ra RE BE joodeodool 5% 9 * WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, '31 1 ET E x a. wu Cal 1 1) 1 The Unien National Mount. Joy Bank MOUNT JO¥, PA. \ hb 3 Capital, Surplus and Profits, $502,000.00 % Can Serve You as Executor, Administrator, Assignee, Receiver, Guardian, Registrar of Stocks and A \ Bonds, Trustee, etc. 1 A 27-ACRE FARM Limestone Soil, Not a Rock on the Place and Level Here's one of the finest small farms I have ever offered. Excellent location along hard road and half mile from macadam road. GOOD BUILDINGS, Bank Barn, Tobacco Shed, 2«car Garage, Implement Shed, Milk House, Frame House, Well water and cis- tern. Good reason for selling. Don’t Delay but let me show you this excellent farm now. Present crops will tell land’s condition. Jno. E. Schroll Phone 41R2 MOUNT JOY Stehman Bros., Salunga, Pa. Your Nearest Ford Dealer SALES SERVICE We carry a Complete Line of Parts. Our Shop Has all Mod- ern Equipment and we pride ourselves in our Service. We Would Appreciate Your Patronage Stehman Bros., Salunga, Pa. “Goedel 4 5 % % $ 0) 0 $0 02 0. BOO 00 0 0 0b 8 0 0S bb wo ade SAVE $$$ ON COAL AND“GET A CLOCK FREE 1 have arranged truck coal from the mines direct to your home, thereby saving hamdling several times. I am going to pass this saving on to you. ARfg person buying Three Tons or More can save considerable mone¥,on coal now. Weight Guaran- teed. This applies to all kinds of coal. On All Orders for Six Tons we will Give Absolutely Free, a Very Beautiful Clock. ho F. H. BAKER. MOUNT JOY, PA. Phone 156-R3. ay, 90 0% 0% 6% 6% 0% 6% 6% 0% % 2% 0. 0. 0. 0. 0 Ua? at ot 06? 000 050 059 0.0050 059 0 00500 050-0, > PLUMBING a EATING 9 a 9, 0 Xa x > Q > 0 3 RB. on x 3 3 = © 0. 2 bo ode PROMPT SERVICE JOSEPH L. HEISEY ™ & Phone—179R8 FLORIN, PENNA. & & THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. CHG Lr Kae OHHH AR CH RH 1 Haurled Aside By DCROTHY DOUGLAS o Bi 3 Cniritual Intruder : X CHO EOC CHOC BA ON A (© by McClure Newopaper Syndicate.) (WNU Service) ENWAY thought of her as the spiritual Intruder because he had only found her in the world of spirits, She was an ephemeral being who filled all his waking dreams with vis- ions o” what a woman should be, Fenway was only admitting his normality when ne let himself know that he wanted to marry and have a wife about the house. He visualized a sewing basket there beside the sunny bay window and perhaps a carelessly flung feminine something lying on the chesterfield. He would even like to see thc pink satin slippers she had kicked off making a warm touch of color on the blue velvet carpet, Yes, Fenway wanted very much to marry but that Spiritual Intruder kept coming between hin and lal the flesh- and-blood girls he took any kind of fancy to. His mind was held in thrall by that soul of some one and she per- meated his very existence with her unknown lure. Fenway had tried at times to shake off that clinging vine and grasp the more tangible happiness of an earthly presence but it was like attempting to blow the fragrance out of the heart of a rose, In his dreams this Intruder had raven hair and eves of smoldering brown and her cheeks were scarlet and her lips a erushed petal of crimson. She must sing. He was keen on good musie, With the drawing near of his broth- er's wedding at v hich Fenway was to be best man he wished more than ever that he too night be leading a lovely lace-clad bride to the altar in- stead of just giving the ring to his brother, then leading a maid of honor back through the church back to the waiting car. It was to be a big affair—just such a ceremony as Fenway himself would like—ros~ emhowered church, twelve gold-clad bridesmaids, all of whom Fenway had met, and the lovely bride in silver. Her maid, coming from the West, Fenway had not as yet met. She was an old school friend of Janet's. On the morning of the wedding Fen- way and his bridegroom brother left the house and each tried to buck up the other for there was no doubt that wed- dings were nerve-racking affairs. Each wore a tiny white rosebud in the im- maculate lapel and the best man felt for the ring every few minutes. “Wish you were joining me,” laughed the groom. “But I'll be glad when it's over. Hope Janet won't keep us walit- ing.” Janet didn’t. She was prompt, just as a lovely bride should be, and when she stood at the altar, her face glori- fied by the love she had for Tom Fen- way, Jack thought he had never seen anyone so exquisitely beautiful. Then he saw Beth Sawyer. The maid of honor was accepting the bride's white glove and when she felt it securely in her hand she looked straight across at Jack Fenway. His knees became as pulp and his heart thumped a mad paean. The blood mounted his forehead and he strove to detach his glance from the glowing blue eyes still clinging to his own. And while the ceremony continued Fenway was only conscious of Beth Sawyer in her gold and silver clouds of lace. Most of all he was conscious that for the first time in his memory his Spiritual Intruder was hurled into the body of a real woman, They were one. In the girl standing quietly waiting Fenway knew he had found his future wife. A moment later, the procession started from the altar and Fenway felt her hand warm as a nestling dove on his arm. He looked into her eyes and smiled, but his throat refused to pass even the softest remark. Fenway knew nothing about the etiquette of returning to the wedding breakfast. He only knew that he hus- tled the maid of honor into his own waiting car and drove her himself. When they got out of the greatest of the crush he turned to her. “Who are you?’ he asked breath- lessly. The billowing mass of silver and gold and the fragrance from it all was the sweetest thing Fenway had ever experienced. He could more than fancy the pink satin slippers on his blue rug. ‘I'm Beth Sawyer,” he girl an- swered him, and Fenway wondered how he could have supposed his fu- ture wife would have raven hair and dark eyes when this golden glory was looking at him, “I couldn't get on from the West a minute earlier as my engagement—" “You're not the Beth Sawyer who sings—” Fenway could scarcely be- lieve, and yet—certainly, then, her spirit had found its way to him through those many records he had of Jer glorious voice. The thing was not so strange as it had seemed. “Yes T am.” And Beth smiled as if a long-expected moment had at last arrived. “And what's more, Mr. Jack Fenway, I have had your photograph on my table for nearly a year—so I know you quite well—don’t I? Janet sent me one of Tom, of course, so I could admire her future husband, and vou are algo in the picture. I have—" She dropped her heavy eyelashes swiftly. The light that jumped into Fenway’s eves was far too brilliant to be met without a flutter. She did not tell him, just then, that every day for nearly a year she had looked longingly at his pictured face and that in her heart she knew he was the One Man. ID Eee. Baked Bean Supper St. Mary's Guild of the St. Episcopal church of this place will hold a Baked Bean supper in the basement of the church om Saturday October 17. —— msm memes Provide Bull Pen Every dairy farm should have a Luke's bull pen. Ease and safety in handl- ‘feeds on nectar and similar substanc- ing are thus assured and the health and vigor of the bull are benefited. 2 nw Cf 1A Ji Mili NEL \ r / hy CANNER AND FARMER EOPLE ‘demand a higher de-| gree of perfection in all things today than they did a few years back—better houses. better clothes, better food. Before the era of modern cui Ng a vho went into store to buy a und of string beans, for ex- 1ple, expected to take the bad «th the good and make the bes ui it. Today she expects all the beans to be uniformly good. The perfection attained in re- cent years by canned foods, and the low prices at which they are sold at all seasons, has no doubt been instrumental in raising the standard of all foods. Perhaps you have wondered how such a uniform perfection of canned foods has been attained—why all canned peaches are good peaches, and all the peas in a can are “alike as peas in the pod.” From the Ground Up The answer goes back of the canning factory itself to the fields of the farmer who contracts in advance to sell his crops to the canner. For, with the exception of fish, the food materials which are canned—that is fruits, vege- tables, milk, meat and syrup— are products of the farm. Each year canners spend several hun- dred million dollars for fruits, vegetables and milk. Tbe reason they contract for so much of this in advance is in order to get a perfect product. Canned foods never would have attained their present popularity if canners had depended for their raw materials on market surplus or stock that ‘s otherwise unmarketable. Fehr ICNICS, which passed out of fashion somewhat when re- freshment-stands popped up along the high-ways offering everything from New England sea-food chow- ders to Southern barbecue sand- wiches, are being revived in a new and interesting form. Instead of the big market-basket filled with bulky ham sandwiches, a glass jar of potato salad, some hard-boiled eggs and home-made cake, the modern picnic takes on something of the atmosphere of a smart supper party, its menu in- cluding delicacies from cocktail to nuts. The party starts with the pack- ing of the picnic supper. For the modern hostess has no notion of toiling in the kitchen the nizht before the party, baking cakes and good things, and rising early in the morning to wrap and pack them so that everything will be in readiness for the guests. In- stead she phones the delicatessen and the bakery and has her list of good things on hand. Then, when her friends come in, she enlists their services. Shakes, Slices and Spreads Someone is delegated to shake up a fruit cocktail—or a tomato drink which is especially refresh- «ing and appetizing—and have it So the care of the canners really starts in the soil in which their products are grown. Some of them even produce their own raw materials, and hire agricul- tural experts to handle that part of the business for them. Not only must the various fruits and vegetable products be varieties suitable for canning, but these products must be grown near enough to the cannery to permit them to ripen fully in the field and to insure prompt canning. Canners usually select their om seeds or stocks, or advise their grower, or the farmer for wu crops they have contracted, in their selection. After proper seed selection follow proper cultivation, proper harvesting and prompt delivery. All this is essential to the pro- ducticn of good raw material. The canner follows the seed from the soil to the can. He knows, for instance, that he must have pure seed peas of uniformly ma- turing varieties so that they will ripen evenly and, with favorable weather and under proper super- vicion, wield a satisfactory prod- uct. If either the seed or .the weather prove unreliable, the precduct will not be satisfactory, and that is his risk. vn Hos Farmer Benefits One great risk .is eliminated, however, for the farmer who selis his crops to the canner in ad: vance. That is the risk of market and market price. So he can de- vote all his efforts to raising good food, and the road from farm to a I RU A \ li Thy LET'S PARK AND PICNIC ready in the thermos bottle or jug. Someone else slices three kinds of bread—white, rye and whole- wheat in paper-thin slices, butters them and wraps them in waxed paper, ready for making sand- wiches “on the location” from cold sliced meats, sardines, canned sandwich spreads, canned cheese and other delicacies. Or sometimes a repertoire of “different” sandwiches are selected and quickly prepared, and some cold meats, anchovies and other dainties are taken along in their respective containers ready to ar- range as an assortment of hors: d’ceuvres on an attractive wooden lacquer tray with wooden fork, just before the feast begins. Preparing the “Eats” Crisp lettuce leaves are wrapped in cheese cloth and these form the garnish for a fruit salad which can be quickly made from a can of assorted fruits packed for this purpose. Mayonnaise goes along in a can or jar, all ready to top the salad. Nuts, either salted or plain, can be bought in caus, and these, served in paper cups, put the “supper-party” finish to the menu. The food should be attractively wrapped. Most women keep on hand colorful tin boxes in which the holiday candy or fruit cake table is thereby appreciably short- ened. This combination of effort by the farmer and canner is what has brought about a consumption of canned foods commensurate with their dietetic value, their :leanliness, their wholesomeness, and the dependability ard whole- someness with which housewive= now associate them. Here are tested recipes for housewives who are interested in adding to their list of new ways to serve these superior fcods: Apple Sauce Loaf Cake: Cream one-chird cup butter and one cup sugar. Add one teaspoon soda to one and one-fourth cups canned apple sauce, and add to the but- ter and sugar mixture. Add two cups flour, one teaspoon baking powder, a few grains of salt, one- half teaspoon cloves, cne-half tea- spoon allspice and one-fourth teaspoon nutmeg. Then add the grated rind of one lemon. Add one-half cup raisins and one-half cup nuts (reserve a little of the flour to sift over them). Bake in a loaf in a 350 degree oven for from 45 to 60 minutes. Spinach and Beet Mold: Cook fresh, spring spinach until tender, or use canned spinach. Drain, season well with butter, salt and pepper and pack while hot into a buttered ring mold. Keep hot while preparing beets. Heat canned beets, chop, and season well with butter, salt and pepper. Turn spinach mold out onto a platter and fill center with beets. Chopped, hard-cooked eggs may be some sprinkled over the spinach ring * was contained, for this particular purpose. The following tested recipes for new sandwiches may prove help- ful: Sardine and Beet Sandwiches: Spread rye bread with softened butter, then with a very thin coat- ing of mustard. Arrange several boned sardines on each slice, cover with thinly sliced beet- pickles and top with another slice of buttered bread. Deviled Peanut Sandwiches: Mix together the contents of one small can of deviled ham, one- third cup peanut butter, a few grains of salt and one-fourth cup of mayonnaise. Spread between buttered slices of graham bread. Swiss Date Sandwiches: the contents of a can of cheese thin, and place on buttered whole wheat bread Mix equal ities of chopped dates and and moisten with mayon- naise. Spread this mixture on the cheese, and cover with an- other slice of bread. Crab-and-Fgqg Sandwiches: move tendons from one-haif of a 6l%-ounce can of crabmeat, add one hard-cooked chopped egg, and moisten with mayonnaise. Add a little lemon juice to tart, and snread between thin slices of | buttered white bread.* Slice Swiss Re- make BEST Fishermen have long known when | fish bi mosquitoes bite best, or worst, have been revealed by the United States Department of Ag- riculture. There are mosquitoes that bite on- ly at night, others that bit only dur {ing the day, some that bite best at sunrise and some best at sundown. There is one grain of comfort for the mosquito ridden citizen. Only the female es. Here are some mosquito schedules MOSQUITO BITING \ | | it te best, Now the periods when | entomologists of mosquito bites. The male clothing to bite. known under the scientific Mansonia, a severe biter, is busiest just at dusk. It spends tthe the grass and will bite The “rain night and The yellow fever mosquito usually | bites close to the ground or The fresh water name day barrel” or common mos- PERIODS ARE REVEALED |quito bites only at |find her victims no matter how dark is. When flying it makes that ir- ritating singing noise which is fam- | liliar to everyone. can | day if disturbed. { Malarial tl mn College Pheasants State wen sneer tll ~~. Kill Late Weeds of | for they can go to seed. ——— Eee in| When inneed of Printing, (anything) during the kindly remember the Bulletin. mosquitoes will bite night long and sometimes, too, in the daytime, especially on dark days. College officials have releas- attacks led 240 ringneck pheasants raised on from behind, and often crawls under the experimental farm there in co-op- It bites only in the eration with the Game Commission. daytime and is busiest early in the] morning and late in the afternoon. It | flies quietly. It will bite indoors all | By day. cultivating the garden late {the season some weeds start to grow marsh mosquito |so late that they are winter-killed be- all in PAGE THREE TIF USED OUR WNL THIS NEWVSPAPER. MY SALE WAS As REAL KNOCKOUT * 118 iN WIS ADS Furnished by Time counts In applying for patents. Don't risk de- lay im protecting your ideas. Send sketch or model for instructions or write for FREE book, PREVENT those TERRIBLE HEAD COLDS Bl you candoit Zonite disinfects the nose, mouth and throat. An activegermicide. Use regularl and you won't have colds. 30¢, 60¢ and $1.00 “How to Obtain a Patent” and “Record of Invention” form. formation on how to proceed. Communica tions strictly confidential. eficient service. CLARENCE A. O'BRIEN No charge for in- Prompt, caresal, Registered Patent Attorney 43-A Security Savings & Commercial Bank Building (Directly across street from Patent Office) WASHINGTON, D. C. STONE “ay, . Betore placing your order elsewhere, see us. Crushed Stonedlso turers sills and Lintels. J. N. Stauffer & B of C(Concy Blocks, MOUNT JOY, PA. FOUND © ot A) dasuified DUMns LOCLTE THE TINDER. WanT Ass bo recover lost s ~the results will surprise Use Our wav. pr Wes uy CHEAP HOUSE AT FLORIN— Have a Double House along Main St., 5 and 6 rooms, viie side has heat, both have water and electrie wo car per cent. only $4,000. Jno. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. garage. Rents show 10 investment. Price