TORER | 2nd, INESDAY, OCTOBER 2nd, 1935 GOES MODERN Tropical Belle Keeps Up With Modern Modes RE you looking for a food with a tang, refreshing as an shore breeze, simple to serve ry day, and smart to serve for ertaining? We nominate pine- ile. adapts itself easily the mode. When hair and sses were bobbed short, and ple went in for parfaits piled in slender glasses — pine- le parfaits topped the list. w that the “Queen Mary Coif- @" has swept Paris, in honor Great Britain's jubilee year, I dinner dresses sweep the tles, pineapple is molded into ied Ijme salads and fashion- e créamed shrimp dishes. Sun-kissed Dishes rust these tropical belles for King themselves alluring. Per- )8, however, you prefer pine- ile as it appears in its native m-—as they serve it often at waiian resorts. Then place a den ring of pineapple on cool leaves — nasturtium leaves do nicely, if you have them, wm) cress is also nice—and serve ce cold on a green glass dish. at’s a breakfast dish of pristine wity to tempt the appetite! he £ you go in for smart and de- ious combinations, then try ne of the following recipes ich include dishes appropriate breakfast, luncheon or dinner: Tested Timely Recipes fellied Pineapple Lime Salad: solve one package lime gelatin {three-fourths cup of boiling Ss ter. Add the contents of one > 2 can Hawaiian crushed pine- > Service; e. When partly set, add one- f cup shredded blanched al- mds and mold in a flat tin. Cut squares and serve on crisp let- 8 with cream mayonnaise, gar- ed with a red and a green a un SOAP AND WATER fhe old saying ‘Cleanliness is Godliness’, from the prac- is well worth em- sizing. Science has long rec- pd that soap and water rep- an effective combination a- many disease germs. Yet, ite of this generally admitted and the widespread availibil- warm water and good soap, are many persons whose use these cleansing agents is care- t superficial and even down- neglectful,” states Dr. Edith Bride-Dexter, Secretary of om a public health standpoint ifs are made to enforce clean- in eating and drinking es- ming that these mandates rally respected, there yet 5 the vast field of human where the menace of sé germ definitely needs the ation of soap and water to are re- ac- fibe host to devastating micro- abisms. Disease germs may even gin the handshake of a friend for instance, suffering from a cold, coughs into his hand, i clasps the hand of another in turn, places his hand to outh. It follows that every before eating should thoroughly the hands with soap and wa- Undoubtedly many affections e respiratory tract arise be- of the neglect of this simple ph efficient prophylatic rite. btidious persons will also in- upon a daily tub or shower though in cold weather, ly from a health viewpoint, th every day for the average br or sedentary person is not utely necessary. k, and vertise y noth- in this ko, one must overlook the h. It is imperative that the and gums be effectively ed after each meal and also e retiring, and that dental floss mployed to remove food par- from teeth crevices. The cal and dental professions well the | cherry. Place a cheese ball, rolled in chopped mint or parsley, at the side of each. This serves eight persons. Trafalgar Square Salad: Cut four slices of Hawaiian pineapple in halves. On lettuce leaves lay an overlapping row of pineapple and sliced peeled tomato, using first a half slice of pineapple, and then a slice of tomato. Dress with French dressing to which chop- ped green pepper and chopped pimiento have been added. This serves eight persons. Shrimps and Pineapple in Cream Sauce: Drain the contents of one 53% -ounce can of shrimps and brown on both sides in a lit tle butter. Drain one cup of cannec pineapple which has been cut in wedges, and add with the shrimps to two cups of rich cream sauce. Reheat and serve on toast tri- angles. This serves four persons. Sunrise Pineapple: Chill the contents of one No. 2% can of sliced pineapple and one and one half cups of orange juice ove night. In the morning drain the pineapple, place slices in serving dishes and pour over the orange juice. Decorate with a sprig of mint or a nasturtium leaf, This serves eight persons. Pineapple Ice Box Dessert: Cream one-half cup butter, add one and one-fourth cups of con fectioner’s sugar and cream again. Add three slightly beaten egg yolks. Add one-half cup of chopped toasted almonds, one cup of drained crushed pineapple and eight maraschino cherries. Fold in three stiffly beaten egg whites and flavor with one-half teaspoon almond flavoring. Line a mold with lady fingers, fill with the mixture and set in the refrigera- tor for eight hours or over night. This serves six persons.* know that the usual mouth and gum affections get their start in unclean mouths. Thus, both from the aesthetic and health consideration, the daily and energetic applications of soap and water are absolutely essential. However, even today there are many thousands of people whose appreciation of this fact is sadly lacking. i A Gre MARRIAGE LICENSES Harry Cohen, Harrisburg, and Gertrude N. Heisey, Elizabethtown. Thomas M. Body, Jr. Landis- ville, and Kathryn Sarah Myers, Salunga. Morris A. Stoltzfus, of Talmage, and Ruth E. Weidel, Landisville, were granted a marriage license at Harrisburg. Won Title and $1,000 Miss Charlotte Acres of Vancou- yer, B. C, won the world's profes- sional five-mile swim champion- ship for women, in Lake Ontario's cold and choppy waters in a field of 15; and with the title, and purse of $1,000, she also won the distinction of being the first Cana- dian girl to win the event in its elght years’ history. eer A ea THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Too Much Showmanship By E. C. SCHURMACHER © McClure Newspaper Syndicate. WNU Service. . Y ov ask we, senor, why Ameri. can performers are barred from acting in my restaurant. The rea- son may be traced directly to Senor James Capehart who came here as a funny man in an American revue, imbibed so freely that he missed the boat train to La Guayra, and through what he was pleased to call his showmanship, caused many com- plications. The trouble started when Pablo, my waiter, informed me that Senor Capehart’s bill amounted to four- teen pesos, not counting the glass- ware which in a spirit of frivolity he had hurled across the street at the window of my competitor, Pedro Favita, owner of the Cafe de Cerdo Rojo. I approached the intoxicated se- nor, and suggested that as he seemed unable to pay, a bit of dish- washing was in order. “Forget the dishwashing,” said Senor Capehart with a shudder, “If celebrities can bring you business, you're practically a success right now. Just leave it to my show- manship !I” He had once been an imperson- ator, he said, and could represent your notable Americans so ably that anyone would be deceived. “And what has that to do with me?” I demanded. “It's easy,” he said. “Favita stole a march on you with General Tarano, didn’t he? Now suppose you go him one better. The crowd always follows celebrities. Use a little showmanship! Who is the most popular man in Caracas to- day?’ “It is the renowned matador, Gar- cia de la Hoya, whose likeness dec- orates that poster over the bar.” Senor Capehart arose and sur- veyed the poster carefully. “A pipe!” he exclaimed. “A dead cinch! Tonight I shall give the performance of my career for you, impersonating Garcia del Hoya!” At his insistence I dispatched Pablo to his hotel to get what he called his make-up kit. Then swear- ing Pablo to silence, I sent him to bring back a matador’s suit from the store which supplies all the cos- tumes for the fiestas. That night, with great treplda- tion, I awaited Senor Capehart. He did not appear until ten o'clock when we had the most customers. When he did enter, so perfect was his impersonation that I would have sworn he was the great matador, Garcia del Hoya, himself, That’s nothing,” he said. “To. morrow night I will give you an even greater Impersonation. To- morrow afternoon I go to the office of the chief of police to study him.” “But,” I objected, “His Excel- lency, Rafael Numero, Chief of po- lice, seldom goes out in public. Don’t you think it dangerous?” “I shall play my part with the discretion befitting a great artist,” he said. Senor Capehart had done his work well, On the following night the talk about the renowned mata- dor had so spread around Caracas that our bar was crowded. Business was better than it had ever been. Just as I observed this, Pedro Favita, my competitor, descended upon me. “De Valavera!” he hissed. “I know the full extent of your per- fidy. The clerk at the costumer’'s confessed that he rented you that matador’s suit.” I tried to quiet him. “I also know,” he continued, “that Senor Capehart rented a uniform there, of a chief f police, in which he will masquer- de tonight. I will denounce him he minute he comes in.” Almost as Favita finished speak- ng, there appeared in the doorway a figure in the dress uniform of the hief of police, Favita spied him Instantly. “Name of a pig!” he cried. “Impostor! Come here that I may unmask you!” There was immediate silence among the patrons. The uniformed figure seemed to hesitate mo- mentarily, then slowly approached our table. Favita’s hand shot up and grabbed the waxed mustachios, giving them a ferocious tug. There was a startled cry from the owner and a look of amazement on the face of Favita—for the mus- tachios did not come off. Their own- er was the real chief of police, as the squad of policemen who dashed into the cafe and marched the fran- tic Favita off to jail very volubly assured him, It was fully a half hour later that Senor Capehart appeared. He was in ordinary street clothes for which I was profoundly thankful, “I don't knot why you are late,” I sald, “but I am grateful indeed that you did not carry through your impersonation.” “But. 1 amazement. “About two hours ago I gave the greatest impersonation of my career in excellence of make- up, for I was before the most criti- cal audiences I have ever faced!” “And that was... .?" I asked sar- castically. “The chief of police and Pedro Tavita!” said Senor Capehart.,. “I called on each of them and told them that someone would try to im- personate the chief of police here tonight. And in doing so I was dis- guised as the clerk of the costumer where you hired that matador’s uni- form!" eng Eisteddfod, Expression of Welsh National Life Eisteddfod (pronounce it “ice- tethvod,” with the accent on the “teth” and the “th” soft) ts said to be the supreme expression of Welsh’ national life. Long, long ago the original legislative and judicial fune- tions of the bardic assembly were transferred to London. Nowadays they are part of the ordinary gov- ernmental machinery of Great Brit- ain, Yet the Welsh have remained to this day a distinct nationality, states a writer in the New York Times. Their national institutions and national heroes are wholly un- like those of the Saxon, their mem- ories are centuries longer than Saxon memories and the whole of their na- tional life is contained within a language which is Sanskrit to the, Saxon. Their sense of nationality has never been stronger than fit is today, partly perhaps because theirs | is a cultural nationalism, Inde- | pendence for the intellect is its doc- trine. Every Welshman is potentially a chaired bard. It may in fact be taken as a law of human nature that no two Welshmen can meet without holding an elsteddfod of their own then and there, As a mat- | ter of fact, big and little eisteddfods,’ are held the world around, wherever | there is a sufficient number of: Welshmen to form a choir, | Common Mole Must Have Some animals can exist for long periods without food. The badger and dormouse, when they hibernate, will have no meals for weeks at a time, and the latter have been known to sleep from November to March and then be in excellent con-! dition to carry on. But one small mammal that we find all over the country will die if it cannot get a! meal every few hours. This is our common mole; 10 hours is about the limit of its life without food, so it: works hard for a living, writes Oliver C. Pike in Tit-Bits Maga- zine, In damp weather we find moles | working just under the surface of the fields; they make long tunnels, and it is surprising to note the ra- pidity with which they can get through soft earth, picking up worts as they travel. If we know a meadow where there are mole- hills, we can often see the moles’ at work between them. There is a | slight movement of the grass which is continued in one direction, the! grass, all the time, being raised an inch or so. Some of these tunnels stretch for long distances over the meudows, and the moles, will use’ them as underground tracks. { Fines for Swearing Built Church La Guayra, Venezuela, is one of the most novel and interesting ports. It is the port of Caracas, the cap- ital of the country, which is only seven miles away in direct line but, must be approached by a serpentine railroad 23 miles in length, which climbs the foothills of the Andes and the eastern slopes of:the great mountain chain itself, Caracas, at a height of 3,000 feet, has a climate that is springlike at all times. The city is an ancient one for the West- ern world, dating from 1567. In the picturesque port of La Guayra is a church that has no counterpart elsewhere. It was built from the proceeds of fines imposed for swear- ing and is referred to by the inhabi- tants as the “Iglesia de la Santis- sama Carramba,” or “The Church of the Most Holy Damn.” It is a sumptuous church, into the con- struction of which fas gone many a contribution from inhabitants who were willing to pay for their swear- ing. The Janizaries The Janizaries, an infantry force of Turkey, were first organized by! Sultan Orkhan about 1330. Later their number was increased and he exclaimed in| they were given special privileges. It was their boast that they never fled in battle and that they were the nerve ard sinew of the Otto- man army. ‘They were kept in bar- racks in Corstantinople and a few other cities. Some constituted the sultan's bodyguard and in time they became so dangerous that their | frequent insurrections résulted in ef- forts to disband them. In 1826 they rebelled becriuse of a proposal to form a new militia, the sultan, Mah- moud II, having displayed the flag of the Prophet, apd supported by their commander in chief defeated the rebels and burned their bar- racks, many of them perishing in the flames. A royal proclamation abolished the corps. Some 15,000 were executed and fully 20,000 were banished, . | Custom to Cut Off Ears | Before the Statute de la Juriere was passed in 1275, which forbade Jews to practice moneylending and levied a tax upon them, it was the custom in England to cut off Jews’ ears and nail them to trees. There ig little doubt that the fungus called the Jew's Ear, which resembles a human ear and grows on the trunk of the elder tree, owes its name to this historical fact. Some authori- ties affirm, however, that it is a contraction for Judas ear, as it is popularly . believed that it was on an elder tree that Judas hanged himselt.—Answers Mazozine, wd ! Gamber, C. H. Herr, Mervin | Food Every Few Hours ! Assisted At Barn Raising (From page 1) Benj. K. Hess, C. S. Nolt, John | Cassat, Jacob B. Habecker, Mar- | tin H. Musser, H. S. Ebersole, H. G. Kauffman, A. G. Breneman, mer B. Newcomer, Clayton Strickler, William H. Fackler, Ed- | win G. Kline, Robert Zeiter, Fred | R. Hahn, Ray Sweitzer, Christ Keller, Robert Enterline, Walter Eichelberger, Loverne Heistand, Harrison T. Baker, Arthur KEK Gingrich, Richard Nolt, Ray Ken- neth Henne, Andrew H. Shaub, Reuben Shearer, Herman Ginder, Jr, Walter S. Gantz, Donald Ret- | tew, Thomas Grayhill, Roy Fuhr- | man, Bowman Todd, J. H. Warfel !Paul Musser, John H. Musser, H. | Mabel Aungst. , Clinton Engle, Harvey M. Ginder, R. B. Nolt, Abram H. Greider, Amos S. Newcomer, Walter S. J. "Harold Kauffman, John S. Neff, E. R. Bomberger, A. Fitzkee, C. H. Eby, Ezra Ney, Abram H. Miller, Cornelius Musser, Carl er, Martin F. Helfrich, Norman H. Musser, T. H. Musser, John Hamilton, Joseph D. Fry, John H. Knight, John T. Charles, John G. Weidler, Mark S. Nolt, Alonzo | C. Cassat, Harvey S. Newcomer, | N. N. Baer, Enos K. Herr, Albert Brosey, Geo. W. Keebler, Elmer | Dyer, Milton Strickler, A. W. Esh- W. Fackler, Abram M. Bernhard, Herman S. Ginder, S. H. Zerphey, Rea E. Greider, Stan- ley, Witman, Harry H. Miller, A. H. Keller, Walter Bepeyler, Willis S. Nolt, H. O. Emenbheiser, H. M. Gantz, E. M. Mutzer, Er- nest J. Sander, Jerome M. Wiss- ler, Ralph Kain, Sam Hess, Oscar Newccemer, Lloyd B. Musser, H B. Hiram B. N. R. | | i David Hubley, S. B. Nolt, Erb, C. G. Breneman, Strickler, Milton Mowrer, SIZE PRICE \ | 4.40-21 $5.20 4 4.50-20% 4.50-21 5.70 | 5.00-19§ 475-19 6.05 | 5.25-18 5 i subject to change withou tis Prises ghee sales tax additional gs Clarence F. Grissit Phone 192 MOUNT JOY, 3 ' COULD NOT DO HER WEN everye thing Jeu ate tempt is a burden ! —when you are nervous and irri- table—at your wit’s end—tr this medicine. It may be Jost what you need for extra energy: Mrs. Charles L. Cadmus of Trenton, New Jersey, says, “After doing just a little work I had to lie down. My mother-in-law recom- mended the Vegetable Compound. 0000006 | Icanseea wonderful change now.” RR ISA wl EAR RON EA RATE BY l Nissley, Paul R. Newcomer, B. Roy Bender, Arthur Nisley, Wm. Dyer, Harvey Fuhrman, El-! vin Gaul, Elam Longenecker, | Harry B. Oberholtzer, Joseph Cooper, Daniel M. Heisey, J. Robert Charles, Henry S. Musser, | Cornelius Musser, John Jacob Weidler, Jacob W. Newcomer, Samuel G. Erb, Harry S. Gantz, Christ Musser, Amos H. Musser, | David Hostetter, Londa Zurin, E. W. Wissler, Aaron G. Forry, R. M. Davis, Lloyd W. Nolt, John Male- horn, John Bender, Paul Spanck- ler, Clarence Gantz, Ralph Gantz, Warren Aungst, Christ Ebersole, Christ Newcomer. The ladies who helped to serve: | Mrs. Allen Keller, Mrs. John | | | Hamilton, Mrs. John Bender, Mrs. | Ed Mutzer, Mrs. Howard Warfel, Ruth Warfel, Mrs. Hiram Strick ler, Mary Shearer, Mrs. Oscar Newcomer, Katherine Keller, Lil- lian Sweitzer, Mrs. Harry | Mrs. Horace Wagner, Mrs. War- | ren Aungst, Blanche Gantz, Mrs. ——- Eee FOOD SALE The Needle Guild of the Trinity | or eisteddfodau as some would say, Newcomer, Clarence T. Metherell, | Lutheran Church will hold a food sale, Saturday, October 5th at the home of Geo. H. Brown, West Main Street. fi: lean, Well-Graded | Crushgd Stone Ata Lo John A. HY) e rice Mt. Joy 86 or E'town GGA sep.11- CARD PARTY OCT. 11 The Ladies Guild of the Episcopal church will hold a card party Friday evening, October 11, in the Mt. Joy Hall rm AY A When in need of Printing. (any- thing) kindly remember the Bulletin mnt nee Caren tre: Advertise in The Bulletin. EYES EXAMINED i SG EL) GLASSES hg ’ & FITTED TT tre DR. HUBER OPTOMETRIST LANCASTER, PA. John D. Killheffer PTOMETRIST 220 N. DUKE ST. OUR, Elizabethto East High Street PRINTING) | “roby ho 2s 9A Mt 0 P. M. PRICES are LOWEST Manheim—19 W. 1 Street. Mon., Wed., Thurs., 8 Evenings, Tues., Fri. The BULLETIN MOUNT JOY slice To Poultrymen As we a ow approaching the season that you will want to ase remember that Laying Mash good results. The quality 5 a call. ; J. W. WOLGEMUTH Phone Elizabethtown, Pa. WAREHOUSE & COAL YARD house your J. W. lod: Is the Mash you should feed to mash at a very low price. Please giv: PA. § sep] 3 will, you ds READERS— ATTENTION! We are continually striving to make The Bulletin more interesting and if you In the belief that many of you don’t grasp the idea of just what constitutes NEWS, here's a list of what we want: Anyone Left Town—Embezzled— Died—Eloped—Married— Had a Fire—Had a Baby— Sold a Farm—Had a Party— Entertained—Got Drowned— Had Been Ill—Moved to Town— Bought a Home—Got Ri? Had an Operation—Commiitted a Murder— Painted Their House—Fell From a Plane— Had an Auto Wreck—Fixed Up Their Home— Or Any Unusual Happening—THAT'S NEWS MOUNT JOY © P0000? can help us a lot. i$ L- - a Dog— PRE