The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 14, 1944, Image 6

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The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Lancaster County, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, September 14, 1944
This Section's [Interesting Address
They Need Your Bloo




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250 Volunteers Needed

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To Serve as Blood Donors
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At High School Building, Mount Joy i
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We Ate
aa 12 Noon To 4:30 P. M. po
$2 21
bi *
ne : Si
Ris Our fighting men need blood desperately, to give them another chance at life. 4
i This blood is flowing abundantly through your veins. Blood you con spare — — and BX
ge never miss. Bs
ge as
om Will you give one pint « - - right now? The call is urgent. Death comes to injured I
alls, 24
a: men quickly when there is no blood. Life comes back miraculously when precious oe
x blood plasma enters their veins. ph
Rx pl
2h od
i" You experience no pain in giving blood...... there is nothing to fear. x
ns Bu
a 2k
x PLEASE ENROLL NOW!
pid : ae
fs a
ge 3
oe You can register at any of the following places: 2
pr aE
x: Sloan’s Drug Store Tyndall's Cut Rate Store i:



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MARRIAGE LICENSES both of this boro
Donald E. Ney, Marietta Rl, and Donald E. Ney, Marietta R1, and
Gladys K. Farmer, Florin. | “ladys K. Farmer, Florin.
Arthur V. Kulp, 41 East Main St.| Jay Charles Musser, Elizabeth-
J own, and Mary Ruth Hertzler, Mt.
and Ruth Rye, 229 East Main St,
Seiler Printing Company Office
SANNA TUN THN a HN a THN Hh al a UN Ua TAN a UN a UN UN aT aN UN a hatin a ihe, Th
eee
CASAS ARS ART AR AeA Ar ea eae
~
Tear
Joy RD
James E. Kipple, and Dorothy E.
| Zerphey, both of Mount Joy.
seme) A Ss ssn
Subscribe for the Bulletin.
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DAVAO ali al ati aid ative
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—_ vs vs ve ee ee

Everybody reads newspapers but
NOT everybody reads circular ad-
vertising left on their door step.

— A eee.
Patronize Bulletin advertisers. |





Numerous
Weddings
Helen M. Hollen
Arthur W. Ruhl
  
Helen M. Hollen, of Tyrone, Pa, |
ind Arthur W. Ruhl, of Elizabeth-
town, were united in marriage at
Trinity Evangelical Congregational |
Church on Saturday afternoon at
three o'clock. Rev. H. W. Minnich, |
pastor of the church, officiated at a
single ring ceremony.
Attendants were, Mary Elizabeth
Hollinger, of FElizabethtown and
Richard W. Farlow, of Denver, Pa.
after the
left for the brides home
Immediate ceremony
the couple
in Tyrone, Penna.
Dorothy Y. Newcomer
Cpl. Harold E. Kulp
Dorothy Y. Ne
of Mrs. Anna Y
Donegal street, and Haro
daughter
West
wcecomer,
Newcomer,
Mr. and Mrs. Enos Kulp, East

son oi
Main street, Mount Joy, were mar-
ried on Saturday. September 9th, in
Irinity Ch:wch, Durham, N. C. The
Rev. James G. Huggins, pastor of
the church, officiating at a double
ring ceremony.
The attendants were Pvt. and Mrs.
S. Eichler.
The bride wore a powder blue
street dress with black accessories
» of red rose buds.

» returned to her home
Tuesday evening and is
it the RCA Division, at Lancaster.
The groom is stationed at Camp
Butner, N. C. awaiting re-assign-
ment after having returned from
overseas
Dorothy Zerphey
T Sgt. James Kipple


Miss Dorothy Zerphey, daughter
f Mr. and Mrs. Peter Zerphey, |
Manheim street, Mt. Joy, and Tech.
stant James E. Kipple of town
married at the brides home,
> rd September, 9th, at 6:00
h Rev. W. LL
ity Lutheran Charch, Mt.


ld E. Kulp, |
employed |
Keeler, pas-
|
Joy, officiating at the double ring
cere
The attendants were Mrs. Chas.
ist of the bride and Mr. Ed-
, uncle of the groom. |
short wedding trip the |
ned to the home of the
employed at Sico Co.,
recently returned
from overseas and is now stationed
at Smyrna Air Field, Smyrna, Tenn.
|
M. Ruth Hertzler
Lt."Jay C. Musser
The wedding of Miss Mary Ruth |
Hertzler, Mount Joy RI, daughter |
of Elmer H. Hertzler, Paradise, and
Lt. Jay Charle VIusser, USA, son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Musser, of
Elizabethtown, took place Satur- |
day at 4 p. m. in St. Mary's United
Brethren Church with the Rev. E. |
C. Ranck officiating.
Given in marriage by her uncle, |
Landis L. Charles, the bride was
attired in a gown of white satin |
with a beaded seed-pearl sweet-|
heart neckline, fitted bodice and
pointed long sleeves. The long full |
skirt terminated in a train and her
full-length veil fell from a tiara of
. \
pearl orange blossoms. She car-|
ied a Colonial bouquet of white |
roses with a orchid in the center.
Miss
Fellenbaum, the |
of
blue satin and net, with a fitted bo-!
3arbara E
maid-of-honor, wore a gown
 
dice, round net yoke, and full skirt. |
ie 3 |
Talisman roses fell from her
band headress and she carried a
N |
Colonial bouquet of talisman roses. |
1 F. Hertzler, of
le, served as best man and
brother
|

rs were William Klein. |
Elizabethtown, and Linneas Long- i
endcker, of town. |
Lt. and Mrs. Musser left on al
wedding trip following the cere-
mony For traveling the bride
wore a green wool dress with a ce-
1S¢ hat and
matched gloves.
——
Engagements
Mrs. Lester H
Wolgemuth, Mount

Joy R1, announces the engagement
of her s Miss M. Charlotte
Sload, Germantown, to Judson W.
Hill, Norristown, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James C. Hill, Wheeler, Mich.
Miss Sload. the daughter of Charles
Ken-
ents, Germantown,
Lanc. is employed at
Apart
Mr. Hill is employed at the Norris-
town State Hospital. The wedding
will take place Oct. 29 in Mt. Joy.
—
BOYS’ DAY SEPTEMBER 24th
Trinity Ev
al Church will observe Boys Day,
cn Sunday, September 24th, in the
Sunday School at nine-thirty
o'clock. Dr. Ralph W. Schlosser, of
Elizabethtown will speak.
ei
Sload,

nelworth
1gelical Congregation-


Subscribe for the Bulletin.
|
(From Page 1)
Bible, and through their teachings |
at Sunday Schools, into lands that
still very primitive in their
modes of living as are the countries |
{ of Iran and Iraq. Here they find !
filth, no methods of sanitation, no
| machinery, nothing to in- |
are
mcdern
small trend toward
modernism, but rather living as they |
dicate even a
did hundreds of years ago. |
Because they have heard of the |
Jordon River, about Jerusalem, and |

Basic Foods

Owned






One of the Seven
and Operated by The Stores Co
bie bd ab)





For really no
lunches be sure
sandwiches with oul
Mineral Enriched B! kd. Serve it
every meal « - it’s e of the 7
basic foods - - and ity] conomical,
shing school
p make the
Vitamin and
| ert, their daring
about the country of Palestine, they
desire to visit there, and expect to
find the same living as they did in
{ Iran and Iraq. But a surprise a-
waits them for in the past twenty-
five years, modern ideas have set in,
and they find fine modern homes,
modern
mcidern
schools, fine universities,
methods of agriculture,
modes of living.
Rabbi Davis went on to tell that |
in the book, “The Forgotten Ally”,
mich is mentioned about the part
Palestine played in turning the tide
of war, just when Germany was at
the threshold of a gigantic victory
in Africa. Because Palestine is a
mandate could
be drafted into the army, and yet
35,000 Jews from Palestine enlisted
Army,
country, no person
in Montgomery's as engi-
neers, sappers, drivers, and fighters,
each the desert as they
did their own back yard, and be-
cause of their knowledge of the des-
ard help
of battle,
tide of El
helped to drive the Nazis 1200 miles
knowing
their
the tide
war at
turned
Alemaine, and
across the desert, across Sicily, and
into Italy, the
defeat of Italy.
Rabbi Davis went on to tell how
the people of Palestine worked for
the Allies, that the shoes worn by
Montgomery's army were made in
eventually causing
Palestine, how before the war, Pal-
estine was a citrus country, ship-
ing to the country of Europe 90,000-
0G0 crates of citrus fruits, but be-
cause of the fortunes of war it was
necessary to find other markets for
this fruit, how through the
science of chemistry, ‘they found |
and
ways to make explosives from the
fruit, how these people drove |
trucks, delivered supplies, and kept
open the
to Montgomery's army. i
All this and more was done by
the people of Palestine, “The For-
gotten Ally,” but when the war is|
told, Palestine,
lines of communications
over and it can be
will stand out among the other na-
tions of the world, concluded Rabbi
Davis.
erm eee BY
New Rust Preventive
Compound Developed
War experience and research have
resulted in the development of new
rust - preventive compounds that |
greatly exceed the effectiveness of
crankcase and transmission oils or
even axle and pressure gun grease.
Tests started in March, 1942, and |
run under outside exposed condi- |
: : : |
tions, using polished black metal
strips and plow bottoms, gave the
following results:
Crankcase and transmission oil
prevented rusting for 7 to 30 days.
Axle and pressure gun grease pre-
vented rusting for 30 to 90 days.
Five samples of rust-preventive
compounds prevented rusting for 360
days.
One sample of rust-preventive
compound prevented rusting for 453
ays.
On the back or protected side of
the metal strips 22 of the 28 rust-
preventive compounds tested showed |
no rusting after 551 days.
Teardrop Pearl
The big island of Ceylon is sep-
arated from the southeast coast of
India by a channel only 20 miles
wide. On the map, it seems to hang
from the neighboring Indian terri- |
tory like a giant “teardrop” pearl— |
an appearance, some say, that ac-
counts for one of its old travel-folder
titles, ‘Pearl of the Orient.”
Other romantic names given this
luxuriant tropical isle, which now
echoes to the sound of planes roar-
ing overhead and antiaircraft and
rifle-squad practice, are “Land of
the Dusky Leaves,” “Island of Jew-
els,” “Land Without Sorrow,” and
the “Dwelling Place of Lions.”
Watchdog on the doorstep of south-
ern India, Ceylon lies about 760
miles west of the Japanese-captured
Andaman and Nicobar islands on
the enemy-held side of the Bay of
Bengal. It is 1,050 miles from the
crowded industrial cy of Calcutta,
at the head of the bay, and 1,375
miles southwest of the nearest point
on the Burma-Indian front.

CONFUCIUS SAY
EVEN ELEPHANT
FORGET
MAN WHO
NEVER
ADVERTISE



methods of sanitation, and modern
and the |
SUPREME 1 ‘rap
2:17
Enriched Victor Bread 2
28-0z jar 7c
30-0z can 25¢c
20-0z can 23¢c
20-0z can 21ic
12-0z can 10c
pt jar 27¢
Pke 1 8c
Asco Pure Veg,
Margarine




large
loaves




hu
Gienwood Apple Butter Noroints
Kew Pack Whole Apricots 3r
Red, Tart Pie Cherries 2°"
Dsle’s Sliced Pineapple 7
Apricot Nectar Heart's Delight
kf om-de-Lite Fresh Mayonnaise
Ginger Bread Mix Dromedary






Educator
ICRAX
Nola


BF PEANUT
Gold Seal BUTTER ocker


FLOUK
110. 45¢
Our Mother's Cocoa
Standard Quality Tomatoes 3p: 2 No2cans
Tender Green Beans No2can 1Qc
Tender Green Spinach No2can 1 Qc
Ritter's Catsup plain or tabasco 30 p. 14-0z bot 1 7e
Dubuque Luncheon Meat 12-0zcan 3c
}
}

Speed-Up French Dry Cleaner gal can §3¢
A fo of po Po NN NP ff J fp J i fr po po
Fancy u.ulif.
ther Carrots 219°
Tn
IS & VEGETABLES iy ible
HONEYDEWS 2-17°
Fresh Western 2:25
Eating Apples "Us" 2:19
U. S. No. 1 Yellow 3 19
es :
Sweet Pota
CRISP CELERY 2-15



|
|



huawei dat hd dd bh

NN NN A A ASA apap
A
hahaha eke


dairies ead kaka A eh a a
- - by Keebler
SALTINES |
5 Crackers
ro 19° [rere
Fresh ground as you prefer it
“heat-flo” roasted
ASCO COFFEE
2 lbs Ib C€ Save the
47c Coupons |
JOPPA PY PrN NYG
‘Meaty Short Ribs of Beef tb
Sliced Pork Liver b21e
Small Legs of Lamb tb 3 Ge
RIB LAMB CHOPS Ih 39¢
LOIN LAMB CHOPS Ib 45¢
Shoulder Lamb Roast
Breast of Lamb
RUMP VEAL ROAST





square
cut
hb 21e
Ib 29c
Ib 15¢
Ib 79e
National Dog Week—Sept. 17-23,
Pard Dog Food 8-oz {0g
Hunt Club Dog Food 5 '*s 39¢
D & G Dog Food 3 '’s24¢
Kibblets Dog Food 2 rks (5g
F’dale Kib.Dog Food 2'°s [4¢
CLOROX
Bleach at 17¢
Deodorant
Disinfectant
IVORY SOAP
2 med 17¢<
cks
OLD DUTCE
CLEANSER
7
can
Quantity Rights ‘leserved.

Fresh Pan Trout or Croakers
CLAW CRAB MEAT
Taunus aka
SAFE, THOROUGH, THRIFTY
3.-14°
c
Complexion Soap °¥ 5
KIRKMAN'S CLEANSER
3 cans 14«
Kirkman Soap Powder P* 5¢





Kirkman's
24-0z
Soap os 83°
KIRKMAN'S
SOAP FLAKES
23° |
Prices Effective Sept. 11-13-15,



18-0z
pkg
14.

 
Ib 31 .
 








 

|
5





VOL.

Sew:
Disc
Meet
The 1
the Bo
Mount
was he
rooms
Arrange
next
which Vv
at 7:30
ditorium
public.
Mr. L
the Ext
du Pont
will pre:
ing exhi
plastics
His le
exhibit,
school
utives,
housewi
The
Loc
Leon Ho
Joseph GC
Richard
heim
Paul Ho
Roy She:
Elam Sp:
Kenneth
Glenn Cl
William |
Robert R
Bruce L
heim
Richard
Cont. C
Luther
Class
Robert V
Cont. CI:
B. Lehm
ANNOU!
ACME S
Mr. Ba
Acme S
announce
agers he
Mr. Da
ager her:
assigned
succeeded
Buchenat
charge o
quite sol
known, i:
know he
The ch
141 PINT
COLLEC
One hi
blood we
Blood E
Wednesd:
One h
teers Tre
eight had
Forty-f
blood fc
times.
third tim
ond and
PAPER
SAT. SEI
The Mt
lect pape
Florin an
day mor?
at nine ©
Please
place rag
place on
A. M.
206 NEW
Yesterd
here, the
were 206
movals.