The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 31, 1929, Image 6

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SIX
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
By F. O. Alexander
© Western Newspaper Union
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.

 
Reprisal ;







PEGS NOUNS





A Ruined
Tobacco Crop
Doesnt mean a
Ruined
Tobacco Grower

If the Crop was
Covered by a |
Hail Policy
You cannot afford to take the risk.
The Hartford Fire Insurance Com-
pany can. Let us explain this hail
policy and the record and resources
of the Company that writes it.
Widmyer-Prangley Co.
Agents
48 North Queen Street
Lancaster. Pa.
Henry H. Koser, Landiéville, Pa.
D. L. Landis, Elizabethtown, Pa.
E H. Gish, Elizabethtown, Pa.
J july 10-6t

SERVICE
Over Night Dry Clean-
ing
Suits Collected Before 5 P. M. De:
livered by 9 A. M. Next Morning

ONE HOUR SERVICE ON
PRESSING

“Better Service For Less”
Phone 119R2

Mt. Joy Cleaning and
Pressing Company
"STONE
Before placing your order
elsewhere, see us.
Crushed Stone. Also manufac
turers of Concrete Blocks,
Sills and Lintels.
J. N. STAUFFER & BRO.
MOUNT JOY. PA.




We Have
“QUALITY
MEATS
Krall's Meat Market
West Main St., MOUNT JOY

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T= LITTLE LOVE-SONG, IT MIGHT {=u
a GIVE HIM COURAGE KINDA

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THE WORST ABOUT THESE
WARM) NIGHTS 1S YoU
GOTYA KEEP TE WINOOWS
OPEN) AN LET IN ALL THE



INDUSTRIAL NOTES

State Highway Department open-
ed bids for construction of five-mile
stretch on the Lincoln Highway
between Gap schoolhouse and Ches-
ter County line.

Pequea—Tucquan Camp located
on Susquehanna River near here
opened for season.
Ambridge—Eagle Realty Com-
pany erecting building for branch
of Eagle Shoe Stores.
New road over viaduct connect-
ing Hallstead and Great Bend open-
ed to traffic recently.
Road will be improved
U. S. Highway No. 119 to
Geneva.
Bryn Mawr—Two new units of
Greater Bryn Mawr Hospital open-
ed to public.
Montrose—Erection is
on modern hotel building.
Scottdale—Strand Theatre in-
stalled Vitaphone equipment.
Ambridge—Building permits 1s-
sued during recent week totaled
$26,900.
from
New
completed
Scottdale—Dexter Lumber Com-
pany erecting additional buildings
which
in large expansion program
will triple present output and also
increase employes from 50 to 150.
$40,000 additional machinery to be
installed in new building.
North. Belle Vernon—Broad Ave.
to be paved.
Monessen—Monessen Sand and
Gravel Company merged with Rog-
ers Sand Company of Pittsburgh.
Construction of new road
tically completed to Uniontown.
Store opened for business at
owfield Avenue.
proposed Fayette
and $500,000.
Ambridge — Laughlin
Library building dedicated.
new parish hall and
prac-
Charleroi—The Craven Furniture
Fall-
Plans completed for erecting the
City-Allenport
bridge at cost of between $400,000
Memorial
Economy—~Cornerstone laid for
parsonage of

FOR HAL
TIA
fil)
ii LES
WY THE
= VERY DEAR]
ly
MOTOR TRIP
| ve So MANY
ol LL a,
wv 13 7 PEG
avs PICKS LEMON
PRS LEMONS
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&«¢ HEN welll pack up our | by fresh foods from villages may
troubles in the old kit bag, and | be done quickly and satisfactorily.
smile, smile, smile!” Isn't | Also you can get the same brands
that old song typical of the joy that
accompanies the motor tripper of
Who doesn’t feel a light-
ness of heart as he bundles sleeping
arrangements, cooking utensils and
old bus
starts out, a happy vagabond?
Regardless of whether your ulti-
mate goal is a fishing shack in the
imag-
inable, you are part of the fello
ship of the road from the time you
today ?
food into the good

woods or the Ritziest hotel
start.
Real Camping
And regardless of whet!

1
your resting periods in the
around noon-time,
ler you
plan to camp out at night or spend
coin-
fort of a hotel, there is one thing
that you will take, if you are wise
—food. The haughtiest motor may
refuse to move when it reaches a
particularly deserted stretch of road
Then isn’t it nice
to know that in your car you have
of food in most towns and so know
exactly what grade you are pur-
chasing. Flour, fat, sugar, salt and
pepper, and evaporated milk are the
fundamentals on which the food sup-
and | ply is founded. With the aid of a
can of bacon and a box of baking
powder, flapjacks and bacon may
appear on the menu. Coffee is an-
other essential, and this should be
w- | vacuum-packed coffee carried in air-
tight Mason jars. Many campers
prefer to carry condensed milk with
them and use it in the coffee, rather
than to boiher with fresh cream and
sugar.
Among the vegetables which will
surely appear in the food list are
peas, stringless beans, corn and to-
matoes ; they may he combined with
each other or with fresh foods to
make delightful combinations, or any
one served alone is most attractive.
Baked beans, kidney beans and lima
beans are filling foods which are

well adapted to this use. Pineapple
slices or crushed pineapple may he
arranged on a thick slice of ham and
cooked in a covered skillet. In
purchasing {ruits don’t forget that
the berries and cherries are among
those obtainable in cans, as well as
figs, grapefruit, grapes, apples, and
apple sauce. Surely with such a
selection and with the fresh fruits
on the market in the sum 10
otic need lack their sweet freshness.

Pian for Variety 2
Salmon, tuna, mackerel, cod-fish
cakes are among the standard
canned fish for the trip, and many
meats are canned in such a way as
to make a meal only a matter of
opening a can d heating the con- i



mm know that beef may i
ned in eight dif-
iced, boiled, corned,
mode, or
Cut wd Se
dried, roast, stew a Ia
steak with onions? Chic
boneless, curried, deviled
or in tamales. Veal in
roas. : ham, deviled or leaf or whole;


——

A




WEDNESDAY, JULY 3lst,


5
of
THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN
LANCASTER
Wingert & Haas
Hat Store
Straw H ats
Stiff and Soft Hats
\ Have Arrived iff Various
Colo¥s and Shapes
de
\
I
She
Sr
PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY

JNO. A. HAAS, Propr.
144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa.





JrulyaGreatImprovement
mya]
bi

sh Eith
boli

with New Autg M atic Washer
Duo-DisC
&
Orly $99.50
Pay $9.50 down and
we’ll deliver this most
modern of all washers
to your home -— then
$2.50 weekly conveni-
ently pays the balance
THIS OFFER FOR A
SHORT TIME ONLY
Now - for the first time, you secure the two most
efficient washing principles in one washer - an
overhead agitator for full washings and the heavier
and more bulky pieces and which when reversed,
may, if you prefer, be used as an underneath or
submerged agitator for washing a few pieces, or a
tubful.

A 3-Piece Ironing Set FREE!

192¢

Vremoomonn
St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran
church.
Kittanning—Stockholders to vote
on change of corporation’s name
from Kittanning Lime Stone Com-
pany to Kittanning Cement & Lime
Stone Company and also to In-j
crease its authorized capital stock.
Phillipsburg—North and South
Centre Street to be paved.
Coatesville was one of four cit
jes in State with reported building
gains in excess of $100,000 for
May, 1929 over May, 1928, accord-
ing to announcement of Bureau of
Statistics of Pennsylvania Depart
ment of Labor and Industry.
Duquesne— Building permits issu-
ed during first six months of this
vear totaled approximately $493,
628.
Brockway—>Sweet Shop opened
on Fifth Avenue.
Road being graded on the B. P
Highway to connect Main Street of
Brockway with road in Snyder.

Duquesne—West Grant Avenue
to have new sidewalk.
Milton—State Highway Street

from east end of brick paving to
Front Street, with coating of as-
phalt through center of street.
Jenkintown—New traffic system
installed at this place.
Catasauqua — $20,000 improve-
ments and addition to be made to


{ build school and chapel.
|
|
{ First Presbyterian church building.
Relocated Fraklin-Oil City High-
{way opened to traffic recently.
Bosyell—Isaacson Bros. Store
{ with Federated Stores of
America.
Somerset—Airport located one
and one-half miles north of here
being dedicated.
Pittsburgh—Blue Ridge Trans-
portation Company started motor
| coach service over National High-
| way through Frostburg, Cumber-
land and Frederick.
Waymart — Polish National Un-
ion purchased 430 acre farm to be
converted into home for aged and
the. disabled members and will also

Williamsport—New building of
Young Women’s Christian Associa-
tion formally dedicated.
Coatesville—Work is started on
erection of United States Veterans’
Hospital building on Black Horse
Hill.
Oil City—Traffic signs will be
erected along streets in business
sections of city.
Monogahela — First Presbyterian
Church building interior being re-
decorated.
Sltaington—Plans discussed for
erection of addition te the Lincoln
building.
Shippenville—Oil breught in on
the makings of a meal? A can of
beans, a can of tomatoes, some
peaches or pineapple, and perhaps a
can of Boston brown bread take up
very little room, and are they wel-
come! Also they can be replaced
at any town through which you pass,
so you never will be stranded away
from food.
But if vou and your family prefer
to be real campers, spending your
nights out and doing your own cook-
ing, the supply of canned foods will
be greater. By carrying well chosen
standard supplies, the supplementing
easily prepared. Other foods which
may be bought occasionally, or more
often if your carrying capacity is
large, are sauerkraut, hominy, okra,
sweet potatoes, spinach, turnips and
carrots.
Fruits for Freshness
Canned fruits may be eaten just
as they come out of the can. An-
other good method is to heat the
pieces of fruit in the fat left from
cooking meat and then serve the hot
fruit with the meat. Pears, nine-
apple and peaches are partienlarly


liver with bacon or onions.
In planning camping






ety must be consider
for it is e fall i
By buying
such
romaine, chi

buying
sionaily, and fresh vegetables,
sally those to be
towns througii wh
family will st
is important to drink plenty
eat plenty of vegetabies,
fresh or canned, while an the tri

water


Fourteen Cities in Nucleus of Network, With Plans for
Twenty-nine as Wave Lengths Are Granted.
Plans for the immediate establishment of a radio-telegraph
system serving all the interior of the United States through four-
teen strategic cities just have been announced by General James
G. Harbord, president of the Radio Corporation of America.
The service will be managed and operated by the Corporation’s
subsidiary, R. C. A. Communications, Inc.
The stations will be at New York, Chicago, San Francisco,
Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, New Orleans, Kansas City,
Detroit, Cincinnati, Cleveland, St. Louis, Boston and Washing-
fon, General Harbord’s announcement reveals.
The establishment of the new ser-
vice, which will give the inland cities
direct communication with the world
wide wireless networks radiating
from New York and San Francisco to
foreign countries, was made possi-
ble by the recent grant of ten exclu-

hoped will eventually be added to the
radio-telegraph chain.
“Establishment of a new service,”
General Harbord said, “will give the
leading commercial and industrial cen:
ters of America a new, quick and reli

wave lengths are made available.”




The above map shows the twenty-nine cities which the Radio Corporation of
America hopes to include in an inland radio telegraph network soon. Work
already is under way to give radio telegraph service to fourteen of the cities,
on wave lengths already granted. These stations will be at New Orleans,
Kansas City, Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, St.
Louis, Cincinnati, New York, San Francisco, Boston and Washington.
sive channels and five shared channels
from the Federal Radio Commission.
“We hope to extend the system,”
General Harbord said, “to the full list
of 29 cities contemplated in our origi-
nal application as soon as additional
each other.
“But its greatest significance, as
the United States turns more and
more to foreign markets, ie that it
brings Europe, South America and the
Orient closer to America through ra.
dio’s new and efficient avenues of
communication.”
Supplementing General Harbord’s
| announcement, W. A. Winterbottom,
Other cities whose commercial im-
portance and strategic location justi-
fled a place in the new radio network,
able means of communication with |

Davis heirs lease, few miles north-
east of here.
Coatesville—Erection started on
store and office building for Cohen
Brothers.
General Harbord said, were Philadel-
phia, Miami, Fla., Savannah, Minne-
apolis, Memphis, Pittsburgh, Houston,
Norfolk, Buffalo, Portland, Me., Roches-
ter, Schenectady, Portland, Ore., Mil-
waukee, and many others which it is

vice-president in charge of ecommuni-
cations, revealed that the construction
program for the fourteen cities was
already under way. Three million dol-
lars has been set aside for the initial
expenditure.






FAMOUS SOLDIER, IN
OFFICE, STILL RIDES
Sitting all day long, every day at
a desk—one of the most important
desks in the United States—is an
active man whose picture, showing
him sitting erect on a horse. would
be recognized instantly by thou
sands of Americans. He is General
J. G. Harbord, now President of the
Radio Corporation of America. He
was Chief of Staff of the A. E. F.,
commanded the Marine Brigade of
the Second Division in Belleau
Woods and Bouresches when the
division stopped the German ad-
vance at Chateau Thierry, and in
the Soissons Offensive in the bat-
tles of July 18 and July 19 he com-
manded the division.
There is interest for the average
American, who always has the best
intentions of keeping fit, in how
General Harbord has managed to
be so successful at it since his out-
door routine was changed suddenly
by his new position.
He accomplishes that by consis-
tent exercise, including as a prin-
cipal item a daily horseback ride.
He keeps a horse in Central Park.
Every morning, while the aver
age man is lying in bed, he is
up and dressed. At 6:45 o'clock he
ig riding briskly through the wood-
ed park with his friends.





In 1914, average fire insurance
premium charged by leading stock
fire underwriters of the vountry was
$1.03 per $100 of coverage, while
by 1928 it had declined to 83.4
cents.
i etl A ais
The first causal factor in stabil-
izing American business has un-
doubtedly been the new and im-
proved technique of American bus-
iness itself.

ADVERTISE
The codfish lays a million eggs
And the helpful hen lays one;
But the codfish doesn’t cackle
To tell us what she’s done;
And so we scorn the codfish coy,
And the helpful hen we prize
Which indicates to you and me
It pays to advertise.


Ironing Table


Electric Iron Step Stool,
&

D. B.
MOUNT JOY, PA.

BRUBAKE
Read the Bulletin




F YOU get into trouble, it will pay
you out. If you get sick, it will
pay the doctor's and druggists
bills. If you want to take a trip,
it will pay your way. If you want
to develop your business or take
advantage of some good invest-
ment, you can do it at a moment's
Capital $125,000

&

notice.
But the man without money can
do none of these. Instead,
whenever opportunity is offered
or adversity befalls him, he is
forcibly embarrassed.
Better Have a Savings
Bank Account
First National Bank and
Trust Company
OF MOUNT JOY
én



Surplus and Profits $255,000