44 U.S.WAR BONDS 3 fo A oR Rt NA Hp ihe Sp ; : Photos Jrom old prints by State Department of Commerce Photographs or sketches of Camp Curtin Harrisburg, Pa., larg: Civil War, are rare, Tabor are two views. Se & corner of the camp taken from — print. Showing in the forcgreund the famous pump which was the.camp’s source of water supply. Lower shows a reproduction from a drawing, of ‘the camp hospital, a : The Bulletin, Motint Joy, Lancaster County, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, January 7, 1943 dh uth hah LANDISVILLE Dr: H. M. J. Klein, of Franklin & Marshall College, Lane, was the speaker at the dedication of a ser- vice flag in honor of the young men from Landisville district of East Hempfield township serving in the armed forces, in the East Hempfield Township High School auditorium on Sunday afternoon. The program was as follows: “Star Spangled Banner” by the au- dience; invocation, Rev. Raymond H. Daihl; music, East Hempfield High School glee club; address, Dr. 2 (Klein; music, glee club; unveiling : |of flag, Earl M. Godshalk; “Ameri- ca” by the aullience, and benedic- tion by Rev. William IL. Ziegenfus. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pendar and = |daughter Joan, returned to their home in New York City after spend- ing several days visiting Mr. and Mrs. William B. Mumma. The Cheerful Workers Class of Zion Lutheran Sunday School held its meeting at the home of Mr. arid Mrs, George Shenck, on Monday evening. Those present were: Bar- bara Myers, Betty Rankin, Mary Lou Rohrer, Alberta Straub, Mrs. W. L. Ziegenfus, Ann Louise Shenck and Mrs. George Shenck. Mr. R. W. Zigenfus returned to Pottsville after spending a week visiting in the home of Rev. and Mrs. W. L. Ziegenfus. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Good, of Lancaster, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mease and family. the camps in the Northern States Religious News In This Community NEWS PERTAINING TO ALL a CHURCHES IN MT. JOY AND "THE ENTIRE SURROUNDING COMMUNITY. Reformed Mennonite Church’ Landisville, Pa. Sunday, January 10th i at 10:00 A. M. sk . Rev. Wm. L. Ziegenfus, Pastor Sunday, January 10th Charles Habecker, Supt. of S.S. 9:30 Sunday School. ’ 7:30 Vesper Service followed by ‘Congregational meeting. Trinity Evangelical Congregational Church C. R. Robson, Pastor 9:30 The Sunday School Hour, 10:30 Morning Worship and Ser- mon by the Pastor. Anthem by the Choir, 7:30 Union Prayer Service in Trinity Lutheran Church. Wednesday 7:30 Prayer Service at the home of Mrs. Melvin Wade. Official Board. Church Of God Rev. HL M. Mumper, Pastor Week of January 10th 9:30 Church School. 10:30 Morning Worship. 7:30 Union sservice in’ Lutheran Monday : © 7130.8. 8. Board Meeting Wednesday BRR dn 7:30 Prayer Meeting Thursday 7 , 7:30 Choir Rehearsal Florin, Pa. * Rev. IL. W. Funk, Pastor Revival service every week day at 7:30-P. M. Sunday 7:15 p. m. Sunday School at 9:30. Morning Worship 10:30. Junior C. E. 5:30 Senior C. E. 6:30 ~7:15 P. M. Revival Service. St. Mark's United Brethren Ezra H. Ranck, Pastor Sunday Services 9:00 a. m: Sunday School. 10:15 a. m. Morning worship: 7:30 p. m. Week of Prayer service, in the Lutheran Church. Wednesday : 7:30 p. m. Midweek prayer ser- vice. Thursday 7:30 p. m. Ushers’ League meeting at the home of Paris Hos- tetter. Ironville U. B, Church Rev. D. L. Shearer, Minister Luther Ulrich, superintendent. 9:30 a. m. Sunday School. Morning Worship at 10:30 a. m. C. E. at 00 P. M. Carolyn Mummaw, president. - Prayer service Wednesday even- ing in the Ironville U. B. church 6:30 C. E. Societies at 7:30 P. M. led by the pastor, + Brethren Chime ..| Service: Sermon Theme, - meeting at the Methodist Parson-| Rev. D. L. Shearer. The Ladies’ Aid Society of Zion Lutheran church met at the home of Mrs. Kathryn Snavely on Tues- day evening, Misses Ruth Baker and Alice Jane! Herr returned to State College on Wednesday, after spending several weeks at the homes of their parents The Women’s Missionary Society of Zion Lutheran church met at the home of Mrs. A. E. Cooper Wednes- day afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Seifert entertained on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Greenawalt and son, [Richard, and Mr. and Mrs. Luther Gingrich and daughters, Betty and Ruth, of Mountville, and Mrs. Mary Steeley, of Lancaster. - Donegal . Presbyterian Church Rev. C. B. Segelken, D. D., Pastor . 9:30 a: m. Church School. * First Presbyterian Church Rev. C. B. Segelken, D. D., Pastor, m.’ Church School ' 10:30 Morning Worship and Ser- mon. 4 . Union Prayer Service in the Lutheran - Church at 7:30 P. M. Trinity Lutheran Church _. Rev. W. L, Koder, Pastor Sunday, Jan. 10, 1943 9:30 “A. M. Sunday School 10:45 A. M. Morning Worship - 7:00 P. M. Vespers Tuesday . Next Friday, January 15th, the 16:30 P. M. Catechetical Slass 1 andisville Lions’ Club will sponsor the parsonage. {a concert by The Southernaires, in| Thursday : the East Hempfield Township High 7:00 P. M." Intermediate - Luther 00] guditorium at eight o'clock. This quartet ranks among the great- est of vocal ensembles heard today cn the air or concert stage, The Red Cross Rooms will not send work to the homes until Feb- ruary because of the smallpox epi- demic, League. terme Y Salunga' Methodist Church Earl Reigner Thomas, Pastor Miss. Alice’ Strickler, Superinten- dent of Sunday - School Sunday, January 10th, 1943 9:30 a. m. Church school for all te W Farm Shortage Hits Food Aims Men, Machines Too Few To Attain All Goals, Says Official. WASHINGTON.—A serious short- age of manpower and machinery | for agriculture threatens to make | some of the most important objec- tives of the department of agricul- ture’s program of increased food production this year unattainable, a department spokesman said. Specifically, it endangers “milk produetion and: the harvesting ‘of: soy beans and peanuts, two crops which the department of agriculture has persuaded farmers to grow this year to make up the deficiency in vegetable oils caused by the war in the Pacific. An increase of 10 billion pounds in milk production to a total of 125 billion had been planned by the department for this year. But the most recent reports indicate that only half that projected increase will be achieved. Cannot Obtain Help. The reason is not that milk pro- duction does not pay but that dairy farmers are unable to obtain help, Many of their skilled workers have been taken by the draft. For the services of the rest the farmer can- not afford to compete in wages with industry, especially war indus- fry. In some areas, ‘especially Minne- sota and Wisconsin, farmers have begun fo sell their cows, because of this inability to get men to look after them. It is the small, or marginal, dairy farmer, who is said to be suffering most. ; Although the first impact of. the labor shortage has been on milk sup- plies it will inevitably have its ef- fect also on the production of butter and cheese. The latest reports this year indi- cated a soy bean crop 88 per cent greater than that of last year’s out- put of 106,712,000 bushels. The pea- nut crop is expected to total 2,921,- 950,000 pounds, which is double 1941 production. Short on Machinery. Soy beans and peanuts, however, have to be harvested by machinery and the farmers have been unable to obtain it. The harvesting ma- chinery used for grain would suffice for peanuts and soy beans, but these crops do not grow in grain-produc- ing regions. Both soy beans and peanuts are now in the harvesting stage, but much of the crop may never be gathered. The department of agriculture spokesman who outlined these facts admitted that the department ex- NEW HOURS FOR OUR LOCAL RATIONING BOARD Starting Monday, January 11th | charging. the local Rgtioning Board office at 8-12 Market Street will be open during the following hours: Mon- day through Friday 8 to 10 a. m. and 2 to 5 p. m.; Wednesday 7 to 9 p. m.; Saturday 8 to 10 a. m. — Subscribe for the Bulletin. Lined up here, in smart military formation, is a “squad” of the mighty locomotives that work night and day for Uncle Sam. Passenger engines, their specific job is to move troops. And, with the aid of other locomotives, they are doing this at a rate of over a million troops a month! ENGINES OF WAR/ A wholesale meat dealer at Phila. was sued by the O. P. A. for over- | the Amish colony in Maryland, A case of smallpox developed in MR. MERCHANT You €an Rent An vse BONDS 2h vor Teer 10% Ad Space Here In Our NEXT ISSUE = [SR TOP THAT AVR AR 7 h\ BY NEW YEAR'S AB NG Nyy =, get. But—with the cooperation of travelers and shippers, the Office of Defense Trans- portation, the Army, the Navy and Govern- ment agencies—the railroads are doing, and will continue to do, everything within theie power to provide the best service possible to the public in the midst of the greatest wat civilization has ever known. To the right are their comrades-in-arms, rg freight locomotives. Their job is to haul war materials. And they dre moving 1,250,000 tons of freight a mile every minsite 7 a 24-hour day! Of course, to keep up a war pace like this requires the railroads to give right-of-way and a very large part of their passenger and freight equipment continuously to the war effort. Naturally, under the circumstances, service to the public cannot be all that either you or we would like it.to be. Trains may be late. Accommodations and seats may ‘be hard to J Say Ei Today's freight locomotives can haul mich heavier loads than the engines that setved the nation in the last war, PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD One of America’s Railroads... ALL Mobilized for War BUY UNITED STATES WAR BONDS AND STAMPS perts were greatly worried about the outlook. He did not say spe- cifically that the remedy lay with the Manpower commission and the War Production board, who have it in their power to provide the labor |} and the machinery respectively, but | ¥ he left it to be inferred. Grows Morning Coffee In His Own Backyard GLOUCESTER, MASS.—When a ages. Church School Board of | Education meeting following. 6:45 p. m. Methodist Youth Fel-| lowship Meeting Jr. and Sr. age group. 7:30 p.” m. St. Lawrence River Approaches Commanding the approaches from the ocean to the St. Lawrence river : is Newfoundland, oldest colony in| | +" 918%! the British Commonwealth of Na- Evening Worship| tions. Southwest of Newfoundland “Prayer.”| and northeast of Cape Breton island! Installation of officers of the W. | is Cabot strait, 55 miles wide, larg-| S.C. Official Board Meeting. | est of three entrances to the gulf. | | Smaller but very important is the Wed. Jan. 13th, W. S. C. of Belle Isle, ten miles wide, separating Newfoundland from Lab- age in Mt. Joy 7:30 P. M. | rador on the mainland to the north, | Fri. Jan.‘ 15th Prayer Meeting in and serving as the home. of Mrs. H. at! shortest shipping route from Mon-| S00 p. m | treal to Liverpool. Smallest is the =) x | Strait of Canso, half a mile wide, | | | passage on the 3 as TE dn IS AY — a 4 { SAID | GOT ALL THE SCRAP OUT A MONTH AGO. — SHE ship | DIDN'T! — THATS MY WIFE PROVING IM WRONG AGAIN. Po Ya | separating Cape Breton island from! | Nova Scotia. Navigation in the Gulf of St. Law-| | rence has its hazards. There are| | frequent fogs. Tidal currents are| | menacing. Iron ore deposits in the | | north shore hills cause strange com: | | pass deviations. The severe winter | climate that closes the river several months a year causes spring ice| | Jams in the gulf. These factors plus | | toll in wrecked ships. | Mt. Joy Methodist Church Rev. Earl Reigner Thomas, Pastor |Dr. {Sunday, January 10th, 1943 | {Faithful God of Prayer.” {er Service in Trinity Lutheran Church. The Rev. Mumper, guest] speaker. | Wed. Jan. 13th : Jr. Choir rehearsal at 7:00 p. m. | lat the home of Mrs. W. Sloan. St. Luke’s Ep'scopal Church | The Rev. W. E. Stephens Vicar | friend complained of the coffee | shortage to Carmello Capillo, he | just grinned: | self?” ing port—been going down to the sea in ships for more than three centuries—but Capillo’s off-hand re- mark shook them. is perfect for coffee raising,” said the 56-year-old soda water conces- sionaire. “It's just that folks around | here never tried to raise coffee beans before.” he bought some unroasted coffee, imported from Mexico, and as an experiment planted it in his back | yard in the spring. By September, pants of beans. “They looked like string bean vines,” he said. “I picked the beans, shelled them, and had them roasted. Got seven pounds of the best coffee | I ever tasted.” 4,000 Centuries Too Late ¢ . ’ | the numerous islands take a heavy | Japs Capture P eking Man | king Man’ skull, believed by anthro- pologists to be 400,000 years old, has E. W. Garber, C. S., Supt. | been seized by the Japanese and | sent to Tokyo, according to informa- | 9:30 a. m, Church School for all] tion received from Peiping (Peking) ’ recently. lages. 10:30 a. m. Morning Worship| Si [Service: Sermon Theme, “Th ©| peared from its case at Union Medi- cal college, a Rockefeller-endowed 7:30 p. m. Union Week of Pray-| institution. was hailed as one of the modern world’s greatest archeological dis- | coveries when it was excavated at Choukoutsien, near Peiping. ' Army Heeds This Father, “Why don’t you plant some your- They’re hardy folk in this old fish- “The soil right here in Gloucester Sure, Capillo said, two years ago he said, the plants had yielded 20 CHUNGKING.—The famous ‘Pe- The skull, known academically as nanthropus pekinensis, had disap- The skull, complete with jaws, Keeps Twins Together CAMP UPTON, N. Y.—Clifton M. RRR AAR ARR RAR RRR RRR RRR JOIN THE 1943 Clin) Saving? By Joining Our Club Now You Insure A Happier Christmas For Everyone NEXT YEAR! A CLUB FOR EVERY PURPOSE Here are the classes from which to choose: 10c weekly for 50 weeks, totals... $ 5.00 25¢ weekly for 50 weeks, totals... i 12.50 S0c weekly for 50 weeks, totals... 25.00 $ 1.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals... .. 50.00 $.2.00 weekly for 50 weeks. totals... 100.00 $ 3.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals... 150.00 $ 5.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals... 250.00 $10.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals... 500.00 Know the joy of Christmas’ giving without the worry of paying the bills. “It's easy to do i From the Hudson Dispatch, Union City, N. J. Jacob and Mt. Joy Sts. Jan. 10th : | | 1st Sunday’ after Epiphany f= | 915 a m. Church School. Ry [| [= jo mon. | 7:00 p. m. Meeting of Y. P. F. Jan. 11—Monday 7:30 Meeting of Vestry {Jan. 13—Wednesday 6:30 Important Choir Practice Ls 10:30 Morninig Prayer and Ser- | and Clifford M. Gydesen, 20-year-old | twins of Lyons Falls, N. Y,, arrived | { at Camp Upton bearing a note to |¥ | the army from their : father, Gyde: | i J. Gydesen. 3 | “These are my twins and I would | like to have them together if you can, [ please,” the note said. “This makes | me four boys I have in the war.” The army complied with the re- | quest. Vv Subscribe for the Bulletin. Ee youre a member of our Savings Club. Bj saving small amounts weekly, members havi money for presents and other needs! and join today ! FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TRUST Come ij Mount Joy MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION a = Ol > ong py gu Il be dai New | again, like a school seriou your's If a Lasis, isn't p Whe seekin in the ficials a talk denly flies © “Peeji Pho the w pair would best n Some for en young But ir group = studie: The b the b at the he rea | orderi how n they'll alogs. Ab but w bad fe ed hin “It's. 3 you c said th s0 insi man, here, I se grocer cut of picked zt the we pitch bt stande § the ey “We give n i are ge liged.” what countr This demon to whe rein— self—u Too too mi: ers £3) 2 low its favorit But ge a Bern i ete is cerful “Hov says | 3 “until {| we do The 8 seeing he has he wo The m nearest at the you t born?” his con “Well, in Pen; Whil eer un very n