’ The Bulletin, Joy, Pa.; Thursday, July 13, 1050 | YN — « '§ HAPPENINGS -§| The Mount Joy Bulletin wb gle Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher | LON G AGO ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901 stronger and so “she Rt es Audra A brawn and | weakness | test of comes the Published Every Thursday at No.| Wp under a P-11 East Main St, Mount Joy, Pa. might. So 20 Yoors Ago —— angle. As we see it, is it usual for Subscription, per year .. $2.00 | 4 husband to be a bully that his Workmen have started demolish- Six Months wife should resort to such meas-! ing the old PRR train shed at Lan- Single Copies 05 | ures or usual for women fo be | caster. Sample Copies ......... FREE | hysterical and use such a means| a young son of James Brubaker, ————— —— 0 Yor 1 | to attract an end. Personally, we Manheim Road. was accidentally Entered at the Postoffice at Mt." find Joy, Pa. as second-class mail mat- ter under the Act of March 3, 1879. | most understanding, sensible, practical and Net that they don't use tears new Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper | and then to get their way, but not Publishers’ Assqciation too much of the time, thank heav- 39 | ens. And after all, the menfolk are { *hep”. women shot in the hip by a playmate. reasonable. Lancaster The last toll road in County, New ter gturnpike was traffic July 3rd. Holland and Lancas- opened for free Publication Day, Thursday Pennsylvania farmers killed 80 Copy for a change of advertising | eo 0 deer during June. should reach this office Tuesday. | iow ‘Sg We will not guarantee insertion of | THE KOREAN CRISIS 1 laytown Uni n Sunc ay School any advertising unless copy reaches | History offers a pattern that | Picnic was held at Maple Grove the office not later than 9 a. m.| . i | Park. preceding day of publication. might be a guide in the U.S. policy | Classified ads will be accepted to | of aiding South Korea in ifs war| Wheat sold for 9 a. m. publieation day. | against the Russian North Korea! time in the past 16 years, 86 cents | advance. Taking a more recent per bushel. IT O R 1 A L case, Hitler's aggression, we find he While examining an old musket, E D | was too weak to wage an all-out Adolph Shule of Florin, injured his probed the soft spots hand when the firearm was dis- less than at any | war but he + + o K tow: much | along democratic fronts, using them | charged accidentally. » never knows fF Davwi rp MN fe uh ~ I y the world uml} | as a test to see how far he could go. Darwin W. Pennell fell through vy there is in the Tuva while a Bows crue | There was the Rhineland, Sudeten- 2 hay hole while working on a farm you read some of the charges that] arise in the divorce courts. the remainder of | Put was unhurt except for several He advan- | land and Austria, | Czechoslovakia, Memel. bruised muscles. ® 0 6 Poe 9 cents: od : .. | ced upon Poland, but there found | Markets: Eggs, 22 cents; Lard From the looks of things it |, 000 France and Britain dec- 12 cents; Buiter, 35 cents. appears that the Army, Navy and | ided to give battle, but by this time | Illegal signs posted along State Air Force will be taking care of housing for some Americans before Tong. Highways are scheduled for prompt destruction by the Highway Dept. Arthur Koser was a birthday Hitler had gained so in fighting | | power that he was ready for agen- eral war. typical of the! Mr. 6D pattern Russia has followed. If they | With party at the home Seme men resent having their | were prepared for a general war of Mrs. Simon Ginder. wives ask where they have been | they wouldn't have picked Korea and if they didn't ask, the men | aq their target, but one of the vi- would be hurt because they felt| tal, key cities in America. We 109 W. Main Street the women didn’t care, | desire peace, pray for it, but can| A freak hail ® © we afford to assume a peace-fori- | Section, the TOO DEAR FOR THE TABLE | the-moment attitude. We did not Sirloin steaks are selling at $1.05 | want World War IL It cost us a | pn pound in Chicago. Meat prices | long, hard fight for a not certain | This is honored Sarah Lamperter celebrated her sixth birthday, at a lawn party at her nome, storm struck this stones broke windows, | punctured auto tops, and ruined | vegetable gardens. Someone enjoying rifle shooting are high 2nd going higher, ’tis| victory, whereas if we had put a on the Dump west end of town, is reported. Well, the carcass of beef | stop to Hitler's charging earlier, the endangering the lives in that sec- | tion, isn't all steak, as any’ cook can | battle weuld have been shorter and | point. She can serve some palat- | less blcody. Remember that when| The cf passports to Europe able meals with short ribs, -pot| Hitler's troops went into the Rhine- has been reduced from $10 to $6. roasts, hamburger, and reminds us |land his generals had secret orders | Four that the proteins necessary for the | io retreat if France intervened. pensation will be daily diet aren't neglected in the Any decision this country makes | cheaper cuts. If more housewives |is a risk. Whether it is better to! would use these cuts, the prices of | hold (n to our peace and do noth- steaks would drop. We can’t get|ing about Russiz, or take action away from the T-bcne appetite and | and run the chance of assuring the soup bone pocketbook. When an | peace. We are giving Korea aid: to economist {ries to tell us there isn’t | a certain point. But we are going to an inflational spiral, we think of | have to face the question whether | Council Chamber, . July 14. the price of sirloin steak per pound. | to go all the way, even to sending | : A Lebanon antique dealer eo © in trdops to stop Russia. It is a | $1,006 for a Chippendale TEN YEARS FROM NOW terrible decision, but war is ter- | Public sale. If school population increases | rible in all its phases.’ No man Relizble Silk Mfg. Co. at Col- | 8 more than cne-fourth in the next | wants to make a decision, but his- | umbia was ordered by Court to ten years, based on the national | tory shows us that a decision must discontinue cperating at night, be- birthrate increase from 1933 to 1947, | be made, sooner or later. History | we really will have an educational | pages as ledger sheets of trial and | price local cases, claiming com- heard before the ission this week. Columbia, Telephone Co. pur- chased lines and equipment of the Donegal Central Rural Company. Lancaster Cyunty Tobacco Grow- ers Association will meet at the Telephone | paid sofa at a cause of the noise, Nina? : 1 : Nina” a collie dog helonging to | a 3 pi Sdrah 'B. Hershev viet. E problem. The National Association | errer, checks and balances, debits Sarah B. Hershey, Marietta Rl, for Education advises giving tea- |and credits, | received a citation for an outstand- chers a starting salary of at least] pa ch cB | Ing feat of heroism, performed | some months ago. ———— een $2,760 a year, up to $5000, a single | THE GOVERNMENT SPENT salary basis for elementary, jumior| $110,600660 EVERY DAY or senior high school; that we will | spent 110 have to spend $10 billion in the next ten years en adequate school | 1950, which ended June 30 — and buildings, which means that present went $8,554,000 deeper in the hole construction should be more than | cyery doubled. But we are ai present, | With no shooting war on to hoost mightly concerned with safe-| costs as there is now with the Ko- | 4; dealers gusrding the youth that now attend | yean incident, it piled up a deficit | Two our schools, in spending money to | of $312210235745 for the 12| prizes protect the dem-cracy that unlocks | months. ' the school house doors that repre- | In doing so, ii sent freedom to us. lative debt for 160 years’ operation | pha a prize drawing for those mem. | coe {to $257,376,85528501 — about|} A BIRTHDAY { $1,704.50 for each living American. | On July 12, 1817, in Concord, | —_——— Massachusetts, was born Henry | David Thoreau, a nature writer | N F Fl who saw beauty in ashes, wie | €ws rom orin| believed that every man will be a (From page 1) poet if he can and, if not a poet, | Carolina Ridge Runners and May bid : then he will be a “man of science”. | k2lle Seiger and Her Pals. | rene 2 8. Edward Gable, Thoreau was a poet who has| The annual Vacation Bible School | 1 Sh of the brought us clcser to a purely nat- ' of the Florin Church of the Breth- | rman of the urzl way of thinking, of living. He | ern will begin Monday, July 17, and | found nothing new in nature as Bf to July 28 each evening naturalist, but he knew far more | from 7 to 9 pm. than many natural scientists of Lt Stewart Barr of New Mexico what to make of that which he saw j and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Schmuck | about him. His works are read with | @0d grand-daughter Kathy, of | satisfaction and pleasure, gentle | Annville and Mr. and Mrs, Sidney The government mil- | (From Page 1) { mobile show, with seventeen dif- 24 hours. | ferent makes of cars displayed in | the center of the park ky Lancas- hundred and fifteen cash will be awarded Club mem- bers who register at the park on | lifted its cumu picnic day. In addition there will 's who have secured new mems- bers the past year. For children 12 years and young- er there will be miniature free rides on the and the merry- { go-round, and also ice cream and a toy. railway, Club and general picnic committee, { the 1950 program will be the best | ever staged. The picnic is open to | the public, vited. Members of the and all are cc rdially in- | various picnic Alger H. parking, J. | committees are: baseball, Shirk and H. C. Kreisle: H. Nissley | y; children’s tickets and | and steady words, rough-hewn and | Schmuck and son of Lancaster| re rd a | were Thursday guests of Mr. and H. C. Kreisle and Dean | difficult at times, They may not be | © Alrgclay guesis of Mr. and | Gable; music, F. L. § | practical in todaf’s problems, but | Mrs. B. F. Kauffman. | tainment S "Ed ard Fy eet with such| Mr. Samuel Shelley visited Mr. |" 5, Cable; first. | stings the complacent works as his “Conscience”. We are | and Mrs. Harry Hilsher at Eliza- lifted in walking with him by Wal- | bethtown on Sunday. den pond. Mrs, Lloyd Vogel and three | | es ives verso oo, + LOCH Oil Co. Head | | | i | aid, Edgar G. | show, Dean Gable Hess; automobile EEE ER A WOMAN'S WAY WITH A MAN | tives at Liverposl, Ohio. “Feminine tears have long been | 3 Mr. and Mrs. Merle Buller and | (From Page 1) woman's best wespon and defense, | d3ughter, Miss Maude Buller and | concerns —Schock Independent Qil te move nian to do her will. Family | Mrs. Marks, spent the week end at | | Co, relationship experts say that wo- | Atlantic City. man overusés the forms of her Mrs. Earl Gerlitski and daughter | weakness to such am extent she|spent the week end at Lancaster ruins her marriage. Nagging in- | Visiting relatives. stead of patiérice, instead of per- Mr. and Mrs. Warren Eshleman sistence to show strength in making | ©f Emigsvilie, Mr. and Mrs. James a decisicn, are a fault among many Mumper and children of near Bain- women. Using illness, such as a | bridge visited Mr. and Mus. George | to pay him the $1,000,000 in | sick headiiche, is used so often 3 Mumper on’ ‘Saturday. | interest- free: installments over 22| becomes an unconscious excuse, Mr. and Mrs. George . Mumper | | and a half years. | Refuisitig ‘to make a decision but Er, spent the week visiting Mr. and | He said the only other compaay | forcing it upon the husband, then Mrs. Benjamin Frye and family at | of its kind that he knows of is thei criticising him afterwards, is prac- Aspers, Adams Co., Mr. and Mrs. | Joy Company, which he also creat- | tised by numerous wives, A man | Harry Frye at Carlisle, and Mr. ed and which gives all of its net in- | asks why a woman needs a weak- | @nd Mrs. Clarence Frye at Bridge- | come to the public schools of Mt. | oo Weapon. Men are , phisieally | nort, Perry County, J Joy, SE Crane Hook Oil Storage Co. and Rollman Manufacturing Co. — | i to the new company for $1,000,000. He said the value of the three | | companies was in excess of $1,500- ,000. What's move, he continued, he | made "it possible for the new com- | into three rings. | especially | or a simple dessert. | Dutch elm disease. | what about the | not make the ! facilities. | the gym. flcor i b ut there are { and people are | we could have | peaple to come 3 ® lien dollars a day throughout fiscal | Plans Big Program The Bulletins Scrapbook ! eee Week's Best Recipe: Avocado Circular Salad: 2 avo- cados, lemon juice, salt, salad greens, % ¢ chopped celery, 2 pack- eges (8-0z,) cream cheese, mayon- | naise, paprika, pimiento, lemon slices, Cut each avocado crosswise separate rings and ‘Sprinkle loosen the seed, remove the skin. with lemon juice, ening as well as for flavor, and salt. Place one ring on each garnished e. Combine celery, lemon salad plat one teaspoon enough mayonnaise to moisten, stir blended. Fill with cheese filling, paprika. strips. until well rings sprinkle Decorate with Serve with tops with pimiento slices. Serves six. Keep A-Planting Plant Brussels sprouts and caul- iflower for fall harvest. Early spring vegetables can be planted such as beets, lettuce, later as a fall crop, endive, radishes, When cools, choose a carrots, onions, summer weather vegetable the fall spring end have the pleasure of maturing, Summer Eating Mclded salads are weather, Chilled topped with welcome in warm Combination fruit salads. chiffon fruit pies, whipped excellent warm additions Canned cling peaches are good in these fruit pies. Bluekerries rolled up in a rich dough, weather to meals, scone sliced and - baked in muffin pans, are good as hot bread serve with cream. Elm Disease Don’t overlook the countryside. The easily carried that once it catches on a tree, it spreads rapidly. Often its source of outbreak is unknown. | Try to contrcl it by destroying the spraying others with DDT. © immediately The Advantages of (From Page 1) students who did team? With more sports there certainly should be a il sport that would suit everyone. Thirdly, there would be better Sometimes we cannot use because the chaiis are up for an assembly or play. ome people do not want to see our basketball games because they are | cramped and crowded. Not only are all the seats cn the bleachers taken chairs on the stage, chairs around the basketball floor sitting on the Eleacher steps. In a larger school better ilities. This would enable ‘more In conclusion, we would have a | larger variety of sports, keener competition for positions on the athletic teams, be tter facilities, but | | most important of all there would be a si ort. that would suit everyone, EE Everybody reads newspapers buf | | NOT everybody reads circular ad- | vertising left on their door step. CI Bulletin Advertisers F 0 R eo» Watches-Clocks-Jewelry | And Watch Repairing | Patronize ‘Warren H. Greenavili JEWELER 209 West Main St, MT. JOY OPEN EVERY EVENING SIMON P. NISSLEY MARY G. NISSLEY FUNERAL DIRECTORS Mount Joy, Pa. LIVE and DRESSED CHICKENS FREE DELIVERY BLAIN KAUFFMAN MT. JOY, PA. ROUTE 1, DIAL 3-4929 Twist slightly tol avocado | to prevent dark- | cheese, juice, salt, | | : George H. Brown III lemon | Cream, are | As a dessert, dangerous | It affects thou- | sands of elm trees throughout ‘the | fungus can be so | affected trees and seating fac- | and sit comfortably. | CARBOLA Disinfecting White Paint Con- tains LINDANE, Kills Flies Also ISOT0Z: Dairy Spray HESS BROS. Successors To HUBER OBERHOLTZER JFLORIN, PENNA. Phone Mt. Joy 3-4930 ” ( Thera is no befter way to boost your business than by local news- | paper advertising. HATS MADE and REMODELED ROBERT E. HOFFMAN Special Agent New York Life Insurance Co. Phone 3.5375 Donegal Springs Road MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA DRESSMAKING ALTERATIONS GIFTS Margaret-Jean Shoppe 19 W. Donegal St, MOUNT JOY | et avocado NOTICE To Tax Payers After August lst, a Five per cent (5/) penalty will be add- ed to all Borough and County Taxes. TAX COLLECTOR 28-2 4:00 to 8:00 p. m. Small’s Sea f002% | | | EVERY FRIDAY AT | | THE MARKET BASKET FEATURING OUR OWN Crab Cakes and Cooked Shrimp LOBSTER TAILS—SCALLOPS—STEAMING CLAMS ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. | Dr. M. F. GIAMBALVO Optometrist 39 E. HOURS: Tue,-Thur.-9 a. m.-5 p.m. Tue.- Fri., Sat., 6 p.m.-8:30 p.m. Main St. Mount Joy, Pa. ® Eyes Examined ® Glasses Fitted & Repaired ® Phone 3-9295 Have Your | CAR INSPECTEI NOW PHONE 3 VAN’S ESS0O SERVICENTER 259 WEST MAIN STREET, 3-5671 MOUNT JOY @s9 | Apply | DRY FEMALE HELP | WANTED General Duties In Dry Cleaning Plant Good Working Conditions Good Pay, Full Time Employment In Person | LEHMAN & BOOK CLEANERS Elizabethtown, Pa. 35 W. High St. You have set a pattern — a plan— for your life, and you do your best to follow it. But what about your family's future — do you have a pattern for their security? A: ¢ talk with us about this important problem will show how our service as executor and trustee gi? THE ONAL oy Joy __ MOUNT JOY, PA. AR Bay, 5 2[IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH ‘Member of Federal Corporation =" ' Bakery-Fresh Treats Budget-Favoring Prices! Customers’ Corner When you buy a can of food, you! can't see the contents, | That is why the labels on practically all of A&P’s own quality brands of fruits,’ vegetables’ and juices ‘tell y you exactly what the can contains.’ We tell you the U. Ss, j Government grade. OP q da We, explain i exactly 1 what that grade means. JANE PARKER LEMON Sponge Pie to 39¢ LATTICE-TOP FRESH Cherry Pie tn 55¢ INDIVIDUAL SIZE a ALSO LEM! APPLE, Each [ Pie PINEAPP 9 10 GOLDEN, pres OR RAISIN > Pound Cake « 29¢ ALMOND BRAID RING Coffee Cake 39¢ FRESH TENDER Lady DIXIE RING Each 25¢ Cake INDIVIDUAL DESSERT Shells a% 19¢ We list the uses for which the grade is best suited. In other words, we not onlyfwant you to get quality food at low prices at your A&P, but we want you to know in advance what you're ‘getting for ‘your money. Read the “labels cares’ fully on your A&P canned | foods. If the contents, should ever fail to live up’ to our claims or your ex- :{ pectations,” please let us DESSERT A « Layers Po 25¢ : or YEAST RAISED " Write: Donuts ha 31c ; i hy SUGARED Customer Relations Department, Donuts ns 20e . A&P Food Stores FRANKFURTER OR SANDWICH 420 Lexington Avenue, Rolls ™¢ 15¢ 9, 22¢ ry - 1 New York 17, N. Y. MARVEL ENRICHED WHITE 83 E. Main St. eee — 4 | Bread’ 19¢ FRESH CORN 4 wn De Delicious . . . Golden Kernel, Sweet, Fresh Corn, Treat the Family Tonight. None Priced Higher. CALIFORNIA ELBERTA Freestone Peaches vo: price HicHer 2 ths. 29¢ Cantaloupes “Nour rice wh 25¢ Honeydew Melons: ::::«h 9c ROUND STRINGLESS 2 NONE PRICED HIGHER String Beans ib 25¢ Blueberries wont prices Hones fx 29¢ A&P MARKS PRICES ON ALL ITEMS You can keep track of what yon spend and check purchases with your cash register slip at home . . . thanks to A&P’s policy of mark ing the price on every item. Here's a Big Value! CHED-O-BIT Si: AMERICAN 230 69° Imported Bleu Cheese Cheddar Cheese A&P Spinach lona Pork & Beans lona Tomatoes Cut Wax Beans reuse Iona Corn Xe 23c Lucky Leaf Apple Sauce Tn 27¢ Del Monte Fruit Cocktail Wor 35¢ OR PIMENTO 65¢ mii 45¢ SHARP ble 5: 29¢ 6 21c on Jo 33% IN TOMATO SAUCE NINDNNMNDN lona Sliced Peaches y+ 2 of 27¢ lona Tomato Juice 2 Cx 23 Lipton's Frostee "Wi" 2; 25¢ Wrisley's Soap assommeo 10 2% 5%¢ Reynold's Aluminum Wrap oi 25¢ Feiso INSTANT SUDSER yi 27¢c Keebler's Town House cuckes ne 19¢ Belmont Creme “Riss “he 32€ DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEE 1 Pkg of 4-02 & 1 Pkg of 8-oz 72¢ DOUBLE YOUR MONEY 1 Pkg of 16 53 BACK GUARANTEE & 1 Pkg of 4893 Ene 18¢ Our Own Tea Our Own Tea Bags Yukon Beverages* *Price includes bottle deposit & Penna. State Tax Mount Joy, Pa. All Prices In This Store Are The Same As Those In Effect In Our Super Markets Ty PA. ru incl ing, al YO! Fe bou mor NOY 4 Ti
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers