THE BULLETIN, Mount Joy, Pa. Thursday, January 21, 1934 5 OWL LAFES| | 1 | | | { A WISE OWL | \ i B se | Did you ever see how they]| make a car? They start oft with | thousands of little pieces. Then | hundreds of men using millions | of dollars worth of machinery, | hammer and screw and rivet | until it all turns into a beautiful | car. Then you miss a couple of | payments and it turns into a fi- nance company. | i Alimony is merely man’s cash surrender value. a Overheard in the Post Office vesterday morning. Both men were West Enders. “Well, what're you looking so glum about?” “Oh, my wife's been visiting | her mother for a month, and last nigh! she came back home.” “Well, gosh, that shouldnt make you so gloomy.” { That's what you think! You see, I told her I spent every ev- ening al home reading till late when she was away, and then this morning she got the electric light bill—with only a $1.00 charge.” After all, it's the rounders | who make the triangles. Seven men, all fellow work- * ers, at Marietta, made a mutual arrangement Subscription | paper Published every Thursday at 11 | THE BULLETIN | East Main Street, Mount Joy. | Laneaster County, Pa. Larmon D. Smith, Publisher John E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher, 1901-1952 | Rate $2.50 per] Yea by Mail Advertising rates upon request. Entered at the postoffice at Mount Joy, Pa., as second-class : mail under the Act of March 3, | | 1879. i Member, Pennsylvania News- Publishers’ Association. Letters To The Editor To the Editor of the { Mount Joy Bulletin: I just finished reading the Bulletin and I was interested to note the Chamber of Commerce | asked for the opinion of the! townspeople concerning the dis- | posal of the Grade School build- | ing and grounds. As a native daughter of Mount Joy this is] what I would like to offer. First of all please keep it for | the playground activities for those children who live in the south side of town so that they will not have to cross the trafs | fic-laden Main Street to go to| the present park, making it nee- | essary in some cases for adults to accompany them. This would be an ideal park | for benches to be placed under the trees and grass grown on part of it for the older as well as the young to sit for relaxa- | tion without walking too far.| More shade trees could be plant- | | wore a velvet bonnet to match ed. | The foundation would be good for a swiming pool which | is needed very badly in the town where it would be safer | for younger children as well as adults instead of some lonely place on the outskirts of town. | Our wonderful we have could surely guards, ete. as a public service | by Mrs. Ethel Broske, Mt. Joy. | visited Mr. .and to their community. If a swimming pool would not be advisable then by all means | whereby one of | have a band shell at the further | reception was held in the social | | Sheetz, Florin, last Saturday, at | marriage by her father and was | muth, brother of the bride. | bodice, and full skirt ending in supply | Weddings | SHEETZ — LINDEMUTH Miss Betty Louise Lindemuth, Florin, daughter of Jacob S. Lindemuth, this borough, be- came the bride of Harry Sheetz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles 2 p. m,, in the Maytown Church | of God. The Rev. Wagner offici- ated at the double-ring cere-| mony. Miss Lindemuth was given in her sister, Mrs. Lloyd Mowrer, Lancaster RI, as matron of honor. Miss Dor- othy Lindemuth, Florin, attend- ed her sister as maid of honor. Kenneth Engle, Florin, was best man, and the ushers were Richard Sheetz, Florin, brother of the bridegroom; Ronald Het- rich, Manheim, cousin of the bridegroom; and Leroy Linde- attended by The bride wore a gown of im- ported Chantilly lace and satin, fashioned with a rounded off- the shoulder neckline, with a nylon yoke, long sleeves of lace | tapering to points, a princes| a cathedral train. Her veil of nylon tulle was attached to a crown of orange blossoms. She | carried a bouquet of white ros- | es and carnations centered with | red roses. The matron of honor wore a| coral floor-length gown with a net-over-taffeta skirt and an off- the-shoulder velvet bodice with matching velvet jacket. She her gown and carried a bouquet | of cavalier roses and matching | carnations tied with bronze| ribbon. | The maid of honor wore a| gown identical to that of the| matron of honor in peacock organizations | blue. An organ recital was played | | The soloist was Mrs. Leroy Lin-| | demuth, Marietta. { Following the ceremony. al NEWTOWN | Buch, Manheim. Mr. and Mrs. John Sterback, of Lancaster were Sunday vis- itors of Mr. and Mrs. John Mil- ler. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Har- ry Weaver were Mr. Benjamin Weaver, Miss Esther Longenec- ker, Marietta and Rev. O. K. Mrs. Cora Myers, Columbia, visited Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Erb, Monday evening. Mrs. Irvin Witmer and chil- dren visited Mr. and Mrs. John Kauffman Sr. of Ironville, Sun- day. Mr. and Mrs. William Rynier, Gap, visited Mr. and Mrs. John Grossman and family. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ar- istice Wittle and daughter were Mr. Charles Wittle, Columbia R. D. Mr. Joseph Wittle and daughter Judy, Columbia, Rev. 0. K. Buch, Manheim, Mr. and Mrs. Ragner Hallgren, Mt. Joy. Mrs Minnie Geltmacher, Kin- derhook, visited Mr. and . Mrs. Earl Geltmacher and family. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Witmer and sons, of Esbenshade Road, visited Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Wit- mer and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Grossman and family visited Mr. and Mrs, William Geltzenlichter of Sou- dersburg. Miss Betty Ann Haines visit- ed Mr. and Mrs. Robert New- | comer, Mt. Joy. | Mrs. Edith Erb and Bobbie Witmer called on Mr. and Mrs. | Clarence Dietrich of New Hol- | land R. D. Sunday. | Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ma- urice Frysinger and Mrs. Katie Moore were Mr. Howard Fry-| singer, Philadelphia, Mr. Daniel | Frysinger and son, West Ches- | ter and Rev. Paul Z. Hess East | Donegal. ! Mr. ‘and Mrs. Harry Weaver | Mrs. Warren | Sload and family and Mr. and! Mrs. Charles Fogie Jr. and daughter Bonnie Sue, Marietta. | Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Rob- | them would buy the paper each | end of the old foundation. These | hall of the United Brethrenjert Frank and family wege Mr. | day and read it at the lunch | hour to the other six. For this they paid him each a | penny. The paper cost him three | cents, so he made three cents profit. And the other six, in ef-! fect, saved their eyesight and 2 | cents apiece. Many an old-fashioned cling- ing vine now has a granddaugh- ter who is a rambler.” A little man was pushing his cart through the crowded super | market. “Coming through” he| called merrily. No one moved. | “Gangway,” he shouted. A few | men moved. ¢ i Ruefully he surveyed the sit- | uation and then smiled as a} bright idea struck him. | “Watch your nylons” he warned. The women like dust in the wind. The way traffic is today, very | soon the only people who will | enjoy automobile rides will be} those with back vards. Mr. and Mrs. X from the east ward were riding along the] Ironville road Sunday. Along] the way they passed a farmyard | and a jackass brayed. Turning | te his wife he asked, “Some of | your relatives my dear?” Sweet- | Iy she answered,” “Yes, by mar- {| riage.” — — I'll bet he's sor- | ry he opened his mouth. i People can be placed into three classes: “The few who | make things happen, the many | who watch things happen; and | the overwhelming majority who have no idea what has happen- ed. A mother with six children boarded a Lancaster bus on sales day and gave the bus driv- er so much trouble that he said, at the end of the trip, “I wond- er why you don’t leave half of your youngsters at home?” The mother looked up at him | sadly and said, “I did.” One of the consolations of | age is that you can whistle] while you brush your teeth. Recently a single girl came into her office and began pas- sing out cigars and candy, both with blue ribbons. Somewhat puzzled and most surprised her co-workers asked the occasion. Proudly she displayed a soli- taire on her left hand and an- nounced: “It's a boy — 6 feet tall and 185 pounds.” ’ One of our young bachelors proposed 10 a gal recently, tell- ing her he was a go-getter - - - | Joy, such things tend to better | tion and understanding of peo- 5 ple in a small community such] bride is employed at J. C. Snav-| Mount Joy R. D. as ours. I'm sure that many peo- ple who were born in this bor- ough would be very happy they could see a place of beauty and benefit to the community instead of everything destroyed so that you would never and grandparents got ‘their | grade and high school education | there at one time. I think that this is one time when the people of Mount Joy should speak up and not let it to some who might think of the financial gains that would come from selling the property and overlook the good results that would come from | the things mentioned before. ! How about it now, you who scattered | have left Mount Joy because of | 1S not necessary, or perhaps save other duties but still love Mount | as K. T. Keller and | others. Let's hear your opinions. | An interested reader. i GRADUATED THIS WEEK Pvt. John J. Boyer, 20, son ot Mrs. Ella Meta Boyer, 15 Mari- etta Ave., Mount Joy, was grad- uated this week after comple- tion of the repeater and carrier installation and repair course at the signal school, Fort Mon- mouth, N. J. Prior to entering military ser- | viee, Boyer attended Mount Joy | High School and had bea em-| ployed by Bell Telephone Com- | pany of Pennsylvania. PERSONALS Gis | | a necessity. Pvt. Donaid iugene Fogie,| son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fo- | gie of Columbia R1, is undergo- ing eight weeks of basic train- ing at Camp Pickett, Va. Walter Greiner Marietta Av- enue, is recouperating from his recent operation. He will re-| main in the T.ancaster General | Hospital for approximately 3 weeks more. | Charles Reed, East Main St. Mount Joy, is improving follow- | ing his accident. He will remain | in the Lancaster General Hos- | pital for several weeks. His son | Robert will return to teaching | at Ogontz Monday. Abram Waltz, Lumber Street, is recouperating in the Lancas- ter General Hospital following] an operation. J but she was looking for an al-| ready gotter. | Did you notice that when youl ask for 50c worth of steak day all they do is let you smell the hook? A WISE OWL have | known that many of our parents | coopera- | Church, Florin. The couple will | Arthur Koser, Klinesville, { reside at Mount Joy R1. The { ely and Sons, Inc., Landisville f Lancaster. a Ce Postoffice News For the past s, we | have all been inconvenienced | by the cold and the snow. If we were compelled to use the car during these days, we were well | aware of the difficulty in getting here and there, and many times we were pretty much perturbed if we got stuck in the snow, or could not drive up close to the curb or a parking space. Sometimes we go out when it few we-i up all the errands for ope trip, but the rural mail, carriers and the city carriers must go every day to the same houses the same streets and the same door | slots or letter boxes. We give so | little thought to the trials and tribulations besetting these men always taking for granted that no matter how the weather or the load, they will do their job. This is very true, but their load could be lightened by a wee bit of cooperation on the part of the person receiving the mail. For instance the cleaning of walks making them free of snow so the carrier can get to vour door slot is very impor- tant. Cleaning the approaches to your box if you are on a rural route or use a rural type box is| On several instances the mail man has not delivered the mail where the approaches have not been cleaned, or sometimes de- livered the mail to a neighbors box, where the approach to the box is free of snow. You as pa- trons could do much to help the mail man by seeing that the snow is cleaned away from your boxes and that the walks are free of snow. Put yourself in his place. Would you like to carry a load on your back and maintain a schedule, and still contend with bad approaches to homes| and letter boxes. | Every little item which tends | to help the mail man is not only | appreciated put. increases his | ability to give you better ser-| vice. Please keep this in mind, | and if you have, inot » shoveled the snow: away from your box, | do it now. | Elmer L. Zerphey, | Acting Postmaster | tl A Mra There is no better way to boost your business than by local news- paper advertising. and the bridegroom is employed i if | at the Lehigh Mfg. Company, .a¢| Mrs. Vic'or | And much to our surprise, Mr. and Mrs. Hathaway Brenneman, Recent visitors of Mr., and] Mrs. Jacob Erb were Mr. and Witmer and son] Johnnie, E-town R. D. JANUARY SNOW { We woke up Monday morning, | When looking out the window, We couldn't believe our eyes For the ground was covered over | With a blanket of white, And the snow was still falling | Much to our delight. { We ate our breakfast quickly, Then tuned in our radios, We hoped to hear our school Would be one that was closed. We listened and we listened, Manheim Central we didn’t hear, We waited for our buses, Hoping they wouldn't appear. By the teacher and 5th grade pupils, of Sporting Hill School. ee tl Oe et SHORT CIRCUIT CAUSES FIRE IN HOME Fire, smoke and water dam- | aged the home of Jose Santana, High Street, about noon vester- | day when fire broke out in the | electrical wiring in the second | floor ceiling. { John Myers, assistant fire! chief of Friendship Fire Com- | pany, said the fire was caused | by a short circuit, was confined’! to burlap bags, laid on the attic | floor. | | | | { | The attic floor, firemen ex- | plained, was covered with the bags which were laid there to! prevent drafts {from blowing | between sections of plaster | board which covered the second | floor ceiling. } The burning bags were thrown from the attic, firemen reported, but the entire house was filled with smoke and dam- | aged by water dripping through | the second story ceiling. Fire- | men were unable to give an es- | timate of the loss. | — a ENGAGEMENTS MILLER — CATERBONE | Mr. and Mrs. John Caterbone, | Lancaster, announce the engage- | ment of their daughter, Millie | Jo to Robert J. Miller, son of | Mrs. Blanche Miller and the late Samuel Miller, Mt. Joy R1. Miss Caterbone is employed by the Hamilton Watch Cd! and Mr. ‘Miller by Clirist R. Shek, of Mount Joy. Lam | a Cm F. Garber Double Shower Fetes | BIRTHS SIMON P. NISSLEY Benj. F. Gay PA. Mr. and Mrs. John Reuter, of MARY G. NISSLEV Phone 702-J 2 | 453 East Market Street, Mariet- : Seventy-F ve Guests rer the Te git FUNERAL DIRECTORS 30 A double bridal shower was daughter Friday in the Colum- Mount Joy, Pa. — held Saturday night for Miss bia Hospital. Mrs. Reuter was S. Martha Elizabeth Wolgemuth the former Carcl Foerch of Mt. and Miss Catherine Wolgemuth. Joy. The double shower was held at Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Sprout eg the home of their parents, Mr. of Mount Joy R1, announce the AX FO RMS the and. Mrs. Joseph Wolgemuth, of birth of a daughter, Saturday in INCOME T M t Joy R1, by the two girls’ the Lancaster Gener: spital. or FILLED OUT be held in the near future. | M Joy R2, : vo Miss Martha Wolgemuth will birth. of vy i R. E. SHECKARD & SON ET i a for Foner” 55. a, Sve CovumBIA, PA muth will marry Nelson Heisey,' = Mr. and Mrs. Richard Farm- — All Kinds of Insurance — Elizabethtown in a double wed- er, Lumber St., announce the ton . ding. Approximately seventy- birth of a daughter Tuesday in OPEN EVENINGS 2.3 fall five guests attended the affair. the Lancaster General Hospital. - > Hol is iim . Che - 4 YX En In ITT SAT TRE 3 » low A&P Celebrates National Thrift Week With oe : ' i tor, Scores of Storewide spri trai ‘ nick Thrift Buys! : 7 mill 0 er. fe na Laren mE EE Salt oo A NN NaN, he NT \ B 0 : . c ( >.Bag Oranges sr a § 529° 1) 45 | 0) iho c — ( iv Iceberg Lettuce cove 2 ::29° J) So Fresh Tomatoes sod sing in BO . ( \ Florida Pascal Celery “uo 2 ::35° ( Fresh Carrots 19 Cashew Nuts ur: iy 48° Winesap Apples ¢» 49c A&P Dried Prunes i; 25%: 49° Thrifty Frozen Foods at A&P! dy ( Banquet Frozen u c C \ Chicken Pies:::s2e 2:49 ( OLD SOUTH FROZEN \ : c Cans \ $F ( Orange Juice 6:73 \» | \' Spinach 23:33 Dole Pineapple Juice 2:49: 1 Lima Beans “soi 29:45 Downy Flake Waffles 2 = 39¢ 1 0 Broccoli Spears =: 2: 49: Eat All Deviled Crabs «39: | __ Grand Duchess Frozen Steaks ee ge | 1 — Ne” =>. oN Hunt's Catsup “uo 2 5: 29° Ann Page Tomato Soup 4: 37¢ ! Nectar ies iw 250 33° 2 31° Grapefruit Juice 2: 198 «2c 1 Green Beans 20: 33° Our Own Tea vv 45¢ 85 1 . : . pkg. Prune Juice: oi ~~ Hershey Bars rene amon ux 95¢ ; Syr up es un 25° 47° Jane Parker Lemon Pie Jone Qe Old Virginia Jellies 4 “cu 45° White Bread je tn wr 156 : : 3 i ee still only All Prices in This Advertisement Are Effective Through Saturday, January 23rd, w Butter Kernel Butter Kernel Hormel Chili Beechnut = Corn Succotash Con Carne Baby Foods | Strained 10 mer ree 3° 2: 39° wo PGF Coy Mare 25 i Cooked Cereals Soc 110 | . HORMEL ——————— Bevery. Norm) A Dog Yummies Dinty Moore ret Clorox . — 17° Beef Stew J an 2 37 Pe 1%-lb. c quort Cy gallon c con bottle bottle Bachman Greenwood Heinz Green Giant Pretzels Homestyle Beets | Tomato Soup Cream Corn we sn 1° ue JTC | Qe JH Jun 32° cans cans -~— Real Gold Lipton Tea : ian Base.) oo | Heinz Ketchup | Green Giant gebase G5 ; Niblet's Mexicorn 2 = 33 Len, 2. DY ne, BB i: 23 2 = 39° . . . Planter’s Lipton Soup Mixes | Heinz Beans Green Giant | . Salted Peanuts | onion 2 pkgs 29¢ Niblet’s Corn | ie 35 Chicken Noodle 3 pkgs 35¢ 2 Yori, 27° } in Tomato & Veg. 3 pkgs 35¢ cans Whats 2 Yat. 33 | Nabisco Cookies | Excelsior Buttered | Heinz Cooked Green Giant wo 1 Masia: Wafers 9 3 Beefhurgers Macaroni Sweet Peas | Black Walnut pkg. or sandwich in 39 ly) Cc Cc Cookies steaks pkg 2 35 2 Yaz. 39 J New! ‘ . 6 . | Chiffon Flakes | Did Soap Dial Soap en Bini 1 Large 25 2 regular size 23: 2 bath size 33 Asparagus Spears | pkg, cakes ake; 19-01. 43 | - can hy | " All Detergent Allsweet Margarine li 24-01, 39 10-1b. 9 4 In Ya-lb, 1-16, c | . ; pkg. pkg. a prints pkgs. tars | 48 87 EAST MAIN ST. MT. JOY, PA. La