2—The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., EEE | | | September 11, 1952 THE BULLETIN Published every Thursday at 11 East || Main Street, Mount Joy, I Lancaster County, Pa, {l William N. Young, Publisher Fred J. Alberte, Editor & Manager Pearl Roth, Assoc. Editor & Bus. Mgr John E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher 1901 1952 Subscription Rat $2:00 Per Year by Mail Advertising rates upon request Entered at the postoftice at Mount Joy Pa., as second-class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879 Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers’ Association | BY A WISE OWL Editoriaily . > » | An erring husband from Florin had come | home with a few drinks too many under his A Record-Breaking Registration | belt, to be met with an irate and packing-up- : | to-leave wife. She spurned his somewaat a- This week the registration of voters in | poligies and, continuing to pack, said icily, If the county went well above the 100,000 3 were the Yue Hom. osu ioe i : . i3s : “arr ust the same sto. mark which surely indicates a real interest | 24! You ca ome ut Jus : wi : | October, 1926. in the coming presidential election. She eotning ¢ | * x aycees, veterans organizations and Having a payday once a month others played an important part in getting | [5 really quite a joke— voters out to register and reserve a lot of | For just one day we live like kings, credit. However, the effort should now be| For twenty-nine we're broke! continued until eve, for there's | * * * absolutly no sense in registering and then | Here's one that backfired: net veting. Fond of practical jokes, a local man, out But we have watched voters long enough a clear blue sky, once sent a friend a tele: to realize that, no matter how important an | Fy well.” collect — which read: “1 am perfect: election ay ke, Somebody Suggests a lii- A week later the joker received a heavy tle fishing trip—or if it should happen to | parcel — collect — on wiiich he had to pay rain—Mr. John Q. Voter will stay away in | considerable charges. On opening it, he found droves. | a big block of concrete on which was pasted We know who we would like to see | this message: “This is the weight your tele- elected this year—but just the same we rea- | gram lilted from my mind.’ lize that as long as a majority of those | He * He eligible, do vote, that the future of the na-| Guwennie Kramer was cleaning tion is comparatively safe. | their summer home and packed up the glass- * * * ware, to bring to town and wash and pack | away for the winter. She also brought a pack | of old cans to be thrown in the garbage cans. The next day she unpacked waat she thought were the dishes - - - only to find she | had thrown the wrong pack in the garbage cans - - - running fo see if iaey were still there, she found the garbagemen had collected them : It | already - - - now she says Russ will have to as 1t may be, few do more than crab a bit | go to the dump cind find them or eat out of tin about it. cans next summer. Xe Would appresials the poss oy taxes | * * * a lot more if more of us would do some- aH : thing about better acquainting ourselves Here is the latest poem by Dewey jr. owr with the facts. And how do you do that? |®€W poet : x Liitle Willie hung his sister: Well, one way is to drop in on. your bor-| ough council when it hold its regular [She was dead before we missed her. monthly meetings. Willie's always up to tricks. . | 3.4 5 2 ’ . These meetings are open to the public, al- | Ain't he cute? He's oly si%, though few seem to realize this. In fact, Terrific, yes —————222? election house at Taxes, Taxes, Taxes We hear a lot of talk about taxes, taxes on the local level that is, and possible tax increases in the immediate future. It’s a subject which should rate high in interest among all of our readers. Yet, important we know that those fellows who serve on | Thats O. K. Dewey. keep trying, one of council would be mighty happy if more |these days you'll hit the jackpot. taxpayers did show up and would give them | : * * * a bit of moral support for some of the | Speaking of Little Willie, Just heard that many problems facing the borough. | “Little Willie” Wills and Gwennie went wad- * * * ing in the creek last Sunday a week, the day it rained so hard. - - - but didn't stop them .- - Nudlif vi Ai | i - they took off their shoes and laid them on ying An Improvemen | the bank - - they didn't want to get them wet. | x * Turnpikes are the answer to the present- av r Oo . Rr - . To y a « day through traffic problem. Yet when an | ning out of dough. accident occurs such as that on the New| ; v * Jersey Turnpike last week in which a bus x J You know, The whole trouble is, tae upper crust is run- crashed into a truck injuring 43 persons Eo : ’ | bt i 5 7 we wonder if the good to be derived is not | out where ate they loading us o: : nullified hv the added danger of these new, ! A bachelor is a man who has been lucky in modern highways. love. The same situation. exists on our own Le Xx * x Pennsylvania Turnpike. In fact, it seems |, li nese ROW si Jacke Matoney. even more dangerous than any other turn-| Now he’s wishing someone will invent « whirling bathtub that spins you dry. Oooh. He reads too much. * * “Should I take junior to the zoo?” pike in the east. To us, this is to some ex- tent due to the fact th at no effort has been made up to recent months to control speed. At the risk of appearing old-fashioned, = i : , we express the thought that sixty miles an | Naw, if the zoo wants him, let 'em come hour is plenty fast for anybody. And when and get him. * * * trucks go faster than that, a child can rea lize the terrible danger to life and limb | Tid you hear about the new ordinance that resulting. is going to go into effect in Mt. Joy? It says no In New York State the Merritt highway lions shall be allowed to run wild on the] is ‘one of the safest due probably to the fact | 3'reets of the town. that trucks are relegated to truck highways No kidding — Parke told us he must carry a | and speeds are definitely kept under the [net in his car after October Ist. sixty-mile-an-hour point. And when Penn- | * * * sylvania builds highways in which lanes| Bill Enck told me, “what this country needs are divided, separate trucks from pleasure is a good five-cent nickel.” cars and, in addition, control speed, then | we will have the type of highway safety | The every motorist deserves. But not until then! | for a woman to hold a man is to make him | * * * want to hold her. Food For Thought Ee Imprisoned Japanese war criminals ** Annie Strumbendle says: best way | * Frank Zink said he knows of a professor | who spent some time figuring out why profes- | sors are absent-minded. But - before he could | want | tell Frank why, he forgot the answer. Can you | out.” Their sentences, they declare, were |beat thai?? unreasonable, uncalled for, and illegal. A | * * * few weeks ago, a former official of the Jap- la Believes. the oyster is not the only one who | anese foreign office was quoted as saying | @ crab lor a mate. that “the real war criminal (in 1941) was | * a . wh a iv of “decaivicc| Thought-of-the-week: Many's a man's Who ‘was guilty of “deceiving | reputation would not know his character | and provoking Japan into attacking Pearl |if they met on the street. Harbor.” Iva hk x % Famous last words—These cantaloupes | Much is made in this fantastic charge of | a : : President Roosevelt's refusal in 1941 to |are never as good as the first ones. meet with Japan's Prime Minister, Prince Every woman believes there are two sides Konoye, in a last-minute effort to reach to every question—her side and the wrong side. agreement and avert war. Yet before he | * * * | committed suicide after the war Konoye Harold Newcomer. substitute rural mail cor- admitted that no agreement he might have vier, has definitely found out who Wayne's new girl friend is — — — If you are a bit curious he | brought back to Tokyo, short of complete |”. 5 : : | will gladly tell i wit Gn capitulation by the United States to Japan's |r pe ya Bore os demands, could have kept the Japanese war | freim 6 to 7. ue he party from setting off the conflagration. i A WISE OWL Fellowship this world has plenty of leaders, lah Smith. A Parcel Post Auction and a| “fish pond” for the children (From puge 1) of the church. This gift was|provided fun for all attending presented in the name of the “funds” for the sponsoring Ladies’ Bible Class, the Approximately $100 was! Ladies’ Bible Class, the Ladies’ peglized from the sale of Parcel Aid Society, the Women's Mis-| post packages sent by friends | sionary Society, the Sunday!of the members of the Ladies’ School Association, the Broth- | Bible Class. Packages had been erhood, and the Church Council, | receive d from many distant to help defray the pastor's ex-|pgints in the United States, penses when he attends the Bi-| from Canada, Norway, and | ennial Convention of the Unit-i North Africa. Top prices were ed Lutheran Church in Ameri-| paid for an engraved picture of ca, to be held in Seattle, Wash-| {he White House, sent by Mrs. ington, October 8-15. Harry Truman and purchased Pastor Koder responded with by Mr. George Keener; a hand- | a word of appreciation and|painted polished wood bowl thanks for the thoughtfulness sent from Norway, of the groups making the gift, by Mrs. Irvin Smith Sr.; an Ar- and briefly outlined the projects| abic pin from Casa Blanca, pur- and work of the parish. { chased by Mrs. Richard Rice; | The evening's entertainment |and a decorative Bicentennial included two cello solos by Mrs. | Plate from the University of Samuel Harnish, accompanied Pennsylvania, sent by the pres- by her husband. Mr. Harnish|ident of that institution, Mr. led the group singing, which |Iarold Stassen, purchased by was accompanied by Miss Beu-' Mr. Clyde [ Eshelman. | | B. Titus Rutt Agency 85 EAST MAIN STREET, MOUNT JOY PHONE 3-9305 Offers You and Your Family POLIO INSURANCE Pays up to $5000.00 per person for three years of treatment, if necessary Two-Year Premium $10.00 for Families $5.00 for Individuals 35-2¢ Powerful ¥ performance trom g your car, truck and tractor. what « you'll get gasoline. It delivers fast starts and smooth pickups — and emergency power, too! Ard it sells at regular, gasoline prices.” SEE YOUR FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD TEXACO DEALER TODAY GARBER OIL CO. DISTRIBUTOR MT. JOY, PA. PHONE 3-9331 The members of the Ladies Bible Class wish to thank all | who sent packages for this so- cial, and all who helped to (make the evening a success NOW, YOU. CAN cuT UP. TO 20 tors of corn silage an hour! New Hol- land gives you better silage ~~ Faster] In any row crop, Yor top capacity, ease of operation, and complete dependability, the New Holland Forage Harvester leads the Your New Holland Forage Harvester field! goats & wading £ can easily and quickly be changed to The row-crop attachment, windrow operation. The new h: ayhe ad. has extra-wide gathering points. The with its longer spring fingers, picks gathering chains ave spaced close up cleaner, is more effective in a wid. enough to hold and carry thin, short er variety of conditions. New Holland's plants — yet the channel between exclusive floating upper apron gives gatherers is wide enough to handle you greater windrow capacity. It's the heaviest stalks. Feeder action can now possible to chop and Bice lp to be stopped, started, or reversed from 10 tons of grass silage per hour—get | the tractor seat! et # your feed into the silo at he peak of Knives, attached to precision-bal- its nutritive value! anced flywheel for faster, smoother §« All these features in one machine ! cutting and blowing, have microm- mean a New Holland can fill your eter adjustments . . . can be removed every harvesting need. If you're think. or sharpening without disturbing ad- ting of getting a forage harvester — ustment, Stop in and see us today. D. L. DIEM & SONS 400 East Lincoln Ave. Phone: 6-2131 Lititz, Pa. Hay Head! & New High-Capacity above, see it now at your authorized | J 5 NEW HOLLAND dealer ~~ " tl ee Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. CELEBRATED 39th WEDDING Mrs. Kenneth Hess celebrated ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY their fourth wedding anniver Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Hess of sary on September 4th Both Mount Joy R. D. celebrated couples enjoyed their anniver- their 39th wedding anniversdry sary dinner together at Aunt on Sunday, September 7th and Sally's Kitchen at Elizabeth town. their son and his wife, Mr. and I |] J 0 JAMES B. HEILIG 8 Funeral Director MOUNT JOY, PENNA. 0 All Prices in This Ad Effective Through Saturday, September 13th IoRY soap 4 Hod 21 SPAN 24° SPIC ‘N’ SPAN org, pe or 18 TI 1 BABY FOODS this | Chopped ___. 6 8 Oz, Cereal __...... Ps SPIC Ib pkg GIBB'S "KETCHUP _____ ‘sonia POTATOES ___3 Cans Whole Beets Cans PEAS & CARROTS 9p BUTTER KERNEL GOLDEN WHOLE CORN KERNEL bet anes GREEN GIANT NIBLETS CORN on 0% 0.1. HORMEL'S 8-01 LUX + BATH SOAP bath size 34° cakes LUX TOILET SOAP 3 $948 £33 23: RINSO 28° LIFEBUOY SOAP bath size 34° cakes LIFEBUOY SOAP Nove large 1 pkg i ra + 87 EAST MAIN STREET ar ro avr 2 = SUGAR GRANULATED is 49 4 89¢ iTe Strained ____{0 "2" 95¢ 18¢c 28¢ 25¢ BUTTER KERNEL dy 231s 35¢ CHILI CON CARNE CV <1 SULTANA FANCY RICE .: Buller’ Searle Salon Cold Wave & Machineless Permanents | $5 - $8 - $10 FLORIN, PA. ‘| EAST MAIN STREET, A | Maude Buller, Propr. Phone Mt. Joy 3-4339 ASP Si Cut Your Food Bills! How to 91° © 52.39 FANCY RICE S12 23% QUAKER MAID PRUNE JUICE “3 25° A & P GRAPEFRUIT cou. 2 on 27° NABISCO GRAHAM rn sis 29° OLEOMARGARINE 55% nc 9 Jo Be NUTLEY OLEOMARGARINE "5: 2 41 CALIFORNIA VINE RIPENED~-JUMBO 8 SIZF ' HONEYDEWS - 39: ( FRESH TENDER (NONE PRICED HIGHER) BEANS Tokay Grapes "che 2 lbs 25c ¢ 2b. 45° 5¢ SUNSWEET PRUNES: > 24° 2 OLD SOUTH ORANGE JUICE 2 =: 29° ' Birds Eye Frozen Spinach ci 2 li 39¢ Birds Eye Baby Lima Beans # rex» = 28¢ Snow Crop Frozen Peas SUNNYFIELD SPECIAL PRICE! NONE PRICED HIGHER 1+ 10: ay Ho 3% "BEST PURE LARD 2. oT: TOMATO SOUP «iirc 3 eo LIBBY’S PEAS 2°: 2% 2: WAX PAPER “2% 3T DINNER ROLLS ES 2: 25° CHERRY PIE 5.00 30 REGULARLY 59 Price NNN NINN) A & P CONTINUES THE GIANT SALE OF GIANT SIZE SOAP POWDERS and DETERGENTS! With Dish Towel in {bl 53 sgh 56) | OXYDOL, SUPER SUDS, ck 65 DUZ and INORY SNOW 7 VEL FAB, CHEER, “cpg TIDE, DREFT and JOY DOLE, LIBBY'S DEL MONTE “oe 2h" 15 = 29° | SAUERKRAUT ™ 97-97: TOMATO JUICE wiih “= 25° HERSHEY BARS 9h PLAIN or ALMOND M & M's CHOCOIGTE 7-01. 23 PINEAPPLE JUIC pkg. of 6 for 25c COVERED CANDY cello. pkg NTN NANT : Fine AGP Coffee! aia. EIGHT O'CLOCK 1: s2.25. 77k ( RED CIRCLE TQ: 8 'BOKAR i; s231 » 81° es Serer in er ng MOUNT JOY, PA. loc one anc IM! Th Rou, Rhe of li The bath of tr cont: HOU age : elect town ‘ made Walt D. L. K FR PENN This Modes CERTI Phone: