FAT ast I MPa tte we bm te MTP TH Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., FOR... : KILL* the ACHE, BURN, Watches-Clocks-Jewelry ATHLETES F fo And Watch Repairing OR YO ee Ha Get instant-drying drug stores, Today at PHARMACY Greenawalt { eills on conbmct®, T-4-L at all SLOAN'S 209 West Main Sf, MT. JOY RO . Whe sed of Printing. (any= OPEN EVERY EVENING line id inhi Bulletm ET rN RD TRA rR — il H{ BAGGY PANTS | ( Are Most UNSIGHTLY WE CLEAN AND PRESS them for you RIGHTLY Eicherlys | DRY - CLEANING To Close Out About 50 pairs of Wash Trousers " PRICED TO SELL AT THE VERY jow PRICE JOF 339 pf: R PAIR FINE PATTERNS & SHADES Close out of POLO SHIRTS—79¢ EsHLEMAN Bros. MOUNT JOY, PA. Chevrolet alone offers | this complete Power Team! | POWER Glide Automatic Transmission™ Extra-Powerful 105-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine EconoMiser Rear Axle Powerglide is first . . . finest . . . and only fully proved automatic transmission in the low-price field. Gives you simplest, smooth- est, safest no-shift driving at lowest cost. No clutch pedal—no gearshifting—not even a hint of gear changes in forward driving! And—outstanding as it is—Powerglide is only one member of Chevrolet's marvelous automatic power team. *Combination of Powerglide Automatic Transmis- sion and 105-h.p. Valve-in-Head Engine optional on De Luxe models at extra cost, NEWCOMER MOTORS, Imnc. base, | DILATES THE VESSELS OF THE | SKIN to redeh isfihedded infection and | | | | | | many same practice in his guided missiles work and devotes considerable time Thurs day, August 9, 195 pad =X. T. Keller Shows (From nage 12 with all activities, the He company follows closely to the different areas where is being carried on rather the | wor than in started him on’ erecting, designing and engi- | new line of cars. ki In 1909 he became assistd| 1 1085 Mr Keller was made 's ant to the superintendent of the | president of Chrysler Corporation. Automobile Engine Department of | his leadership the Com- he Westinghouse Machine Com-= pany's yearly production of pas- pany, which was later absorbed by | senger cars, commercial cars and k | the Westing Electric Corporation. | preached and passed the one He went to Detroit in February, | million mark. course in machine in for complete in Club, in Key Largo, Fla., Bohemian! Club in California, and the Yacht- men's Association of America. He is a trustee of the Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company) of New York; Life Member nd Director of the American ie Association; a member of the Na-| tional Air Council, | administrative offices | 1910, as Chief Inspector in the De On August 29, 1940, the Board : Navy Mr. Keller was born at Mt. Joy, | troit Metal Products Co. which| ¢ Directors of Chrysler Corpora- and National Aeronautic Pa. November 27, 1885. During his made automobile axles, and he teu) tion amended its by-laws to discon= tion; member of the Detroit Com-| schooling in the local grammer and came intensely interested in motor | tinue the office of Chairman of the mittee on Foreign Relations; Direc-| high school he obtained his first ex- | cars. Mr. Keller believed, however, | Board, which Mr. Chrysler had tor of the Automobile M: Manufactur-| | perience in mechanical things by | that if he were to learn the auto- | | held until his death on "August 18, ers Association; a trustee of the | doing odd jobs in neighboring hard- "mobile business well, he must find | 1940, and made Mr. Keller its Pres- Detroit Industrial Safety Council; ware and handkerchief factories.’ out all about it in various jobs. In|ijent. the chief executive officer of | a Fellow of the American Society From Mount Joy he went to busi- | September, 1910, he became assoc | tha Corporation. He hed this pe ose of Mechanical Engineers and mem= | advancement in | field | manager Company in ness school in Lancaster, Pa. studied shorthand, bookkeeping and commercial law I 1904 he as secretary to a lecturer In accepted the and nw in this capacity spent the follow= British Isles United States in 1906 he decided to quit his clerical ing two years in the Returning to the job, because he the Barton, Westinghouse East Pittsburgh, Henry L. of and typewriting, position auth- saw mgpre chance of mechanical then works Machine Pa., iated with the Metzger Motor Car pition until November Company as general foreman of the the 950, when | Directors of iy oS and in the early part the office of Chairman of | of 1911 went to work on heavy re- the Board Mr. Keller | and chassis testing with the to that post “with general over- Hudson Motor Company. From all the business and af-| there he went to Tarrytown, N. Y.,| fairs of the Corporation.” as Chief of the Maxwell | plant. In Mr. Keller joined the staff of General Motors working chiefly on machine shop, and elected pairs sight over nspector Inspr Just prior to his appointment as | Chairman of the Board, Mr. Keller | | | accented the invitation from the | President of the United States and | the Defense Services to take an im- | November, 1911, central office Jewerly - Silverware Watches - Gifts Watch Attachmemts (WATCH REPAIRING) Complet¢ Rongfn Lighter Repair Service Koser’s Watch Shop Dial Mt. Joy 3-4015 Chocolate Ave, FLORIN. PA. Cadillac. It was at that time Mr.| tant advisory job in Washing- | Keller and the late Walter P. 4, in connection with the defense Chrysler became acquainted. Mr. program. On October 26. 1950, fe Keller was promoted to Super-| sg officially apvointed Director of | intendent of the Northway Guided Missiles by General George Marshall, Secretary of While accepting this new respons- ibility, Mr. Keller remained at the | head of Chrysler Cornoration, with all the Motors in 1915. He left General Mo- | tors to become associated with the Cole Company, but soon returned to Buick as General Master Mech- anic under Mr. Chrysler who was then President of Buick. Mr. Keller | Buick until 1919, appointed a member Defense. general oversight of cofm- pany’s affairs. In 1947, Mr. important remained with Keller had performed when he was another service for the of the mechanical and engineering | {1 g Government serving as taff in the General Motors central | of the President's Advis- In this capacity he compiled |... Committee the Merchant the Motors’ | parine. by | office. | and settled on General { | cancellation claims arising from WHITE - WASHING AND DISINFECTING HESS BROS. { Successors To HUBER OBERHOLTZER FLORIN, PENNA. Phone Mt. Joy 3-4930 39-tf During World War II Chrysler Corporation, under Mr. Keller's di- rection, established a remarkable record of achievement by en- | gineering and producing large | quantities of military materials and | | war contracts with the Govern- ment. Mr. Chrysler left General Motors, but Mr. Keller remained to assume, in 1921, the position Vice President of Chevrolet charge of manufacturing, and 1924 became General Manager of General Motors of Canada, Ltd. i On April 1, 1926, he joined | Chrysler Corporation and weapons. For his outstanding ser- | | vice. Mr. Keller received the Med- | | al For Merit from the President of | the | the United States, the Distinguished | became | Service Certificate of the Ordnance | Vice President in charge of manu-| Department of the United States | | facturing on May 7, 1926. In July | ppmy from the Chief of Ordnance | Heilig Funeral Home 23 W. Main St., Mount Joy JAMES B. HEILIG, Funeral Director | of 1927 he also became a Director | and a Citation for Distinguished] | of the Company and in July, 1928,| services in behalf of the War Fi- | i with his associate executives, Program from the Secretary | | dertook the task of combining the) ,; the Treasury. From 1942-45 he | | Dodge Brothers plants, was on the Advisory Staff of the | | and organization with those of | Chief of Ordnance. U. 8. Armv. | Chrysler. He belame President of | Among the many war products | Dodge in 1929, while continuing to| turned out by the Company were serve as Vice President and Direc- | apparatus to help | tor the parent Corporation. | B-29 fuselage | | is ninety days after taking sections: 25.000 | charge of Dodge, Mr. Keller had in- ranging from 28-ton General Gratts | | creased efficiency to the point | to 60-ton experimental weapons of | where less than { the future: billions of small half the former | ammunition; radar antenna mounts: | oper ations | | the following: of make atom bombs: more than tanks arms Me 3 N gH ever/ TIME - PROVED lode. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION POWE Just press the accelerator to GO... press the brake to STOP... It's the simplest, smoothest, safest driving you ever imagined! Take your ‘DISCOVERY DRIVE” MOUNT JOY, PA. } Boor was required and had | | . | gyrocompasses; hundreds of thous- | i | ands of army trucks; 18,000 huge B- | | 29 bomber engines: thousands of | marine tractors and tugs: 125 miles | of submarine nets; and 60,000 heavy | anti-aircraft cannons. Mr. Keller married Miss Adelaide | of Wilkinsburg, Pa., in Sep- |! 1911. They have two sons, | | Robert and Richard. Mr. Keller | a member of the Metropolitan | Methodist Church of Detroit, a 33rd | degree Mason and honorary | member of the Sojourners Club. | Taylor, | tember, is | an Among his clubs are the Detroit Athletic Club (formerly its Presi- | | dent). Detroit Golf Club, Bloom | | field Hills Country Club, = Grosse | Pointe Yacht Club, Old Club, Re- | cess Club (formerly its President), Detroit Club, Newcomen Society, of Automotive Fngineers; and| cne of the four Arts Commissioners of the City of Detroit. His hobbies are fishing, golf, and ber | boating. s,s ‘Hershey Reunion (From nage 1) dren of Harsha” (Ezra 2:52 and Ne- hemiah 7:45.) where their name is recorded in the Register of the Ne=- thinims of the renament — that feeble band of loyal souls who lov= ed God with all their hearts, and. who returned from the Babylonian Captivity to Palestine under Zer- ubbabel by decree of Cyrus. The “children of Harsha” were among that Jewish remnant who laid the Temple foundations in B. C. 536. Many years after this, during the time of fierce persecution they ave said to have fled to Europe and to have settled in the Eastern Alps, in and about the town and Canton of Appenzell, in the extreme north- eastern part of Switzerland. During the Reformation under the mighty preaching of Zwingli and his dis- ciple Joachin von Watt—afterwards called Vadian, many converts were made. In the History of Pennsylvania by| Svpher, he says “In 1709, a large! body of Swiss Mennonites, who had fled from the Cantons of Zurich and, Berne because of religious intoler- ence, These imm‘grants settled for a short time in Germantown. In 1712 they pur- chased from William Penn, a large Lancaster County, and there formed a settle-| came to Pennsylvania. tract of land in Pequea, ment, which has since become just- ly celebrated as one of the richest agricultural the | States”. This year communities in their landing] they celebrated | 248th Anniversary of the of the Hersheys’ the United] States from Appenzelle, Switzer- land. The late Milton Hershey, the “Milk Chocclate King” was a mem- ber of this original Clan. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Cover had the happy in 1912, en- route to India to pay a visit to Jos-, in privelege, eph and Franz Hershey and their | sister Mary, in Appenzell, Switzer- land. The former of these two brothers still lives in the old Her- sha homestead. They have land and cattle, all are prosperous Aside from this, they manage a, embroidery industry. {The women and girls of the vicinity do fine embroidery work in their homes, or cottages, this in turn is brought to a Centre for sale. After supper a meeting was held at which time the former officers were elected: President, Mr. Frank Dougherty, Landisville;; Vice-Pres. Mr. Lloyd H. Fuhrman; Sec., Mrs. Ida McElroy, Marietta; Asst. Sec., Mrs. James Baker; Mrs. W. Boyles, Lancaster. farmers. large Treas., It's doubtful} if you'll large sum pf mone The only way mgt of serve is Start this week. 4 Lid iT. N18 ON A SILVER PLATTER son a silver platter. ing. And it's fun to save. add EVRY TC [LUE Ed VR LLP JOY, PA. 770% ad 1 Ko Carloads That’s a Lot of APPLE SAUCE for this Big Aeme Sale! This Is not “just a lot of Apple Sauce” --- it's IDEAL Apple Sauce and that means it's the finest quality pre- pared and ready for you to \§ enjoy. Ideal is made from selected, tree-ripened apples, blended and flavored just right. Don’t miss this sensa- tional event. Stock up now! IDEAL APPLE SAUCH| 3:29 IDEAL FANCY FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE IDEAL PURE STRAWBERRY i hi way 16-02 cans a9 96¢ 25 46.02 can PRESERVES 39 TUNA FISH 2:49 GOLD SEAL ENRICHED PILLSBURY’S BEST FLOUR FLOUR 5:39 | 5:49° bag bag 10 'b bag 10 'bbag 97¢ FEATURED THIS WEEK Freshly Ground HAMBURGER D9" Fresh Killed, Fully ily Dressed | Fresh Killed, Fully Dressed Stewing Chickens Frying Chicken: AT ALL OUR MARKETS ade with juicy, oul love the flavor large loaf © LOCAL TRADEMARKS. Inc eévef be handed «a us ever build a re- | Vine Ripened HONEYDEWS* | Arizona Pink Meat 5 Cantaloupes GRAPES PEACHES rw 3-25 Prices Effective Until Closing August 9-10-11, .55° 50 FRESH PORK SHOULDERS -45 LEAN SMOKED HAMS -- » 61 LEAN SMOKED PICNICS Skinless Franks 59¢ Sliced Bacon '®49¢ Fancy Pollock Fillets '° 29¢ Fancy Haddock Fillets '> 39¢ Crab Meat" bd" VIRGINi4 LEE BAKERY FEATURES Here's the Cake you've been asking for - - - Improved, GOLDEN SNOW « LAYER CAKES HN 79° the finest cocoanut layer cake you ever tasted because nothing better ever came out of an oven. It's made with plenty of eggs, has a creamy rich filler and covered all over La. Today's B read Value - - = i Be IT’S NATIONAL VEGETABLE WEEK 12's, ea 33¢ 3 Be 23 a Shank Half) | 49 Freshly Picked Claw Fancy Perch Fillets '® 38¢ Better than ever, Large Family Size ! Your first bite will tell you this Is with long thread cpcoanut. _ 229° Jumbo 36's Calif. Seediess or Red Cardinal LOCAL CORN Stowell’s Evergreen & ears 25c LIMA BEANS 552500 31.29 LOCAL EGGPLENTS 10: YELLOW ONIONS soc 5 19e ‘Large Green Peppers 3 fr 0c | Apples Summer Rambo 4 Ibs 30g IDEAL CONCEN. ORANGE JUICE IDEAL CONCEN. LEMONADE 2 (-0z cans 25¢ FARMDALE BABY LIMA BEANS 10-0z pkg 17¢ SEABROOK SPINACH leaf or chopped 14-02 pkg 21¢ SEABROOK EXTRA F'CY GREEN PEAS 10-0z 21¢c 2 6-0z cans 39%¢ 1951. Quantity Rights Reserved, YOUR DOLLAR. BUYS MORE AT THE: ACME \ Ligh Ten Shel Richard of Rowen led and f injured v small wo were wai at 2 p. m. Stoner, and the © had been nearby s They sta storm br« lice, but all hudd! pupils wi school bt The sh Stoner h The tv Charles Mr. and and Hov Mr. and of Marie Car Flor Str Harry had a v He re that he parked of Rou front o struck. b+ ported State niewics hit by rishurg 4 the tr tric sa scene, and rif timatec by vol hurled sidewa Wa Co $1. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers