Bulletin, Mt. Joy, Pa., Thursday, December 26, 1946 The Mount Joy Bulletin ESTABLISHED JUNE 1901 Published Every Thursday at Mount Joy, Pa. Jno. E. Schroll, Subscription Price $1.50 Per Annum Bix Months.............75 Cents Three Months..........40 Cents Sample Copies........ . and News, the Landisville Vigil and the Florin News were merged with the Bulletin, which makes this paper's circulation practically double that | .¢ pf the average weekly. Entered at the Postoffice at Mount Joy, Pa. as second-class mail matter | under the Act of March 3, 1879. THE EDITOR'S VOICE Newspaper men face an exceed- ingly foggy future as Warren G. Harding was the cmly journalist or newspaper editor to have become president of the United States. But then how many editors would want Truman's job with the incoming Republican Congress? © 00 THANK YOU ALL Several weeks ago we made pub- lic the fact that the subscription price of the Bulletin would be ad- vanced to $2.00 January 1. Up to this time we have received a large number of renewals, many new subscribers and NOT ONE who has said: “Stop our paper, if costs too much.” In zppreciation of our efforts we propose to make The Bulletin Big- ger and Better than ever by pub- Jishing anything in the shape of ‘news that comes to our attention. gn our efforts many of you can assist by giving us a “lip” any time. We'll do the rest, get the news and fee] grateful for your assistance. : eso VERY WELL TIMED i One night last week the Ice Follies opened @n engagement at Hershey. Several days later the December issue of the Readers Digest came thru the mails and it was interesting news to read there- lin a condensed article from Coronet by. Temple , H+ Fielding. headed “Home-Grown Ice Follies.” It appers that two boys in a family of ten children, Sweedish immigrants, lived in St. Paul, Minn. They loved skating, got their ex- perience on a home-made rink created by pumping water into their back were given two ot dogs and two cups of ccifee for their first pubiic exhibitisn on skates and now head the Shipstead Ice Follies, playing 2 48 weeks’ en- gagement thruout the United States annually, carry 165 skaters,. 35 technicians, $200,000 worth of glitt- ering costumes and snap up $4,000,- 000 in gate receipts. Ancther illustration that one nev- er knows just where little things may lead to. May the success of Eddie and Roy Shipstad, also Oscar Johnson be unlimited. 90 SOUNDS GOOD It is the same song, second verse, that the Republicans of the House lay down for the program for fu- ture Congressional action. Among the points is elimination of govern- ment controls; termination of presi- -dential emergency powers as rap- idly as possible; substantial savings where practical; relief from short- ages in scarce items such as sugar and soap; close adherence to the Congressional Reorganization Act “with appreciation of the fact that experience or later developments might demand clarification and im- provement”. It all sounds good, whatever he a man’s political par- ty. Few can find fault with such a plan but yet, each act calls for carefu} study. Several of the points mean nothing, as the words stand. Some of the changes, if undertaken too quickly will be too rich for our blood. Deliberation rather than too prompt an action without a follow- through, will bring more applause for the GOP party in the final etunt. A prophecy of prosperity has been sounded by the President. A projizram for the Republican Con- gress to get immediate action for removals and improvements, is but an eche of werds uttered before, in our history. We are proceeding about cur daily bread and keeping the fingers crossed. oe ~~ yard, an We have every reason to believe that when the new congressional Committees start ferreting. . there will be many surprises. The Eight- deth congress will want to know “Why?” in many instances. First: Chairman Wolcott (Rep.- Mick.) msy start an investigation of a billion dollars in loans which will throw some light on the Gov- ernments financing of thousands of phoney projects, including Elliott Roosevelt's $200,000 loan settled for ‘ With the spotlight .on Board will get a “going over” and the Wagner Act will be the target. In the eleven before the Wagner Act, July 1, 1924 thru June 30, 1935, there 11,830 invalving 5.919.484 workers. In the the Wagner Act, June 30, 1946, years were eleven yesrs after July 1, 1835 thru there were 38,521 strikes 19354519 werkers. Unions have grown from 4900000 in 1335 to over 14,500,000 today. Third: The War committee want to Investigating may tittle more about the dollzy pet shipbuilder, Henry Kaiser, profits of the New Deal's made a $2,080,000 profit in just one | of kis shipyards on a single trans- | acti ip involving a $600 investment. | These are enly a few of the many agencies to be given an airing by ouy Eightieth The facts will inake interesting reading. ® © o A BETTER YEAR Taking inventory in started the Checking :ccounts, recording pro- fit and loss, g on hand, it is a Congress. business is last day of December. tax, nrocess of leds vernment 1 | | | Editor and Publisher | Single Copies............3 Cents | ...FREE | The subscription lists of three other newspapers, the Mount Joy Star | strikes | involving | know a} multi-million | who | / stock | with red and black ink. Seriou minded folk this day to straighten out personal counts, take their own inventory of living. It used to be more pop- vlar than a summing up of past and a forming cof resolutions of thoughts errers, sins, ac- | Tomes mmr HAPPENINGS Of LONG AGO Ade Pad 20 Years Ago The class of 1923 of M. J. H. S. held their Qaklyn Tea House. second annual Warren H. Greenawalt will em-| this is over the old bed of the Kern | Fark in the watch making business | river, which now flows farther ere. north. In consequence, the land is A Liter iety was organized | undermined by decomposing tule : Ry . growth and water tables in some in the Newtown School. eens i £ 11 soil Wark Ratio: Tie Bo 16- places within three feet of the soi iargets: butter, C, surface. 2c, and Lard, 17c. Apparently, according to studies N. 1. Moyer purchased the John | made, the poison is cumulative, and G. FE farm in West Donegal | the cattle do not become ill for Hown weeks or months. Then they be- AS LE wlobrated hig) come emaciated, their coats fade mue Donaven celebrate 1% in color, and anemia usually is birthday. marked. Young cattle are affected | Rev. W. J. Myers of Massillon,| more than older ones, and dairy ani- conducting revival services | O i 4-0). «1S at Shank’s Church " : tn} Sori d are reported to be resistant. Ac- The production of tobacco in the 3 : : 1 off i | 1696 | cording to veterinarians the disease, ‘tate dr 3 y i the wvear ite =tate dropped off in the year 1920 {!gimijlar 49 that called teartness in { to such an extent that the state | England, needs much more study | produced less than Lancaster Co. | before it is solved. | in 1925. Seventy-six relatives attended | 3 5 | | rou held t th Field Crickets tne Ien y ‘eunion 1€1C a el . his | Field crickets normally live out- home of Ame Crickler at \ ke i | home of Amos Strickler at Landis | doors and feed on vegetation, but | ville. | ‘when the crickets’ natural diet be- The Epwerth League held comes scarce late in the season | social in henor of Fred Diffender-| they often invade homes in Joan | for and Robert Brubaker, college of food , Where climates are mild tent | ‘house crickets may also appear in | stuiden | great numbers, migrating from ? 1 Brnibaker cold a emall trac a {| B. H. Brubaker ld a small tract nearby dumps or refuse heaps. tof land with 1 vements at| These crickets may become a year | | . | Mill to Henry G: Lehman. | round menace. To prevent crickets Nati Mannis. of Parkesburg. has| from getting into the house, seal all thet cia cracks and holes in floors and foun- rented thhe Heistand store rcom to| 5. he F vacated by Zshleman Bros. anc | windows and doors. If an will do tailoring, pressing. Drabenstabt the M. Mr. George purchased town, tead property. The Mt. Joy leclared a five Hall percent Re eee Teaching The Youth 3 | and deeds for personal improve- | ment during the ncw year. Some more censciencious than others, would record their be most earnest in planning to im- rrove threcugh the to come. mental lists to" develop character and fortune. Having slipped in the faithful pur- the may twelve months Others made suance of custom, we ask curselves if we have pledges slipped obligations with also and passing years. Let us take self “as of 1946” and work out in- resolutions and | more old-fashioned | in personal | the | a summing up of | dividual] balance sheets. Impelled 1by geod resclutiens we may be halted by the man who reminds { us thot hell is paved with good in- | tenti‘ns. But we might do over-hauling and improving with- cut an anncuncement of that man does not tentions, Surely breathe who can't better his char- acter and if he contributes to a elfiess, fine personal devotion, who forth to label him a fraud :nd impersonator? There was would come a foundation this upen which “good business” before and its building threugh a person- 3 re yr ond vals oe Ju 3 1 i al inventory end balance sheet | tion, considering expansion, struck on December 31, 1946, will Ete cm nd strengthen it. | gy RAC "RET Bt SPRAY PEACH TREES ® 00 1 mom J i | Lo assure a good peach crop next SOME FACTS ABOUT COAL | yea rt cf the spray must be Many people, observing the ap-| dor ifter the leaves dr and be- parently endless labor troubles that | fore the buds crack next spring. | beset the soft coal industry, may | Extension specialists of the Penn- | have come to the conclusion that| sylvania State College say that this | the miners are an overworked lot, laboring long hours at starvation wages. So sume facts by the National recently released Coal Association are deserving of wide-spread re- cognition. In Avgust, earnings of bituminous coal miners was $62.37. hf higher average weekly earnings figure than re- ported by any other industry in the United States. It was 161.18 per cent higher than in 1939. The rise in the cost of living be- tween 1939 and August, 1946, on the other hand. was 41.6 per cent, according to the Bureau of Labor! te Statistics. The coal miners’ hourly earnings in August averaged $1.467 an increase of 65.8 per cent over 1941. Seo, whether apparent that they have far outrun rises in the. cost of living. It has been said that the miners must work a 54-hour week — be- cause some mines work six days a week — some weeks. But very few miners work all of the six days. In the average weekly | wages are figured on a weekly or an hourly basis, it is | our our in- | ty to build | si 1947 | June, for example, for which gov- | ernment figures are available, the | average work week was 42.9 hours. | Again, one hour of the nine-hour | work day is spent, theoretically at! feast, in traveling back and forth fabor, the Nati. | Lohr Eelations to the working place. That means’ (From Page 1) L.ve support. East Lampeter Twp. — ready to cooperate, interested. very Flizakethtown will establish t either beginning of next 1 or 1947-48 year. Ephrata Borough will carry ourse as soon as increased class- ies are available. interest- Lancaster Township — starting cou conside institution in- add- im now without great 4 t Township very erested, but course cannot be It tart of 1947-48 year. larietta Borough considering lans for starting f 1947-48. Mt. Joy Borough interested in ning. New Holland very interested, vill start course as scon as it can Le fitted inte curriculum. Upper schoo] at Leacock Twp. — high already teaching Leola is program. r Twp. health and phy cal educa- first sprey is to prevent peach leaf brown rot, and control 1 cales. curl, reduce ter ra ————— 4 AMERICA'S WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS an Jose and reunion Veterinarians Study flare Cattle Disease Four dix of Califo 1 College of Agriculture are studying molybdenum poisoning of dairy cattle in the state. Previ- ously studies showed an unsolved malady to be due to molybdenum .in pastures. The area involved covers about 400 square miles around Buena Vis- ta lake in Kern county. Much of cleaning and Iso has| ;| mals more than beef. are affected, and swine and horses occasional cricket shows up around the house, the fly swatter or Grade | AA fly spray will take care of him. | However, the spray is effective only | if it hits the insect. Sodium fluo- ride or sodium fluosilicate powder dusted along floors and around base- | boards and blown into cracks with | hand dusters is recommended also | as a control measure. These pow- ders are poisons and must be kept out of the way of children and pets. Dinosaurs Smart Dinosaurs ruled the earth for more than 100,000,000 years possibly because they were ‘smart’ enough to stay in the shade when it was hot, to get into the sun when it was cold, according to Dr. Raymond B.»Cowles of the University of Cali- fornia, and Dr. Edwin H. Colbert and Dr. Charles M. Bogert of the American Museum of Natural His- tory. The scientists say that there is still much to be learned about the dinosaurs, and especially why they became extinct. Dr. Cowles be- lieves that a rise in temperature may have sterilized the dinosaurs so that they failed to reproduce. Dr. Colbert and Dr. Bogert believe that | other factors may have been in- volved, including a shortage of food and competition between the huge reptiles. — Early Medicines Many preparations common to home medicine chests of early Eu- rope have stood the test of time. Compound benzoin tincture was for- merly an English household medi- cine sold under the name of Turling- ton’s Drops; gentian tincture was originally Stoughton's Great Cor- dial Elixir, a popular British home remedy of the 18th century; an- timony was sold as Plummer's Pills; lavender tincture was sold as Palsy Drops; rhubarb was first marketed as Gregory's Powder; senna was known as a home remedy of the early 1700s under the name of Daffy’s Elixir, and magnesium | carbonate was sold in 17th century Italy as Count of Palma's Powder. A res MAKES RIGHT PREVAIL In his last public address Wood- Wilson “The affairs of | the world can be set straight only row said: » firmest and most determined lead and ition of the will to right prevail.” I | make There are 9025 | weekly news; shed in| Everybody in this locality reads the United States. Of these Illinois | The Bulletin—that’s why its adver- h number with a to- | tisers get such excellent results. xas ranks second wit 57 nd New York with 537 is third. EE. A BENEFICIAL ACT The Railroad Retirement Act has een in effect a little more than n during which time 387.- 0 re 0 bled workers and w. dows of road workers have been recipients of its benefits. that while the miner actually works enly eight hours, he gets paid for nine. Lastly, the standard work week in the industry and all time worked over is paid for at the rate of cne and one-half. These are facts —— znd they will come as real people. They indicate that the United Mine Workers’ leadership is not so much concerned with wages and hours as it is with ruth- less and limitless domination of a great industry. is now 35 hours— 35 hours news to millions of CRUSHED Sheep rarely A N Conditions Mount Joy Mills Inc. Rediscovery of Spicer Isles Recalls Early Explorations Rediscovery of the Spicer islands | States began prior to the American | by a Canadian airborne expedition | revclution, and is ene of our oldest | stirs memories of early Arctic ex- | risions of the University ploration when sailing ships first dared the icy waters north of Can- ada in search of the elusive North- west passage. North of Hudson bay and of the Arctic circle, Foxe basin—in which the Spicer islands lie—was named for the English navigator Luke Foxe, says the Na- tional Geographic society. Captain Foxe sailed from England in 1631 on one of the many expedi- ‘tions sent out in the 16th and 17th centuries to find a northern short cut to the trade and riches of the East. Exploring the waters of Hud- son bay and the channels north of it, he showed not only exceptional navigation skill but a sense of hu- mor in some of the place names he left behind him. “Cape Wolstenholme’s Vale,” Foxe explained, 0 called because he believed ‘Sir John Wolstenholme will not lay out any more monies in search of this bay.” History upheld the title. In asserting English possession of the lands he visited, Captain Foxe paid respect to his ‘‘dread sov- Ultimum was Ss Great Brittaine,” in such names as ‘King Charles his Promontory,” *‘The Prince his Cradle” and ‘‘The Prince his Nurse.” He called one group of islands ‘““Brigges his Mathe- matickes,”” and his point along Foxe channel “North- West Foxe, his Furthest.” Folk Medicine Ergot, the peculiar fungus of wild grain, is a folk medicine that wait- ed years for recognition. Midwives of Europe had long known that “spurred rye” promoted the con- traction of the uterus during birth. Even the German name for the growth, Mutterkorn, implies a popu- lar acceptance of these therapeutic powers. Finally, in 1807, the wild rye fungus was introduced to offi- cial medicine under its modern name, ergot. tl lil luble Among Louisiana's many assets are 1,800 miles of navigable waterways and approximately 4,- C00 miles of railways. NEE REE Men and Girls Light and Clean Fac- tory Work on Pillow Cases Expetjenced Or Learners High Rate/of Pay A-1 Working Call For Interview at: 125 Mount Joy St. \ Mount Joy, Pa. 9-5-tf { aT N RN OH, GRACE, SOME OF THE BEST BARGAINS IN THE PAPER ToDAY / LETS GO SHOPPING! I'LL MEET STONE} 1946 PRICES FINE DUST AND ALL OTHER SIZES $1.00 HALF INCH $1.10 AT BINS Add 50c per ion for Truck Load Delivery to Maytown Marietta, Florin, Mount Joy, | - 11 and Mastersonville. Elizabethtown, Milton Grove Burned Lump Lime After Dec. 15, 1946 PENN LIME STONE & CEMENT CO. Tel. Elizabethtown 66R4 RHEEMS, PENNA. A eraigns, Charles the First, King of | own turning | WANTED | Bn Se A United States is more than 24 million dollars annually. a UNITED STATES CLOCK MANUFACTURING | Clock making in the United | In 1750 the negroes constituted one-f'ith of the population of the United States. In 1800 the negro the | population wes less than one-ninti. manufacturing industries. The value of Clocks Now Available manufactured in Q Q Q @ | | | | For Passenger Cars, Trucks and Tractors GEO. W. LEAMAN Mount Joy, Penna. | | | | | £5 Ww EA xy 1 o% | bi | | SAVE WEEKLY FOR NEXT YEARS CHRISTMAS BUYING {| CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB A CLUB FOR EVERY PURPOSE Here are the classes from which to choose: Ra 247 = 10c weekly for 50 weeks, totals .........$ 5.00 i 25c weekly for 50 weeks, totals 12.50 50c weekly for 50 weeks, totals . 25.00 $ 1.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals 50.00 Mu $ 2.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals ........ 100.00 [4 5 3.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals 150.00 i $ 5.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals ._____ 250.00 $10.00 weekly for 50 weeks, totals ..._._.. 500.00 4 Know the joy of Christmas giving without i the worry of paying the bills. It's easy to do if youre a member of our Savings Club. By saving small amounts weekly, members have money for presents and other needs! Come in and join today. 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