PAGE TWO The Mount Joy Bulletin ESTABLISHED JUNE 1901 Published Every Thursday at Mount Joy, Pa. Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher Subscription Price $1.50 Per Annum Six Months..............759 Cents Single Copies.... ..3 Cents Three Months...........40 Cents Sample Copies............. FREE The subscription lists of three other newspapers, the Mount Joy Star | and News, the Landisville Vigil and the Florin News were merged with | the Bulletin, which makes this paper's circulation practically double that of the average weekly. Mr He ED tors at We haye had the usual number of hunting accidents thru-! out this locality and we really cannot understand why peo- | back to ple will be so careless. of careless autoists, gunners, and people who have destruc- tive fires and with all the warnings, we presume will con- | tinue to have them. NO NECESSITY FOR IT The removal of feebleminded from our state prisons and | reformatories and remodeling of existing maximum secur- | male ity institutions now underway, makes the project of an Al- catraz in Pennsylvania now unnecessary and a waste of | public funds. : In our opinion it would be just that much money wasted and at a time when the public debt is already too big. TOO BLAMED MANY LAWS During the 1937 session of Pennsylvania State Legislature, | 602 new and revised acts were passed. This is said to be the | wmber of acts passed at any one session of During and it required a book of 1363 pages to record them: 1931 largest Legislature. the 1935 session 430 acts were passed session adopted 361 acts and 1422 pages were required. The 1937 acts in book form will contain more words than the Bible, but not as much healthy, elevating and sacred inform- | ation. THE WORLD'S BEST MILK A health specialist recently pointed out that the United | States, on the whole, has the best and purest the world. milk supply A considerable part of the credit for this immensely m- | portant achievement must be given to the large dairy inter- Part of their work has been to show farm-| ers how to improve both the health and productivity herds ests of America. f their and also how to handle milk in the safest possible manner. These lessons have been widely followed—and our! pure milk supply is the result. TIME FOR A CHANGE No man is allowed to operate a railroad locomotive—! though it runs on rails along a predetermined track. with every conceivable safety device to prevent accidents—with- out long and rigorous training, for health and capability. and periodic examinations No man can command a ship—though it plies oceans and }ce waterways where the chance of collision with another yessel is microscopically small—without similar training and ex-| aminations to determine fitness and ability. I No man can fly an airplane—though its “highway” is the! empty air—without providing absolute proof of his com-| petence, | Yet any man can operate an automobile down crawded | Amo age and a possible serious accident is a matter of inches, no! matter how ill-fitted he is to drive safely. i That fact largely explains our gigantic motor vehicle acci- dent toll. In some states no examination of any kind is re- mm quired to obtain a driving license. In others not even a li- cense is needed—the most ignorant and incompetent can get behind the wheel ad roar away, endangering evervone in his | D path. And in most of those states w here drivers’ licensing | and prevents only the most obviously incompetent from en- | dangering Physical infirmities, bad vision, defective hearing. and. most important of all, psychological handicaps that make | Welf safe driving impossible—these are found in literally millions of people who are today operating steel juggernauts capable | hundred-mile-an-hour speds. We'll never go far toward solving the accident problem until every state takes the steps necessary to making certain that no person is given a license without providing reasonable proof of capability and thorough knowledge of trafic regulations. We've let the in- capable drive as they pleased—and they've made our hig h- | ways a shambles. 20 Years Ago | nry 'is picking choice ripe strawberries. | eral I T Oo R | A L } At present there are 182 trac- [city caster county. 85 per However, there seems to be a class | flue epidemic Ho >ward Yel red fox. Silver Jubilee i Of Pa rcel Post | he horse belonging to the Messrs. re tl Qe i HEARD NOTED SPE AKER systems have been established, the law is usually inadequate rtibtcoA n the public safe ty. Vou she 3 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO. PA. SEER Boro Council | HAPPENINGS | one] f the heart of the town on the site | 0 (of the former Clarence Schock I yards as a preventive against fires in the future unless the buildin {was fire proof such as the vari- 'ous industries thruout the town. | {No action by Council. The Burgess also favored the co arboring over- So 33 Years Ago Harry Darrenkamp shipped sev- } carloads of potatoes to the | markets. ! ntinuance of night lodgers in the boro lockup | as is being done at Elizabethtown. | He stated it would be quite a S A number of East Donegal far- tion. work on farms in Lan- | | mers have sown wheat the second | Our Water Consumption time. | Pumping Engineer Shatz pumped | A turkey hen owned by James [5292000 gallons of water in 116 cent Raybuck, of Rapho. laid 108 eggs hours by motor and 3,108.000 gal- pany | during Spring and Summer. {lons in 261 hours by water power, contract for the con-| Seven oldest members of the ja total of 8400,000 gals. during: shops at | Methodist Church were each pre- | sented with a bouquet. f a yard { October. { i Our Boro's Health { A man at Quarryville raised al Mr. Dillinger. of the Board of | Eo : | g i sweet potato 25 inches in length. reported folr. cases ‘of Philip Schmaelzle, the designer | ul "OW! ills is as. | . at Brown Bros. Mili, 1S NOW 3$- fever quarantined and one nuis- | ant Mgr. of the Penn Wooster | ice corrected during the month. | Mill at Kensington, Pa. : | i ON oak Fo Fire Co. Request Bishop Jacob N. Brubaker, gave is son, Sem a clock brought from 'F oid | Friends many in 1717. { Council one case of scarlet 0 at tpn A committee of three fro hip Fire Co. was befo nes wi A woman at Milton Grove ac- | h . Sb act] i : purchase of = equipment for exti “hexing (be- | her neighbor of { Councilman tdue to sickness. aving to our taxpayers. No ac- |& I tive to gunning on the former Dr. { 19 W, Steigel St. > | Teter h THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10th, 193 - ———— ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED The engagement of Miss Geral= dine Mae Horst, daughter of Mr. employed when necessary. Public Toilets Councilman Miller stated that Council should consider and pro- vide public toilets and that this could be easily and inexpensively f town. The matter was referred | to constable Zerphey. Zerphey's Report The officer made two arrests and | six prosecutions during the month, | Joy travelling 655 miles in the pur- {son of Mr. and St, town, to Frank Kirchoff, Mrs. Frank Kir. is duti | choff, Lancaster, has bee an- done at the fire house. No action. | suit cf his duties. choff, Brg: > 5 en an N | 1 bi i i ed by : 'mer’s parents i i All bills re c ouncil | nounced by the for: They Miss Him All bills ‘were paid and council 2djourned. The Secretary was instructed to ——- ——————— | | send a letter of sympathy to | Ehirley Bletz, 11, wi Keller. who | You can get all the news of this| Wis 1m dom by a trolley and hers Pan ak locality for less than three cents a! pinned beneath the car for ten absent ior some time | ook itouch The Bulletin. | minutes. She is badlv of Lancaster, Robert ~Q 1 Sy has been mjured. New Light: Contract } A new made with the Penna. Power t Co. and a resolution rel- street lighting contract FOR ative to the contract was also od. HIGHEST PRICES PAID Hunting In Boro an Moore said there nerous complaints rela- Cou were I GEO. LAMPARTER’S SONS Rockland St., Lancaster, Pa. TELEPHONE LANCASTER 24157 Ziegler estate tract in the eastend EYES EXAMINED Dr. Harold C. ed OPTOMETRIST ELIZABETHTOWN | 15 E. High St | jan.27-tf MANHEIM e 11-J Telephone 24-R Mon., Wed., Thurs. Tues., Fri.,, Sat | Evenings by appointment in Manheim NERVOUS { uishing gasoline fires. The spokes- I stated the $500. The | receive Council's { witching) her chickens. P. R. R. officials have come to that Florin should | man Eli Menaugh staked off ground | J. Y. Klines concreete bloc { actory. After the regular meeting of ithe Red Men, the members en- tjoyed an oyster supper at Mec- Treasurer's Report | ley reported these | balances: $2,188.91; { 85,150.65; Interest, $92.00. Need a Watchman There was objecti i *) Mr. H. | water, | now clerking ir tin a stor Kansas City, Mo. had the little hand almost | ——~ severed while at work at the Grey Dr. R. M. Balderson OPTOMETRIST 85 E. Main St. MT. JOY, PA. | Check Below And See If You Have Any Of The Signs 2 can make you old and g, cranky and hard to liv awake nights and, rob goo od times and j that. Sta c—one made espe= > x ta - AM 1 I j el i could you ask for any- T1088 P.M | thin een better proved 3 | th dia E. Pinkbham’s D 4 . | and roots of without fail from your drug Over a mil- 3 ¥ | B Nature calm lion women have written in letters reporting wonderful benefits. 3 For the past § 60 years Ly Vegetable pound has e women go ¢ oo fing thru” trying ordeals, wi Viy not let it id YOU? oe JOW to get a bottle of this m’s Compound TODAY o tread on a cover to an well and broke them. the animal was res- st Gingrich raised 5 pump- kir on one vine, the largest | weighing 100 lbs. and the 5 weighed er 300 lbs. | J. Fred Fenstermacher is now yed at the Yoffee store. rd Delong, Frank Good and David Cooper returned home with ir of geese—tame ones. ov accepted a ers t in the stored, bottled in this building. the vault. The First Ton Litter Club Memberln Co. vhere to Everywhere’ Low-rate service. (From page 1) ervised by State workers. ter was weighed under the su- NO UN The nation-wide reducfion in highway fatalities this year IFORMITY ACCIDENT BREEDERS i ~ - i | BE melon (i oy: 3d modestly retire to the back- Buiclk’s 5 | A dgrateful—ycu ¢ that he ground, overhead stop lights both sets 2 pattern and fills a Fl t ; 3 : : ; : E fe vial du Siz rand Pol Chive | instant your gaze takes in this drop into easy vision—ahead, {unction. | fsire. Two head died and the sparkling Buick for 1939. to right, to left, vou can see! ; i litter was weaned at nine weeks Se take a good look into 1H3 $e kk ens E ve . TL. Je 2} ; % 5 ut age, placed rediately on self- It’s sleck and swift and busi- The ruler will tell you there bigger, better, broader cut fee of i rai i It NOR 5 An fed ne} oi feeding of a dry grain Hi bee 1esstike, lean and clean in are as much as 413 added look. It’s one thing amon tl of water. the trim bonne toro rifts ie Ta : of: 300 the trim bennet square inches of safety glass in many that Buick's got that i | ir this Butnk: nnd these + ’e s . : “i : jraceful upper- (his Buick, and these inches vou'll want in your next auto. Fi t-and-airy look- are placed where they count. mobile. d fine. “oon wi, iy = { > fd 3 ster jo. plexse. and Sra i tie All Gare LAN i look 1t over closer? FEATURES id : : : Why, i is St 1S IN ‘ +5 Ee ; And like “catw valk-cooling’ 3 an car, wiln x a x radiators low where air pres- ou've got here! . i sure is greatest—and the lines p ion and irritation breed accidents. The long 1 tapers quickly of the bonnet: broad, clean, § States and municipalities developed traffic control in a out of Eve 1 the pillars gefodynay tically Detter . y } i . oi or less helter-skelter fashion. No effort was made to 5 Ge The consequences are obvious. A mo- 5 £2 y Fh are aw ud S86 5 torist traveling in a strange territory is confused. He drives frase Buicl: ihe Ha & NE) i : : ‘ SA NB BR 3 through overhead control lights, because in his town the rata SED & highways, we em- | lights are placed on sidewalks, or roadsides, or on the pave- EXimprag Of MOTORS YALU: =f 3 SE NE = Ew a TT a FI | J fl Bia earthed onions meet woe rons Lert eres ae oo deen. Shane B . . B® He violates laws innocently, and unknowingly F U L R I C HH x takes risks that lead to accidents. e 9 % Rt Cc ® We have managed to| BE baat” 505 North Market Street ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. start the accident curve downward. And the inauguration! da challenges the mobilized forces of the traffic safety move- | more « existing maladjustments. Paying tribute to the part state | authorities have taken in saving lives, sparing human suffer- ing and protecting property on America’s benefit not only the officials charged with motor vehicle con- The multiplicity of traffic control devices and regulations home territory, create confusion and irritation. and confus- | ment to go forward with a vet broader program to combat | achieve uniformity. phasize that greater uniformity of laws, regulations and ad- | ment itself. He looks in the wrong places for Stop and warn- ministrative practices of motor vehicle departments would | Ing signs. trol, but also legislators and the great body of motorists. The time for a change has arrived. which confront the motorist when he ventures bevond his: of a movement to standardize trafic control devices sud} regulations would help keep it going down. Se and Mrs. Benjamin Horst of Mount br ar Tt! lir rO ke Pe Ki: fh to or pa thr tin. Hy Wa rou Ca) Ma Bor Fore by cher « crue Arno