The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 22, 1948, Image 2

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9—The Bulletin, Mt. Joy, Pa.,
Thursday, January 22 1948

The Mount Joy Bulletin
Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher
ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901 (
Published Every Thursday at No.
9-11 East Main St, Mount Joy, Pa.



Subscription, per year .. $2.00
Rik eves $1.00
Three Months 60 |
Single Copies 05 |
Sample Copies FREE |
Entered at the Postoffice at Mt.
Joy, Pa., ag second-class mail mat-
ter under the Act of March 3, 1879.
rman
EDITORIAL
+ + +
No man can be a failure with-
cut his own consent.
os @
Many times all that most of us
need for happiness is just a]
change. Bo.
oe 0
At Collingswood, N. J,
cars cantaining 40,000 gallons of
fuel oil on a siding may not be
unloaded because the union pickets
won't permit it. At the same time
families there came mighty near
freezing during the cold spel over
the week end, '
Just what kind of
justice or laws permit such action
is certainly beyond us.
NJ
At present here, is “conclusive
evidence that both Lancaster Hos-
cockeyed
ipifals, the General and the St.
Joseph's are in urgent need / of
more room for patients. On Fri-
‘day there wasn't
‘be had in either one; Both insti-
tutions are jammed with patients
‘overflowing into ccrridors and
some semi-gmergen¥y cases’ wait -
‘ing for admittance,
Both hospitals . are making pre-
, parations, to improve the present
conditions ‘and they should be en-
couraged by all, Who knows, you
may be the next person to apply
for treatment,
® 00
ANOTHER HEADACHE
With the rent control law ex-
piring cm February 29, there is go-
ing to be some drastic pressure
brought to bear upon law-maiers
over this bombastic subject. Al-
ready the cry of the renter is be-
ing heard through the land
since there are «five tenants to
every landlord, the rent control
topic is a noisy issue. Since votes
are especially interesting things,
in a presidential year, there will
be heated discussion for rent
legislation. Landlords contribute to
the ballot-
a single bed fo |
and
, also. It appears to |


$5,600.000,000
Grayhill
veto the
bill, whether
hold two offices, the
scrap between the Arabs and the
Jews, ete, and a little local
troversy is certainly welcomed at
threat to
tax cutting
Dichm can
this time.
® oo 0
MISTAKEN COMPARISONS
It may be human nature to com-
pare current commodity prices
with prevailing in 1939 or
| 1940 and conclude that we are now
| being robbed, But it isn't
| economies. It would be equally
| to compare 1940 prices
| with 1840 prices and conclude that
those
sound
| costs have been extortionate for
| decades,
| Another fzllacy is to compare
the conditions which followed
| World War I with those which |
| followed World War I or some |
tank | previous conflict, and to attempt |
| to draw exact parallels. As one of
i the greatest historians said, “Noth-
| ing is permanent but change,’
| and what happened in 1920 and
the succeeding years won't neces-
| sarily happen again. History may
| repeat itself in princip'e, but not |
in detail.
Everybody
the buck on
prices —e just as everybody wants
[a low price when he buys and a
| high price when he sells,
{ blindness to the facts of life has
| clouded the whole price problem.
| The working man wants
| food and clothing — along
all-time record
passes
cheap
with
wages. The
at
with a
| er wants
prices —
machinery prewar
along record
{ price for crops. Of course, such a|
Utapia is and
those who dance must finally pay
the piper. .
an impossibility,
lower unit profits than they earn-
ed seven years zgo. Many manu-
factures a similar
Both
report operat-
ing experience,

Winter
many
may be entrenched
parts of the land,
in
and retail distribution are more |
efficient and less wasteful than |
ever before, The present price |
level is the inevitable result of |
! many forces, and is a perfectly |
natural development, regardless of
| what the trend may be in the
| future,
| © 9 o0
WINTER PLEASURE
|
{
but
| studying the calendar and
This |
farm- |
|
| Prices are high. But that doesn’t |
| mean they are artificially high.
The major retail systems, both
chain and independent, report |
production |
for |
{ the countryman who looks ahead, |
the |
| increasing
inflation, the Marshall Plan, hous-
education, anti-trust bills,
amendments to Taft-Hartley Act,
RFC, Fair Employment practices,
farm programs, Universal Military
Training, utilities, reciprocal trade,
ing,
wage-hour law, reclamation, These
we but a few of the issues before
the Congress,
Can expect
to fight for the good of the pecple
rather than to direct their vote for
political Perhaps we
wonder what we can do to express
cur wishes to Congress, that it up-
held our rights, sustain our privi-
leges. We have elected these men
new
we representatives
interests?
by vote. Let us, as voters, ask
that log-rolling, bartering, wanton
spending, personal ambition be
| by-passed at this critical time, for
| courage, in the name of Liberty
and Democracy.
oo 00
ADVANCE NOTICE
| Home dressmakers have to in-
| crezse yardage when buying ma-
terial to make a dress with the
New Look. Where it used to take
3 and 1-2 yards for a simple sport
| frock, a dress with the longer
length and full, swirl skirt, requires
| about 5 yards of material, Conse-
manufacturer of
his pencil
higher
prices
for full
an in-
pur-
be
want
| quently, the
dresses is sharpenihg
predicts that, with
costs, higher fabric
new styles calling
women may expect
in spring wardrobe
| chases. One note that might
stressed by husbands, who
| to. keep the bank balance alive, is
| that one of the ladies listed among
the “Ten Best Dressed Women ‘in
the U, S.”, has ‘bought
only one new dress the past year.
| and
labor
| and
lines,
| crease
says she
i 00
| RATIONING WOULD NOT
PRODUCE MORE OIL
| The proposal for the government
| to again be given authority
| ration and fix the price of gasoline
| in na way solve the oil
| problem and would, to the con-
| trary, it. That opinion
was recently expressed by the top
exccutive of one of the country’s
principal «il companies,
No matter how well-meant they
may be, government efforts to
“divide shortages fairly” will
| produce a sing'e extra gallon of
oil. They will only disccurage the
processes of free competi-
would
intensify
not
{
noimal
in which 34.000 oil companies
with each other
[ tion
| are now vying
| trying to keep up with the great-
| est demand fur oil products in all
history.
| © The magnitude of
| dustry’s echievements
widely known as it deserves to be.
The end of the war, instead
bringing the exppcted decline in
oil in-
not as
the
is
of
for oil, brought an ever-
The
is producing more oil products
| demand
demand. industry
and better quality oil produces —
than before, The shortages
which have occurred have been
to
(the docket when subjects arise as: | Yas
% ter.

HAPPENINGS
ese Of rs
LONG AGO
20 Years Ago
Carist Charles
dime in change one day that was
dated 1830,
There are now 56 landing fields
in Pennsylvania,
received a
Mrs
for, airplanes
$5,000
cause of lack
are State Farm Products
Mr. John Tyson who conducted
a radio store in the Baker proper-
has discontinued the business.
Edgar KE, Eshleman, was elected
| assistant treasure: of the Northern
be-
at
in revenue was lost
of housing space
Show,
ty
Trust and Savings Co, at Lancas-
John D. Henyy elected
president of the Rheems Fire Co.
John Walmer opened a grocery
was
store in his double house ' at
Rheems,
Governor Fisher announces the
appointment of J. Frank Johnston,
Justice of the Peace in East Done-
gal Twp.
The Lancaster Co., Girls’ Inde-
pendent basket, ball league opened
at the high school gym.
Eli B. Wolgemuth, died
effects of burns, when he
a container of .boiling water over
his- body.
J. B. Hostetter and Song held a
Power Farming ehtertainment, a
the formeyx Market House on New
Haven” St, : | ’
Plans
high school tat
from
spilled
for a $1221600 Sr. < Jr.
Elizalethtown were
approved,
Lancaster County; ‘ rates second
has light
and 71 official head
-
stations, gy
Ny
Mr. Daniel M.. Wolgemuth was
elected president of the Florin
Trust Company. i
Lancaster Fair Association has
set the dates JAugust 21 to 25 for
the fair, *


EE —
KEEP GARDS IN PLACE
machine guards
Howard Bingham,
as
a precaution He
insists “accidents don’t just happen
Keep those in
place, urges C.
extension agricultural engineer,
against accidents,
they are the result of carelessness,
ignirance, fatigue, or hazardous
working. conditions, Take time to
instruct hired help regarding farm
safety with
machinery, After an accident hap-
practices, especially
pens is too late.”
min RE Mohit
SELECT ADAPTED VARIETIES
In choosing fruits for the hcme
garden, select small fruits, such as
Abram |. Snyder, 78,
The Prize Winners And
(From Pace 1) |
Jane Ginder, Mount Joy R2, sold |
» Final 4-H Awards
Final awards the 4-H Club |
classes announced Friday included |
fol- |
in
and nearby winners, as
lows:
Baby Beef Class
Medium weight: second, J¥an
Grayhill, Manheim Rl; fourth,
William S. Endslow, Marietta RI.
Light heavyweight: second, Dave
Neff, Washington . Boro RI; fourth, |
Charles Kreiner, Elizabethtown |
R2; fifth, Mildred Gish, Elizabeth- |
town R2; eighth, Eugene Gish,
Elizabethtown R2; ninth, Pauline
Fspenshade, Elizabethtown R2.
Heavyweight: third: Mervin
Eshelman, Marietta R1; fifth, Wil-
bur M. Erb, Mount Joy Rl; sixth,
Clair Baum, Elizabethtown R3;
tenth, Ira Espenshade, Elizabeth- |
town R2.
William Endslow, Marietta RI,
won third prize on showmanship.
Hereford Class
Lightweight: first, Miriam Esh-
elman, Washington Boro Rl; 2nd,
Warren Miller, Man‘ieim R2; 7th,
Harold Shelly, Mount Joy Rl; 9th,
Charles Nolt, Columbia R2.
to Penn Harris Hotel, at 42c. ¥
Guaranteed Weight - Prompt |

= oo
SIMON P. NISSLEY
MARY G. NISSLEY
FUNERAL DIRECTORS |
Mount Joy, Pa.

GEORGE BOWERS
Announces his Service as an
AUCTIONEER
Phope Mount Joy: 103-J11
Mount Joy, Penna.
CLERKS
Clarence Myers
David Myers |
10-23-12pt |
|
HUMMER |
Slate, Tile and Ashestos Roofing
Copper, Sheet Iron, Tin Spouting, |
Hot Air Heating. Ventilating, |

Ee
Suction Fans, etc. |
34 Detwiler Ave. Mt. Joy
Phone 209-R
Office:
7-17-tf

BEST QUALITY
DEEP MINE LOW ASH |
Direct From The Mines
Colliery Coal
|
|
At Lowest Prices
|
|
Courteous Service |
Delivery -
More Heat For Your Money
PAUL E. HESS

Mediumweight; second, Helen
Miller, Manheim R1; third, Betty
Lamb Fitting Contest: First,
Elvin ..Yeagley, Elizaketatown R3.
A ee A ee ree

(From page 1)
Leonard Mazakas reported that
they learned Snyder was enroute
to a tobacco shed across the road
his house. He was walking
north, in the same direction the
auth wh¥ hgaded, they reported.
“Emenheiser said he stopped im-
mediately, picked up the elderly
man, and rushed him to the office
of ‘Dr, T. M. Thompson,
town, where he was pronounced
dead.
A son of the late Samuel
Leah Snyder, the victim sur-
vived bis wife, Mrs. Fznnie
Sheaffer Snyder, and 12 children.
Earl, Mount Joy;
wife Clarence Ebersole,
Myerstown; Irene, ‘wife of Morris
Grubb, Harrisburg; Mildred, wife
and
is
by
They
Mary,
dare:
ot
of Lester Schildt, - Union Deposit;
and Raymond, Russell, - Orville,
Isabelle, wife of Walter Burris,
Rachael, Ralph, Roy,
all of Elizabethtown,
Also surviving are two brothers,
Samuel, Flizabethtown, and Wil-
liam, Falmouth; two sisters, Mrs.
Millard Weaver, Elizabethtown,
and Mrs. Willis Geib, Phoenix-
and Robert,


berries, currants, and grapes, and
avieties suited’ to local soil and |
condition suggests Joh
U. Ruef. extension fruit specialist |
of the Pennsylvania State College, |
Only small fruits are sulted to the |
ville; 43 grandchildren, and four
great grandchildren,
Driver Exonerated !
At an inquest held Friday eve- |
mag Emenheiser was exonerated.
YL ocorcaer’s jury of six found him
PHONE MT. JOY 249R3
Jane Ginder, Mount Joy R2.
|
|
Mark * Bushong, Columbia R2; 3rd, |
= FLORIN, PENNA
Successor to Clarence B. Myers,
|
|
|
Florin, Pa. |
|
|
10-30-tf

|
 

P
Have your saws filed and jointed
by machine. Mechanically,
precise flling. Saws cut truer,
cleaner, faster. Quicker serve
ice—you’ll like ovr works
CHARLES ABEL .
Milton Grove a.
Ph. Mt. Joy 120R12 |
- |
ITT |
|
|
|
|


WANTED
Men
i
\ y |
|
|
|
|
|
APPLY
|
\ Mount Joy Mills Inc. |
125 Mount Joy Street |
\ |
{
WORK ON
Sewing Machines
a
MOUNT JOY, PA.
7-10-tf
HOW ARE YOUR SHOES "|
DON'T WAIT 706 LONG.
BRING THEM IN.



us tt un resis «the heads of | clock, days seem to lengthen and
legislators the rent control | SUDSCt appears to come a bit lates
pillow, {es January weeks roli by. Heavy
oe caows, sleet and ice and thaws of
MILLION NEW HOMES | the month, don’t promise too mmeh
These ‘hotse hunting, these + 2 sun and gentle wind and
families doubling up in living | Spring, but those who garden are
quarters because of the shortage, | right now dusting off the seed
Were probably encouraged by the | catalogues, ordering new pamph-
prediction that there will be near- | lets, through weather spells cin-
ly a million tinued cold. How the catalogues
new dwelling units |
constructed this year, There is a | CP! the eye as the gardner looks
over the pages
promise that there will be a con- |
tinued low level of financing cost | ion of saving money by enlarging
| the crops
with a serious
to the home owners. However, | for family table needs,
that there is to be no lower build- Came summer and harvest of to-
ing costs for this construction | °c Shap beans, corn, beets,
causes us to wonder, Building | lettuce, peas, carrots, onions, po-
costs high means Price. of rent, | tatoes. Some folks study the seed
“ind cost of Putdiasing would be | catalogue in the heart of winter if
In-progertion tg the high initial for nething more
building price. This is not relief |
for housing unless the average | _
family can afford to pay rents. It | Some are to be planted in February
is pretty early in the year to see and March, When it ys
if such building predictions wil | © the garden in April” there
come true, What we are concerned | comes a vision of buds, of showers,
than a pre-view
of spring in bloom. Order blanks | |
list good seeds, bought early. since
not guilty of negligence.
et ee ee
| MULCH STRAWBERRIES |
Prevent
relative’y minor, have been spotty
and short-lived in nature, and
have been in large part the result
average home garden, he says.


of transportation and sterage diffi- | 153.6 per cent of 1926, injury to strawberry

culties, which, in turn, are caused Even now the margin between | beds by putting on clean wheat |
by shortages of various kinds. demand and supply is small and [straw for a mulch now, reminds C.!
So far as prices are concerned, | could he erased by a little |S. Bittner, extension fruit special- |
the increase in oil prices has been | voluntary effort by consumers to | ist of the Pennsylvania State |

moderate, and generally below | hold down their needs while the | College, The mulch will prevent |
that of cther commodities, The | industry works furiously to pro- heaving caused by alternate freez-
government's own index shows | vide more facilities to enlarge the | ing and thawing, {
that petroleum still costs less than | supply. Rationing would be a TT Th
in 1926 — while the price level | serious mistake in the case of oil | Stimulate your business by adver: |
for ail commodities recently was or anything else. { tising in the Bulletin. |





City Shoe Repairing Co.
about ight aw © 5s the of green grass, longer glimpses of
weekly grocery bill. ia | itl the first meal of “greens”, |
oe | January seems less important |
Inasmuch as this is still a free
‘ountry, we just can’t resist touch-
ing on the much talked about
Lancaster Fulton Theatre episode
of the past week.
It appears a man refused to buy
t 14-cent admission ticket for his
J-year old daughter. He was ar-
rested, and paid a fine and costs
of $23.10,
Friday morning there appeared !
two editorial columns of objec
lions, written by ' persons who took
sides with the man who paid the
fine, in the Intell-Journal, The
majority of the objections, how-
ever, are aimed at Lancester’s
Kepublican Mayor and his men
by a Democratic newspaper,
But what surprised us most of
all’ was when J. H. Carter, editor
of the New Era, came along Fri-
day evening and editorially sup-
perted the police,
| when you indulge in thoughts of |
Spbring vegetables, There the |
hankering to get out the spade |
and hoe, fertilize the ground, pre-
Pare the stakes, forgetting the en- |
suing back
is
aches, callouses, per- |
| spiring brows. Hail to the good |
earth, the longer days, the cata- |
logue gardener.
| ® s&s
A NEW CONGRESS |
What do we want from this |
Congress? Events of this new year |
will be largely influenced by this |
second regular session the |
Eightieth Congress. Theirs is a
full calendar, At a time when in |
flation beseiges the public. when |
common sense is needed to deal |
with foreign governments, when |
huge grants of money are required |
for international purposes, this |
naticn needs directing through the |
maze by representatives who put
of

But to get the proper slant on
this argument one must of course
know that both newspapers are
under the same ownership,
Of course people do tire read-
Ing abemt prospective presidential
the good of the country, the rights
of the Constitution, above the
petty ‘performance of party politics, |
This business of political self-seek- |
ing isi a jockeying around for
Position wpecially noticable in a




candidates, how much money we
should send gy Europe, Truman's
 

There wil

NOTICE! |
| Fruits
for the year 1948 is available for
public inspection on the Bulletin
Board located in the Hall of the
Fire House and Council Chamber
or the home of the Secretary.
By order of
‘Mt. Joy Boro Council
KRALL'S Meat Market
, The budget for Mt. Joy Borough |
30 SOUTH QUEEN STREET |
LANCASTER, PENNA.
|

Typewriters
NEY ord] ED
J.-M. ENGLE
411 EAST HIGH STREET
ELIZABETHTOWN 14-J {
We Deliver l


Quality Meats
A FULL LINE OF
& Vegetables |

West Main St., Mt. Joy

cna



Watches:
| °
Don W. Gorrecht
| Mount Joy
Hamilton
JEWELER
Penna

NT) NN)
268 MARIETTA AVE
id
LAE Py RB |

i


tising in the


Stimulate your
At A&P It’s One Price - -
The Lowest Possible!
Grand-mother salted away a tidy
sum every week—by shoping at
A&P, for the A&P shopping habit
is almost $0 years o'd, And you
can, the same as that grand old
dame. A&P’s one price policy—the
lowest possible price every day in
the week—is nothing new at geod
old thrifty A&P. So, begin today.
Save steps, save time and start sav-
ing pin money at your A&P Food
Stores.
|


A & P Follows the Butter Market . , «
Down 6¢ Per Pound
Sunnyfield Fancy Creamery
BUTTER
I-LB SOLIDS | IN V4-LB PRINTS
. 88° | 89
A & P only sells one quality . .. One
brand of Butter . . . Sunnyfield Fancy
Creamery.


CALIFORNIA IONA BRAND (Sliced or Halves)
PEACHES Redd
to
PINEAPPLE
PURE LARD
: PEAS Reduced
2 17 45¢
2 2 49
lb print ep eB
3107 28¢
- 1s
310 De
2 20-0r¢) Je
cans
Ee
SWEET u
FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE Sule
TOMATO SOUP
CAMPBELLS
A & P FANCY
APPLE SAUCE fede
Ann Page Sparkle Puddings or Gelatin
DESSERT
SALTINES BY
16-02 26
KEEBLER go
Chocolate Stripes by Keebler 6!/5-01 cello. bag 25¢
Reduced
to
A pes DJ
Tomato Sauce wiih
VAN CAMP'S BEANS "5750 Succ vith sp 31.00 con 33
A & P SAUERKRAUT 2 27-0z cons 23e
BEEF STEW 8 & M Old Fashioned 200z can 43
GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS Florida 2 2002 cans 27e
NUCOA OLEOMARGARINE 1-1b print 41
NABISCO FIG NEWTONS Reduced fo
FRANCO-AMERICAN Macaroni
SLICED DRIED BEEF Embassy Creamed
CHIFFON SOAP FLAKES
2 15Y40z cans JE
33¢
large pkg 39g
16-0z can

An Outstanding Veoluel
SWEET, JUICY ELORIDA


pound
mesh
bag

WESTERN
BROCCOLL
17°
FLORIDA EXTRA LARGE 46 Size
GRAPEFRUIT © 4 + 29:
farge
bunch

BRUSSELS SPROUTS Fory | 1b carton 25e
BOSC OR ANJOU PHARS 3 ibs 25e
WESTERN DELICIONS APPLES 3 bs 35e

ICEBERG LETTUOL Cglif. Extra lg. 2 heads 29¢
A 0 PETS
DAILY LAYING MASH
‘Aids Hens to Produce More Eggs
25 lb bag $1.49 100 Ib bag $5.85
DAILY SCRATCH FEED
Here's a Quality energy feed.
Ib bag $1.55 100 tb bag $5.99
bh4lce
hb 44.c
ib 44.c
hb 44¢
Ib 46¢C
ib 46¢
to
Ut

Nucoa Oleo.
All Sweet Oleo.
Durkee Oleo.
Blue Bonnet Oleo.
Delrich Oleo.
Good Luck Qleo.




83 E. Main St. Mount Joy, Pa.
Prices effective Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Jan, 22, 23, & 24.


business by adver



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