THE BULLETIN, Mount Joy, Pg Thursday, July 8 OWL LAFFS BY A WISE OWL LOST: One black, size 8%, Gerberich-Payne, right foot * shoe - - - Person who found it call 3-9314 High & Mt. Joy Or if you don’t care to return » shoe, come and get the other one, then one of us may have -a pair. Clyde Nissley says « who is tall, dark and has some Several days ago Vera Albert | « walked home for lunch, after * driving to work in the car - - - : upon finishing her lunch was about to return to work when she discovered her car was missing - - - after search- “ing the block for some minutes it only dawned on her, that the “car was parked over at the of- fice on Main Street. A congressional committee is | +a body that keeps minutes and wastes days. I know a fellow who lives on Marietta Street that is so con- ceited that on ‘he sent a telegram of congratu- lation to his mother. “Mushy” Good told me (Phil- osopher) Enck is in the market for several good used tricycles - --- - don’t ask me why! : Did you ever hear about the time Ab Weaver was going to West Virginia, and approaching a town he saw a sign that read You are now entering the town DETOUR Ab’s eves being a little on the weak side did not see the small words “You are now entering” so he drove around the town thinking he was on a detour. A fellow on Main Street told me he thinks his wife is getting tired of him. He said “Every day this week she’s wrapping lunch in a road map.” my A local nurse at the General Hospital asked a fresh patient if there was anything else she could do for him before turning out the light. He answered that she could kiss him. “I'll call the janitor does all the dirty work around > was her squelcher. . he here An old-timer is one who can remember when all the govern- ment gave away was free seeds. Don’t ask: Harry Darrenkamp who the carpenter (?) who helped to fix the chicken coop Tuesday night, cause he won't tell you anyhow, or somebody else might try to hire her. was I never saw anything to com- pare with my wife. She’s more like a baseball umpire than an umpire himself. - - - She makes quick dgcisions, never when I'm out. One of our secretaries thinks | a filing cabinet is a place where you can lose things systematic- | ally. A Barbara Street man had vacation last week and on one of the very hot days his wife had three electric fans running all day long. Finally he asked: "Don’t vou think that’s extrav- agant, running three fans all day?” She gave him a dirty look and said: “I wouldnt worry about it, if I were you They're not our fans - - - I bor- ‘rowed them from the neighb- ors’ — — — — Well! That's different. In most of today’s homes there is a switch to control ev- erything except the children. A WISE OWL St.;} most gals | « are looking for the type of man | she | his last birthday | reverses | them. and doesn’t think I'm safe | THE BULLETIN { Published every Thursday at 11 East Main Street, *Mount Joy. Lancaster County, Pa. Larmon D. Smith, Publisher E. Schroll, 1901-1952 $2.50 per Mail ( upon request. | postoffice at as second-class March 3, John E Editor and Publisher, Subscription Rate vear by Advertising rates Entered at the Mount Joy, Pa., mail under the Act of 1879. | Member, ! paper Publishers’ Pennsylvania News- Association. || Ie | 54 =| HO | = = | By ‘Ms. Edith arb | Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. tice Wittle were Mr. and { Donald Jones, Mount Joy RD, | | Mr. Charles Wittle, Columbia | RD., Mrs. Matilda Derr of town, | Mrs. Ragner Hallgren, Mt. Joy, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wittle and | { children, Columbia. | Mr. and Mrs. John Fogie of Mountville, visited Mrs. Serena | Fogie { Mrs. Earl Geltmacher and | | children attended the Stoppard | reunion at Mt. Wolf, Sunday. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fogie and family were, Mr. and | Mrs. Victor Fogie, Phila., Mr. | ! and Mrs. Abner Fogie and fam- | | ily, E-town RD. | Thomas Fogie, Robert Frank, | | Owen Haines and Jim Kreiser, spent Saturday at Holloway Aris- Mrs Mothers and children in the | Lancaster County area were | getting 12.5% of the almost {in the | ciaries 1953. Nationwide, over a quar- | ter of a million widowed moth- ers were paid a total of over Mothers And Children | Receive Large Share Seeing is Believing $620,000 total in so- | cial being paid in the county end of 1953, M. S Lancaster announced monthly benefits at the Gleaton security Insurance social to- manager of the security office, day These figures $4500 pay- newly available show an increase of over total of ments to this group of benefici in the period ending with December, he Total payments to children in this county was about $48,000 the month of December. In the nation as a whole, million children were total of about $3214 monthly payments at the end of | monthly 12-month said for over getting a million in one $915 million in December. The largest groups of benefi- ciaries uner the insurance program, continue to be retired workers, Gleaton said. In December a bout 8200 such beneficiaries in the Lancaster County area were paid a total of over $415,000. This was an increase of about $450,000 in total payments in social security however, “Gan you name 2 THIS BRITISH SCIENTIST DEVISED PERISCOPIC LENSES FOR SPECTACLES IN 1804 INVENTED OPTICAL INSTRUMENTS, AND WAS FIRST TO OBSERVE DARK LINES IN THE SOLAR SPECTRUM. oY SEEN INVERTED HERE 770M FAAH WYITTIM 2 IN NEAR-DARKNESS, yOU CAN SEE AN OBJECT BEST BY LOOKING TO ONE SIDE OF IT OR SEESAWING YOUR EYES ABOUT ITS VICINITY. 12, 000, 000 AMERICANS SUFFER FROM, CHRONIC HEADACHES - AND VISUAL TROUBLES ARE PROMINENT AMONG THEIR CAUSES, SAYS THE BETTER VISION INSTITUTE. 75% PERCENTAGES "53% VISUALLY EMPLOYEES 35% UNE WITH FAULTY 50% VISION ARE DIFFERENT FOR DIFFERENT FIELDS! a 12-month period. Nationwide, i | the increase in retired-worker | Beach. | beneficiaries was about 24 per- | EER { Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Witmer | cant. and the total of monthly | { and sons of Esbenshade Road, | payments to them increased to ¥ LORI N T 3 | visited Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Wit- | $164.659.061 in the same peri-/| em aii) DIA MONDS mer and family: | od. = Mr. and oe . it Me Curl om Mrs. Edith Erb and Bobbie | Gleaton said that many of us| dy, Brenda and Connie Pierce i Witmer visited Mrs. Paul Wit- | are inclined to think of old-age | June Hollin Miss Mary | mer and family on Sunday. ! and survivors insurance under | Hamilton, called on Mr and | Visitors of Mrs. Matilda Derr | (he social security system as a| Mrs. A. O. Wiitle at Columbia were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gai | program for retired workers| RD. Mrs. Annie Wagner ang nor and sons of West Fairview |! and their dependents exclusive-| Mr. and Mrs. Walter Geyer at] Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hougen- |v. As the figures relating to| Elizabethtown RD, on Tuesday: | | togler, Columbia visited Mr.| and children indicate,| Mrs. Richard Kraus and son, | and Mrs. Maurice Frysinger and | however, survivors benefits are | Richard Jr., Mrs. Everett Kraus| Choose ! licmona Ir Mrs. Katie Moore and Mrs. Ida | 5, important part of the pro-|of Lancaster brought Connie | tl Eisenberger. | gram too. and Brenda Pierce on Friday to | ‘or i ny i iin ad) Other beneficiaries on the ns vp days with iid ne Mrs: Abram Garber. : | rolls in the Lancaster County an cpm 36 dary. V0: OLUMBIA-TRUL-r1l Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gamb- | 0 a aod go and Mrs. Daniel Mumper. = er visited Mr. and Mrs. Haroja| Sent by a en Mr. John Frye and Mrs. Katie ALSO Fry, of the Zion Home. { le a 3 wr = ED - Couch will leave on Saturday | O wi lian {is wi Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Dane) dependent widowers of deceas- | ° SY ray i ar lr Wil, Stabs an 1 an-1 4 workers, and dependent | 10 SB d several weeks in Can-| 3 from iel Geltmacher were Mrs. Sere- | parents who are receiving sur 1a BS le youn aud Mrs. John vivors benefits. The total ofall Mr. 2 dt Mrs, George Mumpet | eo . | beneficiaries in the County arch and Mr and Mrs John Bender { Miss Barbara Ann Finnefrock | receiving monthly benefit pay’ = spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. 'Koser’ S Jewelry Store. and Merlin Funk spent Satur-| ments at the ond of 1953 ai Beriamin Frye and family, at | day at Wildwood, N. J. 14,000, Gleaton said. Adam Co, Prone 3-5404 Mrs. Oliver Witmer and | as aie - and Mrs. Clayton Bren 16 E. Main St., Mt. Joy, Pa. doughter Shirley Ann visited | Marietta spent a few ith 1 visited friends at Reading | 27k Mr. and Mrs. Horace Walters, | her uncle and aunt, Mr and 1 Sunday |i Sp eter Lititz RD. on Sunday. | Mrs. Jacob Erb. Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Hess. and ) Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Rob-| Six puppies were left or-| sons, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ge ib! WAY S ert Frank and family were, Mr. | phans when their mother died | and daughter, Mr. and Mxys. RECORD and Mrs. Arthur Koser, RKlines-{ of a kidney stroke Monday. The | William Smith, and Mr. and te ¢ bv ville, Mrs. Betty Lou Herr, of | dog was owned by Wm. Haines| Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hicker- LORNE ‘R SE Florin, Mr. and Mrs. Hathaway | of town. Mrs. Haines is feeding | nell spent veral days at their B= Brenneman, Mount Joy RD. the puppies with a nipple on a lodge in Perry County. Miss Bonnie Linn Witmer of bottle. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Good- | GOOD NIGHT, SWEETHEART, — —— error — . | ling announce the birth of a GOODNIGHT son Tuesday at the Osteopathic Sunny Gale GROWING BETTER CROPS Hospital at Lancaster Bn TH iE CHAPEL IN THE v Mr. and Mrs. James Posten, OONLIGHT— ol } and dat Mr. and Mrs Kitty Kallen Fred Hauer and children of | pps - Quality Crops for Quality Foods Lancaster, spent the holidays I'M A FOOL TO cage Paul with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Vogel ee these harvest months re nage and much of the fi The grower of the with the consumer, the final judge forged by the rest of the chain reached a peak of 102.2 pounds of canned food per capita On an average, about 80% «c all tomatoes and sweet corn is uit Se Crops 1s canned, as well as about 75% of the green peas and beets, half the asparagus, nearly 60% of sour cherries and almost half the peach, pear and apricot crops, ac- sociation findings. Pennsylvania, it has been est mated that 80-85% of the five major commercial vegetable crops | keting. | Consumer Is King | | As Dr. Amihud Kramer, Uni- y of Maryland horticulturist, | out, “It is the consumer | who calls the tune, through the| retailer, wholesaler, | ar, processor, and determines | the kind of product he wants the | grower to supply “When the processor advises the | grower as to variety to be raised, | or the stage of maturity at which he wishes the crop harvested, he | merely transmits to the grower! the consumer's preference as re-| flected through consumer com- plaints or sales analyses.” Though modern food process- ing can work miracles, high qual- ity of pack is basically dependent on high quality of the fresh or raw product. “If the quality that reaches the factory platform is clean, free from insects and diseases, neither underripe nor overripe,” Kramer says, “the processor has an excel- lent chance of preserving all that excellence, with the ultimate re- sults of satisfied customers, in- creased sales and increased de- mand for acreage.” “In many instances, as, for ex- ample tomatog¢s, asparagus and inks of the points . Probably few people traveling through. our b ze that more reach our tables the cording to National Canners As- jy In one important farming stato, 9 is sold to food processors for mar- #& witiful farmlands than half our vegetable ton- as canned food a | CRAZY "BOUT YOU BABY— nd family. hy The Crew Cuts | ndra Stehman spent SH-BOOM— first link in a great chain end | { Mt. Gretna Camp. of the effort put into the prod | Vrs: Adah Eichler and daugh- Chords And last year US. consumption | io. Mrs, Landis Hess ,spent| SOME DAY— Tuesday at Lancaster Frankie Lane Mr. and Mrs. James M. Eich- | THE LITTLE SHOEMAKER — ler and daughter spent several The Gay Lords days at Niagara Falls and Cana td Good harvesting practices help to insure the proiit in a crop. Jacob Stehman on Tuesday ev- apples, good cultural and harvest- | ening at their home by enter- ing ractices. result not only i ioe Me. g pre 5 i ly inl | {ining guests in honor of their top quality but top yield: the horticulture cludes. rg xtra as weil, | specialist con- Cutting Waste The fact that canned food prices ! have stayed so low is due partly to good raw product takes costly factory 1 d time if unusable ears of corn, mashed or broken beans, sun- burned or immature peppers, pitchfork-damaged squash, toma- toes that are overripe, off-color or injured by pests, disease or pickers, must be “weeded out.” Not to mention field debris. Much of this can be kept down by closer supervision of harvest help, care- ful handling and transportation. Though the processor bears the direct loss, today’s farmer, like | any other businessman, knows that in the end everycne foots the bill for waste, just as every- one sooner or later profits by im- proved crop and factory produc- tion resulting in benefits to the consumer,, ) Wagner, Wedding % WAY’S APPLIANCES Mr. Walter Mateer, Pl one 3-3622 Anna May Ha | Viola Bricker. Mabel Baltozer, |48 W. Main Street, Mount i Valera Johnson of town, Frank | = Zimmerman, of Mt. Joy, and | Mr. and Mrs. John Sanster of! Manheim were fishing at Indian D al bl River, Del., on Saturday and] epen d e | returned with a catch of 180! fish | ? { Miss Sandra Stehman. sur-| prised her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | SERVICE Anniversary. SINCE VETERANS MOVE MORE THAN ANY OTHER GROUP YOU VETS WHO GET VA CHECKS OR HAVE GI INSURANCE SHOULD | MAKE A POINT OF NOTIFYING VA OF | YOUR NEW HOME ADDRES ' Roy M. Ressler | IGHT AWAY. En 27 W. MAIN ST. | -— A me | MOUNTVILLE PHONE 5-5301 | OR CALL WM. K. RESSLER FLORIN, PA. . | MT. JOY 3-5731 | ' New and Used Gas Ranges | 24-tfc | For full i VETERANS tion contact your nearest ADMINISTRATION office (TIPE AND THE RIVER | with the stage of the Mississippi | river, At New Orleans, the period- ic rise and fall of the tide varies being about ten inches at low river stage and zero at high river stage. ERR HD FOOD STORES { Tide Detergent Joy Liquid Detergent 32 #1 15 Camay Soap 3 27 giant bottle large bottle regular size cakes Camay Soap 32° bath size cakes Duz Granulated Soap ns Bac 9 15° Oxydol Detergent ng) 15 Ivory Flakes Soap Flakes eld: lo ivory Snow Granulated Seap 3 7% Lava Soap 32° Soap 23 ¢ giant pkg. large pkg. regular size cakes 3 personal size cakes Ivory Soap 25¢ Ivory Soap 4 medium size cakes 3 large size cakes 2 Rl Bre ALE LO RT NR 3215 Cheer Detergent wp 302 15° Dreft Detergent ay We write and Print Your Ads SELL 2:5 TOU 2) Everbody In This Locality Reads The Bulletin Millions Save at A&P... Because of A&P’s Famous Policy of Storewide Low Prices Every Day! Crisco ‘Shortening 36°: 99 ‘can Swift's Baby Food Wesson 0il 41° sn TT Spic and Span Household Cleaner large giant chopped or pkg. 24° pkg. 17 strained meats can 21° Jumbo 9-Size None Priced Higher Honeydews eo pint bottle quart bottle Ib. can (None Priced Higher) Ib. 25¢ {None Priced Higher each 19° 1 fo, isrum 25¢ dozen 39¢ Northwestern Bing Cherries Jumbo 27-size Pink Meat Gantaloupes Fresh Carrots ‘Juicy Lemons None Priced Higher Pascal Celery elk Je Sealdsweet : Frozen Limeade 20 now Crop Frozen Waffles 2 5% 29 Frozen Lemonade 6. 79° cans Orange Juice on 29¢ 39¢ 35¢ Birds Eye Potatoes rcv. 2 Jc Asparagus Spears Seobrook 10-or. Farms phe. Mrs. Paul's Fish Fillets ron 035 Breaded Shrimp tive oa 99¢ Grand Duchess Steaks Wo 590 Del Monte Fruit Cocktail Monts. Beverages io Asparagus 30-0z. c can 35 29-01. ec bottle 1 0 Tip Top—All Green Spears 28: 1954 New Pack can Nutley Oleomargarine 2 i. 43° Tuna Fish ens 2 on 43 Campfire Marshmallows ,; 28° Kingan’s Chopped Beef 3 12-01. 29¢ Tissues ¥ Price Sale Y=» 2 ‘ow 35¢ Buy one Box of Vanity Fair Tissues at Regular Price of 23¢ . + » Receive 2nd box at 1/5 price of 12¢ A Tremendous Value! A & P Fancy Pineapple Juice i ny Juice Beans July 9 2s gfe 9 eo AF . | 3 2 2 31¢ 20 23¢ Ritz Crackers hk 33 Stewed Tomatoes oo ‘cn 18° Apple Jelly © Jn wr 28 A&P Apricots whois pected prod | Reynold’s Wrap “i 24 "wi" 59 A&P Grapefruit Sections 2':: 29: A&P Grape Juice 2; 16° i 29° Blackberry Pie “uli ‘i 45 Mason Jars Bn 198 = 89 Instant Coffee sir “or $1.15 Save 20c over the Regular Price of $1.35 All Prices in this Advertisement Guaranteed through Saturday, July 10th Dash Dog Food 6 1-lb. 85¢ lc Sale of lc Sale of Sweetheart Soap | Sweetheart Soap Regular Size Bath Size Su 26° Con Co. 39¢ Buy 3 regular size cakes at regular|Buy 3 bath size cakes at regular price price of 25c. Get 4th cake for 1c. of 38c. Get 4th cake for 1c, cans 87 EAST MAIN ST. STORE HOURS—Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs,, & Saturday. MT. JOY, PA. 8:00 to 6:00; Friday 8:00 to 9:00 1 { F > J b = - | A / | | | | i Dy | | ———