Ata ra a on. i COLOR-BLIND ABOUT COAL? —it can cost you money! The cream of America’s black coal is actually tinted blue for your protection, With ‘blue coal’ you're sure of top- quality hard coal. Tinted blue as a trade-mark, ‘blue coal’ burns clean and hot with far less waste. There's less need to MOUNT JOY tend your furnace, when you heat the ‘blue coal’ way. So don’t be color-blind! Get ‘blue coal’ today! ‘blue 3 coal’ AMERICA'S FINEST HARD COAL WOLGEMUTH BRUOS., Inc. Florin, Fa. 9551 Big enough for leadership... Never too big of a ' rt 1 : for friendship The Independent Telephone Industry has grown up with the spirit of Feo] | 11541,000000 ts, onl Hl cj 1650000000 S PLANT INVESTMENT of Independent Telephone Companies friendly community service It’sbig.. mm . 5,100 Independent Telephone Companies . more than nine million telephones... serving two-thirds of the entire area of the U.S.! It’s a 114 billion dollax industry today- double what it was ten short years ago., Yet, for all its size and scope, it is an industry composed of local companies, managed by local people, serving local needs. And though it is growing larger by the day, it will never outgrow its responsible role in community affairs,’ oa) Member 1.S. In ependent Teler = its personal concern with the welfare of; obi neighbors and customers. For America’s Independent Telephone Industry, na J task is too large...no service too small. : al i © TYR 3 7 . > Columbia Telephone Company ASSO on GUARANTEED A AGAINST BREAKAGE Written guarantee comes with every purchase! 16-piece Starter Set Here’s dinnerware that ends your worries about chipped, cracked or broken dishes! oosilon tae . molded of Melmac—new wonder-material— is dinnerware you'll be proud of for Sunday best, yet takes rugged three-meal-a-day family wear. So easy, so safe, the whole family can pitch in with dish-doing. Satiny-smooth and smartly designed Boontonware comes in lovely decorator colors all made to go together: Powder Blue, Golden Yellow, Cranberry Red, Sea Foam Green, Stone Gray, Forest Green. Add these handsome service pieces to your set! MOUNT JOY, — MELMAC “dinnerware at its finest! J. B. HOSTETTER & SONS PENNA. ND Bl 15 cup minced onions and parsley. Bring to a rapid boil. heat to simmer; cover, out without removing lid, until rice is tender. Lower 3 tablespoons butter or mar- ‘ook al tes garine Cook al 14 minutes, 3, cup uncooked riee A cooked rice : 4 ead in buttered 10 x 6 pan ver rice xX inch 1% cups waiter Arrange fish fillets I 34 teaspoon salt 15 teaspoon pepper 1, teaspoon marjoram Scald milk in the same pan in 1 vl rice was cooked. Pour over | 2 tablespoons minced parsley 3 hich ice w cooked Pour ove : fish and rice. Dot with remaining 114 cups milk : I and sprinkle lightly with alt and Bake in 11% pounds frozen fish, fillets | salt, pepper, marjoram, salt and pepper | it and pepper i pepper. slow Thaw fish and sate fillets until milk is almost . | oven (325°) Cook onions in poons of gall absorbed and fish flakes easily. thé butter until soft. Add rice, | Yield: 6 servings. Tobacco Crop Better Than 53 Your Health Production of cig leaf Hospitals may be over-crowd- bacco on Pennsylvania farms €d but not with pneumoniz this season is estimated at 42.-' Cases 609,000 pounds, the State Dept. Only a few years ago, hospit of Agriculture fol-' als in the months lowing a Federal-State survey. announced winter hac solid floors of The estimate, made as of Oc- tients tober 1, 526,000 pounds over peni cillian and terramyecin, it is un patients tc They Today, because of showed an increase of the Sept. 1 necessary for most forecast and 22 per cent more than the vested in go to a hospital 34.794 000 pounds har 1953. However, the treated as effectively and and more conveniently pneumonia pa- can be economically ( THE BULLETIN, Mount Joy, Pa. day, Oct. 23rd. On Friday even- 11! ing the ladies of the town visited Thursday, October 28 CHRISTMAS PACKAGES To insure delivery of packag- es by Christmas Day the follow- | Mr. Geltmacher and sang hymns | and had a short season of pray- ing mailing schedule should be | | observed: / Africa, Nov. 1; Near East, Nov. 1; South and Central Am- erica, Nov. 15; Europe, Nov. 15. - —® HAVE YOU SEEN CINERAMA Have you seen Cinerama? If not, why not go with the Ladies Bible Class of Trinity Evangel- ical Cong. Church, Mount Joy, ton. Nov.:1. Call further Bates for 3-4693. information, By Mus. Edith Erb Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Kuhns, | visited Mr. and Mrs. Brown of Carlisle Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. visited Miss Maria Hoffman, Mrs. Annie Brubaker and Miriam Mellinger, Mount Joy | RD, Saturday evening. A Christ for Newtown Community Evangelistic paign is being planned by Newtown EUB Church. and the Evang- er, he was presented with a bas- ket of fruit from the Ladies Aid Society of the Newtown EUB | Church. Visitors of Mr, and Mrs. Wm. | Fogie were Mr. Edw. Barton of | Silver Spring, Mrs. Pearl Bren- Mrs. Warren | Joy. | ner and son and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lehman, | Richard | R. H. Arndt | Mrs. | Columbia, Mrs. Betty Brosey, neman, Mt. Joy RD, Mrs. Edith W. Erb, Columbia RD., Mr. and Mrs. Victor Fogie, Philadelphia, Mrs. Katie Moore and Mrs. Blanche Frysinger, of town. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Witmer | and family visited Mr. and Mrs. | John Kauffman, Sr. of Ironville Mrs. Matilda Derr, visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Derr, of Mount | Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Mau- | rice Frysinger and Mrs. Katie Moore, were Mrs. Bertha Kitt- Paul, Salunga, Mr. and Mrs. Havard Johnston, Lan- caster, Mary Arlene Hess, Mt. Joy RD, Mrs. Charles Fogie and son of Bainbridge. Mr. and Mrs. Salem Gamber { and daughter, Columbia RD, | visited Mr. and Mrs. Abram | Gamber. Mrs. Edith Erb was a Thurs- Cam- | elist Joe Miller, an outstanding | evangelist of Harrisburg has! been secured. The campaign | will begin Sunday, Nov. 21 to Sunday, Dec. 5. Special out- | 1 standing musical talent has been secured to render special music each night. Watch paper for 1 futher details. The Ladies Bible Class spon- | Mr. and “| sored a reception for the new | “| pastor. Rev. John F. Ferich on Wednesday evening, Oct. 20. Rev. R. H. Arndt, the class lead- er presided. Special singing was rendered by members of the 1954 crop estimate is 14 percent at home church. A solo by Mrs. Norman below the 10-year average of Once ‘a leading killer at all Brosey, a duet by Mrs. Irvin | 49,652,000 pounds. ages, pneumonia is now an iM-| Witmer and Mrs. Howard Wit- | For type 41 tobacco, grown in portant cause of death mainly | ner a song by the Ladies Bible | Lancaster and adjoining coun- among infants less than a year| cass, readings by Mrs, Calvin | tics, the yield is forecast at 1620 old whose defenses against in-| campbell of Lancaster. Words pounds per acre and production fection are weak, and among of elcome were brought by at 42,120,000 pound Septemb- the old in whom pneumonia is various the er weather was good for growth, ' often secondary to other diseas maturity and cutting of the' es. The antibiotics are effective crop. against both the virus and the Many crop reporters com- bacterial types of pneumoiiz mented that reduced the inci growth after the dry recovery and and they have period at dence of many other respiratory departments of = church, Daniel Geltmacher pres- ob Geltmacher, | Supt.; Pres. of C. E. Society, “| gie and class leader, Rev. R. H. Mrs. BR. H. Arndt; Pres, of La- | ident of the trustee board, Jac- | | Sunday School | | Snyder and nla co ny ne was the mos nfeeti Q Cas 0 \ i . : ‘oad + | | plant setting time wag he most infectious diseases common IN gies Aid Society,Mrs. Wm. Fo- | phenominal that they had ever winter such as streptococcal Arndt een. Rapid growth during Aug- sore throat, tonsillitis and scar A brief address by Rev. Fran- | | ust and early September made let fever | cis Fluer who is Rev. Ferich’s for good longi ard du I Sy Whe su copibilicy lo pneu pastor of Willow Street. The and as a re i fy cl Pp is ay) monia is gen ral, there IT { i pastor Rev. Ferich responded | and of good quality. Much le tors in the individual or in the briefly to these words of wel- | I DO (estat i ranvient thi: nerease the . : ’ { than the usual infestation of in-| environment that increase the|. a following which Mrs. sects and jseas wa resent ineciden of Met ic | nf . cts and disea : : inclaend of pneumonia. EX-| Norman Brosey, president of the during the } 1. tren re io d may lead | (545 presented Rev. Ferich with 41 oO | com 4 . - \ 3 yr! v a a . Cutting Wwe practically m-, to pneumonx infection, al-1 5 ash gift in behalf of members pleted by the end of Septem} hough people who live in cold | 4 friends of the church. Fol- For Type 33 tobacco 9 climates are less susceptible 0! Jowing the program a social n Clinton and nee S, the digseasc than those in cli- yield per acre is estimated at 1,-, mates that are variable, which | | hour was enjoyed in the social | room of the church. Refresh- 09 \é "n ay wrodueti atl indie: ) T_T) SS S| G0 Flair-Fashioned . . . better wait! i Coming November 17