The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 25, 1931, Image 6

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PAGE SIX
FIRST NE SENDS
we TRUNK
AND NOW YS (= PATIENT ty OUR Jude ME!
MIS LAUNDRY — [OF BROTHER Gus Wk MAY
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CLEARER — THAT Mu
WOULD SWINE HISONN
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
ANU NOW 115 THE CLOTHES |

INTERNATIONAL CARTOO' CO. NY
Had Considerable Gall but Brother Gus Is the Bitterest Pill of All
| SUPPOSE HES WIRING NOW )
Te ADD ANOTHER QUART O*
WATER, TO THE SOUP-HES |
BRINGING COMPANY *
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BY HITT

Maton
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| ONE - FIFTEENS P wii
LE OY YO FOR. Tete
MESSAGE “YOULL WAVE
™ TAKE A COUPLE OF
SMOOTH DIMES ID ~
Pe

 
|

with 6-room house with lights and
bath; also frame stable.
| boro.
smaller house.
NOW

THE TIME TO BUY
CHEAP IS WHEN THERE IS
NO DEMAND
TODAY, REAL ESTATE, LIKE
MANY OTHER THINGS, IS NOT IN
DEMAND AND AS A RESULT YOU |
CAN BUY BETTER VALUES THAN
AT ANY TIME DURING MY CAR-
EER AS A REALTOR.
IF INTERESTED, CALL AND I
WILL PROVE THIS ASSERTION.
HERE IS A PARTIAL LIST OF MY
OFFERINGS TODAY.
DWELLINGS
No. 314—A very good brick dwell-
ing on New Haven Street, Mt. Joy,
electric lights, bath, etc, corner
property.
No. 337—A fine new house on
West Donegal St, Mt. Joy, all con-
veniences and in best of condition.
No. 339—A good 2% story frame |
house on Main street, Florin, best of!
shape, 2-car garage.
No. 343—A very fine and modern
brick dwelling in residential section
of Mount Joy for much less than
cost of erection.
No. 359—A fine frame double house
on Delta St, Mount Joy. Will be
sold worth the money. All conveni-
ences and garage on each side.
No. 416—A brick house, corner
property at Florin, 8 rooms. All con-
veniences, will sell right.
No. 417—Good Corner Brick House,
Mount Joy, all conveniences, 3-car
garage, too large for present owner.
No. 418—Fine Bungalow on Choco-
late Ave. East Donegal, 8 rooms and
bath, open fire place.
No. 419—Beautiful modern Brick
dwelling, all conveniences, along state
highway in East Donegal. Don’t build,
buy this and save money.
No. 420—A 7-room frame house on
Marietta St., surroundings open, prop-
erty in good shape. A dandy place
for retired rural man. It has 4 poul-
try houses, garage, stable, etc.
No. 422—A frame double house in
Florin, one side has conveniences, oth-
er side lights and water, frame stable,

etc. In good shape and will sell
cheap.
No. 349—An 80 foot front on
Donegal Springs Road, Mount Joy.
New 8 room brick house, all mod-
ern improvements. Included is an
acre tract in rear.
No. 353—Lot 40x200 at Florin
with new 5-room bungalow. Has
light and heat. Dandy home for
$3,600.60.
No. 355—A lot 50x200 feet just
outside Mt. Joy Boro, new 7-room
house never occupied, garage, good
well of water, etc. Half of money
can remain. Possession at once.
Will sell more land with property if
purchaser desires. Here's a worth
while proposition.
No. 365—Fine corner property and
lot adjoining, at trolley line, house
, has all conveniences, large lawn, fine
location. Want to sell to settle es-
tate.
No. 368—A 7-room newly built
and modern home on Marietta Street,
Mt. Joy. Corner property, modern
in every way, 2-car garage, very
reasonable in order to sell.
No. 371—A newly built house a-
long trolley at Florin, all modern con-
veniences and price right for a quick
sale.
No. 372—A newly built 6-room
brick house, brick garage, all mod-
ern conveniences, possession any time.
Priced to sell. Residential section—
Donegal Springs road.
No. 376—A fine modern dwelling
on East Main St, Mt. Joy, all con-
veniences, will sell with or without a
20-car garage in rear.
No. 382—A 2-story frame corner
property at Florin, tin roof, cement
cellar, Florin water, etc.
No. 385—A very modern corner
property in Mount Joy at trolley, nas
all conveniences and in Al shape.
Also garage.
No. 386—A frame house
adjoining No. 385. Prefer selling
these two as a unit.
No. 390—A dandy bungalow on
West Main Street, Mt. Joy, 6 rooms,
all conveniences, lot 296 ft. deep
possession any time. Must be seen
to be appreciated. 3 car garage.
No. 392—A large brick house, good
repair, large frame stable, acre of
ground, on concrete highway near Mt.
Joy. Price very interesting.
No. 397—One of the former Mount
Joy Development Co. houses on W.
Donegal St. Mt. Joy. All conveni-
ences. Price very low.
No. 399—An Acre of land with
9-room brick house, frame stable
2-car garage, etc. Wonderful loca-
tion. An unobstructed view of the
Susquehanna river and land fronts on
Susquehanna Trail.
No. 400—A good frame dwelling on
Marietta street. An excellent buy for
any person living in rent.
No. 405—A frame dwelling, corner
property and will sell for only $3,000.
No. 408—Lot 40x200 on concrete
highway, at Florin, frame house, all
modern conveniences, hot water heat,
oil burner, 6-car garage. A very
good property at a reasonable price.
No. 409—A dandy corner property
along trolley, very modern house, all
conveniences, sun porch, garage, etc.
Can be bought worth the money.
No. 411—A fine stucco bungalow on
Chocolate Ave, all modern Sonveni:
ences, or two cars. A dy
es to To and aod buy.
No. f5—A nice frame dwelling in
r oy, corner property along
 










large double house, fine for poultry.
$650.
{ limestone in Rapho, frame house, good
| bank barn, fruit, running water.
ANYTHING | $2,000.
land near Chickies church, shedding
No. 414—About an acre of ground
In Mt. Joy
Will sell right or exchange for
TRUCK FARMS
No. 183—2 acres and, rather hilly,
No. 184—13 acres of sand and
Only
No. 196—A 2-acre tract in East
Donegal near Maytown, 8-room house,
stable, chicken house, pig sty, house
newly painted.
No. 270—A fine truck farm of a few
acres, near Milton Grove, good house,
barn, large shed, poultry houses, etc,
for only $1,500.
No. 275—14 acres, 2 miles from Mt.
Joy, gravel soil, frame house, barn,
ete. A dandy truck farm. Don’t miss
this.
No. 352—A dandy truck, fruit and
poultry farm near Sunnyside School,
in Rapho township. Here's a snap for
some one.
MEDIUM SIZED FARMS
No. 210—31 acre-farm near Mari-
etta and Lancaster pike, good cropper,
lots of fruit, excellent tobacco and
truck farm. Only $4,000.
No. 300—18 acres of best limestone
land in heart of East Donegal, extra
fine buildings in Al shape, best small
farm I offered in years. Located on
macadam highway. Price right.
No. 329—A 35-acre farm of sand
for 5 or 6 acres tobacco. A good 1-
man farm cheap.
LARGE FARMS
No. 381—A 124-acre farm of best
limestone soil, excellent buildings,
22-acre meadow, water at house and
barn. Price $145 per acre and 3%; of
money can remain. Here's a dandy.
No. 384—A 106-acre farm of gravel
and limestone land in Mount Joy
township, stone house, big bank barn,
good water for only $120 per acre.
Nicely located.
No. 412—A 100-acre farm along
Marietta and Lancaster pike, large
meadow and excellent pasture. A
good farm.
BUSINESS STANDS
No. 334—A fine brick business stand
and dwelling on East Main Street,
Mount Joy.
No. 376—A 20-car garage centrally
located in Mount Joy, will sell with
or without a modern dwelling with all
conveniences.
No. 374—A 6-room house and store
room, owner now doing a nice elec-
trical business. Will sell property,
business, stock, etc. Good large stable
Wonderful opportunity for young man.
No. 403—Frame Building 30x60, 3
stories with wing 28x30 and another
building 24x30. Wonderful business
stand. .Lot fronts 80 ft. on Donegal}
St, Mt. Joy.
No. 404—A very good brick building
one story about 50x100 in Mt. Joy.
Corner property.
No. 406—Frame Office Building;
Show Room, Garage and a Dwelling.
Here is a real business proposition
cheap. The entire lot of buildings
for only $6,000.
No. 423—Bungalow type house and
business stand, on Main street, Florin,
corner, no better location for res-
i gas station, etc. Is priced to
sell.
BUILDING LOTS
No. 285—A corner lot fronting 80
ft. on Donegal Springs Road, extend-
ing in depth to trolley line.
No. 306—Fine building lot fronting
45 ft. on the east side of Lumber St.,
Mount Joy. $500.
No. 310—A 40-ft. lot on Walnut St.
Mount Joy. If you want a cheap lot
get busy.
No. 335—Lot 100 ft. front and 540 ft.
deep on concrete highway between
Mt. Joy and Florin.
No. 366—A choice building lot,
fronting 70 ft. on Marietta St., Mt.
Joy and about 80 ft. deep. Corner
lot. Cheap.
No. 377—Four 50 ft. lots on the east
side of North Barbara St, Mt. Joy.
No. 401—Two lots of ground each
fronting 45 ft. on Columbia Ave. Mt.
Joy. Lots adjoin, are on corner and
are an excellent building location.
No. 421—A double lot 80x200 on
Marietta St., Mount Joy.
JUST LAND
No. 387T—A plot of about 2% acres
of land along trolley at Florin, has a
frontage of one block. Price reason-
able.
No. 388—A plot of ground containing
Show an acre at Florin. Priced to
sell.
HUNTING CAMPS
No. 262—A tract of 125 acres of farm
and timber land, house, barn, etc.
Half is farm land. Several bear pens
on farm. Game such as bear, deer,
pheasants, grey and black squirrel,
Ideal hunting camp.
°
MOUNT JOY, PA.

7
Plant Ornamentals
Prune all broken or damaged roots
before replanting trees or shrubs.
Set the individual plants not more
than 2 to 3 inches deeper than they
originally stood in the nursery row.
Al
You can get all the news of this
locality for less than three cents a

/
W. 0. W. TO GATHER |
AT HEAD CAMP MEET |
President Fraser Sees New
Enthusiasm Sweeping
United States

A new enthusiasm, reflective
of better economic conditions
throughout the country, is pre-
vailing at all of the statewide
head camp meetings being held in
more than thirty states by the
Woodmen of the World Life In-
surance Association, according to
President W. A. Fraser.
The W. O. W. members of Pen-
nsylvania will meet in the state
head camp meeting at Erie (Reed
Hotel) May 7 and 8.
Officials of the Woodmen of the
World, who have just finishec

This is the heacquarters building ‘of
the Woodmen of the World, located
in Omaha, Nebr. From it is operated
Radio Station WOW.
their semi-annual! meeting of the
board of directors at Miami, Fla.,
are most optimistic, not only of
the future of the organization but
of business everywhere.
The Board announced figures
for 1930, among them being the
fact that $2,380,650.57 was paid in
benefits during the past year,
bringing the total benefits paid to
$203,369,280.97.
More than $55,000,000.00 of in-
surance was written during the
past year, bringing the total in-
surance in force to approximately
$550.000,000.00. The company be-
gan business on June 3, 1890.
The headquarters of the com-
pany is in Omaha, Nebr., where
it operates Radio Station WOW
a member of the National Broad-
casting company chain.
The Woodmen of the World has
its War Memorial Hospital in San
Antonio, Tex., and is now build-
ing a chapel and bird sanctuary
there at a cost of $150,000. The
total cost of the Hospital will be
in excess of $750,000.00.

Bus Passengers Out of
Luck in Spanish Town
The poorer class of Spain believes
that if you cannot catch the man who
deserves punishment, the best thing to
do is to puniXh some one else, even
if vengeance is exacted upon those
who knew nothing
happened.
In a little village in the province
of Valencia a small boy was knocked
lown and slightly injured by a pass-
ing automobile. The driver did not
stop, but the villagers decided that
some one ought to be punished. So
they lined up in the main street, un-
der command of the magistrate, to
yummel the first automobilist who
came through.
Unluckily, the first car’ was a big
hus. It was halted and the driver and
all the passengers were pulled out
nd given a thorough beating. None
of them knew what it was all about,
hut the punishment was so real that
15 had to be treated by doctors when
he bus reached the nearest city. and
hree had to go to a hospital.

Secret of Caves
Scientists have been trying for years
fo piece together the story of the
Vlayas as revealed in the ruins of
their pyramids, temples and monu-
ments, and now the investigators are
-onfronted with a new problem, a se-
‘ies of vast caverns in Yucatan which
xtend for many miles, says Popular
‘echanies Magazine. Pictures and in
‘riptions on the walls indicate that
ie caves have been visited by human
eings, but so far archeologists have
‘en unable to decipher the marks or
stablish the time ‘when they were
irved. Were the caverns used for
urial places or for religious rites?
‘cence cannot tell. There is no evi
‘snee that thev were used fer human
ah’tation, although this is a possi
ility.
rel Gr ere.
Prune Grapes Now
Prune grape vines now to insure a
maximum crop of high quality fruit.
about what had.
FORTHEHOUSEWIFE
Following are a number of “Tried and True” Recipes fea-
turing simplicity, common sense and economy rather than
elaborateness and extravagance. These will appear in the
Bulletin weekly for a limited time.
CANDIES
White Candy or Mammy Bender Candy
1 I granulated sugar, 1 c. water, lump of butter, 2 tbsp.
vinegar. boil, but do not stir, until it strings. Pull until white.
Flavor with vanilla. N
Peanut Brittle
Mix 2 ec. of white Karo, one ec. sugar, 1 ¢. water, and cook
until it forms a soft ball when tried in cold water. Then stir
in 2 c. of raw peanuts and cook until it becomes a rich cream
color. Take off fire and stir in one tsp. of soda, beat until
stiff, and pour into buttered tins.
Fudge
2 c. granulated sugar, 14 c. brown sugar, 1 c¢ sweet milk,
2 tbsp. molasses or Karo, pinch of salt, 2 tbsp. cocoa. Boil
until it webs on the spoon, set aside and add piece of butter
size of walnut and 1 tbsp. marshmallow whip. Beat until
nearly set, then pour on wax paper.
Chocolate Easter Eggs
2 c. granulated sugar, 1 c. water, very small pinch of
cream of tartar, 1 tsp. vanilla, 1 ¢. moist cocoanut. Put the
cream of tartar, sugar and water on the stove and stir until
dissolved. Put in the thermometer. Wipe away crystals that
form on the side of the pan with a brush dipped in cold
water, or a moistened piece of cheesecloth. Cook to 238 de-
grees, or until a soft ball is formed in cold water. Pour on
marble or a greased platter and shock immediately bv
shaking cold water from the brush. Add the vanilla and
cocoanut. Allow it to stand a few minutes and then cream
with a broad, straight-edged spatula, using long, up and
down strokes. When it gets too hard to handle, knead with
the hands. Put in the refrigerator in a covered dish to sea-
son. Mold into shape, using the amount for the size desired
and dip in melted coating chocolate. Melt the chocolate
over hot water, never allowing it to get very warm. Dip in
a room not warmer than 68 degrees.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1931



Nut Puffs
Boil one and 14 ec. sugar, 4 c. water, 14 c. of white corn
syrup and 14 tsp. salt to 238 degrees. Pour very slowly 14
the amount of syrup over a stiff beaten egg white, beat con-
tinually. Boil the remaining syrup to 256 degrees F. Pour
this slowly into the mixture in bowl. Add 1 tsp. vanilla and
145 cup nut meats. Beat until mixture holds its shape, drop
on waxed paper.
Oatmeal Candy
14 1 butter, 1 c. table molasses, 2 14
sugar, 2 c. dry rolled oatmeal, 2 tbsp. flour. Bring butter
and molasses to a boil, then add the other ingredients and
put in moderate oven stirring ocassionally. It should be
somewhat harder than fudge when tried in cold water, but
not as hard as taffy. Pour on a buttered platter and when
cool enough cut in squares and roll in XXXX sugar.
Potato Candy
Boil and mash a white potato the size of an egg, 14 tsp.
salt, 3 tsp. cocoa, 1 tsp. vanilla, 1 tsp. cinnamon. Stir in con-
fectioners sugar until.its like dough, form into balls, set a-
way to harden. You can also dip this candy into sweet
chocolate to coat. You can omit the cocoa and flavor with
peppermint if you wish.
c. light brown
Chocolate Caramels
1 c. grated chocolate, 1 c. molasses or Karo, 1 c. sugar,
14 cup butter, 1 c. of cream or cream and milk. Flavor with
vanilla.
Chocolate Caramels
1 1H soft white sugar, 2 oz. chocolate, 4 tbsp. molasses,
1 c. sweet milk, butter size of a walnut, 1 tbsp. of flour,
mix with the sugar. Add chocolate after rest comes to a boil.
When cold enough cut and wrap in paper.
Cocoanut Blocks
Place in an agate kettle one pound of granulated sugar
and 14 c. water. As soon as the boiling point is reached, add
a small grated cocoanut; boil stirring all the time and when
the candy spins a thread when dropped from the spoon,
take from the fire and stir until creamy. Pour on buttered
platter and before it is cold mark off in squares.
Vanilla Caramels
1 c. granulated sugar, 1 c. cream, 1 c. Karo, 14 1b butter.
vanilla.
Sea Foam Candy
3 c. yellow sugar. 1 c. water, 1 tbsp. vinegar, heat gradu-
ally to boiling, stir only till sugar is dissolved then boil with-
out stirring until it forms a hard ball when tested in cold
water. Remove from fire and when syrup stops bubbling
pour gradually into the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs
beating constantly. Beat until the mixture will hold its
shape then add 1 tsp. vanilla and a cup of nut meats. Drop
on buttered nlatter.
‘Butterscotch Taffy
3 ¢. molasses, 2 c¢. light brown sugar,
butter. Boil until it hardens in cold water
After-Dinner Jelly
2 level tbsp. Knox Gelatin, 2 c. granulated sugar,
coloring if desired, 2 tbsp. orange juice and a little rind of
orange grated, 1 tbsp. lemon juice, few grains salt. Soak
gelatin in 2-3 c. cold water five minutes. Put sugar and 2-3
¢. water in saucepan, bring to the boiling point, add soaked
gelatin and let boil twenty minutes. Remove from fire, add
remaining ingredients and color green if desired. Turn into
a pan (first rinsed in cold water) to one inch thickness.
When set remove to beard, cut in cubes and roll in powder-
ed sugar.
lec. water,
Nut And Fruit Cheese
14 1b mixed nut kernels (Brazil nuts, English walnuts,
Black walnuts), 14 1b mixed fruit (dates, raisins, figs).
Chop all together through a food chopper. Mix and press

A strong well-grown plant in good
soil can support about 60 buds,

week thru the Bulletin.

 

in a square pan. Cut in squares and coat with sweet cho-
colate.

a —
*

green, |

OVERTISING
Advertising and not competition
is now the life of trade, according
to the advertising experts who me?
to attend the International Adver-
tising Association convention. The
delegates at this meeting heard a
number of interesting things.
Among these was the statement
by Charles Stelzle, New York ex-
pert, to the effect that if churches
do not advertise their “ware’”’—
spiritual upbuilding and moral
betterment for both the individual
and humanity—they cannot hope
to arouse interest among the mass-
es and fulfill the obligations plac-
ed upon them as parties to the
general spiritual movement.
Another speaker declared that
“advertising is greater than any
single moral force we know of to-
day. Advertising brings about
changes for the betterment of life
itself, changes which fuse into the
social and political life of the na-
ion.” .
It is now generally admitted by
economic forces everywhere that
advertising is the most important
development of modern business.
And it is also coming to be realiz-
ed that newspaper advertising is
the best kind of paid publicity. In
the convention just mentioned the
delegates who were advertising ex-
perts, agreed that newspaper ad-
vertising affords the best publicity
medium for the churches and all
church activities.
Advertising is no longer a theory.
It is a science. And it pays.

SPECIAL
FARM RELIEF
We are now equipped with the following machinery
so that we may better serve our farmer friends—
A.COLD PROCESS MOLASSES FEED MIXER
To make. better feeds at less cost.
A HAMMER MILL AND AN ATTRITION MILL
For grinding your grain and roughage to obtain the
greatest feeding value from it.
AN ELECTRO MAGNET
To keep all feed free from iron and metal which is
dangerous to stock.
A ROUGHAGE' GRINDER
Giving the opportunity to grind farm roughage and
mix it into the feed, saving the “price of shipped filler
feeds. N

GIVE US A TRIAL

Wolgemuth Bros.
FLORIN, PA.
If Better Feeds Are Made We Can Make Them.
Phone 151R4 Mt. Joy 57R6

A Kk
i





Ya
pa
FREEINSURANCE CERTIFICATE
COVERING DAMAGE TO ROOF FROM
“
Hail, Windstorm, Cyclone, Tornado
ISSUED WITH EVERY'RQOF WE APPLY
INVESTIGATE BEFORE YOU BUY A ROOF.
The COLDREN ROOFING COMPANY
401 NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PENNSYLV

feb18tf
EYE STRAIN
ANCE THROUGH LIFE
Do not worry along throwgh life with Eye Strain.
The symptoms are headachéired feeling, inflamed eyelids and
nervousness.
Have our
optometrists help to o A
Proper Fitting Glasses.
prone APPEL and WEBER
2413 OPTOMETRISTS AND OPTICIANS
LANCASTER,
40-42 N. Queen St.