Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa. Thursday, ro = = Published every Thursday at 11 East |! THE BULLETIN Main Street, Mount Joy, Lancaster County, Pa. William N. Young, Publisher Fred Alberte, Editor John E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher I 1901 1952 i" —————————— Subscription Rate: $2:00 Per Year by Mail Advertising rates upon request 1 itered at the postoffice at Mount Joy, bP: s second-class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879 ' ber, Pennsylvania Newspaper { Publishers’ Association [ Editorially ‘3b Sewers Mean Inconvenience Mount Joy probably will start building WwW aren’ ‘ ; » [the regular delivery date, but if sewers next year—and if members of the | {hough they aren't what they used to be | 8g Mount Joy Authority are smart, they'll take a good look at what is going on in Lititz today. Lititz has a town full of ruts bumps There was no sleeping coming home on [regular check and make up the ) ’ mtd and half-repaired streets. As the Lititz Authority pointed out last week, by not immediately repairing streets after sewer trenches are laid and by per- mitting the dirt to settle naturally, the Lit- itz sewer system will cost approximately $150,000 less than it would were the streets returned to their former state immediately. Whether such a plan and its inconveni- ences, broken auto springs and damaged tires, not to mention the griping of the pop- ulace in general, is a good one can best be judged by an on-the-scene study. Building sewers is necessarily a mighty inconvenient project for in so doing a town must tear up every street within its bor- ders. It takes a lot of fortitude and the firm resolve on the part of everyone to ‘keep cool” if it is to be attained without, too much undue mental suffering. x x, ¥ Business Is Getting Beiter At the beginning of the year we heard a lot about business only shuffling along and, according to more than one local retailer, threatening to flop back into what looked like a possibility of bad times. Now, however, the businessman has a smile back on his face as he tells you that, even though the hot summer months never are bustling, that things are really looking up and that 1952 seems to be going to end in a rush. Frankly, most of us let the last few years influence us too greatly and every time business drops off a bit, we visualize bad times returning. Go back a few years and you will find that business was on a much lower level, right here, too, than it is today. And even if we flop back to something a bit lower than the peak, there doesn’t seem to be anything in the near future to cause any serious worry. Xx * A Guy We're Looking For We can remember that last winter one local fellow took a second look at the con- dition of nature in general and then up and predicted we’d practically have no summer at all! Just a lot of cool breezes. It’s too hot to go back over our files, but we'd sure like to know what that fellow has to say now. For up to now, we've had more days in which the thermometers, in- cluding the one on our back door, shot up above ninety degrees, than any year since 1881—and the summer's only half over. But talking about it just makes us feel hotter! Pardon us while we run down the street for a cool root beer! * * * Death On Chuckholes Recent studies of municipal governments indicate that American city dwellers pay more than $80 million a year simply to patch up the holes made by repair crews working on under-pavement utility lines. This kind of expenditure could often be avoided with a little planning such as that at the new Levittown, Pa.—a completely planned community now being built in low- er Bucks county near U. S. Steel's giant Fairless Works. The new town was planned down to the last shrub by the community building firm of Levitt & Sons, Inc. It includes the thoughtful provision to lay water lines un- der the lawns in front of homes and sewer lines along the backyard property lines— instead of under the streets. This means Levittown’s 177 miles of streets will stay put once they're down and property owners—70,000 strong when the community is finished in three years—will save an estimated $42,000 a year. * * * Things To Come Garages and service stations will be interested in a new metal degreaser, said to be particularly effective for cleaning elec- trical accessories. The fluid is practically odorless, dries quickly and leaves no sticky residue . . . A “re-usable” non-melting ice has been developed on the West coast for dairy plants and shippers of perishable pro- ducts. The “ice” is a mixture of water and a processed powder. It can be frozen and thawed over and over again without turn- ing to liquid and can be molded into any shape . . . A flat “wafer” electric motor is available in ratings from 1/20th to 5 h.p. . . . The latest automatic labeling machine labels and heat seals the tops of bags . .. To protect fabrics on display from fading, try a new substance that con be sprayed on a store window from a pressurized can. The coating is clear but filters out harmful rays of bright light. ) July 2M, 1952 OWL LAFFS| | | | | | | | OWL | WISE BY A { Did you folks have fun at the Grocers’ Picnic? Boy, I sure did! That's about the | umpty-teenth one I've been on and even] years ago, they're still fun. These young- | sters should've been on those years ago. 10S. * * * Now this week we have to go te Hershey and see what the Auto Club has in store for us. One thing we can count on though, it'll either be hot or rain. Don’t forget to look for me in the Old Mill. I'm on of those spooky characters you see along the runway. * * Now that they've made cigarettes less irritating, I wish they'd start working on the TV commercials. * * * Money doesn’t talk these days goes without saying. * * * Jy the way, did you see the new woman in our neighborhood? Her face looks like it wore out six bodies. * * * Every father believes in heredity until his children start acting like fools. Don’t they, John? * * * it just Nothing wakes up a child more than being told to go to bed. * Bowlegs may not be few, but they're far between. A certain nagging wife always looking for an argument asked her hubby, “Will you still love me when I'm old and ugly?” The Marietta St. hubby replied, “Who says I don’t?” Watch the divorce application column. * * * One of the young ladies of town wants to marry a sailor and rear admirals. You can’t beat this generation. It’s a woman's prerogative to change her mind.—Also a man’s mind.—If you think it’s a joke call Harry. Nudists are the only folks in the world who have less pocket space than sailors. From the halls of Montezuma, To the shores of Tripoli, The Marines will watch the Navy, As long as they're at sea! Shortly after a safe landing on Nor- mandy, a certain paratrooper was evacu- ated. He had been injured when a cow fell in his foxhole. * * * During World War II, Marines were pre- paring to blast an enemy dugout. Suddenly a Jap ran out yelling, “Don’t shoot, I've got a brother in Brooklyn!” The sum total of what Uncle Sam extracts from the taxpayers these days is some total. Many times beauty is only skin dope. { Joe said he went to a flea circus recently and brought the leading lady home with him. Right, Joe? The face of old Ben Franklin is on the new two-cent postcards. He looks a little shocked. * * * You have to expect a lot of push before you have a pull. A small town is a place where everybody knows whose reputation is spotless and whose parlor isn’t. I'm glad there is some corn growing in fields and it’s not all in this column. When a new bride went into Krall's and asked Shortie what cold boiled ham is, Dick, without hesitating, answered: “It’s ham boiled in cold water.” - - - - Now, fellows, must you be confusing in this heat? * Al was telling a customer at Shatto’s barber shop how very potent a new hair | of the social Social Security Payments To Be Higher In Oct. | Bob Brown About 3331 people in the} 41g Main St. MOUNT JOY lL.ancaster area wi receive Plone S406 Ligher social security payments NEED INSURANCE? CASUALTY beginning in October as a result amend security ments which President Truman signed into law last Friday M. S. Gleaton, manager of oye the Lancaster social security of Heilig | fice, emphasized that no onc needs to apply for the increased Funeral Home “The Social Security already amounts,” he payments Administration is 23 W, Main St., Mount Joy JAMES B. HEILIG, Funeral Director changing the pointed out. “We expect to get them changed in time to have them in the mail October 3rd. meet| WHITE - WASHING AND DISINFECTING HESS BROS. FLORIN, PENNA. Phone Mt. Joy 3-4930 39-tf don't send the in a few cases we that schedule we'll difference in a later check.” Mr. Gleaton pointed out that although nearly every family receiving payments would re- ceive an increase, the addition- al amount would not always be divided among all the members of the family receiving monthly checks. In some cases the entire increase will go to the retired, worker. Under terms of the law, most families will get an increase of about $5; some will get less, | some will get more. A few ben cfits now being paid, and most | Ea of those payable in the future. { will be based on earnings after 1950 instead of after 1936. The} amendment law provides a new! formula for determining the a- mount of the payments . in| these cases. Under it, a retired worker's monthly benefit would be 55% of the first $100. of his average monthly earnings plus 15% of the remaining up to $300. Jeginning September 1, the new law will increase to $75 a month instead of $50 the a-| gk mount of money a beneficiary may earn and still receive the monthly benefits. Self-employ ed people entitled to and survivors old-age Imsurance bene payments for§ cach month of the vear if their net earnings during the entire year are not over $900 fits may receive The amended law contains a provision of special importance/ to self-employed people who have retired or plan to during 1952. retire Before the passage of the amendments their earn- ings for the year in which an| application was made could not be used to figure their old-age benefit payments. Now those self-employed people who orig inally applied for benefits in 1952 may re-apply at the close of the taxable year and have their 1952 earnings used in fig-| uring their monthly In general, this will the monthly benefits payment to self-employed persons payments. Increase A similar change in the law now permits msured wage retire in 1952 to have their wages for this used immediately in figuring the amount of their benefit pay- ments. Heretofore, it was neces-| sary for them to come back af- ter the end of the year in order lay have all of their covered wages for 1952 included in the ccmputation of the benefit a-| mount. | Another amendment allows beneficiaries aged 75 or over al-| | ready on the rolls to take ad-| ices S a vantage of the higher benefit! - { f simply an extension of the one! than the which already gives social se-| payments provided under the! curity wage credits to service-| men of World War II. It applies to service in the armed forces ny up to January 1, 1954. | earners who vear| at least a year and a half of covered work after 1950. The amended law allows so-| cial security wage credits of $160 for each month of active| military or naval service after| July 24, 1947. This provision is| ors of deceased service people is a provision in the amended grower was, but the customer wanted to | be convinced. Al obligingly exclaimed: “Do | you see this hair brush I'm using? Until | some of this hair grower got spilled on it | last week, it was a ping pong paddle.” - = - - Oh, come now! { * Don’t blame the writer for this awful | stuff we fill the column with. got him. Just hope that as the weather im- | proves, it'll improve. - - Well, we can hope, can’t we? 2 new formula, if they have had| Of advantage to the surviy law extending the time for| claiming a lump-sum death payment. This applies to ser-! . . | vicemen who die abroad and ° are later returned to the United| States for burial or Survivors who pay the reburial. wu Stehman Bros. The heat’s | ¢XPenses may now claim reim-| bursement up to two years after! the rebuyrial instead of two vears after the servicemen’s| Salunga, Penna. A WISE OWL, death. | | / reguiar size cakes bath size cakes RINS FOR LAUNDRY A FOR FINE FABRICS bath size cakes Buy 2 cakes for 3rd cake for price SIMORIZ FLOOR WAX quart can ———————— i tS A—————— LIFEBUOY SOAP NOW WITH PURALIN PE LIFEBUOY SOAP NOW WITH PURALIN RE} SPRY 100% HYDROGENATED VEGETABLE SHORTENING I-lb 1 ce 3 can ce 8% 0 ND DISHES 28° RINSO FOR LAUNDRY AND DISHES wo 90° LUX FLAKES AND DISHES vs 28° LUX SOAP FOR TOILET AND BATH I, PRICE SALE OF LUX SOAP 29° 23¢c—Get SAVE bc SURF PLESS DETERGENT | jant c Te 60 CHEER SOAPLESS DETERGENT large c pkg 30 CHEER SOAPLESS DETERGENT giant 82° pkg CREMO MARSHMALLOW 0 BREE large size 2 cakes GIBB KETCHUP WHOLE BEETS SMALL POTATOES Face Cloth in large Each Package pk WHIP ZE SOAPLESS DETERGENI 31° BREEZE SOAPLESS DETERGENT Dish Towel in giant 61 c Each Package pkg NEDICK'S ORANGE CONCENTRATE 2:99 SILVER DUST Dish Clath i large we il pkg 29° SWAN SOAP FOR DISHES, LAUNDRY AND BATH 27° 'S Pat 18g iia © 3%. 2% CASH ON HOT-WEATHER TREATS AT © All Prices in this Ad Effective Through Saturday, July 26th ONA TOMATO JUICE 3 429 YUKON CLUB tm GRAPE JUICE weows 3: 35¢ CHED-0-BIT 2 89 KOOL AID ALL FLAVORS 6 ne 25° CHEE-WEES nis ae CHEESE RITZ ELMER'S CORN NABISCO 8-0z. 25¢ CRACKERS Pkg. QUAN CHEESE FOCD ANNAN) TEXAS BLACK DIAMOND, RED RIPE (32 POUND AVERAGE) WATERMELONS San AON 60° $ 73 4 ds 1% 7 | quarter Je eon 1 3 MELON NGNE PRICED HIGHER SOUTHERN LARGE YELLOW FREESTONE ELBERTA PEACHES ri: 3» 28° TEDDY SNOW CROP'S 7th Anniversary FROZEN THIRST QUENCHERS NNN NN A NT STN TN TN SN ORANGEADE eo. 338 GRAPE JUICE bo 43 LEMONADE Fede) ORANGE JUICE 33 | GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ta BLENDED JUICES e-33c ¢ RITTER’S CATSUP ane: =f QUAKER PUFFED WHEAT fod QUAKER PUFFED RIGE 15 SULTANA TUNA FLAKES 254% 5 GUM and LIFE SAVERS 2% 5 MILFORD PICKLES i “or 280 QV NNN r) > WORTHMORE CANDY SALE! Peanut Butter Tempties }2 Your Choice 12-02 ) ) Assoried Filled Jolly Rolls ) [Eoin 29 SEASIDE BUTTER BEANS 25:23 SULTANA RICE we 150 Zo 2G ANN PAGE JELLIES wari, Ji 29 8 O'CLOCK COFFEE =veco 525 12 Te EDUCATOR CLIX wearmns 2 Qc MASON JARS an 9 don 78 BRIGHT SAIL SOAP FLAKES we 19° < v NANNY JANE PARKER CHOCOLATE CREME Sn, ) DEVIL'S FOOD LAYER CAKE s | SPECIAL hg WE an E>) TH WEI Regularly 75¢ ) (NNN NN A a Na or’ A) SWAN SOAP FOR DISHES, LAUNDRY AND BATH 3 Pedi dis 23 fc SALE of WOODBURY SOAP 4 regular size 24° cakes Buy 3 cakes at regular price and get Ath cake for 1c. SAVE 6c ic SALE of WOODBURY SOAP SWEETHEART SOAP bath size bath size 35° 35° cakes cakes Buy 3 rakes at regular price and Buy 3 cakes at regular price and gei Ath cake for 1c, SAVE 100 get 4th cake fof 1c. SAVE 10¢c SILVER DUST tao 73 DO’ fc SALE of SWEETHEART SOAP 4 regular size 24° cakes Buy 3 cakes at regular price and get 4th cake for 1c, SAVE 6c ic SALE of 87 EAST MAIN STREET ES] MOUNT JOY, PA. give all 500 Pile bre: 400 | 'ORI( OVE EAC! ~ ~