/ many ymen are ;ging them- around, all t with peri- akness and ‘hey should that Lydia ham’s Tab lieve rie ins and dis 25 cents. f Danville, > ambition Your Tab- 1d built me ple G6R4 p.11-tf HOES? ONG light on and sug- ruit and easpoon- glass of to elimi- Javre de k off 20 now.” o consti- owel ac- ttle daily IAL Ss nce elief! 3uckley’s 1e sip of stops an id deep ersistent + control nore tor- s why it's a flash”. teed. 45 8, W. K, 5. XY, TE a WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22nd, 1936 SE Ha ton and Quincy Railroad between To summer will see light-weight, stain- less steel, Diesel-powered Zephyr type trains running 1,000 miles between Chicago and Denver on an overnight schedule that takes about ten hours, or one-third, off the running time of the fastest steam trains. Two trains of ten cars each, not including two cars containing the ‘power plants, are being built here by the Edward G. Budd Manufacturing Company, pioneer in the development of light-weight, stainless steel construction. Known and ghee Ni je less expensive to operate. e first Zephyr, a four- ATE : car running between Lincoln, Buiit in Pai as the Denver Zephyrs, they will be | Omaha and Kansas City, reduced operated by the Chicago. Burling- | OPerating and maintenance costs $45,000 in its first year of service and at the same time increased Chicago and Denver on a schedule revenue $75,000 that calls for leaving Chicago late in the afternoon and arriving in |miles overnight have been inevi- Denver in time for breakfast next table ever since the first Zephyr 1 7 demonstrated its ability to replace Like previous Zephyrs, the new | two conventional trains on a day- | time run,” Edward G. Budd, presi- dent of the company, said. “One of morning trains will weigh only half as'much as comparable conventional trains “Trains capable of covering 1,000 Everyday Cooking Miracles BY FRANCES WEEDMAN Director Hotpoint Electric Cookery Institute The cereal age, the age when saucepan, in a small amount of wa= | ter, right on top the range withe checked from eating and from lik- | out any of the usual dire burning consequences. The measured heat | of the Calrod units is accurately | controllable; it is also evenly dis- | tributed over the bottom of the saucepan. This fact insures uni- | form cooking and an easy-to-wash gone patiently and endlessly through | cereal pan; and, providing only young juniors thrive and grow rosy- ing to eat acurishing, thoroughly- cocked cereals is very often a try- ing age for junior’s mother. Cereals for children must be cooked for a long time at low temperature and as a result mothers have too long Cereals for children may be cooked ; thoroughly, with litle trouble, on the surface unit of the medern electric range the long drawn-out ceremony of | that the pan “fits” the unit, there’s getting out the double boiler, of waiting for the water to boil, and then of giving the cereal a long, slow cooking. If a double boiler hasn’t been used, the is very often cooked with too much water, | or the person in charge has had to stand over it with a stirring spoon constantly in hand in order to keep the cereal from burning. Certainly this “foed for junior” uestion has demanded much pa- tient, painstaking effort but just see how easily this bothersome but really important task of cooking cereals may be done. The new automatic electric range has now joined the family circle; it per- forms cooking miracles in every phase of cookery; little unnecessary details are eliminated, mistakes are put to rout, and cooking becomes an amazingly simple, yet scientific art. Low, Even Heat The surface units of the miracle range are so constructed that a low, even heat can be maintained at all times. Therefore, cereals may be cooked in an ordinary covered | no loss of valuable heat around the | edges of the pan. | But to get back to the principle | involved in this easy cereal cook- {ing process, because the heat from the surface units of the electric range is so perfectly and so easily controlled, a low temperature suf- ficient for steaming, yet not suffi- cient for scorching, may be con- stantly maintained. Less fuel is used in the cooking of cereals than is used in the old-fashioned double boiler method; less time is re- quired for washing and putting away saucepans, and certainly less bother results for junior’s mother. Here is the prescription for | steaming cereals on the surface | units of the new electric range, Steamed Cereal 1 cup cereal 24 cup cold water Combine cereal and water in a | saucepan; cover tightly and place on surface unit. Cook on High Heat until boiling point is reached, then switch to Low and continue cooking 25 to 45 minutes longer. ELECTRIC FLOW SPEEDS CROPS AND KILLS WEEDS By transmitting more than 100,000 volts of electricity into the soil 1 from a tractor plow, an eastern | experimenter is reported to have developed an effective way forer- adicating weeds and grubs from the | ground and hastening the growing of crops. Current is supplied from | a special generator on the tractor | and is conducted through the blades | and is conducted through the blades | of the plow. A field of buckwheat | treated in this manner grew nearly | as high as another, which had | twic been given 200 pounds of fertilizer | to the acre, and the seeds germin- fields of corn, beans and potatoes, curred in five days under the el- ectrical treatment, whereas sixteen days were needed with nothing but | IRONVILLE WOMAN | HOME FROM HOSPITAL Mrs. Harry Albright, well known resident of Ironville, who has betn confined to the Lancaster (General Hospital due to an operation, re- turned to her home last week and is recuperating there. Her many friends and neighbors are hoping for her speedy EE i iP orI Test All Seed Corn Farmers should view all seed corn with suspicion this spring un- tii proved worthy. One of the simplest ways of proving seed corn is testing by the rag doll -methed. "| Other methods are the sawdust and ated in eighty hours. In tests witn | the sand box. Your county agent : | can give detailed information. it was found that germination oc- the fertilizer. The sections cultiva- ted with the electric plow were free from weeds. | Mow one of the new ten-car stain- | lees steel Denver Zephyrs béing adelphia by the Edward G. Budd Manufacturing Company will look beside the first Zephyr. Inset, Edward G. Budd, pioneer in lightweight railroad construction. | with crushed or sliced pineapple, { muffins, butter, and for dessert {Ice cream and gold cake, with | coffee. LEMON SPONGE PIE 1 lemon, juice and rind 1 cup sugar. 2 tablespoons flour, 2 eggs, whites kept separate. 1 tablespoon butter. Cream together. Add 1 cup of milk. Mix well. Add lastly the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs. Bake in unbaked pie crust. (The whites come to the top tomake the sponge) This makes one pie. DEVILS FOOD CAKE cups white sugar. tablespoons melted shortening. eggs. cups sour milk. cup cocoa. scant cups flour. teaspoon baking powder and 1 of soda, sifted with the flour. Mix sugar, butter and eggs until creamy then mix in cocoa, milk and bour. Brown Sugar Icing for Cake 2 cups light brown sugar, 4 cup cream. butter size of an egg. 15 teaspoon vanilla, Boil, until a little in the spoon forms a soft ball in cold water, then beat till thick enough to spread. Sw DW 00 Pineapple Upsidedown Cake 3 cup sugar. 1 egg well beaten. 4 tablespoons butter. 13 cups sifted swansdwn bour. 1 teaspoons salt. 3 cup milk. 1 teaspoon vanilla. Put in a skillet or heavy pan, 1 tablespoon of butter, 1 cup of brown . sugar, 4 slices pineapple cut , fine. Melt all these together. then - put the cake batter on the top and bake. Turn out, upside- down, and serve with plain or whipped cream. rere sll A Qari THE NOVELTY OF IT Since grandmother's styles have ceturned, the hoop that grandpa played with as a boy has been re« vived by the toy industry—The Cycle Trades in America has ap- propriated $200,000 to repopularize the bieycle—Packaged paints have keen a life saver for the paint in- dustry.—Apples, onions and pota- toes are now appearing in packages. The slump has boomed stamp col- .ecting, if anything. A. big New York store has just opened a phia- telic department. ——— — “Mrs. Upton’s pet dog has been run over; she'll be heartbroken.” “Don’t tell her abruptly.” “No, Tll begin by saying it's her | husbhand.”—Sydney Bulletin. , which name it is known in parts {of Europe. The bird, however, is covered with small greenish metalic i locking spots. The male bird is THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Prt ———————————— BE ————————— Bird Nei hb ors | THE BOW-WOW MARKET Neighbors | Well, they've started selling dogs The Starling on the installment plan! Banks and Our most common bird, becoming | commercial credit houses as yet so" during the last thirty odd years, | refuse to handle the paper, so | is the European or English Starl- breeders have envolved their own ing. This species, not a native, was 'part-payment system. Consider brought from England and liberated Washington, for instance: A cer- | in Central Park, New York in 1904 tain woman fell in love with a {ft is a most prolific breeder and has Scottie in a pet shoppe window. gradually spread over the entire Shr was enabled to walk out of eastern part of the United States. the store with the dog on a leash The starling belongs to the same by : greeing to pay so much per and family as the blackbird under conc luding the deal by contracting to give the shop the first four puppies born to her new acquisi- tion. She was much pleased with her bargain until she journeyed across the Potomac to Alexandria not black, but is a rusty brown much more brilliant than the fe- male, while the young, under a year old, do not have the spots at potential pups at last payment. all. Incidentally, cross breeding is giv- ing Scottie dogs a higher frame in keeping with the rise in the stock market. Dachshunds, though, are still affffected by the depression and the debt question and continue [” register “new lows.” Our neighbor, the starling is a bird which lives in close proximity to man. It is found in towns or arcund farm buildings, and is nearly always in flocks, especially so in the fall and winter. i The nesting sites of the bird are BEAUTY PARLOR FOR PET DOGS in holes in buildings, hollow trees, | SAVES OWNERS WORK bird boxes or any other cavity, and | are bulky affairs of grass, leaves, bits of rag and lined with feathers. Dogs have a beauty parlor of their own in Paris where they re- ive hair cuttings, trimmings and rling, skin treatments and baths y keep their fur glossy. Sickly ets are given ultraviolet ray ap- lications. Each morning, ‘“cus- omers” arrive in the arms of eir mistresses or maids and the op is doing a large business. times et) mie “I hear that Doolittle has stopped rinking coffee for breakfast.” “Why is that?” “He says it keeps him wakeful at e office.” lelp Kidneys Don’t Take Drastic Drugs Your Kidneys contain 9 million tiny neglect or drastic, irritating drugs. reful. If functional Kidney or Bladder sorders make you suffer from Getting Nights, Nervousness, Loss of Pep, Leg ains, Rheumatic Pains, Dizziness, Cir- ©8 Under Eyes, Neuralgia, Acidity, urning, Smarting or Itching, you don’t need to take chances. All druggists now ! have the most modern advanced treat- ment for these troubles—a Doctor's pres- Asker—What do you mean by cfiption called Cystex (Siss-Tex). Works . . si fast—safe and sure. In 48 hours it must saying that your wife is in and bring new vitality and is guaranteed to : make y Be ears younger i © out’ all the time? nalke you feel 10 years younger in on k or money back on Spurn of empty + ’ 3 " or vackage. Cystex costs only 3¢ a dose af Teller—She’s in a rage and out ang the guarantee protects you of funds. a es TUNNELL’S Animal Matter Fertilizers We are carrying in stock these old re- liable fertilizers, at our warehouse in Salunga, A trial will convince you these ferti- lizers are of the highest qualify. S. H. HIESTAND & CO. Phone: Landisville 178 Salunga, Pa. Va., and there found a dealer off- ering dogs with only the first two | V a turn! say Thomas Wi t Washingtonian—Oh, yes, they of- ten launder the soiled bills at the Visitor—Will you please show me where they hang them out to dry? #3 tn 3 Painting Dome of U, S. Capitol Takes Thousand Gallons One thousand gallons of special paint were required recently, to cover the dome of the United States capitol with a protective coat. The liquid was prepared by a formula arproved by the bureau of stand- ards and is expected to withstand several years of expesure. More than a week was required to scrape off the old paint. HII GAMES This game is especially appropri- ate for parties where the guests all know one another. Half of the company must leave the room. Those remaining are blindfolded and seated with a vacant chair be~ side each of them. At a given signal the first guests return to the room and quietly take the vacant seats. They all sing at the top of their voices while the Bblind- ‘olded ones try to guess who their neighbors are. When they guess TARR Roomy, Comfortable, Smart— and, aboveall, S AFE nr HE new Ford V-8 gives you a one-piece welded-steel body. Safety Glass all around is standard equipment in all models at no extra cost. Super-Safety brakes have 186 square inches of effective braking surface. Big 6.00 x 16 inch air-balloon tires, transverse springs and a low center of gravity give safety on curves. In performance, riding comfort, and beauty, the 1986 Ford V-8 will change your whole conception of modern automobile dollar value. Call us today for a demonstration. GARBER’S GARAGE Elizabethtown, Pa. te ‘SOME PAINT JOB! correctly the blindfolds are re~ moved. If not they remain blind- folded until they do guess right. The neighbors may change places after the first guess. When all the blindfolds have finally been removed the two groups may change places and start a new game, Farmers—Attention Sorrel Belgian Stallion Licensed, Registered and Approved. 1,750 lbs, 167 hands, foaled 1981. Stands for service on the Bucher Farm a Manheim -Flizabethtown road, near Chiques Church, six miles east of Elizabethtown, 2 miles west of Mas- tersonville. Terms $10.00. If mare fails to bring live colt $10.00 will be refunded after 11 months period or mare rebred. EDWIN F. WHIT- MAN, Owner, Elizabethtown, Pa, R. 3. Phone 928R2L. SAMUEL FREY FUNERAL HOME RL aU TR gl Ee de 101 W. MARKET STREET PHONE 33 or 7-R-2 MARIETTA, PENNA A A os + Jor model illustrated F.©.B. Detrow andard accessory group, including umpers and spare tire, extra New, money-saving conven- ient terms —ask about the $25- a-month and 6% plan of the Universal Credit Company your baby’s health For a Few Cents a Day You Can Keep Food The Safe Way The modern automatic refrigerator can be dedicated to no more worthy cause than safe-guarding your child’s health. Could anything be more important than that? With an automatic refrigerator you can be sure of this whoesome protection. You can know that not only the ba- by's, but the whole family’s food is kept safe, wholesome and good. : You need modern ra2frigeration . . and inasmuch as it will pay for itself in food savings alone, it surely isn’t thrifty to be without one. PENNSYLVANIA | POWER & LIGHT COMPANY and Your LOCAL RETAILER i cori Phone 20-YEAR OLD APPLE ORCHARD FOR SALE vn Standard Varieties Trees in most excellent condition and due to nature of soil produce exceptionally fine flavored and richly colored fruit. Orchard has a complete Water System, 22 acres of land, 2 acres of woodland, large frame building, complete spraying outfit, tractor, etc. all included The price is very reasonable and can prove a good investment. For further particulars apply to . E. SCHROL REALTOR Mount Joy
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers