The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, | . The Mount Joy Bulletin Jno. E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher ¥STABLISHED JUNE, 1801 Published Burry Thursday at No. | P11 Bast Main St, Mount Joy, Pa. | ‘Subscription, per year , gi Six Months ‘ier Three Months ......... ee Single Copies ...... Bample Copies ........ Entered at the Postoffice at Mt. | Joy, Pa., as second-class mail mat- ter under the Act of March 3, 1879. | Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper 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 | 9 a. m. publication day. IAL + + | An exchange says: ‘It's time the | government shook the sealter- | Lrained economic theorists out of | it its hair and accepted big business | as a normal, necessary, and, desirable adjunct of this great in- dustrial nation.” And we heartily’ agree. | ® 0 | citizen indeed, | Every American read the article on Korea in the last | issue of Readers’ Digest. It must | be the truth or it would not have | been published. | After reading it will some one please tell us why Uncle Sam is the | goat. Also why we have had more | wa- casualties than during (World | War II and as yet no war has been declared. Just don’t make sense. ® 00 How many people do you hear saying. ‘To heck with it, we're liv- ing better than we ever did be- fore?” And bow many of the pesple who make that remark could pay off their share of the per capita na- tional debt we have accumulafed to make our current standard of living possible? Surely these same people are smart enough te know that we can’t continue borrowing forever. But do they have the de- termination and the fortitude or patriotism to sacrifice something | upon the altar of democracy? Too | many, we fear, having the vision] lack determination. 20 CASH FOR THE FARMER When it comes to cash income, meat is the biggest thing, in the] life cf the farmer. Last year meat | animals brought him the nice] round sum of $3,590,000.0¢0—almost one-third ef his entire cash income | from all crops plus government | payments. No other single source! of ‘income came even close to the! And the meat than in| receipts from meat. was $1,660.000.000 1949. The virtue of livestock, from the farmer's point ¢f view, is that it can be raised in practically all locations | gieate: and on any scale frem one animal! up. There are great ranches, which | produce thousands ¢f head. But a! very large percentage cf the meat we consume is found in the accum- ulated supply produced by farmers who raise a few animals each year! as a sure and steady source of cash. In the meat business, there is roem for all, and all are needed. A hearty meat industry is of the highest importance to the farmer | and rancher—ijust as if is tp the who wants his steaks and chops and hamburger to be a- vailatle when he desires them. The kind ¢f a meat industry was built in the free, competitive ma:ket, under the supply-and-demand ec- | onemic system. And the pity is that kind of market is always under- mined and weakened when govern- ment takes hold of the reins with price and other controls. We are seeing that now—with meat scarci- | ties in many consuming centers, growing black markets, and dislo- | cations all along the line in consumer, normal process of production and | distribution. In the long pull, al controlled economy harms every- | one—except the bureaucrats. 2 00 FREEDCY. OF CHOICE Under free enterprise, the con- | sumer has freedem of choice. He | ¢an go into any store, look around | and buy or not buy, as he pleases. | He can shop about from store to | store seeking the most attractive | deal. A Things are different in a totai-| tarian econcmy. For instance, the book business in communist Lithu- ania bad been in the doldrums. So a cooperative federation there de- cided to improve sales by deduct- ( Emre | ing money | also | or more | tempted to | tries there | most terrible conflicts ever | doing almost ali | accurately | white | vietion that the war | went, though reluctantly, from the paychecks of & its workers for the purchase of books—whether oe workers wanted books or not!! compulsory compelled every consumer purchasing any article to buy one books in addition! This is the same as if, when you went into a store to buy an over coat, you were forced to buy a pair | of shoes too, or go without the coat. Teday on Amerian merchant would | last about twenty minutes if he at- follow such a policy. All his trade would move with the| swiftness of a hurricane to the stores of his competitors, foreign coun- toat resemblance to our stores. Actually, in most is nothing bears cven a good splendid American retail And in the communist countries, of] course, the consumer gets what the | bosses want to give him—which is usually the bare minimum needed for subsistence on the near-starva- tion level—and he likes it or lumps . Everything is rationed, and prac- tically everything is scarce and ex- expensive when measured in terms of the average man's earn- Freedom of known. All in all, ings. choice is un- American retailing jis should | just about a perfect example of the ren virtue of the whole free enterprise, system. ® 00 one of the fought. Geographically, it is a small war— and material | The Korean war is in terms of human costs it is a big ‘one. Veterans of! seme of the difficult and Lloody campaigns of World War 11 say that Korea in climate, most is even worse—in tenvain, and in the char-| acter of the enemy. It is a war which we cannot win under present also a war half-forgotten conditions, and it is which seems to be at home. Even if a truce is finally reached, it will be an easy one, and and pelicy our trecops will guard in that racked land, unless there is a reversal of ing and waiting to see if the enemy Las mere grim surprises in store for us. Theoretically, it is a way of the| United Nations against an aggres- sor. Actually, cne country, in which States, is fighting. it is a war the United of the providing almost all of the money) and weapons, and taking the vast majerity of the losses. Our casual- ties approach the 100,000 figure, and ef them well over 15.000 are known to be dead. The death rate among those now listed as missing is ex- pected by all to be high. Gur allies ly and taken their casualties too, but, as U. S. News & World Report said, the “U. S. people, is exceedingly have fought brave- with 150.000.060 called upen to assume losses of its ground being ferce youths that are far higher than losses of U. N. allies with 240.- £00,600 people. The proportion of v to those of its U. allies now, is about 13 to 1. 3. casualties ol is vising gradually week by week.” It is cemmon knowledge that our wajor ally, Great Britain, stemach for the has small Korean war, and only came along because. in the curdent state of world affairs, there was nothing else she could do. | Britain feels that it would be eco- nwemically impossible far her (0 break off all relations with China. regardless of who runs the Chinese government. She also feels that an extension of the war in the Far East would mean the loss of Hong, Kong and other key Crown colonies and possessions. She can marshal strong arguments in support of her position. But whether those argu- ments are valid or not in the strong light of history, adds still more this situation] somber strangeness | to the Korean conflict. It was General MacArthur's con- must be car- ried to the heart of the enemy, the | which means to the heart of China.’ nal side of the trapezoids. Fasten it to | It was for this that he stating and restating relieved. Yet, if all else fails, the American govern-! was may forced into that course. It is incon- ceivable that the war should be al- lowed to go on indefinitely. The | drain on our manpower is tool great. On the bright side are reports) from the front that the losses taken by the Chinese, in men and equip- went, have been incredibly high— so high that it is doubtful if they are in a position to mount new ma-| ier offensive: And the feeling grows—and has been buttressed by the most recent atomic tests in Ne-| vada—that tremendous new lethal Novembe 'r 20 195] | nam remain on watch-| jury: be quarter TTY v HAPPENINGS || — of — LONG AGO {| 20 Years ik of Eliz in the ibethtown Pp Franck street Fred I" will cpen a Schock building A number of Dupler, of El ler, garage on Henry trolley lines thru- discontinued them. Keystone Ephrata of lottery cut the county will be nd busses will replace State Police raided the Sales Con and confiscated five tons pany plant at tickets and printing machinery A barn 50x114 ft. to replace the one destroyed by fire on the FE. S. Weaver farm. Markets: Fggs 36c, butter 35c¢, lard 10%%ec. was completed Mrs. Charles Morton was honor- | ed by a birthday surprise at her | heme on New Haven street. i Two pet beavers built a dam in the stream at the Mt. Gretna Mili- tary Reservation which endangered the PRR tracks at that point. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan S. Zug, of Mastersonville, were honored at a dinner for their 50th wedding an- niversary. Rev. James B. Musser has resign- | pastor of Zion Reformed Marietta. i The Girl Scouts planned to dress fortunate child- | Christ- | ed as church at dolls for the less of the community for mas. A doli contest is now in progress | at Dr. E. W. Garbers Rexall Store. | Squire John Keener will build a | tagous disease. It is therefore im- portant to get a veterinarian's opinion if any of these signs show ‘SUN SICKNESS’ IN WHITE LIVESTOCK Sunshine, the greatest of Nc- | up. ture's disease preventives, can The only known preventive steps cause serious trouble for white- | are to provide shade, and to ‘ree skinned animals. Too much is too much, especially when such animals are exposed to bright sunlight after eating cer- tain “sensitizing” plants, The result is a sore, peeling and highly inflamed skin over all white. surfaced areas of tie body ex- posed to sunlight. “Sun sickness” is a popular name for the con- dition, FPhoto-sensitization is the accurate veterinary term, and the disease is also known as solar eczema and trifoliosis. The condition affects all types of livestock with white skin or white patches of skin. It is seen Note 7 Wo hide. vent grazing on pastures known to cause trouble. Among the plants that sensitize an=mals to sunshine in horses with white-stockinged | are certain clovers, St. John's feet, in line-backed Hereferd cat- | wort, wild buckwheat and leche- tle, in Holstein cows, in white and | guilla. white-spotted pigs, and in sheep. A Usually, if the trouble {8 ‘sun frequent complication in sheep is | sickness” and not some disease, the animal wil recover in a few days if it is given proper treat- ment by your veterinarian, and protected from direct sunlight, “big head,” where the ears become thick and swollen as a result of sun sickness. In some animals the symptoms may resemble a con- NOTICE! Five percent (5%) penalty will be added to all 1951 School tax after December 1st, 1951. GEO. H. BROWN III Tax Collector : : | brick semi-bungalew dwelling on Frank street. Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Stehman theiy golden at their homes at Lan- elebrated wedding anniversary disville. The Marietta double time Nine turkeys were stolen from the Elks Lodge huilding at Colum- bia. | went on Silk Mill on Monday. Census figures show an of 28,000 abandoned rast ten years in Penna Football the game Lancoster mncerease farms in the players injured during! East End Park Neiss, Halbleib, tured and Albert Laskewitz, fractured. with team of were Russell nose frac- toes | weapons. suitable for tactical use by ground treeps, may be on the way. Hope is strong that the Chi- nese may be losing their stomach Russia may conclude that this particular Red In the meantime, the for fighting, and that cause is lest. Korean war is unlike any this na- tion ever fought. For Er and fore | See Complete Line LINOLEUM RUBBER TILE ASPHALT TILE BATHROOM and KITCHEN WALL TILE Kitchen Cabinets Wood Custom Made IN COLOR FORMICA TOPS VENETIAN BLINDS WINDOW SHADES PITTSBURGH PAINTS WALLPAPER Install It Yourself Money! «and Save Armstrong’s Quaker Wall Covering — Complete Installations — Mt. Joy Tile & Linoleum Co. OPEN EVERY DAY & EVENING EXCEPT WEDNESDAY PHONE 83-3492 38 W. MAIN ST., MOUNT JOY 36-tf C. Robert Fry MANHEIM R. D. 2, PA. Air Compressor Work Rock Drilling, Concrete Breaking, Etc. Rocks and Excavating and Grading Cellars, Trenches, Etc. PHONE MO Trees Removed UNT JOY 13-4753 Control Winter Ventilation "Wi INDOW vent rs will give you controlled air movement in the bed- rooms this winter. Wintry blasis wili be deflected and snow flurries will be con- | tained at the sill, Construction of the vent ilator illus- trated is both simple and economic a fashion two 4 by 8-inch bl (s of 1-inch lumber into trapezoids to serve as end pieces, These four-sided shines s are made hy sawing on a diagonal lin drawn from the right top corner to a point two inches from the left bottom corner. Now cut a panel of Masonite 3/16” tempered hardboard the width of the window and the height of the diag- the two end pieces with screws. Another method of construction is creating a slide for the hardboard panel by cutting saw kerfs in the end pieces or nailing to each of them two picces of | -inclr quarter-round moulding, The ard may then be removed to permit cleaning o f the sill, B fore fas wind W casing as shown, give it a prime coat of paint and one or two finish coats of exterior grade will give long and excellent service, paint. This ventilator | ALL MAKES REPAIRED 2x MODERNIZED into CONSOLE 0+ PORTABLE | OR ELECTRIFIED IN YOUR OLD STAND Call Us Today—We Pick-up and Deliver .. . Anywhere! J. V. BINKLEY 111 N. Market St. ELIZABETHTOWN Phone 216-J : 46-if SALES SERVICE THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO. Customers’ Corner You can't make a mistake on any purchase at A&P for these reasons: The quality is right—just as adver- tised or printed on the label. The weight is right — 16 ounces to the pound. The price is right— just as it's marked on the item and printed on your cash register receipt. And, finally, satisfaction is guaranteed or your money will be cheerfully re- funded. How can you make a mistake by taking advantage of that kind of offer at your A&P? CUSTOMER RELATIONS DEPT. A&P Food Stores 420 Lexington Ave,, New York (1, N. Y, AT THE AMAZINGLY LOW PRICE OF ONLY It's big—2 feet wide and nearly a foot high! It's sturdy —made of heavy cardboard with extra reinforcements! It's realistic—printed in full color inside and out, with doors that actually open. Can be set up for use or folded flat for storage in a jiffy. Best of all, each A&P Piay Store package contains a valuable coupon which you can redeem for $1.00 and other coupons enabling you to get toy turnstiles, cleaning equipment, shopping carts, practically everything a real A&P store has—at less than retail prices. Youngsters will have fun galore with this wonderful store. Get one for every child on your Christmas list! And get yours today! While we have purchased tens of thousands of these play stores, we are afraid our supply will go quickly. Come in today for yours. These A&P Play Stores are only obtainable at A&P Stores and Markets. JUST LOOK WHAT YOU GET WITH YOUR A&P PLAY STORE ® A play store-size floor. ® A metal manager's button. ® A check-out counter. ® Several grocery shelves. ® Many colorful cardboard products. ® $100 in play money. OLEOMARGARINE PILLSBURY PANCAKE MIX ANN PAGE BLENDED SYRU AUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE MI LOG CABIN SYRUP WEEK-END SPECIAL! BUCKWHEAT MIX Lo Se ASP GRAPE JUICE REDUCED PRICES! Jo ANN PAGE GRAPE JELLY race » MEGOWEN CRAX REDUCED PRICE i NESTLE’S COOKIE MIX 1- SOAP SALE LA CHOY CHINESE DINNER Emperor Grapes 2 FLORIDA ORANGES vic mv ston aso size Bags of Oranges 8 Raisins ALL PRICES SHOWN HERE EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, DEC. 1ST. Our stores are bount Py Buy 3 Cak Regular SUNMAID SEEDLESS REGULAR 5c PACKAGE pkgs Orange Juice owsom 6 Sx WEEK-END 20-01 c SPECIAL SUNNYFIELD “70 13 ~ CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS LETTY LANE = SO CHOCOLATES isis 125° 1251.17 | REYNOLD' S GIFT WRAP PAPER pe 8 Price of 22c—Get 4th cake for Ic ® Plus money-saving coupons! ALLSWEET Ib 1/,-POUND PRINTS pkg c 20-02 c we iE pkg 1 6 3 1 C WEEK-END 12-02 21: 24-01 39 SPECIAL! bottle bottle Cc WEEK-END 20-0 1 6 2h Ib a § ¢ SPECIAL! pkg 24 ii: 44 bottle AUNT 20-02 JEMIMA pkg 12-01 bottle NNN ifully stocked with a splendid assortment of Christmas Candies, Gift Wrapped Cigarettes and Tobacco, Frult Coke, Christmas Cards, Reynolds’ Christmas Gift Wrap, and Decorated Scotch Tape. Come in and see our wide selection, CHRISTMAS STOCKING vormvor (257,180 nis 29° 39 19 HARD CANDY br S-foot quart bottle 19 REDUCED PRICE 33: 4 cakes 23 a7 ibs 28¢ dozen 19 bs 39c¢ 51.08 24s es of Octagon Bath Soap for the MEATLESS 23: Orange Juice sow cor § 25; 99° GreenBeans «4% FROZEN | 87 EAST MAIN ST. MOUNT JOY, PA. 1 i GC / Yi / iE F Sat On th South North o signs ale leading Maytowr Roll ta drop lea Dutch fork dr: door, als Grandfal meke, M net, moc hand, in B-day cl ball feet top sink. flour che sideboare tables: d solid wa horse; 2 small lu ers: 3 St goblets; milkware & pitche Walter D Landis & ——— Ke Fre FROM J 14th. Th erage’ te The 9 FROM T m™ one aau Leauxmor The C Paul, Rowsdal