The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 28, 1953, Image 8

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    Bulletin,
Wount Jon .
ALOUD
Venetian Blinds
PHONE
MOUNT JOY
3-3492
Open Daily
and
Evenings
Except
Wednesdays
8-tfc
Pa.
Plastic Wall Tile
Mount of Tle and Linoleum (0
contract
Marietta H. S.
Commencement
"This Evening
Dr. Paul Bixby,
Education of Pennsylvania State
Teachers College, will be the
speaker at the 79th
[ Commencement College,
| the speaker at the
[ Commenceme nt
| Marietta High
[held Thursday
28. in the high school auditor
ium at eight o'clock. Twenty
students will be graduated at
this time,
Three members of the gradu-
ating class — James Marley,
Srirley Cummings, and Nancy
Grofi-——will present orations.
ATTENDED CONVENTION
Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Shoop at-
tended the Pennsylvania State
will be
“Guaranteed by *
Good Exercises
School, to
evening, May |
SA WES
Beautiful Tile Walls
— at Low Cost!

installations:
MOUNT JOY, PA. Formica Tops



ADVERTISE
for the best
Vacation you
ever had...
Join our;
| Dental convention which was
{ held in Atlantic City last week.
IN THE “BULLETIN”
Choose Your Fun!
Vacation ideas are as varied as the stars, Some like to slam a golf
ball—others like to sail a sloop. But remember a Vacation is only a
Vacation when it's what you want to do. So pick the kind of Vacation
you want; and pay for it with Vacation Club.
‘With a Vacation Club you can save money the easy, effortless way,
Small payments each week mean a good sum at Vacation time.
You never miss the weekly payments—you do miss the strain and
worry of “getting together”-Vacation money.
Regardless of what you want to do financial peace of mind is essen-
ial for a good Vacation, Insure it by joining our Vacation Club.
VACATION CLUB
| ————)
UNION NATIONAL M OUNT JOY BANK &
OF MOUNT JOY
For the Best in Tires & Appliances
See GEO.
FREEZERS
Aspara-
Lea-
New
pright -
Strawberries and
here - And
Have The
Westinghouse U
or the Wilson Chest or Up-
right Freezer to
suit your needs.
gus are
man’s
- In size
Priced As Low As
$279
Terms to Suit You
Easy

Electric Ranges
Let us trade in your old
range - Any Kind - On a
new 1953 Westinghouse
Electric Range.
The Range that Your Food
Can’t Burn.

Priced As Low As
2490


Terms as low as $10 per
month!

Gas Ranges
Beautiful Full-Size
Dividend Top with the New Elco Burners
And Oven Control
Entire Range is Porcelain
$13900
Terms As Low As $9.00 Per Month!
Hardwich Gas Range
Refrigerators
Trade in your old refrig-
erator Now At Leaman's -
On a new
WESTINGHOUSE
FROST-FREE
REFRIGERATORS
You Never Have to
De-Frost
As Low As
299u
Easy Terms To Suit You!





\
GEO. W. LEA MAN
MOUNT JOY, PA.
208 EAST MAIN STREET
THE STORE THAT APPRECIATES YOUR BUSINESS
PHONE 3-9351
OPEN" DAILY TILL 6:00 P. M. MONDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 9:00 P. M.
Professor of
Annual | school year.
79th Annual |
of |
be |
‘Temple Sponsors Teachers
Courses At F. and M.
Temple is announcing |
graduate and
courses for teachers and school
| administrators to be conducted
[at Franklin & Marshall College,
| beginning September 28th and
* extending through the 1953-1954
These courses will
+ | be the first of a new three year
series.
The forthcoming term will
| also be the fourth year for the
again
courses at Franklin & Marshall
| College. This continuation is
[done with the enthusiastic com-
| mendation coming from many
prominent educators in this area
as well as the desire of many
| previous participants to continue
| their graduate training. The
| courses, which will cover a wide
variety of subjects and problems
| with experience gained
|
of vital importance to principals, |
teachers and others in the field |
| will extend throughout two se-
| mesters, and their appropriate-
| ness and wide acceptance may be
inferred from the more than 825
iduals who have taken ad-
undergraduate | indiv
| vantage of the thirty or more
different offerings in this Grad
| uate Center.
Strategically located within
easy reach of a very large and
progressive body of teachers,
and with classes meeting during
the late afternoon and evening,
the courses can be carried on
concurrently, with the regis-|
trants losing no time from their |
normal pursuits. The courses |
| take on added significance from |
[the fact that they have been
selected wtih great care to con-
form to the needs of the commu-
nity and the suggestion of local
educational leaders, together
in the
presentation of the courses given
during the past three years.
Registration hours have been
arranged for 4 to 6 and 7 to 9 |
p.m., Wednesday, September 23,
in Fackenthal Library at Frank-
lin & Marshall College.

The Dutch Philosopher
|
|
| Well, Mrs. Espenshate! Come
up on the porch and enchoy this
nice weather. Sunday without
I such a rain storm was quite un-
now wasn’t it?
Yes, for once people went
| somewhere and got home in the
| dry. Did you and Chake go any
place?
No, he chust wanted to set
| around. After he read the papers
|and puttered around the yard a
| little he tired himself out and
laid down and took a nap. He
| said he would of mowed a part
of the lawn only people don’t
like to listen to a lawn mower
on a Sunday afternoon.
No—I don’t like to hear one
either. A body can do almost
anything on a Sunday nowadays
but push a lawn mower on ac-
count of the noise they make.
Well, as far as Chake is con-
cerned, I think he said that about
lawn mowing chust for an ex-
cuse not to do it. He is good at
that.
Well, we will soon have a dry
spell and the lawns won’t grow
so fast. Chorch used his power
machine the other evening and
after he got done he came in and
says he thinks somebody ought
to invent a small mower that
a body could ride like the ones
they have on golf courses. I says
I hope not because you would
drive it too fast like you do a
car and have an accident and
mavbe kill yourself with it.
Yes well. What did you and
Chorch do on Sunday?
Oh, we chust took a little ride
on Sunday and had dinner up
near Harrisburg somewhere.
Chorch did not want to go on ac-
count of the Sunday traffic but
in the end—after I told him what
I had planned for dinner—his
| appetite got the best of him and
he says we will drive someplace
and eat, but stay on the back
roads. Then we got lost a couple
of times and by the time we got
i on a main road Chorch was so
hungry that he wanted to stop at
the first hot dog stand we came
to. But I put my foot down on
that. I says. I am hungry too but
after all this fussing around I
{ain't going to eat at no hot dog
stand. Keep driving, 1 says, til
we get to a good place. So he
did and I had a big platter of
fried chicken and Chorch had a
steak. Coming home he stayed on
the main road and chust to be
annoying he didn’t drive fast
like he usually does. 1 says,
Bl Chorch, you are going too slow
and somebody will get impatient
and run into us from behind, I
says. And he says how can we
enchoy looking at the beautiful
Garden Svot of America
meaning Lancaster County—if
we tear along like we had to get
to New York City before we
could go to bed. And chust then
a state policeman came along
and told Chorch pretty sharp like
to speed up a little as he had a
whole parade of cars behind him.
After that there wasn’t any more
trouble.
Didn’t you say anything?
No. I have learned when to
keep my trap shut. I chust said
when we got home I would make
him a nice cold supver and we
talked about that til we got
home. .
Well, what else is new?
There don’t seem too much
going on except this everlasting
talk about butchets and taxes.
A body gets sick of it sometimes,
because no matter what happens
in the end we will have to pay
more taxes anyway.
How can we pay more than
what we are paying now?
Don’t ask me—but as Chorch
says, we always have.
It often wonders me what these
gover’'ments do with all the
money they get. The papers
chust say that this department
needs so many billions and this
other one so many billions, but
they never tell a person what
thev aim to do with it.
No doubt if' they did it would
fill a whole Sunday newspaper
with figures and nobody would

(AS OVERHEARD BY JOHN BOYD) |
i
read it anyway. Chorch says all |
them head men probably figure |
what they need and then ask for |
a lot more than that chust to |
make sure they will get what |
they need. And in the end it is |
easier to give them what they |
ask for than it is to figure out |
whether they need it or not. |
Chust like it is easier for Chorch | |
to give me twenty-five dollars to |
run the house on for a week than |
it would be for him to figure out |
that T could get along on twenty, |
which I probably could do if I]
had to.
No doubt that is about the way |
it is done.
Well, taxes or no taxes, I got |
to get over home now and scrape
something to gether for Chorch’s
sunner,
What are you having?
What I was going to have for |
Sunday—weal cutlets, fried po- |
tatoes and a can of tomatoes. |
Chorch will have to eat it even
though he don’t like weal be- |
cause he is going to such a lotch
meeting and he won’t have time
to eat somewhere else. Good bye
now.
Good bye.
Those In Service
Newport, R.I.
Dear Rem. Committee,
I received your gift that you
sent me and 1 appreciate it very
much. I showed the rest of the
boys and they said that it was
very nice of the town to do
things like that. Thank you
very much again.
SN Frank Zimmerman
Dear Committee:
Many thanks for
useful “dog chain”. The gift
arrived several days ago while
on our Division Field Exercises
which will continue . for eight
weeks here at Grafenwohr, Ger-
many. After which we will re-
turn to home station at Hanau,
Germany.
The weather has been very
cold. Today was Mother's Day
and we had quite a bit of snow.
As for my duties, I'm the
Battalion Adjutant or the Si
as referred to in military terms.
Again many thanks for the
chain and best wishes to all for
continued success in all your ef-
forts, I remain
Sincerely,
Capt. Harry G. Walters, Jr.
the very
Geneva, N. Y.
Dear Rem. Committee,
Sure was surprised to receive
a package from you already. I
was even more surprised when
I opened the package and found
what was inside. Right now
there isn’t anything I can use,
more, unless it would be some
sleep. It seems there was a slip-
up somewhere along the line
and we were issued our dog
tags, but no chains, So I can
sure use the dog chain.
I picked up our weekly base
bulletin yesterday and ran ac-
ross an article about Johnny
Cryns. Remember, he gave sev-
eral talks to the high school
students about communism. He
was also master of ceremonies
at the talent show that was held
last year. He's almost through
basic training according to the
paper. He's trying to get Eddie
Fisher, Patti Paige, Joni James,
and has already managed to get
Karen Chandler to appear at
Sampson. Well I have some
shoes to shine also have to help
get barracks clean for open
house that Sampson is going to


have on the 15 & 16, so thanks
again for the dog chain. J
will be CLOSED SATURDAY
ECORATION * *
Open Zi Evening Until 9 P. M
Special Sale for Your Holiday Meals
Small, Lean Smoked
HAMS
57°
63°
Dressed and Drawn Fancy Hen Fancy Hen
TURKEYS ~*~
the Oven!
Fully Dressed Stewing or Frying or Frying
CHICKENS 49°
Hamburger Freshly Ground Ib 39
Tasty Skinless Franks - 45¢
Plate Boiling Beef 2:29
Sl. Lebanon Bologna '* 29¢ | Fresh Pork Sausage '*43¢
Swift's Premium Ring Bologna > 49¢
Did You Start Your Set of Kaylan
Stainless Steel Kitchen Tools?
Everybody's talking about this sensational offer - - a Kaylan
Stainless Steel Kitchen set - - the “Cadillac” of Kitchen
Tools - - at a price less than those in the “lower price field".
You can’t duplicate this value. A coupon and your purchase
of $10.00 or more each week get you one of the seven valuable
kitchen tools at the sensationally low price of 39c. Coupon
book was mailed to you - - if you did not receive it merely
ask the checker or manager for one.
-Piece Kaylan Stainless Steel
KITCHEN TOOL SET {.
Value
with a purchase of $10.00 or more each week
for seven weeks and coupons.
KITCHEN TOOL OF THE WEEK
Kaylan Stainless Steel 3
Cook Spoon
special Bonus Offer! Reg. 58c Quart Jar
with $10.00 purchase and coupon
. Cc
Hom-de-Lite MAYONNAISE ony %
and the 20c coupon In the Kaylan Coupon Book
FRESH PRODUCE FOR DECORATION DAY
Shank
Half
Whole
Ham
- 99°



only
3
9<(.
for
only

EXTRA
SPECIAL!
Juicy
Calif.

pkgs
8 ea.
7-0z
can
12-0z
jar
714-02
jar
65-02
can
FLA. VALENCIA ORANGES “= 33¢
LARGE FLA. GRAPEFRUIT 3 fr 29¢
2/25¢ 2-33
New Crop Jersey Beets 2 behs 19g
Seabrook Farms Baby Lima Beans 2 10-0z pkgs 49¢
FROZEN Ideal Green Broccoli 10-0z pkg 29¢
Ideal Concen, Orange Juice 2 6-0z. cans 33c
SPECIAL FOR DECORATION DAY PICNICS, ETC.
Round, Bar-B-Q or Long Frankfurt 2 3 Be
Virginia Lee Orange Iced Layer Cakes
Be sure to get enough Supreme Enriched «
loaf 1 5
Try this better-tasting, soft, fresh loaf of wholesome bread and you, too,
will switch to Supreme and save the 3 or 4c a loaf.
IDEAL FANCY 35
WHITE MEAT TUNA
C
PEANUT BUTTER 33
OLIVAR QUEEN
HOM-DE-LITE CREAMY
MAYONNAISE
SALAD DRESSING
BANQUET BRAND 30
PRINCESS 2 19
PAPER NAPKINS ose
CALIF. NAVEL ORANGES 22 30¢
CRISP ICEBERG Fresh Sou. Valentine Green
Local Spring Onions or Radishes 3 Ph 14¢
Seabrook Spinach Leaf or Chopped 2 14-0z pkgs 43¢
FOODS Ideal Concen. Lemonade 2 6-0z cans 31¢
ea 69¢
BREAD ~
Louella Butter Bread Binds dated loaf 25,
IDEAL CREAMY OR CRUNCHY
STUFFED OLIVES
HOM-DE-LITE ZESTFUL at 45¢
Prices Effective May 27-28-29, 1953. Quantity Rights Reserved.