The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, November 1, 1951 The Mount Joy Bulletin Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher ESTABLISHED JUNE, 1901 | | | met every demand, domestic and A Published Every Thursday at No. | foreign, right in stride. Coal is used 9-11 East Main St, Mount Joy, Pa ADd ev in some form by everyone. Subscription, per year $200 | will be using more and more Sin Months ss $1.00 of it as time goes by. Three Months 60 eo 0 Copies 05 i . pag os 3 FREE Those who are interested in how ——————— communism operates once it comes Entered at the Postoffice at Mt. | to power should read a vivid and Joy, Pa, as second-class mail mat-| hor=ifying drticle by Peggy Durdin ter under the Act of March 3, 1879. | ;,, the October 13th issue of the Sa- Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper | turday Evening Post, called “They Publishers’ Association Are Ruling China by Mass Mur- der.” Miss Durdin obtained her in- 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 9 a. m. publication day. eee pee | formation from refugees from Red | China who had fled to Hong Kong with this paragraph: “The Chinese communists are writing a new chapter in the long history of bru- | tality and oppression in China. ———— | Since last fall they have arrested, O R 1 A L executed or condemned to hard la- ED IT bor mare than 1600000 people. + + They are making a ruthless effort On the average, only 19 percent. | to exterminate every potential en- of the nation's forest fires are start- { emy of their regime and terrify the ed by lightning and other natural | balance of the population into pas- causes. Most of them are caused by rest are sively accepting communist rule.” In order to accomplish these ends. burning cigarettes. The : public caused by smouldering camp fires. ee 0° A report ont of Washington tells us that the country's foed supply is ample and people will be allowed to | eat a little better. They, ‘however, y t neglected to tell people just what | rd Be i te use for money to buy that food. is 4 | ® Y Ne specla are If one wants to eat well today it sion the spectators are trials and executions are spectacles. Every technique of ar- cusing mass hysteria against the accused is employed. The proceed- | ings are broadcast in lurid detain In some cases, as in trials in the | small villages, attendance by local On ¢ceca- furnished type sheets of slogans. They are s aplenty costs aplenty. : 3 costs apa led by cheerleaders in thundering embarked on a cam- “Shoot the beasts! Kill, kill, kill!” As Miss Durdin chserves, life has cheap in China. But, We have paign to save the rest of the world from bankruptcy, social injustice |. and Communism, but we hepe to pursue it successfully, un- less government generally is pre- pared to reduce its costs to the peint that we can afford to make the extraordinary contributions the always been in the whole long history of that cannot | country, there has never been any- thing to compare to this. The kill- | ings are not the result of a simple, savage blood-lust. They are coldly planned, by Mae and his times demand of us. | sition to © o0 { The communism shall exist. : noncommunists ave Statistics bear out the fact that into cooperating with the we Americans have boosted our to- considerably regime | and fellowing every order faith- tal annual income ! | 3 > year 192). act the ac-| . . fram ‘the year 1929. In | of anything or net. are rarely de- tual figures show that in 1929 the | a al income was about $57 total annual income was ai 3 | they are, the defenders ave certain billion. but last year a total of $233 | billion, or a 175% increase was avessed by wage earners of this na- to be arrested. The Chinese communists, borrow- ing a leaf from Stalin's book. en- ; ck of i is the fact ; 8 tien. But back eof it all is t | ceurage children to inform on their °° that the government has been do- ing some increasing en its own’ ac- : ‘ | activity—or, for that matter. anti- Factually. it has increased count. appropriations from $4.7 billion to more than $52.8 billion, and«it has run up the natienal gross debt from less than $17 billicn to more than | communist thinking. The parents are executed. and the child is cal- led a hero of the people, Says Miss | munist parents who speak frankly $257 billion. | and freely ® © 9 reason why priced. At and sons.” All this | the trappings of Just another many : of course, with legality. Last an amazing law for the | Punishment of aries was premulgated. It authoriz- is done, articles are so high Washington over two million cups are stored. It is John E. Fondahl's idea. He wants te be prepared in case we need them in the event dish washing becomes impractical or our wate supplies are disrupted. Don't be surprised if more fel- lows like Fondahl buy several mil- | lion fly swatters or store enough to last us in the future in wells in the Uni- rola — | Counterrevolution- es imprisonment and death not on- for espionage or sabotage. but for “spreading rumors” and ating and splitting the solidarity the government and the people.” As if this wasn't encugh, an article in the code states that case all the oil a activity any counterrevolutionary verse go dry. ; Just ask yourself, who is paying the bills, ooo another makes the law retroactive. CUR APPETITE FOR COAL Each year, the American peopie consume seme 120,600.000 tons of food. That huge total is needed to : . | Chinese people. ( any collective physical people. Or ‘man; for the United States, as a tive conquerer and cppressor of the energize our bodies. Yet the food tonnage is dvarfted hy our production of ahother kind of energy. We requre four times as many tens of ceal to keep indus- accused persons—and the accused | are always found guilty—were ao- ents of the horrible American im- perialists. : ; That, in briel. ty running, to heat cur homes and luildings, and to do ali the othe tasks to which cecal contributes in cre ‘way or another. Ten ycars from now, it is esti- mated, we Americans may need six times as much ccal as food. And 23 er 50 years hence coal may be user Pp in quantities which seem inconceiv- ew = able at present. Some of our great- oo est industries, notably steel and eleetric power, are burning coal in | ever-increasing amounts. New dis- 3 N EASIER WAY from Soars a” TO SOLVE 4 > . bitious research work, are finding , : a and more uses for this .n- BUSINESS ots mensely versatile commodity. TROURES 4 Luckily, we need have no fear IS that we won't be able to get en- TO ough coal. Nature blessed us with engrmeus undeiground resocurces— ADVERTISE WEE ~~ enough to last thousands of years. And, wkcre Nature stopped. the | coal industry took over. It has the highest-paid mass labor force in the world. It bas developed amazing machines, which do the wok of =a 2 ‘cutting, loading, cleaning and grad- | J Sd) = 7 ‘ing. It has ‘established ene new | ws / z safety record after ancther. It has | aC Durdin’s phase, The have substituted ontrol by fear and force fo rule by consent and persuasion.” Franklin was the first master of the Unitec tes lelin Advertisers a Miss Durdin begins her account leaders, tec make sure that no iota of oppo- terrified > fully. The accused, whether guilty y fended—and on the occasions when © °° | parents for alleged anticommunist Durdin, “It is foolhardy noncom- i before his daughters alien- | not specified can be similarly pun- ished. Then. to cap the climax, still 1, Miss Durdin also points out that T everything is done to arouse hatred | prospec- rq ism organizes a nation. In Miss Mr A HAPPENINGS gf LONG AGO 20 Years Ago tween The new river road Marietta and Bainbridge is opened to traffic In some mysterious manner the awning at the Clarence Newcomer residence caught fire Prof. Ira R. Kraybill, a forme principal here, a native of East Donegal, will be a speaker at the county institute The E. L. Nissly dwelling at the Cress Roads wa withdrawn public sale at $17,300 Our fine v filter plant is com- pleted and is in tull operation Mr. and Mrs. D. H. S. Derr enter- tained twenty-seven uests to a loggie luncheon. A contract was let for Hotel at Hershey a $3,000,000 Markets: Eggs, 40 Butter, 35¢; Lard 10'2c The fourtn annual reunion of cholars and teachers will be held it the Elm Tree School A Lirthd y urprise party was held in honor of Mr. Jay Linde- muth. Thieves ransacked the Mr. and Mrs. Harve attending the Mt pbell while they were Joy Community Exhibit Rev. C. W. Ruth of Pasadena, Calif, is the Evangelist at the Ev angelical Church at Milton Grove ra Mary Hoover, 5 yrs., Eliza- bethtown, saved her brother from lrowning when he fell into a wa- tering trough Farmers killed 142 deer in Sept for destroying crops Mr. Campbell, Conestoga Center raised a beet weighing nine pounds ya feted the wer George pletely de- stroyed by fire. This barn burned on the farm in four proved to climbed an ree and started throwing a Federal confiscated 550 of whiskey and 10.000 g¢al- f mash i barn nea Neu Rev. and Mrs. J. L. Smoker the Centerville U. B vere tendered a reception ert T t i] Company € ire NCE m the hankri — well child- Mrs. Matilda Derr visited Mr. and occas~ Vrs sions the people are told that the viev is how commun- SC communists and 4 Heilig Funeral Home 23 W. Main St, Mount Joy JAMES B. HEILIG, Funeral Director Meats ALSO A FULL LINE OF CPLA Fruits & Vegetibles KRALL'S Meat Market 'WWEST MAIN ST, MOUNT JOY! [and family of East Petersburg, cal- (Erb, Columbia Rl. Also dinner led on Mrs, Lillian Witmer Sun-|guests were Rev. O. K. Buch, of day. Manheim and Rev. and Mrs. Frank Staff Sgt. Samuel ‘Ness visited | Druckenbrood, of Honeybrook R2, | his sister Mrs, Howard Witmer on) Mi. and Mrs. Paul Smith of Co- | Monday. Sgt. Ness will soon leave | lumkia RD, visited Mr, and Mus. | for Seattle, Wash and thence to William ; Fogie and family Sunday. | Kotea, Daniel Geltinacher was a Sunday | Suspicion leads many people nto and Mrs. Jacob | many mistakes dinner guest of Mr JACOB R. CORLL Public a : Bookkeeping — Tax Service 29 WEST MAIN STREET Accountant 5 | 5 i ; i i MOUNT JOY, PENNA. ) | ® i OFFICE HOURS: (4 i TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, 7P. M. - 9 P. M. 2 i SATURDAY ‘AFTERNOON & EVENING i ih f i PHONE 13-3281 i | If no answer, call 3=5323 ! | BE SURE i | tc let us clean your summer garments BEFORE | { fl iM storing them for the secson. I i f i i REMEMBER il i ) : { i you will get better cleaning resulis NOW than in i ( | 0 the Spring when age has set those spots and 0 iW 4 if | 0 stains, ki {(( { i A o if icherlys A A 0 76-78 E. MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY. PA. i Hi WwW I sects EE I NENT J ‘PERCE STRINGS "5 DOTTIE HUTTER SMITH WOTS ODD ABOUT ir?) t BE SENSIBLE AND ) I'VE GOT ANOTHER CEAL WITH Fan Ry 2 \T | : SMITHS | | BEERSCOFT PRINS | | FOR DEPENDABILITY Ir "THAT'S AN ODD | PAIR SOF YOu | ONE Ea AND “oN \ ONE GREEN = OPEN TILL 6:00 P. M. DAILY FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M.—SATURDAY TIL 10.P. M. 321 A [A 3 Phos 3°6981 gia NORTH MARKET ST. 'MT.JOY, PA. LOW COST AUTO LOANS See us apout the financ- ing before you buy your next car. Come in today TONAL MOU N NN MOUNT JOY, PA. id JOY iy, Ng o i [IN UNION _THERE IS STRENGTH | ee MANHEIM R. D. 2, PA. Air Compressor Work Rock Drilling, Concrete Breaking, Etc. Rocks and Trees Removed Excavating and Grading Cellars, Trenches, Etc. PHONE MOUNT JOY 3-4753 Rustle Up Man-sized Meals in Minutes with Big Buys From AP's Del Monte Round-Up Sale! Del Monte is the brand that'puts flavor first and A&P is the store that puts value first. So when these two famous names get together you naturally expect lots of luscious, low-priced eating. You won't be disap- pointed, eithér! For all your Del Monte faverites are marked with A&P's low prices! Pick plenty! DEODORIZER ps -0z 'Freedom of choice" is im- when you vote, DEL Veer c At A&P we have always been ro Early Garden Peas 3 i a0 DEL GOLD oz that our customers should be hose Cream Style Corn OR WHITE 3 on 50° free to buy what food they want, out any pressure from us. DEL : 46-02 c We strive always to stock our ji Tomato Juice iL 49 wit wou: TOMato Juice 2 oo 47° good foods that constitute good values. Then we leave it up to If there's Say Eng ye a ga MONTE Sliced Pineapple 2 R= 59 to give you better "freedom o . . oe ice” af your AR wore Fruit Cocktail 2 7 49 Us Know. riease wrire: Da Pe ches SLICED 29-01 29° A2P Food Stores a OR HALVED can Neu Tare TI, [wr iin ACE FANCY GRADE "A" 29. RP PUMPKIN PRICE REDUCED 2 job 33° PINEAPPLE JUIC LiBBY'S i8.oz 23° 46-01 2 c ifs Fg : OR DOLE'S cans can BEST PURE LARD PRICE REDUCED 2? Lb 39° pkgs Rir-Wick i 59° Armeur’s Treet Te 49° Chicken igs i> 51.85 StarKist Tuma Su i 34 Rice Krispies to 24c Baby Food 10 ws 95¢ Fruit Cake. 0% '5051,45%:52,89 1851 x Tomatces 2 25: Layer Cake .. §Q¢ Seaside Buhler Beans 9 25¢ THIS WEEKEND'S PINEAPPLE 10 iE Does CHEESE KEN-L RATION Delicious! Tasty! FOOD cams Solid Slicing CELLOPHANE ¢ © NONE PRICED CARTON HIGHER Customer's Corner BIS ¢ is Be § 9:93 portant when you shop as well as devoted to the democratic idea DEL 14-01 in the quantity they want, with- nose Tomato Catsup 371° stores with a wide choice of wp tol weve Prune Juice min 29° our customers to take their pick. choice" at your A&P please let DEL MONTE RELATIONS DEPT. a ; BEAN THREE 6-01. 1 0c 2302 c 48% § STYLES can cans #9 ie 19-02 c SQUR PITTED CHERRIES o~ Mazola. Oil 5. 35¢ = 68: Swift's Peanut Butter 35° Ched-0-bit LCi have 5 25° ona Cut Beets 3 %n G0e DEVIL FOOD Jans Parker SALE IS GOING CAKE | moa gg I i c d QE FOX FRESH TOMATOES CRISP PASCAL GELERY None Priced Jumbe Higher =~ Stalk 17. WINESAP. APPLES <:: UE 39° EMPEROR GRAPES “wy 2.25 Bring Your Surf, Rinso, Spry Coupons to Your A&P for Easy Redemption C. Robert Fry | | E . MT A AP
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers