The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 29, 1954, Image 8

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29
|THE BULLETIN, Mount Joy, Pa.
Thursday, July 29 §

Penna. Game
Commission
Weekly Letter
The
the
tion
increase in
popula-
in Pennsylvania is credited
in part to participation by many
organizations and
farmers in the
recent-year
ringneck pheasant
sportsmen’s
program of the Game Commis-
Son.
Organizations and individuals
engaged the chick rearing
endeavor have compiled an en-
viable record of success in the
past few years. Some of these
propagators has successfully
raised nearly 100 percent of the
birds allotted them.
about 80 percent of
erage,
game farms have been
d to the 12 weeks minim- |
state
real
um liberation age.
The record shows that be-
tween early May and late June |
of this year 220,485 day-old]
pheasant chicks were shipped |
from state game farms to cabs!
and persons eligible to partici- |
pate in the undertaking.
The breakdown of this year's
shipment is: sportsmen’s clubs, |
64,530 chicks; farm-game co- |
operators, rabbit farms and
farmers with land open to pub-
lic hunting, 155,955. The total |
is close to that each of the
past two years.
>heasants reared by
men’s organizations will
berated by the clubs in their)
localities. Many of the
male birds raised by the others
will be released by Game Comn-
mission officers just prior to or
small game
a high return to hun-
of
sports-
be li-
home
during the season
to ensure
| Other
Sportswomen assume their
Right
jo happened
says Game Protector
Wiggins. “A new
sportsmen - or
has just been granted
at last”
Harold W
group
has
member-
ship in the Northampton Coun- |
[ty Federation.
| “This club is believed
{the only chartered
of its kind in the United States.
to be
(It’s membership is restricted to |
the |
women, and its is
Femme Rod and
name
Gun Club of
Foston’
Farmyard Bird is Pheasant
Chicknapper
Game Protector Calvin
| Hoope r
County game chicken left her
home quarters one day in May
land strolled to parts
When came back,
days later, brought
a clutch of young pheasants.
“It would seem she drove
ringneck pheasant from her
and finished hatching the
eggs herself. Since her return |
[the chicken has been in
mood to allow the real mother
or any person to get close to the |
appropria- |
reports:
a few
along
she
she
a|
Inest
no |
young pheasants she
[ted.”
Knowledge of Field Conditions|
{Important In Wildlife Planning |
=" | The general welfare of wild |
|birds and animals, game breed- |
ling results and matters effecting |
[their populations or health are
|always of prime concern to |
|wildlife authorities. The spec- |
lialists are close observers the |
[year around, also, of food and |
[cover conditions, necessities |
{which are affected by extremes |
{in weather and by pests and di- |
| seases.
Knowledge of food shortages |
lis important for the needs of na- |
| ture 's children in winter, partic-
|ularly. Through their experi-|
ence with growing things wild- |
[life managers can determine by |
late summer what the winter |
|food crop will be and so plan |
[their winter feeding program in |
| advance.
| On-the-ground
of game protectors, sportsmen |
| and- farmers over all months of |
the year help the Game Com-
| mission in its planning. For ex-
| ample,
killing frosts in some areas in
mid-spring that have been not- |
observations |
ed. Later developments in those |
watched. |
| localities will be
| Where natural food crops for
certain wild species are inade-
|auate the authorities will,
| previously, plan ahead for the
purchase and distribution of
{supplemental food for wildlife
|during the critical period.
Edge Cutting Provides Ideal
{ Home For Wildlife
“A late spring trip around an
edge cutting on a Farm-Game
{Project in Wyoming County re-
pheasant rearing |
On the av-|
the |
day-old phasants supplied from
| they take
| opinion
of |
sportswomen - |
organization
{
A.
“A Lawrence |
unknown. |
| $3,700.
as |
| vealed the extent to which food
| producing shrubs and vines
| will grow if the environment is
| right.”
So said N. M. Ruba, in charge
of the Game Commission's land
| utilization program in north- |
| east Pennsylvania. He backed
his assertion with: “A total of
| 18 different food-bearing spec-
| ies were counted, either in blos- |
som or beginning to fruit.
Coupled with the dense cover
provided by the felled tree tops
and sprout growth, plus the
food provided in adjacent clov- |
er fields, this area is a wildlife
| paradise.”
Woodchuck Hunting
Game Protectors in the South-!
east Division of the Pennsyl-|
vania Game Commission report
the woodchuck hunters are
turning out in goodly numbers.
Much of the hay and grains
have been harvested from the
fields, the woodchucks are more
exposed when feeding and furs
nish inviting targets to the hun-
ters. M. D. Stewart, Supervisor
of the Southeast Division re-|
| ported that three accidents have
| been charged to woodchuck this
year in the thirteen counties
within his jurisdiction. Fortun- |
ately all injuries have been
slight, the accidents have been
reported as happening in Leb- |
anon. Montgomery and Schuyl- |
kill Counties. One accident was
self-inflicted, and in all cases
the contributing cause was the |
accidental discharge of a
arm.
Stewart urges that all hunt-
ers be sure that the firearms
into the field, are in
good mechanical condition. The
firearms should be carried at
all times with the safety “on.” |
The Supervisor expressed the |
that many accidents
would be avoided if the hunters
never place the safety in a “fire”
position except when the weap-
| on is pointed at a legal target.
safety factors to be con- |
sidered by the hunters is the
| type of clothing they wear in
| the field. Bright colored cloth- |
| ing, especially head-gear, that
will not blend in with the sur- |
roundings or be mistaken for
woodchuck is vitally important. |
Too often a fatal accident has
| been caused because the hunter |
| placed himself in a position in
which he himself was mistaken
for the quarry he was seeking. |
Accidents of this type could be |
reduced by the hunters being |
| sure of their targets before fir- |
| ing.
Although the Game Commis-
sion has removed the protection |
from woodchuck it is still con-
a game animal and Sun-
During
1 to Sep-
sidered
hunting is illegal.
the period from July
tember 30 the legal hunting
hours are from 6 am. to 7:30 p.
m. Eastern Standard Time. All
| hunters must comply with the
law and wear the license in the |
middle of the back. Supervisor
Stewart also pointed out that |
the current 1953 hunting license
is valid only until August 31st,
1954.
day
Authority Awards |
Contract Bids
Two bids were awarded at a|
| special meeting of the Mount |
Joy Borough Authority Monday |
night at the Gerberich- Payne |
office. The first bid was for the
building of a base for the new
standpipe was awarded to the |
Jaffola Firm, Boyerstown, for |
$16,225.00. |
The second was awarded to |
Paul Martin, Mount Joy, for |
His bid is to construct |
and pave an alley leading into |
| the standpipe. Contract calls for |
| starting of the standpipe at the |
end of August.
®
TOMATOES PROVE
SALAD TEMPTERS
For tempting meat or vegeta- |
ble salads, use tomatoes.
Not only are they good to eat
but they're loaded with vita- |
mins A and C. i
For a hearty salad, cut stem
| ends from six tomatoes. Cut
| four times from the top almost
reports saying there was
through the bottom to form
| eight attached petals. Place to-|
matoes on lettuce.
Fill with a mixture of 1 cup
diced cooked meat, 1 cup diced
| cooked potaties, 1 tablespoon |
minced onion, and 2 tablespoons |
| chopped green pepper. Add]
| salt, pepper, and dressing to
taste. {
—
APPLE DESERTS
Apple desserts can be made]
more colorful if you add some |
red cinnamon hearts to the ap-|
ple before cooking. Try the can-
dies in apple sauce, too.
|
| tennial Players throughout
| sented on the
| 11
| Harrisburg
| 2,000 spectators
| tennial
| of the New World.
| this historic
| Pennsylvania.
Keystone State
Offers Many
Tourists Spots
land of
many
Pennsylvania, vaca-
tion surprises,
standing tourist
the visitor this season,
the State Department of
merce.
has
reports
Com
Unique among these events is
the original outdoor drama of
the Pennsylvania Dutch, "Out
of This Wilderness,” being pre-
sented by the Selinsgrove Cen
the
summer.
According to the Department,
| the production, simple and
sincere drama of authentic his
tory and folklore, pre
stage of the Sel
¢
1
is being
outdoor
the
Us
insgrove Fairground
theatre located in sight of
famous Susquehanna Trail,
and 15, midway between
and Williamsport
The theatre accommodates over
at per-
formance. The drama is present-
Wednesday, Thursday
and Saturday throughout the
summer beginning July 28. Tic-
kets are available through Cen-
Players, Inc., Selings- | ¢
grove, Pa. Those offices are
also equipped to reserve over- |
night accomodations in the |
many fine hotels and motels to
be found in the vicinity.
each
ed each
acts por- |
any
The drama in two
trays for the first time
stage the heroic men and wom-
en of Frontier Days who lived,
fought and died in their
struggle to found a new nation
in this land of freedom. Portray-
ed in the cast are Conrad Weis-
er, famous Indian mediator;
Chief Shikellamy; Count Zin- |
zendorf, famous Moravian mis-
sionary; Chief Seneca George;
Gabriel, trader and first
settler: Anthony Selin, Revolu-
tionary War hero; Catherine
Snyder and yovernor Simon
Snyder, Selinsgrove’s first and
only State Governor, for whom
Snyder County was named.
As the play unfolds, the audi-
ence becomes a part of the real
life story of the German people
who fled from religious and
political oppression of their na-
tive land into the “Wilderness”
“Out of this
built the
Keystone
on
loved,
Wilderness,” they
towns which are the
of the Nation we have today.
The spectotors watches 200
years of history pass in a single
evening. They share a peoples’
mingled emotions and deeply
religious convictions through
heartwarming of joy,
triumph, simple and
humor and the happiness and
glory these people feel when
the Nation they have .made is
preserved as their own United
States. Their patriotism and
love for their country
in Stirring music and
composed especially for
play.
There are many other
esting things to do and
and senic
scenes
comedy
Songs
inter-
see in
sector of
week immediately
the or esentation of
For the
preceding
out-
attractions for |
{ long
ty
in 17
| the
i
is shown
this |
| oy of This Wilderness,”
be the Fair
| held every evening. This is only
| one of the many well known
| Fairs held annually in the Key-
| stone State.
Selinsgrove
Selinsgrove is the center of a
section rich in historic lore. Just
north of the city is located the
Albany Treaty Purchase Mark-
j er indicating the line of the fa-
{ mous Indian purchase arranged
the Albany and a
point of national historic inter
an impor-
Pennsyl
remains
by Congress
Selinsgrove was
of the old
and many
may be
in the vicini-
est
tant
vania Canal,
of the
the
center
canal observed a-
highway
only
from Selinsgrove
Sunbury, a few oiled]
and the
Susquehan-
at the
and
on
the
fe 1der
opposite side of
is located con-
the west
that stream. To the
is located the
built
by the
a histor-
na River
fluence of north
branch
north of the
es of
Clty,
Augusta,
marked
site of old Fort
56, now
State and developed
ic shrine with a museum and a |
model of the Fort restored. Fort
Augusta Mansion is headquar-
ters of the Northumberland
County Historical Society.
Thomas A. Edison conducted |
xperiments in Sunbury which |
led to the development of the
world's first three-wire com-
mercial lighting system, and the |
city is properly known as ‘‘the
as
| birthplace of the electric light.” |
The City Hotel, destroyed by |
fire in 1914 and later rebuilt as.
Edison Hotel, was the first
building in the world to be elec- |
trically lighted. It stands in the
heart of Sunbury’s business sec- |
tion. The scenery along the Sus- |
quehanna, at Sunbury’s front |
door, ranks with the most in-|
spiring in America. Across the |
river is the famed Blue Hill, no- |
ted scenic spot.
- ai
STRING BAND TO PLAY
AT FLORIN CARNIVAL
The Hageman’s String Band, |
Philadelphia will be the featur- |
ed entertainment at the Florin |
Carnival Saturday night, July|
31. The band will march and’
put on a display drill on the!
street in front of the Florin Hall |
during the evening.
WAY’S
RFCORD
CORNER
THE HIGH AND MIGHTY—
LeRoy Holmes
CINNAMON SINNER-—
Tony Bennett
SWAY-—
Dean Martin
LOOK SHARP. BE SHARP—
Boston Pops
DEEP IN MY HEART, DEAR— |
Mario Lanza |
IF I DIDN'T CARE—
Hilltoppers |
BOULEVARD OF NIGHT-
INGALES—
Tony Martin
WAY'S APPLIANCES
Phone 3-3622
48 w Main Street,
Mount Joy

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run the
ain demonstrated their ex-
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48 WEST MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
09
DI,

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Womens Dress Shoes pr
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Childrens Sandals SD or
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SUMMER
REDUCTIONS
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IN BROWN, NAVY, WINE,
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SALE PRICE
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CREPES - PLAIN COLORS - FANCIES
in nylons, dracons, rayons, cottons ocnhd cotton crepes,
the kind that-need no ironing.
Take advcntage of these] fine items which are priced at
a great saving to you.
EsHLEMAN BRoOSs.
MOUNT JOY, PA.


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