six The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Lancaster County, P a., Thursday Morning, September 12, 1940 Religious News In This Community CHURCHES IN MT. JOY AND THE ENTIRE SURROUNDING | COMMUNITY. ! Trinity Luthieran Church Rev. W. L. Koder, Pastor Sunday School at 9:30. Morning Worship, 10:45. Vesper Service, 7 P. M. IB First Presbyterian Church | Rev. C. B. Segelken, D. D., Church School, 9:30 | Morning Worship and Sermon at! 10:30 Pastor | | ———— | Donegal Presbyterian Church Rev. C. B. Segelken, D.D., Pastor Church School 9:00 | Evening Worship and Se 7:30 o'clock. rmon at Salunga Methodist Church Rev. W. Frank Carpenter, Minister 10:00, Sunday School. 8:00, Evening Worship and Ser- mon. St. Elizabeth Mission Elizabethtown, Pa. Rev. Wm. J. Watts, Pastor Sunday After Trinity | Morning Prayer Seventeenth 8:00 A. M., Sermon. and Church of God Rev. G. F. Broske, Pastor Sunday School at 9:30. Morning Worship at 10:30. Evening Worship, 7:30 p. m. Prayer Service Wednesday even= ing at 7:30 p .m. Brethren Church Salunga, Pa. A hymn sing will be held Sun-| cay, Sept. 15th at 7:30 D.S.T. Two favorite hymns will be il- lustrated in crayon by Mrs. Laura Kreider, Ephrata. Bring your black Brethren Hym- of in- nals and enjoy an evening spirational singing. Mount Joy Methodist Church Rev. W. Frank Carpenter, Minister 9:30, Sunday School. 10:30, Morning Worship and Ser- mon. Vocal Solo, Mrs. Walter Tuesday evening at 7 p .m jor choir meets for rehearsal. Wednesday evening at 6:30 p. m, | rehearsal. | Sloan. , Sen- Youth choir meets for Church of Ged Landisville, Pa. Rev. Raymond Daihl, Pastor Church School 9:15 A. M. Morning Service 10:30 A. M. C. E. Societies 6:45 P. M. No Church Services, July 21-28. Florin U. B. Church Rev. I. W. Funk, Pastor 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. 10:30 a. m., Morning Worship. 5:30 p. m.,, Junior Christian En- deavor. 6:30 p. m., Intermediate and Sen- ior Societies. 7:15 p. m., Evening Worship. Thursday Evening— 7:30 p. m., Prayer Service. St. Mary's Catholic Church Mount Joy Father Phillip Gergen, Pastor Mass every Sunday morning at 10:00 a. m. NEWS PERTAINING TO ALLTHE | yi town, near Elizabethtown { ty, son of the Mortuary Record In This Section (From page 1) iller funeral Elizabeth- this afternoen at two Sheaffer's parlors, Interment in E'town. cemetery Aaron S. Herr Aaron S. Herr, R.D eighty-five, of | 2, died at 6:30 | m. Tuesday at his home after 2 lcng illness. He was a son of the late Rudy and Fannie Herr, and was for many year: an employe of | the Cornwall - Lebanon railroad. Surviving him Bertha. | and a Amos of Elizabeth- | are his wife, brother, tcwn., David N. Grove Lavid N. Grove, seventy, Bain- bridge, died at 1:30 a. m., Tues- day, at the Columbia Hoespital. He | was admitted to the hospital a week go and had everal months. He was born in Lancaster coun- late Simon and Su- and a retired | farmer. H: was a member of the United Brethren church at Fal-| mouth, | He is survived by these brothers been in ill health for the past zanna Grove, was and sisters: Harry, Paxtang; John, | of Findley, Ohio; Minerva, wife of Philip S. Libhart, of Bainbridge; Amos Grove, of Marietta R. D. 1; and Malinda, wife of Clayton Har- nish, Lancaster R. D. 2 Richard W. Lzber Richard W. Leber, sixty, Eliza-| bethtown R. D. 2, died at 7 a. m. Sunday at his home, after an illness of four years. Mr. Leber had beer | employed by the Pennsylvania rail- road as freight and ticket agent at| Conewago for thirty-five years|} until his retirement, He was a son | of the Milton and Elizabeth | Leber and was a member of Christ Evangelical and Reformed church. | | Elizabethtown. Deceased was bors: | here and resided in town for many years. | are five sons, Edwin. | Leon, Roy, Charles and | of Elizabethtown; late Survivors Middletown; Eugene, all four Donley, Elizabethtown and Mrs. | Eliza Crowell , Harrisburg and three | brothers, Harry, Reading and Simon | and Milton, both of this city. Eleven grandchildren also survive, Help Support (From page 1) in their effort Let’s make them want to be even better! Attend Monday night's meeting, see the new uniforms and let the teachers and band know that you're working with them. It will be a grand feeling of sat-| when you see and hear | to know YOU isfaction, this group in action, helped! Remember, Monday September 16th at 7:30 p. m. re A eee evening, | Adequate School Lunch | To maintain a good food balance, | the noon school lunch should include | milk, fruit or tomato juice; one pro- tein food like eggs, meat, fish or cheese; bread and butter, and one | Evening devotions are held the second and fourth Sundays of each month at 7:30 p. m. St. Luke’s Episcopal Church Rev. Wm, J. Waits Sunday, September 15th— Seventeenth Sunday After Trinity 9:15 A. M., Church School. 10:30 A. M., Morning Prayer and Sermon. 7.00PM. ¥Y. PF Wednesday, September 18th— 6:30 P M., St. Mary’s Guild. & Sat., Sept. 20th - 21st— Acolytes Festival, Mauch Chunk. Trinity Evangelical Congregational Church Rev. Clarence C. Reeder, Minister Sunday, Sept. 15 9:30 Cradle Roll Program 7:30 Evening Worship Monday— Choir Rehearsal, 7:30. Tuesday— Y. P. meet B. A. Walters Quarterly Conference, Lititz. Wednesday— Mission Band. Prayer Meeting, Thursday— Beacon Class Meeting. | St. Mark’s United Brethren Ezra H. Ranck, Pastor vegetable, preferably raw. The | | vegetable may be used as a sand- | wich filling, or it may be celery | stalks, carrot or turnip sticks with salt. Whole wheat bread should be | used at least half of the week for | these lunches. Cookies or cup cakes are preferable to sliced cake be- | cause they carry much better. If | the teacher serves one hot dish at | noon, the children should know the | menu a week in advance so the | mother will know just what to send | from home to complete the lunch. Labrador Tea Labrador tea is the popular name for a small evergreen shrub ot the heath family which grows in bogs and swamps in Greenland, Canada | and the more northern parts of the United States. The leaves are tough, | i densely covered with a brown wool | on the under face. They are fra- grant and when crushed have been used as a substitute for tea. 9: 00 a.m ri School 10:15 a. m., Morning Worship. | 6:30 p. m., Junior and Intermed- | jate Christian Endeavor meetings. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship, Wednesday— 7:30 p. m., Mid-Week Prayer Ser- | vice; Young People’s Christian Fel- | lowship meeting. | Thursday— 7:30 p. m., Meeting of the Dorcas | Society at the home of Mrs. Anna | Sunday Services: Longenecker. ) PENNSYLVANIA FARMERS BOOST WHEAT YIELDS 56%, SURVEY SHOWS i (1) Unfertiliz od rot Father and son inspect a bumper crop. In system, (2) fertilized root system gives strength to enable plant to go | through the winter with less loss. Pennsylvania farmers who usejof fertilizer is on wheat. In addi- {2 fertilizer increase their wheat | tion to increasing the yield and | duties were enlarged to include the| Witnes: Tree Chapter D. A. R. supervision of the entire AAAl ip Le host to the Donegal, ;Jrrograms in the North- Central ' (ir Francis Smith, Har states. Prior to his new appoint-| 1 cba non. Swatara, Pine Ford and {ment, which became effective Sep- chapters at a gr :}tember 5th, he assistant in the department work-|D. A. R. MEETING IS His| PLANNED FOR MAYTOWN ing on the corn-hog program. was Under-Secre- meeting on Saturday, S:ptember 14 {tory of Agriculture. The joint session will be held at It is a foregone conclusion that 8 P. M. in the Mayvtown Reformed the policies of Ex-Secretary Wai- | THe Woman's. Ald Socials lace will be continued under Sec-| 1 the parish, will serve supper in retary Wickard. the East Donegal Tcwnship High Rchool cafeteria, "THE SNYDERS-LATCHFORDS Profesor Mervin H. Brandt will] AT DINNER | he the guest speuake r and the) Mr. and Mrs. David Snyder and | church’s history will ke prepared by! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Latchford Henry Haines and read by his {entertained at a dinner, on Sunday grandson. Music will be furnished n honor of Mrs. Maggie Manbeck’s seventy-eighth birthday. Those who enjoyed the a quartet from the church con- gregation. i occasion | eel Eee | ice cream for dessert. Me. Stoltzfus returned August 22nd, from the Dr. Peirce Invalid Hotel at Buffalo, N. Y. where he underwent treatments. ng See When in need of Printing. (any- thing) kindly remember the Bulletin Patronize Bulletin Advertisers, a CONSTITUTION DAY vields by 9 bushels per acre on the | quality of the grain, fertilizer pro- average, or 56 per cent, according | motes a vigorous growth and larger | in | yield of the clover or other hay crop to a recent national survey which 32,000 farmers told of their experience with fertilizer. The wheat growers who were interview- ed verified on their own farms the results achieved at experiment sta- tions, which show that wheat is very responsive to fertilizer. In addition to the increase in yield, 73 per cent of the farmers who were interviewed in 17 States reported better market quality; 85 per cent had noticed that fertilized crops got a quicker start; 45 per cent observed that crops were more resistant to disease; and 76 per cent reported that crops matured | earlier. Experiments carried on at ex- periment stations show that gen- | which follows, which in turn bene- | fits the crop coming next in the | | of yield. | from the use of fertilizer is equiva- rotation. Pennsylvania farmers can sub- stantially reduce their cost of wheat production per bushel by in- creasing their yield. In the east- ern part of the United States it costs on the average around $15 to grow an acre of wheat, regardless If the yield is 15 bushels the cost is $1 per bushel; if the yield is 10 bushels the cost jumps $1.50 per bushel; while a 30 bushel vield reduces the cost to 50 cents. The value of the increased wheat vield in Pennsylvania resulting [rss Mr. ii Mo tao Hen D. H. S. DERRS AT bec exas; r. an TS. eo- dore Geister and daughter, Doris, AMISH FROLIC | and Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Neum- Walter H. Derr and Mr. and Mus. land, all of Bethlehem; Claude; D. H. S. Derr, attended an Ane | Manbeck, of Philadelphia; Mr. and Frolic at the farm of Moses Stoltz. Mrs. Rey Sherman, of Reading; Mr. | and Mrs. William Ellis and daugh-| ! ter, Mary, Paul and Frederick Garber, Mrs. Sara Espenshade,' Winifred and Dick Latchford, all of town. Mrs. Manbeck was the of many useful and lovely gifts. AO rn BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION A double “birthday annivh:rsary celebrated in honor of Mr. Almos S. Earhart by the and grandchildren, recipient was and Mrs. children Monumental Knowledge A little learning is a dangerous thing, but in the gathered {o harvest the tobacco crop | matter of investments it must be monumental for Mr. : | . .. an abundance of experience vast enough to on A meet every conceivable investment problem. cut and hanging in the sheds. One of the reasons why people in all walks of A chicken and ham supper life come to this bank for financial advice is that served with the delicious Stoltzfus all our officers and executives are men of long and sound experience. Through many years of CEE SRT I ERT study of investment trends and decline, they FEEDING YOUR CHILD have acquired that intimate knowledge that FOR HEALTH instinctively leads them along the right course An informative article by a dis- | the This advice and counsel is fus Jr. Bareville, R. D. 1; on Wed- nesday, where neighbors and friends was safe course. lent to about $1.67 for each dollar spent for fertilizer. erally the best place in a crop rota- tion to make a liberal application Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. | yj authority on household | : a. sof this bank Graybill G. Bruckhart and three | efficiency. Every parent will want | always available to customers of this bank. children, Mr, and Mrs. Abram M.|to read this timely feature in the | Hess and three children and daugh- | September 22 issue of ter-in-law, Mrs. Jno Earhart and Behind The Future BY ELIZABETH M. GARBER (Research Assistant to Senator James J. Davis) The second Roosevelt administra- [ blems: in their incomes, their debt tion has seen many cabinet changes | In this month of September farmers see the head of the Department of Agriculture step into the a Vice-Presidential nominee Under Secretary of Agriculture step forward into a full-fledged Secret- aryship. Henry A. Wallace was the and foreclosures, in bettering their living standards, in soil conserva . | tion and distribution of their sur shoes of | pluses, The Department was de legated a large task in the admin- istering of new laws to solve thes very and in the settin: up of new instruments of govern and an problems <econd | daughters, Mrs. Daniel Hilt, Bites: | Wallace to hold the office of Sec-|ment. Since 1933, Agricultural Ad bethtown; Mrs. Beenjamin Jones | of Agriculture. The elder justment Administration, Surplus this city; Mrs. David Shoemaker, | wr. 11200 his father, came to Wash- | Marketing Administration, Com- Bainbridge and Miss Barbara Leber | ington in 1921 to serve under Presi- modity Credit Corporation, Feders at home; three sisters, Mrs. Ge corge | ge nt Coolidge. This elder Wallace [Crop Insurance Corporation, Farn Walters, Harrisburg; Mrs. Raymond | to Washington with the idea Security Administration, Soil Con servation Service, Rural Electrifica tion Administration have been adde« as administrative units of the de | that the staff of the department wer¢ “clock-watchers” and “chair-warm- ers.” He found instead clear-think- ing, loyal workers in the depart- partment. ment. Son, Henry A. Wallace in These new agencies together with addressing his farewell to the pre- the expanded functions of olde bureaus in the department are to- sent department employees similarly praised them for their “experience | day headed by a new Secretary of ability and honesty.” Agriculture, Claude R. Wickard In turning over the Secretariate | | Wickard is an Indian farmer whe Mr. Wallace paused to review pes s werk of the leadership. The Departm:nt wished | to serve the farmers of by extending them government co- the | department under his | farm policies. a member of the committee in the worked hard for the notior such program. Later operation in countless everyday pro- | AAA seen much service in new dea Back home he was original corn-hog corn belt and as the first he was an TheAmerican Weekly | the big magazine distributed with the Baltimore Sunday American On Sale at All Newsstands! two children. Mr, and Mrs. Roy E Shelly, and ten children, Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Earhart and two child- sen, Mr. and Martin Hoffer and Mr ind Mrs. Almos Earhart and twec | | children. J In Three { Three entirely new lines or an Eight in any model. Prices begin just above the lowest. " IN THE GREATEST YEAR in its history, Pontiac presents its greatest line of cars— the 1941 Pontiac “Torpedoes”! Three entirely new lines of cars— every one a “Torpedo” —and every model offering you a choice of a Six or Eight engine! And they're led by a new De Luxe “Torpedo” Since the dawn of man, no man-made docu- ment ever so perfectly set down the precepts of human rights than does our Constitution. As a living, working manuscript, as powerful today as it was hundreds of years ago, we are indeed fortunate to live under its protec- tion. Ordinarily, take with the world in turmoil and peoples everywhere suffering injustice and indignities, it is well for us to pay particular respects to our good fortune aside to note the Constitution. we on the day set Tuesday, September 17 FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TRUST CO. MOUNT JOY MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION any new car buyer can afford! Bigger? Yes! More powerful? Yes! Easier to handle? Yes! More comfortable? Yes! Yet they give you the same record economy that made this year’s Pontiacs such a. sensation! See these new Pontiacs today. Then you'll know why we say,“It’s Another Big Year for Pontiac!” op IS WHAT YOU GET WHEN = YOU BUY A 1941 PONTIAC 1. NEW BEAUTY AND LUXURY 2. ENCLOSED RUNNING BOARDS On Two Series 3. GREATER OVER-ALL LENGTH . INCREASED POWER . RECORD GAS AND OIL ECONOMY Built-in Oil Cleaner 6. LARGER, SAFER BODIES 7. NEW, TRU-ARC SAFETY STEERING 8 9 oo . NEW INTERIOR LUXURY . PERFECTED ‘‘TRIPLE-CUSHIONED" RIDE’ 10. CHOICE OF A SiX OR AN EIGHT IN Plus ANY MODEL 99 other improvements and outstanding features that make Pontiac more than ever "America’s Finest Low-Priced Car." A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE 120 South Market Street THE UNION NATIONAL MOUNT JOY BANK MOUNT JOY, PENNA. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION PONTIAC DE LUXE "TORPEDO." Low-priced leader of the Pontiac history! 119-inch Tot lengt inches. New concealed running boards. Available in five models: PONTIAC CUSTOM "TORPEDO." The aristocrat of the line? 122.inch wheelbase —over-all length increased 4 inches. Available as a Four- Door Sedan, Sedan Coupe and Station Wagon. 175 Another Big Year 7or J HASSINGER & RISSER Great Divisions the pitiac 70 Torpedo Every one a “Torpedo”! Your choice of a Six reatest line in increased 3 PONTIAC STREAMLINER “TORPEDO.” A new streamlined version of Pontiac’s famous “Torpedo” styling. 122-inch wheelbase—71% inches greater over-all len Offered in the Four-Door Sedan and Sedan Coupe. h. New concealed running boards. ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. Ce Ad Of To A ve the ad and le Mr. 1] Agronn 8 locat Works, Mr. small ¢ which terestin sery he grasses use in include There selectio and leg perimer strange much p County About The Cal In John peter, v Chairms tion Cal it was a J. Marst Federati gate to as Gen and for chairmas in West The S of the held N officially Mobiliza meeting, Novemb Caskey During will be hundred for the s cies inc Hospital, Rossmer Associat: the Criy CHAMB WILL H tad Chamke evening booth a next mo The m of by th Committ There these quite ar at this Ma Far Oc The Ee will holc Thursday and 11th feature | quoit an junior groups finals ir Friday n Thursd will fee for sch hockey ¢ gal and Friday feature a ball gam test bet Mount J B.§ Ou The re the Mou Associatic tor’s roor Bank a Wednesd: Secreta the recei $2,876.20. Several for and { Upon 1 was dec’; |
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers