The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 11, 1933, Image 3

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11th, 1933
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
Merchants who want to in-
crease receipts,
should tell peo-
ple what they have to sell thru
the advertising columns of the
Bulletin.
People read weekly news-
paper ads before they read cir-
culars, or any such advertising.
A person glancing
cular invariably throws
over a Ccir-
it into the
stove or waste basket when thru.
Newspaper ads
are oft-
times read by every member
of the family.
THESE ARE
FACTS. THINK THEN ACT

For This Locality’s Complete News Service
Read—The Bulletin
|








A 52-Acre Farm
In Donegal Township, Limestone Land
STONE HOUSE, BANK BARN
Shedding for 12-Acres of Tobacco
Good Stripping Room and Cellar, Other Buildings




























creek flows through farm, two excelient meadows, land
fronts on a state road, Fruit, good water and productive











soil.
Here is a good farm and can be bought worth the
Prospective purchasers


money owing to sickness.
should at least inspect it. For further details call on
Jno. E. Schroll, Reiter
Phone 41] No. 441 MOUNT JOY, PA.
















 

{
Sr


>





7 WHOLESOME y
SLICES

J. K. FREYMEYER, BAKERY
ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.


Phone 41W
WATCHES JEWELRY
Expert Repairing
F. J. TURTON
JEWELER
28 E. Main St. MT. JOY, PA.





THE BULLETIN
Makes Four Kinds of Credii

Creait


genmer, Pde
Two
agencies serving farmers in the five
new agricultural financing
here recently
Credit Ad-
of the Fed-
of Baltimore in co-
Henry Morgenthau,
of the Farm Credit
Administration, announces Chas. S.
Jackson, President of the Federal
Land Bank of Baltimore
The two new credit agencies are
the Production Credit Corporation of
Baltimore and the B' ‘more Bank
for Cooperatives. They will serve
farmers in Pennsylvania, Maryland,
Virginia, West Virginia, Delaware,
and the District of Columbia.
The two new institutions, with the
Federal Land Bank of Baltimore
and the Intermediate Credit Bank of
will make available the
short-term, long-term, and inter-
mediate credit for farmers.
The new production credit corpor-
states were organized
the
officials
as a part of Farm
ministration by
eral Land Bank
operation with
Jr., Governor
ation, Mr. Jackson says, was organ-
ized with an initial capital of $7,500,
000 to be paid for by the Governor
of the Farm Credit Administration
on behalf of the United States.
The function of this corporation is
not to lend money to farmers for
production purposes, but to sub
scribe for Class A stock in the local
production credit associations to be
organized wholly within the second
Federal Land Bank District. These
production credit associations will
loan to farmers for production pur-
poses, securing such loans by liens
on growing crops and other personal
property or livestock. Loans will be
made for periods of one year or less
none for more than 3 years.
Production Credit associations, Mr
Jackson points out, may be organ-
ized by ten or more farmers, and
charters, rules and regulations will
be issued by the Governor of the
Farm Credit Administration in
Washington. The associations will
be local institutions and their ter-
ritovies will be defined. Organiza-
SHORT-TERM, ! AND
INTERMEDIATE FARM CREDIT:—

Available io "zrms in State
Needs of Farmers in
& Five States Now Served by
farm Credit ‘Administration
‘ Unit in Baltimore

1. First Mortgage Credit
2. Emergency Farm
Mortgage Credit
8. Production Credit
4. Credit for Cooperatives dion
Chay
Yederal Land Bank
of Baltimore
will
tion of these associations start
shortly after the Production Credit
Corporation of Baltimore is ready to
purchase Class A stock in them.
It is expected that with the estab-
lishment of production credit asso-
ciations in many communities, the
need for regional agricultural credit
corporations and also for feed, seed
and fertilider loans by the govern-
ment will diminish to such a point
that they no longer will be neces
ary. At the same time there will
be built up a larger number of asso-
ciations capable of handling pro-
duction credit cooperatively. The
stock of each will be owned wholly
by the borrowing farmers, the gov-
ernment gradually discontinuing the
ownership of any stock in the asso-
ciations
The new Baltimore Bank for Co-
operatives, also organized recently,
will make operating and facility
loans to farmer cooperative mark-
eting and purchasing organizations.
Commodity marketing credit will be
provided through the Federal Inter-
mediate Credit Bank of Baltimore.
It will continue to make loans on
the security of warehouse receipts
which in many cases will be supple-
mented by additional loans from the
Land Bank Commissioner's agent.
Production credit will be made
available through the Federal Inter-
mediate Credit Bank of Baltimore,
the Production Credit Corporation
of Baltimore, and local Production
Credit Associations to be established
throughout the district.
This set-up provides a complete


type of agricultural credit extended
by agencies under the supervision

of the federal government.

| pecially the
| write
| model them after the style of Jeff-
representing staple agricultural com
modities.
This coordinated credit system,
states Mr. Jackson. will furnish the |
first farm mortgage credit from the
Federal Land Bank of his district,
and coordinated credit system for |
agriculture. Through it a farmer
can obtain full information on all
Sale Register

Saturday, Oct. 14—On the premis-
es, at the place of business of Reist
Mummau, at Rheems, a large lot of

household goods by Mrs. Catharine
Leonard. Mumma, auct,
Saturday, Ortober 14th—On the
premises on the Maytown and the
Elizabethtown Road, at Ramsey's
Toll Gate, one mile north of May-
town, public sale of implements by
Mrs, Susan Frank C. S. Frank, auct

Saturday, Oct, 21-—On the premi-
ses, corner East Main and Jacob Sts
Mount Joy, real estate and personal
property by Christ Weidman and
PAGE THRER
PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH

What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has Te
Say This Week

Margaret Rahm, executors of John
Rahm, deceased. Personal property
at 1 P. M. and Real Estate at 3 P.
M. Frank, auct.
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Saturday, Oct. 28—On the premises
in East Donegal township, on the road
leading from Marietta to the Colebrook
Road, one mile north of Marietta, real
estate, household and kitchen furniture
and farm implements by Henry K.
Breneman. John F, Waser, Auct.

Saturday, Oct. 28—At 2 P. M. on the
premises in the village of Florin, real
estate and some household goods by
William Widman, Jr., Administrator of
the Estate of William Widman, Sr., de-
ceased. Vogle, Auct. See advertise-
ment.
WHEN LETTERS WERE FORMAL
Thomas Jefferson was a great let- |
he wiote |
thousands of letters every year. And
of course they had to be very formal
People in those days were serious-
minded and they did not descend to
amiliarities. Jefferson was himself
a man of plain habits and tastes, as
we know, but he felt that he had to
comply with the fashions in letter
writing which the high-hat people
of that day set.
Here, for instance. is the way he
closed one letter: “Repeating to you
my sincere sense of your goodness
to me, and my wishes to prove it on
every occasion, adding my sincere
prayer that Heaven may bless you
with many years of life and health,
I pray you to accept here the hom-
age of those sentiments of respeet
and attachment with which I have
the honor to be your most obedient
and humble servant.”
Bear in mind, they had no type-
writers in those days. All letters, as
well as writings of every sort, had
to be done laboriously in long hand,
and with quill pens. Try to imagine
what people of today would say—es- |
younger generation—if
they were told they would have to
their letters by hand and
ter writer. It is said that
erson’s time!


Gull Delivers Fish
to Hands of Angler


Taft. Ore.—John Marple, while
fishing in Siletz bay, noticed two
seagulls fighting over a 15-pound
hlueback salmon. Fina one of
them conquered the other and flew
away with its cate
The fish was so heavy the bird
ould not carry it. As it flew low
over Marple's head he reached up
and plucked the salmon out of the
seagull’s beak. That's Marple’s

story.





How to Reduce Heating Costs
4y JOHN BARCLAY,
Heating Expert




There are three simple damper
controls on every properly regu-
lated home heating plant, and an
understanding of the proper use of
each of them will help you to save
time, trouble and money.
First, there is the turn damper,
or “butterfly” damper. With this
control you can prevent “chimney
loss.” Many people believe that un-
burned coal that drops to the ash-
pit produces the greatest waste.
This is not so. Actually, the heat
you waste up your chimney is ten
times as much as the greatest pos-
sible loss through your ash-pit.
It iz very simple to reduce this
“chimney loss.” Just keep your
turn damper as nearly closed as
possible. By turn damper is meant
that disc or plate like damper in-
side the pipe leading from your
furnace te your chimney. The next
time you fix your fire, turn the
handle of your turn damper one-
sixteenth of an inch. If your fire
still burns freely, turn it another
sixteenth of an inch. Repeat this
until you find the ideal adjustment
that gives you the greatest amount
of useful heat with the minimum
amount of chimney loss, then in-
dicate this position with a chalk
mark on your smoke pipe, and
leave the damper in that position.
De not attempt to regulate your
fire each day by moving the turn
damper. It should be left as nearly
closed as possible at all times dur-
ing the burning season. The only
time when it should be moved at
all, after you find the most advan-
tageous position for it, is at the
beginning of the very cold season,
and again at the beginning of the
very mild season—to compensate
for the difference in outside tem-
peratures.
Next week I will discuss the
check damper and the ash-pit dam-
per, which are used to control the
speed of the fire.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Q: We are going to put a heating
system In our bungalow. Do
you advise hot water? Which is
better a round or square boiler?
F. A. B, Richland, N. J.
A: Hot water heating systems are
very satisfactory, but cost
slightly more for installation



MOUNT JOY

than the one pipe steam sys-
tems. The modern hot air sys-
tems for the bungalow type of
home are also very satisfactory
and have a comparatively low
first cost. There is very little
difference in performance be-
tween round and square boilers.
In the smaller types, the round
seems to be favored while in
the larger installations the
square boiler is more adaptable.
J. P., Scranton, Penna. — 1
have answered your inquiry
with a personal letter. A coal
dealer's service man, heating
contractor, or plumber can
often make valuable sugges-
tions in cases such as you de-
scribe.
Q: We have a two story home
heated by a pipeless furnace
located in basement. Our first
floor gets overheated, while
second floor is scarcely heated
at all. When I am descending
it seems the heat pockets about
half way up the stairs. What
is your opinion? KE. S. S., An-
napolis, Md.
A: This difficulty is common where
pipeless heaters are used in twe
story buildings. The cause of
our trouble is lack of eircu-
ation. In your case, the cold
air from upstairs meets the
warm air from the first floor
in the stairway “opening and
stops circulation.
The lease costly method to
increase the circulation is to
rovide a separate warm air
eader from the furnace to the
upstairs hall, and also provide
a separate cold air return to the
furnace. The register should be
located either in the floor in
front of the lower step, or in
the viser of the lower step. This
will provide a positive circula-
tion and heat the upstairs hall.
The heat to the bedrooms will,
of course, come from the hall
through the open doors.
(If you have any heating prob-
lems address John Barclay, Room
1814, 120 Broadway, New York
City. He will be glad to reply in a
personal letter.)
| whipped
Woman, Aged 94, Walks
Mile a Day for Exercise
Walnut Ridge, her
theory of plenty of exercise to gain a
long life, Mrs. Martha E. Jones, nine
ty-four years old, walks a mile a day
Ark.—Following


Der onser dawg ich en brief
greeked fun ma maidel un doh is
my answer:
“My Liever Shwilkey Ich het
garn os du mere ous meim druvvel
helfa daidsht. Ich hob tzwae boova
os cooma mich saena. Ich bin de
ansich duchter un my dawdy hut
twae boweri un blendy geld uff in-
dressa. Der aned fun denna boova
is en hard shogicher bowers boo.
Are is shae ga-nunk awver si hend
sin row un is glaeder fitta ene net.
Are is so arlich un ufrichtich os der
denked de weldt un
dawg long un
olles fun mere, Der onner is en
yunger mon os in sime laeva nix
g'shoft hut un nemond wase we are
en laeva maucht. Are hut olsfart
we’s bobeer uff de wond—awver ’sis
de besht glaeder un se fitta ene os
ga-report os are daid net uft ga-
nunk settla mit sime shnider, Are
is orrick politei is en gooter donser
uncon schwetza os we en lawyer.
Are sawgt are wet mich usht far en
lady—en “‘ornmaent’ hut are mich
g’hasa—un ich breicht in meim laeva
nix shoffa. Now. Gottlieb, sawg
mere wella funi denna boova sull
ich hira?”
Sally Lauderbach
Well, Sally, ich hob usht
g’hired in meim laeva un ich glawb
net os ich widder so en risk runna
daid os we ich sela mohls hob. Do
hare bin ich net ga-booked uff so
socha, awver ich geb dere my opin-
jon un es sull dich nix kushta. Der
hend
ae mohl
si
bowers boo hut rowe un
glaeder fitta ene net. Well, ich wet
olsfart liever en darrer gowl kawfa
os goota points wised os en fedder
os de shtaggers hut. De hend sin
row, Ferleicht won are en loafer
ware done wara si hend glot. Won
is don sin si rowe
hend en disgrace. Si glaeder fitta
ene net? So! Well, ferleicht sin de
duch batzawled. Per onner boo
will dich hira un nunner seddla.
Sawg du eme are set arsht uff-sedd-
la—mit sime snnider. My lieve
Sally, en arlicher, ug-richticher,
ondlicher. flishicher bowers boc is
so feel wart os en gonser shoafshtoll
foll fowlenser. Der aned boo will
dich holda we en lady. Duch net?
Hut are g'sawt? Mit dime dawdy
sime geld. E-yaw? En mon os SO
reddy is far farshprecha maucha is
der arsht mon far se farbrecha, un
en mon os het wase we mer geld far-
deencd dare wase aw net wee's tsu
holdta. Dime dawdy si howfa mawg
grose Si awver ich hob in mime lae-
va nuch ken geldhock g'saena os so
os are ken budda hut. En
hond os row is is en warrem
eram
arawet en shond
long is
arliche
poultis uffera drowericha fraw
hartz. awver de glad hond fun ma
ga-polishta raskal is so kold os en
grut in ma hussa-bae. Hire du ken
mon far si hend un si glaeder—aw
net far si ga—polishte monneer un
si shae g'schweiz. De sin oll shae
won mers afforda con, awver se sin
net so notewennich en arlich
hartz un en uffrichtiche hond. My
dawdy hut ols g'sawt: ‘Besser en
shtickle brote im sock os en fedderly
uff m hoot,” un luss mich dere saw
ga sis feel woreheit dart drin.
0s
Du waisht now wos ich mane. De
glaeder sin der shtamp uff'm dawler
der mon is es guld.

“just for the exercise.” She expects
to “walk a mile a day” when she is
one hundred years old. Her mother
lacked only four days of hei
hundred years old when she died, an
Mrs. Jones’ father lived to be one
hundred and nine years old.
Half of House Insured
Quincy, Mass. —H of a double
house here will be razed so the other
half may be insured against fire. The
building is a century old. John Foley
could not insure his half, which has
been modernized, because the other
half owned by John was in
bad The re-
sulted.



Rooney,
repair. compromise


SLIMMING DIET
Here is another of the weight
reducing menus prepared for
this paper by Dr. Shirley W.
Wynne, Commissioner of Health
of New York City.
Adjust the diet to your
needs by taking smaller er
larg-~ portions of the food in-
dicated in plain type. Do not
change the quantities of the
foods in bold face type. These
are the protective foods, and
must be taken as indicated. i
Bl KFAST
1/2 small grapefruit
2 slices of bacon
1 slice toast 3 Scien o
1 small pat butter ae 30
Coffee
HO sugar)
no sugar)
(well done nis
(wisk instead of creaw
LUNCH
(cottage cheese, cele
watercress — 3 tbsp.
cheese, 1/2 cup cole slaw)
Fruit gelatin with 1 tsp.
CTORM eee.
1 ghmss of milk oe
PINNER
Fresh fruls cocktail (spple and
Salad
slaw,

1 cup stewed tomatoes _.

1 emp string beans (mo butter) 350
Lettuce salad with 1'T tbsp.
French dressing - 3
1 gines of milk . ~ 130

try to reduce too fast.
A quarter of & pound a day is
enough.




| =
229 Veniremen
For Jury Duty
(From page 1)
|

Harry R. Barnhart, contractor, Eliza-
bethtown.
Levi Eaby, retired. Landisville.
Frank S. Miller, undertaker, Eliza-
bethtown
Theodate G
| Manheim.
| Harold Engle
Chas. J.


Dietrich. housewife,
laborer, Maytown





Bennett, butcher, Mt. Joy.
Alvin T. Delong, watchman, Man-
loin, No. 4
Petit Jurors, Nov.
| Reuben A. Bummel, 1» Bain-
| bridge
John A. Seitz, laborer, Elizabethtown
No. 1.
Phares G. Engle, retired, Bainbridge.
Mary Diffenderfer, housewife, Mount
Joy.
Herman Ober, millworker, Manheim.
Petit Jurors, Dec. 4
John H. Shenk, retired, Manheim.
James A. Doyle, retired. Elizabeth-
town.
Geo. W. Dimeler, laborer, Elizabeth-
town No. 1. =
John B. Myers, laborer, Elizabeth-
town No. 3.

Christian D. Musselman, tobacco
dealer, Landisville.
Jonas Whisler, farmer, Elizabeth-
town, No. 3.
Levi Myers, shoeworker. Elizabeth-/
| town.
Clarence Grissinger, clerk, Mt. Joy.
Clayton H. Lefever, shoe cutter, Floz-
jin
| Jesse W. Atkins, manufacturer, Eliz-
abethtown
rn A Er
You can get all the news of this lo-
cality for less than three cents a week
through the Bulletin.
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