"WED! DAY, MARCH 25, 1931 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. PAGE SEVEN REGULARLY WHERE QUAL- COUNTS AND YOU WILL KE YOUR DOLLARS GO FURTHER! Regular 21¢ ASCO PURE FRUIT ERVES jar 19¢ Five popular flavors. Special Régular 10c Califyrnia Dried ASCO Gelatine By LIM BEANS 3 25¢c (Assorted Flavors) PRE PrudenceCorned Beef Hash ........... can 27 ¢ Smithfield Apple Sauce . ......... big can 10¢ ASCO Barllett Pears ........... ... big can 23¢ Del Monte Rartlett Pears .......... big can 25¢ ASCO Calif ognia Asparagus ....... tall can 21¢ ASCO Long Cut Tomatdes Sour Krout 4 med cans 25¢ 2 big cans 19¢ Baster Candies! 25¢ Chocolate Cream Eggs Jelly Bird Eggs Decorated Chocolate Eggs 5¢ Chocolate Cov. Cream Eggs 7 1-2 Vine Rjpened 1b 19¢ 2 1bs 25¢ 3 for 25¢ 3 for 10¢ ‘ BREAD Large SUPREME "oe JC Big Pan Loaf Victor Bread 5¢ Savings on Byaporated Milk ASCO Well A nown Borden’s Tuberculin Farmdale Carnation Tested Brand Every Day 3 tall cans 22¢ 3 tall cand 20) 3 tall cans 23¢ Our Own Bakery Gake Specials! Cocoanut Each, Pineapple Marshmallow 2 3 Icing Layer Cake C. Layer Cake L : Best Pink Salmon % tall can 10¢ ® Hartley's Black Currant Jam ....,.. big jar 45¢ ] Sweet Tender Sugar Corn . ...... Boo can 10¢ ; Skinless Figs %.... jar 23¢ Glenwood Apple Buiter . ......... % big jar 23¢ SRECIAL ; . SPECIAL Premium Seed Potatoes Soda Crackers IRISH COBBLERS Ib 21¢ (Certified) T 120 Th (2 bu.) $3.40 Snow Peaks 2 1b box 24 ¢ House Cleaning Aids at Low Prices! Sunbrite Cleanser 2 cang 9¢ : P. & G. Naphtha Soap 5 cakes : Oxydol Cleanser pkg 1 Chloride of Lime big can 12¢ Johnsor’s Floor Wax jar 10¢ 2 Household Mops 29¢ Handles % Accurate, Courteous Service makes buying a pleasure in the ASCO Stores. These Prices Effective in Our : MOUNT JOY STORE ME | Wanta 3 B Busi ? § ad] uy a usiness. T None that’s on the rocks either but a good, substan- § tial honest-io-goodness proposition that is paying. If anything like that interests you, investigate this at once. I have a proposition here that won’t require a big sum of money to handle. Business will include dwell- ing, auto truck, etc. Present owner will cheerfully help get you started. Now don’t sit and think, ACT. Come and see me or I phone and I'll call. JNO. E. SCHROLL MOUNT JOY, PA. EE — — WHEN IN NEED OF yo COAL— COKE 3 | CHICK FEEDS Y SUPPLIES coal, Cod Liver Oil, Etc. Peat Moss, Grit, Give Prices Reasonable Patronage Greatly Appr Prompt Service d HARRY LEEDOM Phone 5RS5 MOUNT JOY, PA. & LIVE STOCK MARKET CORRECT INFORMATION FUR. NISHED WEEKLY BY TUE PENNA. BUREAU OF MARKETS FOR THE BULLETIN Market: Receipts for week were practically all from local feed only four cars arriving by rail, inbe- tween grades pfedominating, none quotable above $8.75, trading thruout T. | vania lots, | party TOOK PICTURES OF BEAR & CUBS (From page 1) ter den of mother bruin and three fine little cubs. The trip, which started by automobile, ended in a twelve mile “trek” on snowshoes through the wildest of Pennsyl- mountains and against a driving blizzard. Those forming the consisted of John B. Ross, district game supervisor; Game Protectors G. H. Gustin and Hayes Englert; Trapping Instructors week on peddling basis with closing | C. E. Logue and Blair Davis; Game prices on all grades beef steers and | Refuge Keeper C. yearlings about steady with Monday, | Leo A. today's top $8.75, average weight 1,-|of 332 pounds, bulk of sales $7.25-8.00. Bulls, she stock and cutters closing | ranged in R. Walizer, and Luttringer, Jr., in charge education from the Harrisburg office for whom the trip was ar- order to secure motion about steady, bulk fat heifers $6.25-, pictures, 7.00; medium bulls $5.25-6.00; butch- er cows $4.00-4.75; cutters $2.00-3.00 Only meager supply of stockers and feeders, steady undertone. Calves steady, top vealers 11.00. Hogs: Closing steady with week's 25¢ advance.. Receipts: For today’s market, catt- le 1 car from St.. Payl; containing 34 head, 344 head trucked in, total cattle 377 head, 161 calves, 530 hogs. oli Receipts for week ending March 21, 1931, cattle 4 cars, 1 St. Paul; 1 Omaha; 1 Penna.; 1 Colorado; con- taining 130 head, 1271 head trucked in from nearby, total cattle 1401 head, 1290 calves, 2598 hogs, 235 sheep. Receipts for corresponding week last year, cattle 13 cars, 7 St. Paul; 5 Penna.; 1 Indiana; containing 303 head, 1179 head trucked in from nearby, total cattle 1482 head, 731 calves, 1470 hogs, 223 sheep. Range of Prices STEERS 1 Good $8.00-9.25 Medium 7.00-8.00 Common 5.75-7.00 HEIFERS Choice 7.00-7.75 Good 6.26-7.00 Medium 5.50-6.25 Common 4.755.650 COWS Choice 5.005.758 Good 4.00500 Common & Medium 3.00-4.00 Low Cutter & Cutter 1.75-3.00 BULLS Good and choice (beef) 6,00-7.50 Cutter, common & med 4.506.00 (yrlgs, excluded) VEALERS Good and choice 10.00-11.00 Medium 8.50-10.00 Cull and common 6.50-8.50 FEEDERS AND STOCKERS Good and choice 7.50-8.75 Common & mediium 6.00-7.60 HOGS Lightweight 9.25-9.75 Mediumweight 9.25-9.75 Heavyweight 9.00-9.50 Packing Sows 7.00-8.75 Lancaster Grain and Feed Market Selling Price of Feeds Bran $31.00-32.00 ton Shorts 29.00-30.00 ton Hominy 32.00-33.00 ton Middlings 32.00-33.00 ton Linseed 43.00-44.00 ton Gluten 37.00-38.00 ton Ground Oats 34.00-35.00 ton Soy Bean Meal 45.00-46.00 ton Hog Meal 38.00-39.00 ton Cottonseed 41% $39.00-40.00 ton Dairy Feed *16% 31.00-32.00 ton Dairy Feed *20% 33.50-34.50 ton Dairy Feed 20% 37.50-38.50 Dairy Feed 24% 40.00-41.00 ton Dairy Feed 25% 41.00-42.00 ton Horse Feed 85% 37.50-38.50 ton Alfalfa (Regular) 36.00-37.00 ton Alfalfa (Reground) 38.00-39.00 ton il Mei Jinjutsu of Chinese Origin? “My old teacher told me,” recalls Taro Miyeake, Japanese exponent of jiujutsu, in an interview in the At- lanta Journal, “that jiujutsu is a de- velopment of the old Chinese method of fighting with the fingers extended. This was a very dangerous and skill- ful system. A man straightened out his fingers stiffly and jabbed with them, preferably for the eyes. Failing to reach the eyes, he sought various nerve centers on the body. “When the Japanese took up the science, more than 1000 years ago, they began to improve it. Instead of jabbing for the eyes they gradually developed a system of leverages that would work against bones and nerve centers,” Ancient City of Bergamo One of the most picturesque towns of Lombardy in Italy is the ancient little city of Bergamo, perched on a conspicuous hill and still redolent of the days when the Venetinns made it one of their fortress It is a quaint and crooked place with many interest- 3 rch of Santa in part from ing build Maria M 1137, has excellent Romanesque work of black and white marble. During the greater part of its history Ber- gamo belonged to the state of Venice, having acquired the city from Milan in 1428 and retaining it until 1797, Forget Troubles Troubles n largely in fearfu i The result is wasted worry. Reziember the adage of the ancient nhilosopher who remarked: “I am old man and have had many troubles, but the mest of them never happened,”—Grit. too an B= Grow Early Vegetables Hotbeds and cold frames are valu- able~ ment for growing early ¢ ok nts, They are easy to LL. Circulars 120 and 135 teli now. Write to tha Agricul- tural Publications Office, State Col- lege, Pa., for free copies. AA nn Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin The bear's den consisted of a hollowed out stump of a tree about four feet hich and about five feet in diameter. Here the three young cubs were born about late January, for they looked to be about two months old and weighed approxi- mately 4 or 5 pounds. They very active and crawled about over the mother continually. The female was restless and would snap her jaws from time to time as the ob- servers peered into the cavity, She was still in a semi-conscious condi- ion, however, although she would not permit officials to secure a stethoscopic record of her heart action which they would liked to have done. Piciures were taken as close as three feet but the dark in- terior, made doubly so due to the color of the creatures, made pho- tography diffiqult. Additional pie- tures will be taken in a few weeks, providing the animal remains, and she will no doubt do so unless the weather is unusually warm. A hibernating bear is found only by the merest chance, and in this par- dcular instance by two trappers on the trail of a wild cat who saw that creature approach the bear’s stump in an attempt either to jump over or hide within. The wild cat, how- ever, according to the trappers, no sooner observed the bear than it jumped about ten feet in the air and was gone, The trappers, curi- ous to see what made the cat dis- appear so rapidly approached the stump, looked in and saw the bear and her family. Black bear cubs are born during the mother’s win- ter sleep. The hibernating animal, having fattened itself as much as possible, lives solely from such fat until spring when it emerges as a rule, rather gaunt and hungry. When Gaine Protector Englert first visited the den the bear permitted him to stroke her.” HEARING IS HELD ON POLLUTION (From page 1) pollution measures would force many indusiries out of business, were made at a public hearing at Harrisburg Tuesday on several measures providing for enforce- ment of anti stream pollution laws. Members of the conservation’ sportsmen and civie organizations spoke in behalf of the measures and manufacturing representatives opposed enactment of such legis- lation, The measures on which the hear- ing was conducted were the Hun- sicker Lose companion bills to per- mit county and municipal officials the right to sue industries or muni- cipalities in the name of the state’s attorney general for abate- ment of stream pollution. A similar bill by Representative Post, North- cumberland, which, however, ex- empts coal companies from such action, The opponents of these measures spoke favorably of the administra- tion stream pollution bill intro- duced Monday night in the Senate by Senator Mansfield, Allegheny, which provides for classification of streams. Proponents of these mea- sures opposed the administration measure on the ground that a low classification would not permit a municipality to have redress to the Supreme Court from stream pollu- tion activity by industries. The proponents of the measured told of pollution in the streams of state and referred to the Pittsburg harbor as the Pittsburg cesspool. Grover C. Ladner, of Philadelphia, cited the higher cancer death rate ‘n Philadelphia as compared with | Camden and asserted that the | “dirty Schuylkill river,” from | which Philadelphia draws water, | could be partly responsibl + this, | as Camden drinks water from ey artesian well. { Opponents of the measure told | of “the incalculable’ harm which | such legis- | they said enactment of lation would bring on the paper, ! coke mining and other industries in Pennsylvania, They said they were in favor of anti stream pol- lution measures but did not desire a measure which would enable municipalities or counties force them into short {ime lution. to heavy expenditures in a to avert stream pol- The Situation Here The editor of the Julletin brought suit against Geo. Brown's Sons, a local manufacturing plant, for spring pollution and won. The violators immediately installed a filtration plant at their mill here and are making an effort to discon- tinue said pollution, Fatal to Fish The public can get an idea of as to just what results this pollution has on fish. Several weeks ago the writer of this article bought a number of the largest gold fish obtainable, from 8 to 10 inches in length, and placed them in a spring oR ee ee ; Eve Finally Fell 3 x for Gus 4 x By GENEVRA COOK z= oe odohotel VE DELBERT had her own little way of refusing a man She would brush back a wistful tendril of spung-gold hair, lift her wide violet eyes appealingly, and say: “Oh, but I couldn't think of getting married, really. Not for years and years. I really couldn’t., Good-by, Jim > or Harry or Bill one part of the formula ever varied, and that was the name. But tonight, for the first time in her briei life, Eve Delbert found herself faced with a formula that wouldn’t form. There was something in the steady gray eyes of Gus Morton that made the words fade on her lips, “I—I can't, Gus,” she faltered. Fis voice was tender but firm, said: “Why not?” And then suddenly, she was telling him why not, letting him, as she had let no one else, glimpse into her in- most soul. “You see, Gus, it's because I'm look- ing for something romantic to happen Why, it wouldn't be exciting at all to marry and settle down here with some one right from Jonesville. 1 want— I guess every girl wants—glamour and adventure and romance, along with Jove.” Without stopping to see the expression in Gus’ eyes, she rushed on I'ive hours later Eve Delbert sat alone in a palm-shrouded corner of the Manyana club conservatory. Against the white gleam of marble long folds of dusky tulle fell from her shoulders He to her tiny black slippers, and a wreath of silver stars was in her hair. “Star light—" Eve turned at the sound of a deep | voice at her shoulder. “Star bright—"" There was something throaty, some- thing magical about that woice that seemed to weave a spell over every- thing, “First star—only star I'll see to- ! night—" She could feel deep eyes upon hers, but she could not see them for the man at her side was dressed all in deep black, and a black mask con- cealed his face. “Wish IT may—" The thrilling voice made her heart beat fast. “Wish 1 might— Know if you're Night Ph “I'm the Spirit of Dusk,” breathed Eve, softly. “And you?” His voice deepened with mysterious power, as he answered, close at her side, “IT am Midnight.” the Queen of By and by, as the musie of the orchestra drifted out to them, they danced there together. Once, as they sat together, watching the play of iridescent light on silver water, Eve stirred. “I ought to go find—some one.” “You'll come back to me?” he whis pered huskily. And she answered, “Oh, yes!” She had to look a long time for Gus before she saw him standing, tall and determined, in his blue denim overalls 0 SENET EO and straw hat, up against a pillar near the ballroom door, “Oh, Gus! I'm baving the most wonderful time. He's dressed as Midnight.” i Gus flung back his head with scorn. | “Hunh! Too bad he isn’t the Big | Dipper!” “Oh, Gus,” her voice was “You just don’t understand. It’s just as 1 said, you aren’t romantic. You don’t have the tiniest bit of imagina- tion. And I'll never marry you— never!” She flung herself toward the door leaving him standing there, fumbling at a long piece of straw behind his ear. Jack in the conservatory all was still. Breathless, Eve waited for him to come. If—sometime—he should ask her what Gus had asked her tonight—. She reached up to brush back a wisp of soft hair—and suddenly he was there! His tall form was bending over her, his arms were around her— tight. He was lifting her in his arms. reaching the door in four long strides. At her first ery, a firm hand was upon her mouth. She could not make a sound. She felt herself lifted into a car, a big black one. His voice, rough and importunate now, whispered in her ear, “The Chariot of Night. And you—you are going with me, my dusk- lover, where there is no day!” Eve's breath came in great gasps. She struggled to free herself, twist ing and turning in the strong, ardent arms of Midnight, Oh, if only Gus would come. If only she hadn't been such an idiot, going into the conservatory alone, like that, Looking for Romance! No won der he thought, With one great wrench she loosed herself from his grasp, sprang from the car, and ran swiftly, madly, toward With the sound of footsteps pounding the gravel behind her, she fled up the path, and through the door. { A long hour later, Eve, gazed con: tentedly into the steady, trustworthy eyes of Gus Morton. “No more romance or imagination for me, Gus,” she whispered happily. “Just only You!” I've met--some one. | tearful the club. Perhaps it was well for her that she did not see later the man with no imagination, alone in his room lock securely in the bottom of his trunk one costume of deepest black, with one black mask; and lock se- curely in the bottom of his loving heart, one secret—not so very black. {@ 1931, McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) WNU Service. near town, spring water water. They were taken from and placed in spring In less than a week all the fish except two, were killed. These two were removed, placed in a barrel in other water, and are still alive, About a year ago half a can of young trout. were purchased and placed in this same spring. They all died within several days. Is it any wonder people are op- posing stream pollution? HG 1011 * 4 " x a x a : 4 s = | n E well as handle funds. Nb /igacion The Union National Mount‘\Joy Bank MOUNT JOY, ‘RA. - 4 Capital, Surplus and Profits, $502,000.00 A) 5 . > Can Serve You as Executor, Administrator, Assignee, Receiver, Guardian, Registrar of Stocks and \ Bonds, Trustee, etc. “Easter Candy ¢ “Gust received a full line of MELIANGER'S EASTER CANDY We will be plesed to take your order and take care of it till 8 o’clgck the night before Easter. Af- ter that all goods remaining not called for will be re-sold. % % : We also havh,a line of C. F. ADAMS, E. G. HESS\ HARRY SHREINER and a Few Other'Yakes \ REDUCED PRICES ON TOBACCO CIGARS and CIGARETTES Remaitthe Same \ % \ SPECIAL d Car Sale | % ce 3 | 1930 ESSBX COACH 1929 CHEVROLET COACH 1927 DODGE £DOOR SEDAN 1928 ESSEX 4-DOOR SEDAN 1926 ESSEX COACH, Rohrer's Garage Mount Joy, Pa. ™ AGE - > N 7 " i ng: a i ; _UMBER ~ x : hs 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. J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers