The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 05, 1946, Image 4

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4—The Bulletin, Mt. Joy, Pa., Thursday, September 5, 1916 |i oe


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LONGENECKER ROAD, MOUNT JOY, PA.
PHONE 305-R
‘See Cancer Help
In Powerful Beam
New Tool That Science
Has Long Waited.
URBANA, ILL. — A 22,000-volt
| free electron beam which can be
used to ‘‘penetrate the core of a
atom and study the nucleus in
way never before possible,” has
been produced at the University of
Illinois,
The beam is described by the sci
entists as a ‘new tool for which
atomic and medical scientists have
long waited.”
It comes from the university's
22,000,000-volt betatron which had
been used previously only to pro-
duce high voltage X-rays.
Entirely new ways, the scientists
added, to: Study the inside of the
atom; study the behavior of elec
trons; create artificially radio
active substances and attack deep
seated cancer. {
Theoretical calculations indicate
| that the beam might disclose im-




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oo

The Bulletin Covers This Section Like the Dew















































To apply its net income
solely for the benefit of
Public Schools is the ex-
clusive purpose of The
SICO,Company as requir-
ed by its charter. You'are
doing a publicfeducational
service when you use
SICO _gascline/and fuel oil.
8 NOT everybody
vertising left on their door step. tising in the Bulletin.
portant advantages over X-rays
in the treatment of deep-seated
cancer,
The scientists said, however, that
three to five years of further study
might be required before such a
powerful force can be turned on a
living human being for tests on pa-
tients.
The scientists point out that arti.
ficial radioactivity is not new but
that its creation by electrons with
such a powerful energy is.
Whether the two are different is
another question they now hope to
answer,

Fourth of Animals
In Atom Test Killed
BIKINI LAGOON.—Nearly 25
per cent of the animals placed
| aboard ships in the first atomic
bomb test were killed outright or
died later from exposure to
lethal rays, a member of Vice
Admiral Blandy's staff revealed.
In addition, many of the ani-
mals still living are critically ill.
Capt. R. H. Dreager said it
would be months before the full
story of what happened to the
animals could be told. He said
the animals suffered ‘no real
pain.” y
Studies have disclosed, he con-
tinued, that if the ships had been
manned by crews, most of the
seamen would have survived and
would have been handling ships
ready for action,



Button-Stealing Butler
Forgiven, Buttles Again

|
fowa Is U. S.’s No. 1



Food Producing State Q ‘ S ’
f 45
| Iowa, admitted to od in| uake Hot pot
1846, produces more + the |
tables of the nati than does wy |! . .
ig ante oi Re — iis Iv fing | Scientists Produce Figures
| plains lies one-fourth of the grade { To Prove Claim.
| A soil in the entire couniry. fowa | Rta
iis first hogs, poultry, |
 





eggs, livestock, and inj
finist


 
a1.
lar, nd |
over j
less fit ire
square or
erboard impres
eler in Iowa is quite different
the concept of the first white
itor, Pere Marquette, as he dr
: :
down the Mississippi under the
bluffs near present-day McGregor, |
in 1673, wrote in his journal. “To
the right is a chain of very high
mountains.” |
With rare exceptions roads run |
directly east and west or north and |
south, and there is one to every |
mile. Only four states have more |
hard-surfaced highways than Iowa. |
The state is fourth in railroad mile- |
age; no point is more than a dozen |
miles from a rail line. This trans-
portation network gets precious
crops to market in record time.
| lighting a campaign, in the midst of
Black Spruce Swamps
Restocked by Planting
That black spruce |
swamps successfully re- |
cut over
can be
 
stecked by planting is indicated by
a test made on the Superior na- |
tional forest, Minnesota, in the
spring of 1938. Two-one black
spruce trees were har-planted at a
spacing of four by four feet direct-
ly in a heavy growth of live
sphagnum moss overlying peat.
The moss was so wet that regular
slits could not be made, so much
of the shaping of the hole and sub-
sequent firming of the moss around
the roots was done by hand. Unlike
plantations on upland which often
have to be weeded or released two
or three years after planting, no
subsequent care was required by
these trees. An examination in Oc-
tober, 1945, at the end of eight
growing seasons, showed a survival |
averaging 68 per cent, or about
1,850 trees per acre. Moreover, |
these survivors averaged 44 inches

in height (ranging from 16 to 87 penses at $400, is not concerned | |
inches). The shorter trees were | | about the high cost of living. | |
found in the wetter areas. The Here's why:
examination brought out the fact Home? He built the two-room


California Termed
PASADENA, CALIF.—Two scien:
tists have produced figures showing
California to be the earthquake
“hot spot” of the United States by
a wide margin.
Conversely, if you live east of the
Rockies, the chances of being tossed
out of bed by a major earth tremor
are fairly remote.
Drs. Beno Gutenberg and Charles
F. Richter of California Institute
of Technology have determined
from records going back 42 years |
that California and Nevada have
about 90 per cent of the seismic
activity of the United States.
Together they record about 5,000
quakes a year (1.3 per cent of the
world’s total).
The scientists hasten to add, how-
ever, that two-thirds of these are
of the smallest magnitude and only
a few are destructive.
The total does not include the
“swarms of small earthquakes that
always occur as aftershocks follow-
ing a major seismic event.”
Their studies currently are high-
the West's greatest housing boom,
for quakeproof construction of ma-
jor buildings.
The reason Mother Nature is so | ground
unstable in these parts explains
also why Japan and Pacific islands
have so many tremors.
The land areas bordering the Pa-
cific are the newest geologically
in the world.
California has two major faults,
or splits in the earth’s crust.

One is the Owens valley trough,
on the east side of Sierra Nevada |
range. |
The other is the San Andreas |
fault, which enters from the Pacific |
north of San Francisco, bisects the |
state lengthwise and finally crosses |
the border into Mexico.
High Cost of Living
Doesn’t Worry Him
STOUGHTON, MASS. — Leon-
ard A. Whitten, 60, a carpenter.
who estimates his yearly ex-

that sphagnum moss is an excel- house he lives in. |
lent rooting medium due to its Vegetables? He grows them.
extreme porosity, large water-hold- Meat? He goes hunting for
ing capacity, and good aeration. that.

Watch Clothes for Mildew
Mildew is not a simple stai

in, as
many people believe. it is a fungus
Haircuts? He lets it grow.
Electricity and telephone? He |
doesn’t have any.
Fuel? He cuts his own wood.
Furthermore, he takes all





LONDON. — Through the chill, 8rowth that eventually “eats” into | | summer off.
stately halls of ancient Warwitk the fabric, causing sagious and per-
castle, Thomas George Cook wen{ manent damage. It thrives in a —_—
is i ie i damp, warm, dark, unventilated as. 4 |
about his buttling duties with a a Bilin 3 5 Oa Alan Moon Worship in Early
clear conscience. Police had writ] Place. 2herejore, 1 clothes are .
ten finis to the mystery of who stole even slightly damp when put away Arabia Told by Science
the jeweled buttons off the Earl of or if dampness reaches them in WASHINGTON.—Existence of a |
Warwick's vest. storage, a closed bag and hot sum- | of

Cook is an excellent butler, bt
a poor judge of horseflesh.
“borrowed’’ the platinum and dia
mond buttons to defray the costs

mer weather make conditions ideal
He had for
fore storing cl
be given a
%
e mildew. Be-
they


the growth of

should

 

1 brus
thor
of a disastrous day at the track ing and cleaning to make sure
But the earl, whose ancestors they are dry to help prevent! ¢
made and unmade kings of Eng fungus growth in garments. The ,
land, is a man who values a good
clothes should then be st
l red in a

butler above a set of waistcoat but. dry place or in a moisture-proof
tons. container so dampness cannot j}
i
the earls reach them. Unless such safety
Despite forgiveness,
however, a magistrate’s court said !
the fine and costs would total $76.40
When the buttons were stolen, the

clothes should be ¢
summer


taken, stored
mined in mid- |
to see if any mildew has
neasures have been

I
 
 

tween the east and the west.

moon worshippers,
who lived in southern Arabia just |
before the Christi
| revealed by Dr
an era, has been
rleton S. Coon of

Harvard university.
Dr. Coon told of the discovery of
he moon worshippers in a report
ublished by the Smithsonian insti-

tution,
The
1ighly
worshippers
civilized
composed four
kingdoms which
¥ | were the principal trading link be- |
But
of what were once “splendid tem-
and lofty skyscrapers,” Dr.
les
earl was in Africa shooting lions. | started. If so, they should be taken | Coon said, only scattered fragments
He said he hadn't worn that par. out of the stor bag at once, | remain. {
i ar vast § « -ushed ahd dried outdoor 3
2? vears I 1 dalid 1c )O M : os:
ticular vest for 10 or 12 years. br ls ed, : ahd on d outdoors Their moon religion took many
“I'm afraid this is not the first before putting away again. strange forms. Dr. Coon said that
time Cook has had racing trouble,”

[ thing) kindly remember the Bulletin
in reconstructing the religion from |
the earl confided. “I've always ancient inscriptions, it was found
stumped up and he has always paid ; Plack Hole of Calenify that the people believed “the sun
back. The black hole of Calcutta reiers | was a woman, and the moon her |
Test New Type Radar in
Flight Over the Pole
EDMONTON, ALTA.—A B-29 Su.
perfortress with a pressurized cab:
in recently made a flight of more
than 5,000 miles from Edmonton
over the north geographic pole and
back, first such flight in history origi.
nating on Canadian soil, it was
learned,
No details were released officially
by United States army air force
headquarters here, but it was be.
lieved the flight by way of Fair.
banks, Alaska, was made for instru.
ment testing purposes, particularly
the Loran device, which is similar
to radar, and to gather data on
weather conditicns in the polar re-
gions.
The B-29 was one of three Loran
monitoring aircraft which have
been based in Edmonton for some
time. Carrying a crew of 12, the
plane stopped at Fairbanks for re-
fueling and then went over the pole
and returned to Fairbanks in ap-
proximately 23 hours. Later the B-
29 returned to its base here.




Rhapsody Orchestration
Now in Congress’ Library
WASHINGTON. -- Ferde Grofe,
composer and orchestra leader,
presented the original manuscript
of his piano-orchestra version of the
“Rhapsody in Blue” to the Library
of Congress.
The orchestration of the ‘famous
composition” by
s written by Composer Grofe in
1934.



New York in

Everybody reads newspapers but °
reads circular ade

George Gershwin +
to the infamous im
sonm
of | husband—the




stars their children, |

146 English pec

: ye H and of these the most important |
jail in Calcutta in 17 J-ud- | was Venus
1 AAT f ~» bec:
Pow By 4 yorrd, ° ane A “These stars eventually became
2 INawat ) enge an SOO0r ey
ie ip a : angels; people and animals were
after broke with the British author- the children of the gods.’ id
oe aa C C S <
ities. His sack of the town of Cal- Dr. Coon = Cl
cutta and capture of Fort William This dy discovery opens vast
$ Ss 7) Ss vas
is the chief event of the
history. Most Eng
town’s 4
Ta new fields for archeological explc ra-
sh officials fled, plora





: > 3; | tion, the Harvard expert said. An
but those remain were forced tim eh : y
to sur ter of) brie resict entire new civilization is now ex-
o surrender aft a brief resist- v
hi % = pected to be uncovered in the near
ance. The prisoners were forced future
into a single cell, about 18 feet
long and 14 feet, 10 inches wide. Sen
The only ventilation c¢ through British Stock Up on
two small b w that


ows
Bread on Rationing Eve
LONDON. — British housewives
opened onto : 5 mid- |
June wi
 




Peshtigo Fire
The Peshtigo fire—so called for
the town in Wisconsin near where it
started—broke out October 8, 1871, a
few days before the Chicago fire.
Though less known than the latter
conflagration the tragedy of Pesh-
tigo took a greater toll of lives and
the fire roared with hurricane speed
over 1,280,000 acres of forests. It
burned up towns, villages, saw-
mills and farms. Peshtigo, a busy
logging town of 2,000 people, was
reduced to ashes. Some of the
town’s people, mostly women and
children, were rescued by ships on
Lake Michigan and other people
crowded into a river that ran
through Peshtigo and escaped by
ducking under water when the
flames leaped out from the river
banks. But 600 men, women and
children died horrible deaths when
the town turned into a furnace. It
all happened in just one hour's
time. In all, 1,500 persons in the
region lost their lives.

Paper Boxes
Approximately 45 per cent of all
folding paper boxes made by the
nation’s 400 manufacturers are
used to package food. Other lead-
ing users are producers of soap,
tobacco, hardware, appliances,
automobile supplies and medicinal
products. Chief raw materials of
the boxboard for these cartons are
unbleached sulphite wood pulp
trimmings and cuttings from en-
velope and letterhead papers;
wood pulp, chiefly of
spruce; old newspapers and maga-
zines; baled mixed papers. In the
reprocessing of salvaged waste pa-
per it is ‘‘cooked” at temperatures
high enough to kill all harmful
bacteria.
When in need of Printing. (any=


 

BBITS
II Times
BBIT FARM
T, MOUNT JOY
FOR SALE ~ YOUNG
Also Rabbit Meat | At
MARKS & HERSHE
371 NORTH BARBARA ST
7-18-tf

White Flour
FRESH
SHIP - MIDDS
BRAN
— MILL RUN —
s Flour Mills
Pa.
Stehm
Mount Joy,


DON'T WASTE
MONEY ON
. IMITATION











Everybody In This Locality Reads The Bullshin

 
the main part anc

io a depth of twenty
six feet permitting this home
be 1} small plot.
hen and
>d so that
ick-to-back
zed form of
ates the




 



y of a basement
ing stairway hugs
semi-halli-

 

me plannin
reflected in this
floor plan.



First National Bank and Trust Company
First National's House-of-the-Month Club
"THE IVES" . . .
or September
BED Room 1
12°





2&9

FLOOR PLAN
Mount Joy, Pennsylvania




pressiv by rushed the bread stores and
of th 46 were bakeries on the eve of bread ra-
survivors, John tioning. Stores were completely

sold out of bread and flour.
It was the biggest buying tush
London had ever seen.
The food ministry in a midnight |
announcement also added oatmeal,
wheat porridges, macaroni, spa-
ghetti, pudding and cake mixtures, |
| pearl barley and a number of other
cereal products to the rationing pro- |
gram. |
mandant of
the fort, gave an ac-
count of the i
yonies endured that
Hole.” The site
rked with a black marble


night in the “B
now is me


 




Army Air Forces Want to
Fly With Atomic Energy






frigerator
Mexico


 


tions of lo t r ng companies in a research pro-
frigeratos 2 to 4 { no vita- find out how atomic en-
min C, but that after 18 to 21 hours be used to propel air- |
the loss to 13 per cent
Co-op: s at the Geo tract to supervise |!
nies has
Id En-
plane corporation of
i i 3 Stimulat 4 si 7 eT =
Stimulate your business by adver- Stimulate your business by adver
‘ tising in the Bulletin.



Er






THE MODERN WAY TO SURFACE
Z ROADS. .ECONOMICAL. ENDURING
AND SO SMOOTH !
CARL'BYDROHAN
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.’
-



at low cost maintenance!
hh
Also—Ideal for Driveways, Park-
ing Areas, Farm Lanes, etc... .*
og a BW — -—
Venlo Steel Sash + Glon-Gery Brick + Howell Overhead Doors)
Ready Mixed Concrete - + Hauling Crushed Stone
3 St. Clair Anthracite :

 


 



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