Junior C. E. 5:30 Senior C. E. 6:30 Evening Worship Service 7:15 Thursday evening 7:30 P. M. Prayer Meeting Ironville U. B. Church Rev. D. L. Shearer, Minister Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Luther Ulrich, superintendent. Easter cantata, Sunday at 8 P. M. Trinity Evangelical Cong. Church 1. E. Johnson, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 a Morning Worship and Com- munion 10:30. Subject, “The Stone Rolled Away.” Evening Worship 7:30. Subject, “I Will Come Again.” This is the last service for the Conference year. There will be no service Sunday, May 2nd. The pastor will attend Conference. Come and Worship with us. Mt. Joy Methodist Church Rev. Earl Reigner Thomas, Pastor Dr. E. W. Garber, C;;S., Supt. Easter Sunday, April 25th, 1943. 9:30 a. m. Church School with Easter program. Classes for every 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship Ser- vice: Pageant: “The Easter Gar- den.” Special Music. 8:30 p. m. Church School Board of Education Meeting. Monday April 26th, Jr. League Meeting at Parsonage, 7:00 p. m. ‘Wednesday April 28th, Sr. Choir Rehearsal in Church at 7:30 p. m. Thursday April 29th, Methodist Youth Fel- lowship, Parsonage 7:30 p. m. Trinity Lutheran Church Rev. W. L, Koder, Pastor Good Friday 7:45 P. M. Confessional service Easter Sunday. 9:30 A. M. Sunday School 10:30 A. M. Holy Communion, preceeded by a short confessional service in the Sunday School room. 7:00 P. M. Easter Festival of the Sunday School. Monday April 26, 7:45 P. M. Reception to ‘new members in the Sunday school room, Wednesday April 28, 7:30 P. M. Ladies’ Aid Sceicty will meet at the home of Mrs. Nora Derr. First Presbyterian Church Mount Joy, Penna. Good Friday 7:30 P. M. Preparatory Service, munion, by a guest minister, Rev. Donald Mummert, of Harrisburg. | marks by the guest minister. Presbyterian Church of Lancaster, [Classes for every age. Easter Sunday, April 25th 9:30 A. M. Sunday School 10:30 A. M. Service and coma} 6:30 P. M. Young People’s service 7:30 P., M. Easter Musical. Re- Church Of God Rev. H. M. Mumper, Pastor Week of April 25 9:30 Combined service in church Sanctuary. 6:30 C. E. Societies 7:30 Evening Worship with: Bap- tismal service, Wednesday 7:30 Missionary Pageant by the Ergetans S. S. class. Zion Lutheran Church . Landisville, Pa. Rev. Wm. L. Ziegenfus, Pastor Charles Habecker, Supt of S. S. 9:30 Sunday School 7:30 Vesper Service, Sermon theme: “The Resurrected Christ.” Good Friday The 23rd, at 7:30 P. M. The Len-| ten Cantata: “The Road to Calvary,” by F. Leslie Calver. St. Luke’s Ep'scopal Church The Rev. W. E. Stephens Vicar Jacob and Mt. Joy Sts. Good Friday 12 Noon—3:00 p. m. Service of the Passion. Saturday, April 24, Easter Even. 5:00 p. m. Holy Baptism Easter Day, April 25 6:00 a. m. Sunrise Service 10:30 a. m. Choral Eucharist and: Sermon. 7:30 p. m. Church School Service. No morning session of Church School. Easter Monday, April 26. 7:30 p. m. Annual Parish Meeting. Salunga Methodist Church Earl Reigner Thomas, Pastor Miss Alice Strickler, Superinten- dent of Sunday School Easter Sunday, April 25th, 1943 by the guest minister, Rev. Jno. B. Roland, assistant pastor of the First Easter pregram and Decision Day. 9:30 a. m. Church School with GETABLE OILS BY FROM SOY BEAN, CORN AND / TF. WINCHESTER, OF THE ANIMAL HUSBANDRY DEPARTMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY. OF MISSOURI, HAS DEMON= STRATED BY MEASUREMENT THAT HORSES REST BETTER STANDING UP THAN WHEA LYING DOWN. FEWER CALORIES, KE FOUND, WERE USED LP WHEN HORSES STOOD, Recitation, “An Easter Wish,” Pauline Brooks; Recitation, “Eas- Donald Zerphy; Exer- | ter Time,” County, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, April 22, 1943 [: Science} i’ ORSON, D MUNN, Litt8, LLB. Editor, Scientific American 7 pe By WAR lives literally off the fat of our land, for the basis of many explosives and other materials of ‘war is glycerine, and glycerine is obtained from fats. wf inane gp Consequently, the success of the waste fat salvage campaign conducted by the War Production Board and the Committee cise, “Happy Easter,” Susanne Sponsler, Valerie Johnson, Nancy Estock, and Patsy Angstadt; Reci- tation, “Jesus Lives Again,’ Carol Ann Smith; Exercise, “The Mourn- ing Marys,” Daisy Brooks, Mary Jane Groff, Jackie Gilbert, Grace Shaffer; Exercise, “God’s Angels,” Mary Jane Starr, kamp; Recitation, Dorothy Brooks; “My Verse,” Exercise, “Christ Is: Risen Today,” Benjamin Groff, Jennie Angstadt, Jackie Zink, James Nissly, Richard Young, Gary Shotzberger; Exercise, “He Is Ris- en,” James Metzler, Peter Koder, ‘Sheridan Angstadt, Richard Nissly; Frimary Song, “The Children Re- joice,” The Primary School; Carol, “Ye Happy Bells of Easter Day,” Girls’ Choir, Members of the Class- es taught by Mrs. Frank Young and Mrs. Clyde Eshleman. Program of Intermediate Dept. Recitation, Helen Detwiler; Exer- cise, “Given Tasks,” Class of Miss Catherine Ney, John Bowman, James Newcomer, Gerald Estock, - 2 Carl Krall, Richard Tyndall, Jerry Shupp;. Recitation, Winifred Barn- hart; Hymn: “Christ the Lord is Risen Today,” The Congregation; Exercise, “The Resurrection and the Apostles,” Class of Mr. Carl Krall, Donald Young, Jack Tyndall, El- wood Rice, Glenn Shupp, Richard Sheetz; Recitation, Mary Jane Krall; Dialogue, “Growing,” Donald Starr and Charles Johnson; Hymn: “IKnow That My Redeemer Lives,” The Congregation; Pageant, “The Meaning of the Cross,” Class of Miss Dorothy Wolfe, assisted by the Girls” Choir; Seeker, Marion Smith; Christianity, Marion Ney; Cross Bearer of Scorn, Nancy Brooks, Cross Bearer of Shame, Nancy Ang- stadt and Cross Bearer of Love, Ed- na Bartch; Pageant, “The Other Cross,” Cless of Mrs. Clyde Eshle- man, Jean Sheffler, Fay Rice and Kathryn Leib; Anthem by the Choir; Offering; Remarks by the Superintendent, Mr. Carl Shaffer, 10:30 a; m. Morning Worship Ser- vice: Sermon Theme, “The Easter Message.” Baptism - of Infants and Reception of New Members. Friday ‘April 30th, Cottage Prayer Meet- ing at home of Mz. and Mrs. W. W. Fackler.. Bring your Upper- Room. Time 7:30 p. m. St. Mark’s United Brethren Ezra H. Ranck, Pastor Sunday Services 9:00 a. m. Sunday School. 10:15 a. m. Morning Worship. Holy Communion. 6:30 p. m. Junior and Intermedi- ate Christian Endeavor. 7:30 p. m. Evening Worship, ser- mon, and Holy Communion. Wednesday 7:30. p. m. Midweek prayer ser- vice and reception for the new members of the Church. Jeanne Darren- | of the Glycerine and Associated Industries is of vital importance + to the Nations o % welfare. If all the housewives of America co- tdrive, some %360,000,000 pounds or more 1% of waste fats can be salvaged Lannually -_ { & enough to pro- duce the gly- : cerine~ needed & to make 540,- 000,000 pounds. of, smokeless powder or correspond- ingly large quantities of nitro-glycer- ine, dynamite, essential drugs and antiseptics, and many other necessi- ties of war, « WF meld ap p All the housewife has to do to participate in this important sal- vage campaign is to make it her regular practice to strain all used cooking greases, after they have served their. full use as food, into any clean can and store it in a cool place. When the can is full it should be taken to the local meat dealer, who will buy it and start the fat on its way to war. Three weeks after the dealer receives a pound of waste fat it ‘has been made into glycerine and is being used to make some product our armed forces must have:+ i Heré¢, for example, is what one pound—only 31 . tablespoons—of waste fats means to the war pro- duction effort: It + will supply enough glycerine to make the pow- der required for four 37 mm. anti- aircraft shells or 10 shells for a .50 calibre airplane cannon. This same amount of glycerine will be sufficient to fabricate three cello- phane gas-mask bags or to make enough synthetic resin to camou- flage one-fiftieth of the surface of a large tank. Glycerine also is needed for the recoil mechanism of big guns, for depth bomb release devices, to make dynamite, and many other essential war products. The reason why housewives are urged—Dbegged, in fact—to help end the glycerine shortage by saving their waste kitchen fats is this: Glycerine has always been obtained for American uses as a by-product of other manufacturing operations, chiefly from the making of soap. The soap makers normally import- ed much of the fats and oils they used from the Pacific areas now cut off by the Japs. With the war on, these manufacturers cannot make enough glycerine for peace- time uses, much less to provide for the greatly expanded needs of wartime consumption. s Other sources of fats must be opened up, and the greatest of these sources is the American kitchen. Fats that ordinarily are poured down the sink, to the detriment of the drain- age pipes, are rich in this desper- ately needed glycerine. Over a billion pounds of fat and grease were wasted every year in American households before Pearl Harbor. 4 All that has to be done to tap this source is to obtain the coop- eration of housewives in getting the used fats from the kitchen to the. processing plants where the glycerine can be extracted and started into war use. gv Ef From this you can readily sce that no amount of waste fat is too small to save for salvage. Only by saving every drop, in fact, and delivering it regularly to the meat dealer, can we prevent the oftea- quoted phrase, “too little and too late,” from being applied to our glycerine supply. and by the Pastor; Closing Versicl- es; The Prayer, Benediction; Re- cessional Hymn: “The Day of Res- urrection,” The Congregation. ee IG sano IT WAS OUR ERROR All activities scheduled from Wednesday to Friday under the St. Luke's Episcopal Church notes last week were erroneous. These items should have appeared under the notes for St. Marks United Brethren Church, ENTERTAINED AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Lehman, on Delta street, entertained Rev. A. Hershey Lehman, of Chicago, Ill, and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lehman, of Lancaster, at dinner Wednesday evening. Rev. Lehman has been spending the past two weeks in this locality visiting relatives and friends. rm eee tl eee Stimulate your business by adver« tising in the Bulletin. Gospel Tabernacle Rev. Roy S. Forney, Paster Sunday Services: | 9:30 A. M. Bible School. Martin Wolgemuth, superintendent. 10:30 A. M. Morning Worship and Sermon. 7:30 P. M. Sermon, Subject, “Coming world events foretold in the book of Revelation.” Special music in the evening— mixed quartet, Wednesday 7:30 P. M. Prayer service Friday 6:30 and 7:45 P. M. Youths vic- torious life fellowship. nse meet 4A ee eee: “MISSIONARY CLINIC” The Ergatan Sunday School Class of the Church of God will presenta missicnary playlet entitled “Miss- ionary Clinic” on Wednesday even- ing, April 28th. Patients: Mrs. Vincent Mackison, Mrs. Harvey Hawthorne, Jr., Mrs. Floyd Gordon, Miss Eli Shank, Miss Marie Beamesderfer, Mrs. Robzrt Schroll and Mrs. Jay Barnhart, ’ This playlet will be under the di- | rection of Mrs. George Broske. The ! public is invited to attend. i nr ee A rr U. B. CHURCH ADDED EIGHT NEW MEMBERS Eight members . were received into the fellowship of St. Mark's United Brethren in Christ. Church on Palm Sunday morning. Those received were Misses Eva Caroline the The characters are as follows: The Pl 7” Doctor, Mrs. Mark Newcomer; The ’ Nurse, Miss Helen Schroll; The only os ad RST TARE The vap-ants were charging as paratrooper turned to his “Tommy” “Start talking, Tom said, “and talk FAST!” landegl. y the WAR business management, TALK FAST, electric companies under BONDS Reigle, Romaine Stohler Betty Pauline Balmer, Gloria Schatz, Geraldine Fay Cra mer, Mrs. Raymond +Heisey, Reigle, Romaine Brown, Betty Bal mer, were Mary Jane Williams, Randolph Mateer. ti THE EASTER FESTIVAL TRINITY LUTHERAN, CHURCH “7. April'25, at 7:00 P.'M. Organ Prelude, an vocaticn with “Amen”; sicles; Gloria Patri; Hymn: “The Easter Day,” The Congregation. | Program of Primary Department Brown, Dorothy John ment of baptism was administersd by the pastor, to the following, Eva Dorothy Schatz and James Booth. Two infants were presented by their parents for baptism. They Processional Hymn: “Jesus Christ is Risen :To- “day,” Choir and Congregation; In- The Ver- The Lesson; World Itself Keeps d whether America could make cartri ‘than the “Tommies” and the machi the Garands could blast them out. answer! Today, power-driven machi Witmer Eberle, Jr, and James 80 cartridges every minute—removin, ts, in« Habecker Booth. specting, rejecting=—keeping pace with the rat- At the same service “the sacra- a-tats that are shooting our way to Victory! Power passes the ammunition. But electric power is doing far, far more! It’s helping to produce those Tommy guns, too—and tanks, ships, planes! That takes a lot of power—and America’s got it! Five times more than in the last war—more than all the Axis countries combined have now! 5 Pennsylvania Power & Light Company i’ ELECTRIC POWER—VITAL TO AMERICA’S FIGHTING POWER YOUR ELECTRICAL PRODUCTION SOLDIER \ ENLIST IN THE WAAC America Needs More Volunteers * WOMEN'S ARMY AUXILIARY CORPS ENLIST NOW —and another Fighting Man can go to the Front for the 4 4 i A Use stamp No. 26 bl PLENTY OF EGGS FOR EASTER You can rely on your favor. ite Acme Market for depend- get the Prize-Winner SWEET CREAM BUTTER Ib 53 a pis. | PaasEggColors ctn rks 10° Acme Meats for Easter 7 Pts, ib: Rib Lamb Chops SWIFT'S PREMIUM J Sliced Bacon - Fresh Boston Butts able Eggs at lowest prices Sat, Night April 2 and get Shoulder Lamb z= w» 3§e ib 4Qe wind 1b Je PICNIC STYLE FRESH Pork Shoulders ix: 1 29e Fresh Bay BUCK SHAD Ib 35¢ Official Fat Collection Station—Bring Us Your Waste Fats For Explosives—We Pay You 4c per pound. Don’t Forget--Uncle Sam Needs Your Waste Grease to Win Gold Seal Enriched FLOUR 12 Pure Lard » 18 Vegetable J bts. 19 ; eth Shortening ia ne — rge, Meaty } BLUE BONNET Sweet Calif. | argarine 2 _ 47¢< 5 Pts. Creamy Cheese 1 JE 8 Ps. I Prunes Fresh Vegetables and Fruit for Easter EAE ist LARGE FLA. VALENCIA FRESH SLICING Tomatoes New Spring Radishes New Crop Round Valentine tring Beans Enriched Victor Enriched Supreme Bread Glenwood Sweet or Natural GRAPEFRUIT a JUICE No 2cans Cc 4 pts ea Nose 29 a Farndale Evap. Old Fashioned MOLASSES doz 3 3 ctn 2 bch 56 Large Southern Cucumbers ea 1Qc New Spring Onions beh Be Large Southern Peppers ca 10c 25° BREAD 2-11° 2 vs 17¢ LER “Make tasty molasses Ginger Bread Today! : 2 'bs 19c¢c @ tall cans 55¢c Idedl Peanut Bafter 250z jar 43¢ Bala Club Beferages 3, ae 25¢ Hom:de-~ Fresh Mayonnaise 27¢ Cal. 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