PAGE TWO " MT. JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA, J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr. | | RHEEMS Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Werner, and daughters, Elizabeth and Miriam, { | Subscription Price $150 Per Year and son, Paul, called on Mrs, Enos Six Months ...... 75 Cents | Floyd and daughter; Ruth, Friday. | le rg 2, Kaylor has re- Three Months . 40 Cents Rev, Hiram 1 ylo re- \ turned to his home on Sunday after Single Copies 3 Conia pending a week at the Wills hos- I $ a Sample Copies ...... FREE | pital in Philadelphia where he had | == | indergone an operation. Entered at the post ome 5 Mount] My Harry Landis has purchased | y as scond-class mall matter. ta Hiv: coube ro Sipling J of the expiration of your a ew Willys coupe from ipling | subscription follows your name on the | Bros,, local dealers. label. We do not send receipts for sub. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Young spent scription money received. \ SN ro- | Sunday with the former's parents, you remit, see that you are given Pp Sr Nr per credit. We credit all subscriptions | My, and Mr. Abram Young and each month. family at the first of C OHH Lave nels family. All correspondents semmunications , ater than Monday. between that time and o'clock noon Wednesday. Wa vertisements must pos ate office not later than Monday night. New advertisments jnserted If peaches us Tuesday night. rates on application. ; The subscription lists of the Landis ow d the ville Vigil, the Florin News an end callers at the home of Mrs, Su- N od unt Joy Star and News were merg: Wow that of the Mount Joy Bulletin, ich makes v yh double that of the papers or- dnary weekly. EDITORIAL DO SOMETHING : President Roosevelt has done his part; now you do something. Buy anything, anywhere; paint your kitchen, send a telegram, party, get a car, pay a bill, rent a house, fix your roof, get a haircut, see a show, build a house, take trip, sing a song, get married. does not matter what you do—but get going, and keep going. This old world is starting to move. ————— CHILDISH ACTION Governor Pinchot stated Monday that Pennsylvania is losing $10,000 a day thru failure to enact a beer tax law. With money needed on every side, with taxes, taxes and then more taxes, the authorities ac- tually throw away $10,000 per day. Can vou imagine such childish at- titude in these depressive times of need ? : We don’t know just who is re- sponsible, but think this childish- ness should be cast aside immed- iately, the proper legislation enact- ed and get that much needed money —particularly now. THE SMALL TOWN TREND The present trend of population, from the cities back to the rural areas, has added greatly to the growth of the towns and villages during the last two years. Many of us are prone to classify our population into two groups, city dwellers and farmers. This is a grave error. Between these two classes are the inhabitants of the small towns, and these soon will number 25 per cent of our entire population, according to the pres- ent rate of growth. They are neith- er city dwellers nor rural inhabi- tants, but a separate class, contain- ing much of the best, the steadiest, the most progressive of our citizen ship. WHAT'S WRONG? Last week saw the passing of Mount Joy’s only home bakery and also our local talking picture house Both closed up very suddenly be- cause they didn’t pay. We certainly regret to make a report such as this for many reasons. We are without a home industry —a bakery and a movie as well. Both, particularly the latter, brought many people to town who spent money in our stores and other business places and there is no good reason why we should not have just as modern a movie as any town the size of Mount Joy in the county. We know our business men will feel the absence of these two enter- prises and hope the time is not far distant when they will be replaced. THE GARDEN URGE Most of us haven’t thought much about gardens the last few years but will be spading and seeding this spring. More spare time will give some of us a chance to put in some real gardens. The opportunity to turn garden hours into savings through producing our own vege- tables will be an even more import- ant factor. There is nothing more healthful than garden work. During the war it was a patriotic thing to have a garden. It is just as patriotic to- day, for it shows that we are do- ing our part to economize and meet our problems and feed our families with our burdening others. The nation, it is said, must bal- ance its budget. So must we as in- dividual families. And where there has been a reduction in earning power, we can help to balance our budgets by gardening. WE COMMEND FOR BRAVERY The banker who protected his de- positors. The dairyman who didn’t water his milk. The wife who stuck. _The juror who stood by his con- victions in spite of threats. The man who disregarded all ad- vice and kept his property in his own name. The cop who shot it out with armed bandits and took his share of lead at $125 a month that he didn’t get. The school teacher who uttered her same old cheerful “good morn- ing, children,” without her break- fast. The manufacturer and the merch- ant who refused to cut the quality and in spite of “hell and high wa- ter” kept their flags flying. And last, but most important, the patriot who has kept his faith in God and America. We still believe that honest effort still wins its reward and that the reach this office not Miss Ethel Myers, of Lancaster, Telephone news of | a few days with her sister, reach Miss Jean Kraybill, a student at ney her Easter vacation with her par- ’ 1 0 n + this paper's circulation oo 4" hildren, Eddie and Su- give a|spent the week end with the for- a Mr. Jacob Williams has been re- It | moved from the Brethren home at Mrs. W. W. Weaver and family. West Chester college, is spending ents, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Krayhbill. The following guests were week san Heisey: Mr. and Mrs. Karl B. anne, of Mifflintown; Shirely Ann Heisey, of Mountville; Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Breneman and son, Ches ter, of Landisville; Miss Bertha Erb Mr. J. C. Smith, of Camden; Mr. Harold McElroy, of Wrightsville, and Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Cocker of Chester. Mr. and Mrs. J. Kraybill Bard mer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Bard. Neffsville to the home of his son, Jacob E., in Donegal where he is confined to his bed. Mr. and Mrs. Enos Floyd and daughter, Ruth. spent Sunday af- ternoon with Mr. and Mrs. George Floyd and family. Elder Jacob W. Heisey, of this place, attended the Presbytery at York on Monday. : Mr. Harry Hoover and Isaac Ketteri r spent Sunday afternoon visitir at the Brethren home at Neffsville. Reist Mummau, local cattle and implement dealer. motored to Chambersburg on Friday. MASTERSONVILLE (Too Late for Last Week) The Christian Workers Society of the Chiques Church of the Breth- ren will render the following Easter program on Sunday evening at 6:45 P M: Leader, Mrs. Samuel Ginder; the opening song, congregation; scrip- ture reading by Dorothy Stauffer; prayer; solo, by Kathryn Ginder; reading, By the Will of God, Clara Shenk; recitation, Easter Angels, Grace Hackman; song by a mixed octette; essay, What Easter Means to Us, Arthur Hollinger; recitation, Her Easter Blessing, Esther Wol- gemuth; song, mixed octette. At 7:30 P. M, following the Christian Workers program, there will be a sermon. The Trinity Lutheran Sunday School of Colebrook will have their Easter program on Sunday evening, April 16, 1933, at 7:00 P. M. There will be recitations, exercises, a pan- tomine, pageant and a short talk. Mr. Henry E. Ginder underwent an operation at the St. Josephs hospital, on Friday, April 7th. Mrs. Phares B. Ginder and Mrs. Benjamin Hollinger have returned to their respective homes after spending some time as patients in the St. Joseph's hospital. The 4H sewing club met at the home of Alma Ginder on Tuesday afternoon with the following mem- bers present: Misses Martha Halde- man, Ruth Hess, Mildred Gibble, Lavina Greiner, Grace Bomberger and Alma Ginder. Eee. DEDUCTION In fighting days of old When armored knights were bold; Whenever they wanted to undress They used a monkey wrench I guess A ees Patronize Bulletin Advertisers still persists and that nothing can hold back the dawn. BETTER TIMES The surest signal for a real and enduring improvement of business is a general rise in prices. Ths sig- nal has been awaited in vain for three vears. Successive efforts to restrict production have failed to show price improvements. Now with inventories uniformly low, save in a few basic commodities, and with confidence returning, there are many indications that price im- provement is setting in. It is now evident that we are not to have inflation, and that the dol- lar is not to leave its gold basis. But there is a mildly inflationary tendency in the new currency pro- gram. It is not currency inflation, since it does not increase the in- debtedness of the government, and since it does not increase the to- tality of the purchasing power in the country. It provides liquid as- sets in exchange for sluggish assets This new currency will strength- en the cash position of the banks. This will permit the banks to aug- ment their loans to customers for legitimate business purposes. This increases purchasing power. New credit is created. This means a new demand for goods and services and new buyer competing for those goods and services. The logical re- sult of this is price increases. Once the improvement of prices is seen to be substantial and lasting we can look forward to continued growth of business activity. This Process will be accelerated by the administration program of the new never-ending cycle of night into day public works. In this light it is | tries show the truth of the old say- apparent that while we are not[ing that it takes a lot of horse al recovery. THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. Be Sure That School Children Are Well Fed, MAYTOWN Mr. and Mrs, William Roath, of Harrisburg, spent Friday evening with Willliam H. Roath. Mrs. Margaret Bontz, of Mariet- ta, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs Lewis Hall. Miss Belle Shetter, of Lancaster, visited Mr, and Mrs. James F, Johnstin on Friday. Mrs. Mary Graybill, of Harris- burg, is visiting her sisters, the Misses Emily and Sallie Shireman. Miss Anna Culp. of Lancaster spent Easter with her mother, Mrs. H. M. Carpenter Mr. and Mrs. Parke Bender, of Enola, spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Carpenter. Mrs, Harold Engle spent Satur- day at Columbia. Mrs. Edith Kautz, of Elizabeth- town, spent Sunday with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Huntzinger and children, Jean and Bobby, spent Sunday at Strasburg, with Mr. and Mrs. John Homsher. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Davis, of Harrisburg spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hicks. Mrs. James F. Johnstin, Miss Ruth Johnstin, Mrs. H. M. Carpen- ter, M. Ethel Culp spent Saturday at Lancaster. Mrs. Sue Bowers and children of Lancaster spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Blottenberger. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Hostetter and daughter. Janet Louise, of Pal- merton, spent the week end with Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Harter. Dr. and Mrs. Alvin Shewman of New Castle announce the birth of a son, Easter Sunday. Mrs. Shewman will be remember- en as Miss Anna Haines, of May- town. The many friends of Mrs. Ion Terry will be pleased to know she is improving after an operation at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Lancaster. MII RANDOM NOTES The friends of our friends are our friends. A man’s reason habitually follows ier is usually a poor opponent St sentiment, nce may be golden but a lot of talk savors of brass, Propriety is the least of all laws, Improper Nutrition Lowers Growth, Affects Learning Warns Fducator Resistance to Disease, Slows Ability, Says Dr. Ireland By Dr. Allen G. Ireland Director, Physical and liealth Education, New Jersey State Department of Public Instruction IN these times, when so many of us are faced with economic need; we must make sure that the chil- dren are properly fed in order that the next generation will not be hampered or injured by the diffi- culties of our times. This is a matter so serious that it admits of no argument. Physi- cians and scientists well know that improper nutrition, particularly in childhood, inevitably lowers resis- tance to disease, tends to produce stunted or deformed growth, has serious effect not only on the bodies but also on the minds of growing children. This is particularly true of children in the schools. It is about school children that I wish to speak in this series of articles. The Parents’ Wish Every parent has some sincere wish for his child. They're not secret wishes either, for in my work with parent-teacher asso- ciations I have’ opportunities to question fathers and mothers, and they tell me readily enough. Of course, “health” stands first. You would expect that. As a father, it is first with me too. But sometimes, when I take them unawares, parents will mention “success,” “fame,” “wealth,” “hap- piness,” or “parenthood.” Then I say, “What?” “How about health{"” It is amusing to watch them hasten to agree. Guiltily they reassure me with, “Yes; health is most impor- tant.” If your schoo! does not now have a school lunch program, you should work actively for it for the good of your children. If it already serves school lunches or at least a hot dish at noon or a mid-morning or mid-afternoon luncheon of milk and crackers, get behind this pro- gram and support it. Show that as a parent you appreciate what your school is doing in this direc- tion and that you desire it to con- tinue. I do not mean to imply, of course, that the school should furnish free food to children. The cost of any luncheon at school is a proper charge upon the parents. ever- theless, the school is obligated, particularly where children can- not return to their homes at noon, to provide a suitable lunchroom, to furnish milk and other essential foods at cost, and to take advan- tage of the ideal educational situa- tion created by the school lunch. The parent is obligated to make the program financially possible. Usually it means only a few cents a day—a few cents a day for health and happiness! More Information The schocl does not need to have an elaborate lunchroom. Many schools use classrooms and still make their lunch a happy and in- structive high spot in the child’s school day. Many parents write to me for information about school lunches I am happy tc announce that a booklet has now been prepared an- That is what parents really| poring their questions. You may think. We moo have many and va-|pave a free copy. Write to the ried ain! for our children, | of Physical and Health but to a vo honestly regard 2 | Education, New Jersey State De- sound heal foundatior. as the partment of Public Instruction, child’s most important asset and ‘Trenton Trust Company Building, our greatest gift. For without it,| Trenton, New Jersey, for the book- nothing eise matters. Having it, aot “Child Hea!tl. and Nutrition.” normal child is free to go as far as|¢ you are a teacher, send for a his ability and training permit. | free copy of “Phe Schoo: Lunch.” Thus it is the duty of parents who wish their children to do well| This is the first of siz articles in in school to promote and support the school iunch program as a health measure and also as an edn- sational measure. | the school lunch problem appearing tn this paper. [In the next article Dr. Ireland will chow how food {is related to ability to learn and the most obeyed. Marriages are not as they are made, but as they turn out. If you must draw the color line draw it at feeling blue. Send a fool to the sea and and he will not find salt water. The same food who used to blow out the gas now steps on it, A great soul ought to be more sensi- ble of benefits than affronts, Treacheries and acts of artifice only originate in the want of ability. A woman is never satisfied until she can do a thing two different ways. When the members of a standing committee meet they usually sit down. We should have very little pleasure if we did not sometimes flatter our- selves. If we resist our passions it is more from their weakness than from our strength. The true method of being deceived is to think one's self more cunning than others, There may be a good deal in a name when it is located in the southeast section of a check. It is better to love the person you can't marry than it is to marry the person you can't love, Southern Hardwoods Better ways of working southern hardwood lumber are being sought by the forest products laboratory of the United States forest service. In re- sponse to requests of southern or- ganizations, four studies will be made. The chief aims will be the following: To provide consuming industries with specific information on working and machining characteristics of the dif- ferent southern hardwood species; to F You WANT Qoob Temi - By DR. J. M. WISAN Chairmen, Council on Mouth Hygiene, New Jorsey State Dental Society APRIL FOOLS DAY IS GONE BUT MANY OF US ARE STILL BEING FOOLED read an advertisement or hear a statement over the vertisement is attractively pented or if the radio program is tently entertaining, immedi- health, though there are certainly some that would eause injury by frequent use. Where they do is in the complacency they . Persons using them get the idea that they need not any other measures to protect kealth of their If pyorrhea is to be prevented, the proper use of the tooth brush is essential, : : and certain forms of dental treatment are required. Dental decay can be prevented by supplying expectant mothers and children with proper foods and caring for dental defects during the jon of foods and by medical ice and treatmeat. All in all one safely arrive at the econclusien we cannot depend on advertised products to maintain mouth health. They have their place in keeping the mouth clean, but unfortunately some of the manufacturers, in their desire to increase their sales, have made the{ claims that cannot be substanti- ated. BR is time that We American public stopped being year viec- tims to the “bunk” that is being handed out in extravagant adver- tisements. When you buy denti- frices or mouth washes, look for the shield which signifies that the product has been accepted by the Council on Dental Therapeutics of the American Dental Association This is your guarantee that the product has been tested by this body of disinterested scientists and that it has been found to dc the work it is advertised to do You will not find this seal of ap proval on articles for which manu: make extravagant claims find out whether there is any better way of seasoning hardwoods than that now used, particularly in the case of oak; to determine the dividing line in size and grade between logs that pay their own way in logging and milling under typical southern hardwood con- ditions and those that do not. Knows Birds and Animals At the age of thirteen a boy in the Ozarks, Guy Greenwell, Joplin, Mo., can identify 750 birds and animals from pictures, and describe their hab- its, says a writer in the Golden Age. He is in great demand every summer as an instructor of Boy Scout and Y. M. C. A. groups and is able to answer immediately and learnedly about 98 per cent of all the questions put to him regarding bird life. His father is in the poultry business, and the boy himself seems to be a natural-born enthusiast on bird life in all its as- pects. Average Lifetime There were 1,321,367 deaths in this country in 1930 and the death rate was 11.3 per 1,000. Of these, about 142,000 were infants under one year. The es- timated average length of life in this country is now 56 years; about 50 years ago it was only about 40. Based on the 1920 census, the average ex- pectation of life at birth is 55.33 years for a male, 57.52 years for a female. Quinine Trees on High Lands The bureau of forestry in the Phil- fppines is conducting an experiment in growing quinine trees on high-eieva- tion lands. About five acres, at over 1,000 feet altitude, near Mud Spring in the Makiling National Botanic gar- den in Los Banos, have been cleared for the planting of cinchona trees, al- maciga, Benguet pine and other con- ifers, —— A Bre. Present conditions in many coun- THIS year the Spring suit | has done all sorts of in- teresting thing. to its make-up in order to achieve something new and original. Nipped-in waistlines, important big revers, butions and a detachable cape are featurcs of the suit which make it outstand- ingly smart. Colors and fabrics are also important and contrast is used to good advantage. Every modern fashionable is fabric conscious and woollens in solid colors, tm eeds in eyery mix- ture imaginable, or are THE CAPE Is a new addition to 1233 chosen, while blouses go in for dark contrasting cottons and silks. This combination of light suit with dark blouse is new, and one’s suit is definitely marked 1933 if it follows this idea. The ~ape of the suit illustrated may be taken off, for it is only but- toned on to the jacket under the collar. This detachable idea en- ables one to really have two cos- tumes instead of just one. (Mec- Call 7303). (By courtesy of The McCall Company). to have inflation and a quick boom | sense to maintain a stable govern- in business. we are tending toward | ment. ET credit expansion and a sane gradu- é e Patronize Bulletin Advertisers Bulletin Catch— Them Before They Climb... PRICES today are below “sea-level”, if we may be permit- ted to use the phrase as a simile for par. They're actually “sub” pric- es in the sense that many commod- dities, and principally the necessities of life, are being sold below cost of production, or at least be- low the cost at which merchants, manufacturers and wage-earners can continue to produce them and maintain normal standards of living. What, then, is the inevitable result? Prices must come “up for air” .. .national and individual prosperity demands it and the upturn is immediately in the offing. Today’s prices are depress- ion prices. They can only be com- pared with prices during other periods of depres- sion of past years....they cannot remain in this country any more than depression can continue in a country so basically prosperous in resources, in en- terprise, in wealth, in commercial and industrial leadership. These are conditions which will, and are already, adjusted them- selves. . .by inevitable laws of economics. We've reached the low... and at the low is the time to buy. With Food, Clothing, Furniture and almost every- thing else at the lowest prices in 15 years; with the purchasing power of your dollar greater today by 40% to 100% than at any time since the war sure- ly it’s time to stock up...even to buy beyond your immediate needs because unless you buy now, or very soon, you're surely going to pay more. ..when prices come ‘up for air.” BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10th, 1933 - A i ls lial: nd 0.0, 0-0. 0-00 0.5 © 06. 0 6 6 6 "0 2 bo hk 2b 2 Stk a a a a