Mount Joy, THE BULLETIN, Pa. Thursday, April 1, 8 Y IN OUR 89: ALE" HURRY! Saturday is the Last Day Ideal; with tomato sauce 8 89«¢ 16-02 cans ORK & BEANS ARMDALE PEAS Lo OLDEN CORN iin ALIF. TUNA Large, Sweet 16-02 cans 16-02 cans €) = 89- 89< 6-0z Light Meat Grated cans fA KIDNEY BEANS vr 81:89 SPAGHETTI EE 8. 89 GREEN BEANS «occu 65:89 APPLE SAUCE rn 515589 16-02 cans OMATOES ro roe RATSUP regular or Hot UT BEETS ELLIES ceo assorted 0G FOOD 15 80Qc OLO- SOFT 8:89 IDEAL FANCY FLA. ORANGE JUICE 2:49 HUNT'S CALIF. CLING CLING Peaches bi can Halves or Slices in Syrup Have You Tried the New Ige KEE Detergent 2. 45 | For cleaner, whiter clothes and Ary Whiter clothes and spariding dishes. | SUPREME BREAD 15 1 Sm Large Rated Loaf Still Only Why not save up to 5c a loaf? You can't buy better bread at any price. It's enriched - - and made with the finest ingredients you use in your own kitchen. It’s Softer, It's Fresh Every Day. | Reg. 29¢ < pkg of 6 This Week’s Virginia Lee Feature-- Cinnamon iced Buns Supreme Protein Bread 'f 25¢ Va. Lee Hot Cross Buns Reg. or Brown 'n Serve 12 in pkg 39¢ Louelia Butter Bread 'f 25¢ DELVALE ICE CREAM $1.29 > gal ctn £7.19 LOUELLA MILK It s Homogenized 4 tall cans 50¢ PRINCESS MARGARINE 255 41¢ IDEAL INSTANT COFFEE 202 jar 55¢ Acme Beef for Satisfaction -- It’s Graded U. S. © YOUNG LONG ISLAND Ducklings. 89- 89- 89 glasses Qe 14-02 bots 16-02 deal Ideal cans POV odo d «MO OILET TISSUE AR © 46-02 cans Golden !}'s ODD ‘Choice” Fully Dressed and Oven Ready Get one for a treat this week. Ib 45¢ BONEL ES SS POT ROAST U. 8. Choice Beef Ib 57¢ FRESHLY GROUND BEEF LEAN SLICED BACON Wilson Corn King 1b gg. KESSLER'S FRANKFURTS > 43¢ LEAN PLATE BEEF 2'"=35¢ Sm. Bologna Pieces av Fresh Killed FRYING CHICKENS Fully Dressed g 2-1b, | 1h 39% | Tender Beef Liver 1h 39¢ Smoked Beef Tongues 1b 49¢ Fresh Pork Sausage - 1b 45¢ Meaty Scrapple 21bs 29¢ | Lebanon Bologna 15 1b 29¢ Perch Fillets 1b 43c Haddock Fillets 1b 45¢ Pan-Ready Whitings 1b 19¢ Now at Their Best! Large, Sweet and Juicy Fla. GRAPEFRUIT 2&9 NEW POTATOES U. 8. 1 Red Bliss PASCAL CELERY Crisp Green GREEN BEANS Fresh Valentine SPINACH OR KALE FANCY TOMATOES FRESH COCOANUTS 2for25c GOLDEN CORN SPRING ONIONS bch 5c CRISP RADISHES FLA. WHITE SQUASH 21bs19¢ GRASS SEED Extra Special! | 2 stalks 19¢ cello pkg 19¢ 2 ctns 35¢ 6 ears 39¢ | 2 pkgs 19¢ | 5 1b bag $1.89 | 2-YEAR-OLD FIELD GROWN ROSE BUSHES AJ. BUSHES Vs. 1 ea 99¢ 8 Packs Burpee | Seabrook Farms @ 2 S02 29: Flower Seeds| French Fries & rs Seabrook Extra Fancy Only 10-02 Cl with 23° any Green Peas 2 pkgs 29 | Seabrook Farms C & B or Ideal Frozen Foods Orange Juice | Prices Effective April 1-2-3, 1954, Quantity Rights Reserved. | ODDO A PL WW WN i 24 Bion on <n rast ip Big Bargains | | to her all the time.’ 25 { him just to give it to us. {ing fate, | for Timothy, and she had a right to | think of the future, | Mike's father had. | have [to buy a piece of property. The cor: | Remember Son By EDNA MAY JONES IMOTHY ed and freckled lay flat upon the floor machine-gunning the cat. ‘‘A-a-a-a-a’”* heckled Timmy. You're not a cat, Dhalia, you're an enemy, an’ I'm shooting you dead. A-a-a-a-a! Wi hat makes cats so dumb, Mom?" ‘Because they i can't speak, Minute dear.” Fiction not the kind of dumb I mean. I mean dumb like . . . Well you know what kind of dumb.” Mrs. Smith wiped her floured hands on her apron. ‘It's not stupid dead. It just doesn’t understand your lang age.” “Well I talk she should because , Mrs. Smith bent over the oven, screwing up her face to study a cake, ‘I've talked and talked to a ge rtain little boy I know in my own anguage, and quite often he dosen’t unde rstand.” I'immy wriggled. “Aw, Mom. I really understand, pretend I'm not listening.” “Well do you understand when I | say get up off the floor. Those are your good pants.” “I know,’ he said, whacking them vigorously. Mom?" “Yes, dear.” “Do I have to go to Sunday School | all my life?” shucks, only [ ‘Sunday School pants. | SMITH, eight, red-head. | PERSONALS | HIGHEST LIVING STANDARD BIRTHS Ireland enjoys the highest liv- Mr. and Mrs. Robert Detwil- | ing standard in Europe. The av- Stowe, Vermont. She was ac- companied by Dr. Bruce Math-| ias and Miss Joanne Tittle, both of Lancaster. Charles Reed, East Main St., Mount Joy, is improving grad- | ually in the Lancaster Hospital. He entered the pital in October, room 468, would appreciate visits. I WL, MAM PPI hos- and Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. For Farm “nd lore | Timothy eyed the cat with dis- | gust. “What makes cats so | dumb, Mom?” “That, and Church. Why?" i “Well, shucks. I'd rather stay | { home and play with the fellas.” | “Why do I have to go anyway, Mom?” | “To learn, Timmy. To distinguish evil from right.” “You sure do talk funny, Mom. Mike’s Dad talks swell, He tells us stories about sol- diers, and guns, and all kinds of things.” ‘Timothy,” she said in a shocked | en't I told you not to | go in that house.” “Oh, I don’t go in their house. | Mom. I just sit on the steps and | listen to him talk to some other | fellas it real still so’s they'll think we're | : ra 3 | Mike and me listen. We just | | here, and we listen like every- | 4 1 “wy hat do they talk about, Son?’ | ‘‘Oh, about polly-ticks, and strikes and things. And they talk how fellas get killed 'cause they are trying to | do the right things, and some bad guy comes along and says they got | to do it his way, or else, and then | there's a fight, and somebody gets killed.” | “Timmy, isn’t there something you would rather do, than listen to men talk like that?” ‘Nope, I guess not.” IS mother paused to smile and rub a warm, slim hand through his red shining hair. “What would you like to do.most of all?” “Aw, gee, Mom. You know. If I had all the money in the world I'd buy that carner lot, and I'd buy all the fellas baseball outfits, and we'd have real teams, too.” ‘“That lot costs a great deal, son.” “I know, but Old Man Jackson's got lots of money. It wouldn't hurt She cut a square of steaming. sweet cake. “Run out and play, Timmy. Supper will be ready in an hour.” She watched the boy disap- pear through the back door. So small, so intense, so absorbant. Hers alone now, to raise as she saw fit, Later when they were eating he | said. “Mom. Mike's Dad says we're going to have another war.” “No we're not,” Mrs. Smith said firmly stew ‘before him, | “But Mike's Dad says we're going to... | “Well, we're not,” she repeated | with emphasis. This may be tempt- [ but she was responsible iust as much as ‘““The reason we're not going to another war,” she said,. “is because we're not going to en- courage one, What 1 mean, Son, is . Well, Timothy, i think you and the fellas are going to be able to | | choose baseball suits.’ He looked at her puzzled, and in- credulous. “You see, Son, If your Dad were | here, he wouldn't be talking about wars. He'd be talking about base- ball, just as we're doing. Tomor- row, Timothy, you and I are going ner lot you wanted so much!” reel rere Bulletin Ads Pay Big Dividends. ! Gls rsa on a ae | sheets of cl alkboard. | ond nghtly. | ber. | board | troughs for colored cravons | tice lumber | of the hardboard panels is 27” and their width is 30”. Length of the legs can be varied to suit the ages of the , and put a deep plate of thick | kad Two-Sided Easel for Child S A HOME entertainer and edu cational tool for voung ghildeen, an easel is without parallel. The on illustrated is especially useful’ it can be used simultancously by two children. One side is for drawing on newsprint; the other is a A panel of Masonite 3/16” tempered hardboard forms the backing for both | the paper and the chalkboard. Sheets of newsprint are held in place with clips. Use two coats of unpigmented sealer in preparing the other, sanding the frst down thoroughly and Apply a thick ¢ surfacer, obtainable at paint stores, rub- bing it down with a clean cloth when dry. Legs are formed of 1 by 2-inch lum- A center strip behind each hard panel gives it support. The and chalk have ends of lumber, sides and bottoms A strip of lat at either end of The easel holds it steady when in use. Hinges st the top permit ready and storage. The overall height is 49” at of slate of tempered hardboard. Ic lding 3 , the he ight children who will use it. The top of each trough is 4” wide and the depth is 3%". General | | | er, 371 North Barbara Street,| apage person consumes 3,460 | Mrs. H. V. Hardin of McCam- { Mount Joy, announce the birth | calories daily. of a daughter Friday at the] ——— | ey, Texas, arrived Sunday in of ancaster- Gonersl Hosbital. | . 4C < x re « nN [i Mount Joy to visit with her| Nr. and” Mrs. Jobn Nr | RIC HER FLAVOR mother, Mrs. Richard Pothke | Aon Rc a: t" Jc A tablespoon of condensed and sister and brother-in-law, | a or fl gn 1 Sun A) + | milk added to cream before | | Mr. and Mrs. Hans Helms for [2 Oe . y i > h a whipping will increase the | several weeks. Accompanying | Be BY, gh : a 1 amr " quantity and give a richer flav- Mrs. Hardin on her trip east] 090A ie nea Ch 23% | or. were her two sons, Ricky - age | iy ae ho wi Helsey 4 3 and G - age 2, N : Af Ly ow ’ [312 and Gary - 8g 2 Mos, Har 13 W. Main 81. Mount Joy, af WAY'S din is the former Erika Pothke, son, at. Lancaster Osteopathic a St. Joseph's Hospital gr: go A Joseph's ospita grad- Hospital. The baby was named RECORD Miss Christine Weidman | | Same. Carl BE. Stoeck CORNER spent a week skiing in Mont | 341 a re Mou aI Treblant, Quebec, Canada, Mad | : OP i we i es River ‘Glenn. Vermont and|® daughter onday, at Lancas-| SECRET LOVE— ter General Hospital. Doris Dav | Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hake an- | nounce the birth of a daughter | T uesday, March 30 at the York WANTED | Perry Como | | Hospital. Mrs. Hake was the { MAKE LOVE TO ME— | former Mary Shearer, grand- | Jo Stafford { daughter of Mrs. Mary Walker, MAN WITH THE BANJO— | | MO , JOY. Mount Joy Ames Bros. | Perry Como | TO HOLD FOOD SALE | HERE— The Auxiliary of the Salunga | Tony Martin | | Fire Company will hold a Food EASTER PARADE | Sale, April 3, 10:00 a.m. to 2: 100 | Licarace »m. in the Fire Hall, in {2 | EASTER PARADE | ga. | | | On sale will be homemade | chicken corn soup, baked beans | cakes, pies, and fruit salad. | | — — WAYS APPLIANCES Phone 3-3622 48 W. Main Street, Bulletin Ads Pay Big Dividends. ' Mount Joy THERE'S ONLY ONE SIDE --- YOURS! From the day we opened our doors it has been a tradition to treat you as if this bank were operated exclusively for your use. Save with safety and profit at First National Bank & Trust Company. FIRST NATIONAL BANK Varsity Basketball Pictures | FRAMED 8x10 | FOR SALE Regular Price $1.00 NOW 75¢ PICTURES INCLUDE TEAM AND TROPHIZS OF LAST MOUNT JOY HIGH BASKET BALL TEAM | Call-GEORGE HOUCK—3-5853 LOVELINESS Begins With Your Hair... Smart Styling For Easter | | With Our | CUSTOM PERMANENT WAVE SPRING Also Specials on Our Better Permanents FOR A LIMITED TIME Experienced Operators To Serve You TONY and GEORGINA — OPEN MO ! ) ! ) CLEO SHANK, Prop. NDAY THRU SATURDAY CALL 3-4122 AT THE EBERLE BEAUTY SHOPPE 89 EAST MAIN STREET i eo 2 QC a) 2Z — > ey 20 oH TTT a —- re GET IT AT Spare The Grease, and | Spoil The Car Car well lubricated for wear - free op- eration? | A well-greased car per- forms more smoothly . . gives you a quiet ride. Let us lube it up TO- | DAY- | RALPH WALTERS SINCLAIR SERVICE 323 E. Main St., Mount Joy 11-4¢ BOOTH’S MELLINGER'S | HOME-MADE EASTER CANDIES -25¢-55: | Cocoanut Creams Luden’'s Hollow Milk Chocolates 10 - 20: BOUCHAT & SONS Boxes of Hollow Candy | Nest of 8 pieces $1.29 Easter Napkins 15¢ — Easter Tablecloths 25¢ 87 EAST MAIN STREET, TUN Watch enlarged fo show details without winding GIRARD PERREGAUX rer Walle. ® Here is the watch you can wear without care... because it is shockprotected, water-resistant, and it winds itself with every motion of your hand. Made by the makers of fine watches since 1791, Girard-Perregaux watches are famed for beauty and accuracy the world over. See our wide selection of Girard- Perregaux Gyromatic watches. ® Reg. US From $67.50 Fed. tax incl. ADAM H. GREER JEWELER Par. Off. MOUNT JOY, PA. | Past AND EASTER Five Crotning ano FURNISHINGS vi FOR MeN AND BOs 5 comms: FIFE Our Spring showing of really fine and \ ) 1 l | { | I} | wd) ) ) ) | ) ) ) ) ) ) ) \ ) ) ) ) ) up - to - the - minute merchandise will amaze you. DROP IN ANYTIME Boys sizes start from age 8 EsHLEMAN Bros. MOUNT JOY, PA. TTT eo) we at re ae o_o a ome. Sr T eT SS ETT TTT TT oT Th winn featu timo ening Scho uled Fo! is to Hoste will with vocat Kode Th Bloor guest Rev. pasto pal C also teslir 1951 ional team Tit citize duce of th Mr. 1 senta ers, f Mi Stree solo. or of Cask Th en b; rell § and | the o Re Re at Hi til Sq Unio and of El night T Mc ern | ions of M at a quet, in he Mi ed tl ively ketb: ing | potat ro.ls, slabs crea the « Sp je i« colle team fine valu ing On Joy Ram treat with and Ce duce ty, a Mr. pres: Scl Fo Pr start coun rade caste 1. W Joy year thirc Tt and addi Tt war will ing, Chaz char
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers