The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, February 26, 1053 Main Street, Mount Joy, Lancaster County, Pa. Villiam N Fred J. Alberte, Roth, Assoc Young, Publisher Editor & Manager Pearl Editor & Bus. Mgr, Editor and 1952 John E Schroll, 1901 | Published every Thursday at 11 East | | | Subscription Rate: $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. I Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers’ Association reel BY A WISE OWL My wife was kind enough to make a dona- tion to the column this week. Here ‘tis The budget plan is, knowing A place for every cent Let's Send a Boy Scout Westward! Nothing has aroused our imagination | more recently than the thoughts of that | big Boy Scout Jamboree to be held along | : Rs the Pacific Coast in California this summer, | You leam lus Where i's omg. There boys from all parts of the United | Instead of where it wen: States — the world for that matter — will | * * ¥ b-| pitch their tents and live together, swim | She's the kind to waom expenses 1S no ob- together in the Pacific and view the many |iect, as long as it doesn’t cost too much. scenic attractions together. * % XK If we had a boy we'd sure be willing to She has an uncle thatll live > make many sacrifices to let him go to that | knows he can’t take his money with him, and | jamboree. How about it? We as a commu- | he's the kind of a guy who wont go without it. | nity ought to be doing something right now | He to send at least our outstanding scout west-| But sometimes his thriftiness doesn’t pay off | ward this summer. |... he had a hobit of taking long steps to save We don’t know how much time there is | his shoe leather and he split his pants. left to get the thing organized but if scout | %* +* * officials of the borough can select a deserv- | : B have to Be 861 ing youngster to represent our town at the I don’t know why women 1 dis | jamboree and providing others are enough | confusing. 1 overheard a young o Ys "| interested to help raise the funds, we'll [to « girl friend; "Why get so upset? Why id start the ball rolling with a ten dollar dona- | you go to him in a perfectly tion right here and now! { way and lie about the whole thing? * * * * * * "Kersey" Frank breakiasts at Bennett's Res-| How About a Big Steak? {qurant and the other morning when he came | Last week the dailies carried pictures of up ‘o eat the restaurant was still closed. Feel- shoppers jamming butcher shops to buy | ing sure thew must have overslept. he started | steaks at thirty-nine cents a pound. Well, | being on the same column with So What | we're durned if we could find anything near | rushed downstairs and started things cooking. that figure in these y’ar parts, and we're | After he had served “Kersey” he happened to not kidding. | glance up at the clock, but couldn't believe But in those communities where this im- | 1's eyes cause it was only 4:30 a. m. - - - -| ported beef was imported from Canada, Seems “Kersey had made a mistake and was folks did have a heyday of juicy steaks, al- | several hours early. though it now appears that this meat had Yr Yo Yr been frozen and thus could not be re-frozen or kept for any length of time. In fact, a local butcher tells us that if they would trim that neat like any self- respecting local butcher would do before selling it, that the cost would oe actually nearer eighty cents than thirty-nine. forever, he Spring is in the air! Newcomer's got an or-| der from one man for three lawn mowers When they asked him if he hadn't made al | mistaize he replied: “No, it wasn't a mistake! | You see, I have two neighbors that have none of their own and if I don’t get them one they will always have mine when I want it.” *. dk ik x kx % 2: : A fellow has to be darn careful now-a-days Behind The Scenes what he puts in print — — — Frank Shreve, | But, we wonder, how many of us give proprietor of the Farmers Inn, (adv.) tareatens | much thought to a turn in the market such | "Co this newspaper if his name appears on | as is seemingly occurring in the meat |, “oo with Philosopher E — — — | - 2 market 2s ‘i ; : a I personally can't see what's wrong with | With visions of thirty-nine cent steaks in bei : : FL iv’ a : . mw | being on the same column with the “So What our mind, we bumped into Tom Hollinger 1 it font he Obituary Col " Saturday afternoon. Tom had a big smile as ong as I isn on i g on his face which wasn’t exactly in keep-|— — — SOY Frank, it won't happen again. ing with what he told us. “Yep,” Tom ad- * * * mitted, “I just sold all my stock at a loss Here's probably what would be published | of 368 per head.” if we found thet some jckester had stolen «ll Well, we asked, what does a who | the letter s's from our type cabinet. fattens steers do when he has to take a “Thome louthy thneaking throundred hath | loss like that in a falling merket? Just go |thtolen into our compcthing room and thkee-| right out and buy up new stock to fatten, | daddled with all our eaheth. We muth there-| Tom told us. And that, as we see it, takes | fore apologithe to our readerih for the inthipid | the kind of business nerve which should | gppearance of thith week'ta ithue. ultimately spell good, decent profits for} We would altho like to thtate that if at any the fellow willing to take the chance. time in the yearth to come we thee thith dir- Sure, we all want cheaper steaks. But |v thnake in the grath about the premitheth, | when we get them we should not lose sight we will thoot Bint tho {ail of of the fact at maybe a lot of fellows like | 1 a irwith chethe.” Tom Hollinger took it on the chin. And what would the world do without fellows * * * A farmer up near Center, after seven years willing to take chances such as he did? ot effort on the stony farm, announced to all | * * * and sundry: | “Anyhow, I'm holding my own. I hadn't Rest Spots 8 : | A friend writes in to add - thought to jong Tm Dome here havent Both our editorial last week on making the turn- | : 4 * J | pike safer. “‘Fatigue is largely responsible : for accidents on the turnpike,” he surmises, |. One termite to another termite as they met adding, “I think much could be accomplish- | in “ont of a venetian blind! “Look, our bread | ed by placing many more rest spots along |! coming sliced now! the turnpike.” i * * * And with tha’ we thoroughly agree.; Started leafing through my seed catalog and Some states have small picnic areas, some | the new seeds on the market this year make with bubbling springs, some with modern | even me anxious to start tae garden. Man! buildings, where the weary motorist can | This new tomato seed doesn't even have to be stop and relieve the tension of Constant | The catalogue says. “drop Atlas pk ni 05h Daves: the tors. rast d : | Charlie's tomato seed anywhere, and you'll | I ; ] airs 100 | store bill, meaty as « butcher's hand, and red- oughly littered with paper, otc. To estab-| ger them your neighbor's face when he s lish a couple dozen shady noc s where the | oo gon » 2 : Ses tired motorist could remain uatil he felt | ¥ a ists fool. 1 refreshed again, not only would make the], Sn SR col I ordered fow- turnpike safer but would make driving on | een: packages immatiatgly, it a lot more pleasant. * * * | Yep, we think rest spots on tho turnpike | A Florin gent says his wile has a mania for | are a mighty good suggestic... Good enough, | ‘fixing up old furniture, and the other night in fact, that we intend to send a copy of | told him to try a chair that she had bought this editorial up to Governor Fine. at a farm «© 71. and just finished fixing over. He I sal down and remarked: “This rocking chair | * * * isn't very “comfortable; It should be, she ex-! Washington Warmed Us ciaimed, “I just put in new rocks.” - - - Quch-! | J | it wasn’t President Eisenhower who said * * * “against the Insidious wiles of a foreign| #nd just remember, said George Shatto— influence the jealous of a free people ought | “You can call your garden a success when to be cnstantly awcke, since history and | your neighbor's chickens ke first prize ‘at experience prove that foreign influence is {the Poultry | = ow. one of the most baneful foes of a republicar Hi Ve + * government.” Fe | ‘ No, the president dic ut utter those wise | words nor did any other foe of C. Amunism. Those are the words of George Washington uttered even before he becanie the first President of thee United States. | Really, some ching radical must have hap-» pened since then! } Was chewing the fat with an old timer last |night and I asked: “Did yon vote, Pop?” "Shucks—No,” he replied as he aimed for the spitoon. “There weren't nobody runnin’ I'm ‘or, and there weren't no way to vote again em I ain't fer!” — — — That explained it. A WISE OW.’ | announces that | who show one amount in hoeleth he |§ After Small If You Want Your | Auto Tags On Time Check For Mistakes new every Applicants for making mistake tags are cy orders, they are sending the Revenue Dept. Secretary Otto F. mittances are coming into | was apparently caused by a | vear old son of the license | when he lit a piece of paper in mima the kitchen stove and then car imaginable on checks and mon-| peg jt to the 10 | where he laid it on the sofa. To his wife, the former Dora Gut Small Child Sets Sofa And Rug On Fire | The Friendship Fire Com-| pany answered a fire alarm on Friday to a Mount Joy R1 farm heim R4, Twp |and found a sofa and rug ablaze his home Friday after an illness | in the living room. Irvin Myers, of several weeks. He wa assistant fire chief, said the fire mer, retiring nine years ago a1 tenants living room | prevent water damage to the Messner | interior of the more faulty re-|carried the burning the | rug outdoors where the fire was lie G., firemen and home, sofa Bureau of Motor Vehicles than| extinguished. in any previous renewal period. | The farm is owned by Anna Probably the one main reas-| Mumma and tenanted by Mr. on for mistakes this year is un- (and Mrs. Andrew Cortez. familiarity with the new law which changes the next expira- | CORN SOLD FOR $46 A TON AT L. H. NISSLEY SALE tion date for coimnmercial vehic- ie tags from March 31, 1954 to| May 31, 1954, Instead of for- warding a check or Money Or- der for a l14-month period this time, owners are sending in the fee for only one year—that, de- spite the fact that the correct a- mount is stamped in large num- erals on the new applications they are receiving. Thousands of other errors, though, have no origin in a change of law. “Some applicants are sending us the fee for a passenger car instead of a truck or some other commercial vehiele,” he disclos- es. “Others are sending the fee for an operator's license, or making out the check or Money the Pennsylvania of Revenue.” Then there are the applicants | who fail to sign their check, or num- erals, then spell out a different sum. : Secretary, Messner announces that all renewal applications for new plates have been mail- ed to every owner. If he or she { has not received it by Thursday, February 26, he urges that the owner contact the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Revenue, Harrisburg, at To facilitate checking the rec- ords, the owner should be sure | to mention his title number. Reduce Losses of Foals Some of the horses that are romp- ing home ahead of the field today owe their victories—and their lives —to new scientific discoveries. Ac- cording to veterinarians at the Uni. versity of Kentucky, losses of un- | born and new born foals due to in. | fections have been reduced 20 per- cent in the bluegrass area of Ken- tucky within the past few years. Better means of diagnosing ailments of foals and improved disease-fight- ing drugs are cited as principal fac- | tors in the loss reduction. tll Qe Bulletin Ads Pay Big Dividends. Department of | once. | ton; hay for $30.50 a ton; bar- ley at 1.45 a bushel. and $20; a wagon air compressor, $81; rr — Farm equipment and house- [hold goods sold for a total of $9,851 Wednesday at a public sale held by Levi H. Nissley, on the Cameron Springs. Farm, Donegal Corn sold for $45 and $46 a Three tractors brought $355, | | $425, and $690; a tobacco plant- ler, $110; | $150 ‘and rake grass mower, $200; $315; and hay elevator, $250. | manure spreaders $200; side delivery disc plow, $310; | grain drill, $200; Tobacco ladders sold for $13 | for $207.50; | and plat- | form scale, $51. Rocking chairs Order in favor of the Bureau of | brought $15 each, and rugs sold | Internal Revenue, instead of to | for $2 to $43. Department | were the auctioneers. | | | Hess | | Dupes and | | v J SUCCESS V-¥. ites Fo PIEDMORT PICKLES KOSHER DILL 24%;-0z PROCESSED , jar 29° THANK YOU KIEFFER PEARS Jeu AD SUNRYFIELD RICE : nid = 37 LORD MOTT'S GREEN BEANS FRENCH 153-01 15° STYLE , can 3 al I == RL ZZZL CLEAN “ Only $2.00 PER WEEK Down Payment $514.95 ® Activator® Washing Action ® Fingertip Controls ® Adjust- able Wringer ® One-year War- ranty And lots, lots more— You'll have to eome in and SEE! BUY G. E. WASHERS WHERE YOU GET FACTORY TRAINED SERVICE AT | WAY’S APPLIANCES 48 W. Main Street, Mount Joy Authorized Dealer “GENE WASHER | FAUST RED SOCKEYE SALMON 8-02 49° can POUND CAKE Re RED CIRCLE COFFEE 79 3-1b. bag 1-1b. $2.31 bag i 32 'PALMOLIVE SOAP 3 F regular size 22¢ Cakes LIPTON SOUP MIXES 35° 2 pkes 20g Noodle or Tomato-Vegetable ONION SOUP MIX * LIPTOR TER jflarm of A W. JANE PARKER GOLDEW| 'PALMOLIVE SOAP | co 380 te BB SOAPLESS DETERGENT big + : dant PIC i ) pkg. 21 1 (EA BAGS 7%, 53° i 959 wn 10° of 16's 20 of 48 53 Pg. oa pkg. Get 1 large package for 14-price when you : take coupon on package te your dealer. Mae cemetery. and | A | MRS. ANNA GRACE GABLE Mrs. Anna Grace Gable, 58, Mrs, Stella Harrisburg, | Mrs Bordner, of Lebanon. Mortuary Record —— sister, Mrs. Berstler, of Middle J. HOWARD NEIDEIGH town, also survives. wife of John Gable, 5 Ehrhorn I. Howard Neideigh, 83, Man ———— : [St Lebanon, died Wednesday died at MRS. FRANK H. SCHENCK [evening at her home. Mrs. Emma M. Shenck, 79, | Besides her husband, she is wife of Frank H. Shenck, survived by these sons and disville, died at her home Wed-| daughters I'ne Rev. John H, 7:45 a. m. after an| Gable, Florin; Carl James Gab- | 1e, Josephine, wife of Chester S., and Hale, all of a far He was born in Perry Co., a|nesday at son of the late Alpheus and Je- [illness of six months, Snyder Neideigh, and! She was a daughter of the! D Smith, and Mrs. Jeannette was a member of the Mount Joy | late William and Magdalene Roth, all of Lebanon; and Allen Church of God. There Dierolf and was a | Leon Gable, at home. survive | Beiswenger charter member of Zion Luth- SW shall, and these children; Hul-|eran Church, Landisville, LETTERS GRANTED dah, wife of Milton Arndt, Eli-| Besides her husband, with] Union National Bank, execu- marked | tor of the estate of Joseph R, Gibble, late of Rapho Twp, | whom she would have wedding anniversary zabethtown; Ross J., Lititz; Nel wife of Jacob Young, of her 53rd Manheim; Mrs Florence MM. in March, she is survived by a! John D. Newcomer, 2nd, 224 Heisey, Palmyra; Martha G.,|son, George A. Shenck, Landis- | So. Market St, Mouht Joy, ad brother, Geo. M. Dier- | ministrator of the estate of olf, Landisville; and one grand- } John D. Newcomer, late of Mt, Shertzer Sr., Salunga: Effie M.,| daughter | wife of Ray Baker, Manheim;| Funeral services on Saturday | Mary E. Koder, 43 W. Main Minnie G., wife of Glenn Huntz- at 2 p. m. at the Koser Funeral | St., Mount Joy, executrix of the berger, Elizabethowtn R3; Ar-!Home in Landisville, with in-|estate of Erwin J. Horn, late of thur W., Elizabethtown; terment in the Landisville | Mount Joy. Nora A., at home; also twenty- | 4 v Sebi pti i four grandchildren, sixteen |§| great-grandchildren; a Mrs. Jacob Williams, Mt. Joy R1: and two brothers, Alton, of Blaine, Perry Co.; and Edward of Marietta. Funeral services Tuesday in the Nissley Funeral | Home, this boro, with services at the Mt. Joy Church | of God. Interment made in the Henry Eberle wife of Homer Heisey, Palmyra | ville; a Rhoda V., wife of Samuel and sister, WHEN THINGS LOOK BLACK CALL 3-407 1 were held) further was cemetery. ALBERT CALEY Albert Caley, 79, of near Sa-| lunga, died February 19 at the} 9 Lancaster County Hospital af- | IC er ys ter a long illness. He was employed as a farm laborer until his illness, on the| Wickenheiser, | 76 - 78 EAST MAIN STREET MT. JOY, PA. WE OPERATE OUR OWN PLANT | Member National Institute of Cleaning and Dyeing Drycleaning Guild of Lancaster City and County near Salunga, and was a mem ber of the Mount Joy Evangelic- al United Brethren Church. He is survived by the follow- | ing children: James S., Ray-/ CELERY SE Jer 19° NONE PRICED HIGHER f Jumbo Staik EP FLORIDA INDIAN RIVER NONE PRICED HIGHER GRAPEFRUIT BEANS Ir 2 Ibs. ? c NEW POTATOES FLORIDA RED BLISS 5 8 | U. 5. No. 1A" sizig Bj Ibs. | 10-0r. 9 Fresh Spinach 9 too. 30. Red Radishes 3 snow 14° Prunes une, 1» 925: xv 47 ORANGE JUICE 27° STRAWBERRIES 2: SNOW CROP FROZEN FOODS Vegetables Mixed gy 10-or pho. YOUR CHOICE ri 12-01. pkg. 2 5 Peas ; SFE 'KRAFT’S MACARONI DINNER CHEDDAR CHEESE es CASHMERE BOUQUET SOAP 3-22: CASHMERE BOUQUET SOAP 3-32: \ All Prices in This Advertisement Effective Through Saturday, February 28th SILVER DUST OCTAGON "BREEZE ; LAUNDRY SOAP Dish Towel in Each Package Face Cloth in Each Package larg Cc i il 1 60° 26; VEL SUPER 085 | ng BUFFALO BRAND FROZEN 2... 25 49: Suan 59: large pkg SILVER DUST Dish Towel in Each Package giant pkg. GERBER’S BABY FOODS SOAPLESS DETERGENT SUPER SUDS | Dish Cloth inEach Package i 5 . : . wei eal t ¢ STRAINED % 10 er 95¢ : large ¢ 05 C i0PPED "gions 89g large 3°03 Ps. ; . ? abl oupon on hack of package worth 10¢ fo- Get 25¢ refund by sending coupon on box | CZREALS . 2-02 pkg (Te! Wd ward purchase of 2 large or 1 giant package top to Giant Super Suds, P. O, Box 710, ’ » of VEL, N. Y.46, N.Y —_— «By Vals «RE { 4 87 EAST MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY, PA. Pl M Penn 4 wood ectric bath ing Ii Barn chick J ises. 1] schoo I on sa S be mu EV. J. H. Xa h =