The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 19, 1933, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    







 


A y - .
n ir 1 ¥ / ! : { 3
a i ! {
oD 3 NG ’
/ (
yo
fy 9th, 1938
~ ‘
PAGE FOUR THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 19th,
| SUNDAY DINNER |
| SUGGESTIONS
By ANN PAGE
| ODAY may I present to you the
summer or ready-to-eat branch of
the sausage family, This family to-
gether with your own cold cooked
meats is more than willing and able
"5 to help you plan quick and easy meals
Adve oo State ¥ oF Crore. for hot days. Cook your roasts on
A Tax. oe cool days and be ready for the sure to
follow hot ones. In the ready-to-eat
On Junel,1933 - average sausage family are the various ham,
gasoline tax was A as much beef and tongue bolognas, liverwurst,
pi 1 4 of luncheon specialties and the dry
as cost oi the fuel itself / sausages, cervelat (with no garlic)
and salami (with garlic), Other well-
known members of the family are
head cheese and blood sausage.
Boiled, baked and spiced sliced ham
are also economical ready-to-eat
meats.
Jellies and preserves are delicious
with cold plates. Use them and peanut
butter for the children’s sandwiches.
Peaches and cantaloupes are good,
plentiful and reasonable this week as
are also green peas.
The Quaker Maid Kitchen presents
the following menus,
Low Cost Dinner
Pan-broiled Chopped Steak


|
| now collects |f a
| |'3 faves § ——/
| on each gallon, NN re \
of gasoline / | EY Ny aL TAK )
|| forthe Budget | Fron fhe £310 roads
|
|






Catch
Current
Sing » Prices









 
ge : tt ANS
ye for the Industrial | across the continen Prepared Spaghetti Buttered Bees
2 Recovery Act | EVERY YEAR | = Bread and Butter
Blanc Mange with
Raspberry Preserves
Tea or Coffee Mite
 

 



; » a1 : "GV ARN Medium Cost Dinner
Z KY / AR ESF,
B »f ] ! ] | > ¢ as / KF, {J with Cold Chicken Vegetable Salad
¢ OI € 1€ IC € ur ns p- Ee r f A A / GASOLINE Currant Jelly Pickled Beets
Revere INN * ER L152 7 4 would £0 s¢ Bread 2nd Butter
von AN a ir ir noforisi oating Islar
. N Sy ia YY if) $600 000.000 | Coffee (hot or iced) Mite
“ . . . ma 2 AUTOMOTIVE oN "(Nk oe 7 n . I} Jal | ; 3
Time and tide wait for no n FREIGHT 1: Ni MN additional Yery Special Dinuer
i | / AD a, f 2, Moy : Stuffed Celery
Nor are the low prices of today and the turn pays the Nl Moog // : | Boast Beat ood CUNY in
of the tide toward higher prices going to ranro = UB 2 Mer | i Peas in Cream
sd 74 z ye: Urs ~ XE © omato
wait for those who haven’t the vision, cour- enlist / (oa Se ; po | Rolls Butter
: 2. Ca 98) SN. oa iC Iced Wat 1
age and foresight to buy when prices are at TAX BILL = fe Na? ETN A | Colton Gia So

the lowest ebb in 15 years.
Sid ss corgi of Bi tie gr is | Keeping Down the Waistline - - - With Myrtle Miller All BUNDLES
prices is more than a mere simile . . . it'sa
certainty . . . price tides change as surely
as ocean tides.





















=
| :
Fi Exercise 1. Prone position, legs extended. o%® Exercise 3. Bi- r=, » Must C
bh « Elevate knees. Extend begs to prone posi- 7 cycling. Ex- 4
4
tion. Raise body, bending over towards
0) | 4 LE BR J
STRANGE ruling! Yet a ruling that is ad-
hered to strictly by every church. The
bundles in question are WORRY, CARE.
They must be left at the door when you en-
ter your Church. And when you come out
again, the bundles will be gone! No mat-
Fat ter how heavy your burdens, no matter
A how long or far you have carried them,
they will be lifted from you as you enter.
Today's prices on food, clothing, furniture, tend both legs
furs, cars and other things are from 40% to
100% lower than they have been in years
and lower than they will be before the turn
of another season.
/ vertically in
7 A air. Lower left
-
:
N
v


leg and raise
slowly trying _ -
to achieve ro-
tary motion as |
right leg is
lowered. Re -
Don’t be caught off your guard when it’s so peat 10 times.
i i ise 2. Sitting position. Draw
important that your savings be guarded. Exerc gp
up left leg close to body. Roll en-
tire body sideways to right until =a,
right shoulder touches floor. Re-# Sw
gain sitting position. Repeat with
right leg, rolling to left. Do exer.
HE cise 5 times with each leg. io
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
Finally a
brisk rub-
down with
double hand-
ful of salt
and shower
bath.







 
Remember that! When things are dark-
i th. By doing them conscien- d the hill ahead
Keeping the waistline slim and BY EMILY BANKS tee est, and you are weary, an e hill ahea
TE — - i tiously every morning, your figure i
S tha Ne es Bibi Worcester Sali Iigtimia 1 oor 3s slim looks too steep, and you feel that you can-
* 4 J : and physically you 11 feel “in 1 2
Myrtle Miller, formerly a : 2 not take another step, remember your
or This Localit S Com lete News ervice by Miss jegfeld Follies and | the pink of good health.
y P featured dapcer With ile Zieges Be sure to follow the exercises with a brisk rub- Church.
dancing star of many Broadway successes.
i ictured above are not difficult | down with your favorite table salt and & refreshing
Il tin Ne boi habit upon arising, just } shower in order to obtain the utmost of exhilarating,
e u as important as washing your face or brushing your | tonie value, Leave Worry an

Read


Care at Home



Your Church offers you strength, rest,
courage. Let your Church help you. Come
Let you Church help you. Come often.
Come in sorrow, but come, too, in joy. For
though the Church can make your sorrow
less bitter it can also make your joy more
sweet. Come to Church next Sunday and
leave WORRY and CARE at the deor

q


COME TO CHURCH SUNDAY

Chick Fullis, first ma-
jor league player to




SAINT MARY'S CHAPEL
als 00 hiss, Riso DONEGAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
tional -League batting. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN
 





TRADES HORSES FOR AIR.
PLANE RIDE—Jean Barnes,
bronzed Montana cowgirl ar-
rived in Chicago after a six-
# ty-eight day horseback ride
from Butte to the World's
“Can’t Afford It”
MAROONED 24 hours Fair. With the verdict, “It y
® on this jetty, 10 men, was a great trip—but never !
9? trapped by storm, again” she traded her horse
a 1 ® were rescued by Coast for an airplane ticket back
Guardsmen at 8an- home over United Air Lines
dusky, Ohio, and covered the same dis-
4 ¢ tance in 12 hours that had
required more than two
months by horse.
KRAYBILL’'S MENNONITE CHURCH
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
| MT. JOY MENNONITE CHURCH
ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
CHURCH OF- GOD
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
FLORIN UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
TRINITY EVANGELICAL CONGREGA-
TIONAL CHURCH




 














 

HE use of that phase does not suggest
the inability to buy so much as the de-
sire to practice rigid economy . . . to save
. . . to deny yourself needed and necessary
commodities.
 

ST. MARK’S U. B. CHURCH

But Man, oh Man, and you, too Madam, how
better and more effectively can you practice
economy and thrift than to buy when prices
are at their lowest ebb in years?
How more certainly can you insure economy
than to replace worn or out-of-date furniture
than when new is selling for one-third of A. M. ANDREWS, New
. York capitalist, makes
what it sold for 15 years ago? Or to stock hrest Lo. mine inl
up on food products when they are 40% less fustsy with new light |
. . . evice ca
than at any time since the war? Or clothing ektrolite, Flameless,



| PROGRESS 30 CENTURIES
AGO is seen at the Century of
| Progress Exposition in Chicago—
The authentic reproduction of the |
marvelous Temple of Solomon,
created by Dr. John W. Kelchner |












: : wickless and without of N 35 ye |
when $53 today will buy you what you paid rts, Vightor Ph MRS. HELEN WILLS MOODY Y = AN ig J a > |
$100 for in 19127 intense heat when Winning Ble of her matches at orite for Fair visitors of every
merely exposed to air. Imbledon,

faith and creed. |

What you really cannot afford to do is not
buy because you cannot afford to miss to-
day’s low levels . . . prices that are an ac-
tual boon to reduced incomes . . . to the
practiee of sensible, far-sighted economy.







Toe BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.

a Sa SL
THE COOLEST PLACE AT CHICAGO'S WORLD'S FAIR—The new and magnificent Pabst Ca-
sino, girting a lagoon over which delightfuily cool breezes from' Lake Michigan are wafted to the
patruns of the Casino’s al fresco terrace as they sit and drink Pabst Biue Ribbon Beer and listen to
the sparkling tunes of the “Old Maestro,” Ben Bernie and all of his lads.






po