The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 29, 1936, Image 5

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    1936
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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2th,

1936
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
FOREIGN VILLAGES AT GREAT LAKES EXPOSITION


Great Lakes Exposition’s
run for one hundred days. More
visitors are expected to attend. The fair will feature
exhibits depicting the industrial, commercial, social
and cultural life of the Great Lakes area, In the
insert Kate Smith, radio star, is shown receiving an
invitation to the exposition from Mayor Harold H.
Burton of Cleveland.
Old World atmosphere will be captured for the
“Streets of the World,” a
ten-acre international village. The village, shown
above, will be the central feature of the exposition’s
huge amusement zone and will contain more than
100 structures. The mammoth exposition will open
on Cleveland's downtown lakefront June 27 and will
than 4,000,000








Everyday Cooking Miracles


BY FRANCES WEEDMAN
Director Hotpoint Electric Cookery Institute
If you didn’t find a kitchen like
this one tucked away in your Christ-
mas stocking then resolve, right
now, (New Year's AFTER reso-
lutions are every bit as good) to at
least start campaigning for your
modern miracle kitchen in 1936!
Just picture your own complete
satisfaction if you could say “good
[>

atid place it in the baking pan. Oh,
did you forget to preheat the oven?
No, indeed you didn’t, because this
range is one of the new, automatic
electric ranges which bakes cakes
the “one step” way. You see, all of
the forgettable, unnecessary details
and hazardous steps involved in old-
time cooking have been eliminated

The electric range, at left, is one of the most important features of the modern
all-electric kitchen
morning” in this bright, cheery
kitchen, Doesn’t it give you a tin-
gling, thrilling feeling way inside?
And the satisfaction of using this
kitchen lies not only in its delight-
ful, eye-pleasing beauty, seen at a
glance, but it lies in the usefulness
of its gadgets, in the reachableness |
of its trim doors and drawers, in
the general utility of all of its work-
ing surfaces. It is in such a kitchen
as this that real cooking miracles
can happen.
Easy Cake Baking
For example, how would you like
to bake a cake like this, knowing
beforehand that it was going to be
a sure success? Simply stand at the
smooth, stainless working surface
which has been provided and find
within easy reach all of the cook-
ing utensils which you need (no
necessity in this kitchen of running
a marathon or of going through
strenuous calisthenics collecting
this and that). Then mix the cake
in the usual conventional manner

in this new miracle kitchen; they
have been replaced by an unbeiiev-
able series of new conveniences; and
an economical, scientific surene:s in
results is obtained through their
use,
In Cold Oven
But, let's get back to our cake!
Next, place the cake in the cold,
unpreheated electric oven and we
close the door, with nary a qualm.
We set the temperature control at
the correct baking temperature, and
we turn the switch which releases
the measured electric heat units in-
to the heat-controlled, moisture-con-
trolled, insulated oven, to Bake.
Then while the cake assumes a
light, velvety textured, golden-
brownness, we place the soiled
‘dishes in the charge of the electric
dish washer, and we are then free
to go about some “new” business
until the cake is done.
This is “one step” Miracle baking
and really don’t you agree that it
is a miracle?


RECIPES
TRIED and TRUE
COCOANUT CAKE
2 cups granulated sugar
3 eggs
1 cup butter
1 cup sweet milk
3% cups flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
Mrs. Berger uses this cake as a
foundation for all kinds of cakes.
Varying the flavoring and frosting
used from time to time. The cocoa-
nut icing is especially nice on this
particular cake.


CREAMED SHPIMPS ON RICE
3 tablespoons
3 cups boiling salted water
1 tablespoon butter
serve.
3 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
1 cup shrimps (1 can)
2 tablespoons salad dressing
Cook the rice in boiling salted
water until tender, and drain.
Melt butter and add flour and salt.
When well mixed add milk and
| bring to boiling point, stirring con-
stantly. Add shrimps and cook
until - they" are thoroughly heated.
Remove from fire.’ Add salad
dressing. Pour over hot rice and
Double the amount if there
are more than four in family:
Ce
Although our patent system is a-
bout 145 years old granting of
patents on plants was not author-
ized until a few years ago. A law
to this effect, the Townsend-Pur-
nell bill, was enacted by Con-

2 tablespoons flour
gress in 1930,

LIFE ON MARS?
Hiram Percy Maxim, who in-
vented the silencer for guns, autos,
{aiid hospital windows, believes that

Mars is inhabited by a race of
{beings much further advanced than
the men of this earth. The design
of the canals, he says, offers con-
proof that they are artifi-
cial, and for works to be construc-
ted on such a scale as to be vis-
{ible from the earth would suggest
a race of super-life, not necessarily
in the form of man.
rrr se AD ARI en
LET GRASS GET STARTED
Cows should not be turned out to
‘pasture until the grass has gotten
| throughout the
well started and the ground settled.
Better pasture and more feed
season will result
from giving the grass a chance to

get a good growth in early spring.
CheSNAP
At Home With Your Camera


. sacrifice?

Was the Pacifist
Right?
By
LEONARD A. BARRETT



The appeal for volunteers in the
late war was met not only by a
large number of
young men who
enthusiastically
contributed their
services, but by
a much smaller
group who stead-
fastly refused,
for conscience
sake, to bear
arms. At the
time these men
were branded as
pacifists and
were looked
upon as cowards,
shirkers, unpa-
triotic, and unworthy of the priv-
ileges of American citizenship. The
sobering and painful experiences
through which we have passed since
Armistice day may cause us to in-
quire seriously: Was the pacifist
altogether wrong? The experiences
of the last decade have led many to
interpret conditions in a far differ-
ent light than during the crucial
years of the war period. We are
now inquiring in all seriousness:
Was the pacifist right?
Let the Unknown Soldier speak.
Were his voice audible, we might
hear him thus speak—I gave my
life to make the world safe for de-
mocracy. It is no more safe today
than when I went overseas. For
what purpose did I fight? Whom
did I serve? Was it all a hideous
mistake that I made the supreme
What is our honest and
unprejudiced answer? We might,
also, hear him speak like this—
Never again. Edith Cavell was
right; patriotism fs not enough.
The only way to put an end to war
is to refuse to fight. Let the forces
opposed to war organize to resist
militarism. You cannot settle the
question by mere argument, but it
can be settled by the creation of a
better social order, composed of
right-minded people who in peace
organize for the purpose of abolish-
ing war.
Is the pacifist right when he tells
us we must take pacifism out of the
clouds, of sentiment and make it a
part of our practical politics? Is
he right when he steadfastly and
conscientiously affirms that war is’
wrong ; socially, morally wrong, and
therefore, has no place in a Chris-
tian civilization? Is he right when
he affirms his intolerance with the
theory of non-resistance to evil, and
at the same moment hastens to ar-












This room has medium colored walls and a variety ot tones in the fu
nishings. Taken at 20 seconds, 1.22. lens focused at 15 feet.

URNITURE dealers report a sub
stantial increase in business. Are
you numbered among those who have
refurnished a room or added new
furniture or decorations?
If so you should take a picture of
this rejuvenated room. lustead of
merely writing friends or relatives
about the new dining room, bedroom
or living room suit you can send
them pictures. Maybe you have a new
nursery!
Don’t put off taking these pictures
any longer for making them is not
at all difficult; in fact you will en-
joy it. Here are a few pointers that
may help you in making your first
shots.
If you take your interior pictures
in the daytime-the chances are that
you will have to take a time ex-
posure unless your camera is
equipped with a very fast lens, say
1.3.5 or faster. If a time exposure is
necessary you will have to use a tri-
pod or else place the camera on some
solid support such as a table. Even
with an 7.3.5 lens you should have
some substantial support for your
camera for you will probably find it
necessary to take your shot at 1/5th
or 1/10th of a second, and at speeds
slower than 1/25th of a second it is
extremely difficult tc hold the camera
steady. Any movement of the camera
will cause a blurred picture.
The secret of success in indoor piec-
tures lies in controlling the lizht
reaching the various parts of the
room to be pictured. To begin with,
never point your camera directly at
the window or door through which
the greatest amount of light is com-
ing. Keep the light behind or to the

side of the camera 11. as
a omy
b api

cf that lar window clear d
and keep it down for P
long enough to give you the other
features and details. Then, close the
shutter and run the shade i to its
normal position. Now, go back to t!
camera and, without BS Ag
film or the camera’s position, ©
the shutter again for a half second
lon,
It is a good idea to use a very
os hs yp in taking indoor
becausz you want detail. Foe
Sn half-way between the
camera and the far side of the room;
then, when the lens is stopped down
you will find that practically every-
thing is in sharp focus.
Avoid including large pieces of
furniture in the foreground, lest they
take up more space in the picture
than they deserve.
Exposure time will vary, of course,
with the brilliance of the daylight
and the degree to which the walls
reflect light. On a bright day, pic-
tures in a predominantly light col-
ored room can be taken with an ex-
posure of five or ten seconds. On dull
days, in dark rooms having only one
window, you will need as much as
five minutes, with the lens at 7.16.
Interior pictures serve, as
“memory insurance” for in years ie
come when members of your family
have “grown up” they will enjoy
looking at the snaps of the “old
homestead” taken when they were
youngsters.
JOHN VAN GUILDER



 


sometimes |



piple trick. Pui 1 the shades |

Here's the New Parchment



i) ry CASTERS FOR THE
| KITCI
EN
Baked Mack TABLE!




home craftsman can do his
by equipping
with
the table be-
most helnful
for it can be
The
wlevife a real
the kitchen
When this
m onc of
rt’cl n the
service
table
is done,
the
tea-casters.


moved about easily from the stove
}
nk, to the ice box, or to
ince of the din'ng room
flt or
and consequently
vol'shed floors
of linoleum.
W llpaper =
dam» spots on wall-
are not always easy to
move as all will acknowledge who
have tried it. It is, however, not
to do this with a mixture
consisting of salicylic acid, one
‘part, and alchol, 90 parts. Use a
oft cloth or sponge to daub
In a few
the en'r:
The cas‘ers have rubber-
1 wheels,
wll not mar ithe

mn Spots o
Mold or
re-
difficult
small
moments they
me ones DON W. GOR
Eye mt Mount Joy, Pa.

aisappear.
-— elt G
impressions
stick—espec
 

wi Lp 3
vy excellent proce ture to
15 the full, rich, fine fl
7 come out of oven i
d garnished with lemon |
vor


Settling international ites than
by the shedding of blood?
The causes of war are primarily
economic and social. These prob-
lems can and must be solved on the
basis of an authorized system of
Christian ideals. There is no other
alternative. We must fight war with
principles and not with swords, It
is the task of no mere conscripted
group, but of all of us who claim the
right and privileges of citizenship.
POTPOURRI


Before te Christian era, bells,
as we know them today, did not
exist. Bars of metal and cym-
bals were struck by hand to pro-
duce the sounds, The cup-shaped
type of bell came into being in
the Fourth century. They were
first used in France in 550 and
in England a century later,
© Western Newspaper Union.






( nt
i 41 Lo Og 3 DEST
bijyseand th t’s the
you! Evidenc
¢oiplenty...fd
of better tan 439%
greater non-s§
age, quicker-8§&
safer grip, longs:
ance. Get yous
worth and the
ye us about tif


ears”


Goody

Clarence F.
Phone 197 MT. JOY, PA.










E POSTS
durable
PROVIDE FENC |
Sound timber of trees
growing in the farm woodland can
be used for fence posts. The dura-
Eilit
the
y of the wood is not affected by
season of the year in which the
tree is cut and it is not necessary to

season posts before they are set in
the
Kidneys avs
Clean Gut © Acids
The only way your body can clean out
Acids and Poisonous wastes from your
blood is thru 9 million tiny, delica i-
ney tubes or filters, but beware
drastic, {irritating drugs. If
Kidney or Bladder disorders
suffer from Getting Up Ni
ness, Leg Pains, Back
Eyes, Dizziness, Rheur
ity, Burning, Smarting
take chances. Get the
teed prescription call
Tex), oD fast, si
uiet — Unscen —
Trouble-free -
Yields a wealth of cold-
making power at ale
nt cos t... because of cu
sign with bai
ng parts! Preci-
permanerily oiled,
y sealed aguinst
and dirt. Comes to
cred for Five Yiars
vice expense, for
ollars, included
ise priced












ground.



 
agains
Peoof / de
ETTER & SN
MT. JOY,

 









VE
Ve
J. B. HOSTE
Phone 68


Hi costs is Jc a ae at dr 1ggists
and the guarantee protects you.








andard Varieties
rees in most excellent ¢« and due to
eptionally fine flavored

>»
Li ACTS
LAL 14a & vv a \ Lila,
of land, 2 acres of woodland, large frame building,
complete spraying outfit, tractor, etc. all included
in sale.
The price is very reasonable and can prove a
good investment. For further particulars apply to