SThe Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, August 16, 1951 | The Mount Joy Bulletin Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901 Published Every Thursday at No. East Main St., Mount Joy, Pa, Subscription, per year $2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months 60 Bingle Copies 05 Bample Copies ......... FREE Entered at the Postoffice at Mt, Joy, Pa, as second-class mail mat- ter under the Act of March 3, 1879. Member, Pennsylvania Publishers’ Association Publication Day, Thursday Copy for a change of advertising should reach this office Tuesday. We will not guarantee insertion of | any advertising unless copy reaches the office not later than 9 a. m. preceding day of publication. Classified ads will be accepted to a. m. publication day. 9 am span EDITORIAL > + 4 « Thrucut Florida roasted and sweet potatoes ave competing with hgh priced meats on tables. We have possum and ground hog galore, better substitute, those who cannot afford | $1 steak go meatless. ® & 0 After killing a number of crazy | pecple in the attempt, Canada has finally forbidden future rides over | Niagara Falls. Of course we're not much better. Skt i Our authorities never post danger | of various sorts | signs at crossings until several get killed. ® ® 0 Over at Lititz the Council Newspaper possum dinner | But not so in Pennsylvania. | still | but rather than | has | | feat on, | cress the continent, development a- and still leads, | The first experimental rural power [lime was built only 28 ago, | Today 91 percent of all the farms in America have and the great And 89 served by directly led in its years some veeupied | electricity ava’lable, bulk of them percent of the the private over ther | cal farm electrical cooperatives. Electricity cheapest most eflicient the Last year, cost of | amounted to only 1.29 percent of total farm income. And in the mat- private enterprise, are using it. farms are utilities, either own lines or through lo- is the and “servant” farmer has. the power ter of cost, not government enterpr'se, does the job vam VT vn Auto picnic The marriage of Rev. Wm. var | NEWTOWN | HAPPENINGS way Petre, pastor of Mt. Joy Meth- i odist Church, to Miss Helen Eliza- | Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Snyder of | — of — beth Hostetter, of Millersville took | Ne wville visited Mr. and Mrs. Vie- Jace’ Wednesday. | tor Snyder and Mr. and Mrs, El- LONG AGO At the band festival at Ironville, f wood Isler and family. | | tWO Salunga weightlifters gave al Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rollman and | demonstration.” Jake Reiser, lifted | family of Lititz visited Mr. and Mrs 20 Years s Ago 235 lbs, and R. Miller 310 lbs. William Haines Sunday. : The Blue Stone Ramblers will Mrs. Howard Witmer spent Sun- entertain at the Booster Club fes- day with Mrs. Calvin Ness of Col-| A lot of small mouth black bass tival in the Old Tennis courts on ymbia R. D from the Mount Pleasant hatchery Columbia avenue. The Newtown School and Com- were distributed in streams thru 100 persons attended the Shank | munity reunion will be held Satur-| out the country School reunion in West Donegal | Sept. 1st. Howard Simmons Benj. F. Groff, West Main Street, | pownghip, in charge of S. H. Hertz- stringed orchestra will furnish the | has withdrawn his petition as can=| |. the president music. Mr. Alvin Shonk of Wash=| didate for Prison Inspector All bathing beaches and Swime ington, D. C, former Newtown The 52nd Brigade of the Penna ming pools must have a permit for School teacher will be the after- National Guard of approximately operation after September 1st, a] noon speaker. The Rev Charles R. | | fifteen hundred men, camped near! law administered by the State Beittel D. D. Pastor of the Otter-| Newtown. Wien the news spread, Department of Health. {bein E. U. B. Church, Harrisburg | hundreds of people flocked there] phe School Board at Columbia, t Will speak. Entire program will be | a to see the Calvarymen ordered liens placed against 199 announced later. The game protector at Liverpool, properties for unpaid taxes. Mrs. Lillian Witmer and grandson of serving the farm for the least Perry County, has in his possession - Howard spent Sunday with Me. aii | money. On the average, the govern- | hie pu Eugene Raymond, of Marietta, Me Mervin Garner of Wrights- | avi «calle sr=cooperative snc contaminated In jee tea] crested. ih ising} cate .. : : : ments cle seamen 1 Se Deg sof vo reve to vig mph, Gene Shoop nd oF 148 cents per kilowatt hour. have caused the illness of many in es 2h: ng «11 » | children visited Mr. ary Mrs. f Municipal systems charge 1.22 motorists attending the Reading’ 24, of that boro. more Jones of Lancaster Sunday, * a, ¥ And business-managed pow- | but 0.93 that these com- | cents. er companies charge cents —despite the fact | panies pay heavy taxes and the | government systems do not. The job of mak'ng power avail-| able to rural America is virtually complete. But of power is still in its infancy—in the { future, the the | average farmer w’ll consnme ever- Taxpaying free gets all possible | agricultural use farm experts say, increasing amounts, enterprise will see that he at the lowest | he wants, | cost. [ | oo 00 NEW AGRICULTURAL INDUSTRY Back in 1945, The Chicken-of-| | Tomo: ‘row program was inaugurat- |ed. It was sponsored by the Atlantic | | qu'te a problem. According to boro | Pacific food chain, in cooperation | figures they reveal that only one- | with the U. S. Department of Ag- | third of the water pumped last| Its purpose was both! month was paid for by consumers. | and important—to produce | Just what became of the other two | pegter chickens on less feed, and thirds is the sixty-four dolar ques- | thus improve the quality while] tion. ® 0 0 “The control propaganda, over a long peried of years, weakened faith 'n free enterprise spread and free competition. Confidence in | tions joined the our American system of economy has heen sapped by continued bor- ing from within Which is better, te have the has | by propagandists. price | lowering the cost to the consumer. | | "A & P financed a system of a- | wards to outstanding producers of the ch'ckens, and also paid the ad- | ministrative costs. Farm organiza- | program eagerly. | | And the result. according to H. H. Alp, director of the American Farm | Bureau Federation's commod’ty de- partments, is that the program has of a beefsteak advance 10 cents,” or | a whole new agricultural | to have the ceiling controlled at 8 industry. cents, and then pay 25 cents in| jy js estimated that 860,000,600 taxes to regulate the price, pay| meat-type chickens will be mark- | to have the ceiling controlled at 8| ated this year, sabsidies to grain and growers? ® 5 0 HISTCRY REPEATS ITSELF One of the best Dorothy Thomp- son's recent newspaper dealt with the workings of the Of- fice of Price Stabilizatien controls. {Miss Thompson laid special columns | as compared with livestock | (16,000,000 in 1950, and that 75 per { cent of them will be descendents of | Chicken-of-Tomerrow The { annual contests have that in 10] have flocks. proved chickens can now be grown weeks that are larger more meat than were formerly pro- | [ duced at from 11 to 16 weeks. Only and | stress; a few years ago, the farmer's poul- on the meat problem, pointing out try income was derived 80 percent! that CPS policies have caused| from market eggs and 20 percent she-tages in various parts of the| from meat. Last year, eggs account- | ceuntry. ed for 56.6 percent, turkeys 8.5 per Then she said. “Normaily speak- | ‘ent and chicken meat 35 percent. ing, the law of supply and demand | Here is an endeavor whch has influence prices. Where supply ex- ceeds demand. prices fall: where | supply is short and demand high, | they rise. But where a commodity the and consumer. worked out to both producer Mr. | Alp said, throughout | | the country can afford to be ever- advantage of | “Producers which bas become a standavd ar-| lastingly thankful for the creation ticle of consumption disappears| of the Chicken-of-Tomorrgw pro- | from the market, persons outside! gram and to the leaders, the spon- | the market will supply it to those | sors, who have worked so hard to willing to pay. OPS measures have| make it a success.” It is not un-| centributed to bring about short supply and the disappearance of beef ‘nto illezal channels. “You prices ties.” certainly cannot reduce by creating artificial scarci- In the cowrse of her article Miss | Thompsen also ebserved that black market suppliers are buying born bull calves tastically prices. After the] an'mals are raised to marketable size, it would be utterly impossible to sell the meat at the legal ove. So, inevitably, this meat will fow| into under-the-counter channels— and the average family wll not be able to buy it. History repeats itself, and this | time OPS is repeating the history of OPA ‘n almost exact detail. high the black market is back, and is grow- | ing. People are having to go with- out things they want, because they can't find them in the legal market. Productien is beng discouraged in vital fields. That always happens when government runs the econo- | my. oe 0 FRIVATE ENTERPRISE DID THE JOB August 26 will mark the hegin- ning of Farm Electrification Week. During the Week. one of the great- est advances in the history of agri- culture will he celebrated. Power has literally revolutionized life and work on the farm. ‘Moreqver, this week will also be a testimonial lo the spirit and pro- gress of the light and power indus- try, which pioneered rural electri-’ new- | at auction at fan- | | jumped to the corner of the shel-| | in | usual that the program should have | | been sponscered by a big food chain. | | Lead'ng food chains ali over the | country have frequently cooperated | with and other | in campaigns to move crops. Retailing, alter | link between producer and con- sumer, and ‘t has a direct stake in the welfare of both. | — —— | Lightning Killed ( From Page 1) |of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Snyder, Ma- | | rie tta RD; Paul Haller, fifteen, who | | resides with Mrs. Mackinson: | { Flowers, fourteen, brother of John and John Miller, Mr. and Fi Marietta R1. | The a tall locust tree | about three feet from the shed then | produc ers | or improve | all, is the James | son of Lester” J. Miller, bolt struck ter where Stoner was sitting, splin- tering a two-by-four up- | right before striking the boy, police | learned. Stoner was killed instant- | corner | r. Stoner, as deputy coroner, is- I ey a verdict of accidental death. | The victim was a pupil in the 8th | grade at East Donegal Junior High | School and active in the . school’s | model railroad club and: basketball team. He attended St. John's Luth- eran Church, Maytown. In addition to his father, he is survived by two brothers, Donald E. seventeen, Adrian, Mich. and Rénald C. twelve, at home, and his | Mrs, Mr. and Mrs Daniel Geltmacher) spent Sunday with Mr. and Mus. | Ralph Kieth. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Musser of FLORIN, PENNA. Columbia Route 1 Daniel Geltn day evening Mr, Murs and Salunga visited Mr on Sunday Norman evening, , visited” Mr. and vacher on {Thurs- Miller of #. Lillian Witmer BULLER’S BEAUTY SALON Open %00 A. M. to 9:00 P. M, GET YOUR NOW! SUMMER PERMANENT COLD WAVE $6.00 up, Mr. and Mrs, Irwin Witmer en- “Ns | tertained Mr. and Mrs. John Kauff- PHONE MOUNT JOY 3-4330 Maude Buller, Propr. man of Ironville; Mr, and Mrs. John 31-tf Kauffman, of Conestoga at a birth- day supper in honor of their son, ——t Jack who celebrated hig fourteenth Hr E.J.M & So Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Espenshade hg yers ns and sons of Elizabethtown, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fitzkee and family of ~~ WELL DRILLERS -— Mount Joy, were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Frysinger Main Street, SALUNGA, PA. nd Mrs Mr, and Mrs, umbia, R1, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs bia visited Mr. Roy | gie on Sunday. 4 i to the owners of the oldest electric refrigerators in Lancaster Co. Register your “old electric refrigerator in the PHILCO Oi Refrigerator Derby ar LONGENECK Nothing 70 Buy! No Slogans 7 Write! Just eviter your old Electric Retriperater regardless make! Regardless of make or condi- tion the oldest electric refriger- ator being used in a home wins. The oldest entries will be awarded the famous PHILCO Model 1018 2-door Refriger- ator ABSOLUTELY FREE! Come in and register today! ER'S EARL B. LONGENECKER Phone 4111 LANDISVILLE, PA. 30- Of MANHEIM R. C. Robert Fry D. 2, PA. Air Compressor Work Rock Drilling, Concrete Breaking, Etc. Excavating and Grading Cellars, Trenches, Etc. Rocks and Trees Removed PHONE MOUNT JOY. paternal grandmother, Mrs. Clara J 3-4753 \ Daniel Moore. Paul Smith of Col- Alfred Atland and and Mrs, Free estimates and prompt efficient service Barton, of Colum- Wm. Fo- | Phone Landisville 2561 or 2687 | high Al ol 9 WOrk ce ason your A&P is staffed with such wal ber men and women is because: We pay good wages We ofler good hours and working conditions. V/e give our emloyees vacations, pen- sions and many other benefits. We offer them opportunity for ad- vancement when they do a good job. ! these things make A&P a good place and a good place to work is a aood to shop. Please write: USTOMER RELATIONS DEPT. A&P Food Stores 420 Lexington Ave. New York 17, N. Y.. 7 5 " © ERE + ik. PASCAL CELERY CREE FRE tonight. some today!” a 1 ESTORE DEWKIST FROZEN 12-01 a WHOLE RED rllg dm 2 Ke 45¢ 6 Oz cans SNOW CROP FRCZIN N RIPE BANARAS None Priced Higher E PEACHES Fordhoek Limas Lemonade 7 SIROTA 5) sf EA, i A SWEET BUY IN SWEET TENDER GOLDEN KERNEL FRESH CORN “Treat vour family to a mouth- watering ‘Corn-on-the-Cebh’ dinner This golden-ke=neled corn is succulent and delicious and bound to bring forth raves frem the folks - young and cold. Buy NONE PRICED HIGHER YELLOW — NONE PRICED HIGHER BIRDSEYE FROZEN REAL GOLD FROZCN Large Stalk 2 FEAST YOUR EYES ON THESE All Prices In This Ad Guaranteed Through Saturday, August 18th 6.25 lb 13¢ 19c 4 15:29. 12 02 pkg 34 2% 6 ox cans Kotex | DRESSING Sugar Banguet Chicken ® Borden's Starlae RAJAH SALAD THIS IS NATIONAL HOME CANNING AND PRESERVING WEEKI MASON JARS pka of 48 pka of 12 38° 1.41 dexo andres, 320%» 89 Marrow Beans i: 21° Piedmont Pickles "+32: Peanut Butter Apple Juice uw om 15° Grape Juice: Pineapple Chunks >= =v29¢ Jwanee “Wud 2 Ann Page Grape Jam 3°48 Fig Juice wn A&P Sliced Beets =-13¢ -Air-Wick Blueberries warn 529 Letty Lane Pops Tuna Fish “openness Daily Dog Meal Corned Beef = 2x33 Waldorf Tissue 3, hpricot Nectar mov: Evap. Milk ux 2 quart ¢ Pry . oe 9 == 80: risp RE 2°19 Educator Crax :: 18°: 28° Club Crackers «mw 126 Keebler Cookies “uit 'i 28° ns ae] 93 Laundry Starch "**..... 18° son 1038 Star-Kist Tuma sv