Nearly 31» Million Dollars This Section’s Numerous Weddings Worth of Cattle, Grain, Milk, Eggs, Etc. Produced Annually On 186 Donegal-Conoy Farms Annual production value of the land in the Donegals and Conoy township which the government contemplated acquiring for other than its present use. Approximate number of farms involved, 186. Total acreage 11,520 acres at 200 Per acre i oie. 2,304,000.00 Acreage in farm gardens and truck patches, 93 acres at 20000 per yield J... 18,600.00 Acreage of corn, 2594 acres yield 145264 bushels at 75c ... UA 108,948.00 Acreage of field grains (feed-barley, oats, etc), 1,388 acres yield 55520 bushels at 65¢ per bushel ................ 36,088.00 Acreage of wheat, 1210 acre: yield 29.050 bushels at 1.00 onl 29,050.00 Acreage of hay, 2,790 acres yield 3438 tons at 15.00 BEE On a dn sae ee 51,570.00 Acreage of pasture, 1016 acres of pasture at 10.00 BR RE a i iE i so ee ie aaa 10,160.00 Acreage of tomatoes, 558 acres at 135.00 DI BO tiv rivers rr be Rd aR a ae 75,330.00! Acreage of sweet corn 279 acres at 64.00 PB CTE... cr ee 17,856.00 Acreage of peas, 93 acres of peas at 70.00 PEE BOI ov... ia ie iene ae a 6,510.00 Acreage of tobacco, 1,020 acres yield 1,224,000 lbs. of No. 1 tobacco at 6c per Ib. ................ ooo an 195,840.00 1,020 acres yield 306,000 lbs. of No. 2 tobacco at Beperadh. ..... aR EE 15,300.00 Number of hogs marketed, 3,146 hogs at 225 lhs. per hog, 4 200.850 Ibs, at Zoe. per 1b. a... ann 53,088.75 No. calves sold, 1,50 calves at 140 lbs. per calf, 210,000 lbs. at Ieper dh... ............. REL 26,250.00 Number of steers sold, 1476 steers yield a net profit of RCO pester CSR 44,280.00 Number of milking cows sold, 1488 cows at 160.00 PR COW... a 238,080.00. Pounds of milk produced, 1,027,000 lbs. of milk at See per db. nah 28,756.00 Dozens of eggs produced, 599,650 dozens of egos at 2 Sle SL 179,895.00 | i... i sa 439.501 601.75 Vi Bo ok and raving ictory 00 photogravhy, cartcons, well-; strated books of all types, oe about music, sports, novel and play writing, poetry and indiviZual plays, geography, travel (of the last ten years), biography (especially the shorter, more popular type) history (particularly Europe and Nerth and South America since 1800), Fiction — Aviation stories, venture, historical sports, western, Let every householder be ready when the solicitors call. They want bocks, books for our defenders—a bock for every service man. Keep Reading. ory Page 1) Mrs. Lester Roberts, Mrs. Mary Toppin, Mrs. John G. Longeneck- er, Miss Elizabeth Heilig, Miss Mil- dred Zink and Mrs. Paul Frank, Florin. The books can be taken to the following places: Sloan's Drug Stere, Eshleman Bros. Store, Tyn- dall’s Drug Store, Aunt Sally’s Kit- chen, H, S, Newcome: & Son, and J. B. Hostetter & Son, and for those who cannot take their books to these, places, the solicitors will call for them before Fr.day, Janu- ary 30th. Camp librarians report the fol- ad- novels, humor . al Qe lowing are the types of books in greatest demand: Applied psychol- | LICENSES ogy, current affairs, military publi- Charles H. Zink, this boro, and cations, erime and the F. B. I, po- | Mary Jane Snead, Lancaster. lice systems and fingerprinting, En- Walter W. Grove, Shippensburg glish grammars, arithmetic, algebra, |R. 3 and Anna Mellinger, Mount geometry, trigonometry, calculas| Joy Route 1. Ezra Dourte Heiscy, Mount Joy R. 2, and Vera Eliza Kibler, Wash- ingtonboro, R. 2. and tables of logarithms, up-to-date accounting, short- salesmanship, technical books, hand, business and ING 40. SURGICAL DRESSINGS ASSISTING FAMILIES OF MEN IN UNIFORM THE CHARTMANERS, mC | ON THE HOME FRONT of na- tional defense more than 1,250,000 Red Cross volunteers are taking an | quest of the Army and Navy. Home| active part in backing up the man | Service workers serve back home’ in uniform. They serve behind the | as the connecting link between the lines performing scores of wital man in uniform and his family tasks, vital to our growing armed | through contact with tha Red Cross forces—providing blood for emer-|ficld representative stationed at geney transfusions, making sweat- | Army and Navy posts. ers and surgical dressings and un- dertaking other duties at the re-| lin-law and sister of the bride. ! president, | that | Alleman, West Donegal township. / The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Lancaster County, i Sara G. Myers Earl P, Nissley The marriage of Miss Sara G. Myer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Adam E. Myer, of Lancaster R. 5 and Earl P. Nissley, son of Mr. and Mrs, Rufus Nissley, of Manheim, R 2, took place at 4 p. m. Sunday at the home of Rev. Diller S. Myer Bareville. « The couple were atten- ded by Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Car- per, of Manheim R. 1, brother-in- law and sister of the bride. The bride wore blue transparent velvet and Mrs. Carper chose pink trans- parent velvet, After the ceremony the couple left on a wedding trip to Ellen, N. Dattisinan Stanley B. Barnhart SNO-BALL DANCE HERE WEDNESDAY NITE. FEB. 4 The High School students are in the midst of plans for a public €no-Ball Dance, to be held on Wednesday evening, Feb. 4, from 800 to 11:30 P. M, The proceeds from the dance will be used to purchase an electric bas- ketball score board. Tickets may be purchased from any of the com- mittee memb:rs which includes: Charles Shirk, Jane Landvater, Dick Brown, Janet Nissly, Harold Zim- merman, Newton Kendig, Betsy Bigler, Mary Jane Engle, Nancy Ellis, Anita Warta and Nancy Stoner. Andy Kerner’s orchestra will fur- nish the music and the admission will be forty cents plus four cents tax. Patrons $1.10 per ticket. el Ge The Lowering Of Headlights Campaign Mr. and Mis. Allan Dattisman, of Salinga, announce the marriage (of their daughter, Ellen N. Stanley B. Bambhart, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Barnhart, of 819 | Spruce St., Elizabethtown. The wedding took place at 10:30 | a. m. Saturday, January 10, in the i Grace Methodist Church at Belair, Md, with Rev. G. A. Ogg officiat- ing. The couple was attended by Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Peters, brother- | The bride is a graduate of East Hempfield High School and is em- ployed by the Hamilton Watch | Company. Mr. Barnhart is a graduate of Elizabethtown High School and is associated in business with his father. = Brief News Of «The Day From Local Dailies (From Page 1) Glen Smith, aged 5, broke thru the ice on the Juniata river, near Mifflin and was drowned. While attempting to cross the street at Steelton, Joseph Bensic 77, was struck by an auto killed. Mrs. Mary Swift. Chestnut Hill, baked her cwn birthday cake in preparation of celebrating her 100th milestone. Carcle Lombard, screen actress was one cf 22 killed when an air- plane crashed into a mountain peak in Nevada. The tires of forty workers’ cars at an aircraft plant at Detroit were ! badly slashed with knives while the men were at work. Clifford G. Baugher, ex-Deputy State Treasurer, was indicted by the Dauphin County grand jury on five charges of embezzlement. Two Ohio residents were killed 'some sheep were injured and a number were liberated in the woods and when an auto and truck collided east of Newport. DOROTHY WOLF HEADS SR. LUTHER LEAGUE The Sr. Luther League met at the Parish House of Trinity Luth- eran Church Tuesday. Officers were elected as follows: Dorothy Wolf; vice James Roberts; secre- tary, Martha Snyder; treasurer, Cathrine Ney. The Missionary topic on India was presented by June Swartz, Frances Keener and Helen Meck- ley. India is the location of the next Luther League of America Missionary objective. Folk dances were led. by Dor- othy Wolf and refreshments were served. nn come Gr QR COURT MAKES RULING IN TOBACCO SUIT Permission to answer charges he broke a tobacco-raising contract was granted councel for Paul Aungst, Penn township, seek- ing to recover $4,620 from Charles president, An answer will be filed to Alle- man’s counter-claim that Aungst failed to help harvest the crop as agreed because he left the state after applying for a marriage li- cense with Alleman’s daughter in October, 1940. —— et eens ONCE A THIEF— — Isadore Gendelman, 30, one of the Mountville bank robbers, was sentenced to from 5 to 10 years at Philadelphia for robbing a trolley arn there and only six montis after the local robbery. —— Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. to LOWER rove LIGHTS DONT BLIND ONCONING TRAFFIC! AUTO CLUB POSTERS SHOW ADVANTAGES OF LOWERING YOUR HEADLIGHTS have motorists their headlights when pass- A campaign to lower ing cncoming vehicles has been launched by the Lancaster Auto- mckile Club and will be continued throughout 1942. “Lewer Your Lights—Don’t Blind Oncoming Traffic” is the admoni- tion to drivers set forth on colorful posters, in newspapers and radio announcements, and in other ways. Co-operating in the campaign are the Lancaster Police, Pennsylvania Motor Police and other enforce- | ment’ officers. Pennsylvania law re- | quires motorists to lower their lights when approaching other ve- hicles, and those who fail to com- ply are liable to arrest and fine. | The Lower-Your-Lights campaigt! however, aims to bring compliance on streets and highways of Lancas* ter county, through voluntary co- cperation of drivers, rather than through arrests, the sponsors say. “Statistics shew that in 1941 ! three out of five fatalities occurred at night and over half the pedes- trians killed in traffic met death between 6 P. M. and midnight, of which many were attributable to glaring headl.ghts,” and Automobile Club statement points out. Glar- ing! lights greatly reduce visib.lity. Lowering headlights not only gives the approaching driver a break, but actually makes passing safer for the driver who dims the car lights. A | slight wobble in the center of the | comes I read it from the front to | road at high speed by a glare-| blinded driver may cause a serious | accident. “Co-operation of every reduce the accident toll on the streets and highways of Lancaster county this year.” Lower-Your-Lights posters on display in store windows, ages and gas stations and places throughout * the Newspapers, radio and other channels also are carry- ing the appeal to motorists. A ,H- - PP are other county There is no better way to boost your business than by local news- paper advertising. YOUNG LADY, VERE ou T OF LETTERHEADS NS 7 motorist | in this campaign not only will make | night driving easier, but will help ! gar- | announcements | Pa., Thursday Morning, The Affairs At Florin For Past Week Mr, and Mrs. J. W. McCauley spent Monday at Lancaster. Mr. Jacob Loraw will celebrate his seventy-first birthday on Jan- uary 29th. Mrs. J, W. McCauley entertained a number of {friends to a bridge narty last Wednesday. Dr. and Mrs. Dale Garber of Lansdowne, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs, A. D. Garber. Christian Endeavor County con- vention was held in the Florin U. | B. Church cn Mcnday evening. | Mr. und Mrs. A. G. Walters left en Tuesday morning for Orlando, Florida, where they will spend sev- eral weeks, Mr. Ralph Mumper, of Virginia, is spending a ten-day furlough with his parents. Mr, and Mrs. Gecrge Mumper. Mr. Harry Eichelberger had as his Sunday guests, his sister and her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Bru- baker, of Elizabethtown. Wr. and Mrs. Charles Ruhl and visited Sunday Mrs. ‘Michael Wagenbach, George Wagenbach on ~fternoon in Silver Spring. Corp. Max W. King, who is sta- t'cned at Fort George G, Meade, Md. spent a five-day furlough at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy F. Baker and family of this place. Mr. and Mrs, Martin Nye enter- tained the following at their home on Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Coker and daughter, Billye; Miss Mary Funk, Pvt. Ralph Mumper, Mr. and Mrs, George Mumper, Jr. and daughter, Marlene; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mumper and son, Billy. of Columbia; Mr, David Mumper, of Mt, Joy; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Mumper and daughter, Sylvia Lee Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mateer and ~on, Jimmy, all of Mount Joy; Mrs. Wm. Jones and children, Ruth Ann and Billy, and Miss Marion White. of Maytown; Mrs. Sue Nye and Mr. and Mrs. George Mumper, Sr. i A, rjtptpryyYtrraim™hw® MT. JOY POSTOFFICE NOW SELLS TAX STAMPS Automobile-use tax stamps are now on sale at the local postoffice and motorists who have not al- ready purchased same are remind- :d to do so before February 1, The card which accompanies each | sticker, states that the stamp may be placed on the panel board or ! other conspicuous place on the car. Many owners are placing the stamps on the inside of the windshield un- der the regular State sticker. Thus tiie stamp and sticker. ace back to hack. | Don't forget to buy yours, a iI LL«. CAMP LEE SOLDIER LIKES THE BULLETIN We are in receipt of the follow- | ing letter from a local soldier: Sun. Jan. 18, 1942, “lI want to thank you for send- ing me The Bulletin. It is the only newspaper I read besides a few magazines I buy now and then, I | look forward to receiving The Bul- letin every Thursday and when it ! the back page. for | | The Bulletin. JOSEPH GERMER, Co. F 8th QM.TR, Camp Lee, Va. Thanks again | LOTS ORFRIENDLY So come in soon andiet us help you have fun making someone yo happy. You'll fing all sorts | | of cheery greetings t | shut-ins, friends far aw who'll be celebrating | day or anniversary. | | | | | 54 W. Main St. | “A Friendly Store J In a Friendly Town.” iavghter, Doris Elaine and Mr. and | January 22, 1942 | 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ¢ 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4: ¢ 4 < 4 < 4 4 ¢ 4 ¢ 4 ¢ 4 4 4 4 < < 4 4 1 < ¢ ¢ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 : il and Operated by.The American Stores Ca. DELICIOUS FREESTONE EACHES No 214 cans 2: 31° BTOES croice SOUR KROUT Robford Golden Whole Kernels RLY JUNE PEAS 2 PLE BUTTER cx» SAUCE =r Hood doz { es Taste One and You'll be back for More - - CHOCOLATE, COCOANUT OR DEVIL FOOD Jayer Cakes | The ‘“home- made’ kind of cake you would pake yourself with the best _g of ingredients. A” Get Your ne Favorite - = 27 3 No23 25¢ ASCO SELF-RISING cans , 3223 PANCAKE 21 FLOUR Ic 19 C Try it Fresh from Our Bakery No 2 cans 38-0. 20-0z Box 25¢ oD our No 1 uarantee 3 cans 19 Plums 2 No2% 25¢ Mother’s Joy Pancake Syrup |] Emm soe or 18€ = ui 29° FARMDALE DALE EVAP. MILK Pu Large Size doz 23¢ SPINACH Princess Oleo Ib 16¢c Tom c Asco Oleo Ib 20¢ Savoy ibs ASCO LEAN 14-1 15¢ Sliced Bacon rks LETTUC KALE bon CARRO Solid Crisp Iceberg Fresh Calif. 2-13 He beh 7c National Peanut Week Fréghly Roasted Peanuts 1b 12¢ JUICE 3 240z cans 285¢ JUICY, SOLID FLORIDA | “al Our White Bread is with extra vitamins and minerals Rich Milk or Supreme READ 2:17¢ ASCO PEANUT BUTTER With Vit. 8-1 8-02 jar | 3€ OSCUL OFFEE 3° GOLD D MEDAL Try Asco Coffee on Our Guarantee Like it as well as (or better than) any other brand of coffee or re- turn the unused portion in the bag and get a pound of any coffee we sell, regardless of price. - 23° = Save Coupons on the Bags For Valuable Premiums WIN-CREST COFFEE » O° 3 JAMES RIVER BRAND Smithfield Spread 2x 25¢ Clapp’s Cereal er 150 Junket Desserts 2 kes {9¢ Nestle’s Morsels 2 3: 25¢ Nestle’s Chocolate 2 7°” 25¢ Duff's Waffle Mix Mix rka {9g Fibred Codfish Ice Cream Mix 5-0z oie 10€ | 3 vier 25€ Prices Effective Until Closing saturday, January 24th, 1942 . Quantity Rights’ Reserved BORAX SOAP | poses | Bere 1b! 1b 2.Qc [3251323 Mount Joy's chs o Modern Self-Service LD DUTCH : Market Kirkman’s Soap Powder pkg 5c CLEANSER Cans 13 Kirkman’s Cleanser 2 cans 9¢ 21-23-25 Kirkman’s Floating Soap 4 cks 17¢ Starch) ho KiRKMAN’S Bon Ami dake 9¢ E, Main St. | S0AP CHiPs [Sos i | : Saniflugh For Closets ¢ MOUNT JOY, PA. re : : 8c -0Z : Parking in Rear oe a Dazzle 2 12¢ Open Every Friday tee ene nd Saturday Nights DISH TOWEL for 1c | Hunt Club Sweetheart) with 24-02 pkg Kirkman’ Beg Food | Toilet Soap \ C Lean Boiling Granulated Soap at 22¢ Mare at the fri 46.02 -1 5 Cc Creamery 4 0 Ib BUTTER The Prize Sweet Cream SUTTER Quarters CREAMY, MELLOW CHEESE 3° No 1 can 37c AIL FISH: IX Continental 3 pkgs 25¢ b Hac ons 17° 0 Si bit 25¢ ib QFE Tomato Sauce pkg ded NUTS ES v5 c pride EER (TA EA RA HS OEE RRA fF CHUCK 0AST + D2 Rib Roast Yui End 1b Short Ribs Beef © 17. 4-19° LIBBY'S ned Beef Cros Cut Beef ast 29: Pork Loin Roast 1» Zhe Center Cut Pork Chops ©» 25¢ FRESH SAUSAGE Country Style Ib 23¢ PAN PUDDING lb 19¢ RED PERCH FILLETS ib 19¢ STEAK FISH Boneless 2 lbs:29e¢ KIRKMAN'S . Red Heart PARD 50 phe 39 3 cies 20° | Your Dollar Buys Thr Suis Trie Testim Judge O suits bei Isaac | and his Elizabeth in the forty-twec of Mount another Painter, tiffs in tl The pr as the truck cra township deen Mil for Cripp town. E injured. Snyder wife and their fan Two County 1 issued pt truck tire enger tir as well obsolete held last County the Mow sued cer! Orville § plumber, Harry S. trucker, Manheim, tire; Rag Joy, ice William ler and and four Manheim, tires and comer, I tires and Columbia three tire Joy Town grader, ty The he K, Tingle Henry S tary, anc bethtown, turned b additional swered applicants $7 ¢ Nee Res Have y our local The to date for Fund . is still neec $5,000.00 In orde be neces already | much as have ma is also i sons who not home that thei; Contrib any of places: J AIR IND Army Dauphin, Counties duction cruits, 1 and will Lenard ville, wa linoleum strong C