6—The Bulletin, Mi. Joy, Pa., Thursday, September 19, 1946 ‘Mortuary Record In This Section (From page 1) Mrs. Ella S. Miller, sixty-three, widow of Rev. Martin R. Miller, of near Landisville, died at 3 a. m. on Sunday at the Lancaster General Hospital, after an illness of one day. She was a member of the Landis- ville Mennonite Church, and a daughter of the late Abram and Su- san Seitz Herr. She is survived by the Esther, wife | f Clarence H. Harnish, 4, David H., Lancaster 1., at home; Martha, G. Ranck, Strasburg R1; Arthur H., Londisville; Frances H., wife of John N. Hertzler, Elizabethtown R2: | and twenty-two grand-children. The funeral was held in the Lan- disville Mennonite church day afternoon with interment in the following children: Lemcaster | R1. Anna wife of Amos | ( ¥ r I DUFF INSPECTS NEW HISTORIC MARKERS Duff, ission, yester- the Pennsylvania His- first of the new historic along the main high- of the Attogney General Jam's H torical and Museum Comm markers which ai» to be erect:d by the ipproved aljoining cemetery. commission ways of the Stata. With the Attorney General are Charles G. Webb, Harry W. Gutshall Wellsboro, on the left, and Thomas Murphy, Scranton, on the extrime F ol servi for Harr r | right, both members of the Commission. liners. services lov farry Ww. The Commission expects to place markers in every gection of the State | Gutshall, a farmer, who died Thurs- | during the next few months. Tae initial order is for 500 et Bape day at his home in Blain, were s are bai weekly, T nzrkers are ve installed by : : ments are being 1 ceiver The % is ore to Ss ¥ | held Sunday afternoon st Blain Lu- 1 the maintenance forces of the Department o ighways. i | istod Bu the 15 Gener: ;- | theran Church. Burial was in the Funds for tha markers wire appropriated by the 1945 General As- |t ; C é | sembly and approved by Governor Edward Martin. Blain Cemetery. Mr. Gutshall, who was 66 years | was the son of the late George | | old, | Bennett Gutshall. He | | and Celestia | will be h:.ld zt the home of Mrs. The Affairs [iii James and a sauer kraut supper will be served. was a member of Blain Lutheran | Fl } F Memiers pres:nt other than the | Church and Sunday School. He is At orin or | office rs were: Mr. Arthur Braun, | survived by his widow, Mrs. Graca | teacher of the class, and wife, Miss | Dromgold Gutshall; three daughters | = riam Guhl snd Mary Bates. Cree. Lester Hench, Loysville; Mrs. | Camp Hill, and Mrs. | New Cumberland; Mrs. Harry Bishop, Richard Heisey, Past Week (From Page 1) Everybody in this locality reads | grandchildren. and Mrs. Paul Frank, | The Bulletin—that's why its adver- | four sons, Harry B., Mt. Joy; Merl= sons, \ A meeting of the Good Cheer | tisers get such excellent results. and Robert, both of Blain, and Lynn Class was held on Tuesday evening of Harrisburg: a sister, Mrs. at the home of Mrs. Irvin Bishop. | | We Want News! | garet Dromgold, Blain, and eighteen Duri ing the business meeting the ol- ection of officers were: Mrs. Irvin This is vacation time! When [| Deceased is very well known here. | Bishop, president; Mrs. James Hoc- | you go places for a Sa the | | A number of years ago he purchas- : weekend or longer, or if you || Ni oh fp kenberry, secretary; Malinda Myers, g Y ed the Michael Hossler farm a | | | | | have company, drop us a card or call 41J and tell us about it. — That's news! short distance north of town where | he resided for some time. Later he | | sold the farm and mpved to Blain. | ently I ee ee This Section’s | Numerous Weddings {reasurer; Mrs. Harry T. Herr. The October meeting of the class pianist, | | (From page 1) The bride was given in mar- | Clayton Richard Gertler and was attended by her Miss Louise M. Gertler, as maid of | | honor. Ralph Alleman attended | | his brother best man and the | ushers were James Garfield Walsh, ter. | rage by | sister. | as John Hess and Alvin Yingst, Eve- [lyn Kreider played the wedding | music. | . rs Hatchell THERE are many kinds of milking Tv W. Martin hand and machine . . . but there is only ynn W. | : one “magnetic” milker—the De Laval The marriage of Miss Beatrice Magnetic Speedway . . . that assures uni- form, fast and gentle milking at all times. Tt is a wonderful feeling to know that your cows are being milked in the same uni- form, correct way day after day. And the results of De Laval fast, uniform milking are wonderful, too. Why not talk it over Guernsey with us today? Hatchell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bonnie E. Hatchell, Long Island, N. Y. and Lynn W. Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl A. Martin, Salunga, | tock place Sunday in Trinity church in Brooklyn, N. Y. { Miss Margaret Martin, of the bridegroom, was maid of honor. A reception followed the cere- [mony at the home of the bride for | the immediate families. After a wedding trip to Lake George, N. Y., the couple will reside Holyoke, sister DE LAVAL-MILKER OF CHAMPIONS Another De Laval Milked Champion—Douglaston Royal's Peidey | Woodacres Guernseys, Princeton, N. J. Her record: 17.8365 Ibs. milk, 987.8 Ibs. fat, establishing her as Class Leader in De Laval Separators De Laval Sterling Milker If you want cleanest skim- If you are looking for ming, highest quality cream py, Taya] quality milking production, longest service h low first and an easy-to-wash separa. at somewhat lower 3 cost, get the facts on the JJ tor—all at lowest cost per in Et ii eg Rind De Lival Sinkise Dilker Mass., where Mr. Martin is foreman . : ulsator as wo . And there Jr fe au parts = provides of mechanical aeronautic mainten- Hand or motor drive. precise milking action. ance at Westover Field. Frances Susanne Fackler H S N ewcomer & Son Inc Ph ° ° 9 Miss Frances Suzanne Fackler, | Ruth D. Fackler, | Elizabethtown, beczme the bride of | C. Ray Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Smith, Maytown, in a solemnized in daughter of Mrs. MOUNT JOY, PENNA. ceremony the formal HOME - COMING Parade Pictures AT rose garden at the Masonic Home in | | Elizabethtown at 4 p. m. Sunday. i The Rev. Garnet O. Adams, a Mar- ine Corps chaplain now on terminal ON DISPLAY ciated at the ceremony. i | lookout | leum floors and spilled grease, wa- | | locomotive and to prevent the evil | of | was | United States senator leave, who was a roommate of the |r bridegroom at Ursinis College, offi- |e | Student Matinee (From Page 1) | guished leader of this Band. Capt. should know. The public concert tours of his fa- “President's Own” Band have Santelmann mous taken them to every State in the | Union. Everywhere, he says, he finds a lively interest in things mu- —especially in bands. the sical- Whenever Marine Band goes | Capt. iving advice and encourage- he pos- on piintie tour, Santelmann is | found g ment to such organizations meets on the road. Wherever he conducts a number as sible, played by one of these bands, or several of | He will be on the such an opportunity when the Marine Band plays at Mc- | Caskey on its forthcoming tour. > them en masse. for Kitchen Dangerous P P re manv hom ga part of thoir is often a dangerous { | ace wo | | i | | Such things as v. ater on the floor. a rickety kitchen ladder or a po handle extending over the edge o the stove are booby traps waitin for sone AL cting or urthink ing victim to fall into their : The National foty courcil esti | mates that the is the 3 of one out of nearly every five ho: accidents serious enough to reg hospital care | A large part of those kitchet calamities are caused bur t from steam and hot liquids. 24 careful homemaker will lift the | cover from a pan of ing liqui so that it forms a | the steam, and she will sec | that those handles are turned ay | to prevent grasping by childish fin gers or to avoid the danger of an | accidental bump. Thick, dry pot- | holders are essential tools for ev- { ery kitchen, Highly polished lino- | ter or fruit peelings are frequently the cause of injurious falls. And so are the stools, boxes and chairs | used in place of a safe stepladder | First U. S. Patent Was Issued 110 Years Ago Exactly 110 years ago, the United States issued its first numbered pat- | ent and it was for a locomotive, Association of American Ra reveals. the | ilroads The patent was “designed to give a multiplied tractive power to the the wheels.” It | Ruggles, a from who was largely ret the passage of the act of which set up the present-day ican system of granting patents adr istering the system prope: ts Senator Ruggles’ invention was ¢ gear-like arrangement for I tive wheels and railroad vai which wou%i mesh for grades. of the John sliding issued to or 1825 Amer. COmMo- | The invention which was accord- ed the honor of Patent No. 1 wus outmoded as soon as it was patent- ed. About that same time a 1: o- | motive startled the world by pulls | ing a train of cars up a grade wit | oui the aid of outside cogs or ¢ That rapid progress has es 1 storage or for canning are the key | points in turning out a high quality product. Delays between the time the vegetables are gathered znd prepared for freezing or canning | presently | jhe war | | General | | ly housed, of a | Leading Lights Serv With Judge Ad The judge advocate general's d= partment, which marked 171 anniversary last July, is one of th oldest Founded in i775 by an | cid continental congress, the de. x : : | iment was organized as a part Of Hardships, Appeals of General Weshinzton’s army by To Young Men. | Lt. Col. William Tudor, the first domain | judge advocate general. WASHINGTON. who think | One of its first members was of tho United States coast and geo- | Capt. John Marshall, who later be detic survey as a highly profes- | { came secretary of state and chiel 1 hq cloistered department of | | justice of the Supreme court the federal government are only | A the many other distin partly right. Its work is scientific, | 1 figures in law and g » have served with are Henry L. ment secretary of » of war; Maj. later a major general, of war, and ambassador tc a: Mal, Felix associate reme court; Col. were, later dean e¢rsity law school ty on the iaw :n, Hugh S. Johnson, ard journalist. department attained state Patrick J. John H. it numbered cr-attornevs and the judge advocate gen the largest law firm in the eruel lege department ety of subjects, upon a Mexican Bases Aid AAF Hurricane Lookout Earlier hurricane warnings and better protection for people living in the southern and southeastern United States will be the results of special agreements just completed with the Mexican government which will permit army air forces aircraft to operate from three Mex- ican airfields. Hurricane-hunting planes of the AAF formerly have been unable ef- fectively to keep tab on hurricanes moving into or originating in the Gulf of Mexico and Pacific waters adjacent to Mexico. Before the { landing rights were granted, weath. er planes were based at Morrison West Palm Beach, Fla. with bases at Las Vajadas ra Cruz, Merida in Yucatan, and Ixtepec in Qaxaca, the AAF can extend its hurricane-hunting activities far to the west—to fol. low each storm that develops, fly. ing through and around it, and te keep the weather bureau constant. ly informed of the rate of move- ment and intensity of these vicious tropical disturbances. Portable Farm Elevator The portable elevator is the “strong back’ that does the labori- ous lifting for the modern farmer, according to R. D. McMichael of Electric's farm industry | division. The portable farm eleva- { tor will handle bales, boxes, bas. kets, ear corn, oats, wheat and oth. er small grains; bags of potatoes, or even gravel and sand. Valu able as the portable elevator is in the harvest rush of handling the hundreds of millions of tons of | farm crops, its usefulness by nc means ends when crops are safe. the farm expert pointed out. Such stored products usually unl ow Je | go ultimately to market or are used | contains a ; atented fea. | : . | ares 3 mos 0 & “| to feed farm livestock. The farm R ‘Ho as Poca lon of American | truck or trailer ean be loaded as ailroads sai > : %ads sald. | easily and quickly as the crop was | stored originally. Ground feeds us Fr ing V bl | well as sacked commercial concen. reezi stable ) Gard i ng Yege in es | trates purchased to supplement arden freshness of vegetables farm-grown feeds present no prob. and rapid preparation for freezer lem for the portable farm elevator Cotton Classification The Smith-Doxey act is the name congressional act which pro. may cause enc deterioration t¢ : ii i Y iu e 0 3 4 tere ation 1o| vides free classification and market ak nem unfit for storage Mh i i is ‘mw for storage. To | news services to organized groups put up high qualily vegetavies, se- | of cotton growers. This act di | lect vegetab fresh from th ar- = i | = i Tas) irom Le E8r-| rects the secretary of agriculture paring them as rapidly as | 3S er : > I a g os as rapidiy as | to provide for free classification of SS e 1 Tr Ing al ne I poss 9:8 a or gathering a hen | cotton to cotton growers who are canning or freezing omplly t rani i ing promplly 10] organized to improve the quality retain quality, flavor and colcr. Having all equipment and sup plies | needed for canning or free ready for use will help greatly rapid handling of garden products. | | reset ffl i | munity ganization must file a | cation for er than Monday, Sept. 23rd. | partment t stubs to James Sheaffer, not Sloan’s Pharmacy Pauline G. H. Edwards | Henry P. Koestner | | Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Gallagher, Mount Joy Elizabethtown R2, have the mezrriage of their Pauline G. H. Edwards, 129 Mount Joy St., this boro, to Henry P.| Koestner, 561 N. Prince St., Lancas- ter. The marriage took place at | 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, August 14th at the St. Joseph's Catholic Church, 25 h with the Rev. Stephen J. Hribick, C eac officicting. Miss Betty Lermer attended the 75c each bride and George Koestner attended his brother as best man. { By A reception the Liedkranz | Club followed the ceremony, after | which the couple left on a wedding | trip to Atlantic City. They are now | residing at 48 W. Frederick St. | Lancaster. | = ee | | Patronize Bulletin advertisers, : announced daughter, Place Your Order by Number at Sloan’s "4x5 Views at 4x5 Views at 8x10 Views at Full Set of 50 15¢ each Individual Individual at Photographs BISHOP’S STUDIO ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. AS i NEVER BUY | | : OF PEDDLER | | NOT WITH SUCH FINE | | BARGAINS IN OUR HOME NEWSPAPER! | of of farmers single classing major Since non-selective killing and soil sterilization are desirable for their | type of weed clearance, their cotton. If a grower wants | his bales of cotton to be classified, 1 must be a member of a group who have adopted a variety of cotton for the com. or county—with each mem. PLE ASE RETURN STUB ber planting a part, if not all, of | his crop to the variety selected, American Logion Members are | The farmer himself does not apply equested to please return the | for cotton classification. Each or. group appli the services with the de of agriculture's cotton office right now. Railroads Use Herbicides The railroads have always been customers for herbicides, huge quan: | titis of crude salt, oil, sodium { chlorate, and arsenic oxide are | used. In 1934 alone, 4,500 tons of arsenic oxide and 1,783 tons of sodium chlorate were allocated foi use on railroad rights-of-way. Since i . { both oil and sodium chlorate are fire hazards, and sodium chlorate and arsenic oxide are fatal to ani mals, they are not ideal for road { side or ! has actually jump fences to eat plants railroad weed control. Ii been reported that cows will poisoned with sodium chlorate which gives off an odor like new mown hay. Sn. { When in need of Printing. (any- thing) kindly remember the Bulletin tising in the Bulletin. branches of the army act of the overn: the de Stimson ahd secre. Hur secre: Frankfurter, justice of the Wig- of Northwestern and a world of evidence; NRA its size during Werld War II, approximately was de- Eest known to the public for its part in connection with military justice, it also acts as the advisor to the army and wide Find Rdventure In Field Work vocata e Ceodetic Survey, in Spite but its personnel often meets with adventure and sometimes is in dan- | ger. Personnel engaged in basic detic control survey work in the in- | terior areas of the country ‘‘may en- | poisonous snakes, wild ani- animals gone ber- geo- | counter mals and tame serk,” department of commerce re- lates. ‘““I'hey may find themselves cling- ing to a mountain ridge when a gale or blizzard strikes, or in deep gorges may he compelled to port- age their boats and paraphernalia around rapids too rugged for navi- gation, In a mountain defile the lead man accidentally may dislodge a bouider, causing a wild scramble among those behind him to avoid serious injury. Appeals to Young Men. “Despite hardships and dangers encountered on occasion, however, work in {he open has a strong ap- peal to young men and the div sion | of geodesy experiences no difficulty | in maintaining field parties at full | | strength. | “Every summer a limited num- | ber of young engineering students | are given employment and “distrib | uted among ficld parties. They re- | ceive regular salaries and per diem | allowances while employed and are | assigned to the less tasks. | Not a few of them ultiinately join | the survey as pcrimancut mernbers, | Often the work of tieid parties is: centered far from human habita. | tion.” | Geodetic control operations take into account the curvature of the | earth. For this reason in flat ter. rain it is necessary to make triangu. | lation surveys from a considerable | elevation. To micet this need Hi portable steel towers are in con- stant use by ficld parties. In ad-| dition to taking care of the curva. ture of the carth, these towers | provide an observation platform ex. | tending above surrounding forest] growth and other obstacles, On two | occasions falls from these towers | have been fatal, | Operations Varied. | Operations in geodetic control | are varied. They include the de- termination of geographic positions | latitude and longitude—and the| | dete :tion of elevations, “In 1807, during the administra. | tion of President Thomas Jefferson, the hureau wus organiz ced as the| United States coast survey,” the re. | pert says. ‘‘Operations started in| There were some interrup. | tivns to the work, but it has been] carried on continuously since 1836, | 1816. “Having always handled coastal] coniro! surveys, the bureau in 1878 | wos given the task of continuing] such surveys into the interior and| becarne the United States coast and geedetic survey. As a result of this | pra ai control-survey work, a se- ries of charts and maps covering | the United States in its entirety to. | day may be put together like the] many pieces of a picture puzzle.” | Burmese Rice Output Is | Expected to Be Short! SINGAPORE, STRAITS SETTLE. | MENTS. —Rice production in Bur. | ma and Java probably will be more! than 600,000 tons short of internal | needs this year, an RAF aerial sur- vey discloses. | The survey showed that about | 16,000,000 acres of irrigated rice lands in Burma, Java and French | Indo-China remained uncultivated. | British officials here believed Bur- | ma would be obliged to draw upon her surplus accumulated during the | war, The Burmese government! hoped to be able to continue some | exports from that surplus, Sarawak, Rich Borneo | Kingdom, Now British LONDON.—Sarawak, rich Bornea | kingdom of the white rajahs, has | become a British Crown colony. An order in council put into ef- fect legislation approved by the Brit- ish parliament and Sarawak's su- preme council. Sarawak, Borneo state with 500,- | 000 inhabitants and 300,000 acres of | rubber plantations, was ceded ta Britain by its last white rajah, Sir Charles Vyner Brooke, 71, under an agreement by which his three daughters and some local officials receive the proceeds of a $4,000,000 trust fund established from Sara- wak funds. | Chums Buy Artificial Arm for Crippled Youth | FLINT, MICH.—Willis Conkright | Jr., 14, who lost part of his right arm in a mowing machine mishap, was given funds for an artificial arm by his playmates in the neigh- borhood. He was driving a horse-drawn mower on his father’s farm. He got off the seat to shoo a pheasant and her brood out of the way, and fell in front of the blades as the horses started. —— een. | Stimulate your business by adver- CONBENSID T0 SOUP iarge ri 45-0z A € can New Pack Vitamin-Rich Sunrise on vice Enriched with famous Louella Butter - «= New Paci .omaaio Brand 18-0z can Bc Farmdale Cut Green iajestic Dill Pickles Esco Cider Vinegar Local Fresh Green TOMATOES Large Heads Snow-White Grapefruit Juice sweet or natural Blended Juice orange and grapefruit Sweetened Orange Juice Rob-Ford Sliced Beets Tender Early June Peas Rudco Noodles "tomatesauer Ritter’s Asparagus Soup BROCCOLI SPINACH New Crop Savoy LIMA BEANS Fu Peds California RULIFLOWER - 2 18-0z cans 25¢ 46-0z can 33¢ 48s 13¢ 14¢ 25¢ 2%¢ 63¢ 19¢ 46-0z can 16-0z jar 19-0z jar 2 20-oz cans Beans quart jar at [8e gal jug 16-0z jar 103-0z can Large Bunch 2 Ibs 18¢ 2 29¢ 2 Ibs 29¢c ONIONS RADISHES Fancy Yellow Crisp Red Ibs 15¢ 2 bchs Ge SWEET POTATOES "Md Golden 3 1s [Ge U. S. No. 1 Jonathan APPLES ———— Hear’s Delight Prune Real.emon Lemon Juice P. D. g. Chocolate Flavor Syrup 153-0z jar hot cereal Cream ef Rice Pie Crust EFrench’s Croam Salad Chef-Boy Ardee Spagheiti Eager 163-02 jar 34 Speed-Up French Dry Kuni Club Dog Meal “heat-flo” roasted HSCO COF Easy to Mix op Borden’s Liquid HEMO 22-0z Bc jar Fresh DO'NUTS oo: 1° CRISCO Vegetable Shortening ‘On Sale As Allotted) Cal. Fancy Yellow Taste the reason 3 out of 4 prefer Senator » el A ad Gt bot pA 16-0z bot 29 Juice or ews z 0 18-0z pkg Qin 8-0z pkg fim wl Muctard {2s Qs al can i g © 5 Ih pkg Be c > lbs FEE 2» Asco Quality Creamy Caramels | Orange Pekoe Tea 1 1b pkg 19° EVAP. PEACHES [Supreme Bread Value v 37 Aeme Meat Departmenis large = fig i loaves i di, — Young, | Ducklings Long Island 37 Spiced Luncheon Meat ',1h 2%¢ FRESH COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE and SCRAPPLE Cod Fillets LARGE CROAKERS Fancy FANCY PAN TROUT 35¢ 29¢ 25¢ lb lb Freshly Shucked Salt Water OYSTERS Standard pt. ec] (ON SALE AS ALLOTTED) Soap Flakes lge Pka 23¢ Soap Powder Pkg {3g Granulated Soap oy 23: Borax Soap 6c Kirkman Complexion Soap 3 bars ide Evergreen Pine 31.0z Jellied Soap Jar 8 25° Wilbert’s No-Rub soz Furniture Polish bot 29 Nexon Rietal Polish 8-0z bot 19¢ Barbaso! Razor Blades Pke 10c=25¢ ALL-NU FLOOR WAX ptcan 18¢ SPEED-UP BLEACH at bot Je 3 sal jus Je Prices Elective Sept. 19.3 Your: Dollar: Buys 21, 1916. Quantity Rig s Reserved. More :at-the "Acnie RY autc bur; whi kille Te not sche Plea Tt Hom ard six, G. 1! St.; Rl, Flor Fred jure Th early Cour Twp Lanc Rhee cras] Shir! enge pot. Th Lang estat Kahl and own La tary from June Bik searc Ist I ville, menc Vietc ficer ing N. J. Th ably spon: editir cal test ! for tl signe pair 1, 16 Lt. from Bikir in tl in tl daug Land Th Louis Mrs. to Er Mrs. bridg Luthe with of charg rng Mis Mrs. came Waltz Waltz The Bern: more, Sleen ring Bette W. La Mr. 112 W nounc daugh Blant Blantc Clean took Septer The Joy H brideg 1946 = U. S. Afte couple Florid Viviar Natha Miss