The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 11, 1951, Image 2

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S—The Bulletin, Mi. Joy, Pa.
Thursday, January 11, 1951

The Mount
Jno. E. Schroll,
ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901



























































































































P-11 East Main St, Mount Joy, Pa
Subscription, per year .. $2.00
Bix’ Months, seater devs. $1.00
Three Months 60
Single Copies os 00
Sample Copies ......... FREE
Entered at the Postoffice at Mt
ter under the Act of March 3, 1879

Publishers’ Association
Publication Day, Thursday
should reach this
the office
preceding day of publication.
9 a. m. publication day.
+ + 3
A SLAP INTHE FACE
LA
WHY THE STRIKES?
there are so many,
Communistic
those
wha
Jarly :
ploves are .producing
at Iagerstown, Maryland,
walked out Monday.
® 6 ©
fainly have their “trials and tribu-
Jations”. as a real honest Pennsyl-
like individuals, seme ave hit hard-
er than others.
faces a most unusual predicament.
list.
®
That recalls an incident which
occurred right here in Mount Joy
many years ago. We were facing a
veal hot poitical campaign and the
Bulletin began publishing extracts
from the Boro Council
book. Suddenly the record book
was removed from the Bore’s safe
and nothing has been seen or heard
of it since.
® 6 0
OPENING THEIR EYES
Many of you will remember,
particularly our farmers. how the
Government tried to keep demand
and prices of farm crops above nor-
mal by controlling preduction. To
us this always seemed silly.
When a farmer has productive
land he is forbidden
crops thereon.
Lact Friday the government re-
moved all restrictions and this
year, at least, farmers can grow
all the corn and whezt they care
to—provided ‘he Supreme Ruler
provides the rain and sunshine to
mature what they plant.
It is far wiser fo ‘have one ear
of corn or a bushel of wheat in
your bin when yu need it than to
depend on next year’s production.
QO 9 ©
NOT THIS YEAR
In the unually cold New England
states last January, flowers were
blooming ouiside the house while
folks inside wer> busily removing
the Christmas greens. Not so this
year. For those who feel thzt New
Year should be a date when the
seasonal vear is really new. such as
Spring, they had their wish last
been a tough customer, snow came
early and stayed, ice persisted.
But it is not a dead world. Snow
and frost are fresh and new, they
are the cover on the boesk that tells
the tale of Spring. The flowers
that bloomed in January of 1950
were gut ¢f order in the scheme of
things, and 1951 has seen to keep-
ing them in their place until the
proper time. Who are we to argue
with Nature?
eee
HAVE THEY FORGOTTEN
China has seemed to stand. in
past history, as a pacifist nation. a
tries who despoiled her. Fifiy years
ago Russia looted China while
Published Every Thursday at No.
Joy, Pa. as second-class mail mat-| When Borden
Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper
Copy for a change of advertising
office Tuesday.
We will not guarantee insertion of
any advertising unless copy reaches
not later than 9 a. m.
Classified ads will be accepted to
EDITORIAL
. The city of Breckenridge, Texas,
turned hack to the U. .S. $750,000 | 2 snappy sale. Imagine carrying a
of already allocated Federal hous-
ing funds and asked that the money
be used to “arm our men to fight.”
We really can’t understand why
many labor
strices thrueut the country, Could
representatives have
crept in. at these places? Surely
true Americans would nst think of
striking at a time like this particu-
4500 Air Force em-
.thé
C-119 Packet fr the Government
they
Fire Companies and firemen cer-
vania Dutchman remarked, but,
The Brickerville Fire Co. surely
Some one stole the membership
minute | S$
January. This winter weather has |
i seien reser wi on Former Ol Tanks
| Eushels, and the grain elevator was
Joy Bulletin
Editor and Publisher

cites China to war with us, China
lights the only friend she had
‘| aming nations, The Chinese should
| take a refresher course in history,
to recall the past and remember
the robber Russians, those who now
call themselves saviors.
® 00
AMERICA SINGS
invented conden-
, | fed milk in January 1874, little did
he think the day would come when
| Elsie would talk, a much later in-
vention of radio and television.
Elsie will probably soon sing, ev-
erybedy else is! Yeu just can’t get
away from advertising songs. They
sell soap and cigarettes, chewing
gum and beauty lotions, beer and
scouring powder. We wouldn't be
surprised to find the butcher and
baker greeting us in the shop with
a singing commercial, the plumber
and milkman offering a tuneful
earful of their brand, the news-
bey and haberdasher bursting in-
to a snappy number, all based on
the premise that a catchy air makes
tune so far that a motorman sings
the station stops, the postman bass-
oes a profundo as he delivers the
mail, the power company sends
tested tenors to read the meter.
Hosten, James, my throat gargle
and spray, that I may raise my
voice in song.
® 00
ON OUR OWN
The matter with voluntary con-
trols is human nature. Why didn’t
the government begin earlier to
impose mandatory controls, asks a
local critic? Maybe capable men
needed at such a time are difficult
to. lure to Washington, to take on
Hard, thankless jobs that are un-
steady, pay low salaries, are open
to constant, severe political attack.
Anyhow, we are now asked, as pa-
triotic folk to voluntarily refrain
from charging too much. paying
too much, buying too much. Self-
controlled, duty bound, civie-mind-
ed citizenry ‘would make an ideal
situation but, unfortunately, the
plan didn’t work when voluntary
price control was tried during
World War II, and human nature
hasn't changed since then. It did
not work at the time of the Civil
War when voluntary enlistment,
with an inducement of cash bonus-
didn’t appeal and finally the
draft system was inaugurated.
It is the same old story over
egain, to hold the excess demand
over the limited supply, to make
a s'zble price level. Voluntary or
mandatory, the control may restrain |
or dam inflation, but the pressure |
is still there. Taxes and credit con-
trols are used to reduce the con- |
| sumer’s démand fer goods. This is
hateful to us but is a necessary |
measure to reduce spending, though |
it lowers our level of standard of |

to produce living. This comes under the head- |
ing: of sacrifices. During wartime, |
sursly price control is not the |
greatest sacrifices asked of us. |
Americans can tzke it, the major-
[ity want it and feel the govern-
ment should have acted sooner.
® 6 0
| FACING FACTS
Weekly more cities are organiz-
ing for civilian defense. By proper
training and structure, with a few
| minutes warning, civil defense can
| reduce as much as 50 per cent the
| cesualties caused by atomic bomb
attack in undefendad areas. School
children are being instructed in
def>nse measures, as horrible as
the necessity is. Ignorance, fear
znd hysteria can take lives as well
es bombs, Adults should learn facts.
Fer instance, within a radius of
one-half mile of the point beneath
on atomic explosion there would
Fe complete destruction, window
| breakage for eight miles, within
| two miles nylon hose would dis-
| integrate from the terrible heat.
Within’ a three-mile radius, about
50 per cent of the people would
receive a fatal dose of the nuclear
radiati'n but a large majority of
these would actually be killed by
the blast and hoat before the ra-
diation would have its effect. We
can’t afford to avoid knowing these
things. Such knowledge is bene-
icial in knowing how to meet the
situation should the necessity arise,
which we pray will never be so.
|
|




(From. Page 1)
present location by floating them
on a large man-made lake. The
four tanks alone provide storage
space for 1,000,000 bushels of grain.
In addition to the four large
tanks, eight smaller tanks are being
built with a capacity of 50,000


thus designed and built around
A large 3% story grain dryer has
(From page 1)
comer on one of the routes, or
have changed from one route to!
another call at the post office, fill |
in a change of address card, and |
then you can be assured cf your | ;
Instructions For |
this in mind, and there will never
be a delay in receiving that im-
the box will be a hig help in this |
respect. This is not only a help to |
him, but to you also.
This office is starting a drive for
the purpose of obtaining the cor-
rect names and addresses
trons in the town. If you are liv-
ing in the West Ward, you no doubt
have received a small cblong paper,
which the mail man left at your
box. Take time to fill it in care-
fully, and after you have done this |
hand it_ to your mail man, aor drop |
it in any letter box, or bring it to |
the office. No stamp will be re- |
quired for dropping it in a letter |
box.
|
i
|
of pa-
In the near future, there will be
a drive for
putting complete ad- |
dresses on all letters mailed in the |
town for; patrcns in town or on the |
rural routes. There are many per+ |
sons living in town and on the ru- |
ral routes by the same name and |
initials. This means a delay and |
confusion, and if the mail is of a|
personal nature, some one else may |
receive it, open it and then bring |
it back to the office.
You will be dicing yourself al
favor as well as being a Lig help
to this office, if you will not only |
place the name on the envelope, |
but also the address. By doing this |
you can be assured of prompt, |
eourteous, and correct delivery on |
your mail.
LEGION TIDE OF TOYS
SHIPPED TO NEEDY CHILDREN
The W. S. Ebersole Post No .185 |
of the American Legion wishes to |
take this opportunity to _sincerely |
|
|

vators, grain
grain causes damage and spoilage,
grain must ke dryed to a safe stor- |

thank all the school children and |
people of the community who par- |
ticipated in their “Tide of Toys" |
making it a decided success.
Two large tobacco cases were
packed with toys and sent to Pier |
38, Scuth Philadelphia, to await |
transportation to foreign countries |
in a Legion Liberty ship.
|
In order to assure absolute de- |
livery to needy children, American |
Legion representatives accompany |
the, toys to each country and dis- |
tribute them personally. In this way |
none can go astray, be sold or i
any way received by anyone other |
than the needy children. |
It was through the courtesy of |
the local Grey Iron Casting Com- |
pany that the toys were packed in |
water proof paper
shipping, and any available
filled in with jacks, toy rakes, etc,
from their own stock. {
SH Magnesia: |
for overseas |
space |
—

Everybody reads newspapers but |
NOT everybody reads circular ad- |
wertising left on their door step.
——— el Con + re |
|
|
Subscribe for the Bulletin.


beén installed which can dry a
minimum of 1,000 bushels per howe. |
Because of the design of the ele- |
never need be held |
of drying capacity. |
fact that moisture in
up for lack
Due to the
|



age moisture before it can be
stored. |
ee
y |
| OWL SAY! |
NOT so vast, Mac! a
YOU CAN'T STOP WH
ON A GLIPPE
PINE /






there, the names on the inside of | Loan
oA prayer for |
"A :
HAPPEN
— of — i
LONG AGO
| Gene on his fifth Lirthday.
Association hi:
BY MAJOR GENERAL ROY H. PARKEP
Chief of Chaplain
1,000. shares. of installment stock to
"| date.
Frienidship Fire Co. held its an-
nual banquet Friday evening with |
{ 135 present. |
Russell Cramer, of
{ led the officers of Court Ephraw,
A [re sters of America
|
|
"
1
4
1
INGS
town, instal=

The authorities are looking for |
mail being delivered. If you have 20 Y ears Ago Shlomon Fisher, one of four men
decided to move out of town, or] -s NSP Ar who conducted a clothing store |
off our Ronee - Helens JANUARY 14, 1931 [here and then disappeared.
ou leave, drop in at the office anc : . . . |
pa h Pp se" of address. card. | The American Legion held its| Jacob Swope, Elizabethtown RD, |
ill out a change of address card. : cd i A ay
TI : : il Q t the. {or annual banquet. The membership | fractured both his arms when he
his will assure you o » for= | . I , :
wardis f ‘vour wall t our new totals 51. B. A. Shupp is the | fell ¢ff a tobaeco scaffold in a shed. |
of your mail to your ne y ) .
dd Tho who Hh wal | newly elected commander Mr. pnd Mrs. H. F. Hawthorne |
ress. Se ho ove away, | . mike te wt? 3
and fail to notify the office, the Miss Ruth Kaylor entertained gave a surprise party for Bunley |
only alternative left is to return |the Christian Endeavor Society Ww ker, of Lancaster. i
ER : | Tuesd: svening. Paul Brubaker, 44, son of M. M. |
your mail to the sender, marked, | tuesday evening {ivabaker.; died at’ Readin
| nas Ma | dave rubaker, died “¢ 08 5
“Address Unknown”. Please keep | Mr, and Mrs. Jay Eicherly gave ; : X Bl ;
|a birthday surprise for their son Mrs Peter Zerphey fell and frac-
tured her
ri etl GCI mn
arm,

 


. . |
portant letter ‘you might be léok- | Nathan R. Buller, fish commis- y :
ing for. sioner for 20 years lost his job,| Subscribe for the Bulletin,
This portion is for rural patrons. | Pinchot appointed. Richard Beam- i
If more than one family or person | ish. | 1951 JANUARY 1951 | |
is receiving mail through your box, | John Beamesderfer cf town, sold PA Sy 4 5 6 |
r : . ’ |
place the names on the inside of |P. 'W. Baker of Landisville, 42 : 3 > nor
the lid of your box. When the mail | €ses of 1929 tobacco at 20 cents a 14 1516 17 18 19 20
man has mail for your box, and if | pound. aL ‘ 22 23 24'25 26 27
he is in doubt as to who lives| The Mount Joy Building and 29 30 3i

is sold over
our 1a |
s,-United States Army
7
R Imighty God, the Creator and Preserver of all mankind, we commend
/ to Thy special care and keeping those serving in our Army.
Though they be in tl
angels for their protection. Walk beside them as they go through the
valley of the shadow of death.
Knowing that all good things conte from grant them courage and
loyalty, through a firm faith in (reedom’s cause, in the present
conflict. When sacrif
1e midst of dangers, do Thou send Thy guardian
ices are called for, let them be made in the |
knowledge that Thou art the rewarder of Thy servants. Enable them |
to live valiantly and serve nobly, in the full realization that no man {
liveth unto himself.
wills, and pure hearts free from hatred and bitterness, renewing them
each and every day
who against enthron
Awaken in them a lively faith that will keep them close to Thee.
Enable them to rest
be strong, yet knowing the cause as they battle for the
right, they can never fail Fill their hearts with the assurance
that with Thee noth
for good to them that love Thee.
If it be Thy will that injuries be sustained, let them exper-
ience the touch of Thy healing hand and do Thou bless the means
and the ministries employed for the restoration of their health.
In these difficult times, when. the forces of evil are running
rampant and many hopes seem about to be crushed, fill their
Grant them clear minds, strong bodies, resolute
with strength, like strong men of old, |
ed wrong stood with confidence and courage.
their cause upon Thy Word that though the foe
ing is impossible and that all things work together
hearts with an abiding sense of Thy reality and the certainty of |
Thy continual prese
nce. Enable them to look to Thee when loneliness
and longing overtake them; fulfill their yearnings by granting
them Thine own companionship and fellowship. Enable them to
realize the full meaning of Thy promise, “Lo, I am with you always.” |
Thou who are the Protector and Helper as well as the Giver of
victory, grant unto t
hem every good gift of body and soul and unile
us with them in faith and love unceasing. Amen.
Reprinted from GOOD, HOUSEKEEPING MAGAZIN®








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MOUNT JOY, PA.
Customers’ Corner
The men and women of A&P
are proud of their reputation for
efficiency.
In your A&P everything is set
up to save you shopping time
and effort.
In. all our operations — in the
store and behind the scenes — we
work hard to cut out waste motion
in order to save you money.
Is there anything you would
suggest we do in your A&P to
serve you more efficiently and eco-
nomically? Please write:
CUSTOMER RELATIONS
DEPARTMENT
A&P Food Stores
420 Lexington Avenue
New York 17,N. Y.
NESTLES _ .. AAc
COOKIE MIX 33
NESTLE'S SEMI-SWEET MORSELS 6-01 pkg 22¢
  


GELATIN DESSERTS
AND PUDDINGS
43
GRADE A eo 2850
16¢
{0c
Butter Beans: 5. 3° 26¢ lle
ro ge
83c
Jello & Royal
Mazola Oil home
A&P Peas cui:
Cooked Macaroni
0 & C Potato Stix ol
FRANCO
AMERICAN can
i15¢
22¢
A&P Apple Sauce on
Red Cheek Apple Juice
din Oil wo 18¢
Orange Brink coin wo 19¢
Cake Mixxreer Wii tin cio we: 246
Town House iil
37-01
bottle
BY KEEBLER Te 32¢
Keebler Cookies «sonar vic’ 4T¢
“Junket” Rennet Powder 10¢c
Lipton’s Tea %a¥ © 33¢ 55 88¢
Tea Bags vrovs nv 20¢ 2%, B3c
Lipton’s Soup Mix 3° 35¢
Lipton’s Soup Mix ows 8 7 35¢
Butter Kernel Corn ile
Pilishury Pie Crust we 18e
Ann Page Beans "lic 15¢
Ranger Joe Popped Wheat 5&3 ide
Basseit’s Liguorice “" 5 19¢
Rll 5c Candy Bars 6“ 25¢
Pineapple Juice Toi ond “en 35¢
Grapefruit Juice “256
Mixed Vegetables “> Se
Pineapple Cheege Cake =»: 39¢
JANE
APPLE, CHERRY OR
LEMON MERINGUE
each LYA
Famous Jane Parker Treats:
Potato Chips
Appie-Raisin Coffee Cake
Apple Turnovers
Sticky Cinnamon Buns
Pies

94-01
23¢c °c 45¢
ch 24g
3” 23¢
Pa 33¢

AN OUTSTANDING ARP VALUE
SHARP CHEDDAR
CHEESE
+9"
EAST MAIN STREET
Mount Joy, Pa.




just
C Zuarantee
January 11¢h ced
A January 17. through
grocery prices
Thu rsda eS)
ednesday

Less Than a Cent a Cup
A&P TEAS
Nectar Tea "2c 52¢
Our Own Tea ne 476
pkg 25¢
Uncle Ben's Rice conver ior 21¢
A&P Sliced Beets wo: | Ag
Fickled Beefs “lisesi” 1 196
A&P Spinach GRADE "'A™ 4 160
Pastry Flour 5: ee 19¢
Apple Jelly 286
Chivers Jam or 39¢
Sparkle Desserts Te
Peanut Butter
PILLSBURY
Pancake Flour 5.505%. "is" 33¢
Lake Shore Honey 3l¢c
Wheatena we 30¢
Pilisbury Enriched Farina 15¢
Dried Pea Beans ..; 15¢ 7. 29¢
Daily Dog Food 9¢
Tomato Soup om 286
Marcal Dinner Napkins .
Scot Tissue i
Ritter’s Catsup
Mother's Oats
Daily Laying Mash
14-01
botile
48-ox
6c °. 35¢
os 1412
Daily Scraich Feed bes 1:10



FLORIDA JUICY THIN SKIN
Grapefruit
3-29
LARGE 46-54 SIZE


Red Delicious Apples
Western Crisp Carrois 2°" 19¢
"12
NONE PRICED
HIGHER
Emperor Grapes
New Green Cabbage oi
Macintosh Eating Apples
Anjou Pears Vie priced
Iceberg Letfiuce ut
Assorted Saited fiuis Fong
*14¢
* 10¢
1b i2a
15¢
i15¢
49¢c
NOME PRICED
HIGHER
Diamond Walnuts 2% 1» 39¢
Sunsweet Prunes | 26¢c 2° 50¢
Seedless Raisins 6 » 25¢

[em FROZEN FOODS [Tet]


Birdseye Peas
Birdseye Spinach ns Ofe
Mixed Vegetables #24
Orange Juice 3 2 iu 2Te
Broccoli Cuts © "230
Peas & Carrots 3: ~~ "1 23¢
Birdseye Peaches vs 980
Pia 236
CROP
AP Food Storey
THE GREAT ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC TEA COMPANY
Copyrighted 1931 The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.

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