich-
igan,
During the summer months we
spend most of our time in air that is
adequately humidified by Mother Na-
ture, but during the winter heating
season we coop ourselves indoors
where, according to the Institute, the
air contains only about one-third of
the moisture it should have.
The dry indoor air extracts an ab-
normal amount of moisture from the
skin, with the result that it becomes
too dry, harsh, and easily chapped.
The abnormally dry indoor air also
extracts the natural. moisture from
the scalp, with the result that the
hair loses its natural luster and be-
comes dry and brittle.
These effects, so detrimental to per-
sonal beauty and charm, can in large
degree be obviated, says the Institute,
by automatically injecting into the
Lome
atmosphere suflicient water va-
x
FY
%
Gallons|| ©
BEd

i
The Water Pan in Old Style Heating
Plants Holds a Gallon of Water,
More or Less, and Usually Is Dry.
Six to Eight Gallons of Water
Should Be Evaporated Daily in the
Average Size Home During the Win.
ter Season.

por to raise the relative humidity to
a desirable percentage. In homes
heated with the old style systems, the
air contains less than half the amount
of moisture required for health, com
fort at moderate temperatures of T0
or 72 deg and conserving natural
ly beautiful and hair.
With modern warm-air heating sys
tems of the yapor-air type, however,
sufficient water-vapor is constantly in
jected into the home-air to maintain
a4 compatatively uniform relative hu
midity of 40 to 50 per cent, according
rees
skin
to heat temperature. One effect is a
soft, balmy atmosphere comparable
to that of a fine spring day, which
will eonserve the heauty of fine com
plexions and lustrous hair.
Of further importance is the fact
that adequately humidified indoor-air
is regarded by leading health authori
ties and physiologists as a vital fae
and other res
usually be
advance of
the winter heating season. Where in
contains a suitable propor
moisture, dry-air conditions
to irritation of the hedlth
tor in preventing colds
piratory diseases which
come epidemic with the
door air
tion of
tgact are eliminated.
Air Motion Is
Vital to Ideal
Home Heating
I'ew persons realize to what exten:
the fan has contributed to American
and to every-da)
Hor'and
Holland
industrial efliciency
comfort, decla
Thermology of
indoor res the
Institute of
Michigan
From time immemorial the fan in
another has been utilized
un beings. The


to hn
elecirienlly operated fan units used to
day make it possible to maintain
Ithful nd comifortable air condi
i n our wntainl buildings
vhich otherwise would b unlivable
weause of lack of per véntidation
fans give us contro of mdoor
veather and nuke possible the main
of indoor conditions that may
wo termed ideal regardless or
conditions out of doors Foday our
homes can be nude as comfortable
nd fresh throughout as the modern
 
p-to-date theatre is possible of
Jistrange as cit aay
I. by the Latest type of warm air
ting systems of the vapor air type.
n addition to furnishing needed
‘mth during the heating season
se systems uniformly yet draftless
istribute the warmed air by means
n electrically operated air propei
mit in the dome of the jacket that
rounds the heatei
wugh draftless, the
ted by these units is sufiicient to
air motion
ue the forming of pockels of staz
i. stifling air that are
r much discomfort in homes heated
v means of oid-style heating systems
responsibil
A men ee sn
Attend Winter Courses
Short courses in agriculture and
dairy manufacturing will begin at
the Pennsylvania State College
January 5. These courses are des-
igned for those who cannot spend
a lodker period at the college but
who desire to become familiar
with the very latest agricultural
information ‘and practices. Write
to the Dean of the School of Agri-
culture, State College, Pa., for a
catalog. ; “
HOME HEALTH CLUB | ¢
WEEKLY LETTER WRITTEN EX.
PRESSLY FOx THE BULLETIN
BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER

The subject of food seems to |
be a very interesting one, and I |
have received a number of letters
this week from club members ask-
ing for a lidle more information |
on the subject.
As I stated in
ure, itgis of great importance |
that food ‘should be relished, that
there be genuine gustatory enjoy-
ment, and in order to secure that
desirable result, a variety of food
materials is best. I once received
a patient who for a number of
weeks had been at a noted sanit-
arium, under careful dietetic sup-
ervision. His daily allowance had
been restricted to a very few art-
icles of rather an unpalatable
nature. As he was, previous to
his admission to that institution
extremely emaciated and weak,
such a diet was almost intoler-
able, and he rapidly grew worse.
When he arrived at the home,
which I then operated, he was
completely exhausted and could
hardly get to a room, When ask-
ed to come to dinner, he refused,
saying he did not feel hungry,
and he was afraid the food might
injure him I®*humored him until
the next meal, when 1 insisted
upon a reasonable amount of
good wholesome food. He ap-
peared greatly surprised that I
should allow him to eat of any
dish upon the table, with the res-
triction of . complete mastication
only, No harm resulted, but a
good night's sleep followed. I
watched the case closely for sev-
eral days, and noticed that no
liquid of any kind was partaken
of at any time. I also found the
vital organs were carried much
lower than they should be; the
carriages of the entire upper por-
tion of the body was very bad. I
therefore first ordered a cupful
of hot water, thirty minutes be-
fore cach meal, After a few days
I supplemented this by ordering
six tumblerfuls of water daily at
various times between meals, and
increase this amount to three
quarts of water daily. I also, at
the same time instructed the pa-
tient in the exercises given in
Volume 1 of the Home Health
club books for developing the
muscles, which assisted in main-
taining a correct carriage, de-
veloping the chest and abdominal
muscles.
No medicines of any kind were
administered, and in two weeks
the patient began to gain flesh, in
ao OE 1 RE
a previous lect-
four weeks he was gaining at the
rate of three pounds per week,
and at the end of two months
still kept up ‘that rate, becoming
gradually stronger and robust by
the simple methods jus: prescrib-
ed. I have no doubt but he would,
within a year, have had a com-
plete collapse and perhaps have
died a victim to errors in diet-
etic habits and a lack of know-
ledge of the simplicity of the
methods of cure practiced by the
Home Health Club.
His case had been pronounced
consumption of the wasting vari-
ety, and I have no doubt he
would have died of that disease,
so called, if left to his own req
sources or in the hands of those
who confined the diet of their pa-
tients to the particular cereal or
vegetarian foods manufactured by
their managers.
All readers of this
are at liberty at all
write for information pertaining
to the subject of health. Address
Dr. David H. Reeder, 3 E. 31st
publication
times to
St, Kansas City, Mo, with at
least 6 cents postage.
DQ Cee
Backgammon Played in
Practically All Lands
ons, sweeping lurope
 
Caesar's
carried backzammon to every country





|


 
 



they touche and left it there, after
the barbarian hordes had swept
Rome's emy » into dust.
Down throuut ce es it cam
essentinlly a ie of the aristocrats
it's known that Madame de M.in-
tenon, just hefore th *h revoin
tion, entertained a Vo nmon, prac- |
tically as ithy Détroiters. New
Yorkers, Bostonians are entertaining
today. |
“Aristns.” w ed vide for |
the that « ad thority
the fro ¢ sons of
Fr 1ved hael 1
It has a ent I n ne
ntry 1 for example, |
Irie Trac
The origin of the English namo is in
doubt. [Some say it came from t
Welsh words, “hich” men: little,”
and “eammum,” meaning “hattle.
Others assert it came from the Saxon


“y
ba

“back,” and “gamen.”
or a game in whi
the men were set hack.—Detroit New

meanin game”

History of the Carpet
Perhaps the
are certain fragments exq
Sir Aurel Stein in Turkestan.
are attributed to about the beginning
of the Christian era, but their exact
date and significance are not estab-
lished. A western wall hanging, re
sembling a carpet, made at Quedlin-
burg about the end of the Twelfth
century, suggests strongly that ori-
ental carpets were not unknown in
Europe at that date, and that the
technique of one had been copied by
the Quedlinburg weavers. It is not
quite out of the question that the art
may have been independently invent-
ed, especially as a modified form of
the oriental technique is adopted.
Three carpets in the mosque of Alaed-
Din, at Konia, are attributed with
some certainty to the early Thirteenth
century.
ee feat
oldest pieces of carpet
avated by
These

There is no better way to boost
your business than by local news
paper advertising. tf

Rs

PAGE SEVER
Wim 0 11110

 
e are here to
h oe
4 well as
Ls Bt
|
The Union National
Capital,
Can Serve You as Executor, Administrator, Assignes,
Mount ‘Joy Bank
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Surplus and Profits, $502.000.00
Receiver, Guardian, Registrar of Stocks jand

Bonds, Trustee, etc.
THE LONe , THE
SHORT OF IT 15
ATTRACT
ATTENTION
Tisers 2
Av NV cuts =
COST
jhn12te
100 0 OT) 0 Of OO 1 a - Il






i
NO EXTRA








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.
Bermidjii,
in the
“And, their advertising per mill line, is not
Mitchell’s’
National Editorial Contest.
good time to remind the public in general,
national advertisers in particular,
weekly newspapers are the most
gans of public opinion and protectors of public
welfare.
‘Sentinel’,”
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
, and every
cellar
advertiser has
possible customer.”
published at
, wins the prize as best weekly
This is a
and
that country
important or-
in him a


)

~
Prompt Holiday Optical Serviee


Christmas
verware
Department.
Departments will not

in our Diamond, Wateh, Jewelry and Sil-
Optical
interfere
with Qur
fog,
APPEL and WEBER
40-42 N. Queen St.
Phone 2413
LANCASTER, PA.



























 
Cm 5 0) DC) CS ST) ST) TD) ST ST TD) >) SS) 0-40