WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1929 FOR ECONOMICAL NEW SIX CHEVROLE since JAN. 1st To satisfy the overwhelming public demand for the new Chevrolet Six, the Chevrolet Motor Eompany has accomplished one of the most remarkablg industrial achievements of all time. In less than thfige months after the first Chevrolet Six was delivered t§ the pub- lic, the Chevrolet factories are producing 6,800 cars a day. As aresult, more than a quarter-mill Chevrolet Sixes have been delivered to date — tremendous popularity is increasing every day! on the road have not yet seen and driven this come in for a demonstration! The Roadster, $525; The Phaeton, $525; The Coach, $595; The Coupe, $595; Sedan, $675; The Sport Cabriolet, $695; The Convertible Landau, $725; Si Delivery, $595; Light Delivery Chassis, $400; 114 Ton Chassis, $545; 114 Chassis with Cab, $650. All prices f. o. b. factory, Flint, Mich -a Six 233 South Market Street Maytown ELMER G. STRICKLER QUALITY Mt. Joy P. FRANCK SCHOCK AT LOW TRANSPORTATION eZ 1 A h TE fl This Cold Weather Calls For Spicy Accompaniments An old English verse tells of how March borrowed three days from April, and after receiving them found that “The first 0’ them was wind and weet, The second o’ them was snaw and sleet, The third o’ them was sic a freeze It froze the birds’ nebs to the trees.” plies to March especially,| ly? A number 10 can holds some-| cup washed, seedless raisins, one seems to typify these blowy| thing less than a gallon, so the re-| and one-half cups brown sugar, blustery days of Spring, when the| sulting conserves will vary from| four lemons (juice and grated weather is as capricious as the| three to six quarts. rind), and cook gently until thick. 2 ND this verse, aithough it ap-| cious preserves most inexpensive-| can of sliced peaches. Add one traditional lady of Victorian Here are some of the ways to| Ten minutes before the conserve days. do it: is done, add one cup chopped wal- So while the wind outside tries ome Effective Flavors nuts. Pour into jelly glasses or to make up its mind whether to Some jars, Makes about three pints. aid rain or snow or sleet, we, in- Pickled Canned Peaches: Drain side, can make up our minds to| a number 2 can of halved peaches combat his decision. And one way and to the syrup add one-half cup to do this is to get out our cans| vinegar, three-fourths cup sugar, of fruits and decide to add a few| two long sticks cinnamon and : more touches to them and have an| one-half teaspoon * whole cloves.| the mixture reaches 218 degrees array of fancy pickles and_pre-| Boil ten minutes, pour over the| F., and it drops thickly from serves. Some you can give a| peaches, cover and let stand for| spoon. Use a wooden spoon for piquant flavor by adding vinegar, three days. The last day pour] stirring. Pour into hot glasses or sugar and spices; others may be| into glass jars and seal. Makes| jars and seal. Makes about four bland preserves, lusciously rich| one pint. quarts. and subtly compounded of fruits Pear and Tomato Chutney: Cut in unusual combinations. the pears and tomatoes from And probably you will like a number 2 cans into small pieces. chutney, too, to serve on the oc- Add pear syrup, one chopped casions when your menus need sweet green pepper, one sweet red shaking out of their routine, and | pepper, one chopped onion, one you decide on a curry—and of| cup sugar, one-half cup vinegar, | using only the ganned fruit and course a curry without chutney is| one and one-eighth teaspoon salt,| sugar. The proportions used are: hardly curry. one-half teaspoon ginger, one-half| one number 10 can of strawberries teaspoon mustard, and a few| and one and one-half cups sugar; Get Large Can of Fruit grains of cayenne. Cook slowly|a number 10 can of raspberries until thick. Pour into glasses.| and one and one-half cups sugar; Of all these, you probably will| Makes about three glasses. a number 10 can of red pitted want to make small amounts, but| Peach and Pineapple Conserve:| cherries and two cups of sugar. did you know that by getting a big| Mix contents of a number 2 can| Cook as directed in above recipe: number 10 can of fruit and adding| of crushed pineapple with the| seal in sterilized glasses. The little sugar, you can make deli-| chopped contents of a number 2| make around three quarts each.* Strawberry and Rhubarb Pre- serves: Mix contents of a num- ber 10 can of strawberries, three cups of diced rhubarb and two and one-fourth cups sugar. Boil until Preserves from Cans Raspberry, Strawberry or Cherry Preserves: These preserves are made in the same manner, but I x A (vertise in the Bulletin THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. OWL-LAFFS 4 a | ing 0. W. L. (On With Laughter) 3 At the barber shop the other day Doc Longenecker told his barber he’d make a good golf player be- cause he’s such a good clipper. The other day it was raining to beat the cars as a man on Marietta street came home to dinner and met his wife going out. She said she was going shopping. He bawled her out for picking such a time and she said, “You told me to save up fora rainy day, didn't you? Now I've saved $4.00 and this is the first op- portunity I’ve had to spend it.” One cold Sunday morning a man in town took his son along to church. When they returned home he asked the lad if he remembered the preacher’s sermon and the boy, rub- bing his hands said, “Course I do. The text was ‘Many are cold, but few are frozen'.” Allie Stumpf told me there was a customer at his restaurant recently who said all that’s being done now- adays is filling the jails and the cemeteries. He’s blamed near right at that. I see where a chap has obtained a patent on an automobile driven from the rear seat. Of course there’s nothing new about that in a lot of families. You know there are a few spots in this town that are not the safest places to be. Think of the poor guys who were kind enuff to escort a lady home and then came mighty near gettin’ shot for it. From all appearances and gener- al indications, I'll bet there's as much brewing done in this town at present as there was when the old Alois Bube Brewery was in its hey day. I feel dern certain there are many more brewers, anyway. Nobody sells it, of course not. It’s like the cigarette fad when nearly everybody rolled his own. Now nearly everybody brews his own, If vou doubt ‘this assertion, find ~ out how many cans of malt our stores sell and at the sama time how many lemons. Some claim it’s a substitute for lemonade, A man told me that too many people worry about what their neighbors are doing instead of what they are doing themselves. Enos Rohrer, the Hudson-Essex dealer, has a new green Hudson car in his show room. He says it’s ro- bin’s egg blue and if you can con- vince him to the contrary you can do more than myself, “Steve” Kay- lor, Constable Zerphey, Christ Mum- ma and a lot of others could do. Up at the Florin school one day last week the teacher asked a pupil “What is a pedestrian ”’ The an- | swer was given: “A girl whe won't | neck.” I heard about a girl who attended a party the other night and spilled gin over her evening dress. Seems | as though some girls never do learn how to hold their liquor. But why should that girl worry? I know a chap who couldn’t even hold | spaghetti. He put his in the waste basket. A fellow came to Constable Zer- phey the other night and said, ‘‘Offi- sher, you better lock me up. hit my wife over the head wish a club.” | Zerphey said, “Did you kill her?” | The chap replied, “Don’t think | sho. Thash why I want to be lock- ed up.” and Mac said, “what was the wave | Fost perennials are planted. [can be done before the spring rush begins on the farm. —Brick, lodatjon, sonveniences. | bery, flowers, sha |(n A number one co I heard a fellow say to Tom Me- | size_porch. See owner, HH Elroy, “I got H-E-L-L last night,” 40 Donegal Spring St., Mt, BLISTERS IN EARTH TO ALTER ITS SHAPE That Is What Noted Scien- tist Sees for Future. New York.—The earth’s crust prob- ably is not “dead” and finished in shape, the American Association for the Advancement of Science was told by Dr. Bailey Willis of Stanford uni- versity. Instead, even the stable bottom of the Atlantic ocean now may be heat- ing up preparatory to causing land shifts, The theory is that scores of miles down in the rocks that form the skin of mother earth, great blis- ters form, as big as whole states, and that as they melt the rocks, the re- sulting upthrusts make the earth's surface what it is, and whatever it may change to. But there was nothing of possible human catastrophe in Doctor Willis’ picture, for he spoke in the new time concept of science, his changes re- quiring millions of years. He named well known places where on the slow time scale such shifts actually now seem under way. Great Plateaus of Granite. Doctor Willis’ address inaugurated the annual convention of the associa- tion. His subject was “the Origin and Development of Continents.” He said all continents are great plateaus of aranite, standing high above the sea bottoms, which are of basalt, a heavi- er rock. “We know the kind of rock that underlies the sea.” he said. “from seis- mographs. With aid of earthquakes we can sink our plummets more than half way to the center of the earth. We know the velo ity at which shocks travel. the depths at which they pass through or around the earth, and the kind of rock they pass through. “We know that the earth is en- veloped about 2,000 miles thick with elastic rock, below which is a core about 2,000 miles in radius, apparent: ly inelastic, very hard, probably iron, which may be melted.” The heat that causes blisters, he said, probubly does not emanate from the earth's inner core. “Compression by gravity.” he added, “is eapable of producing all the heat of which we have evidence. As rocks heat, the melting tends to extend lat erally faster than upward, thus form- inz blisters—asthenoliths, we call them. “Conditions favorable to formation of asthenoliths appear likely to de- velop in those layers thirty to six hun dred miles below the earth’s surface, and probably only those within less than one hundred miles of the surface directly affect it. “A blister may grow several hun- dred ‘miles across, and be ten to twenty miles deep, containing one or more million cubic miles. The cover eventually breaks around the mar- gins, where eruptions follow, and finally the cover falls into the emptied center, Conditions thus theoretically sketched are features of the smaller depressions that are the deeps of the oceans. The Windward and Hawaiian Ate SXAWMpes of-- voleguie- ridges surrounding such deeps. Takes Years to Grow. “A blister requires perhaps several million years to grow. A very large number of eruptions, a great many lapse of blisters and an enormous time must have been required to form Africa, Eurasia and the Americas in this way. The complex structure of each continent «corresponds with the multiplicity of actions required by the theory.” Adobe Houses in Old Mine Town Yield Gola Monterey, Mexico.—T. L. Crawford a British mining engineer who has ar. rived here from »Mazapil, an ole min- ing town buried in the "eart of the mountains, has found that slag from the smelters operated by Spaniards more than 200 years ago. and long carries high abandoned, values in gold. Even the old adobe houses are rich ! in the precious metal, according to as- says which he made recently Some of these adobe blocks run as high as $500 to the ton of gold, silver and copper. Mr. Crawford has interested a syndicate of mining men in the pos. sibilities of smelting the slag and the adobe-built houses hy modern methods. BR Plant Hardy Shrubs This is the month when hardy trees, shrubs, vines and herbaceous Such work age, fruit, shrub- newly painted, length?” At one of the lodges here in town | recently the head officer in calling | the men to order said, “We will now | have insulation of officers.” I'd! hate like the deuce to tell you who | that bird was. Now you needn’t laugh. have been right at that. they were live-wire officers. i I was back at the station the day when a certain married woman here met several of her lady friends and she greeted each one with an affectionate kiss. I asked her why and she admitted that that was a- bout all the practice most married | women get. He may | Possibly | buzzard of a kissed her She said that old husband o? hers hasn't since they were married. Sam Miller told me that a fellow came to his store to buy a water proof wrist watch. Sam told him he i « pardon me I asked him if he day night. to wear clothes.” | Sy one that won’t stop when I dip {my doughnuts in coffee.” Had a man at my house the other “Will you if I tell you that I just sampled that liquor on the buffet?” that's lay and he said to me, I said, “Good Lord, man, { hair tonic.” He said, “The dickens A fellow went to Two drunks stopped The other said, near time, ain’t it?” Elmer says if he were married he would always help his wife, she mopped up the floor he would was supposed te take it off when he! on up the floor with her. takes his bath and he said, “{ wanted | A WISE OWL UL HOME FOR SALE i none better, all you say. I thought it tasted unusually good.” Doc Garber’s {for a pound of insect powder. Doe wanted to take it | with him and he said, “You don’t ex- {pect me to bring the bugs here, do {you?” in front of Harry Brooks’ store window Satur- One said, “Ladies ready “Well, it’s d— and if FRX REX XRT The Music and the Words By AD SCHUSTER KKK KKK EXE (Copyright.) * * * x * ; * ULU and George were engaged and ft was the romance which kept her from going to the larger city near- by to continue her studies in musie. George, a serious youth with some in- clinations toward science, was proud and even amazed that the town's hand- somest and most popular girl should prefer him to all others, He took her to the dinners and dances and lived as a man in a dream which was too good to last. Then came the radio with its par- ticular appeal. George became a fan from the first. He built sets for him- self and the neighbors, experimented with all of ‘the hook-ups and added startling and intricate words to his vocabulary, Instead of calling on Lulu four nights a week he made it three and then two. “If he thinks I'm going to stand for getting cut out by a loud speaker and a lot of funny things, he’s mistaken,” Lulu declared, and she began accept- Ing Invitations from the others who discovered with pleasure they were