The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 25, 1965, Image 3

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1965
Timely Tips for Women
by Doris W. Thomas
Now's The Time To Freeze Peaches:
Peaches sell themselves through their flavor and beau
ty, rather than for the vitamins they provide.
When the fresh peach season is over,
serve your family peaches that taste almost like fresh fruil
from the trees. Freeze some for later use.
Select firm ripe fruit. Hold
one to three days after pick
ing to improve the flavor.
When peaches are ready to
freeze, prepare a sugar Ssy-
rup. If the 40 percent syrup
(3 cups sugar dissolved in 4
cups water) is too sweet, use
215 cups sugar and 4 cups
water. For a better quality
frozen product, add 2 tea-
spoon ascorbic acid (1,000
milligrams) to each quart of
syrup. Be sure syrup is cool
before using. Ascorbic acid
will definitely keep your
peaches from turning dark.
Working quickly, peel the
peaches using a stainless
steel knift. Slice or quarter
them directly into syrup in
freezing containers. Syrup
should cover the fruit, Seal,
label, and freeze immediate-
ly.
Certain peach varieties give
a better frozen product than
others. New varieties recom-
mended for freezing include
Sun High, M. A. Blake, Red
Skin, and Laring.
* * *
American-Made Madras
Fabrics Are Washable:
When buying madras fab-
ric, know whether you are
buying genuine madras, pro-
duced in India, or madras
made in the United States.
India-produced madras fa-
brics are dyed with fugitive
dyes. The colors bleed free-
ly during washing and tend
to blend with each other.
This is often considered an
advantage because the re-
sult is a striking muted ef-
fect.
The mass-produced Ameri-
can madras fabrics are dyed
with colorfast dyes and are
unlikely to fade even after a
long series of washings. How-
ever, most of the brightly
colored madras fabrics have
a little excess dye on the sur-
face that may bleed during
the first few washings. Wash
garments of American-made
madras separately at first,
putting them through several
sudsings, and following each
sudsing with thorough rins-
ing. Once the excess dye is
removed, garments may be
safely laundered with other
colored ones.
* * *
Know Life Insurance
Needs of Family:
Deciding how much life

, force. Subtract other savings,

you can still
insurance protection to buy
is important for any family.
This decision is sometimes
based on the amount of mon-
ey the family would need
should the breadwinner die
Another possible basis for
the decision is the probable
income of the breadwinner
during his lifetime.
If a family uses its future
needs as a basis, it would be
well to list these probable
needs. Short range expenses,
include funeral costs, medic-
al and hospital costs not cov
ered by insurance, amount
owed on mortgage or install-|
ment payments, cost of set-

tling the estate, and possible
job training to prepare the
widow to earn an income.
Possible long term ex-
penses include a reasonable
income for te widow or oth-
er dependents who may not
be able to enter the labor
|
investments, or benefits avail-
able to the family from the
basic amount needed. The
remaining cost of family
needs would ideally be cov-
ered by life insurance.
A second approach to plan-
ning an adequate life insur-
ance program is to figure the
breadwinner’s probable in-
come if he were to live his,
normal life expectancy. His
dollar worth is his future
earnings minus the amount
that would go for taxes and
living expenses for himself.
If this line of reasoning is
followed, the dollar worth of
the worker is the ideal a-
mount of life insurance pro-
tection for his dependents.
Income and the family's
willingness to sacrifice pres-
ent spending for future se-
curity also affect the decision
on how much life insurance
is needed.





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Hi Daily Until 3
a
YOURSELF
in the mirror. Then ask if the
person you see is completely
satisfied with the amount of money
being saved for future security,
Be honest! If the answer is
“No” then it's time to open
a savings account in
Union National Mount Joy Bank
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Member F.D.I.C.
REGULAR HOURS
8 am. - 2 p.m. Monday through Friday
5 pm. to 8 p.m. - Friday
EXTRA DRIVE-IN AND WALK-UP WINDOWS
:30 p.m. — Saturday - 8 a.m. until 11 am.


 


our bank.

ima





 
 


 
ER HE rm g——

Bird Watcher Guide
Bushy-Tailed Weaver
A very gregarious species,
the Bushy-Tailed Weaver can
p=
((
 
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~~
7

be observed in large numbers |
on crowded flyways during |:

THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
There's A Secret In Batting Power
Jo >
holidays and weekends. He is|:
known for his rapid flight,
and gets his name
habit of weaving in and out
through flocks of slower
birds, causing a great deal of
disturbance. He is very con-
temptuous of other birds
with one exception—the Blue
Coated Copper.
Moral: One showoff can
spoil everybody’s fun.
*® * *
Two-Headed Love Bird
The name given to this
bird is misleading. It is not
one bird with two heads, but
is two birds that fly so close

like
it looks
one. This is thought to be
part of the mating ritual of
together that
the species, although this
would appear to be more
practical when perched. Oth-
er birds, when sighting the
Two-Headed Love Bird will
avoid it if possible, as its
flight behavior is similar to
that of the Aimless Wonder.
Moral: There's a time and
place for everything. If pecks
must ‘be exchanged, a recrea-
tion area is safer (for others,
anyhow) than an open,
crowded highway.

SAN GHE OIL
Oils Everything
Prevents Rust
REGULAR — 0IL SPRAY — ELECTRIC MOTOR


from his |:
Pete Ward, in his third year at third ba
PAGE THREN


JE
Whita
 
*
se for the. Chicago
Sox, shares a pre-game peanut butter energy boost with a friend,
Tom Welch, 9, of Evanston, Ill
In the double-header with Kansas City that followed, Ward hit
a homer, two doubles and a single to knock in four rung and lead
the White Sox to a twin victory.
Manager Al Lopez says, “He keeps getting better every day,
both at the plate and in the field. The sky seems to be the limit
with him, Before he’s through he may become one of .the greaf
pnes.”
On hig way up to the White Sox, Ward played in the California
State I.eague, the Three-I League, the South Atlantic League, the
Texas League and the Triple-A International League,

The Worry Clinic
by Dr. Geo. W. Crane

Little Matthew shocked his father but all parents
should follow Judy's methods and offer their youngs
ters mental calisthenics long before they enter kinder-
garten.
Start with Bible stories. And if you think the
Bible is dull reading, just answer the questions below!
CASE S-484: Matthew, aged 4, is one of our grandsons.
His mother is our daughter Judy, who reads Bible stor-
ies to her four youngsters and also the neighborhood kid:
dies.
During the warm weather, she has a regular mid-after.
noon story session on their back lawn. :
And this is superb exercise
for the minds of youngsters!
All too many American
parents overly stress medical
health, including vitamins,
polio shots and orange juice;
then relatively ignore the
spiritual health of their
youngsters.
Your child can have a
brilliant I1:Q:, yet become
functionally feebleminded by
lack of proper mental exer-
cise in childhood!
Dr. Robert H. Gault, one
of our leading American psy-
chologists, used to call this
“feeblemindedness by de-
privation.”
And he referred not to a
shortage of food or minerals
and vitamins but to deficien-

cy in mental and spiritual
calisthenics!
At the dinner table Judy
mentioned something about
drunkards in the Bible.
“Now wait a minute,” her
husband protested, “I never
heard of anybody in the Bi-
ble ever being drunk!”
“Yes, they were,” pertly
spoke up 4-year-old Matthew.
“Don’t you remember Noah
and Nabal?”
His daddy was stunned.
To have such a Bible scholar
at his table at the tender age
of only 4 years, was a dis-
(Turn to page 8)

When in need of printing
remember The Bulletin.




TIPS FOR
TOURISTS
How to Treat Feet N


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If you're bound for far-off
places, the home folks may
wish they were in your shoes.
But how will you like being in
your shoes — after days or
weeks of trotting around to see
the sights?
Protect your “basic trans-
portation” — by heeding these
foot-saving pointers from ex-
perienced tourists:
1. Take only shoes of proven
comfort — leave home the new
pair that needs “breaking in.”
You may break first!
2. Take along enough shoes
to permit several changes.
Don’t wear the same pair two
days in succession. In hot
weather, many people find
comfort in changing shoes two
or three times a day.
3. Favor leather shoes over
synthetic materials. Leather
has pores which “breathe” and
let moisture evaporate — im-
portant in guarding against
athlete’s foot.
4. Be sure socks and stock-
ings as well as shoes fit prop-
erly — tight hose not only
cramps the feet, but interferes
with ventilation. If your feet
perspire susgively: ypu may
fg #;
'

be helped by wearing cotton’

\ J a8
5. If you suffer from athlete’s
foot, see your doctor before
you leave. He can prescribe a
new fungicide, Tinactin, found
to cure 75-80% of clinically
tested cases. Taken along and)
used at the first flare-up of
athlete’s foot, Tinactin can
help make your trip more
pleasant.
6. At day’s end, soak tired
tootsies in a warm foot bath.
But don’t forget to dry feet
thoroughly!
7. Limber tired feet by wig-
gling your toes. Each night, try!
this 5-minute exercise: sit in a
chair with shoes off, extend
. legs, move feet up and downy
as far ag they'll go. ,