The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 16, 1935, Image 3

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1935
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO. PA.

I»





PRAISES AMERICAN




SPIRIT — Richard H.
se WEEK'S NEWS|

PREPARES
OCEAN HOP—
Amelia Earhart
“il Putnam, noted avi-
;| atrix, admits that
she will attempt a
Hawail - Mainland
flight. She is shown
before her plane
with Paul Mantz,
ace pilot, who may |
accompany her. o
FOR

a


Grant, vice - president
and director of Gener
al Motors Corporation,
as guest speaker on
the Forum of Liberty
broadcast over the
Columbia network,
praises American spin
It as a factor in past
and future prosperity.
He looks forward to a
big sales year in the
motor industry, which
provides a livelihood
for one out of every
ten in the United
States.


LINDBERGH WITNESS
LANDS—Betty Gow. who
was the Lindbergh baby’s
nurse. arrives on the S. S. [8
Aquitania to testify at the
trial of Bruno Richard
Hauptmann, accused of the
kidnaping.



titian and golden highlights.

STARTS NEW HAIR SHADE—Ginger
Rogers, the beautiful young dancing star
of the films, starts a new hair shade. It is
called “flaming gold,” a beautiful blend of




















Fisher
APPROVES NEW COACH—Frank Cody, su:
perintendent of Detroit public schools,
proves the model Napoleonic traveling coach
that will be the project for boys enrolling in
the newly-created apprentice class of
Body Craftsman’s Guild. Mr.
seated, and William S. McLean, secretary of
the educational foundation, view the coach.
 

ap-
the
Cody,

3 He RE

RIOTING MOB—Despite President Roosevelt's pronounce-
ment against mob violence, Shelbyville, Tenn., was thrown
into panic, two were killed and the court house burned as
an attempt was made to lynch a negro. In the center is G. L. i
Gibson, father of the 14-year-old girl, the alleged attack on

whom precipitated the violence.

Viola Has Part All Its
Own in Orchestra Work
The viola is exactly like the violin,
except that it is one-fifth larger aud
has heavier strings, notes a writer in
the Washington Post. It is tuned a
fifth below the violin, its strings thus
giving C, G, D and A, the deepest tone
being an octave below middle C on the
plano.
The viola is played in a manner sim-
ilar to that used for the violin, except
for the greater stretches in fingering,
due to the greater length of the strings.
The dull, mournful tone of the viola
comes from the fact that its strings
are thick. The extra depth is attained
by increasing the thickness of the
strings, which always makes the tone
Yess brilliant. Thus, the viola gets a
tone color of brooding melancholy.
The viola plave the third part in the

string quartet, which cou
and second violin, a viola, and a violou-
cello. This does not mean that it is
always below the two violins In pitch,
for the string quartet depends upon
interest and variety in the leading of
its four parts, and sometimes the viola
may be playing the highest note of a
chord.
In orchestral work the viola has
much the same duty. It is often called
upon for its special tone color, but us:
ually it is found playing in four-part
harmony with the first and second vi-
olins and violoncellos. In the Eight-
eenth century {ts role was more hum-
ble, and it was often compelled to fol-
low the bass viol
Hogs are produced on three-fourths
of the farms of the United States and
in all of its cities.
iN

cellent news. The 1934-35
“get” of oysters have been
proclaimed the best since the fa-
mous “set” of 1930. Good news,
also, for thousands of unemployed
is the fact that the oyster indus-
try will, this year, employ 50,000
persons “a-sea and a-shore.”
Fortunately for oyster-lovers,
science has discovered that the
bivalve not only tastes excellent,
but is excellent for health. The
composition of the oyster is of
such a character as to make it,
more nearly than most foods,
self-sufficient as a diet. In this
respect it resembles milk and
needs but the ordinary ingredients
used in cooking — starches and
fats — to give it balance. An
oyster stew, for example, gener-
ously seasoned with butter and
accompanied by the usual bowl of
oyster crackers is a perfectly bal-
anced meal.
| Dr oyster lovers there is ex-
Convenience of Canned Oysters
While the old theory that oy-
sters could be eaten only in
months with an R has been dis-
it is still a fact that they
other nonths, owing to the in-
ferior taste of the oyster during
the season of spawning. With the
advent of canned oysters—oysters
taken from the best waters at the
time they are fittest—it has bhe-
come possible to eat this excel

lent food all year round. This is a
long step from Roman days when
the oysters were shipped from
Britain and had to be packed in
sacks of snow, so that the shells
were held together, keeping the
oysters wet and fresh in their
own liquid.
canned oysters has,
added materially to the quantity
of oysters used.
Here are some delicious dishes
which can be made of canned
oysters:
Oyster Stew: Scald three cups
of milk in a double boiler.
the contents of a 5-ounce can of
oysters to just below the boiling
point and add to the scalded milk.
Bind with one tablespoon of but-
ter which has been rubbed to-
gether with one tablespoon flour;
season with one teaspoon salt and
a little paprika.
fourth cup of cream.
once with oyster crackers. This
serves four persons.
Oyster Entrée: Drain the con-
tents of one 5-ounce can of oy-
sters and arrange in four but-
tered flat shallow earthen rame-
kins, or in scallop shells.
cup of bread crumbs with one
tablespoon of minced parsley,
two tablespoons butter, one-half
teaspoon salt, a few grains of pep-
per, one-fourth teaspoon thyme
and one-half

NEWS — OYSTERS
Add four tablespoons oy-
juice.
The convenience of
no doubt,
A Stew and an Entrée
Heat
toast.
Then add one-
Serve at
prika.
Mix one
been

teaspoon lemon

ster liquor to moisten.
oysters with this and place under
the broiler flame until the crumbs
are well browned.
four persons.
On Toast and in Patties
Oysters a la Maryland: Brown
one and one-half tablespoons but-
ter in a pan, add one and one-
half tablespoons flour and brown
again. Then add one and one-half
cups of milk slowly, stirring until
smooth. Add three teaspoons an-
chovy paste,
salt and a few grains of paprika.
Scald the oysters from a 5-ounce
can of oysters,
liquor, and arrange on buttered
Add the oyster liquor to
the sauce.
beaten egg volk, stir until hot and
pour over the oysters. This makes
four servings.
Chicken and Oyster Patties:
Make a cream sauce of one and
one-half tablespoons butter,
and one-half tablespoons flour,
one cup of thin cream, one-half!
teaspoon
spoon celery salt and a little pa-
canned pimientos
shredded,
have been scalded in their own
liquor from a 5-ounce can,
two cups of diced chicken.
at once in patty shells,
six to eight patties.®
A woman we know was baking!
pies and she baked an extra one and
sent it over to her next door neigh- |
bor. Next day the neighbor called |
to the woman's little girl and said to |
her: “Here's the dish your mother |
sent that pie in. I'm sorry I haven't
anything to send back in it.” The
little girl replied: “Oh, that’s all
right. You can just keep the dish
until you have.”
An applicant for life insurance wag
being examined medically and he was
very anxious to have the doctor give
him a good rating. Questioning the
applicant the doctor asked: What did
your grandfather die of?
I forget, was the reply, but I know,
it was nothing serious.

N
LE
Cover the
This serves
one-half teaspoon
reservire the
Then add one slightly-
one
salt, one-eighth tea-
Add one-fourth cup of
which have
which
oysters
and
Serve
This fills
PAGE THRER


Bulbs and Bill
By AMY CAMPBELL
©. McClure Newspaper Syndicate,
WNU Service.


“M


OTHER,” her older daughter
said to Harriet after luncheon.
“Bill and 1 are going to their cottage
to plant bulbs this afternoon.” There
was the merest note of dubiousness
In the telling, that took from that
queer little shock of an announcement
for the first time, when it still should
have heen a request. Bettina had
grown up.
Harriet marshalled her subtlest
common sense and blandest histrionic
ability.
“Sounds pleasant to plant bulbs to-
day. Who is Bill, where fis the cot-
tage and what kind are you planting?”
She felt there was the exactly perfect
degree of motherliness in every de-
tail of word, tone, and material of in-
quiry.
Meanwhile she adroitly hid her in-
ward turmoil. Bettina must not es-
cape her with the wrong boy to the
wrong place alone at sixteen for in-
definite hours. And Bettina must nev-
er suspect it was a really vital de-
cision.
“Bill? Don’t say you haven't seen
His
him ’'round here—Bill Moore.
mother knows you.”
“Describe him,” suggested Harriet
cheerily as if her attention were only
slightly captured,
“Oh—" impatiently— “that’s not my
line. He's taking the convertible and
a load of bulbs in the rumble. We may
zo to the picture at the Pat tonight
if we feel like it when we get back.
Bill says gardening is a trifle ex-
hausting at first. I'm to stab in the
bulbs while he digs and shows me
where. Don't fuss if we're
late. Mom, for it may take hours.”
“Sorry 1 didn't pay proper atten-
tion to your plans, Bet. How many of
you are going and where is it? Bulbs
and Bill, you said—what else?”
“We're going to their cottage at the
beach,” Bettina said, with the degree
of belated respect for her mother’s
opinion that Harriet had waited for.
“Who is with you beside Bill,
Sweet?” Harriet felt the affection
which she allowed to creep into the
little name.
“Why, just the two of us, why ?—"
and then, suspiciously—
“Say, Mom, just what is this all
about? You're not going out to the
coupe and question Bill when he comes
and say we must have a chaperon or
we can't go.”
So it had to come to a crisis.
She said: “Dear, don’t be upheaved.
Quite naturally you can’t wish, when
you come to think of it, to go without
wanting Bill to take his mother or
someone else, on such a heavenly aft-
ernoon. She'd probably like to oversee
her own color scheme anyway. Why
not phone and investigate with her
first? She would be flattered and val-
ue you at the same time.”
Harriet hated herself for being of-
ficious.
Bettina’s voice pierced her with its
grave intensity.
“Don't be so Jittery. Of course
Bill's mother isn't going. She is can-
did about effort of any kind. Loathes
it. The cottage Is locked, barred and
winter-bound. The distance, twenty
miles. Work will take perhaps two
hours. We'll tea at the. hotel grill
which Is still open. Be back for din-
ner and a later show. There's a pro-
gram. Take it or leave it!”
“Movie stuff, darling. But uncon-
vincing. You can’t talk to your host-
ess like that and remain a popular
guest. Plan something else at once
and not waste the day. The other Is
naturally off. Sorry I can neither take
it nor leave it just yet. Not at six-
teen, Sweet. Not and be your proper
mother.”
“Well, if that isn’t cool! And heavy.
Maternal solicitude indeed.” Bettina
said this with deadly deliberation.
Harriet hid her anger successfully
as she said, “Don’t attempt to be bor-
ingly clever, darling,” and walked with
assumed serenity into the sunroom.
Bettina called after her: “I'll phone
Daddy, that’s what I'll do.”
“Anything you like, Bettina,” was
the smooth assent. “I like your Dad's
judgment about anything and every-
thing.”
Then Harriet appeared to become
lost in a bit of writing she was do-
ing. In exactly five minutes she heard
her daughter's dulcet tones at the
telephone.
“Bill, I don’t think I want to delve
in the soil today and I forgot a date
for tonight. I really want to surprise
Moms with a tray of afternoon tea
today.”
Harriet blinked away the sudden
moisture from her lashes. Bettina
had her father’s quick forgiving na-
ture. In a few minutes she would ap-
pear proudly penitent and atoning,
anxious to show Harriet how she val-
ued her mother’s favor, really.
At sixteen, Harriet thought she too
had believed her mother a kill-joy.
Yes, that was the old significant word
they had for it.
At that moment she heard a tumul-
tuous arrival, distinctly male and very
young and robust.
“Say, Bet,” roared a fine unmodu-
lated boyish voice, “I've just thought
of the hunkiest idea. Let's take your
mother planting to the lake and we
could all have tea at the grill instead
of pottering about here. You ask her
for me, will you?”
Harriet thought, “So that’s how they
manage these things now.” Distinctly
clever. Or had it just happened?
She would take a book and go far
down the cliff and read and let them
plant bulbs merrily.
Marginal Land Defined
The National Land Use Planning
committee defined marginal land as
“land where the agricultural output
just balances input, including a proper
allowance for depreciation and interest
on capital other than land and labor
of the operator and his family. Sub-
marginal land is that where output
falls below the balance, and supermar-
ginal land, that where output rises
above.”

Various Uses for Raisin
Seed; Oil Is in Demand
The magazine Food Industries says
the by-product of seeded raisins Is
sprayed back on the skins in the form
of a fine oil. This prevents the seeded
raisins from sticking together or to
their packages, and enhances their ap
pearance,
From 2,000 to 4,000 tons of raisin
seeds are accumulated annually from
the 200,000 tons of raisins sold each
vear in the United States. When the
seeds are extracted from the raisins,
come of the pulp, or meat of the fruit,
naturally clings to them. From this,
by diverse means, comes:
12 to 14 per cent of grape sugar.
Alcohol from that.
191-proof brandy
from the latter.
15 per cent of oil from the seeds
after they are crushed, dried and
cured.
Raisin oil is also used as a salad oil
(it blends readily with olive oil); for
frying doughnuts and potato chips
because of its non-greasy flavor; in
the paint industry, particularly on
canvas; for awnings and airplane
wings, because of its slow-drying and
high-spreading qualities and, finally, in
lubricants,
To top everything off, the residue
from the crushing process is utilized
in stock feed, as a fertilizer and as a
fuel.

Cane Briton’s History Is
of Interest to Canadians
Cape Breton has a history as color-
ful as that of any part of Canada. A
great part of the population claims de-
scent from the hardy Scottish pioneers
who came out to make homes for
themselves in this sea-girt island to-
wards the beginning of the late cen-
tury, says the Montreal Herald.
As early as 1713, when the Treaty
of Utrecht gave Newfoundland definite-
ly to England, one finds French settlers
coming from there to Cape Breton.
The romantic story of the efforts of
France to hold the place—called by
them Ile Royale—and of their building
the great Dunkirk of America—Louis-
bonrg—is unique
["rench colonization.
At the time of the fall of Canada the
island was an important subject of
debate in the settling of peace terms,
for France was loath to give it up. The
Treaty of Paris finally ceded Cape
Breton to the British.
Officers and soldiers who had fought
in the war were given grants of land
as a reward for their services, but Cape
Breton was considered too valuable
an asset to be disposed of at once, -

Do Not Forget Famous Dates
Far be it from the Uruguayans to
forget ‘their famous dates in history.
They may forget the particulars of
what occurred, but forget the date—
never, A daily lesson is taught to both
grown-ups and children alike, and to
visitors, too, for many of the most im:
portant thoroughfares are named to
commemorate dates of significance in
Uruguay's history. The most im-
portant of these is the Avenida 18 de
Julio, or 18th day of July avenue, so
named in honor of that day in 1830
when the constitution of the country
became law. Two others of importance
are Calle 25 de Mayo and Calle 25 de
Agosto, or 25th of May and 25th of
August streets, the former named te
honor the Independence of the col-
onies of the River Plate, obtained from
Spain in 1810, the latter being the day
in 1825 when the independence of the
republic itself was proclaimed.—Wash-
ington Star,

Evolution of the Cane
A stick was probably the first per-
sonal property owned by primitive
man, He found it a handy weapon
with which to fend off the sabre-
toothed tiger and of great assistance |
to him on his week-end trips over the
by no means perfect highways of the
period.
The stick persisted through Biblical |
times, prophets being generally pic-
and sweet wines |
in the history of |
Rifles of Civil War Days
In the American Civil war troops of
l;oth the North and South were armed
with rifles, shooting elongated bullets
rounded at the nose rather than the
old round bullets of the long rifle. Most
f the rifles of that period were muz-
zle-loaders, though as the war pro-
oressed breechloading rifles were in-
troduced from time to time.
Copper and Lead
Sheet copper and lead are the metals
nost commeonly used in roofing. Re
pairs and replacement of roof and
chimney flashing can more safely be
(done with these metals than with
cheaper materials which will rust out
n a few years. The same is true for
the gutters and rain spouts.

WE HAVE.....

Krall’s Meat Marke!
West Main St., Mt. Joy
Crushed St on e
Building
NN
Before placing your order elsewhere


UYING
OUR
1935 CAR



| Now on Display\ and
on Sale at
RalphM. Busset’s
Garage
\
5
{
~~ Manheim, Pa. |
| janl6-2t

see us. AlSe, manufacturers of
CONCRETE. BLOCKS
SILLS and LINTELS
J.N. Stauffer & Bro.
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Swiss Watches and
Small Watches
Repaired
Frompt Servi
Prices Reason
DON W. GORRECHT
Mount Joy, Pa.
WEAK AND SKINNY
MEN, WOMEN
AND CHILDREN
Saved by new Vitamins of Cod Liver
Oil in tasteless tablets.
Pounds of firm healthy flesh instead of
bare scraggy bones! New vigor, vim and
energy instead of tired listlessness! Steady,
quiet nerves! That is what thousands of
people are getting through scientists’ latest
discovery—the Vitamins of Cod Liver Oil
concentrated in little sugar coated tablets
without any of its horrid, fishy taste or smell.
McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets, they're
called! “Cod Liver Oil in Tablets”, and they
simply work wonders. A little boy of 8, seri=
ously sick, got well and gained 10% lbs. in
just one month. A girl of thirteen after the
same disease, gained 8 1bs. the first week and
2 lbs. each week after. A young mother who











fn
Electri¢ and Acetylene
WELDL
R. U. TRIMBL
ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.
G.
ET


HOW_ARE YOUR SHOES?
DON'T. WAIT TOO LONG
BRING THEM IN
CITY SHOE
“REPAIRING CO:
could not eat or sleep after baby came got
all her health back and gained 10 lbs. in less
than a month.
You simply must try McCoy's at once.
Remember if you don’t gain at least 8 lbs. of
firm healthy flesh in a month get your money
back. Demand and get McCoy’s—the original
R and genuine Cod Liver Oil Tablets
—approved by Good Housekeeping
Institute. Refuse all substitutes—
insist on the original McCoy's—
there are none better.
Without Ear Drums
New Amplified Acousticon uses a new auditory
path —bone conduction, detouring ear drum
and middie ear mechanism. You can hear con-
versation from all angles and at greater dis-
tance, enjoy radio, talkies, church services. A

iy


“L. E. ROBERTS
%
happy release from present handicaps. Com-
plete information and Free Booklet “Defeating
Deafness’ on request, write—




\ PUBLIC ACOUSTICON
A on Autp Titles, Licenses AMPLIFIED HEARING AIDS
\ and Operators Licenses 580 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK, N. Y.
arietta St. and oe —,
mer Main & New Haven “| Patronize Bulletin Advertisers


MOUNT JOY, PA
msm ten -
 

/
Sohal is
tured with a staff gripped firmly in ¥
the right hand as they wended their
way into the wilderness.
Kings and dandies had their sticks,
too. Disraeli, credited with having
been a bit of a dude in his time, had
a different cane for each period of the
day.

Hat-Bands and Baldness
Baldness, says a writer in the Los
Angeles Times, is not due to parasites,
dandruff, nervousness or brain-work
but to the pressure of hat-bands upon
the blood vessels in the scalp. Here-
tofore, women wore loosely fitting
hats, and escaped baldness. Narrow-
headed men do not feel the pressure
of hat-bands
heads, and narrow heads are seldom
bald.
Department of Public Health, it is im-
possible to restore hair which has van-
ished.
may be prevented.

For Death to Wash Scythe
In some of the remote villages of
astern European countries, the peas- |
ants, when a death occurs, immediately
place a large tub of water outside the
front door so that Death may wash his
scythe when he leaves.—George Pol-
hamus, Toledo, Ohio,
Weekly.

Maraschino Cherries
Maraschino cherries are marasca
cherries which have been pitted and |
put in maraschino liquor. Maraschino
is a liquor distilled from the fermented
juice of the marasca cherry and fla-
vored with the broken kernels.
The Granby Token
The Granby token (1737) was a pri-
vate copper coinage issued by John
Higley of Granby, Conn., where there
were copper mines, afterward used as
Tory prisons and workshops. The ob-
verse was a deer, with the legend,
“Value Me As You Please”; Roman
numerals IIT and crescent. The re-
verse was three hammers on a tri-
angular fleld, each surmounted by a | 3
crown, and with the legend, “I Am §
Good Copper.”
as much as do thick- '%
Baldness cannot be cured, but |
in Collier's §
|

MAKE SURE OF'ENOUGH READY MONEY NEXT
According to the United States | &
CHRISTMAS BY JOINING ONE OR MORE
OF THE FOLLOWING CLASSES
CLASS 10F Members paying
for fifty weeks will receive....}
CLASS 25 Members paying 25\ cents a week
for fifty weeks will receive........}
5100
12.50
CLASS 50 Members paying 50 ceits a week $ 25 00
.
for fifty weeks will receive.....
CLASS 100 Members paying
fifty weeks will receive.........
CLASS 200 Members paying
fifty weeks will receive........
fifty weeks will receive.........
$1.00 a week for
$ 50.00
$100.00
$2.00 a week) for
cee len
A
CLASS 500 Members paying $5.00 a week for 2
B20 2 wee 50.00
The Union National Mt. Joy [
Mount Joy, Penna.-