2—The Bulletin, Mt. Joy. The Mount Joy Bulletin Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901 Pa., Thursday, July 29, find peop'e serving on school Published Every Thursday at No.| boards and in local offices, with- 9-11 East Main St, Mount Joy, Pa. 4 henefit of polities! The trou- : bl us is that we feel that Subscription, per year $2.00 i o thal A o { men SS > Six Months . $1.00 € govern Is same nag Three Months ... ia oe 60 should be left to politicians By Single Copies ......... 05 capable ms engaging in public Sample Copies ......... FR rvice in the same way they will . rve their own business, we will Entered at the Postoflice at Mt. Lot : , ; : make communities like Mount Joy Joy, Pa. as second-class mail mat- ter under the Act of March 3, 1879. wetter And the state and feder- al government equally so. EDITOR [AL yo 1 THE CHEW COSTS When we eat a choice piece of +> + + . 3 _” li Ii 1 steak, each mouthful we chew Some af the naticns politicians A . . costs five cents ar more With are going te learn that it is quite a ' . > i : meat prices higher now than ever, distance, from the political platiorm White H the consumer puts the blame on o the White House. i to the inflation, the meat packer, the ® & © > 5 ‘i Lutcher, the farmer. He himself The Agricultural Department rec- |. . He 4 I i is largely to blame for that five x nd pedi { eicht per- ) nds a re tion eight pe . : ON oi Gero ol } ! ‘nt mouthful Americans have nt in wheat acreage ecause cent I ” ‘ 3 i heceme used to the choice cuts. wre is too uc n hand. t wi f sy ' : there t n V4 : y The sir'oin and T-bone steak is we diffi the price up : be difficalt keep the | Pl ere expensive than hamburger Lere if farmers or ‘h. taere J) gEOW lop Mu and tio many want the steak ee 90 1 : In order to raise a steer that LISTENING BEITER viclds choice cuts, the farmer will How often we turn on the radio spend three years attending it. At merely to pass time, often carry on | the price of feed those years costs a conversation with the air waves the farmer a pretty penny. The as a back drop. What we hear goes | meat racker loses in the in one car and out the other. For- | slaughtering as much us 40 per iunately there are more discrimin- | cent of the initial investment ating listeners, those who tune in |The dressed carcass becomes more and onalyze what they hear. H they | vziuable. The butcher gets the find a program harmful, distasteful, | meat, which in weight includes the they make their protest known to | fat and bones that won't seil. the radio programs, consider the) The lower priced cuts go into result of such, especially te the | hamburger and he takes a loss on vouthful radio audience. They make | this in many instances The tke number, variety, details of ob-| rime cuts then come high. Heart, noxicus programs, known to the | kidneys nd liver ave lots cheaper, | press, the broadcasters, the FCC. [but they aren't favored by the They registered their approval and | myer We want steak. Then recommendation of better will have All of us might listen to its radios with a more critical attitude, help work fer better listening. ® » FLYING FARMERS to pay for it, ® eo 0 HIGH PRICES needs be told that today’s prices and wages are programs. we and | | No one much higher | Fatl it i he [han they've ever been. Why? Be- | father used to worry how xa : : x Lig of World War YL could keep ‘em dewn on the farm, ae The U. S. Gevernment, much un- the youngsters who looked to the mn 4 ye i like England, made the sky the limit rura ) city as a Utepia and that the 3 : a when it came to production costs. life sleepy and slow paced. The | - re | ; During the war, if industry was to flying farmers have put added in-| | hint : : |exist, it had to pay similar wages terest in the rustic scene. Farmer | lor else Se. aviators yearly are adding to their | When the war was over | numbers. State clubs crganized by | 3 4 ithe Government or industry had the | them, are thriving. Not only is Ju-~| : : nerve to try and reduce production | nior interested in this up-to-the- { [costs or wages. minute farm movement but the sea- i i i i i opposite : as agriculturist finds it profit- | Pl te and as [a result wages and prices have been |S caring ever Irstead it was the soned 2ble and his wife, who relishes the | and today there [is no way of telling : since quick shepping triv to the metro- : ye . : . . ust whe or polis, likes it also. Landing fields are : I Hen |hew we'll reach the peak. finding a place midst pastures. 1t | may cause wonderment among the | It seems to us as though industry ay cause wo srment 2 o 3 : : cows, sheep and hogs, but we an [il let the wage earner decide S, sheep & gs, 8 oo : : i i take the flying farmer pretty much I? hat. Today's trend is to wilfully for sranted (Mm eet any and all demands or wage | or gra La 3 : ® 06 : | increase and in turn increase the FAVE AND FORTUNE [selling price of everything. Seme | FAYE AL Nn . an » » x 1 . of 1 Recently appeared on the nation's | ™ this even beyond proportion. the announcement of the That is the only peaceable method John J. Pershing. | te the in history with those | front nage, . : to cope with today’s wage earner. And them death of Gereral We whe : ; : “believe ven me”, raid tribute aged warrior aos down are already squawking. To- gies aown day a dollar deesn’t buy much more the valor, cour- On the | famed before him, for cents worth before vou buy. In forty than age under fire, patriotism. ng matier what announce- | same front page was the oh ment that a former majey cases it buys only twenty-five ren at a forme ajel : : cents werth, Bennett E. Meyers, now serving a| Now we're heading into that re- for country’s principles, iered from the is made by humans and humans are disloyalty fo his has been cash- History jail sentence ; adjustment period and we predict drastic changes after armed forces. ] election. weak’ and strong. There are those | Santa Clauses will die » nat- who can't resist the temptation to|%ral death. further persenal. gain through 98 9 “pull”. There are those who place | BY-PASSING integrity before and above seif. Each | A'mest daily, and some days from man is faced with momentous or | hall a dezen or more sources, the | seemingly insignificant decisions, in writer is getting tre real expression his lifetime. Many of us falter, on that much discussed subject — | stumble er fall. Henor the man who | By-Fassing. carries to the grave his name, un- Since we gave the matter an air- | blemished, untarnished. He is in- | ing last week and our business men deed a MAN. ton Main street learned of that straw ® | vete, it has ninety-five percent. of THIS MEANS US {them up in arms. What they really A suggstion comes from David [want is move business—/NOT LESS Lilicnthal that has a bearing on |—which is exactly what a By-Pass Many | would mean. must duty to by law, country, young men, now give It's just plain common sense that training It when a highway is relocated that all the | | . business on itary the educated people, ears to mil brings forth proposal where, business follows it. How of- locate their after it qualified for en do people build or num- any highway Never. role, should set gside a like ber of years for some public ser- has been relocated? vice, local, state or federal Mr There are a few folks who claim Lilienthal doesn't mean a pari- | congested traffic here. That is true time, dollar a year job, as much |and is due to the fact that passen- as he seems to feel citizens should | ger cars, alter approaching a truck, { public ser- | particularly the larger cannot highway Fecome interested in connected with pass en a two lane ones, vice not necessarily and polities. We have manzgemeni [must awaik an epportunity. But this of civic business, the organizations | condition will be eliminated with a such as Parent-Teacher, working | wider highway, now in course of to improve teaching standards and | construction. sclve youth problems. In line | When the of federal work, there is need skilled professional men. It newly is | Lancaster is completed, there will . : : . . | usually during wartime that skill- | be a3 noticeable change in traffic be- | ed experts in business and finan- | cause there will not be a single cial fields come forward to offer | “bottle-neck”. AH traffic will be their services. ~. We need such able to proceed at its legal speed. men in every department of gov-! Furthermore, when that Dream ernment, In country areas neither | many of the November | On that date many of to- | any- | relocated high- | of | way from a peint east of our boro to you | Highway north of here is completed, | HAPPENINGS es gf L ONG AGO 20 Years Ago I ¢ mated that 5,000 bus. of Lane. Co, wheat wa ld at $1.30 Pe bushel A thief entered the home of Har- cy G. Hoffman, near Rheems, and tole $70 in cash. Penna. Dept. of Highways will viden 10 miles of the Hbg. Pike, between Mount Joy and Lancaster to 100 ft. Mrs. Harry the attic Brubaker harv berries, they sold At Coliimbia meeting, not fell down at her home. Ober, ested 15 bus. of at 20¢ Borough Smith Sr., steps Rheems rasp- and truckers, per box. Council one councilman was present, Mr. and Mrs. H. invitations to the N. Nissly have wedding of to Sam- issued daughter Caroline E. Strayer. and Mrs. the their uel B Mr. entertained B. Spangler Daughters Harvey King's Class of the U. B. Church. Lancaster County Tobacco Grow- ers made a trip to Hartford, Conn. | 28 children and 16 mothers at- | tended the Clinic ing. Rev. Geo. pastors, Well Baby meet- installed Lutheran Lancaster, A. Kercher, two one at the Church of the Redeemer, and at the Concordia church, nut Hill. At a speed contest in bricklaying Patton Trade, Vander- 1,020 bricks in 1 hr. and 40 minutes. hell at Jos. slice laid Ed Ream! John B. | ersford, have rented the arage recently vacated by { Tryon. Mr. J. H. Hostetter, 76 tobacco crops in his life. | When a shipment of “yellow pine lumber” from Pottsville, was found to be leaking, agents discovered 110 | barrels of beer. The Sunday school class taught by Joseph Shaeffer enjoyed an outing at Hertzler's woods. Frank Young is excavating for | his new tire shop and dwelling on | East Main street. Ephrata is considering their ball park to the American Le- gion. { Col. Lindberg made $204,000 dur- |ing the past six months. { Mount Joy Base Ball team will play a series of three games with | Elizabethtown. Neighbors of J. Earl Witmer, near Erisman’s Church who is ill with typhoid fever completed the har- | vesting of his wheat crop. Markets: New wheat $1.30 per Chest- | Two expert mechanics from Boy | aged 88 raised | donating | 1048 Vemma =o (Land and Joyvee of Lebanon: and Mrs. Paul Basehore and Ci J f Jonestown; George Kirst and Miriam and Roger of Fredericks- LUurg er li — BY KENNET! DROHAN The following is a report of the daily temperatures and rainfall in this section from Wednesday, July 21 to Tuesday, July 27. Day Low High Rain Wednesday ........ 63 74 00 Thursday .......... 70 89 22 Friday ............. 89 86 1.57 Saturday .,........ 64 81 03 Sunday ............ 53 85 .00 Monday .......... . 56 90 00 Tuesday .........., 70 90 41 | — One of those B-29's encircling the be, fell into the sea off the south coast of Arabia. There was only one survivor, Cc. M, WEBB & SONS / 122 South Barbara Steet MOUNT JOY, PA. ROOFING — SPOUTING SHEET METALWORK ROOF PAINTING PHONES: Mt. Joy 117-3 (Manheim 211J4 | Electric and Gas Welding Also Spe¢ialize On FARM MACHINE WELDING AND EQUIPMENT Automobile and Truck Welding LAWN MOWER Shy SHARPENING Lover's Welding Shop Delta and Marietta Streets JOY, PA. Phone 289 | MT. Men and Women Wanted '§ Experienced Stitchers Embroidering Machines Helpers, /Spanners and Menders on Embroiffers ring Machines | Sewing Machine \ Operators "| Examiners & Folders High Rate of Pay with Excellent Working Conditions APPLY Mr. Warta Mount Joy Mills MOUNT JOY, PA. bushel; Corn $1.15; 29-31c: | Lard, 13¢ and Butter, 35c. Rheems Water Company, have completed their third wind wheel at {the water supply plant. Devil's grip, an ordinary grip of mild form has broken out er, Lane. Co., 200 cases had devel- i oped.. DR Cr Hiestand Family (From Page 1) of Mus. Paul Georg Kirst. officers Laverne Paul Base- Endicott; in charge Basehore { and Mrs. The fc President, President, Mary Raymond Hiestand. | elected and; Vice | ‘hore; Secretary, Treasurer, Those were: Rev. an present Mrs. W. J. Sayre from N. J.: Mr. and Mrs. Ritner Wayne, Pa.; Mr. Hiestand; Mr. Hiestand, Larry and Mrs. Henry Mr. Dennis Richwcod Men- augh frcm | Mrs. Simon Wilbur Mr. taad and and and Hies- Mrs Janet; Caroylin; and George McFarland, | Douglas; Mr. and and Hiestand and Richard Williams of Salunga; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton | | Druecker, Joyce and Jimmy from Laicaster; Mrs. Charles Green of | Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil | Endicott, Secile and Billy of Clay- mont, Del.; Mr, and Mrs. La- verne Hiestand, Roger and Mr. June, Mr. ler, Gordon Manheim; Hiesta ad, rat John and Mrs. Craig: Paul Mr. Mil- and Mrs. Howard Hiestand and Ray- mond; Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Hies- there should be a noticeable de- crease in our local traffic. All the large thru trucks will use that road | as they do at present between Car- lisle and Pittsburgh. Last but not least. We can see no sane reasen why any one should be- come alarmed if the straw vote was four cr even twenty to one. Remem- ber, some of those voting who op- csed it, cast as many as ten votes per person. Two of them told us in Den- | were | Hies~ and | Mrs. | Albert | all | Leslie | 3 | and Mrs. Jcbn | and Joel of | and | | | | | | { For Agricaltural Use Develgped by the § 2,4D Weedkillers | WEEDONE JCONCENTRATE 48 Originators contains 3 bs. 2,4-D acid equiv- alent per g§llon. The ethyl ester formula off the original WEE- DONE butfcontaining almost 4 times as uch 24-D acid per galloty Sticks rain or shine. Gets those Bar WEED 4 - contains 4 pounds to-kill weeds. 2,4-D acid equivalent per gallon. A liquid amine salt formula. Completely soluble in water. Will not clog spray nozzles. For the easier-to-kill weeds and pre= emergence spraying. | The gallon price of these Low Cost weed- Killers. Compare ) pe actual pounds of 2,4-D equivalent per gallon they contain. Use these powerful weedkiliers in any sprayer FREE Agricultural Bulletin on Request New Low Price Sprayers Available | | XR Paul S. Hiestand Phone 3285 MARIETTA, PA 30: tf 1 00000000000000000000000¢ | | | | | 0 |) ) ) } ) | } J | ) ) ) ) } ) ) ) ) | Robert D. Walker DENTIST ) | Dr. 121 East Main St., Mount Office Closed July 25th to Aug8 Clean Crushed Stone Prompt Delivery at Low Prices Penn Lime Stone & Cement Company PHONE E-TOWN 66-R-2 RHEEMS, PENNA. a as To 1 - Cloister Dairy tee Cream ALL POPULAR FLAVORS PRICES 2 gts. - 95¢ | 1 gal - $1.85 Pints - 25¢ * Now Packed in the new handy two quart box. Flavor of the Month — FRESH PEACH PRICES 1 gal. $2.10 Full Line of | Frozen Fruits & Vegetables | 2Y2 gals. - $5.00 2 qts. - $1.15 ON SALE / | | MT. JOY FROZEN FOOD LOCKER PLANT | | OPEN DAILY 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m OPEN FRIDAY TO 8 p. m. | ASPHALT PAVING DRIVEWAYS - PARKING AREAS - LANES CRUSHED STONE ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN THOMAS BOYD 36 WEST MAIN STREET — MOUNT JOY TELEPHONE For High Prices Let Us Haul Your Poultry Direct Te The City SMALL HAUL ING FE E Paul G. Mumma & Son ELIZABETHTOWN R 1. Phone E'town 171 or 13 Phone E'town 345J5 SHUI HTT i IIIT IIIT THI EAE 0S : LE 3 IIE TTL HE 4 SN 8 WIHT EE The bank’s expense mn handling a checking ac- count can be offset if | the depositor’s loanable is large enough to produce suffi- cient earnings for this purpose. When serv- ice rendered costs more than the income from an account, a charge is necessary. We welcome your inquiries about our services. The Union National Mount Joy Bank MOUNT JOY, PENNA. | | | Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation % | Everybody In This Locality Reads The Bulletin] | Supplee-Sealtest Ice Cream | | BUY A&P COFFEE & SAVE upto 4 12° a pound Mild, mellow Eight OC lock . . « Rich, full bodied Red Circle . . . V igorous, winev Bokar . . . grand by uys at the 1 Ib. price—truly money savers in the 3 Tb A bags. O'CLOCK RED BOKAR Mild & Rich & Vigorous Mellow Full-Bodied & Winey Ith, 1b, c 4% bag bag bag 3-1b bag $1.29 . 87) Ib bag $1.15 3.1b bag $1.24 TN \ SUNNYFIELD FANCY CREAMERY / in BUT ER 86° Prints : / NEW PALK ( NIBLETS son rat) YA & P PURE CONCORD GRAPE { pint € quant < JUICE boitle bottle \' BUTTER KERNEL BANQUET PEAS 3 == 30° NEW, DELICIOUS, ECONOMICAL, JANE PARKER Big POUND CARE MARVEL BREAD 1dc Sc CANDY BARS 2” ~~ 49° er 19¢ 25¢ 1é-02 loaf NT NR NN MASON JARS 65c uu 75c GREEN GIANT PEAS 2 Ur dic FLOUR ts 35 20 69¢ BEST PURE LARD [i 25c CHICKEN-OF-THE-SLA GRATED TUNA FISH =r 350 > ttt” Net” nat? Nii” Natt? er? Snes’ Ni Elberta Freestone Peaches & - 55° 3 Ibs. 28¢ pusnel Basket ______ $4.49 NONE PRICED HIGHER Nn ci Plan to serve these luscious every meal . . peaches wt . home can emough (0 serve ail through the yeas. CALIFORNIA VALENCIA ORANGES § » moh A9¢ HONEY DEWS hi w= 3% NEW 2 Ibs FRESH TOMATOES JERSEY 2 ICEBERG LETTUCE 2 NEW PACK IONA PEAS 3. 29¢ A&P oh APPLE SAUCE 2 . 20 oy cans 23¢ ARMOUR'S CORNED 29¢ 29¢ extra large heads 20 oz cans BEEF 12 oy can 45¢ SALTANA WHOLE UNPEELED APRICOTS 29 oy can 25¢ VEGETABLE SHORTENING DEXO 1b FLORIDA SWEETENED OR UNSWEETENED BLENDED JUICE 3 - 18 07 cans A&P FANCY GRADE PEACHES dic can 25¢ “A” HALVES 29¢c 29 07 can WHITE HOUSE APPLE BUTTER 28 oz jar 17¢ A 83 E. Main St. Mount Joy, Pa. Prices effective in all A&P Super Markets and Self Service Stores 1 i 1 PN Evel