The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 13, 1949, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    andwork.
ier with
a dust
canapes
who will
make a
sith two
artments,
by a
fited, if
orid, and
Dr what
ange for
17, 26,
vg, (anys
Bulletin

a



a
THES


FREE FREE FREE FREE FREE | A G : D
BE SURE ram vryer
TO TAKE A GUESS AT (From Page 1)
Warren H. Greenawalt ng
WHAT TIME WILL
THE WATCH IN OUR WINDOW STOP RUNNING
YOU MAY
the grain to a point about 5 feet
frog the bottom of the dryer
where cold air is circulated thus
WIN A RENSIE WATCH
by yeur guess on this ad, deposited at our store
during Community Exhibit Week.
cooling the dried grain. The en-
tire operation is automatically
controlled by scientifically de-
INGE: «+= Vrain ens vis vas vy va signed controls, thermostats and an
i electric eye which stops the opera-
BUESS ooo ssn an tion and shuts cff the burner and
Guess Hour Fan oN pe Second ............ sets off an alarm system if for any
reason the dryer is pot operating
FREE FREE I'REE FREE FREE

normallly or in case of trouble.




No damage is ever done to the

= grain because of the low control-
led temperature and every pre-
DRAPES |
BLANKETS
CURTAINS
SLIP COVERS
COMFORTERS
BEDSPREADS
HOUSEHOLDS
WE DO THEM ALL
IN
MOUNT JOY'S
CLEANING PLANT
Eicherlys
caution known to modern engin-
! ering has been taken to eliminate
fire hazards.
Mr. Steaman states that all the
facilities such as receiving weigh
ing, cleaning, conveying and ele-
vation are heing installed to hand-
le wet grain at 450 to 500 bushels
per hour. Should later conditions

warrant it, space is provided to
install another dryer beside the
| | present one.
{ While the dryer is being instal-
! led primarily for drying wheat, it
is the intention of Stehman’s Flow
Mill to dry all free flowing grains.
Mo. I. D. Stehman states that
combined wheat is so mucn differ-
ent from the old way of bindering
| tareshing that a dryer has
equipment.
The management invites all far-

mers and others interestec

| become an indispensable piece of
(
| spect the dryer during the farm
show this week, or at any other

time.

-— — §
| | REE! |
FREE! FRE News Foon Florin
iddies 12 Years of Age and Under | (From pape 1)
Wednesday.
 

 
|
oy Mrs. Emma Peifer visited Mr
TEL i fond Mrs. Abram Engle at Marietta
bro i i who czlebrated their golden wed-
ding anniversary.
Rov. Gerald Marzolf, Maytown
ted Mr. and Mrs. George Mump
i
|
| er on Thursday.
|
|

Pav ENE
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Diffenderfer,
Messrs. A. DD. Garber and George
Mumper spent the week-end at
| Buck Ridge Camp, Perry Co.
| Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Kauffman, Mr
| and Mrs. John Eichler and Katie
| Foreman spent the weekend at
Wellsboro and the Grand Canyon of
Penna. and on thew return home
they visited friends m Orbisonia.
A surprise drop-in party was
Leld on Saturday evening aw the
me of i ind Virs. Jame 5
i Eschbach. Guests were: Vr nd
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hahn of Potts-
ywn, Mr. and Mrs. David Eschbach
PLAY HOUSE Tt
{ ier and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Esch-
|
5 Feet Deep—7 Feet Wide—8 Feet High bach of Pottstown.
Mr. and Mrs. George Mumper and

NVirs. James Eschbach visited Mrs
Ellen Neidigh at Campbelltowa on
On Display At [Bins
MT. JOY FAIR | HONE tS
OCTOBER 13, 14, 15 | Ii Annet
| shed until freezing weathel The
The house is completely insulated with Gold Bond Rock [f|™°Vve them to a warmer place
Wool Insulation, has Hunter Aluminum Windows, has
Fireplace and is wired for electricity.



tt our booth and must be
r guardian. Winner must reside


AWARD WILL BE MADE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15


Capitol Inalation & |
pence i Lo | | READING THE ADS
GRAND OPENING
BOWERS’
ESSO SERVICENTER
Sunday, October 16
3 Miles East of Eliza bethtown
NEXT TO CLEARVIEW DINER 'ROUTE 230
24 HOURS SERVICE 7 DAYS WEEK
TIRES - BATTERIES - LUBRICATION - GAS - ACCESSORIES









DAVID H. BOWERS, Proprietor 3
EB
at 160 to 175 degrees down through
: : : wer
industrial type oil burner, with |

Complete Perma-Stone | My, Horry Hon of NO
| ing logs.”
PUBLIC DELUGES of the bridegroom was best man. | The Bulletin, Mt. Joy, Pa., Thursday, Ocilober 13, 1949—2
A AND P COMPANY Ushers included Donald Ney, Mar-
VOICES DEFENSE
As letters, telegrams and tele-
| phone calls continued to deluge
| stores and offices of The Great Muelicy, Florin; and Warren | . I np
i | Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. pro- | Spickler of Mount Joy RD2. Don- WORK IS PROGRESSING FOR RUMMAGE SALE OCTOBER 29

jetta and Ke nneth Ney of Phila, | ployed by his father, 1950 sct ag a completion date.
brother of the bridegroom; Warren armen srs A ran it

Jeweler A speciaily designed fan driven | testing anti-trust efforts to dissolve | ,)q Ney Jr. nephew of the bride- | THE SOUTHEASTERN BREEDS ! St. Mary's Guild of Episcopal
¢ QT NG INT y a pa he 90 year ‘hain re- ! : | r ; ; \
209 WEST MAIN STREET, MOUNT JOY, PENNA. by a 5 h. p. motor draws the heat be 4 yea: old . food cain i grcom was ringbearer | Work is proceeding on new barns | Church will have a Rummage sale
page advertisement to 2,000 news- Following the ceremony a re- and an administrative building for | en Saturday, October Bi & at the
papers across the country ception was held in Furnace Cha- the Southeastern Pa Artificial | Marke House from 10 a. m. to 5
Good Clean Pasture 2 Hood of of A pel, East Marietta, after which the | Breeding Cooperative to be toca-{ p. m.
and P came from housewives, far- - Oem cons
ted on the new Harrisburg pike at .
1 ( |
Tal mers, manufacturers and labor | coupie left on a wedding trip ni |
telps Pouliry Men leaders, according © the Mrs. Ney i of East | the intersection of the Flory's Mill | QUITE SHORT ON BEEF
according * NEW mes= is a graduate

Home Grown Feeds Why do. unde A he ip Donegal Twp. High School class of road. Pennsylvenia produces about one
: . " To lh } ; is emblove \ o y The icial bre g gro ; aT ha or te 3 .
Cut Operating Cost business? The company reports 1949 and is employed b Donegal The artificial breeding group that 1 a half per cent of the tot al
. : and Conoy Ins. Co., Marietta, Mr. | now has its headquarters in Lan-! live cattic of the country Fat con=
Good clean pasture and plenty of An enormous number of cus- | ’
es bid tmers are telling our store man-| Ney, graduate cf E. Donegal Twp. | disville estimates the cost of its} sum about seven and a half per
home grown feeds for your pullet
crop pays dividends in more eggs,
lower production costs and bigger
agers and clerks that they want | High School class of 1947 is em project at $160,000 with Jun 5th. echt f all meat produced.
to continue to enjoy our low ee - ee
! prices for quality foods
profits. The use of range
ata dit x Farmers and cther suppliers are
Bligh ¢ feeders and barrel | what they can ds to pre-
walercrs *s such a program | serve this efficient outlet for their
rasily possible, products. iT ow
Missouri university tests show | Our 110,000 employees are ask-
that pullets on well-fertilized alfal- ing us to protect their jobs and pen-
fa pa: consumed 17 per cent ‘is il Burning HOME HEATER
Lobor leaders are wiring us all
their opposition to this threat to
ha a Mh labor's living standards.
leed Tor each pound of gain. BIras If all these people will be hurt,
on clean pasture were althier | why then do the anti-trust law-
vers want to put A and P out of
r business?
Q The message quotes these law
1935- 50 1948 vers as saying that A and P Food
1 | Stores “have regularly undersold
competing retailers and continued:
We plead guilty, adding that for
the rast ©0 years, we ‘have con-
I { £3 tantly stepped up the efficiency ( f
: RY us operations in order to give ou
je DOZ BUYS 1 TON | 90 DOZ BUYS 1 TON customers more and more good
cod for tneir money.
As for allegations that A and P's



an birds on bare range.
The pasture-fed

less foc

lets needed less





and more energetic. Mortality rate | lw prices prevent competitors
was lower and there were fewer | rom doing business, the advertise-
culls. Out of 100 pullets at four | ment pointed out that in the last
weeks of age, 94 of the alfalfa- | ten years, 275 rival food chains
| have grown up and some 30,000
individual grccers have gone in-
: to business
tho se raised on bare ground. Pur- Moreover, while A and P h id
gue ..umve tests showed that | 316 per cent of the national food
with corn and small | market in 1933, it had only 6.4 per
grains provided a complete ration | cent in 1948. according to figures
for laying flocks. of the anti-trust lawyers them-
Getting goed pasture and a cheap | gives NEW civic burner (A) balances AUTOMATIC CONTROLS, o¢ course.
If A and P should be compelled
‘anged birds later went into the
laying house, compared to 70 of



Ind RINT
adino clover Vi
New Beauty, too.
i
1d plentiful supply of grain is a

Te tier of putting farm soll in shape | 12 uit: | 3s prices will go up and heat output to actual needs. SAVES FUEL. Combined with multiple stages of heat, plus
BY SY Try Iam son an] he wav will he cleared for the :
» produce bigger yields per acre. | of every otaer efficient NEW real pilot, they assure most comfort with least
For this you need a rotation in |,nq large scale distributor. midget pilot (B) burns for hours
oil in cold or mild weather. SAVES FUEL.

vhich deep-rooted legumes and
aro kovator ¥ou need ti ye on a cup of oil SAVES FUEL
are gceysione. « cc Oo

uild up the organic matter supply W ddin Th I E Designed and proved in Perfection’s own
ia plowed-under legumes, crop e gs ruou heat extractor (C) between fire = :
sidues and mam ‘ou nec ; Research Center, most complete in the
a \anure. You I g to (From page 1) chamber and flue, collects heat that would DTA ple
feed the soil a good ration of plant : > Vou y Davia ) ’
thle ot 5 : a toch with Rev. Wilbur Alli- otherwise go up the chimney, industry. Backed by Perfection’s 60 years


he crops. In such a | am, ferti- | son officiating. E experience in making oil-burning equipment
lizer is an important member of | I. circulating blower (IJ) :
i yw th
he soil-buildiug team. Janet McKain ; for the home.
{not just a fan) puts heat where Its needed
At current prices, eggs will buy | Samuel S. Ney
: ES FJ rite to dor fe » oR |
rly ice a riilizer as Miss Janet McKain, daughter of SAVES FUEL Write today for Perfection Heating Booklet
10 ye 180. It ly 90 dozer | Mr, and Mrs. Paul McKain, Mari-

212 fert etta RD were married Sunday in
Jizor today, whereas ft ook 1000 Fo it Wore ; -
back. in. 1930, Enz. Presbyterian Church Mariet- ip a A rl 74
i ta with Rev. John H. Thompson Gi Jt
| Jr. pastor officiating at the douhle

Rice, in was the

| | ring ceremony. ' 3 . . . \
| Check Work Stock Miss Peggy Rice, { See Perfection Heater on Demonstration During Farm Show
honor attendant and the brides-
| maids were Miss Hazel Miller, Lin 8 3
Miss Marian Ney sister of the i
bridegroom, Miss Evelyn McKain Rn i 0 ge i)
| the sister.
Harold Ney of Maytown, brothei MOUNT JOY. PA.
95%
of all hauling jobs
can be done with






 

) ) 1e 55,000 horse and
i n Maryland farms have
urged te check intake valve Chevrolet
rh {1 the cylinders,




; \diust the carburetor ¢
Tho tern iren’t as mixed as Advance-Design trucks
me might think. Joseph M. Vial,
extensio inimal husbandman, ex
plained that a horse's mouth and
teet nay be co ared to intake
ves on a tractor. The teeth need
to be (just as the intaka|
val o be properly seated) |
if 1 ) meet evenly and let

ihe horse chew his feed properly.
Tust as tractors are troubled |
ith carbon in the cylinders, horses
1 have trouble with internal
parasites. These may be removed |
by any competent vet {
be a better worker

n and



Lit 1
duri he coming summer,
The tor on the tractor ad
just v to the work load.
For is accomplished
by gett tl in proper condi-

tion before the heavy work load
comes. Vial recommends this be
done by ‘feeding the horse a hand- : oo
ful of oil meal with his grain at

Buyer preference shows that in 95% of all hauling jobs,
this time of year to keep him in
: ’ : .
good condition and by giving him there’s a Chevrolet Advance-Design truck that will
many jobs to do as possible; serve you more satisfactorily . . . for more years . . . at
such preading manure or haul-

less cost. The wide range of the Chevrolet truck line—
Other recommendations include: from smart panel delivery models up through specially
“Keep water in his cooling system, equipped heavy-duty carriers—means you get a truck,
keep his tires in good condition by specifically designed to carry the load, all the way un
Bevan wroas oy shod ard see to 16,000 lbs. gross vehicle weight. See us today —buy
en the Chevrolet truck that’s just right for your job.
Farm Record Keepers
Told of “Short Cut” ADVANCE-DESIGN TRUCKS
“It's easier to keep up than to
catch up,” advises Clara Leopold,
extension home management spe:
cialist at the Univ y of Nebras
ka, to the hom 1d farm account
Featuring VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINES ® DIAPHRAGM SPRING
CLUTCH © SYNCHRO-MESH TRANSMISSIONS e HYPOID REAR
AXLES ® DOUBLE-ARTICULA od BRAKES ® WIDE-BASE WHEELS
® ADVANCE-DESIGN STYLIN e BALL-TYPE STEERING oe
UNIT-DESIGN BODIES
According’ to Mrs. Leopold, a PREFERRED BY MORE USERS THAN THE NEXT TWO MAKES COMBINED
ertain time ‘each day should be


record keeper. Another hint, she
says, ‘is to keep a pencil attached
to the account recoras.

ct aside to jot down the daily trans.
Tea NEWCOMER MOTORS, Ine.
Everybody reads newspapers but ‘
| NOT everybody reads circular ade MOUNT JOY, PA. PHONE 3-3111
J
vertising left on their door step.