2—The Bulletin, Joy, - Pa, Thursday, July 7, 1949 The Fi Joy Bulletin Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher BLISHED JUNE, 1901 Eas aaa ES our wonderment. But, as any man knows, it is amazing how very ESTA Publ'shed Every Thursday at No. 98-11 East Main St., Mount Joy, Pa. much can be crowded into a wo- . 1 1 ar men's andbag. They are mu- Subscription, per year $2.00 ith old 1 ‘ r ’ 4 od \ ( ters. © Six Months .. $1.00 cum | es, with old letters, Three Months ....... 60 ceipts, bills, check books, calling Single Copies ...... 05 cards. cosmetics, hairpins, keys, x Ia: Conic: CRT Sample Copies FREE tamps, combs, perfume capsules, 1 vitamin pills, hose to be mended, Entered at the Postofl 1 : . welry appears Yov. Pa. as second-cl mail mat~ | Jewelry to be repaired It apr A ter under the Act of March 1879. that the voung woman on trial the files of the De- Per- fishing ; was carrying Member, Per i EDITOR +“ + + partment of Justice in hers, haps it was one of those creels that the ladies sling over the | A L shoulder of a cotton dress. ® 00 ON AGRICULTURE Agricultural Commi- REPORT nation on In its I'kis is wheels but we certainly report on the get mighty scant | Department, the Hoover mileage (0 the gallon with the pre- | gion states there could be a saving sen! Government spending of S80 a year of unnecessary spending This is pure guess- It is fai ser to take a loss on | work, opponents say, but that there a used ca in than to pay the is great overlapping of services in repair bills that will pile up when | this Department, we don’t doubt. it is resold. I'wenty different bureaus and also EE report directly to the Today a lot of people envy Rob- | Secretary of Agriculture. Em- inson Cruso He had his island plovees number 82.000. Expen- and didn't have to worry about |ditures for the last fiscal year how or where to go in hot weath- | totaled $834 billion, er or where to spend his vacation. There is the case of a Missouri | ® 0 © farmer who sought advice about When vou say that a dollar won't | fertilizing his land. Five differ- do as much as it used to, rvemem- | ent agencies of the Agriculture ber that a man won't do as much | Department gave him five differ- for a dollar as he used to do either. lent Kinds of advice on what! 1 oo oa | fertilizer to use and how to use The U.S. Treasury announced |!t To get away from this sort of ‘ } y issi advise Friday ‘hat the government ended Hung the Commission advises r - : the Feder: lepar > up $1.811,449.047.68 in the red for ¢ Federal department to set up 3 rh state offices to give direc srvice the fiscal vear 1949 ending Thurs- give direct service :. : to farmers, have a co al i cach | day. This is three times than the i 4 a uncil in each | He : arm community to concentrate on deficit forecast by President Tru- dof dhs C trate Rn the activity in that locality. This! man last January. | . : : . ; would give relief to the over-| If the president and his support- 4 ; BP J? - | worked State Agriculture agencies crs continue spending money like J al iq ict who have their hands full. It is | drunken sailors, can you picture | | : 1 . i" oid | suggested the Department of In- inancial condi’ions in the good oc 2 . financ : i . { terior and Agriculture trade on! 1. S. A. a few years hence” A U.S. A a | sume services. Let Agriculture oo © NGI COUTS give up water development except 'OUNGER SCO S : : YO ER S¢ that involving loeal farm supplies An advantage to be given young | i and Interior give up activities re- boys, st rung September 1, i an I2ting to lands but not minerals. oppoi tunity to become ( uh Scouts, There is too much overlapping now Boy Scouts and Senior Scouts, at| oo conservation, forests, and an earlier ge, Cubs can be | ranges, eight years instead of nine, Boy Since 1862 when first formed | Scouts eleven instead of 12 and the this Department of Agriculture has Senior or Exploring Scouts can be | expanded to cover many phases of organiza- with 14 instead of 15. The Ww farming and that which deals with years study, it, Naturallly the tion, alter three advancing of experience with youngsters the years have changed the servic- | plus the approval of parents, find es. With inflation, depression, | lowering age requirements will war, moving and increasing popu- benefit children. This is a fine lation, new kinds of plants and! bey's club, a ‘worthy council lec animals, mechanized farming, the! by forthricht, citizens who build pro nst: ine . . . | upstanding modernization of marketing, | made in the Department. crop had to be Agriculture mising youths into | changes aware of a of their stalwart men, yeuths bili i via But, one ¢ sensibilities and rights . : fhe se: : can become so complicated and in- | brothers the cohlisation of their | ron , 1 ohligations ) . . . { 4 . : . : velved in organization that no part | citizenship, the duties of the just| . e | 3 cf the bureaus functions success- | and ‘he wise. We are respectful sy ee j | fully and efficiently and economic- | Nog of ouy Scouts. | of ou > | ally. | ee mr ei an SMALL SLICE OF PIE | Last year wis an exceptionally | ! machinery peak and d one in the farm Sales hit a ono NEWTOWN business wages and profits were at excel- Mr. and Mrs. John Fogie, Mrs lent levels Charles Neice of Mountville visited One of the largest manufactur- | Mrs. Serena Fogie Sunday ers in this important field had the Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Witmer | sales of £945000,000--the greatest 1 so Ronald were Saturday in its history. It is interesting to | evening guests of Mrs. Lillian Wit- detail just what happened to that | mel maney, and how each dollar of it Mr. John Landis of Lititz, Mr. was spent. nd Mrs. Rufus Landis, of Bain- First of all. 57.2 cents out of each | bridge were Sunday visitors of Mr. | dollar taken in went for materials | and Mrs. Oliver Witmer. f Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Geltmacher | and supplies to other concerns that provided the things it had to have spent Friday evening with Mr. | to carry on its business. | and Mrs. Louis Farlow at Hope- Payments to and on behalf of land i the ecmpany’s employes--wages, Mrs. Martha Orio of Philadel- | social security taxes, group life in- | Pha, 1s spe nding a few days with | surance etc. — accounted for the Mr. and Mrs. George Schoelkopi. 23.9 cents. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gamber of Taxes. Federal, state and local | Manheim visited Mr. and Mrs. | required 4.2 cents. Abram Gamber on Sunday. when all these es- Mr. and Mrs. Adam Fogie and | The balance. : Re : : family of Newville visited Mr. and | { double water, | (about HAPPENINGS a Of wi LONG AGO § aan 20 Years Ago W.D Ketmer, ser. toe raised 1 cabbage weighing over six pounds. Mrs. C. S. Gingrich the Wilhelm Walters Marietta Street tendered by his family at A birthday outing was Rev. H. S. Kiefer, Donegal Springs. The H. S. Bernhart room has been tire stock, Estate leased, dry goods, groceries ete. | vill be disposed of. Miss Laura M. Harley, Springs Road, sailed on the S. S. Stottendam for Europe. 150 chickens were stolen at the! Samuel Zerphey farm, theft in Boy it Hertzlers The second | a year. Troop No. 2 near Scouts camped | here. Hilt and assistant Jno. | Widman had charge of 18 scouts. woods Scoutmaster purchased | property on "NATIONAL PRESS BUILDING WASHINGTON, D. C. Xp 2". By Anne Goode lp — If making a good meringue is one of your bugaboos try placing it on the pie while the filling is still warm, Then | contrary to most rules bake in a hot | oven at 425° F. until brown, Meringue store | and the en- | | Donegal | | | spread | Markets: Eggs, 28-30; Gutter 30; and Lard, 13c. After 30 years service at the Grey Tron Casting Co., Mr. Wm. Dilling- | firm. Mrs. Wm. Strickler, town, entertained 22 members of | the Sisterhood Bible Class. A chandelier of the late Nathan- iel Long was sold for $1,300.00. This week we started to pay a four cent tax on gasoline. Men's Chorus of Evang. Cong. Church sang at Donnallys Mills, i Perry County, of which Rev. Bn man is pastor. He formerly lived here. Mr. Walter Potter, Poet of Le- | moyne, spoke at the Booster Club meeting. Merging of the Bainbridge First National Bank and the E'town Trust Company, become effective July 1. A double-headed calf, had body, four weighed 90 lbs. County farm per- fect sound legs and was born on a York Girl scout troop No. 1, planned a festival to be held in the Park. Burgess H. H. alized for a minor operation. The Bulletin’s Scrapbook ! Engle was hospit- + + + Week's Best Recipe Cereal Crust with frosted ber- ries: 3 ¢ corn flakes or crisp rice | cereal, 1-3 ¢ Crush butter, evenly sugar, 3-4 t cinnamon, combine with Spread firmly for cereal fine, sugar, cinnamon. in pie plate, pat crust and chill before filling. Put 1 unbeaten egg white, 1 ¢ gar, 1-4 c¢ t salt, adding su- water, pinch of salt, 1-2 cream of tartar in top of a Cook nstantly boiler. boiling until the peaks the | continue to | and thick. Ar- drained sliced berries in | Pour over beating ¢ soft mix thickens forming 7 min.) Remove from add 1 t until cool heat, vanilla, beat range 2 ¢ chilld cereal pie crust shell. frosting over fruit allowing to run | between berries. Garnish with | whole berries. Chill one hour be- | | fore serving. { Summer Fabrics Fabrics sparkle, glisten and also | shimmer, though it be muslin, or ‘| sandy, taffeta, dcted Swiss. Iri- discent chambrays, gold threads or woven throug muslins, shimmer- ing dots on voile, make summer | frocks a beauty to behold whether for daytime or evening wear. Strapless dresses are hitting a new high though low! Wear them | | with short, pegged jackets, jackets | of velvet with cotton, jackets of | sential bills were met, was profit. y cotton with silk, etc. Have | And it came to just 4.7 cents—less Ws Wm. Fogle Monday evening, | frosted crgandies full and belted in | than a nickel--out of that typical M na Givens of Middle- black patent leather. Go ethereal] sales dollar. In 1941, by contrast, | toWn spent the weekend with Mrs. | ic cummer profits amounted to 8.3 cents onto Kate Moore Inspirational { the dollar. Mr. and Mrs. Neal Fetzer and ..The Lord thundered from Hea Finally, in 1948, the stockholders faughter, Net, of Olmsted Homes. | yen, and the Most High uttered | of the company didn’t divide up all Middletown visited with Mr. and! His voice. II Samuel 22:14. the profit in the form of cash. Mts. Edward Isler Sunday. ! { They received about half of it Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Senor en- | | The other half went back into the | tertained Mrs. George Moore and | SALU NGA | business for needed improvements, Nes n Monday. | : . . Mr. rs anie ie acher | The point is that even ;m = bye on a Datel ig a The L. and S. Fun to Cook Club | usually good business year the Re 1 iw Pea held its second meeting at East | stockholder generally gets about | Rev. an rs. J. E. Earhart at Centerville Miss Evelyn the smallest cut out of industry's | i i ; Frysinge ssion= | financial pie. ysinger, missiot | Hempfield high school cafeteria. Miss Hindenoch had charge of 00 {ary in San Francisco, Calif, Mrs. |the cooking, having the team make | A WOMAN'S PURSE | BI nche Frysinger of Mount Joy |¢0° kies and cakes while dishwash- The young woman on trial, ac- RD. Mrs. Rehart and daughter, ng ard sing team di thee cused of stealing secrets from the Edith, Mr. and Mrs. Schriber 811d} WOr's. . Depat‘ment of Justice and passing | SOT of Hanover; were Sunday | Mrs. Levi Peifer, Mrs. R. Bru- | | dinner guests of Mrs. Kate Moore. | baker, Miss Cook attended. them to a Russian spy, really must eee A Qt have had a pockethook! With | all the days of testimony, the ar- | CUT ANNUALS REGULARLY ray of names and incidents that Cut annuals in the garden regu- invelves so much intrigue and so | larly to induce them to bloom. If} many persons. that all started with | seed is collected, store it in small, | may the lady's purse, is the basis for | well marked envelope: | big difference, | Next meeting will be held July 19 in the high school. rr AA Ase ee Beinginarutor in a groove sound alike but there is a melted butter, 2 T| | er severed his connections with the | south of | | A { | | | | | | | | stands up much better. . “* %* Ta little bit of steam from the tea | kettle does a lot to refreshen flowers and. ribbon on your summer hat. Re- shape and adjust the posies and bows while they are still warm and damp. * * ' Whether the fish for dinner is brook trout from the nearby stream or a sal- | mon steak from the store around the corner it will taste even better if you real mayonnaise generously on top before broiling. Gives a delicate crust and a delicious flavor. % Right in the washing machine is the way to dye bulky articles like bed- spreads and draperies. Dissolve all- purpose dye in a small amount of hot water. Then strain the dye solution into the washer before you put in the material. Run machine a minute to mix he dve well. , Then go ahead as if to was xR X Have you heard of the new sweet potato chips? Nothing like the white potato variety. Dated with sugar they taste like candy. Or sprinkled with salt they go well with Bevesages. On the market soon. * x For those who yearn for the new closed-toed shoes, yet hate to give up the comfort of the open variety, try the | wall-toed last next time. They have more room than the conventional style. Dr.H.C.Killheffer Optomet ist MANHEIM J 163 S. Charlotte 1%. R Lr Mon. dnes, 9.5: i Tues. 1 yf ey P. M. Tues Fri. Sat, 9:30.1:00.2-5 P.M, ELIZABETHTOWN 16 E. High St. Telephone 24-R DAIRYMEN STOP LIFTING HEAVY MILK CANS Let 7, T-33 Cool Your Milk WRITE - WIRE - PHONE FOR FREE LITERATURE PAUL E. WEBBER G. E. Appliance & Wiring MASTERSOCINVILLE. PA. 211-J Manheim R3. GOLDEN CHORD WATCH BRACELET Look close! The gleaming ands of Spei- 1 GOLDEN CHORD flow and interlace in a stunning Hand Woven Cord de- sign! Giveher — win her with Speidel Golden Chord — strike ingly gift-pack- aged in a lavish Empire box. Plus Speidel’s won- derful new Fash- ion-Change Ends that attach — re- lease~with a flip of your fingers. $Q9 Br Federal Tax Included Koser’s Watch Shop| Dial Mt. Joy 3-4015 Chocolate Ave, FLORIN, PA. 2 aca Come to SLOAN'S for playtime acces- sories and summeriime health and beau- ty aids. Our low, low prices mean EXTRA SAVINGS for you—EXTRA MONEY ior fun in the sun. And we've scores and scores of things you need for a better time of your life wherever you go, what- ever you do. So shop here today—and SAVE FOR THE FUN OF IT! 200 79c Beach Bags $1.00 Playtex Swim Caps 69c¢ Kodak Baby Brownie Fc £2275 urine Rexall Aspirin Good Value LIGHTNING The tremendous energies that are contained in molecule the drugs and chem- icals in our airatory, are every atom of the fury of to insignificance. Yet, al- though these tremendous for- ces are present, in check—leashed. pharmacist handles ily as he and mixes the your prescription in strict ac- cordance with orders. Coty Face Powder $1.00 7 OUT OF 10 WOMEN CHOOSE KOTEX —_— BOX of 12's i Whosoo! A Cream-Oil FOR YOUR HAIR forces and and every Prescription Lab- such as to make lightning pale in- |300 SOFT SMOOTH TISSUES held your they are And hem eas- measures ingredients of weighs, your docior's Add 209 Federal excise tax to Cosmetics nt 68,000,000 of them build a 3 double jrailroad that spans our | ® nation, coast to coast but many dollars, deposited regularly at this bank, can help you build security, and have the other good things you want. CL NATIONAL BANK You'll Say “Best Iced Tea For Me" Yet Many Who Customers’ Prefer A & P Teas SAVE UP TO *Based on National Survey Averages | "1 Corner 3" A good food store must be a clean store, We believe our customers are entitled to top quality food at low prices, served in clean, healthful surroundings. That's why we train and instruct our employees to keep all trays and cases and scales scrubbed and sanitary; to keep refuse and packing cases out of the aisles and off the sidewalks; and to keep floors and grocery racks clean I #1 and orderly. Sometimes during rush Velb periods it's hard to keep a Phy store as neat as it should be. But that's our job, and you will be doing us a favor if you will let us know if your A&P store ever fails in any way to measure up to our high stand ards of cleanliness, Pleasc write: Ya-lb pkg 47¢ Our Own Tea Bags 38 Customer Relations Depuriment, A&P Food Stores, 420 Lexington Ave. New York 17, N. Y. Nearby Golden Sweet Fresh Corn 6 c= 33¢ NONE PRICED HIGHER California Large Fresh Apricots 2 1:23 NONE PRICED HIGHER 30 POUND AVERAGE Neves or Quarters ® 4c IFT, ARMOUR 1-b WOR DERSY pkg 49¢ Va-lb 24c¢ Juicy Skinless Frankfurts Sliced Cheese AMERICAN OR PIMIENTO REFINED Pure Lard i» 15¢ MUSSELMAN'S RED SOUR PITTED ° WATER 7¢ Cherries or A CALIFORNIA IONA SLICED OR HALVED Peaches DRIP OR REGULAR GRIND 23 Boscul Coffee ARMOUR'S cok NED ’ 60° Beef "Hash ue 33 YUKON CLUB {Club Soda! Ginger Ala or Fruit Flavors) lg bot 1 8c REDUCED PRICE ean Prices include bottle deposit & Penna. State tax, Beverages Daily Dég Foo Merron ron tom £3C Oleomargarine tos 31cC “Junket” Powder a 2" 2ic X-Pert Cake Mix 23. eo: 26€ Potato Chips JANE ‘PARKER ts 23¢ oy 45c¢ Marvel Twist Bread 2; a 19¢ Layer Cake Jans Parker Maple Nut Laysr. Two nolden i each 39¢c round layers of Mapis flavored cake. Flilad and topped with flavorfal map crema frost- Ing and chopped toasted Pecans Pabst-ett Spread "ois +S 20 | Phila. Cream Cheese 23 33¢ Baker's Chocolate “ice. ae ITC Educator Crax = 1§5¢ !* 27¢ Phillip’s Tomato Soup oor 28¢ Salad Dressing 0 wm vr 45¢ Ann Page French Dressing bouts 18€ A & P Grape Juice Jo, oe 33C Crushed Pineapple > 0.290 Dill or Sour Pickles jo 23¢ Bisquick ™: 12m mx Te 25¢ Tor 45¢ Chocolate Bars "i>" we 19¢ Mason Jars sore 89C Unt’ T9¢ Zippy Starch i 32¢c i8c bottle one 18¢€ ‘Ann Page Noodles Ann Page Macaroni Sparkle Desserts Melo-bit Cheese Ib pkg 23¢ lb pkg 14e 3 pkgs 19¢ ibs 75¢ 83 E. Main St. Mount Joy, Pa. All prices in this advertisement are effective in A&P store in Mount Joy. PE: TC Th mit any