a elected were James Berrier, SHE BULLETIN, Mount Joy, Pe: Thursday, August 5 2 by the iwo women in his life . ners. Following the games A ! ; ) ? a: : : : = i . ’ . : David Berrier, Jr. THE BULLETIN ‘Hockey Star Festive Foods Club Miss Brown and Miss T aylor, Berrier Reunion Meets business meeting was held and Se a Mrs, or forms the basis of the plot, In Florin Hall | a short program was presented. | poo." cooretary and Martin OWL LAFFS | | | | Mount Joy, Pa., Published every Thursday at 11] Addresses Club East Main Street, Mount Joy. [ Lancaster County, Pa. | Ken Smith, former National Larmon D. Smith, Publisher | League hockey star with the Boston Bruins, gave an interest- | his experience ing account of before the Mt. John E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher, 1901-1952 when he spoke ate 95 | Subscription Rate $2.50 per | joy Rotary Club Tuesday noon. | year by Mail X | Adve rtising rates upon request. Originally from Canada, Entered at the postoffice at Smith described hockey’s place as second-class ‘ : as second-class | i, canada as being comparable BY A WISE OWL There was an awful lot of ex- citement, smoke, heat, hose, fire engines the school house fire day morning, but the got a big charge on Satur flames, | and people at| | | thing I » out of was the| | : : | women in night togs, house-| coats, shorts, bobby pins, and | clips (without make-up). I took some candid snapshots of a number of them (they'd howl if they’d see them). Then later in the day I watched for these same women (after they'd spent] long, painstaking hours their mirrors). was ‘‘just so,’ and clothed with all the extras. Then I took a snap shot again. I'm putting them in an album of ‘Before’ and ‘After’ and what I've come up with is sure a prize. gals don’t depend on nature one bit! noticed that retires a- Have you ever the rising generation bout the time that the retiring generation rises? Here's one I had been told, | and ‘completely forgot about: Several weeks ago Elmer Zer- phey, had gone home for din- ner - - - when he arrived there | | prepared, his] and he| no dinner was wife was't there became quite either, perturbed. glanced at the clock on the wall, Sunday after a week's look to| the and after another quick see if the timepiece was runn- ing, discovered he had come | home an hour too early — — II got'it right, -he back down the alley to work again. — — — — Those, before | Now their hair | ’, make up perfect, | little | sneaked | Wisconsin Spectucal of Music. and went, | except for the mend H. Kissinger, 920'> So. Boston | worked Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma. In it] she described a “‘Stager” blank- et which has been in her family | Canada there are for approximately 100 years. rinks, She several ar-| tition in the schools ticles and is interested in know- He said that he tire summer to earn money to buy his first skates. In an en- mail under the Act of March 3, Ro . [1879 Re to baseball in the United States Member, News- Hockey players are develop- | paper Publishers’ Association. | 4 through various age groups | i in league competition in the | Oklahoma Women same manner as baseball play- { | ers & t up through Lit- { h Il ers are brough ‘Wis es To Se tle League, Midgel-Midgets and | . the various other age groups In | Local Coverlet this country. A letter was received by Ti- Smith started playing in or- | tus Rutt, burgess, from Frances | ganized hockey at the age of 10. enough many and compe- super- vised outdoor is disposing of Smith’s career placed him on ing if anyone in Mount Joy or ’ Ta i A Y! teams at Boston, Hershey, Tor- would be interested in purchas- onto, Pittsburgh and Provi- ing the blanket because it Wwas| ance | made here. | Following his talk, Smith was The blanket carries the fol-| kent pusy answering questions | lowing, woven into the edges: from interested Rotarians on Latest, Improved Pattern; War- phases of the sport. ranted and made by H. Stager, | ° | Mount Joy, Pa. “Evidently | there was a pair of these for this one is mended across the top] with a piece of another. On the | whole, it is in good condition | ” says Mrs. | Council (From page 1) alley on the Barbara St.; extension of the east side of South Kissinger. | and creation of a new alley on | According to local historians, | the southern limits of the bor-| there are no members of the| ough park running parellel| Stager family living around | with Detwiler Avenue from N.| Mount Joy and vicinity any-| Market Street to Eby Alley. more. Henry Stager had a weav- | Ray Mvers, fire chief im ing plant ¢ » rear the] : | ing plant at the rear of thel,,, coq that the company ans- property between Krall's Meat | wu ESE { Mars '% F id i wered 15 fire calls during July. | Market and rey’s residence. | oy 1 Po 2 tin I i 1 He also anounced that the 800 gis s standing. : [ fie pul ong i 1 landing | feet of fire hose ordered by | ’3 ) | | council approximately 2 years | ago had arrived from the na-| | tional Civil Defence organiza-| | tion surplus. | After George | | ‘Lois Rutt Attends Twirling School Miss Lois Rutt, made borough | hearing a report daughter of | by Houck, Mr. and Mrs. Titus Rutt, New| playground director on the ac- He | Haven Street, returned home| tivities of the playground for stay at! the summer, Council decided to National Baton Twirling| grant him $125.00. toward the Jamboree in S. Milwalkee,| payment of equipment bills. Wisconsin. The Jamboree is | The next meeting will be held held in conjunction with the| one week later than the regular night due to Labor Day. It will Tuesday, she took part in the| be held September 13. | 27th National Twirling Conven- ® unis | tion for judging and teaching. | . OE . “Harry Troutwine was telling Wednesday through Friday she Seventy--Five Aittena the fellows over at the Post] attended classes on twirling. Hiestand Reunion i : Bi Saturday morning there were Office about a hill he had en-| SL i Seventy-five persons attended countered on a trip back Er contests among the twirlers, <r : . | bands, drum and bugle corps, | | the fifteenth annual reunion of > a d 2 ( . . : Mt. Gretna, I believe they cal- iti the Henry S. Hiestand family it Turkey Hill - - Anyway ard and drill teams. Four hundred Sund July 25 Hostetter’ . Sate J id : sors Sunday, July 25 at ostetter's aid “I ha he > suing | participated in the twirling « ; ry said: i he had been driving a Xi Th contest winner | Pavilion, Howard Hiestand, of -™ 1 1 - ark ¥ | J >SL. e 2S 21'S | . a car without a back on the | Lebanon, president, was in seat. he would have landed in presented a program Saturday igh ds seat, : . charge of the affair. Mrs. Thel- the trunk of the automobile.” night. Lois participated as clerk 2k ' or . : ma Druecker, Lancaster, had] and assistant judge for the twir | {tl : . charge of the program. ling contest. She and Dawn and ! prograt { When a female is young wants to be old. When she’s old she be young. But most of her life she wants, period. There a woman on Street, who musn’t much of her husband — — On Monday (wash day) I was she wants to Marietta think very just} Raymond Hiestand. Gordon | | Joyce Burg of Red Lion repre- | . re Miller and Fred Erdman playe i sented Pennsylvania in the Pa- : I io I ed) ee . several selections as an instru- rade of States, a feature of the : ay . mental trio with Mrs. June Zell Saturday night An estimated program 100.000 attend | at the piano. Group singing was 00,( at ( led by Irvin Hiestand followed ed the parade Saturday after- | : noon by devotions by S. H. Hiestand. ° A piano solo by Joyce Hiestand, | vocal duet by Helen and Char- Zone 7 Firemen To les Boehmler, piano solo by | Janet Hiestand and a mandolin | | Purchase Generator walking past her back yard, and solo by Albert Hiestand com- | on the wash line I saw some| An auxiliary generator to be pleted the program. bathroom towels hanging, that] purchased by Zone 7 firemen New officers were Raymond | were marked HERS, and IT. Many a woman who is a vis- ion in the evening is a sight in the morning. I'm beginning to think the reason people buy. trailers is so that they will have a place to live while looking for a place to park. + 4 Speaking of ‘Park’ing, “Cadillac Kid” is having trouble too, since he bought his cadillac he can’t afford to spend the} money to park it. Musically speaking, you oft- en heard that phrase “The Lost] Chord” — — — — — But the tune Len Safko heard wasn’t exactly that either, It was some- thing about “The Lost Ford.” A Mount Joy Street husband asked his wife the story of the dirty window?” “No I haven't, she replied. “Well,” he said, ‘you could- n't see through it anyway.” His wife asked a neighbor la- ter: “Have you heard about the window you couldn’t through?” “No,” said her friend. “Oh, well,” said the wife, “it’s too dirty to tell anyway.” They sure louse up things, don’t they. A WISE OWL Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. te - ’ “Have you heard | | see | i | the county the | | | Mount Joy is the | Miller, will be placed in Mount Joy it Hiectand, Lancaster; J. Laverne was announced at a meeting of | Hiestand, Manheim, vice presi- zone firemen Monday night in, deat: Mrs. Wilbur Heistand, of | Rheems. It will be completely Salunga, secretary and Mrs. | automatic and will enable fire-| Richard Bryson, Landisville, | men to maintain two-way radio | treasurer. : contacts in the event power isj| cut off as was the in Mount Joy during the recent storm. only site in of Lancaster case Emergency Drive To Be Staged By mentor March Of Dimes federal gov- An emergency March of half and| Dimes will be Elizabethtown out will pay $70; Rheems, Marietta 31, and Landisville, $30; Maytown, $20.000.000. This sum re- Ironville, Salunga and Florin, | quired to pay the high costs of $20: and Silver Spring and Mas- | continuing care for 67.000 pa- tersonville, $10 tients stricken in earlier years sons fl) land unknown numbers of vic- THREE ARE CHOSEN tims of current record out- Among the seventeen girls en- | breaks Simultan the rolled in 4-H Club home foundation must meet the cost mics project who have been of increasing the nation’s sup- selected to represent Lancaster | ply of gamma globulin and fi- County during the annual Penn-! nancing the poliv vaccine study. sylvania 4-H Club Week begin-| National Foundation pro- ning Monday, August 9 at the| grams are at the point of no re- Penna. State University are|turn. There can be no retreat three local girls. Miss Eileen | except at unthinkable human Mount Joy, R1, Miss Mi- | sacrifice or postponement of po- riam Roland, Mount Joy R1,|lio "prevention. * the and Miss Lois Kulp, Manheim | March of Dimes last January | R1 were elected from individu-| was the most successful in polio al 4-H Clubs and will attend a| history, it fell far short of the outside which operates its 24-hour basis. Th will cost $700; the ernment will pay one Mount Joy and staged United States August 16 to The immediate need is for is the ously, series of special homecoming | tightly budgeted needs for 1954. demonstrations and lectures. That is why the foundation ee | must make an emergency’ ap- I peal to the public. | groups prepared | dessert. of Agnes ‘Run New Production portrayed in the Philip Barry comedy, “The Animal King {dom” which begins a week's | run Thursday at he Gretna Playhouse, Mt. Gretna. Robert Lansing plays the man, the part created by Leslie Howard on Broadway. An artis- | | - | tists, typlified by Rachel Taylor, ! a struggling Painter; James Ray | an author, and Phyllis Tilling- ¢hast a German violinist. How- Lansing has been born in the wealthy social upper strata and is expected by his father, Harry Sheppard, to conform to type. Lansing marries Vanita |} Brown, a smug and assured | |PERMANENTS $5, $7.50, $10 Sloan's id Call Mt. Foy 3-6981 through- |’ ‘Meets Tuesday The sixth meeting of the Mt. Joy 4-H Club was held Tuesday, August 3 at the home of Mrs. | John Musser, Mount Joy R1.| Janice Breneman, president, was | in charge of the meeting. Dur ing the business meeting, mem- | bers were shown the 4-11 club | pins and plans were made for | both the mothers’ meal and the | round-up at Millersville State | August 19. was chosen Teachers College, Janice Brenc as the club's posture contest at the During the period, chicken, caramel man delegate for the | round-up. the bis work cuits, ice cream and The next meeting of the group will be held Tuesday ev- ening, August 17 at the Rosenfeld Manheim home | R2. ° Gretna Playhouse To A man torn between the life he was born to and the life to which he wants to belong is tic, non-conformist, he wants to live in the world of ar- creative well-to-do girl. The conflict be tween the worlds represented Buller’s Beauty Salon Main Street Florin, Pa. 2 TONT'S GIVEN $5. Call Mt, Joy 3-4339 Ma aude Buller Prop Non-discoloring ELAS SIOCRINGS 12 Comfort Plus Glamor For Women With £ NEW! VARICOSE VEINS -/ { Healthful support for [ss surface varicose launder The REXALL Store MOUNT JOY, PA. Phone 3-3001 for daily delivery to Landisville, ALL POPULAR BEER | i SALE sparked by the comedy dialogue | from Philip Barry's pen. Others in the Curry as suitor, to Gretna cast include Miss Brown's Ray Purcell, Playhouse, Mason former newcomer as a butler and Ann Herr as a society ma- tron, the role created by Chase in the Broadway produc- | tion. The comedy, presented by Charles F. Coghlan, direetor, and Gene P. Otto, will continue through 11, excluding Sunday. time is 8:30 p. m. ® Three Cub Scout Dens Are Organized The third meeting for the instruction for co-producers, August or- ganization and } Cub Scouting in Mount Joy was Tuesday evening. Ralph appointed Cubmaster Charles Wolgemuth. organized held Rice was assisted by Three dens were Mrs. Bruce Brown, Mrs. Myrtle Nornhold and Mrs. Ral- ph Rice as den mothers. Assist- ant den mothers will be Mrs. Walter Brandt, Mrs. Dorothy Holtzman and Mrs. Jas. Kline- dint. Den fathers will be Char- les Heaps, Charles Etsell and Asher Beamenderfer There will be an afternoon meeting Tuesday, August 10 for den mothers and prespective 2:00 to 4:00 with den mothers from grade training order p- m. in the ing. This class is im- portant in that Cub Scouts can be started in Sep- tember. When in need of Printing. (any- thing) kindly remember the Bulletin - ® Bulletin Patronize Advertisers | Closing Out Big Reduction on Toys - Baby: Gifts - Novelties - Sun Suits Baby Caps and Bonnets, some nylon, your choice 98¢ HAT BOX FREE with purchase of $1.00 or more. MARGARE ie SHOPP 19 West a, Street MOUNT JOY, PA. Dial 3-9373 JE AN Alterations Buttonholing Dependable Roy M. Ressler 27 W. MAIN ST. MOUNTVILLE PHONE 5-5301 OR CALL WM. K. RESSLER FLORIN, PA. MT. JOY 3-5731 who was a pugilist, | Ilka | Curtain | school build- | New and Used Gas Ranges | 24-tfc - ALE - PORTER Salunga, Mt. Joy and Florin BRANDS OF Open 9:00 A. M. _ Friday and Saturday, Smith Beer N. MARKET STREET to 8:00 P. M. 9:00 A M. Daily to 9:00 P. M. Distributors MOUNT JOY, PA. We Specialize In . . . AUTO PAINTING WRECKS REPAIRED WHEEL ALLIGNMENT AND WHEEL BALANCING. FREE ESTIMATES Carriger’s Paint PHONE ELIZABETHTOWN 110J12 & Body Shop |. RHEEMS, PA. tfc | The Annual Reunion of Berrier family was held day, August 1 at the Fl Fire Hall. Games were pl: and prizes awarded the ina - | Clorox Clean Home! Disinfects - - Deodorizes - - - Bieaches and Clorox-Clean linens are mo Than White -. . Th Sanitary, too! quart bottle Vz-gallon bottle Sun- win- AEG ER SI ARR There's Pride Protection Clorox Removes Stains: 18° 31° the The oldest person present Heisey, treasurer. was Mrs. Alice Shaubach; the | — youngest, Pamela Brandt; the family who traveled the farther- est, Mr. and Mrs. Pratt. Officers orin wyed Yellow Freestone Fresh TT = nes 429° Peaches (One Price—None Priced Higher) Seedless Grapes rics ior 19° String ree £ 29° Golden Bananas ia. * 10° Potatoes U.S. No. 1 “A” Size wb 45¢ Local White ys 27c Large Cucumbers “haw” 3 wr 100 one 89° Higher Old South 6-01. c cans 19 Frozen Orange Juice Real Gold Lemonade Banquet Chicken Pies nee 89° AGP Frozen Fish Sticks "Si 39° A&P Fancy Hawaiian (In Extra-Heavy Syrup) 20-02, Pineapple Chunks S45 Pale Dry, Root Beer, Black Cherry, Cola, Cream Soda or Weincheo Frank's Beverages 3 ux 2%° lona New Pack Tomatoes od “Onley” New Pack Peas ly Ann Page Beans 2 ne 23° 27% 31° Sultana Rice 13¢ 35. 25¢ Spaghefti Aum 2:23 2 Th 31° Cheddar Cheese “* "49° *" "63° Kingan’s Chopped Beef oo. 29° Boneless Chicken Fricassee ru 39° A&P Pineapple Juice "v=" “ur 2T¢ re | Ann Page Mayonnaise "I 31° “' 55° ey’re| New Giant Instant Fels Naptha .&™,, 13° Del Monte New Pack Peas = 31 “Our Own” Tea Bags Tooter 55° Yukon Beverages ooo ol Chocolate Chip Cookies Gc Lo 39° Nabisco Sugar Wafers les 0% Pineapple Pie sim, be 39° Lemon Ice Gold Bar Pate ll White Bread Sliced ot 19° ; Lids. 22¢ All Prices in this Advertisement Guaranteed through Saturday, August 7th al Solan 5 1 c I/,-price Sale of Sale of Woodbury Soap Woodbury Soap 3 regis 2% 21¢ bath size 31 cake comb. k b. Beech-Nut Buy 2 Fee jake: 8) regia: Buy 2 i So, at regular 3 price. Get 3rd cake for rice. Get 3rd cake for /5-price. Baby Foods == 2 i Dial Soa i Si, 6 89 bal So : regular size c bath si : ii, 10 © 95) 2 "ui 29 cites” 39° doz, - “ven & pias. 19° Felso Fels Naptha Detergent Soap | | i dexo bo. 29° D1 100% Instant Fels Nola Vegetable Soap Granules Soap Flakes : - laiye = | Shortening at Th voll ig lb. @fc 3b. QAc Modess Wesson Oil can 31 can 83 Regular or Super . boxes of int t . 2 12 pads 11° tattle 41¢ 17° a Borden’s Peer Pan | Borden's leese Spreads Peanut Butter Cheese Spreads Ro Sy S th y Blue Cheese, Cheese 'n’ Bacon, 9 Fi 45¢ Cro oz 37 moe). elves Sharp " glasses Dietetic '* ox or 35¢ 2 glasses 51 STORE HOURS—Mon., 87 EAST MAIN ST. MT. JOY, PA. Tues, Wed.; Thurs, & Saturday. 8:00 to 6:00; Friday 8:00 to 9:00 When in need of Printing. (any« thing) kindly remember the Bulletin
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers