The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 25, 1937, Image 4

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TR TE TI


‘AIR EXPRESS:
% | Lusty offspring of
y | 98.year.old Railway
Express Agency, 10
4 years old September
1, flies every work.
day, at 3 miles a
minute, 2,000 ship.
i: ments weighing 7


tors on RK0.825 miles
; of air routes between
all U, 8. and Cans.
EDD!E RICKENBACKER
(left) visits his alma mater, B
President Ralph E. Weeks of






the International Correspons dian airport cities
dence Schools, Scranton, Pa., i Ny ang Yy <oordinated
welcomes the famous war § air-rail service be.



tween - all off.alrline
ace and leader in the : ty
hig cities.
tion industry upon the occa-
sion of his recent visit to the _
institution with whien he en.
rolled for technicaj instruc-
tion when a young man.
go) 4 Poa of
avia-


He bg


HS me
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
 










 


FOREIGN NEIGH.
At war and in peace;


OUR
i BORS:
Right is O. J. Schmidt,
leader of the Soviet Polar
Expedition, playing with po- &


lar bear cubs attached by the
explorers, while in the photo
wat left, is a Chinese soldier
preparing to take lethal mea- !
x Sures against the
Ra Japanese,
Ra on pr





invading 8
SN

 
 
 
 
 

 





IN HOT WEATHER
OR COLD: Joan Blon-
dell, taking a sun
bath, is easy to look




af 2 2 3
TAKE GRAPEFRUIT JUICE!” Cham-
pagne was the order of the cay when they
danced at the Paris Exposition a fe)
but Rockettes were drinking Florid
Juice straight fr »m the can when the
cameraman stole this picture in dressir
of Radio City Music Hall in New York.





WEEK.
The Affairs i <u owe
ined a fractured knee
motor accident Sunday.
n G enefra ore Groff, of
[the Susquehanna river, a distance
Briefly Told “=
0
I ches ups

Columbia, swam
45 minutes.
loaded
't on the highway east of
miles in
truck with

ie
pea-


I.andisville Wednesday afternoon.
|
(From, Boge 1) | Howe, 68, Paradise, had
at Lancaster last week was John | his jeg broken when a vock tolled
Kraybill of Florin. [on him while at work in a quarry.
Lightning fired four barns in the | Samuel Groff, 18, of
county during electrical storms Sat- |i; held responsible for the death
urday and Sunday.
Harry
A
Blue Ball,
‘of his sister as the result of an
Twenty-two carloads of tomatoes |auto mishap.
were shipped from ‘Lancaster in| Robert Peters, 19, was killed and
| NEW USES FOR BY-PRODUCTS OF MILK
'

 
 



Wm. Nauman, 65, badly injured
when a barn they were helping to
raze, collapsed.
Barbara K. Esh, 18 months old
daughter of Emanuel Esh, Bird-in-
has concussion of the brain. ¥ ! ¥
Jacob G. Wolgemuth is the ex-
ecutor of Lizzie C. Wolgemuth, late
of this boro. The estate notice ap-
pears in our advertising columns.
rns etl QC
SUCCESSFUL ROASTS
The Men's Bible Class of the Evan-
gelical Congregational Sunday
1 school held a very successful corn
| roast on the Church Lawn on Thurs-
| day evening when about sixty mem-





L
*T certainly would astonish little | product. So are the buttons on aj
4 Miss Muffet if she knew how |new blouse or father's spring suit,



s shining belt buckle.
For there are innumerable articles
in daily use that derive from the
original atelier of Madame Moo.
Milk by-products enter into the
process of making such dissimilar
articles as dominces, book bindings,
buttons, wallpaper and Knitting
needles.
To find wider uses for the so-
called “surplus” milk and thereby
further aid the dairy famers in-
come is a widening activity.
Butter-making extracts from milk
the fat and a small proportion of
the soluble constituents. The re-
maining milk solids are left in the
skim, buttermilk and whey. In pro
ducing the butterfat for the 1,650,
000,000 pounds of creamery butter
which this country found use for in
a recent year, there were some
3,000,000 pounds of milk solids left
over. In addition to that, the
cheese -makers had 300,000,000
pounds of milk solids not included
{in ne on ct :
: | The importan y-products o
The belt buckle and chip on the| ik are casein, which comes from
oung lady’s dress, the vanity case, | A ee Bens
iy ornament, manicure stick and skim milk, and the various chem
|icals contributed by the whey, such
as lactic acid, sodium lactate and
calcium lactate.
Lactic acid may play a part in
cigarette holder, lipstick container | making the appetizer at dinner and
and her pocket comb are made from | the pastry at the end. It is used
milk by-products. {in leather goods and in paints and
She shuffies cards that owe their | may also have helped make the
gloss to milk, keeps score with a|soft drink at your soda fountain.
pen, whose barrel is derived from | The vigorous youth of the milk
milk, on a pad of glazed paper | by-products industry is strikingly
whose glaze is a by-product of the |shown by government figures.
same universal fluid. | As recenily as 1920, this country
The little ornament that adds |produced only a third of the casein
or mc
many uses science has discovered
for milk since the days of curds
and whey.
Suppose, for example, that Miss
Muffet’s modern granddaughter is
invited out to a bridge luncheon.
ivory-like

Her vanity case,




sther articles are made from casein
by-products from milk.


companies furnished the rest, with
Wisconsin and California sbaring
heaors as the largest producers.
Used in plywood for airplanes,
casein helps man to fly, in chem-
ical sprays, it helps insects lose
interest in flying. Experiments
have even been made with it as a
synthetic. fabric resembling wool,
an undertaking that must make the
cow feel rather sheepish.
Casein products are of two sorts
—the plastics and the glue family.
Beads and buckles, pocket combs
and poker chips belong to the for-
mer group. Casein glue figures in

hd
| Coat, vest and sleeve buttons of the
busy executive, cigarette holder,
pencil, calendar pad base and biot-
ter are made of milk plastics.

paper and paint, : lineoleum and
leather, upholstering and book bind-
ing—to mention just a few.
Magazine paper acquires its
glossy finish by being dusted with
fine china clay after being surfaced

gayety to a chic sport hat may be | it needed. By 1934 imports were a
manufactured from a dairy by- | mere four per cent. American milk
with casein glue.

Fypea of buttons and
THE MOUNT JOY BULLE
Hand, fell down a hay hole ang fk

Religious
News in This
Community
NEWS PERTAINING TO ALL THE
CHURCHES IN MT. JOY AND
THE ENTIRE SURROUNDING
COMMUNITY


Kraybiil's Mennonite Church
East Donegal
Sunday School 9:00

First Presbyterian Church
Rev, C. B. Segelken, D.D,, Pastor
Church School 9:30. F. B. Walter,
superintendent.
Donegal Presbyterian Chureh
Rev. C. B. Segelken, D.D,, Pastor
Church School 9:30 Amos R. Gish,
superintendent,

Mount Joy Mennonite Church
9:00 Sunday School
7:30 P. M. Preaching
Friday evening 7:30 S. S. Workers’
Meeting.
Church of God
Rev. G. F. Broske, Minister
Sunday School at 9:30.
Morning Worship at 10:30.
C. E. Society at 6:30.
Evening Worship at 7:30.
Zion Lutheran Church
Landisville, Pa.
Rev. William L. Ziegenfus,
Pastor
Sunday Church School, 9:30 a.m.
Worship and Sermon, 10:30 a.m.
Salunga Methodist Episcopal Church
Rev. C. Lyle Thomas, Minister
9:15 A, M. Church School.
7:30 P. M. Morning Worship.
Rev. Earl J. Creamer, of Lancas-
ter, will be the guest speaker.
Mt. Joy Methodist Episcopal Church
Rev. C. Lyle Thomas, Minister
9:30 A. M. Church School.
There will be no morning wor-
ship service. !
Trinity Evangelical
Congregational Church
Rev. Clarence C. Reeder, Minister
Sunday: —
9:30 Sunday School
10:30 Morning Worship.
¢ 1:00 Evensong
2.


Trinity Lutheran Church
Rev. George Kercher, Minister
Bible School 9:30 A. M.
Morning Worship 10:30 A. M.
No evening service.
The church will be closed the
last two Sundays in August.
United Brethren Church, Pa.
Rev. I. W. Funk, Pastor
Sunday School 9:30.
Morning Worship 10:30 A. M.
Sunday evening service 7:15 P. M.
Prayer meeting Thursday even-
ing 7:30 P. M.

St. Mark’s U. B. In Christ Church
Rev, O. L, Mease, S. T. D,; D.D.
Pastor
Sunday School at 9:00.
Morning Worship at 10:15.
Prayer service on Wed at 7:30.
No evening service.

Church of God
Landisville, Pa,
A. P. Stover, D. D., Pastor
Morning Service 10:30 A. M.
Church School 9:15 A, M.
Evening Service 7:30 P. M.
Choir Directress, Miss Evelyn
Hiserman.
C. E. Societies 6:45 P. M.


bers attended.
The Mission Band of the Evan-
gelical Church held a doggie roast,
on Friday evening. The roast was
greatly enjoyed by the many at-
tendants,


nee S nothing quite so deli.
ciously “right” for cool Septem-
ber evening suppers as some extra
special waffles
with the plea-
sant tang of
smooth. cheese
grilled right into
the crisp, brown
cakes... with a
side dish ‘of
grilled tomatoes.
If you serve
waffles frequent-
ly (or only occasionally), you'll
welcome the flavor variety found in
these


Cheese Waffles
2 cups sifted cake flour: 2 tea- |
spoons - double-acting baking pow-
der; 1% teaspoon salt; 3 egg yolks,
well beaten; 1 cup milk: 4 table-
spoons melted butter or other short-
ening; 1:.cup grated American
TIN, MOUNT JOY, LA
io
*
Fair a EEN Lo
: 4; iy i on
0. PA.

NCASTER C
——





Week-End Motoring
State Forest Parks


Pennsylvania Scenic and Historic
Commission

Crisscrossing the State

Pennsylvania has more than 28,-
000 miles of improved highways
The Roosevelt Highway (Route 6),
the Lakes-to-Sea Highway (Route
the Benjamin Franklin High-
way (Route 422), the William Penn
Highway (Route :2), and the Lin-
coln Highway 30) stretch
across the Keystone State between
Ohio and the Delaware River
Routes 18, 19, 219
Pennsylvania in western
between north and
220 stretches from Cumberland,
Maryland, northwest New
York State at Waverly, N. Y. Route
11 enters Pennsylvania from Hag-
erstown, Maryland, and via Harr-
isburg skirts the Susquehanna north
and then northeast along the east
of the Susquehanna, thru
Scranton into New York State at
Binghampton, N. Y. Route 15
now stretches from Maryland via
Gettysburg and Harrisburg
the east side of the Susquehanna
River north through Williamsport
to New York State, changing to
Route 2 in that State and leading
to Painted Post, N. Y.
These are the principal highways
They
reveal matchless scenery, hundreds
009
ved),
Cross
area
south. Route
and
its
into
branch
along
that crisscross Pennsylvania.
of beautiful vacation
of places teaming with historic lore,
and suggest to motorists every type
of travel interest.
spets, scores
“I wish I could impress upon our
2,000,000 Pennsylvania
what a rich store-house of scenic
and historic State
really is”, says Secretary of High-
ways, Warren Van Dyke. “Motor-
meet many surprises in
motorists
interest our
ists will
mountain beauty and open country
landscapes by traveling the thou-
sands of miles of byways forming
a gigantic network of our major
highway system.”
The Pennsylvania State Publicity
Commission the Penn-
sylvania Scenic and Historic Com-
(formerly
mission) has a Tourist Information
Bureau, offering assistance to mo-
torists in mappng interesting va-
cation tours within the Keystone
State. A scenic and historic map
folder and a 128- page booklet,
“Pennsylvania has Everything”, are
two pieces of literature available for
free distribution. A letter of pos-
tal card addressed to the Com-
mission at 9 N. Fourth Street, Har-
risburg, Pennsylvania, will receive
prompt attention.
HAMBURG (Routes 22-122)
Hamburg, in the beautiful Sch-
uylkill Valley in Berks County, is
situated at the junction of the Wil-
liam Penn Highway (Route 22)
and Route 122. It is the gateway
to Schuykill Water Gap. Along
the Schuykill River are many
landmarks of the old canal, which,
in years past, served as the means
for transportation of coal from the
anthracite region to Philadelphia.
This year Hamburg is celebrating
the 100th anniversary of the horo-
ugh’s incorporation, A series of
events will close with a King Frost
Carnival in October.



R. U. TRIMBL
ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.




30 SOUTH QUEEN ST
JLANCASTER, PENNA.





“%. YES WE DO
2h
FENDER and BODY
Stra

ing powder and salt, and sift again. !
Combine egg yolks,
Makes five 4-section waffles,
Note: This batter may also be
i

cheese; 3" egg whites, stiffly beaten. | {8
Sift flour once, measure, add bhak- | fis
milk, and but-
until |
ter. Add to flour, beating
smooth. Add cheese. Fold in egg !§
whites. Bake in hot waffle irom. |§
baked on a het, greased griddle. Jf
Let us estimate your™}

HASSINGER & RISSER 4
MOUNT JOY, PA,


 
A
Who Says There Aren
 
intense days of competition

‘t Wild Horses Left?—This herd of |:
wild mustangs has been corraled at Sun Valley for the first |!
major rodeo at this famous Idaho resort. Champion riders
of the West will attempt to conquer the steeds during two
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25TH, 1957

You can get all the news of this
locality for less than three cents a
week through The Bulletin,
TE ts UD A AI
When in: need of Printing. (any-
thing) kindly remember the Bulletin







I HAVE JUST
INSTALLED A
AGON MODEL
RU-FIT
y STRETCHER
st in the line
be stretehed,
and WIDER

SHOES

| LASTS TO FIT AH

Affairs At
Florin For
The Week
(From Page 1)
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Kling.
Mr. William White spent the
weekend at Maryland.
Miss Jean Moyer, of Harrisburg,
is the guest of Mary Dorcas Eshle-
man, who will accompany her guest
home over the week end.
Mr. Enos Wachstetter, Mrs. Annie
Wachstetter, Mr. Harry Herr and
Miss Stella Wachstetter spent Sun-
day evening at Manor Camp Meet-


ing.
Wm. Rodgers, Ruth Neuhause
of Bird-in-Hand, Edgar Rodgers
and wife and Patsy McCarty, of
Lancaster, were also Sunday guests
at Klings.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hostetter,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Duple, Mr.
and Mrs. Irvin Hostetter, and son,
Gerald, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Holl-
inger, John Eshleman, Samuel W.
Longenecker attended the Hollinger
clan reunion at the church of the
Brethren at Florin.
Mrs. Clarence Nissley held a
Doggie Roast on Friday evening
for her Sunday School class, “The
Shining Stars,” at the Cove near
Mt. Joy. Those present were: Mrs.
John Wittle, Mrs. Park Shetter,
Mrs. Lloyd Vogle, Kathryn Wittle,
Alverta, Maude and Ethel Buller,
Mary = Funk, Lillian and Mary
Welfley, Robert and Kenneth Niss-
ly and Evelyn Fike.
The ground-breaking service
‘he Florin United Brethren church
al

for the new Sunday School Chapel
was held Sunday afternoon
with a special program. The offi-
cial board, superintendent of Sun-
day School, President of Trustee
Board, each took a shovel of ground |
with other members following. The |
new Chapel will be 40 x 42 feet. |
A liberal offering was taken.
on
 


There is no bet'er way to boost
your business than by local news




paper advertising.


GEO. LAMPA
Rockland St., Lancaster)
TELEPHONE LANCASTER 21157


LUTZ,
PHONE 217M Rk.
DEALERS IN THE SECTION
John S. Bender Clarence F. Gr}
MILTON GROVE, PA. MOUNT JOY, PA. ©
CHAS. HELLER

Sere a2
oe














34 years of constantly
cars. You have your















ever, too. In the “60”,
per gallon.
Rear seat now 7 inches



po car’s improved performance,
greater economy, increased comfort,
and new luxury of appearance mark
it one of the greatest advancements in A
engine sizes in many body types—either
the brilliant “85” or the Thrifty “60”.
A NEW LOW FORD PRICE THIS
YEAR—And Ford upkeep is lower than
this town are reporting 22 to 27 miles
STILL FINER RIDING QUALITY!
a month, after usual down payment. buys \ i
$25 Ford Finance Plans of buys any 1937 Ford V-8 under
GARBER'’S GARAGE ®
 





 
REAL %@AS ECONOMY! — Increased
mileage ¥all models.
EASY-ACSION SAFETY BRAKES!
— Self-ener@iging operation. Greater
stopping powlewith easier pedal action.
ALL-STEEL SBFETY BODIES! —Steel
top, sides, floofgwelded into a single
all-steel unit. Rullper-mounted and ful-
ly insulated. 3
ALSO! —Easier shod
wood-grain finish or}
new uphélstery treath
luggage
“V” windshields that Hi
Glass throughout—maore fi
ey to the last detail!

 
 
 





improved Ford
choice of two









 

ess steering—rich
nside trim—smart
nts—huge new
clear - vision
pen — Safety
your mon-

 

owners right in








forward of axle.

 

 

~edis Company. Ask us for de
Elizabethtown, Pa.


5



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said: