The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 17, 1931, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY,
NOW SHE CAN KNOW!
JUNE 17th, 1931

HANKS to the McNary-Mapes
amendment to the Federal
Food and Drugs Act, fostered
and brought about by the com-
mercial canned foods industry it-
self, the housewife will be in a
position from now on to know
that a steadily increasing num-
ber of the canned foods she buys
are above or below certain stand-
ards.
Up to this year the buying of
canned foods has been somewhat
of a blind business. The fact that
such gigantic quantities of them
have been manufactured and sold
is because the vast majority of
them are so uniformly good. But
up to the time when the first
standards under this new amend-
ment were promulgated by the
Secretary of Agriculture, the
housewife had only her own per-
sonal experience and her knowl
edge of the best brands to guide
her choice.
Six Standards Set
Now she has new knowledge
put into her hands by the manu-
facturers of canned foods them-
selves. This amendment. which
was signed by President Hoover
on July 8 of last year, authorized
the Secretary of Agriculture to
establish definite standards for 1
canned foods products — excep!
meat and meat foods which are
subject to the meat inspection act,
and canned milk—and to promul-
gate a form of label designation
for foods which fall below the
standards which he set.
Standards for six canned
foods products have already been
set by the Secretary of Agricul-
ture. These standards are for
peaches, pears, peas, tomatoes,
cherries and apricots.
7
All canned foods which the
Government allows to be sold must
conform to the requirements of
the Federal Food and Drugs Act.
The purpose of the new standards
is simply to enable the housewife
to differentiate at a glance be:
tween the best grades and those
which are not so good, but are
wholesome and legal.
Substandard Grades Labeled
All canned foods which fall be-
low these new standards will be
required to be designated on their
labels as “Below U. S. Standard
—Low Quality But Not (llegal.”
This statement will be disnlayed
prominently on the container in
immediate conjunction with the
name of the product, and wil te
of immeasurable help to the ncuse
wife by informing her that the
canned food, while substandard,
is nevertheless wholesome and
edible.
Full Cans Also Assured
Thus the housewife can not only
discriminate as to the palat iit
and attractiveness of the
foods she buys, nut the new
promulgated by the Secretary of
Agriculture also nrovide for proper
filling of all cans. These require-
ments for fill of container state
that “canned foods shall be con-
sidered as of standard fill if the
entire contents occupy 90 per cent
 

or more of the volume of the
closed container. Canned foods
which fall below the foregoing
standard of fill of container shall
bear the name of the article imme-
diately preceded, wherever such
name appears, by the words ‘slack
filled’ in letters of at least equal


size and prominence.”
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
|
"
in
In this way the housewife is as-
sured that she will not only know
that the canned foods she buys
are above or below certain definite

standards, but that she will get
all of the food she pays for in
every can.
A New Departure
Such action as this is without
precedent in any other industry.
Other industries formed na-
tion-wide associ and set up
“Czars’”’ Lo s Lue nduct
of their menivers. but 1t has re-
mained for ational Canners
Association to go to the Govern-
ment and say to it in effect:
“We want a law which will not
only regulate the conduct of all
the members of cur association
hut of every other manufacturer

it
 
 




f canned foods. and which will
make them state plainly on the
labeis of these fcods whether they
are : ve or belew certain fixed
standards. And we waat you. not
ourselves, to set the standards
upon which t} XY it labeling
is to be based.”
A Wisz Move
This action on the part of the
National Canuers Association is
not based on altruistic or uneco-
nomic prinein hut it was taken
hecause the mdustry was forward
looking enough to realize that its
continued success depends not
only on the quality of its product
but on accurate knowledge of that
quality by the public.
Under these new standards
which take active effect ninety
days after they are promulgated,
and the first three of which went
into effect on May 18. the house-
wife will be more fully protected
than ever before by specific know”
edge of just exactly what kind
product she is buying. *

 





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2

Its beginnin’ to
though the world is going backward.
Many
furinture for the old fashioned kind
and do alot more things just like that.
But we reached the climax last week
when the State made it legal to shoot
deer with a bow and arrow.
beat that?
Can
Sheetz, Ed Ream, George Mumper, A. | t
D. Garber and a lot of others going deer
hunting with their little bow and ar-
row.
John Newcomer says its tough enuff
to stop a deer with a large calibre rifle,
say nothing about the toy bow and ar-
row?
We don’t blame the State Game Com-
mission for
{ Indian
{| there won't be many shot that way.
At that its gonna help a lot of fellows.
They can shoot an armful of arrows
at a deer while its standing. Go gather
them up and shoot ’em all :again and
50 on.
A lady at Salunga said to her hus- i
band:
more.”
He:
Wife:
with s
Now
The bee, though he finds every rose |t
has a thorn, always comes back leaded
with honey no matter where he ram-
bles.
Now
same?
OWL-LAFFS
ae
ieee.
i iit.



ed A
ut
>

Fm
—
pe ——]
A —————
A
foe
1
TN
fy
—— oC
J
(ein
f—
\
0. W. L

appear to me as
people discard new and modern
Can you

you picture fellows like Roy lt


legalizing this ancient
weapon. They know darn well
1

“Y know you don’t love me any
“Why, dear I certainly do.”
“Yeu couldn't love a woman
uch eid clothes as 1 have.”
here’s a good vacation thought:
why shouldn’t people do the
by you.
bearers.

Mary had a bathing suit
She carried in her purse
And every time she wore the thing | Philadelphia, his coat hanging in the |
A machine tried to
It shrunk up worse and worse.
Can you magine a remark like this
| by a man who was sick enuff to die:
bologna will save my
One piece of
ife” You may guess who it was.
Toughest Kind of Luck
About the wunluckiest guy I ever
heard of was the prisoner who was |
reading a story. When he got to the
end it was one of those (continued in
the next issue) kind and he was to be
hung next day.

A woman on Marietta
A fellow not far from here, a con-
tractor I believe, went to a lawyer and
said: “The Doctor says I've got about
a month to live;” I want to make my
will,
Fix it so my over-draft in the First
National Bank goes to my wife—she
can explain it to them.
My equity in my automobile I want
He will have to go
0 go to my son.
o work to pay the bills.
Give my unpaid bills to the bond-
ing company, they took
chances on me and are entitled to
something.
That new-fangled machine on the
job, I want the engineer to have. He
made me buy it; maybe he can make
it work.
My equipment,
They have
ong, they might as well
ob.

“It's no wonder you're such a sissy.
Your father and mother were married
by a justice of the peace.”
Reply: “Well, from the
ary of war.”
One of the laborers down
ee terest he'd fire him.


street says
that her husband has no sentiment.
She said she has cried for hours with-| PY
out getting a penny.
some awful
give to the junk
man. He has had his eye on it for
several years.
My keg, I want to go to my hoot-
legger, I hope it costs him as much to
keep it wet, as it has me.
I want to have the funeral handled
Any undertaker will do, but
I want these six material men for pall-
carried me so
finish the
noise I
a ( heard at your house your pa and ma
must have been married by the secre-
at the
Grey Iron told me that Jack Miller
offered him an interest in the business.
Jack said if he didn’t soon take an in-
| girl” Reply: “Yeh, she wouldn't pay | when he steps on them.”
any atterition to me either.”

Jake McCauley, up at the
Shoe
Factory, had a funny experience Sun-
day. He was on his way home
! back of the car.
from
pass him but Jake wouldn't have it
about ten miles down the pike,
why I was trying to catch you
Now Jake has an odd coat an
——
Cldest Schoosl in Erglend
Like all superlative
are those
Grammar school at Canterbury
oldest, but the evidence point
claims
the Bishop Felix.
Dickens will recall that he clair
to be the oldest, when he sent
Copperfield there. To Dickens
has perhaps given elsewhere pi
of the worst school in Englan
King’s school was the ideal s
“a grave building in a courtyar(
a learned air about It that
very well suited to the stray
and jackdaws who came from t
bearing on the grass plot.”
Life Story of Kiss
The kiss developed out of the
man who was your equal in the
scale. If you met a superior, the
rubbed his face with your nose.
In time, it became the custo
other to touch lips instead of
fectionate gesture between two f
or lovers.
But many races still
rubbing as a salutation.
retain
gether when they meet. and in
nesia it is the custom to put you

Boxing the Compass
[HSS
we as follows:
half
north
east, north north
one-half east, north ea
norih, north east one-half north,
cust,
est,
north east by one-half east,
east by east, north east hy eas
north east,
e half eyst,
half east, east enst
east or



{ that way. They chased each other for
| quite a distance when finally the other
car passed and then stopped him.
told Jake, “I only wanted to tell you
that your coat blew out of your car
He
that’s
d vest.
there
who doubt that the King's
is the
s out
that it was established in A. D. 631,
Lovers of
ned it
David
. who
ctures
d, the
chool :
1 with
eemed
rooks
he ca-
thedral towers to walk with a clerkly
prim-
itive habit of rubbing noses with a
social
n you
m for
two persons who were greeting each
noses,
And years later the kiss lost its cere-
monial importance and became an af-
riends
nose-
The Maoris
of New Zealand press their noses to-
Mela-
Ir nose
close to the other person's and to sniff.
To box the compass means, in nau-
tical language, to recite in consecutive
order the points of the mariner’'s com-
The points from north to east
North, north one-half
east, north by east, north by east one-
north
st by
north
north
t one-
north
east by north, east
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hipple Sundayed north, east,
at the seashore. Mis. Hipple wanted They say the music teacher at meni -
to be nice to the kiddies so she !school here recently explained “f” and Dlrase Long in UU
brought along a bag of sand with | “ff” in music. In conclusion he said: The phra at id
. . “pn “« ’ H yirase te Lhe ust anpears
which she contemplated filling a sand | “If “f” means “forte” what does | i, 4 render eo wl Bt apnea
box. The bag was placed on the | “ff” mean?” ! i " - rn a Snes Ane
: fia 5 i : > ~ Fail to lose w
bumper and during the trip it sprang One pupil replied: “Eighty.” read in the old dime et po
a leak and when they arrived home ww “another redskin bit th
: . \ another «skin bit the dust.”
they still had the bag but no sand. Shirk and Barney, down at Young's| ut it is in fact rooted in ti v
Com
train the other evening I overheard
ing up from Lancaster on the
service station. Shirk said: “My eyes! ‘nu
are better'n yours. |
walking on the roof of the barn down | rio
I can
see a fly| ession
the earliest recorded
are in Homer's “1
nd Ovid's “Metamorph
uses of
liad,”
oses,”
this conversation between the con-|on the Simon Snyder farm.” | "ovine. Fhe wards translated be
ductor and the brakeman: Barney said: “Well I can’t see him the world over.—Kansas
“She seemed like a good sensible | walk but I can hear the shingles crack



Hr IE 2 ge, On Sub BE Ye NY
He fi





Gold of Conquistadores
OMETIMES nature laughs
at those who seek metals in
the ground to make them
rich, and ignore the bounty
of the rth which, with a
care, is constantly renewing

little
itself, to produce
cultivators of the soil,
millions.
So it
Spain who came to the new world
wealth for patient
and foods for

was with those sons of
led




for gold, and who, when they f
to find it, went 1
neglecting the unri
ities for riches through colonization.
The Conquistadores wanted to get
rich quick, and, when they didn't,
many of them pulled up baby pine-
apple slips because they had grown
to love the luscious tropical fruit
which they could not get in their
own country, and went home to try
and grow that fruit under glass, as
it does not grow easily in a tem-
perate climate.
Had they remained there and
seized this priceless opportunity,
today’s thriving pineapple industry
might have been theirs. For a ripe
pineapple is a luscious fruit, and
today’s Hawaiian pineapple industry
puts that ripe pineapple into a can,
so that it will reach its millions
of devotees with all of its natural
fruit sugar, its vitamins, its flavor
and its unusual appetite producing
taste.
The Taste’s The Thing
Have you ever noticed that
“more” taste about pineapple?
That, as you eat it, you feel some-
how as though you could keep on




Pineapple is a powerful
1 to digestion and helps one to
:e care of rich protein foods.
That's because pineapple contains
bromelin. This fact this
golden fruit an excellent accompani-
ment to meats. It's the bromelin
in the pineapple served with meats
which aids in the digestion of them,
les adding a ta and a taste
to them that everyone likes.
And now one may have all the
ts. Increased pro-
pineapple one war
duction in the Hawaiian Islands has
not only made available a great deal
more pineapple than in previous
vears, but the price of this tropical
fruit has been lowered so that the
housewife may use it as lavishly as
she pleases, with meats, to make
cakes, griddle cakes, waffles, decora-
tive gelatin salads and desserts,
frozen and otherwise, or she may
serve the golden wheel of pineapple
swimming in a delicious syrup,
nicely chilled, for an extra “ritzy”
dessert in every sense but price.
Here are some interesting ways
of serving pineapple with meat, and
some frozen desserts.
Pineapple With Meat
Pineapple Meat Cakes: Add one
slightly beaten egg to one pound of
chopped round steak, and mix well.
Add one and one-fourth teaspoons’
salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper,
one cup crushed pineapple and one-
half cup crumbs. Form into round,
flat cakes and pan broil in a hot
skillet. Makes eighteen medium
| cating it?


1
makes
 
 



 
Southern Fried Chicken with Pine-
apple Wheels: Drain syrup from
a No. 2% can sliced Hawaiian pine-
apple. Add a two-inch stick of cin-
namon. Boil three minutes, then
add pineapple slices and set aside
until cool. Drain and chill. Fry
enough chicken for eight in the
usual Southern fashion and pile in


the center of a 1 er platter.


Around the chicken arr e a bor-
der of eight lettuce s, using
deep cup-shaped leaves. Place a
pineapple wheel in each and make a
rosette of mayonnaise in the
of each. Serves eight, and provides
both the meat course and the salad.
Pineapple Desserts
Pineapple and Banana Ice Cream:
Scald together three cups evaporated
milk, six cups thin cream, two and
two-thirds cups sugar, and cool
Add one No. 2 can crushed Ha-
waiian pineapple and one cup mashed
banana pulp, and freeze. Serves
twenty-four,
Pineapple Cherry Bavarian: Soak
two tablespoons gelatin in one-half
cup cold water. Heat to boiling
the juice from one 8-ounce bottle
green mint cherries, one and one-
half cups crushed pineapple, one-
third cup sugar, one
lemon juice and pour over gelatin,
stirring until dissolved. Color a light
green and cool. When starting to
set, add cherries cut in pieces and
one cup whipped cream and pour
into individual molds to harden.
Unmold and garnish with whipped
cream and bits of angelica.€ Serves
center

cakes.


an oe ddd nur roe a
Ee SC iV
Ne 1
eight.*
tablespoon,
PAGE THREB
"Tok
Cops 1
Covered by a
The Hartford I
of the Company
N Agents
204 Fulton Build: g
LANCASTER, PENNA.
Henry H. Koser, Landisville, \Pa.

jun
If the Crop was
‘
Hartford
Hail Policy
You cannot affoyd to take the risk.
Insurance Com-
pany can. Let this hail
policy and the record and resources
that writes it.
Widmyer-Prangley Cao.
D. L. Landis, Elizabethtown, 4 Pa.
E. H. Gish, ph
-tf



HIN
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ARE
PHONE Us
Your Ap Tooay



 
 



every 10 da



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yu r hair
How long is it?
Hy many days
since it was cut?
10 1S Ri T. Haircut


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forSmokers
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ARE YOUR SHOES?
WAIT TOO LONG



 

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