h, 193? = DEST G nother ds n out your > Kid= cheap, tional e you ryous= Under Acid don't 1aran« (Siss-~ In 48 and is ek or kage, geisiy AT 3 tha can't 1t on sug- )0on= ss of limi- ec de ff 20 V. nsti- | ac laily )oost | WEDNESDAY, SE "EMBER 29th, -SNAPSHOT CUIL 1937 PATTERN PICTURES 5 £3 An exposure of 1/100 second at £.5.6 on chrome type of film caught this i water pattern, TATURE has a mysterious way of creating patterns, designs. She seems to abhor plainness as much as she abhors a vacuum. t+ Consider that every cell that is the substance of matter is fashioned in some kind of pattern. The snow- flake has a pattern. Liquids crystal lize in patterns. The wind arranges snow drifts in patterns as it does the sand on dunes and deserts, The tide goes out and leaves the sea bottom rippled with designs. Calm water disturbed makes rhythmic designs on its surface. Shadows make pat- terns. Leafy boughs against the sky, moss on the rocks, tiger skins, wings of birds—what is there unadorned with some kind of pattern? Nature is full of them, evidences of a seeming purpose to maintain rhythm, beauty and order in the universe, Man imi- tates them, consciously or uncon- sciously, in the structures he builds, the materials he fabricates and the order in which he places things, Have you ever thought of pat- terns, nature’s and man’s, as sub- era artists have made prize pictures of patterns. It's a way to obtain new pleasure from the world about you. It requires, first, skill in seeing pat. terns. They are so common that only the exceptionally obvious ones, like those in sea sand, are likely to be noticed by a person not looking for them, These we call curious, but gaze up through a skyscraper in the course of construction or go down to the waterfront and study the patterns that the masts and rig- ging of ships make against the sky, Watch for shadow designs made by ordinary ebjects, such as a picket fence or a cartwheel, These are the kinds that only the purposeful ob- server is likely to notice. For him, patterns that may be caught with a camera are everywhere, Plump a stone into a pool or spill a box of matches on the table and you have one made to order for you. Go pattern hunting with your cams era, Taking such pictures challenges your photographic skill and you will find that both your album and your mind will Le enriched thereby, jects for a camera hobby? Some cam- John van Guilder. State Tests Signs Showing Highest Speed For Curves or By WARREN VAN DYKE 1 Secretary of Highways Harrisburg, October 1—Markers | warning . motorists the maximum | speed at which curves can be] rounded safely are the Depart- | ment of Highways’ latest innova- | tion in highway safety. | { The first of these speed limit in- | dications will be seen along U. S.| Route 11 from New Cumberland | to the Maryland State Line, be- | ginning September 1. If successful, the markers will be extended gradually to other major routes. Numerals only, such as “20, | »25,” or “30,” will be painted on| present black and white signs] which show show sharp turns, in- | tersections and other dangerous | conditions ahead. These numerals | will indicate the greatest speed the | motorist should travel in making | the curve. TU. S. Route 111 was selected for | this experiment because of its, numerous short vertical and hori- | zontal curves. Drivers on this heavily traveled highway now will { be protected against these hazards | if they heed the markers which | will be posted along the entire | distance of 40 miles. Driving conditions on this road | below York may be changed later | because of contemplated resurfac- | ing and banking of curves. When | this is done, the speed limit indi- | cations will be changed as may be | found practicable. Motorists will have no difficulty in discerning the numerals which | will be 12 inches high, stencilled | under the directional symbol. They should not be confused with route numbers which are painted on separate signs in the form of a shield and a keystone for U. S.| and State routes, respectively. Bad weather conditions, of course, should prompt the driver to drive slower than the speed designated. The department determined the safe rate of speed around curves | by having experienced driver traverse the entire route with in-| structions to drive as fast as he | could on curves but to remain en- an tirely within the right lane of the | road. In reporting his observations, the | driver said the fatest speed he | could travel on many curves with- | out entering on the center of the | rcad or the left lane was between | 10 and 35 miles an hour. | Such a finding should be food | for some thought. - If a veteran | driver, using a car ‘in safe mechan- ical condition with new tires, and | driving on a dry pavement in ex- | cellent weather, could not exceed | that rate of speed safely, just think . | of the number of accidents and | AA SF AR Sn IF narrow escapes that must result at a faster speed when another car approaches from the opposite dir- ection around the curve. These markers should be a great aid in our constant campaign to reduce the highway toll which last year took 2411 lives. The motorist who obeys these signs is greatly reducing his chances of being in- volved in an accident with another car or ending his trip in a ditch or ravine, $31 It Can Happen ? “It can’t happen to me.” Yet tuberculosis did “happen” to John, freshman law student, crack oars- man and the picture of health. It happened to Betty, just turned eighteen, vivacious and care-free. CR FINE: BODY: MAY CONCEAL ;..JUBERCULOSIS But modern methods uncover it before it does harm ~ | In fact tuberculosis shadows the lives of more than one hundred thousand young American men and women between the ages of 15 and 25. The evidence that tuberculosis can lurk in a strong young body is complete. It is all too common to find young football and basketball players with hidden tuberculosis. The disease may hide in the lung for months without a tell-tale symp- tom. Quietly it digs in like a treacherous enemy. But it need not happen to you! There is a way to find out if silent tuberculosis lurks in the body. It is to have a tuberculin test made. This test, simple and harmless, will show whether or not the germs of tuberculosis have invaded the body. If it is positive, take the next step —have an X-ray picture taken of | the chest. This penetrating ray re- veals on the X-ray plate damage that may have been done in the lung by the invaders. In some high schools and colleges all students are offered the tuber- culin test and X-ray—an excellent plan! Remember, It Can Happen—but is not likely to if you UNCOVER { TUBERCULOSIS BY MODERN | METHODS. RUMMAGE SALE The ' Young ‘ Ladies’: Bible class of Trinity Lutheran Chureh will hold a Rummage Sale in the Church House on Friday and Sat- urday, October 8 and 9. — a Amn Advertise in The Bulletin. ( THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO. PA, RECIPES Tried and True CREAMED CRABMEAT WITH MUSHROOMS 2 cups flaked crab meat and chopped mushroom 1 cup butter V4 cup flour 1} cup mushroom stock or milk 1 teaspoon salt Pepper and paprika 1 cup cream Buttered toast Method The proportions of crabmeat and mushrooms may be whatever you desire. One half pound mushrooms makes about two cups sliced or chopped. One can of crab meat makes about; two cups flaked. Wash and slice mushrooms. Cook stems in butter to make stock. Cook mushrooms three minutes in butter, Stir in flour and season- ing. Add stock and milk and stir until smooth and thick. Add crabmeat and just beore serving stir in cream. Reheat and serve on buttered toast. BAKED CUCUMBERS 4 large cucumbers 1 tablespoon chopped onion 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 5 tablespoons butter or other fat 1 cup bread crumbs 1 cup tomato pulp 1 tablespoon salt Pepper to taste Wash and pare cucumbers and cut in hall’ length-wise. Scoop out all pulpy seed portions possible without breaking fleshy part. Parboil cu- cumber shells in lightly salted water ten minutes and drain. Meanwhile cook onion and parsley in fat, add other ingredients and cucumber pulp and cook mixture five minutes. Fill shells with hot stuffing, place in a shallow baking dish, add a little wa- ter to prevent sticking and bake in moderate oven fifteen minutes or un- til stuffing has browned on top. Serve in the baking dish. ORANGE SHORTCAKE Right now, before Strawberries make their initial bow in this sec- tion of the country (that is, those luscious homegrown ones) why not delight the family with an Orange Shortcake? It has been said that some persons really prefer it to the Strawberry Shortcake. The ingredients are: 2 cups flour 1 teaspoon salt teaspoons baking powder tablespoons sugar tablespoons shortening 3 to 3 cup milk Sift the dry ingredients until well blended. Rub in the short- ening using a fork. Cut in just enough milk to make a soft dough. Put in greased cake pan, press with hand in shape to fit the pan and bake twelve to fifteen minutes in hot oven. Lal Ginger Drop Cakes 1 cup dark brown sugar 1 pint baking molasses, beat to- gether very lightly, add 2 eggs, pint of melted lard cup thick milk teaspoons baking soda teaspoon ginger teaspoon cloves teaspoons cinnamon cups flour Bake in a very hot oven. Orange Sherbet Mrs. Birk also sends us this Sherbet recipe which we are sure you will find delightful: the in- gredients are: juice of 7 oranges juice of 6 lemons 3 cups sugar 2 quarts milk 1 pint cream Stir all well together and make in an ice-cream freezer or elec- trical refrigerator. This amount serves quite a few persons. OBIS N= pa DN pe SWEET POTATO PUFF 5 or 6 medium sizes sweet potatoes 2 eggs 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons melted butter 2 tablespoons hot milk Boil sweet potatoes until tender, remove skins and discolored parts and press remainder through ricer to make about 1 quart of pulp. Beat yolks and whites of eggs separately. To sweet potato add yolks, fat, milk and salt. Beat mixture well, then fold in well-beaten whites. Pile lightly into greased baking dish and bake in moderate oven (350 de- grees) for 45 minutes or until light and fluffy and brown on top. Shrimp and Tomato Salad Dice fine a can of shrimp and three tomatoes from which the skin has been removed. Add salt, pepper, parsley, onion salt to SUNDAY,DINNER Suggestions By ANN PAGE ARE tomatoes being used in your household as freely as their fine and low price would suggest? resh tomatoes eaten sliced, in salads or cooked in any of almost numberless ways, are Popular in most houscholds. Corn and lima beans are also at their cheapest but they must be carefully chosen for quality. Bartlett pears, scedless grapes and aphlea are unusually plentiful and cheap. Other good fruit values will be found in plums, peaches, and honey- dew melons. Beef prices are still tending higher, veal is steady, pork prices are some- what lower and lamb offers best value. Poultry, egg and butter prices are up but eggs and butter are still lower than last year. The following menus are chosen Jom seasonable reasonably priced oods, Low Cost Dinner Shoulder Lamb Chops Creamed Potatoes ‘Cole Slaw Stuffed Tomatoes . Bread and Butter Fruit Cup Cookies Tea or Coffee Milk Medium Cost Dinner Cream of Celery Soup Cold Ham : Vegetable Salad Sliced Tomatoes Bread and Butter New Apple Pie Tea or Coffee Milk Very Special Dinner. . Fruit Cup Fried Duckling Sweet Potatoes Buttered Broccoli Tomato Salad Rolls and Butter Floating Island Coffee DEVILED HAM IN RICE BORDER Ingredients are sliced ham, bread crumbs and prepared mustard. Take 2 cups cooked rice, 1 table- spoon finely chopped pimento, salt, Wise Reader The Bulletin space. tisements, the not. cle of interest that. Because of COLUMNS. ped green pepper, 1 tablespoon | Slices of hard cooked eggs chopped onion, 1 tablespoon butter and 1 large tomato chopped. Method Cut thin slices from cold cooked Soak gelatine in cold water five minutes. Pour boiling water over gelatine to dissolve, and stir while adding sugar, vinegar, lemon juice ham, about } inch thick. Make salt. Chill and when the paste of bread crumbs and pre- |mixture begins to thicken, add the pared mustard. Spread paste light- |salmon. Glaze plain, individual molds with some of the clear jelly. and arrange them in the center of [Place slices of hard cooked eggs a fireproof platter overlapping the [on bottom and sides of the mold. ham slices about half inch. Sur-. When eggs are set, fill mold with round this with a border of rice, salmon mixture and chill in your which should be prepared in the refrigerator, Remove from molds following manner—To cook rice, Py loosening edges with a sharp knife and dipping in hot water. Serve on a lettuce leaf with may- onnaise dressing. Six servings. ly on both sides of the ham slices add pimento, green pepper, onion and tomato which has been cooked in the butter for five minutes. Add just enough stock to moisten. Sea- son with salt and a dash of red pepper. Dot the ham with small bits of butter and place under moderate broiler flame to brown. Jellied Salmon Salad 2} teaspoons gelatine i cup cold water 1 cup boiling water 4 cup sugar 1 cup vinegar 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 teaspoon salt 1} cups shredded red salmon Slices of hard cooked eggs NOW and then you will want taste. Mix with mayonnaise and serve on lettuce leaves, Place a stuffed olive on tooth pack on top. pepper, 1 tablespoon finely chop- Advertisers Advertise In A Paper That Has is ever conscious of the fact that an advertiser, in order to realize the maximum of return from the money invested, must buy some- thing more than just type and white No ad can be effective unless the paper in which it appears has READER INTEREST. In order to add the local news, church matters, owl laft's, dutch letters, markets and what People read one or more of the above subjects, lay the Bulletin aside and along comes the next member of the family and reads his or her arti- family. During all that time your ad- vertisement may have been seen and read by one or How many of you read the average circular dropped at your door? can best and most truthfully answer If you want good returns for mon- ey expended, put your ad in a news- paper that is read by thousands of careful, scrutinizing readers. the latter ADVERTISERS ADVERTISE IN ITS The Bulletin Mount Joy, Pa. Job Printing done in a hurry. SEE US FOR Hot Water Car Heaters McCord LI SPECIAL Because of our facilities we are in a position to get your job done promptly and give you the kind of quality you? demand. BULLETIN MOUNT JOY Phone 41) i a_i A A AO 5 A MS NCA Stinking smut dous loss to wheat growers every year, ted PHONE: 112 " PAGE FIVE poy with copper carbonate dust or ime == proved organic mercury, according to Penn State plant pathologists, Treatment is particularly impors tant in a cool, wet fall. TREAT SEED WHEAT causes a tremen- The disease can be preven- by treating the seed wheat . om ED CARS Idsmobile 4 Door Sedan RADIO—HEATER—VERY CLEAN CAR | 1936 P tiac Business Coupe VERY GOOD CLEAN CAR 1936 Pontiac 2 Door Sedan 1936 Ford Business Coupe 1934 Ford Business Coupe 1935 DeSoto 4 EXCELLENT SHAPE—LOO 1931 DeSoto oor Sedan 5s LIKE NEW oupe der & Rissgr MOUNT JOY, P H assi n ® Prepare For A Comfortable Winter At Home Interest interest Julletin publishes all N. and so on down the half a dozen people. You fact, WISE to adver- : = WHEN YOU VISIT THE Manheim Community Show September 30 — October 1-2 MAKE IT A POINT TO SEE OUR Beck Brothers Furniture MANHEIM, PENNA. . «When you select an R & GS can feel sure of safety-andsdrizin ure for a long time. Eachonedecs checked at thirty at our Annual ClearanceiSaig] they're real bargains.${Many makes and models make selectiopease] Every R & G car is backed byo guarantee of “satisfaction or yousmoney back”. Come in today and take your pick: f the cream of the use op¥ / GARBER’S GARAGE Your Furniture Dollar Does Double Duty Here BW ore RE DTI DIOR Eas 3 cars we offer are remewed to Ford A en guaranteed in - written [2 hes 158 AL Elizabethtown, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers