25¢ eposit 25¢ aposit 30c¢ ES LE 210M week) ! i A ———— Sewing Machines REPAIRED ~ REBUILT OR CONVERTED INTO ELECTRIC PORTABLE MACHINES SEE KAPPY In Fiorin OR PHONE MOUNT JOY 3-5739 BAGGY PANTS ARE MOST UNSIGHTLY WE CLEAN & PRESS THEM FOR YOU RIGHTLY Eicherlys QUALITY CLEANERS 76-78 East Main Street Mount Joy but many drops wake the 3,020 gallons of oil needed _ to run the diesel-powered “20th Century” streamliner from New York t to » Chicago but many dollars, deposited regularly at this bank, can help you build security, and have the other good things you want. IL YY CS a YE VR) SHU ie MT. JOY, PA. ; Webern FDIC. Taf THE MOST THRILLING NEW CAR ON THE HIGHWAY ! MAKE A Phone you. I ‘2, Dealer : / 2 Leg Waiting for you is “the drive of your life!” Slip’ behind the wheel of the brilliant new Futur- amic 88” and see how new and different Ss can be. You'll sense the difference the monient you fee Ithehigh-compression*‘Rocket” Engine spring to life. Eagerly—easily—effort- lessly you thread your way through city traffic. The “84” trigger. = to answer your every command. Ng 3-3361 f PHONE YOUR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER NEWCOMER MOTORS, Inc. Corner W. Main & New Haven Sts., MISS CASSEL, THIS PLACE PRESENTED A RECITAI appearance in New York. The recital presented by Miss| Miss Cassell 1esides with Maryfrances Cassell, violin artist at | Mrs. J. C. Market street, and is having St. Bartholomew Church, 50th and | cn South Park Ave, New York last Wednes- day evening was well attended known here, and’ cally at Rotary NOTICE! OUR REPAIR SHOP IS NOW OPEN WITH A SKILLED MECHANIC MR. AL YIENGST, IN ATTENDANCE Prompt, courteous service is our aim 7:00 A. M. TO 6:00 P. M. If necessary, other hours by appointment NEY’S Marfax Lubrication PHONE MT. JOY 3-5131 TEXACO BERVICE AND REPAIRING Washing FLORIN, PA. received a fine ovation, at her first her and Lion's Clubs. was her accompanist and ally, Mrs. | piano gree at ! pervisor of the She was City, School of Music at Boston, reared in Mass., | Cassell, | and made a complete tour of New well | Mexico, and appeared lo- various cities in the | States. Mrs. Walter Sloan, of this place has ap- peared in many recitals profession- Sloan is a teacher of and voice, received her de- and was music su- School com - Temple Avon Grove Chester Co., System, before ing to Mount Joy. LOOK OCH AROUND In the Ads On These PAGES and Announcing! THE OPENING OF A NEW HERSHEY'S ICE CREAM STORE Featuring HERSHEY'S ICE CREAM IN THE SOLID PACKED FULL PINTS ONLY OPEN EVERY EVENING AND IO DATE WiTH THE You know you're the master of every traffic situation. Then you're out of the city—out on the open road! Here's where “Rocket” Engine! power really pays off! Swinging along “the straightaway—topping the hills with long, easy’ strides. Comfort, visibility, economy, spectacular, action! So driveit yourself! Make a date with the is nimble, alert, maneuverable— “88,” and you'll want to make the “88” yours for keeps. It’s at your Oldsmobile dealer’s—now. 70 Oc .... Mr. Martin Ney, Prop. Texaco Service Station FLORIN, PA. SUNDAY | Hydra-Matie Drive standard squipment on Series "98" and "'B8’' models, optional at extra cost on ng 1 76. W hite sidewall tires optional at extra cost A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ———— Mt. Joy, Pa. | Oklahoma studied in Paris also Julliard | ony elle Journey By SHIRLEY RAY I* WAS the fifth morning in a row so Mn wighton was not sur- prised. She slipped out of bed qui- etly, reached for a robe, and put it over her shoulders. Before dawn, every morning of that week, her four-year-old daugh ter had wakened - Minute her with gentle . ae but insistent tugs Fiction | to tenn her avout the dream she'd just had. Had they been night mares, Mrs. Laughton would have { been eager to get up to comfort a | gay frightened child, but they were nev- er nightmares, They were always and fanciful dreams that made the little girl's small face giow with wonder and delight. So Mrs. Laughton, as on the other mornings, took Ellen into the kitchen and poured a glass of milk for each of them. With both small hands wrapped around her glass, the little girl sat on the edge ‘of a too large chair and with shining eyes, eagerly told her dream. { KL TAQ I Mommy, | Wind | on. my DREAMED 1 was sleeping, and that the North stopped right outside my win- dow and called my name. He said, ‘Ellen—Ellen—wake up and come to the window. Then I'll put you shoulder and take you for | a ride with me." Mrs. Laughton tock a drink from her glass of milk. This dream was | going to be very much like the oth- 5 | ers. | bluebird, once (| Ellen on an | Mrs. | bed and ended the tale at once, self, Something or someone—once a a fairy—she couldn't recall what the others were—came to the window and offered to take impossible journey. Laughton yawned. She would liked to have put her daughter to but the thought of Mr. Laughton and his sure-to-be-bad disposition made her ask patiently, *‘What did the North Wind look like, dear?’ Ellen was enthusiastic. “He was green,” she declared im- portantly. Mrs. Laughton thought to her “‘She doesn’t know one color | from another.” | my eyes as we | there were continued. “He had green shoes and long The child long pointy green hair and a long green nose.” The wide eyes and little head leaned forward and the small voice became confidential. “He wa all green except for the buckles on his. shoes. They were silver and shaped like stars and they spar- kled so bright that I had to blink blonde “We houses went way up high over the | and trees.” went through the air. Mrs. Laughton yaw len didn't notice. ned again. El- “After I climbed o shoul der,” she said, y W ly up high over all the houses and trees. We woke the leaves and tl made shivering noises when we passed by. We stirred the dust from the streets so they would be clean for morning. “hur he said that he must ig back home because mi had to wa over, other tow: visit before the ni So," (she appointed) window. H his shoulder went away “That's dream,"’ ily, ‘Now 1 It was morning Mr. Lau had left for the a couple of and Ellen was playing ( ffice hours ago, in the yard. Mrs. Laughton made Ellen's small bed. She picked up a rag doll and set it in a chair. She put tle two miniature bedroom in their place in the closet. She picked up a rumpled nightie and a to hang it away. There was something in the pock- et—something heavy. Mrs. Laugh ton put her hand inside and felt. It was cold and hard She drew it out slowly and held it in ber band for a long time. It was a silver huckle in the shape of a star, Released by WN) Features. ——— eee Everybody reads newspapers but NOT everybody reads circular ad. vertising left on their door step. The Bulletin, Mt. Jovy, Pa.. Thursday, June 16. 1949—7 The story is making the rounds that a rooster lived three days af er he lost his head on the chopping block, people have been runnming around that way for years, ud - be surprised, some Patronize Bulletin advertisers, {f ASPHALT PAVING Driveways - Parking Areas - Lanes — CRUSHED STONE ~~ ESTIM/ ATE S € HE ERFU LL ¥ GIVE “N THOMAS BOYD 36 WEST MAIN ST. MOUNT JOY TELEPHONE 3-4494 . 5-12-tf Don” Enjoy Good Eating Year Around USE FROZEN FOODS SPECIAL FROZEN CONCENTRATED GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, GRAPE AND ORANGE JUICE Make 12 pints 25¢ Sealtest Ice Cream Now $1.95 gal. IN 2 FLAVORS. CUT BRICKS, DIXIE CUPS, SANDIWICHES, POPSICKLES Cloister Dairy Ice Cream Now $1.75 gal. Orders for dinners and parties packed on request Mt. Joy Frozen Foods Locker Plant DIAL 35436 Telephone workers are “SPECIAL” people The telephone lineman who braves blizzards, tornadoes or hail storms to keep the lines open doesn’t consider himself a very special person. Neither does the operator who sticks at her switchboard in times of emergency. But workers like these are “special” people. It takes unusual people to have their courtesy and sense of duty and responsibility. We're proud of folks like these, a vital part of the team that has enabled telephone service to reach its present high level. COLUMBIA TELEPHONE CO. Heard The € 7 AY (Good News Today? Pls The Mount Joy Building & Loan Association OFFICERS AND Gerberich, Pres. Sec h. DIRECTORS Henry H. Eby, V. Pres. Fellenbaum, Treas. J. Willis Freed Booth Herman Boyer Grant D. E. M. Bomberger, E. W. Newcomel Christ Walters John M
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers