July 18, 1973 Mount Joy Bulletin - Page 3 YOU'LL ENJOY SHOPPING WEIS FOR THESE REALLY GOOD VALUES = [3 0 ma fi I Prices effective thru Sat. July 21 ... AT YOUR MT. JOY WEIS MARKET . 441 WEST MAIN STREET... GREAT FOR THE OUTDOOR COOKOUT! Blend-0-Beef ANY SIZE PKG. 19°. CHUCK STEAKS | CHUCK ROASTS WEIS VALUTRIN. TENDER, DELICIOUS c FIRST CUT Ib. B 4 Ib. a 8 USDA CHOICE BEEF KOUNTY KIST WHOLE Green Beans “KABUKI” MANDARIN Oranges BIG TOP 1973 PACK 1-1b. cans SEA SIDE 15-02 j cans GRAPE DRINK on c 46-oz. “ON-COR” FROZEN Stuffed Peppers, Veal Parmigiana or % 2 4 W 2-Pound Package “FREEZER QUEEN" MEAT & GRAVY & i 0 @ ’ 5-o0z. Pkgs. A 99¢ VALUE ON “KRAFT” » 14-0z. Cc Pie ; Frozen : ea. COLORFUL, FLAVORFUL ... FRESH Nectarines a SAVE 50° =. SAVE 25° E-. ON A 1% QUART BOT. OF HEAVY DUTY A BOX OF 100 DYNAMO DETERGENT TETLEY TEA BAGS Offer Expires 7/25/73 } Expires 7/25/73 One Coupon Per Family One Per Family Re: Gd SAVE 15° = 28 OZ. BOTTLE OF MR. CLEAN Expires 7/25/73 One Per Family SAVE 18° = 3 BATH SIZE BARS OF ZEST SOAP One Per Family Expires 7/25/73 —mmmmmmememnt wl cn a ————— = —— — — = C= — — — — — — — — | I | = —— — —— ——— — = cm] a v Senior Girl Scouts On Trip To Chalet In Switzerland Senior Girl Scout Troop No. 944 of Mount Joy and Elizabethtown are on a trip to Our Chalet in Adelboden, Switzerland, in July. Our Chalet is an international center for Girl Scouts and Girl Guides of the world. The girls and chaperones left from the John F. Kennedy Air- port on Swiss Airline on Sunday, July 15. They will return July 30. While in Switzerland, they will visit Berne, Interlaken and Geneva. Also, the group will travel to Salzburg, Austria and Munich, Germany. The girls and chaperones are as follows: Marion Conner, Cindy Gainer, Susan Godshall, Barbara Her- man, Linda Kuhn, Donna Subject: PEOPLE (Continued from Page 2) Brown’s mother, Mrs. Irene Bowman, returned Friday, July 13, from a three-week trip as far west as Colorado. They spent three days in the Denver area visiting many sights of interest, which included a trip up Pike's Peak by limousine, a tour of the Air Force Academy and the Denver Mint, and attended the opera, ‘The Barber of Seville”. They spent time in Central City, Colorado, which is an old gold mining town preserved in the same condition as in the days of the great Gold Rush. A special thrill to the travelers was a three- hour drive through Phantom Canyon Road which was a one lane gravel road trhough canyons, up winding steep hills and across ravines on precarious wooden bridges. They discovered after their exciting adventure that only well-seasoned drivers would even attempt such a stunt. They traveled north through Wyoming to South Dakota where they visited the old gold mining towns of Deadwood and Lead. In Lead they took an intensive tour of the Homestake Mining Cor- poration which is still in operation today. It was in- teresting to note that the em- ployees were provided with all their clothing and were required to shower before returning home after their work day. The cor- poration launders their clothing and refines all the water used to shower and for laundering purposes in an attempt to confine every bit of gold to the mining corporation. They enjoyed the Black Hills and The Bad Lands of South Dakota. In Spearfish they attended ‘The Passion Play”, held outside in a huge am- phitheater. The play was briefly postponed due to a thunder storm, but proved well worth the audience’s wait, when a beautiful rainbow arched the stage for the beginning of the impressive play. In Wisconsin they enjoyed the Wisconsin Dells and took a boat ride on the Wisconsin River. An interesting stop was a town settled by the Swiss, New Glarus, with its many Swiss shop, villages and chalets. En route to Colorado they were impressed with the massive wheat fields in Kansas and the numerous herds of cattle, that could be seen everywhere. Also while in South Dakota they drove through Bear Country U.S.A. This is an area where wild animals roam freely and are viewed in their natural habitat in your own motor vehicle. Just three days after they visited the tourist attraction it received national attention when a lion jumped in the window of a motor home and began mauling a child. The child’s grandmother was able to kill the animal with a butcher knife. Neidigh, Elaine Pennell, Beth Taylor, Susan Weaver, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gibble, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Zerphey, Ella Gainer and Lois Anderson. The girls raised the money for the trip by selling hoagies the third Saturday of each month, bake sales in the Mount Joy and Elizabethtown area, glass collections, a Christmas Bazaar in November, selling peanuts, delivering flyers, selling Girl Scout calendars and cookies, having stands at the parades, and by selling a variety of products. Senior Girl Scout Troop No. 944 is sponsored by the Lutheran Church Women of Trinity Lutheran Church in Mount Joy. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gingrich and daughters, Stacey and Stephanie, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Nolt and children, Jeff and Jodi, all from Mount Joy, and Mr. and Mrs. Stan Gingrich and sons, Chris and Mark, from Landisville spent last week camping at Ocean View Camp Grounds in New Jersey. They enjoyed miniature golf, swimming in the ocean, lake and pool, biking and the men golfed at the Avalon Country Club in Avalon. Mrs. Kim Gingrich was surprised by a birthday party on Monday evening, July 2, and was visited by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kretzing, who were vacationing in Wildwood. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Charles returned home June 29, after spending eight days touring five Southern states and driving 2,000 miles. They drove straight through to Nashville, Tennessee in sixteen hours. They enjoyed such places as Opry Land U.S.A. spent four hours on a bus tour of opry stars’ homes, saw the hall of fame and the museum. On Saturday evening they attended the Grand Ole Opry Show. In Chattanooga, Tennessee they saw the steepest cable in- cline in the world located on Look Out Mountain where seven states can be seen. While in Tennessee they saw Wonder Falls, Ruby Falls and the Lost Sea. From there they traveled to the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia. They spent time at the Natural Bridge, Luray Caverns, and toured the New Market and Manassas Battlefields in Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Moran and children Patrick, Beth Ann and Shawn spent the week of July 4 on Chincoteague Island, Virginia and Wildwood, New Jersey. While on the Island they saw many wild ponies, various wild life and toured the Oyster Museum. En route to Wildwood they crossed on the Cape May Ferry. To Soccer Camp Two Donegal high school soccer players will participate in a week-long soccer training school, to be held in August, at Choate School in Wallingford, Conn. They are: Rick Hilt, 510 West Main street, and Scott O’Leary, Mount Joy R1. : BUY FX — today! FE exe CLOGGING! Avoid waste accumulation and detergent pile-up...one safe, easy-to-use application > will prevent the periodic ~~ mess and expense of clog- ging. ANTI-POLLUTION! MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! $ \\ -— -— “k J.C. Snavely & Sons 150 Main St. Landisville, Penna.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers