Bulletin, Mounl Joy, Pa,, Thursday, July 19, nn A A “ NEWTOWN oh “TIN THE MANY SMART SHOPPERS WHO i | of = 1 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Geltmacher Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher LONG. AGO { spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs In Mount Joy i Ralph Keith and family in Brun- | ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901 | works TEE | | nerville. and Vicinity BI w————— workings of the de- | Inns a Mis. Howard Witmer and son| Published Every Thursday at No.| mand system of producing and sell- | { Howard spent Sunday with Mrs ’ 1 5 a) , * #-11 East Main St. Mount Joy, Pa ing goods must, in the long run, 20 Years Ago Calvin Ness of Columbia Rl. Dial -3431 | beep wo $2 [hurt all concerned—including the i | Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Witmer and hey year do $1.00 | consumer, Mrs. A. D. Garber has a coverlet | family of East Petersburg visited 11 Three Months 80 | ® 00 made in Mount Joy, by A. Frey| Mrs. Lillian Witmer on Sunday ev- — eee i Single Copies ........ dover oH { To poi : i | dated 1858. ening : — point to the obvious, this » | ‘ ' " Sample Copies ves | country, in company with most of My, and Mrs. Harry A. Brubaker! Mr, and Mrs. Maris Gainor . and uality Meats "My. but that A&P Corn is Wonderfull ET a _| gave a reception for Mr. and Murs. | daughters Ruth of Mt. Joy visited \ Fntered at the Postoffice at Mt. | the allegedly civilized world, is liv a A A | Saag Re Ie ro ita ALSO A FULL LINE OF Joy, Pa, as second-class mail mat- | ing on a war economy. Today's tre-|' Np : 2 Ae ch ‘ a) | iid K 1 ter under the Act of March 3, 1879. imendous national income and An old time Square Dance will} ening, : . ere Fresh Sun ber: Bens pa: N “prosperity” is to a very great ex- be held at Sporting Hill with the | Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Geist and BIRDS (21 | (Ma Mem Pu here - Valle Toros pl tent the direct result of wars—past, | Susquehanna Mountaineers Jug! children and Mr. and Mrs. John Cc . : oad Vola of oo y | present, and potential. | Hand to furnish te age : a. ant boty of Lancaster v bl EARS 1 Q The first new wheat delivered at! visited Mr. an rs. John Miller on : } i Publication Day, Thursday One year after Korea, the U. S.| ae | “Treat your fi ! Mix Copy for a change of advertising {finds itself well along the road to] Gettysburg at 45¢ per bushel. | Sunday. Fruits & egeta €s tering ‘Cor ily to a mouth-wa- " { Poll > . 5: | Visitors duis {8 n-on-the-Cob’ gj oll should reach this office Tuesday. | the garrison state, said Business Prof. C. H. Jaceby, 52, local mu-| Visitors during the past week of | tonight. This golden-kerneled inner a We will not ingertion of | Week in one of its June issues. Mil- | sician, was slightly injured when Mr. and Mrs. George Schoelkoph KRALL'S M t M ket bo Suen ent and delicious od Aes ! ; advertising unless copy reaches | wraps: sv af bo Weis ; whe in ed ar | oung t . 3a : 3h office Be Tater an a. m. | itary buying now is the biggest struck by an auto. J : | and family were Mrs. Victor Fogie, folks young and. old from the We) A Ti ee | preceding day of publication. | single force in the ecenomy. Robert Heilig left for San Diego, | Mr. Harry Fogie of Philadelphia WEST MAIN ST. MOUNT JOY | today! uy some | cont Classified ads will be accepted t0| Between June, 1950, and this| Calif, where he will report to the and Mrs. Roy Gephart of Mt. Joy. BE a a. m. . publication day. | June, deliveries of military goods “iP Crowinshield. | Mr. and Mrs. Harry Witmer of Electric ® NEARBY FULL-PODDED | have doubled. In the coming year,| Messrs. John Rollman and Harry Manheim were Sunday evening g FRE beautiful { visitors of Mr. and Mrs. William and Gas € In | | Haines Also Specialize On EDITORIAL Eo oie a ae. a “+ Lima Bean ward the end of 1952, or possibly | Pass in the Chickies Creek. Gerberich-Payne Shoe Company | Mrs. Earl Shaffer and Mrs. Theo-| FARM MACHINE WELDING 2 - 15° > | the first quaster of 1953, they will | The eRe Cs of today cer- reach te cso doy by | baseball team will play a three- | dore Salter and son Dervin Lee of AND EQUIPMENT | Florida Seedless Lime Yor What com 1 Mi tainly has ample security. It has| present mobilization plans. By then | series with Rohrerstown. | Flizabethtown were Monday visi-| and Truck Welding S Ing, shiny dozen 19 i unemployment insurance, healtie the U. S. will be channeling 20 pe-| Gasoline dropped a cent a gallon. | tors of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Isler| yAwN MOWER SHARPENING Sweet Seedless G Buy a lorge PHC pension | cent of its national output into de- | A large barn on the farm of Chas. and family. rapes thar Gan Ib 29 Beauties, Sa "ALL prices in thro insurance, social security, . : | Saturdz ; od ’ 2 sad what clse have you, but there fense and defense-supporting pro- | H. Gable, near Ironville, was des-' Saturday evening visitors of Mr. Cover's Weldin ho | i ¢ Irs. Daniel Geltmacher were | ave quife a number of them would | duction. troyed by fire of undertermined|and Mus. like to know just where te get gro-| The effects of rearmament natu:- | origin. Fay os Rohe Keita of Brunner-{ pp JOY, PA. Phone 3-5931 cevies. ally vary greatly from industry to] Russell Schatz, town, suffered a| ville, Mr. Irvin: Niuman and Delta and Marietta Streets oo 0 industry. In some fields snch as| fractured skull when his car skid- | daughter Marion and son, and od it a tree | guest Falics wis 7, The old saying ‘it is an ill wind | electronics devices, military orders | ded and hit a tree. guest Falica Lewis of Mt. Joy, and this advertisement ugh Saturday, July 21 Customers’ Corner that blows no one any good’ must The Old Timers ball team and | Miss Helen Zell of Akron. be true. Within the last week we were listening to the radio and heard the announcement of the ten per cent increase on the cost of newsprint. We immediately reached for the aspirin, which, of . course, helped the aspirin business: It seems as though everything is bound to help some one. oo 0 D. A. Haley, president of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, points out some facts. Federal agencies, all along the line will make a de- vout effort to get rid of all the cash left in their accounts . . . . They must spend the money appropriat- ed to every agency, in order that come July first their asking for a larger amount to spend next year be granted them . . . . What would happen if we all spent the last dol- ler we had each year in order that we could start’ with a clean slate? oe 0 TAXES CAN KILL OUR ECONOMY Karl Marx, the fellow who wrote the creed of communism, had some- thing to say about taxation. He said that capitalism. which means our system of free initiative, enterprise and progress, will eventually be destroyed by ‘faxes, taxes and still more taxes. He even predicted that democratic, capitalist countries would, if left to their own devices, finally tax thei: economic systems te death and thus bring in commu- nism. Well, taxation can de just that, if carried too far. The people who are continually fighting for more tax money to spend. even though their preposals may be ex- celient and even though some of the additional tax money might be used to benefit the people general- ly, sheuld take the :Vlarxian precept to heart. Taxes can kill our econo- my. oo 0 CEILINGS DON'T MEAN A THING quotes an officer store chain as saying, not mean a thing”. He went on to explain that observation in these| ar iS again dominating our whole | words: “Most of the goods we sell are below ceiling. When you're try-| ing to unload high inventeries, you worry about prices that will bring] in customers, not about ceilings you | know you can’t reach.” Many other retailers around the country, dealing in goods as varied as haberdashery and automobiles, | expressed similar views. As the Wall Street Journal summed it up, “By and large the merchants re- port that the real control on prices consists of the lofty stacks of goods in warehouses and on store shel- ves.” This situation illustrates one all- important fact—and that is Simply that maximum production and ag- gressive competition do more to put the brakes on inflation than any political controls which have ceeurred to the mind of man. As a matter of fact, under cer- tain circumstances controls can ac- tually be inflationary. They can un- dermine competition—if everyone are taking most of the output now | and in time nay take virtually all ef it. The aircraft industry is 95 per | | the local league nine will cross bats | i at the Union Picnic at Hershey. cent devoted to defense work. And,| Miss Dorothy Baker will broad- of course, a very high percentage of | cast over station WGAL and will metals—steel, copper, nickel—are | be accompanied by Miss Esther | going for military and allied uses, | Baker and the proportion is due to con-| Tne twelfth Perry County Re- union will be held at Cassels Park, | tinue to rise. As Business Week puts it, “Even | Marietta. though military orders are fitting | Mr. and Mrs. Irvin B. Kraybill fairly smoothly into the economy, | gave a birthday dinner in honor of they are putting a strain on man- | Mrs. Silas Stoner and Mrs. Kenneth | power and materials supplies. The | Stuckey. big complaint of defense contrac- wrt. tors all over the country is: We can| CONTROL not get the workers we need to! Protect process the materials we do have.” | The magazine quotes one St. Louis | manufacturer as saying that, in spite of his defense order priorities. | he had to buy materials in the | entomologist of the Pennsylvania | biaek market. It quotes a West! College. Be sure to discontin- and the rotenone one week before not werkers. Tos haven't any | harvest. CABBAGE WORMS i cabbage and related | piants from worm attacks by dust- ing or spraying rotenone or DDT, | suggests L. E. Adams, extension | | Columbia, Mrs. Mr. Harry Hamilton and daugh- ter Pauline of Elizabethtown, Mr. IC harles Wittle and daughter Nancy of Columbia R..D.: Mps. Elizabeth Moyer and family of Marietta were | Sunday callers of Mr. and Mrs. | Aristice Wittle and. family. Mr. Charles Kauffman, US.N. of | Baston, Mass. visited Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Witmer and family Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Witmer and family visited Mr. and Mrs. John Kauffman. of Ironville on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Cromwell and | b | daughter of Florin visited Mrs. Lil- lian Witmer on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Salem Gamber of and daughter Nannie took a motor trip on Sunday to Chesapeake bay. Miss Delores Witmer daughter of | Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Witmer has re- | turned home after a weeks vaca- tion in Florida. et OG ‘Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. Auto Motors STEAM CLEANED Snyder's Welding Shop PHONE MOUNT JOY 3-5635 Abram Gambey VV VV EYES EXAMINED BY APPOINTMENT DR. S. MILLIS OPTOMETRIST 59 N. MARKET STREET ELIZABETHTOWN Hours: Daily: 9 to 1 and 2 to 5 Evenings: Tues. & Sat. 6:30 - 8 ,No Hours Thursday , PHONE: 334J VV VV VV VV VV AAAAAAAAAALAALAL ALAA LA IAAL AAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA WWW 4 4 < 4 < 4 5 4 skills; they haven't any interest. They just stand there.” This man- power problem, in all probability, will be the toughest nut to crack in the long run. It is estimated that | hy the end of the current year a- bout 8800,600 civilians will be needed in defense jebs. A very substantial part of them will have to leave work in what is considered nonessential enterprise and move into the essential industries. | However, few think that severe | civilian shertages will develop, save | in a few specialized lines, unless a big war comes along. The belief is | that American productivity can handle the defense load and the] normal civilian load at the same | time. Many kinds of goods are ac- tually in surplus supply now, as] th recent price wars in New York | and other cities demonstrated. Those wars were largely the con- sequence of excessively large in- | been as great as had been antici- | pated. So, when the Supreme Court A Wall Street Journal news story knecked the Fair Trade laws on the i of a department | head, dealers began unloading at “Ceilings do | Prices people would pay. ventories—consumer buying hadn't At any rate, the sad fact is that Military buying is now running at the rate of $6.000,000.000 la year. It will rise swiftly and sharply. j BE — HERE'S ANOTHER HOLDOUT THAT JUST DIDN'T PAY | | There was a time when pr oduc- | ers grew a croy of potatoes, apples, | onions or anything else, they al-| ways disposed of same. If there was | no demand they made the price s0| attractive that a market was al-| ways available but not so today. | Out in Washington they had al good crop of apples last Fall but | the growers kept the price up so high that the demand blew out the window. Now, in the vicinity of Yakima, | Wash., between 2,000 and 3,000 car- | loads of apples have been dumped |} because nobody will pay 50 cents a | box. During the winter they could || have gotten four times that much. — a Cees GROW COVER CROPS has to sell at the same price. why should any merchant wok his head off trying to do a better job than the competitor down the street? They create artificial scarcities and black markets. They burden all or soybeans sowed this month or disked just before fruit harvest, rye or ryegrass sowed after harvest, A cover crop in the peach or- chard is almost a “must,” says C. S. Bittner, extension fruit special- ist of the Pennsylvania State Col- lege. He recommends sudan grass . hi and these disked early in the 7 What Advertising Does vs When someone staris advertising, Someone starts buying; When someone starts buying, Someone starts selling; When someone starts selling, Someone starts making; When someone starts making, Someone starts working; When someone starts working, Someone staris earning; When someone starts earning, Someone starts buying: An endless chain, so to speak, and the merchant who doesn’t advertise and advertise regularly is doing noth. ing if he isn’t breaking links in this endless chain. | Simply Dial 3-9661 Mt. Joy, and a skiled ad writer of The Bulletin, a newspaper brimful of reader interest—about everything that happens in this community—will be glad to place your merchandise before the reading public. : i > § A VAAN VANS A “Let the buyer beware” is an old saying. Lk But at A&P, we want our customers to have confidence in what we tell them and what we sell them. That is why vou can shop at your A&P with the assur- ance that if for any reason you are not satisfied with your purchase, your money will be cheerfully refunded. If anything should happen to shake your confidence in A&P, we would like to know about it. Please write: CUSTOMER RELATIONS | - DEPT., A&P Food Stores 420 Lexington Ave., New.York 17, N. Y. Iced or Hot ASP "COFFEE Hits the Spot! | Custom Ground before your eyes, for best res sulis in your coffeemaker .. priced for savings, MILD AND MELLOW 5 or 7 11 Eight 0 Clock bag RICH AND FULL-BODIED Red Circle I 1g VIGOROUS AND WINEY. Bokar = 81° White House Evap. Milk 2... 2T¢ A & P Small Whole Bee's or 8c Wax Seal Wax Paper on 28¢ Spearmint Leaves 20c Ann Page Peanut Butier * 33¢ Aan Page Beans Ms 2 Lu 33 A & P Grape Juice 55. 21¢ Si 386 Gold Medal Wheaties 5; 16¢ 75 23¢ Ann Page Cider Vinegar - i Tc Jelly Glasses “ram BT A & P Fruit Pectin ws 0c MASON JARS so. dozen pints dozen quarls 7" 19 8% Ev Rings oka. 86 Jar Baps samco pis. 490 MUSSELMAN'S 20-01 22¢ Pie Cherries NEW PACK tan Keebler’s ear 20¢ Woit’s Apple Juice bos 236 Daily Dog Meal h fos Yukon Club Beverages 3.1.28 ny pas Ginger Als, Club Soda & Assorted Flavors PluY 5c bola deposit RL he Libhey’s Onion Rings "iis" Snow Crop Ora Birdseye Fryers .... V10.cook Hs” $1.54 15 99" "It's A&P for Fine Fideeh Foods! LEMONADE > a we 33 Orange Juice 50% wn 396 vs ngeade " wm 316 Another ASP #7 Summertime Value! RITZ CRACKERS | vib 30° Vg : ene or f BAKERY, TREATS , = on, 7 Extra Fine White Siiced wr re NE 7, i -0z Potato Chips Ail ves 136 vos 25¢ Angel Food Rings 2 39 ks Pound Cake “ ih al “ale Dessert Shells a 2 Jelly Streusel Coffee ons i rd r BI CHeese - % FOOD * Bm PRICE 2b gh RED! AMERICAN OR PIMENTO Two tempting varieties of Ched-O-Bit Cheese Food at one money-savs, ing price. Get both for doubly delicious sand- wiches and snacks! SUNNYFIELD FANCY CREAMERY sm ai ny BUTTER 75 wx TT° Borden’s Gruyere slow dish $30 Mel-o-bit Cheese icici ioe $1.01 Mild Cheddar Cheese *53¢ Family Flour 3:5" 5; 40c > T8¢ Mueller’s Macaroni 2, tr 12 Dried Beef 5. 63¢ chimmel’s Grape Jell rd 16 Apple Butter Poa y i nr 19¢ Dexo some wr 326 a 889¢ Rajah Salad Dressing “wu 4Tc Mayonnaise... ici: 2266 456 Kraft's French Dressing... Zi 21¢ lona New Pack Peas on 290 Apple Sauce 8 Qo Ae Yolanda Oil = 68 ‘hE 2.25 Ann Page Mayonnaise Sa 656 Salad Dressing 2) 33¢ = 55¢ Tuna Fish Flakes California io 25¢ Waldorf Paper - 3 wie 386 Campbeli’s Pork & Beans 2 2 Libbey’s Safedge Slasses piv a9 DASH’ DOG FOOD J = 47° Lat — 87 EAST MAIN ST. MOUNT JOY, PA. On Palmyr 5 includin: 2 Dough 2 Daugh Tl mals for E < Fc Auctionee Clerks—H C