The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 20, 1938, Image 13

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20th,







1938





ens
i Li
co
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20th, 1938

Calling All
To Get The I
Family In The
In Progress At Tl
 
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN

N, MOUN’
Tt a
AN
 

 

I JOY, LANCASTER CO. PA PAGE



 













HIS MASTER'S VOICE

CLOSE UP THE
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IN fr
MILLS


 
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PAMZPINTO



Test New Type Heat
For Winter Shipments

— | hence

middle third of electric toaster and
incomes ranged from $780 to $1,450, | floor lamp—at
the nation whose | radio.
i tion at
iron, i
less than one-half
Roosevelt showing that the av- ing with interest a drive by the | istributing football score books and | streamlined, it has only three wheel | HALLOWE'EN PARTY . A-CHOO!
erage income of all American | Consolidated Edison Company here ame f ts this autumn...A NEW | iy vo in front, one in back, an | The Ladies Aid Society of Trin- Owner of Baby Car: I want a
families in the fiscal year 19-38 was | to push the sale of electrical .ap- way to cool dri without diluting | cooled motor, wheelbase of about | ity Lutheran Church will hold a | half a pint of petrol and a tea-
$1,622 and the average for all | pliances. More appliances in the jie water with 1 d i ass | 12 126 inches, and will be priced at | Hallowe'en Party in Hostetters Hall spoonful of oil, please.
single individuals, $1,151. The av- | home mean greater Seti if lied with c 1 tig iid a | about $500. on Thursday, Oct. 27. The pro- Garage Hand: And shall Teough
erage income of the poorest third | slectrical power. The utility offer jes cooled in the ice box, then used | Ee — gram will be announced later. to the tires, sir?
that is, the mean income of the | being m made through 900 dealers, in- | to stir the drink....An automobile | When in need of Printing. (any- a reel eee i
poorest 13 million families and | eluding several department stores, | of revolutionary design, in construc- thing) kindly remember the Bulletin When in need of Printing. (any-| Stimulate your business by adver=
single persons was $471. For the | consists of a four-unit package— t Rochester, N. Y.; super-|week through The Bulletin. thing) kindly remember the Bulletin | tising in the Bulletin.
| ST rE







me sr A ax



3
the average was $1,076. For the | the list price for these items if i
i
highest third, with incomes rang- | purch: ised separately. Results of
ing from $1,450 to more than the campaign so far have exceeded |
$1,000,000 a year, the average was offi
$3,000. . 5 ANE
Washington—Neare; one
i
|
expectations, alre- | {11
In the i
of the combination |
of the population will be in school | he said.
this fall. The Department of the * * 9%
Interior estimates record-breaking| HEADLINES IN NEW YORK-- |
enroliments as follows: Elementary | Westinghouse Electric & Manufac- |
schools, 22,400,000; high turing Company paid employes 38.9
|
|
|
a company

first six days, 11,984;

ports.

quarter sets were sold, |
schools,
6,750,000; colleges and universities, of each sales in
1,350,000.
ment is traced back to the high birth
cents dollar of
for th ie enroll- hr ow .
Reason for the big enroll 1937, 314 cents for materials and
supplies, 7.4 cents to stockholders |
rate averaging 25 > { y a- Ef :
ate averagit > per 1,000 popula and 5.7 cents in taxes...Air trans-
Since the
31-35, was
tion in the years 1920-24.
rate for the five
down to 17.2
age

port industry to need new capital

ear. 19;
years soon. .
per thousand, a shrink- le .
lc
years |
.Mack Truck ordersshow in-!
se. Agriculture Dep i
timates 11,850,000 bale cotton crop; | ji}
18,946,000 record last !
.Contracts
wrtment es-
 
in schocl attendance a few
The teach-
now

seems inevitable, :
: compares with
ing profession, even over-
year.. awarded for en-
crowded in some areas may then he |”. : . : nt
gineering construction in first §
faced with reduction in the ranks of
unless
of profes-
cent over
to bro:
scope of Social Security Act
of Congress. ..
months up 3. 7 per per-
its working members, new
fp iod last year...Proposal iden
avenues for
sorial talent such as adult education
employment

next session Deliver-


To get apples and pears from the
Pacific Northwest to Eastern con-
THE WEEK
sumers during winter months, when
zero or below temperatures are en-
countered, scientists of the United
States Department of Agriculture
have tested refrigerator car gas
heaters with thermostatic control.
This type of heater does away with an interesting
costly rail stops for frequent inspec- es
WASHINGTON — The
IN
BUSINESS
National
Resources Committee has submitted
report to President
classes, consumer education classes
ies of rayon yarn broke all records |
and the like, can take up the slack. |
in July August, |
* * * ®

and

Labor
should 3
mediate revision of the American tax | cans; all that
structure, That is the sense of what | the can,
Matthew Woll vice president of the |into the
American Federation of Labor, told |{rigeraor......A
the National Small Businessmen’s| Woolen blanket carrying a
Views Taxes — Indu
with labor for
im-
work


whip the content
a she i al oe
a mechanical re-
introduced
ice tray of

newly


ritten guarantee against moths....
Association in Pittsburgh. Woll con- i


tions and insures the right tempera-
ture for shipments across the conti-
nent—about 35 degrees—even though
the train passes through rapidly
changing weather conditions.
WHO, WROTE \
“The Last Round-Up” &


Cars are now heated with charcoal


—
burners placed in the ice bunkers. fw ==
Sometimes the heat gets too high In bead. id for tbe Last Round-Up
and fruit ripens too rapidly, espec- ih

ially when the trains run out of a
particularly cold area into a warmer
one, which often happens. Too much
heat is problem as well as too little,
making it imperative for the train
to stop for temperature regulation.
Last winter in transportation tests
on potatoes from Maine the Depart-
ment investigators tested a new
heater, which burns any common
compressed gas and is suspended
outside and under the refrigerator
car. It operates on the same prin-
ciple as a hot water heater for the
home. Pipes between the floor and
the floor racks of the car distribute
the heat evenly to all parts of the
space under the floor racks. The
warm air rising keeps fruit in the
top layer of the load at about the
same temperature as that in the bot- |
tom layer: An antifreeze E studied fiddle in Boston witn
in the pipes avoids freezing when | high hopes of a musical career.
the heaters are not in operation on | but drifted in search of a living te
the trip back across the continent. a Colorado honky-tonk.
He moved from there. organizea
It is estimated that between one | gne of the first jazz bands in the
and two dollars worth of compress- West, played wherever he could get
‘ed gas will keep a car at correct | good dates. Huge of frame and
~~ | strong of muscle. the cowboys’ life
temperatures on a cross country trip. | appealed to him, but music had the
Canadian railroads are equipping 50 | first hold and soon he was back in
cars with the new device this year. | New York loge! I» lO
Ss sa) 8 2 e



Only two cars have been equipped | fast Round-Up” for the electric
by U. S. railroads for experimental | company. The song was actually
| written under the threat of having
purposes. . his lights shut off unless he paid
the bill. That night he turned out
INCREASING SPACE the song and tried hard te sell it
Due to the unexpected crowds | the next day. Finally he contacted
. 5 | @ publisher who was not afraid to
7 aa he a .
which attended the games held at | yake a chance with a song that was
Ironville during last week, Harry | mot about love. He used the name
M. Albright announced today that | then of George Brown and ander
he. t rovide. plays that and his owp name wrote many
S arranging to provide paying! gener fige songs. including “Wagon
space for approximately fifty more | Wheels.” “Chapel .In The Moon-
participants. bt," “They Cut Down The Old
e Tree” They earned him mem-
rehip in the American Soclety of
Composers, Authors and Publishers,
His vame Is
uy Aug,

You can get all the news of this
locality for less than three cents a |
week through The Bulletin.
)
..Larger windows and
in the 1939 model
seen here and there on city streets,
tended that “taxes can and should
be distributed
so as not to stifle business or to tax
incentive which is the source of new
windshi

cars nf

more equitably and

result of public demand for better
















All Cars on the Road Today
an 3 Years Old!
£4
& ah
5 as ol
Are More

F © BS
In Power That
YOURG I
- STATION
BARBARA STREETS
5 oe om 20 @D 7 =
AWO




!
!
i
i
:
six-year |
!
|




industry and new employment.” |driving visibility. . .Gasoline stations
EE




Though admitting that with current


government expenses
and the
mounting public debt, it
might be | BATTE R iF {EA AT
| | - /
necessary to increase tax Tevenues | EN Lod, H
, Woll protested exc
failure o




next ye 7c
duplication of taxes, fed- |
: :
eral, state and local taxing authori-

Ts
use to wn
revenues we
ties to define t} *h the
tax
the

e to be

indirect
| put, and
i ward hidden taxes.
critical time in the
| adding that
taxing plans to be worked out will
rest the success of today’s recovery
spending that fails,
what shall follow—debt repudiation,
political and financial
collapse?” Observers viewed Woll's
on the present tax structure

i


ising trend to- |
He termed it a
incre:
a,


Hci
nation’s history,
“upon the fairness of |
Bence:
program. If

| inflation, or

i attack
| as significant of a new trend in la-
| bor’s move to further cooperation |
| with industry,
* * * * ®
What Retailers are Doing—Won- |
{ dering if the new advertising stunt
York State could be applied
| to their business. The slog
| State That Has Everythin
ing printed on the checks it uses to
| pay bills and
{ 2,000, 000 of such
| annually. ...Recognizin
|
| of New



salari

| are
 
i fort is a more potent arg

selling shoes to men than
i
IN VALUE, POPUL

the findi

was
sr of a recent
1: 1
tallied the
all section

C opinions of
men in s of the cs years, boug ght more Goodye
Distributing to women in gi
stores a handbill
tracts from the food and hot me m
McCalls magazine. |
eatures 10 or more |
the store. The |
for these |
handbills which the stores turn over |

and sales because it’s
greater safety — st
cons
ing articles in
Each handbi
products c
magazine furnishes °

SINCL
‘mats”
~~
| =
MAI!
N
to their local printer.
5 5
wy
pv)
/
Utility ators and el-
company oper


|
BOOSTING ELECTRIC SALES |
)
ectric appliance dealers are watch-

 

GOOBS YEAR
G-3 ALL-WEATHER
ARITY, SALES
Car owners the world over have,
any other iad of tire. It is first in popularity
irst in value. Gives
a
i MOUNT JOY, PENNA.

































RS, ACCESSO RIES DIFFERENT
LUBRICATION
Fl
U1
GRISSINGER'S
Our Equipment Guarantees Your Car
The New And
Different Lubrication Because It Involves:
1 Change Position of Car
2 Free Bearing Surface
3 3 Smooth Flow of Lubricant
C
a To ALL PARTS of BEARING

 
tishied With 1938 Lubrication
©39 DIFFERENT LUBRICATION
XTRA COST
 
ba ¢
np
i
3
OD
WO
for 23 consecutive
ar All-Weathers than

 
NO
 

ops quickest.

Phone 192 or Stop and Let Us. Show You +
GRISSINGER

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