‘WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1931 STORES C > €O VTL I TLR i Adsense RE AA Sn NA oS bon 21 » When 1 can Purchase Quality at a Saving ? Your Neighb&rhood ASCO Store is the Highest Quality ent savings. Homekeeper w she always rece Foods and o depends on Ves The Most pf the Best for the Least! Our Pavarfle Coffees Specially Priced aj Coffee Saved! Vick Blend Coffee AThe Choice of Thousands. Especially adapted to Percolator use. Boscul or 3 WHY PAY MORE place to get Table Needs at consist- is a great satisfaction to the busy "ASCO Service, for Ib 25¢ Ib 21¢ Acme Beant Coffee 1b tin 31c Cc Maxwell House Coffee Ib tin 41c Asco Buckwheat Reg. 9c TASTY or Pancake CALIFORNIA FLOUR 2 15¢ - ASCO Golden SARDINES SYRUP can 10c¢ 2 big cans 15¢ In Spicy Tomato Sauce ‘Pillsbury’s Pancake Flour GENUINE CRISCO ASCO B BROKEN SLICES Hawaiian PINEAPPLE Bartlett Pears 2 pkgs 25¢ Ib can 23¢ big can 20¢ big can 20c »: Br Paul; Pa Wa ASCO White White Domestic (Oil or ye Norway Mustard) I UNA Sardines jo can 5p 1S with Pork each 5° ASCO Bear FANCY rE Te DICED BEETS T asty Mi: | Mackerel | | Po i 250 3 cans 20¢c 2 ) buffet cans 10¢ 3c cans 25¢ xed Vegetables ACCQO Finest Tomatoes 3 med cans 25¢ ASCO Gelden Bantam Corn 2% cans 25¢ Farmdale Tender Peas 2tcans 25¢ ASCO Cooked Sweet Potatoes 2 cans 25¢ / 2) READ Ig bi | SUPREME i vg 7 EE J Victor Bread Big Pan Leal aC ilar TRY A LOAF! Hoadnus for Quality Buttery Louella | Richlany TEE BUTTER | BUTTER The Finest Butter in 1 America! | Creamery prints of mepit. KLEIN'S HocoL ATE 5 for 10c Crispo Fig 1bs BARS Er r23c Finest Sli big cans ~ 25¢ DEL MONTE or ASCO CALIFORNIA HERRIES | 2 tall cans 35¢ Specially priced, BeetsorCawols ............... ... 5¢ bunch Sweet Potatoes ................ 3 14¢ Large Flo Florida Grape Fruit A RN 5¢ New Cabbage . 3 pounds 11¢ Quality at a Saving has been enjoyed by thousands of ASCO Customers and ASCO Service assures it today, as for Forty Years These Prices Effective in Our MOUNT JOY STORE A A Westminster Chime Clocks Lord. through this hour, \ Be thou our guide: , So, by thy power, No foot shall slide. LY The melody Ba these lines are set is by far the most universally loved of all. HE FAMOUS CHIMES The mechanism in t Finest se clocks are the e World Produces Comparison reveals Neen Clear Throated Tones n That gives the true source and cheer and comfort to pond with every mood. We are showing a beautiful line that will interest you. $22.50, $25.00, $25.50, $28.50, $33, $35.00, $38.50 There are 15 clocks in this assortment. Don’t forget we have an up-to-date Optical APPEL and WEBER JEWELERS & OPTOMETRISTS A LANCASTER; PA. N. Queen St. i epartment. corres- f these clocks at a price Also All Kinds Re PROMPT SERVICE JOSEPH L. HEISEY Phone—179RS study one t Le heifers 89 Pa. ce showi ing $11.50. Hogs: 27 head, ‘Chicago; Omaha; ing week Virginia; Virginia; | taining 47: in from LJ | head $7: Bw Py heep. bd ¥ Good ba | Medium hd Common 5 ne] Pt | Choice Good Common Ground Oa Cottonseed Dairy Feed services in beginning preach: Monday, | Hershey Tuesday, Berger Wednesday, E. Wagner Thursday, SQ Snyder Friday, i Broske On Saturday night, and all day i L. G. Snyder | of Altoona, will be present and as- | sist in the Monday, Smith Tuesday, | Keckler Wednesday, | W. Getz Thursday, | Hoverlter Friday, | Kraybill Saturday, | Heighes — —— ee APPROVES SITES one yard of rock ranges from 2-10 | 4¢ one of his hind feet until it reaches The movement for abandonment | pounds per ton to three to four pounds | considerable length. He then draws of one room schools and the trans- "per ton, depending upon the kind of ! i; the slack and makes it fast. The portation of the pupils to modern buildings with wider continues to grow officials of the Department of Pub- lic Instruction CORREC NISHED WEEKLY FARE PENNA BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE 5.50; butcher cows $4.255.00: 25-3.00, Calves 25¢ 258 head trucked in, total cattle 285 hogs. Receipts for week ending on February 21, 1931, cattle 32 6 St. Louis; 3 Ohio; 2 Penna.; 2 Indi- ana; 1 Kansas City; 1 Tennessee; 1 1 Buffalo; 1 Oklahoma; 1008 head 1844 head, i 274 sheep. St. Paul; last year, cattle 19 cars, 4 2 Maryland; 2 Michigan; 1 W. nearby total cattle 1196 Range of Prices Dairy Feed | i Dairy Feed | Dairy Feed { Dairy Feed Horse Feed Alfalfa (Regular) Alfalfa (Reground) SPECIAL SERVICES IN THE CHURCH OF GOD HERE There will the Church of God here Sunday evening, March March 2—Rev. H. S. services Ma: ch 9—Rev, March 10—Rev. B. F. THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA PRODUCE & LIVE STOCK I iii "Ad T INFORMATION FUR BULLETIN Market: No life to mz: t beef steers and yearlings closing 1arply lower compared with week a 30, 2bc | to 50¢ off, none here quotable above $8.50, bulk of sales 25-8.00. Bulls | mostly 5 lower; she stock and cut- rs showing less decline; hulk fat ARK IT | of the reaper by { Cormick ‘s being celebrated Thurs- | VALUABLE | | ‘ s iati Clubs in 4 |taken on the old McCormick farm |¢'ation Clubs in the lin Virginia, will be | McCORMICK REAPER CEN- TENNIAL WILL BE CELE- BRATED THURSDAY EDUCATING THE I'he centennial of the invention Cyrus Hall Me- ] I day, February 26 J. B. Hostet- lav Lave & Sy MOTORISTS FURNISHED THE fo 50 Bon Seale in McCormick-| BULLETIN BY LANCASTER coring rm equipment. i [of the recs ep — AUTOMOBILE CLUB lay and o n yi eine kent Sis 2 p hous : 2h . he er i Officers of the Lancaster Aut neciion with a orld-w'de com- mobile Club are receiving congra memoration of the reaper inven- ulations on the Club’s accomplish on that is now going on through- I ranking among what out the world, “Romance of the | fnown as the “Big Ten” of the Reape,” a five-reel feature movie, | 1065 American Automobile Asso. United States ay Yaniada gv +} 103 ies . 0 shown free of and Canada at the close of 1930. 25-7.00; medium bulls $5-| charge to local people in the Hostet- | Lancaster stood tenth on the list cutters | Stockers and feeders are | movement. | to 50c lower, top vealers little or no Steady to weak, top west- erns $9.00. Receipts: tle 1 car from Chicago; For today's market: cat- containing head, 104 calves, . 444 cars, 6 4 Virginia; 3 Pittsburgh; 1 containing" 836 head, trucked in, total cattle 1053 calves, 2214 hogs, Receipts for correspond- Tenn.; 3 Penna.; 2 Saint Chicago; 1 Ohio; con- head, 723 head trucked calves, 1947 hogs, 148 STEERS $8.00-9.25 7.00-8.00 5.75-7.00 HEIFERS most grain a man could hope to cut|bers and from that of the efficient harvesting equipment known. [The Lancaster Clubs was about two acres: If, then had to [are among the lowest of any of the be racked, threshed. Today the harvester-thresh- |chain, yet the local er, the direct McCormick reaper, 5 job in one trip over the field at the ica. rate of 35 to 60 acres a day, two men doing with this machine in one !ness conditions throughout the na- day what would have required 140 tion the Lancaste to 200 men working by hand. til the reaper velopment of ind static. = Little was made until men’s minds were | relieved from the | in; the necessity of arduous farm toil. [In the State, in a celebration next More thi progre 100 y 1831 ye i young man who in 1831 clung|nounced at the February COWS Choice Good ( non medium 1 cutter BUI.LS 1 1d choice (beef) 6.00-7.50 0 utt common & med £.50+6.00 24 (yr! 1ded) | VEALERS Gi 1 choice 10.50-11.50 Me 9.25-10.50 | Cull ymmon 7.00-9.25 ell 3 AND STOCKERS A | Good and choice 7.50-8.75 “A Common & mediium 5.00-7.50 HA HOGS | Light ht $8.50-9.00 ‘3 Bi = 1 Medin ight 8.75-9.25 | '! Hi 5 8.50-9.00 | Packing Sows 7.25-8.50 | | ; ancaster Grain and Feed Markat | Selling Price of Feeds | Bran $29.00-30.00 ton | Short 50-27.50 ton | it Hominy 32.50-33.50 ton jo | Middl ) 31.50 ton | Ys | Ts 42 {3.00 ton | Gluten 39.00-40.00 ton 34.50-35.50 ton al 17.00-48.C0 ton 325 00-39.00 ton 419, $38.00-39.00 ton #169, 31.50-32.50 ton 18¢ 0-34.50 ton «209 37.50-38.50 ton |" 249, 11.00-42.00 ton 259 42.00-43.00 ton 859% 37.50-38.50 ton 37.50-38.50 ton 39.50-40.50 ton —— be a series of special Sunday, and Male Ci C, March 11—Rev. G. FOR 31 SCHOOLS steadily, said today. is at Reinhiold’s can get all the loca tenaciously to his resolve to lighten | of the the labor of this great century. urged to visit the and see the i : | the had baffled mankind since the . be- fo 11 be the is hastily, but year by year.—F. H. Col- ier in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Prussia Long “A word that has a very interesting seph Tumulty, iistory is spruce with its double mean ng (1) ‘smartly or finely dressed’ and (2) ‘the fir tree’ known as spruce fir.” 1, when the following ministers will | wifes Frank Ii Vizotelly in a New York paper March 8, My. | monly known and spoken of in those ( Quarttette, | days, Spruce, | destination. “The reason that Prussia should | have been cailed Spruce instead of ! Pruce is to be attributed to the Eng- lish fondness for initial S, which may have been drawn, in this case, from Little did the he German das Preussen. “That Spruce reilly meant Prussia ind was used instead of Pruce may be March 12—Rev. G. R.| found in ‘Piers Plowman, read Spruce for Prus, March 13—Rev. O. M.| ver Tales. Prussia was called Sprucia as March 14—Rev. C. H.|'ate as 1614. The bureau of mines says that the amount of powder necessary to break rock, its hardness and toughness; the courses of | number of free faces exposed, and the tightness of the opening from which it is to be blasted. A smaller amount necessary in proportion for large At the February meeting of the quantities of rock. The percentage State Council of Educat’on, thirty- | of additional consolidated schools | the were approved, Only one of these is in Lancaster county, that being school, in West Cocalico township. Dull yu powder would depend also upon breakage is obtained on lower per- centages, as some rocks require a slow-acting explosion. From 40 to 60 per cent powder is used for ordinary -— blasting. By subscribing for the Mount Joy Bulletin you news for less than three cents s You can get all the news of this locality for less than three cents a home into cash. | week thru the Bulletin. J ter ‘show room at 7 o'clock. and in so doing took a place along The reaper ushered in the most im- | Side of the Chicago Motor Club, portant era in the advancement of [the Detroit Motor Club and other mnnleind. McCormick's Invention organizations in cities many times showed the farming world how to dis- | larger than Lancaster. place monotonous hand labor with | the clubs machine power. Following in the Ten have territory train of the reaper came seeding ma- entire state. chines, harrows, cultivators, and all| The Lancaster Automobile Club, the farm labor-saving equipment we |With a paid up membership of 13.- Several of covering an have today. Before 1931 nine out of |024 as of December 31, 1930, is ten people in the United States lived | considered one of the strongest on farms. Now the ratio is less than |and best motor clubs in America, three out of ten. Before 1831 the |both from the standpoint of num- service in a day with a cradle, the most|and protection given its members, annual dues bound, haulded and [1,065 units in the great A. A. A. organization | protection and | does the whole |Service as any motor club in Amer- descendant of the |gives as complete Despite the general lull in busi- Automobile Agriculture was almost static un-|2nd Plans now are being made by appeared, and the de- |those in charge for a big increase stry likewise was | in membership this year, The lo- fundamental progress | “al Will join with the Penn- 3 ia Motor Federation. compris- eighty-eight A. A. A. clubs monotony and | gs have happened, greater |Month to mark the twenty-fifth an- has been made, in the past|"iversary of the founding of the 5 than in all the previous |State body. Plans for participation And the courage of alin this Silver Jubilee will be an- Auto Club to be held jn the : allr yf the Stevens harvest, ushered in | ballroom of the Stevens The people are | th's Frfday | Q ’ ¢ ‘lock Hostetter store 8 o'clock, reaper with which! »- young McCormick, then only 22 | an ch ie of fie Pes tin r, Reg. | 3 hoe and his Girls’ Mar a he ars old, solved the problem that] and h irl Marimba band entertainment feature. INFORMATION FOR 8 E01 EI RE 5 nose = included in the “Big | Club forged steadily ahead in 1939 | RRL, This Week meeting | House, | evening at Edward. Gable, president will Nobility Valentine Chocolates, OOO PAGE SEVEN SRM 100 MOTORING PUBLIC’: ; ge v We are here t give advice as well as to ~~ handle Fung ys \ “No Obligalion \ YW The Unidy National Mount Joy Bank MOUNT Joy, PA. % Capital, Surplus and Profits, $502,000.00 %., % Can Serve You as Executor, Administrator, ssignes, Receiver, Guardian, Registrar of Stocks a Bonds, Trustee, etc. % junl12tf M0 LO clals , 80¢ Cocoanut Cream or Peanut Butter Hess Eggs, 120 or 24 to a box Bird Eggs, the Real Jelly Kind, <2 1bs. for 25¢ Adams Big 5¢ Maxshmallow [ rs 3 for 10¢, or 8Q¢ of 2 dozen Special Price on All Box "Candies GQ¢ ow yr Ww wn or H. A. DARRENKAMP Ae Ade 2 A RY 2 A 4A \ | 3 Doors Fast of Post Ofc MOUNT JOY, P/ ginning of history. | There 18 no admiss on charge and - a | the publie is cordially invited to | attend. { eee tl Ieee eee: LI, | v, } s . 1 Cet | + nd o In hee ning ri | t H ion that is the : o hard that many are exhau 1 at . . ) 0 ! ston ¢ After til first | i y on | es it fF Hy. A t million has onl | : S le no and \ i \ ¢ ( ! 1 i l i 1 | 1 i 1 { - { 1 { But y ] to he I { e ah ess hab It i | wis | 1 v i | i | Il 1S Lr el ! { np ( ig th | mi 1 I'o : ys a | I 1 I i nging Ss there, ii t and ( of t ( ifthe modest di ¢ 1 ( > hella 1 out ] ~ ( ( f 3 res 2 il 1 . ) for Ie t they ver will the ! I d d nto} of 1 ( ‘Fifty tl ! { tl Ss fro 12 of the tui ly ! y ye This must IX {; for cor if it 1 )y Highland to b plit up 1 | | are bound to | 1 It is a wand to " | 1 dress of the Lowlander. itious sati t ( e | This is declaring to every man, young does not suf 1 being Land old, gentles and commons, that wed by the levi 1 fortunes of mul they may after this put on and wear imillionaires, ‘evenue is as sure the trews, the little kilt, the doublet, theirs. the small plaid, along with the tartan | Young man, get $50.000—not toe | kilt, without fear of the law of the | laud or the jealousy of enemies.” Honor Well Bestowed on Chief Justice Taft “Sprucia” | | According to Vizelelly One day, along about midwinter, Jo- former secretary to President Woodrow Wilson, was tak- | ing his constitutional across the mil- | lion-dollar bridge on Connecticut ave- | nue when he saw a well-known and gigantic figure strolling ahead of him. | | { “Used Car Sal “On its face, this word does not | Mr. Tumulty had a chance to |} bear any resemblance to Prussia, yet | his own stride and catch up, March 3—Rev. E. special occasion it was the custom | as he usually did, a str rin a muad- |} among our forehe:rs to deck one's [ dy, smail auto be an Ohio li- { | March 4—Rev. H. | self out in the dress of other coun- b conse drew up beside the huze figure tries. Men who adopted the particular | ahead { March W. H. | dress of Prussia were arraved in a | “Say, guy! Could you tell me how | style to which the epithet spruce might | 1g get to 700 California vie? | March 6—Rev.- G. F. [have been applied with perfect pro- The large man stopped, led, went |}! priety. They were appareled after the | to the side of the muddy flivver and March, 7th, | style of Prussia, or, as it was com- | explained carefully and in detail how | the stranger could reach the desired ———— EE. SPECIAL 1930 ESSEX COACH 1929 CHEVRQLET COACH 1927 DODGE 4-BOOR SEDAN 1928 ESSEX 4-DOOR SEDAN 1926 ESSEX COACH Rohrer's Garag | Mount Joy, Pa. LLL RRL SRR OOOO OOO OOOO: MOOOOOOC As he finished, the m: n from Ohio started his engine and called grate- fully to the polite Washingtonian: “Thanks, Chief!” and drove away. stranger know how nearly he had hit the truth when, in his impersonal gratitude, he had called the late Chief Justice Willinm Howard Taft “Chief.”—Collier's Weekly. where we although Chau- used Pruce iu his ‘Canterbury Spider's Wonderful Web The first thing that a spider does in weaving his web is to lay the foun- dation line. He attaches a line at the point of departure and crawls along spinning it as he goes and holding up the newly spun thread by the claws Breaking Rock by Powder spider then goes over the line several times to strengthen the foundation, after which he spins the other lines f the web. In the case of lines of webs appearing great distances apart the spider emits a thread, which is cut by the air current from its spinnerets until it becomes entangled in the sur- rounding emiiting silk some little distance and lowirg the wind to draw it out is equently exercised in the early life Liauy Spiders. re meee Qe Tufn useless articles about yal rock. On some rocks a better eet Geer: our Clasgif ed eolumn. Come in and et us show you how 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 Don’t follow in the same old rut—pP ep up ya branches. This power of | at our expense. dec > BULL at your service, mista midis ascii Maul NT JO em exsily We can assist you