SAGE TWO THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, Mount Joy LANCASTER CO., PA. THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN ESTABLISHED JUNE 1901 Published Every Wednesday at Mount Joy, Pa. JNO. E. SCHROLL, Editor and Publisher Subscription Price $1.50 Per Annum Six Months.... ..75 Cents Single Copies............ 3 Cents Three Months........... 40 Cents Sample Copies... FREE The subscription lists of three other newspapers, the Mount Joy Star pnd News, the Landisville Vigil and the Florin News were merged with the Bulletin. which makes this paper's circulation practically double that of the average weekly. tm EDITORIAL JACK FROST As the chill winds of autumn come, farmers and garden- ers watch crops and plants with anxiety. Many flowers that had been the glory of the gardens hang their drooping heads after Jack has delivered his stealthy blows. Many a farmer has seen his promising crop wither and decay, as the result of premature frost. Agriculture science deals with saucy Jack, who is now abroad with his nippers. There are various plans for ward- ing him off, such as gauzy veils spread over endangered plants, or bonfires that produce thick smoke clouds and hin- der the frosty descent. The farmer and gardener has to be a student of nature. The weather bureau and newspapers and radio tell him when Jack Frost is seen traveling in his direction. If the farmer can’t spare a few minutes to get this information, he may spend many hours regretting the loss of his products. INSURANCE BEGAN IN PENNA. The fraternal insurance movement in the United States. originated in Pennsylvania sixty-seven years ago, the State Insurance Department officials pointed out today. .The movement has grown until societies operating in this State have a total membership of more than four million, and the combined assets of all societies in this country and Canada are more than six billion dollars. The movement in this country had its origin in a co-oper- ative insurance fund started by John Upchurch, a railroad worker, of Meadville, in 1868. Upchurch took up a collect- ion for the funeral expenses of a friend who had died, and types of contract in this State, including endowment and needs in advance of their occurrence. Fraternal societies are now authorized to issue various types of contract in this State, including endownment and annuity policies, EXPERTS RUIN A GAME Now that horseshoe pitching has been taken from the al- ley and the barnyard to a position second only to golf among the sports patronized by all men, and summer resort hotels with access to golf courses also possess horseshoe pitches, or * avhatever they are called, a great wrong is being done this fine pastime. As it was in golf, so is it in the game or ring- ers and leaners—the amateur is being discouraged. The federal census does not record how many Sunday golfers have broken or given away their clubs and retired from the game with a lifetime average of 112 because they have read too much about the feats of Bobby Jones or Law- son Little. It would make an interesting investigation. Now the occasional pitcher of horseshoes is treated to the performances of Ted Allen, of Alhambra, Calif, world champion. Mr. Allen, who uses a one and a quarter turn toss, allows a man to sit on the stake, and without disturbing him, proceeds to throw one ringer after another. He stands a man with a paper bag on his head in front of the stake and pitches a shoe which removes the bag and pins it to the peg. He allows two men to interpose a blanket between himself and the stake and tosses an infallible succession of ringers over it. Since reading about Mr. Allen, we have forsworn horse- shoes and quoits but we certainly hate to discourage such comers as Messrs. Sweitzer, Ruhl, Fellenbaum, Sheaffer, Roth, Hendrix and others. ARMISTICE DAY Though thought is swifter than light, the two minutes of silence on Armistice Day is too brief a space to hold all the thoughts that can never have utterance on such a day. An- § Say | Eee Foal Fashioned of me- tallic lace is the evening gown chosen by Mrs. Franklin D. Roos- evelt, the nation’s first lady, as her costume for Wash- ington’s first im- portant event of the social season. pr Nernst engineering feature, four door sedan. mer, is following in Sweeping from bumper to bumper in one graceful curve, the 1936 Oldsmobile sets a new style in automobile design. Engin- eered right into the car is every proven such as hydraulic “=: brakes, knee action wheels and the solid steel “turret top” body by Fisher. The model shown above is the six cylinder Alfred Sande, step son of the fam- ous Earl Sande, and son of anoth- er noted jockey, Clarence Kum- their foot- steps. He is shown on the grounds of the La Salle Military Institute, where he is a sophomore student. A # {a 4 ~ NL N | " N\ Speaking in Pittsburgh, Miss Carlo Orlando, the daughter of Italy’s prime minister during the world war, recalls her fathers prediction that “within 20 years there will be another great war.” SNAPSHOT GUL ABOUT VIEW FINDERS 2 You will not cut your friends in two OW did I ever hanpen to do that when I took this picture? There are the fish and part of Bill but I certainly did a fine job of cut- ting him in two.” Haven't you heard those s&d words before? Sure you have, The answer is very simple. The lad taking the picture failed to use the view-finder properly when he made the shot. He probably saw that the string of fish was in view, but he quite overlooked the fact that the proudly grinning Bill was neatly cut nual addresses by veterans and by orators not veterans can- not manage, even though thousands of eloquent words be ultered, to give body io the exact thing that is in the minds of most Americans during those two minutes. There probably are Americans who observe the period silence as a fitting ceremony, as a tribute to the Unknown Soldier and his comrades, but who observe it with half a mind given to the work that is to be resumed. There are others who keep the two minutes of silence merely because their fellows do. There must be others who feel in that two | minutes so sheltered by the high wall of silence from every | ordinary demand and interest and problem of the world a | speedy and almost miraculous return, over no matter how | many years, to the mingling of joy and relief, of sorrow and | pride, of shame and exultation, that their country felt on the | | first Armistice Day in 1918. Most Americans now know what that emotion was, buf the day comes, without much delay, when most Amcricans | will not know and they will have to rely on tradition or hear- say for understanding of it. Possibly those who lived through the first Armistice Day do not understand their experience J well enough to persuade others of its reality; if a generation | which knew not the war can understand a man’s being half | ashamed, half proud of the human race on November 11, minutes of silence can mean. est milk weight or | grain for each cow. Ie in two. Most modern cameras have two kinds of view-finders. First, of course, is the familiar reflecting finder—the kind into which you peer from above. Properly shaded, it will give you an accurate idea of what each shot includes. Then there is the “direct” view-finder, mounted on the top or side of the camera. In using it you hold the camera at eye-level and Sigh through two rectangular openings, What you see, the camera will get. With either or both of these finders there is really little reason for fail- ing to get what you want in a picture. Of course, there are limits, defined by the size and shape of the film and the capacity of the lens. You have to if you use your view finder properly. select the most interesting bits of a scene and concentrate on them. When an artist does this, he “com. poses” his picture. Many volumes have been written on the subject of composition, but the whole idea may be boiled down to this: Good compo- sition is simply a pleasing arrange- ment of the elements of a picture, an arrangement that puts the emphasis on the most interesting feature. A little care in using your view finder will, almost invariably, give you a well composed picture. For your eye will reject an arrangement that is confusing or «displeasing; it will warn you that somebody's head is going to be lopped off; it will re. veal whether or not the finished picture will tell a story—the story vou had in mind when you unlim. bered the camera, for “telling a story” is the essence of a good pic. ture. Although we have only ourselves and a few friends to please we can increase that pleasure vastly by pausing, just before we click the shutter, to check up our picture in the view finder. If it’s what we want ~—fire away! And, when the finished pictures come back, we shall cer tainly not begrudge those few sec- onds of concentration on the view finder, JOHN VAN GUILDER Feed to Meet Needs Dairymen who produce the cheap- measure the and erseys should receive one pound of Guernseys grain for three pounds of milk pro- duced, while | one pound of | nds of 1918, that generation will learn to understand what the two vary somewhat with the richness | of the milk. should get grain for 3% or 4 The amount Holsteins milk. Produce Winter Eggs Records kept on Pennsylvania flocks show that winter egg laying will | ia highest and The 55 {is necessary for the most profitable egg production. | high-producing flocks laid practic- | ally two and one-third dozens more | eggs per hen during the months of goed prices ‘than did the low-pro- | ducing group of flocks. | | | | ment with peas, s y Hoots, cauli- Thursday, Nov. 7—At the Bulle- | flower and lettuc 7 iiss They are all plent : i tin Office, East Main Street, Mount | cheap. Onions, cs rocco and nl tomatoes are fairly h Joy, at 7:30 P. M, twe lots of Melons and berries are the best fruit | around Nos. 120 and 148 New Ha- | choices, particularly cantaloupes, hon ar SE s : eydews and watermelons, blackberries, | ven Street, Mt. Joy, cach with im- | raspberries and huckle- or blu Ber yies. provements by the Union National | Here are three menus made up from 2 od seasonable foods edapted to different | Mount Joy Bank, owners. C.S. | budget levels: Frank, auct. Low Cost Dinner Braised Lamb Shanks Friday, November 8—At the Mashed Potatoes Creamed Carrots | Bulletin Office, Mount Joy, Pa, Bread and Butter at 8 P. M., four tracts of land, | Susy Wik Sale Register If you want a notice of your sale inserted in this register weekly from now until day of sale. ABSOLUTE- LY FREE, send or phone us your sale date and when you are ready, let us print your bills. That’s the cheapest advertising you can get. By ANN PAGE | ou prices of meats and poultry have continued to lose altitude during the | past week, jamb and fowl most spec- tacularly. Egg prices have not changed { but lower pri ices are anticipated for | bu 1tte ad e n be brightest st: are temporarily the in Heo vegetable Lemon Sauce Milk Blueberry Cake Tea or Coffee some with improvements by Owen Medium Cost Dinner P. Bricker, Trustee of Jacob Shenk, Cold Chicken Vegetabie Salad Pickled Beets Bread and Butter Jellied Fruits Custard Sauce Tea or Coffee Milk Very Special Dinner Jellied Consomme Roast Beef Browned Potatoes Green Beans Green Salad Roquefort Dressing Bread and Butter Melon Plate Coffee Milk PASTEURIZED Mk W. F. COBLE Turn useless articles about your home into cash. | Advertise them in WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6th, 1935 Bankrupt. C. S. Frank, auct. See advertisement. Saturday, Nov. 16—In the village of Salunga, real estate and personal property by Jac. H. Musser, attor- ney in fact for the heirs of Susanna M. Newcomer, deceased. Sale at 1 o'clock. rere © ree Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. One galion could lift a three-ton Tyrannesaurus 3% miles our classified column. ELWOOD MARTIN, Dist. “He QUETCOMEs @ stout enenty who suc: | ceeds in overcoming his own anger.” IATA YT ’ NOVEMBER | §—Lewis and Clark reach 'the Columbia River, 1805. | 6—United States army cap- | rr ture and occupy Sedan, 1918. 7—36th state votes for repeal of 18th Amendment, 1933. > 8—American Legion holds Nos first national convention, 5 1919. C = sy 9-Start of German revolu- | es tion, Berlin, 1918, | 3 ; 10—Stanley finds lost Living- RZ A ston in Africa, 1871. =e): 11—Great dust storm darkens { all of Chicago, 1933, © C. E. LUTZ, THAT EXTRA “LIFT” IN H-C gives 1 to 3 more miles per galion Ask the Sinclair Dealer Copyrighted 1935 by Sinclair Refining Co mpany (Inc.) Agent Sinclair Refining Company (Inc.) ~r P Elizabethtown, PHONE 217TM GRISSINGER’S E. Main St, MT. JOY, PA. CHAS. HELLER MASTERSONVILLE, PA. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. 459—10a Truck and 455-26a Farm 460—Main St. Prope Rapho Twp... . .. 453-62, House, Garage, Etc. . . . 454—Corner Prop. & Lot, Mt. Joy . 457-3-Story Brick House, Mt. Joy . 458-22% a Farm, electric . . . 456— Corner Property Florin, all con. Right JNO. E. SCHROLL, Realtor MOUNT JOY, PA. 2000000000 REALTY LISTING! HERE ARE A NUMBER OF PROPERTIES to be DISPOSED of at DEPRESSION PRICES OOO $2500 $2500 $2500 $3500 $4000 $4500 Poultry Farm rty, Florin . . . . $2600 Colu Hect and Irwil Mi New Jane spen Clay Mr daug Mrs. week sonb Mr taine ' man, dinn Good man Beat: Mi of 1 baun day parer lenbe Mi: ion Long the at day Mous Eliza won costu Mr bara Hallo and comic the ( on Colun the the s H Ir Clenr and « Jr; © and « Mr. a daugh ton E raim and C MILL ONT Ar vance 1936 precec Thi annou of Re Octob Powe: the p the I: and it appre who currer view | amour Fund, it is » The pany of the electri State, of the as tax To cident refrair islative source come would other ces Ww in in payers develo H The Miller: will bi Millers game day. An i alumni the ¢ 5000 g spond. S Stor bage, « slightly cool, squash dry, fa