IC. a | oy cael AIRING 11-tf 1C. PA. SAAT PE Se S550 A Let Us Give Your Car This New Protective Coating That will bring out the True Beauty of the finish and help preserve it from Fading and Dulling. WITH i» « rin DU PONT SPRAY GLAZ HIGHER GLOSS .. LONG LASTING PROTECTION REACHES ALL CORNERS AND CREVICES SAVES CHROME AND GIVES IT A BRILLIANT SHINE Hard Durable Glaze - - - Washes And Dusts Easily SHINES BRIGHTER LASTS LONGER COSTS YOU NO MORE LET US GIVE YOU AN ESTIMATE ATLANTIC CERTIFIED SERVICE 22 WEST MAIN STREET PAUL K. STEHMAN, PROP. TELEPHONE 3-9191 MOUNT JOY, PENNA. AR TR RR CA Ne PB / AMAT Ng Se 3 £/ EE $09¢ BEST Flour ... ICE CR CREAR 29¢ ~ ofan JELLO" Bn 25¢ is 0 Registered Trodv mark of General Poods Corporarion Recipes in every sack of Pillshury’s BEST! ——————————————————— 24. With Coupon 1 | | Union Jack Tomato Juice 2/29 | NEW 1952 PACK ‘Ma-SonEarly June Peas 2: 25c Mussleman’s Sour Cherries’: 23 Delicious Drink Snow Crest only 3c bot Spry 3 1s 8c Heinz Baby Food 1 O is 9O« Sunshine Krispy Crackers » 25c STEHMAN'S Jellied Broadcast: July 19, 1952 | 1 pkg. lemon gelatin 1 cup boiling peach Juice V4 cup salad dressing® , teaspoon salt 4 cup Pet Milk , cup canned, sliced peaches, well drained Dissolve gelatin in ju ice. Cool. Put salad dressing and salt into bowl. Mix in gradually. Stir milk mixture vel ati n m ixture. Chill un- er than unbeaten 11 mii thicke eg PET PET MILK 3 wren 4d | | “ut peaches into small pieces | @ Fold i into chilled ge latin mixture. Rub ! with vegetable oil a mold holding 4 | | ith FRESH MEALS id Se .. Fill with gelatin mixture. Chill itil firm. Keep Slash { until ready to rn out on lettuce or other ens, if desired. Serve as salad Makes 4 servings. ! serve, Tu salad gr or ‘dessert, *Use the kind that not a bottle, comes in a jar, No. R522-29 Ground Beef sii | ALIF | pass KUNZLER'S CONESTOGA | Lottice Heads 2 1 c Bacon 11h sliced 4 De LANC. COUNTY 95¢ 65: 49 Franks Steaks LARGE FRYING Chickens doz 30. YOUNG BROILERS FULLY DRESS Chickens Pork ro Kraut RIB OR LOIN END MARTIN'S SKINLESS SELFSERVICE ir 4c ib 59 Tomatces ©» 35 ED HOME RAISED Potatoes 101: ¢ Oc ALL WE GUARAN NTEE Watermelons $1 HE LUE ELF -SERVICE ato FLORIN, PA. EB es FREE i ADVERTIS E IN THE "BULLETIN" SOCIETY. STATE OF PENNA UR el Ler) Folks are fads, Primitive man ate whatever could be chewed of the carcass of the animal he killed. He ate the organ meats well the muscle. Ancient peoples preference for the the abdomen, Homer, in the Odyssey, re- foods used by the early finicky in their food as as showed a contents of fers to Greeks which are spurned to- day such as roasted entrails and goat's stomach filled with blood. The nutritive qualities of this country's processed meats could be improved if organ meat and blood were included in them. Blood sausage, or blutwurst, is popular in Middle European Countries. The aboriginal American, the Indian, devoured quantities of oysters, as indicated by the huge mounds of oyster shells found along the Atlantic Coast. Oysters have nutritional ad- vantages do clams, lobster, and shrimp, because they are eaten whole, including the in- ternal srgans. It is claimed that the nutri- tive value of oyster meat is greater than that of cow's milk due to the high content of cal- cium, iron, and other minerals {and all of the vitamins. Snails are considered a delic- lacy in many parts of the world, and in Ceylon and some parts of Africa, snails as large as a man’s hand are grown for the market. The use of more organ meat and fish would raise the quality | of diets in this country. i el REUNION as GARBER The eighth Reunion of the Garber family will be held Sa- turday, July 19, 1952, 12:30 P \i.,, DST in the Lititz Springs Park, Lititz, Pa. Each family is to bring two things for a “Luck Lunch,” plus their own silver, ete. Plates, cups, coffee and ice cream will {be provided by the Reunion Program Committee. If any of the Garber Clan have not re- | ceived the regular invitation [they are to consider this an in- vitation to come to the reunion. An interesting program has been planned. Mr. Jacob B. Garber, Lititz | R3, is President and Mrs. Geo. | I.ehman, 370 Donegal Springs Road, this boro, is Secretary of Garber Clan. re eee the Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. ee A @ — Pine and Celandine A king-size living-dining room that is rectangular in shape is distin- guished by a modern and dramatic | vse of color. The two end walls are painted in celanline green. Through an archway in one of these walls, an area is visible which is painted chartreuse, Pine-panelled side walls have a smooth natural finish, while the window frames in these walls are enameled in the soft gray-green. The ceiling is white and much of the | urniture is coafec to match On the | | floor, which blends with the pine- panelled walls are gray-green rugs, Upholstery is a grayed cerise which is not unlike a clover pink, Female “Cinch” American women could reduce | their collective waistline by 90 mil- | lion inches this year, by compress- | ing their figures with the ‘cinch’ | that grandmother employed to com- press her girth by an ~xtra inch-and- a-half to two inches. Industry offi- | cials point out that healthy support and good posture, rather than a | pinched-in look, are the major ob- jectives of foundation garments to- day. want Russian Tanks Russian-made tanks and other { vehicles, knocked out or captured | by the Army in Korea, now are be- | ing studied by ordnance experts and | later will be used in training. When their research and training value is | finished, most of these enemy tanks | | will be scrapped. More Russian- | made equipment captured in Korea | likely will be melted down and ! moulded into new pieces of equip- ment as the program of returning battlefield scrap to the United States gets into full swing. P. P. & L.. REPORT Pennsylvania Power & Light | Company filed today with the {Securities and Exchange Com- | mission the necessary registra- | tion statement: covering the re- leently announced Issue .of (100,- | 000 shares of "new . preferred | I stock. : | The First Boston Corporation and Drexel & Company have been named as joint managers |of a group of investment bank- {ers which will underwrite this Jpreferred stock. i fom Remember Son By EDNA MAY JONES IMOTHY SMITH, eight, red-head ed anc freckled lay flat upon the figor machine-gunning the cat. “‘A-p-a-a-a” heckled Timmy. ‘You're not a cat, Dhalia, you're an enemy, an' I'm shooting you dead. A-a-a-a-a! What makes cats so dumb, Mom?" “Because they « Minute can't speak, Fiction dear." “That's not the kind of dumb I mean. I mean dumb like , . . Well you know what kind of dumb.” Mrs. Smith wiped her floured hands on her apron. “It's not stupid, dead, It just doesn’t understand your language.” ‘‘Well she should [because I talk to her all the time.’ Mrs. Smith bent over the oven, screwing up her face to study a cake, ‘I've talked and talked to a certain little boy I know in my own language, and quite often he dosen't understand.” Timmy wriggled. ‘Aw, Mom. I really understand, pretend I'm not listening.” “‘Well do you understand when I say get up off the floor. Those are your good pants.” “I khow,"” he said, whacking them | vigorously. ‘Sunday School pants. Mom?” “Yes, dear.” “Do I have to go to Sunday Schoo! all my life?" shucks, | only I Timothy eyed the cat with dis- gust. “What makes cats so |! dumb, Mom?” Vy “That, and Church. Why?” “Well, shucks. I'd rather stay » ? home and play with the fellas. “Why do I have to go anyway, Mom?” | “To learn, Timmy. To distinguish | evil from right.” “You sure do talk funny, | Mom. Mike's Dad talks swell. | He tells us stories about sol- | diers, and guns, and all kinds of things.” “Timothy,” she said in a shocked | voice, ‘haven't I told you not ito go in that house.” “Oh, 1 don't go in their house. | Mom. I just sit on the steps and listen to him talk to some other | fellas. Mike and me listen. We just | sit real still so's they'll think we're not there, and we listen like every- thing.” “What do they talk about, Son?" ‘Oh, about polly-ticks, and strikes | and things. And they talk how fellas get killed ’'cause they are trying tc do the right things, and some bad guy comes along and says they got to do it his way, or else, and then there's a fight, and somebody gets killed.” “Timmy, isn't there something you would rather do, than listen to men talk like that?" “Nope, I guess not.” IS mother paused to smile and rub a warm, slim hand through his red shining hair. “What would you like to do most of all?” | “Aw, gee, Mom, You know. If I had all the money in the world I'd buy that carner lot, and I'd buy all the fellas baseball outfits, and we'd | have real teams, too.” ‘““That lot costs a great deal, son.” | “I know, but Old Man Jackson's got lots of money. It wouldn't hurt him just to give it to us.” She cut a square of steaming, sweet cake. ‘Run out and play, Timmy. Supper will be ready in an hour.” She watched the boy disap- pear through the back door. So small, so intense, so absorbant. Hers alone now, to raise as she saw fit, Later when they were eating ho said. “Mom. Mike's Dad says we're going to have another war.” “No we're not,” Mrs. Smith said firmly, and put a deep plate of thick! stew before him, “But Mike's Dad says we're going “Well, we're not,” she repeated with emphasis, This may be tempt- ing fate, but she was responsible for Timothy, and she had a right to think of the future, just as much as | Mike's father had. “The reason we're not going to! have another war,” she said, ‘iz because we're not going to en- courage one, What 1 mean, Son, is . Well, Timothy, 1 think you and the fellas arc going to be able to choose baseball suits.” He looked at her puzzled, and in- credulous. i “You see,: Son.: If your Dad were! here, he’ wotldn't” ‘be talking about wars. He’d.be talking’ about base- pall, just as we're doing. Tomor- row, Timothy, you and I are going to buy a piece of property. The cor- | ner lot you wanted so much!” Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. | Green | Fingers | By F. ANTON REEDS UTSIDE the windows of Productions a murky shrouded the outlines of Square and twisted and Kerry drizzle Herald distorted | desk. Yes, he was | and | misnamed the street sounds from below. Alone in the comfortable inner office Pat rick Kerry tried not to notice the autumn drizzle Minute beyond the win . dows. Fiction He thought of the plans for the country place tucked away some where in one of the drawers of his getting well along now--so well along that at last he could admit that the country place of his would never be built. Of course, he thought quietly, | life had been good-mighty good he glanced from one to an- The Bulletin, | | other of the scores of autographed photos that lined the four walls | of the office. Friends in plenty he had. He had watched a thing that was Broadway discard its gaudy minstrel garments and take its first halting steps in a strange | new world of quiet understatement But on rainy days he got to think. | ing of the moist, soft earth and the | little rivulets trickling like blind, | hesitant puppies among the clods of plowed ficlds—and his green tingers | began to itch. Old Michael told him he had green fingers, What a proud day that had been. A youug Irishman had stood in the rain and said that to a girl whose eyes were rimmed with tears. had been been—well, Eleven years old *he then. That would have | never mind. Patrick Kerry wasn’t in any hurry about opening the enve- lope his secretary had just brought! in. ¥is thoughts were not in his ofiice today, and he had difficulty in bringing them back from his dreams te pres- ent realities. Finally Patrick's old fingers: snaked open the brown flap and rapped the envelope sharply so that the contents slipped out onto the desk. He riffled through them, picked up the precisely filled-in card that was one of talent scout Burp Mullen's cryptic reports. He forced his tired old eyes to the dossier: “This boy is the one you want, No doubt about it. lie's got a freshness that's the real article.” Patrick Kerry rose and went over | to the window. e I'll be coming back ir Maybe we can ge place of our then by Peck’ Villa or down at Irvington.” A young Irishman had the rain on an on the wooden station Farmdale and said that to = whose blue eyes were rimmed with “Of cours a few years. own platform at tears. Funny how you believed every- thing you said when you w young. Blame it on the rain, he thought If it weren't for the rain I might not have had to do this. He was very business-like as he sat down again. “I'm afraid we've been very Miss Wintersten was hovering in- side the door again. “Mr. Compton is here,” she said. | ATRICK KERRY had just tin to glance at the photos of a sen- sative but rugged ¢ countryman’s face before the face itself was there before him. There were several things Pat rick Kelly had meant to say; in stead he found himself asking: “Just what sort of a place thi that you have outside of Mill Mec ford, Compton?” “It's a nursery, Mr. Kerry. That is, it will be. They take time get ting started, you know." Maybe it was the rain. Any- way Patrick Kerry found hini- self asking a good many ques- tions, about privet hedge and fall plantings and apple grafi- ings. “Look here,” Patrick Kerry said abruptly. ‘‘What about this place | of yours? Say you get this part, | what would become of it?” The young man answered slowly | “We talked about that, Ellen and I,” he said. “I figure that if I make | ! good with you, a few years—even five or six ars—on Broadway would give us the working capital for a real go at it later on. We could always go back and rf over. I suppose we'd want to any- way, some day.” stood in | autumn day in 1896 kind, Compton, and I'm the fact is our Mr. Mui 5s just a little impetuous. You see, Comp- | ton, we're goin to ne ed a profes- sional for that part.’ ig, Bulletin Ads Pa§ Big Dividends. | AVL!) Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, July 17, 195 BEFORE IT RUINS YOUR LAWN It's easy with Scotts anti-Crabgrass Powder Another Lawn Care product by the makers of Scotts Seed Just scatter SCUTL over the lawn with a Scotts Spreader, The clean granular particles knock out Crabgrass - leave good grasses unharmed, Three or four SCUTL-ings at weekly intervals save your lawn from demon Crabgrass. Prices per single treatment: 400 sq ft - 79c 1250 sq ft - $1.95 5500 sq ft - $5.85 Sli. SPREADERS make ploy of lawn weeding, feeding or seed- ing. Sturdy steel construction, rubber-tired - $7.35, $12.50 and $19.50 H. 5. Newcomer & Son, inc. EAST MAIN STREET 'Room Air Conditioner Feel like you sleep on a bed of coals in summer? Let the magic of a kitten-quiet * Easily installed 18 W. WOW andliply) NH THE ALLNEW | B 2 MAIN STREE' MOUNT Joy, LR an —— SRE a Sd x abs So i Ss i SNE Ko a G-E bring you cool comfort—thres wk Typical G-E Dependability | separate streams of filter-fresh air! Jk Handsome Appearance 4 WAY'S APPLIANCES 3622 MT Tel phone 3 JOY, Authorized Dealer GENERAL ED ELECTRIC Room Air Conditioners ’ Ho Half-Truths Here! Orn: 2? rr es ——————— CRABGRASS PENNA. PENNA. i mk 2 fF 7 AS > = GIVES YOU “NO DEFROSTING” nas Completely Automatic We deal in facts! And the fact 1s that only Westinghousa FROST-FREL has the magic button that COUNTS door openings to measure your actual defrosting needs And, what’s more, only FROST-FREE gives you ALL ‘THREE big * needed. Automatic disposal of frost Defrosting so fast button and finest completely inghouse FROST-FREE! So, look for the No Defrosting”’ Automatic defrosting exactly when benefits ind only when { water no pans to empty even ice cream stays frozen world’s first West today and you'll find the antomatic refriger itor . Come in , . see it vou cAN BE irs YVestinghouse, GEO. W. LEAMAN PHONE 2 9351 208 FAST MAIN STREET Everybody MOUNT JOY Thi is LEE Reade The Bulletin
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers