PAGE FOUR List Annex Honor Roll Six students won places on the All - A honor roll at the Donegal Annex for the fourth report period. They included three eighth graders, Lolita Mumma, Alice Kleiner and Barry Meckley, and three seventh graders, Kent Wol- gemuth, Kathy Ney and Ter- rie Gemberling. Fifteen eighth graders made the “A and B” honor roll as follows: Marjorie Sloan, Donna Eichler, Ruthie McConnell, Kay Bell, Bonita Shoemaker, Kathleen Shoe- maker, Nancy Rolfs, Susan Hess, Deborah Hess, Brenda Gillham, Bonnie Engle, EI- aine Brown, Cory Funk, THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. |Select Bulbs For Gloria Sutter and Donald Robinson. Twenty-five seventr graders made the “A and B” honor roll as follows: Patricia Way, Carolyn Keener, Carole Hess, Richard Smedley, Marvin Nissley, Mary Ellen Shearer, Marlene Rutt, Doris Reist, Joseph Bixler, Jeffrey Wit- man, Cheryl Zuch, Philip Wade, Ronald McCarty, Charles Engle, Timothy Em- enheiser, Patty Zinn, Jean Thome, Elaine Hess, Dawn Heisey, Janine Eshleman, Teresa Wagner, Dawn Eshel- man, Cynthia Eshelman, Rob- ert Waters and Richard Hop- ple. Trouble Starts In Starter Trouble with the family car often starts with the starter. In fact, says Samuel T. Milliken, Service Manager for Keystone Automobile Club, many “can’t start” sit- uations at first attributed to dead batteries or faulty ig- nition exentually are traced to troublesome starters. “The electric self starter is a sturdy device and usually last the life of the car with normal use’, he said. “But, starters need attention and Children Alone Invites Fires Leaving little children at home alone is an invitation to fire, says the National Board of Fire Underwriters. Too many times each year, children left at home alone have started playing = with maiches with tragic conse- quences. Never leave children alone for a minute. If you are go- ing out, arrange for a compe- tent baby sitter or call in a neighbor to watch after them while you are away. Before leaving a sitter with the children, be sure that she knows what to do if there is a fire. She should, first get the children out of the house, then call the Fire Depart- ment, JUNIOR F. H. A. The Donegal chapter of the Junior FHA met Wednesday, March 18, with a Red Rose chapter session. Cake decora- ting was explained and dem- onstrated. When in need of printin- remember The Bulletin. rr for CHILDRE Sloan’s Pharmacy MOUNT JOY. PENNA. Free Parking In Rear care and repairs, sometimes, too. The starter’s brushes or commutator might be worn and need repair. Roughness and pitting of the commuta- tor, poor brush contacts, or just plain dirt can cause a starter to break down. “It should be remembered that weather affects starters: particularly cold weather, which, combined with heavy oil, makes the starter crank sluggishly. Under such con- (ditions the driver never should use the starter too long at a time because over- heating could burn out the starter. “When a starter won't turn the engine over a mechanic quickly can locate the troub- (le by testing the starter with (the car’s lights turned on. If the lights glow dimly the {battery probably is low on power. Should the lights go out when the starter key is turned or pressed, there could be a poor connection between the starter motor and the bat- tery; perhmps caused by cor- rosion of the battery termin- als, Such a condition can be corrected by cleaning the terminals and coating them with petroleum jelly. “When the car’s lights dim and the starter moves very (little or not at all, either the battery is run down or mech- anical trouble in the starter or engine is adding its bur- den. When lights remain bright and the starter fails to crank, the trouble often can be traced to an open circuit in the starter. in the starter switch, or in the control cir- cuit. When the starter spins but fails to crank the engine, look for broken teeth in the flywheel ring gear or a defect in the drive mechanism. “The starter is a mighty important device on your car. Have it checked regularly, at least once a year.” COMPLETES TRAINING David* W. Brandt, son of Mr, and Mrs. Robert Brandt of 142 North Market Street, was schedultd to complete basic training March 20 at the Naval Training Center, in San Diego, Calif. The nine-week training in- cludes naval orientation, his- tory and organization, sea- manship, ordnance and gun- nery, military drill, first aid land survival. CHANGE-OF-LIFE... oo does it fill you wi ... frighten you? READ HOW COUNTLESS WOMEN HAVE FOUND THE WAY TO OVERCOME CHANGE Have you reached that time of life when your body experiences strange new sensations—when one minute you feel enveloped in hot flushes and the next are clammy, cold, drained of energy, nervous, irritable? Are you in an agony of fear? Too troubled to be a good wife and mother? Don’t just suffer from the suffocating hot flashes, the sud- den waves of weakness, the nervous tension that all too fre- quently come with the change when relief can be had. - ith terror - & -OF-LIFE FEARS Find comforting relief the way countless women have, with gentle Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets. Especially developed to help women through this most trying period. In doctor’s tests 3 out of 4 women who took them reported welcome effec- tive relief. And all without ex- pensive “shots.” Don’t brood. Don’t worry yourself sick. Get Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets at your drug- gists. Take them daily just like vitamins. : The gentle medicine with the gentle name LYDIA E. PINKHAM Specific Purpose It may not be so simple as it first sounds to choose the right lightbulb for home dec- orating, reminds Helen Bell, extension home management specialist, the Pennsylvania State University. Manufacturers have design- ed four different types of lightbulbs finishes to improve quality and to meet special needs. Finish may be des- cribed as inside frosted, ceramic finish, tinted pastels and silvered bowl. Developed to reduce the brightness of clear lightbulbs, the inside-frosted finish ab- sorbs only a small amount of the light. But the brightness is less than that of the clear bulb and sharp lines are re- duced. . Bulbs with a ceramic or milky white finish have a coating of fine white silica particles on the inside of the bulb, Miss Bell explains. Light is distributed over the entire bulb surface, with no bright spot near the finament With a ceramic finish, harsh shadows are eliminated. Tinted pastel bulbs are made by the same process as the ceramic white bulb, and both provide the same diffus- ion and softness of illumina- tion. The colored coating ab- sorbs some light. Tinted bulbs are designed to accent or complement certain colors Designed primarily for base-up fixtures, the silvered- bowl bulb is a standard in- side-frosted bulb with a sil- ver coating on the bowl end. It’s often used where inside frosted bulbs have been used for general lighting. Miss Bell cautions against using an ordinary bulb in a fixture or lamp designed for a silvered - bowl bulb. NOT RESPONSIBLE When you take clothes to your drycleaner, remember that he’s not responsible for the loss of articles left in pockets, causions Ruth Ann Nine, Penn State extension clothing specialist. Your cleaner will appreciate your careful insptction of pockets before garments leave your house. TOP DONEGAL TALENT The “Four Winds,” a quar- tet composed of Warren Hoff- man, Tom Long, Tom Hayden and John Hart, won first place in the annual Talent Show held at the Donegal High School by the Student Council. When in need of printing, temember The - Bulletin. The pill-box shown is sim- ple to crochet. It may be worn on the back of head or pixie style. Patfern No. 810 gives the instructions. Our new 1964 Needlework Book contains a fine selection of crochet, knit, embroidery, quilts, etc., and includes in- structions for four designs and also coupon entitling you to any pattern of your choice, free. Send 50 cents. Send 25c¢ plus postage in coins for this pattern to MARTHA MADISON (care of this newspaper), Box 1490, New York 1, N. Y. Add 15¢ for first class mail. 4 While waiting for their new sanctuary to be built the congregation of a posh West Coast suburb is meeting in an old farmhouse. Unfortun- ately, the wiring system; . we hear, is not as up to date as the electric organ and the 48- cup percolator that minister to the spirit of worship and fellowship respectively. If the coffee maker is plugged in while the organ is playing the fuse goes phfft, and ev- erything comes to a halt. Faced with ‘cold” hymns during the service or cold WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25; 1964 Remedies Fuse Trouble coffee afterward, the commit- tee in charge has solved the dilemma by posting an usher where he can watch the lady organist and still be handy to the kitchen. Whenever she signals that she is about to play, he whips around the corner and unplugs the per- colator. The musical number finished, back he goes to start the java again. If there are not too many hymns or too long an anthem, the coffee is steaming and strong by the last Amen. —Selected Conestoga Wagon ‘Finest’ The Conestoga wagon, ‘the finest wagon the world has ever known,” was one of the outstanding contributions of Lancaster county to Pennsyl- vania and all the United States. First built for hauling pro- duce from the fertile farms of the Conestoga Valley a- bout 1725, the wagon played an important part in national history for over 100 years. It provided the major means for carrying foodstuffs from the Pennsylvania Ger- man country to Philadelphia, and freight on the return trip — Convenience Foods Not Necessarily Costly Using convenience foods doesn’t necessarily mean you're increasing your food bill, says Harold E. Neigh, extension consumer econom- ices specialist at the Penna. State University. Some "nationality and gour- met-type dishes are rather costly. But the less expensive convenience items are the ones bought in volume. With higher incomes and with more women working a- way from home, sales of con- venience foods have gone up. However, volume selling helps to keep prices down, Neigh explains. New processing and pack- aging techniques will contin- ue to bring new convenience foods. Right now about fifty different kinds of processed potatoes are available, and this doesn’t include the differ- ent brands. The newest in packaging is the squeeze tubes being used for baby feeding and for bed- ridden patients. Applesauce is one of the first foods mar- keted in a tube. " Easy-open beverage cans, new thin aluminum contain- ers, and improved glass, plac- tic, and paper boxes are in use. Freeze - dried concentrates, a jelled applesauce, and rais- in paste to use in filled cook- ies are among other new pro- ducts. The jelled applesauce turns to liquid when heated. When poured into a mold with fruits and nuts, it will solidify when cooled. Patronize our Advertisers. when Lancaster was Ameri- ca’s biggest inland town. Benjamin Franklin in 1755 persuaded the Pennsylvania German farmers and wagon- ers to furnish 150 Conestoga wagons and carry supplies to the aid of Braddock’s ill- dated expedition against the French at Fort Dusquene, where Pittsburgh now stands. As roads improved, as many as 50 of these wagons would make the journey to- gether as a wagon train, to Philadelphia and Pittsburgh and points en route. Many settlers started their way west in Conestogas. The first turnpike in Amer- ica was the great road con- necting Lancaster with Phila- delphia. So any of the wag- ons used it, that it became known as the Conestoga Road. The Conestoga wagons which sprang from its design helped open the West — first the Conestogas to Pittsburgh, then the “Pitt Teams” over he Alleghenies, and later the “prairie schooners” to the country beyond. Drawing the Conestoga wagons were horses specially bred for the job—the Cones- togas. The color scheme of the wagons was patriotic — red, white and blue. They were big and durable, built with loving care by the Penn- sylvania German craftsmen of the day. The wagons and the hearty Pennsylvanians who manned them went out as the rail- roads came in—but they left a heritage that will not be forgotten. You can see Conestoga wagons in action—and ride in one—at special events held by the Pennsylvania Farm Museum at Landis Valley. JOHNSON BUS SERVICE BUSES FOR ALL OCCASIONS FLORIN, PA. Phone 653-0321 Et ll i, 200 Finished Monuments On Display From Which to Choose Beautiful two-grave family monuments Carved and lettered for $158.00 KEENER MEMORIALS MAYTOWN, PENNA. Phone 426-3531