Edd Ri TTY Rec ui WK, “i ing be i Like your doctor, your lawyer —your insurance agent fs the man to know and talk to in full confidence. He's the man you or your family may need in an emergency. For insurance need—or problem-—may we suggest you call your local Farm Bureau agent. He's an insurance expert -and his business is your security and protection. PHONE MOUNT JOY 3-5547 Farm Bureau LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ono Martin Builders’ Center, Inc. Are In Town Macadaming Drives for the next two weeks IF INTERESTED Phone 7-1349 E’town FOR FREE ESTIMATE 11-1¢ IR.D. 1 Weddings [ | SHEARER —- BEILER | The marriage of Miss Gladys! Beiler, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.| David S. Beiler, Elverson R2,| and Mr. Robert Shearer, son of | Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Shearer, of | Mount Joy R1, took place at 10] o'clock Saturday morning in| | Conestoga Mennonite Church. Mr. Ira Kurtz officiated and] Mr. Henry Frank delivered the message. Music was provided by| Mr. and Mrs. Harold Shearer. Miss Elaine Beiler served as| maid of honor for her sister.| The bridesmaids were Miss Flo-| rence Beiler and Miss Nora Beil-| er, cousins of the bride.. | Mr. Ernest Kraybill attended| | the bridegroom as best man. The| ushers were Mr. Daniel Longe-| necker, Middletown; Mr. James! Frey, Lebanon; Mr. Victor Groff | of Kinser and Mr. Donald Frank | of Mount Joy. | Miss Carol Weaver was pian-| ist at the reception which was| | held in the Morgantown Fire] SIMON P. NISSLEY MARY G. NISSLEY FUNERAL DIRECTORS | | Mount Joy, Pa. ‘Robert E. Hoffman | INSURANCE FOR EVERY NEED | ® Accident and Heal'h ® Workmen's Compensation @ Hospitalization | ® Mortgage Insurance ® Farm Liability ® Automobile ® Life ® Fire | MT. JOY 3-6659 MT. JOY, PA. eee What Advertising Does - - - When someone starts advertising, Someone starts buying; When someone Someone starts selling; When someone Somedne starts making; When someone Someone starts working; When someone Someone starts earning; When someone starts earning, Someone starts buying: An endless chain, so to speak, and starts buying, starts selling, starts making, starts working, aon. Canned Peas Good In Potato Nests oN Ny hal Canned peas, one of the leading vegetable packs, have an established popularity based on their delicate and sweet flavor, This attribute accounts for their acceptance “as is” and why they can be combined with so many other vegetables. For a substantial vegetable course, serve canned peas atop baked stuffed potatoes, And let the canned food shelf provide other menu suggestions. For the main course have baked luncheon loaf with a peach syrup glaze, accompanied by cling peach halves filled with pickle relish. Peas in Potato Boats: Bake 3 large potatoes in hot oven (450°F.) one hour. Cut potatoes in half being careful not to break shell. Scoop out potato; mash, season with salt, pepper and butter. Add hot milk to make fluffy mashed potatoes. Put back in shell heaping the potato at the sides and leaving large depression in center, Brown under broiler, Drain a 1-pound can peas; reduce liquid by boiling to about one half. Add peas, salt, pepper and butter; heat to serving temperature. Fill potato centers with peas. YIELD: 6 servings, Luncheon Loaf with Peach Garnish: Place 2 luncheon meat loaves together in baking pan; score the top and insert cloves. Sprinkle with 3 tablespoons of brown sugar. Pour 1 cup syrup drained from canned cling peaches around meat, Bake in moderate oven (375°F.) 30 min- utes, basting several times during baking with the syrup. During last 15 minutes, place peach halves in pan with meat and fill centers with pickle relish. YIELD: 6 servings. Mortuary Record WALTER S. ESHLEMAN Walter Scott Eshleman, sev- enty-one, of Salunga, died at 5 a.m. Tuesday after a brief ill- ness. He was born in Salunga, ¢ son of the late Walter and Annie McCue Eshleman. Surviving are a daughter, Mary E., wife of P. Elias Young Salunga; a son, Clarence E., 210 N. Mulberry St., Lancaster; @ brother, Harry C., Salunga, and four grandchildren. .. LOOK 2a)AROUND In the Ads On These PAGES and = he SE — MRS. LEWIS P. SILLER Mrs. Pauline Viela Siller, th’ daughter of a Civil War casualty and the last of Mount Joy’s old | i “Sixteeners’ organization, diec at 7,20 p.m. Thursday at thr ¥ home of her son-in-law anc Mt. Joy R2 the merchant who doesn’t advertise and advertise regularly is doing noth. ing if he isn’t breaking links in this endless chain. | | | | Reist’s es ewcomerMotors, Inc. 11953 Chevrolet Belair daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shaffer, 241 N. Hanover St. El izabethtown. She was 84. Fi With Concrete 8 The wife of Lewis P. Siller she was born and lived her en tire life in Mount Joy until twe years ago when she and her hus band took up residence at thei dauchter’s She had beer in ill heal'h the past two and : half years. home. future, concrete blocks for the construction If you look to the you'll look to Mrs. Siller was 1st vice presi dent of the '‘Sixteeners,” gradu ates of the old Soldiers’ Orphan maximam i that will give minimum | satisfaction at maintenance cost. Get our prices. Home at Mount Joy who held { Concrete Blocks for their 54th and final reunior | Every Building Need in 1942. The school was for or phans of Civil War casualties CONCRETE BUILDING BLOCKS : + | and the organization derived ite LINTELS — WINDOW SASH name from the fact pupils hac to leave the school upon reach ing their 16th birthday. Mrs. Siller, whose father died of wounds received in the battle for Ft. Fisher. South Carolina entered the school at the age of ceven. and distinguished herself Concrete Blocks Phone 3-9835 there in her studies hone 3-4821 Open Evenings Her father’s miltiary funeral MOUNT JOY, PA. was the first of its kind ever held at Mount Jov, and Mrs S'ller subsecuently became the firet girl at the orphan’s schoo! honored for scholastic: achieve- ment. One of her prized possession had been a parchment dip'oma and two books won as a prize in a special test. Only those whose aralifieations were high receiv- ed a diploma on leaving the school. Mr. and WM+s. Siller would have celebrated their 64th wed- dine anniversary on May 23. Mra, Siller was a daughter of 1954 Chevrolet Belair 2-DOOR — R & H 2 DOOR 2 Tone Paint R & H 1953--210 Chev. Sedan 1953 Plymouth Thurslay, March 17 5 IDE BULLETIN, Mount Joy, Pa. | | Easter Seal Campaign Goal Is $22,500 | Crews of workers whose {hearts have answered the need | lerippled children. | Among them are men and wo- [men and boys and girls who | thave not only found time, but {made time, to see that the 1955 | Easter Seal Campaign of |Lancaster County Society for | [Crippled Children & Adults, | |Inc., gets off on the right footing. | | Across Lancaster county are |volunteers representing groups of all kinds who are hard at work assisting in every phase of {preparation for the biggest Eas- ter Seal appeal ever made by the Lancaster County Society for Crippled Children & Adults, Inc., in its 9 year history. They include: Housewives and interested friends, helping with clerical work in checking mailing lists; Secretaries Association, writing letters and addressing envel- opes; Y-teen groups, sorting ma- terials and stufling envelopes with 1955 Easter Seals | Dr. John B. Noss, prominent Lancaster civic leader and chairman of the campaigs, prais- ed the workers for their ‘“out- standing and conscientious ef- forts” displayed in carrying out wery necessary detail. “Every contribution of this kind is a contribution for crip- pled children and adults in our community. We deeply appreci- ate the fine help we have re- ceived,” he said. The 1955 goal is which is 12': per cent more han last year. Because more nd more crippled children seek he services offered in our Clin-! ics and Treatment Centers it is ssential that this goal is met. | “Approximately 54,000 let- ers of appeal were mailed to esidents in Lancaster City and Tounty’ said Dr. Noss. “We are ffording the opportunity to the handirapved to every nitizen in the County” continued Noss, ‘“‘so if you have not re- ceived a letter of appeal. mail your contribution to Wallace lobinson, Treasurer, 129 East range St., Lancas.er i ° | “LORIN DINER IS | OVER WEEKEND The Florin diner hree places robbed in the coun- wez2kend. Thieves the the $22,500 was ohe of y over last woke open a juke box at ‘iner and removed between $50 nd $100 according to State Po- iceman Leroy Strickler. The theft was dicovered al 9 1. m. Sunday by Robert Smith, vho opened the diner, He said hat gained by ~caking a window on the ide of the building. ® “Attempting to block legiti- nate industrial development by yriva‘e enterprise is not a mark entrance was east f liberalism. It is simple dema- | y Sail { soguery.! New Haven Journal- “ourier. Bulletin Advertisers { Patronize ) | | For Faster, Dependable Gas Service CALL WARD BOTTLE GAS Our Prices Ale Right Our Service the Eest Main Office & Plant Ephrata #1, 1 mile north of Ephrata on route 222, Branch Office 25 South State Street, Ephrata. Fhone Ephrata 3-2207 are devoting many hours to the | Ze Lr. nA j truck! BE ££ a, aaa 1948 PONTIAC STATION dE WAGON oh om 1946 FORD 2 DOOR 1953 FORD 4-DOOR Fordomatic RADIO & HEATER 1952 FORD 4-DOOR HEATER 1950 FORD 2 DOOR With overd ive i RADIO & HEATER i 1950 FORD STATION WAGAN 1950 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR RADIO & HEATER CLARENCE W. HERR SALES b Gaited TRUCKS 1953 FORD > TON Overdrive | 1948 FORD '2-TON STAKE 1947 INT. 2 TON Cab & Chassis SERVICE PHONE 3-9701 RED &% ROSE GROWING MASH HELPS THEM GROW ,_ STRONG . Y RED TOP GRAIN & FEED CO iid . Mr. Eugene Helwig, Mgr PHONE 3-9791 N. MARKET ST.. MOUNT JOY e 50,000 miles in 50 days, without mechanical failure! That's the amazing record set by a Dodge pick-up with 145-hp. Power-Dome V8 ¢ e 22 miles per gallon, carryin using regular gas! That's the av f V-8 pick-up in a 714-mile, AAA-superv omy Run! » Dodge V-8 pick-up, AAA-supervised, climbed 2ikes Peak in 20 minutes, 46.8 second only a ew seconds over the passenger car record 4-DOOR, clean Tr the 1ata Andrew J. and Margar-| et Knight Keller. and was aj 1952 98 Olds. Sedan moemher of the Trinity Lutheran] Church Mount Jov. and the La- dies Aid and Missionary Societ- iec of the church. Qerviving in addition to her hushand. are three sons: Ralph F . Alberta, Canada: George Mount Jov and Charles W., of Palmerton: 2 daughters: Viola, wfe of Preston A. Kilgore. Lan- caster R3, and Florence, wi‘h whom she resided: 3 grandchil-| dren and five great grandchil- » Operating economy and low maintenance wer proved in tests mentioned above. You can save hundreds of dollars over the life of a Dodge truck! Simply Dial 3-9661 Mt. Joy. and a skiled ad writer of The Bulletin, a newspaper brimful of reader interest—about everything that happens in this community—will very nice With all their championship performance, Dodge trucks are priced with the very lowest. And Dodge Truck dealers are noted for their fairness and their good deals. |, 1951 Plymouth 5 PASS. COUPE 11951 98 Olds. Sedan Heater & Radio 1953 Chev. be glad to place your merchandise before the reading public. e No matter what kind of a truck you need light, medium or heavy . . . phone or visit you dependable Dodge Truck dealer this week. THE BULLETIN TRUCKS STA’ VAGON was the Yast of hot MO U NT JOY, PA. STA nox Ac C fren, So was the last of he iV 4 RB ERAS Funeral services were held ad 4 ob {wie DODGE 3. co— 1951 Chev. Pick-up Monday afternoon at the Nissley Funeral Home with interment, x i I A M E N | in the Mount Jov cemetery. vi wa. TE Syn - Oe Delta and Henry Streets MOUNT JOY, PA. - dimes eh Ss ie vim | 1949 Pontiac 2-Door When in need of Printing. (anv. | y - Hydromatic, New Paint thing) kindly remember the Bulletir' - te