The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 01, 1951, Image 4

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deThe Bulletin, Mount Joy, ®a + Thursday, November 1, 1951


1e
ano preltde and posthude were Tl
MRS. WAYNE AUNGST, E-TOWN A trio of the Misses Fannie Ruth

Hager’s Plain Clothing Dept.
“WHERE. PLAIN FOLKS LIKE TO SHOP”













A Fine Selection of
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$49.75 © $64.50
Large complete assortments of plain
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specially designed for men who appre-

ciate quality and neatness. Tailorec
pure wool worsted fabrics, in
bone weaves, gabardines, stripes and
neat figures. Grays, blues, and oxford.
A full line of sizes, including Regulars
Shorts, Stouts and Half-stouts, in Sack
and Frock Styles.
Plain Topcoats
Many Shower-Proofed
$42.50 to $54.50
Conservative models of fine quality all
wool fabrics in blues, greys, and black.
These coats have bs
some of the leading coat manufacturers
of thé Country. Qur navy blue and black
gabardine topcoats, are a favorite with
men who desire comfort and durability.
1
made for us by

PLAIN CLOTHING DEPT., Second Floor
THE HAGER 3
25 - 31 W. KING ST. LANCASTER, PA.
RE













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says: Lehigh Poultryman Correll H. Bachman,
+ RD #2, Slatington.
*I no longer worry about ice In my poultry house
water troughs since I installed electric heating cable
. . . even in Winter's coldest spells. I don't need to
tell any poultryman how important that isinkeeping
egg productionup,’’ continued Poultryman Bachman.
Electric heating cable is easy to install and pays
for itself time and again by keeping water running
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Let him show you how inexpensively and simiply
electric heating cable can maintain your flock’s
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“ ‘paper advertising,
: : isses Marth: od cy in jf
| fay Maser of Lobo Adis SPORE AT REICH'S GIRL DAY Musser, Ruth Dresher and Alma pis " by — il hae Kable Fennsy
Jes and. . 4
01d Dick Whittington Post Mrs. Wayne Aungst, of Elizabeth- | Smith, sang at both services. For WR ety 4
{ Crimson, ‘ermined robes, pearl | un spoke at the morning worship Sunday School, Miss Helen Leese i in the
{ sword, crystal mace, ‘and a gilded ties . . : ;
coach drawn by six horses—such | On Sunday at Reich's Evangelical | was acting superintendent and Miss Everybody in this locality reads a——
are the glamorous office accessories | Congregational Church when Girls’ | Joyce McMillan read the Scripture. R000
The Bulletin—that's why its adver

of London's Lord Mayor, whose | Day was observed at worship and | For the worship, conducted by Ms. |
visit to the United States marks the Sunday School.
first ever made by one in his posi-
| tion.
| JULIA WARREN looked up from| An aura of mellow tradition and
| 4 her pie-baking suddenly, a nd | authority travels with the Lord
thought it had happened. | Mayor of the City of London, For
{ “Bud,” she called. “Please try to |the official who rules the mile
| keep Pinky by your side. He'll get | square City at the business heart of
{hurt if he keeps chasing cars the [the British metropolis symbolizes
| way he does.” [the power and privilege which citi-
She watched Bud through her |zens won from the Crown nearly
kitchen window as he scolded Pinky | eight centuries ago.
by waving a fat! Among other offices held by the
«Minute | finger at him. [Lord Mayor is that of Cnief Magis-
to at Mustn't do, trate, Admiral of the Port and Com-
Fiction | pinky! Mom says |manding General of London; Chair-
you're a bad dog!" | man in the Court of Aldermen and


By Paschal La Padula













TEI
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| Then he pushed along the sidewalk | common Council of the City; and Hal
| in his wagon, Pinky at his side. | member of the Privy Council, F i U IT d V E G ¥ T A B I E ¢
| ae Werk beh do ug pe Even the King traditionally must an CRC
| face. Pinky was lovable, but his seek permission to enter the City on offer
| habit of chasing cars through the | State & Sse Sour.
streets of Collinsville made Julia y in 4a § p
|
|
|
| | |tion at Temple Bar boundary.
{
DEPARTMENT
Exclusive
COMPLETE LINE
NORRIS
Fancy Canned
| dread the event which must inevita- | J ee
|'bly occur, Julia had urged her hus- | How young Dick Whittington rose
band Mark to persuade Bud to |from poverty to the pinnacle of this
give up the dog, but Mark was too |august office is one of the world’s
| | soft-hearted, great success stories. Much of it is
| [ “It will break the boy's heart,” |legend, but the facts that remain are
[ he would say. {more impressive than the fiction.
Not nearly as badly as it | In the familiar tale, Dick Whit- |
{ would if something dreadful |tington wd the poor apprentice to |
happened to Pinky, Julia always |a London merchant who was of-
{§| thought. That could be some- |[fered, through jest, a chance to ship |
| thing Bud might never get over. |something abroad for sale. Having
That might be something he |nothing else, Dick sent his cat. The
|
|


would always remember like a animal, put up for sale in a Barbary
sharp continuous pain. Julia Kingdom then overrun by mice,
knew well it would be that way. tbrought an enormous sum.
.| Meanwhile, Dick had run away |
(from home without learning of his
He returned to London when
|he heard the bells of St. Mary-le-
|Bow ringing out the prophetic prom- |
|{ise that he would be Lord Mayor of |
|London—a promise, the story goes,
{that was three times fulfilled.

Sn

|
Japan's New Stone Age Relics
Similar To American Findings
| Archeologists. have found an in-
teresting similarity between designs,
{surface treatments, and shapes of
[pottery from New Stone Age abori-
: S$ who lived in what is now
7 = (Japan and those from pre-Colum-
| Musn’t do, Pinky! Mom says (bian Indians of the eastern United
you're a bad dog!” |States and Canada, The resem-
| |blance is so striking that it might
| She tried to cast thoughts from suggest a direct contact between
| her mind that were like jagged [these two widely separated peoples.
glass. She opened the oven door, Differences almost as striking, how-
| saw that the pie was almost brown |aver, militate against this conclu-
| enough to take out, {sion. None of the similarities appear
Then she heard it—heard it like |in the pottery of Southwestern Unit-
| she knew she would, like she had |ed States, Mexican, or South Ameri-
| heard it once before in the recesses [can Indians,
| of her mind. Bud's scream, a car's |
| futile brakes, Pinky's agonizing |
| bark,
All she could hear then were Bud's
| sobbing words: “Pinky! Pinky!”
|




7

Home-made Cottage Cheese, Cup Cheese and
Local Fresh Eggs

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Our Dairy Department Features
COMPLETE SELF
RR TPR



The basic question to be answered
by the archeologist is whether the

[ceramic similarities of these two
|distant areas are the result of in-
)
They buried Pink. 3 |dependent invention or represent the |
ley Bburieq Pinky in a smelling, "of ideas and dirdet. |
-~


a
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wooden box in a corner of the back |, from Japan to North America. Featuring Brown's |
| yard among the flowers. Julia put a 4 |
marker with Pinky’s name into the| The tentative conclusion reached |
ground while Bud just watched and |ls that the ancestors of the Indians | |
| said nothing. living in the eastern part of the
Julia did not know whether there (United States and of the primitive I)
| was more sorrow than relief in her people living in Japan, who may not |
heart. Maybe it was better that it|have been directly related to the |
| happened now instead of five or six [Present Japanese, spilled out inftwo |
| years from now when Bud's love directions from a common point of [
for Pinky would have been too hard [origin somewhere in central Asia, |
ni
COMPLETE
i M D
uailty lvieat Dept.
for the boy to forget. Bud could One or more waves of this human sella ae
| forget Pinky now as she had learned [migration came to Japan. Others
| to forget . . . [reached Alaska via the Bering | 5 (A
io, a {Straits and continued into eastern |) il
| A" dinner that night there Were North America: All these migrants | |
| not many words spoken. Mark [found earlier inhabitants, |
| patted his son's curly head, and | |
MOUNT JOY
PHONE 3-9094
tried to console him. ‘*‘Pinky]|
>
Department,
Top Quality Frozen Foods


| sa



wouldn't like to sce you so sad, son. |
He'd want you to remember him]
with a smile on your face, and for-
get what happened today.”
Forget . . . forget. Julia
| locked at Bud's face and knew
| he weuld never forget. Young
| minds don’t forget easily. They
Shrine Renovation
|
|
The second-to-one shrine of Is- |
lam, the Great Mosque at Medina |
|
|
|




in Saudi Arabia, is due for a mid-
{century face-lifting. Stone masons
and carpenter® soon will be elbow-
ling pilgrims at this holy place out-
don’t forget the most important only by Mecoa 1 the hl
Hilngs, Juin’ of the Moslem Worid. Repair crews |
After dinner when the family was | Dave been something of a devotion- |
| in the living room, Mark reading his | 2} hazard at the Mosque over the
“With |Past decade and a half, notes the
National Geographic Society. From
1935 to 1939, worshipers reaching |
{this sun-baked town where Mo- |
as ‘the door. hammed preached, died and was |
“What's wrong, Julia?” Mark buried, watched artisans laying |
| arsed. new marble floors. They saw work- |
| “Nothing, dear. I must get some !|™en restoring the minarets and
RPL ARIE. PIT sec Halen Reynolds | 0lumns whose crumbling condition
for n fo threatened the structure as
i It did not take more than a fey | Whole. An Egyptian banker do-
| minutes, Julia was surprised how Dated the funds for those repairs.
little time it actually took. If only |Some 200 columns 4 Support the
other people had realized what little | HARAM, as the Medina Mosque of |
| dine it took. ithe Prophet is known to Moslems. {
| Tt was not until Julia had stepped|? score or more have deteriorated |
into the living room that Mark|in the decade since the previous |

 
{ paper, Bud playing listlessly
his blocks, Julia suddenly put down
the sweater she was knitting. She
got up from her chair and went to-

20000
i

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pee
_ Eg

»
realized what Julia had done. pecessiigung peat { Steady, uniform heat a big aid ¢
Tos 1eet her, proud of his wife, program for which .
iy Nt rE eile Bud “and | Saudi Arabia's oil-rich king, Ibn mn cutting down colds
showed him what her hands held,|Saud, has agreed to take care of -—Say doctors
|
|
| Bud's eyes brightened. It was a ting the bill.
| bundle of fur. A month old cocker-
| spaniel with sleepy eyes, and pink
| ears. Measuring Earth
| “Pinky the Second,” Julia said| In 1948, the National Geographic
| with a smile. Bud reached out|Society sent out eight scientific
chubby fingers for a new Pinky, a|teams along the 5,000-mile track of
| new hope. ‘an annular eclipse of the sun |
| Julia was glad she had remem-|from Burma to the Aleutian Is- |
| bered Helen Reynolds telling her|lands. This “Operation Eclipse,” a |
| about the litter of pups. She was| Project of unprecedented size and |
| glad she had remembered one day| Scope in studying solar phenomena,
many years ago when she herself| brought back valuable data for
|
|
|
‘blue coal’ is mined deep where the
highest-quality hard coal is found.
Clean because it burns without soot
or smoke. Healthful because its
steady flame keeps a house warm
all over—at an cven temperature.
For good health insurance and”
carefree comfort, order ‘blue coal’,
You'll feel the difference.
BE SAFE -PHONE TODAY
———————————————————————
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Yes, it’s true! The amazing Temp-
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was young with important things in| mapmakers and mathematicians.
| her life. It opencd the way for more ac-
| Julia watched the sadness melt| curate measurements on the earth’s i
| from Bud's eyes us Le fondled the!s@rface, helped in tying together |
pvp. She temembered herself as a geadetic surveys of different coun- |
lny her own do; | tries, “and proved the possibilify. of {
iF girl en the

thougl |miaking accurate astronomical. ob- |
WOLGEMUTH BROS, Ine.
vr had pot servations from aircraft flying high |
| | above the weather in the , thin, | FLORIN, PENNA.
| —— etl) eee | air of the etratosphere.
|
There is no better way to boost |
your business than py loral news-
 
Everybody reads newspapers buf
NOT: everybody reads circular ad.
| vertising left on’ their door step.



Heat your home with“blue coal and FEEL THE dT a

“Tok