e and Sue had been there two times before. I asked him if he had any more room open for the trip and that's how it all started. A week after we retired from MT we were headed to Hawaii with Jerry and Sue as well as Sue's sister Pat and Barb and Harry. We knew Barb and Harry from church so we had a great time traveling to three different islands. Two years later we started our Caribbean jo
urneys with trips to St. Thomas and St. Martin. It's been many years since that first trip together, but we still find we enjoy traveling with the two of them. We usually share a year's laughter together in the 2 weeks we travel. We never take anything personal that we say to each other. Seems to work better that way. I'
ve been called numerous names and I have reciprocated with name calling of my own. Sue and Carol have been told they look like sisters and at times even dress that way. Jerry and I have never been picked as brothers since I am the good looking one. After a day or two our stomachs usually ache from all the belly laughs we have shared. Not sure what people think sometimes, but what the h*#l, we're companions on vacation. It was another extraordinary day in life of an ordinary guy.PS - Sorry to my readers who thought I got lost. I'm on a feeding spree, known as a cruise. I found out they make their money by selling booze, getting you to gamble, and selling you expensive packages for their internet access. Will send more stories, but maybe not every day.

brought the Am
yearbook and have it in the car as I travel to the bindery. Great chance to share some of the daily events of the farming community with you. The scenes shown here are commonplace for me living in Lancaster County. Hope you enjoy a few of the photos. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - photos from the tops are: country road in Lancaster Co., traditional Amish farm with no power lines in sight, scooters in front of a one room schoolhouse, farmer harvesting, Amish farm I stopped at to purchase some tomatoes and a jar of homemade pickles from a little Amish girl who looked to be about 7 or 8, and a selection of goods at the farm.
me for Thadeus Stevens who was a well known member of our community. Stevens was a member of the House of Representatives and had a law office in Lancaster in the early 1980s. I had a student in class whose name was Tad and I always liked it, so when we named our third child, I started to call him by his middle name and shortened it to Tad. Still call him Tad. And .... I still think it's a really neat name. Tad stayed in the baby's room for a few years then moved to the third floor bedroom of the house with his big brother Derek. They had the entire re-modeled third floor to themselves. I can still see the front wall of his room. He painted every NHL hockey team's logo on the wall when he was in high school. That was one of the
many reasons it was hard to move from the old house on Janet Ave. Since Tad was the youngest, he was picked on by his brother and sister. Not much, but just enough to make him cry. I often wondered if he cried for our attention or because they actually hurt him. His older brother and sister still tease him about his crying when he was younger. Tad LOVED our family vacations at the Chesapeake Bay.
He was a fantastic water skier. He also had another board that was a mini surfboard that he was proficient with. Many hours were spent towing him up and down the Elk and Sassafras Rivers when he was younger. At one time he wanted to become a professional water-skier. When he entered middle school he asked if he could play ice hockey. I was amazed at the athlete he was on a pair of skates. Especially, since I couldn't ice skate at all. His stick handling and speed on skates made him a perfect member of the front line on the hockey team. He played for the Lancaster
games and even got to travel to Canada for a few days for a hockey exchange. In high school he had to travel about 30 miles each way twice a week, plus weekends for games, since there were not enough boys his age for a team. He played on the north side of Reading, PA. Many, many miles on the car during the years in middle and high school. He developed his hockey skills over the years and eventually was captain of the teams he played on. Tad also developed an interest in photography as he was growing up. Watching the prints develop in the chemicals in our basement darkroom got him hooked. He won numerous awards in the Scholastic Art and Photography Contest during his school years. He eventually decided upon
work with Jerry
g a stop in goal. Still loves ice hockey. Plays ice, street, and roller hockey year round with quite a few of his friends from high school. He covered his right arm from the elbow to his hand with a memorial to his grandfather after whom he was named. A large photo of his grandfather, Paul H., in h
is military uniform with planes firing
worry about it ever again. Carol said that would be fine with her so I had four estimates for the job. Wanted to keep the integrity of the house the same, so I wanted all the different angles that we now have with the cedar siding. That was going to be hard to do I was told four different times. OK, I know, but give me your best price for the way that I want it done. Couldn't use horizontal siding anywhere on the house. Had to use all soffit pieces. Well, the prices were all over the place with $14,000 the cheapest. Yep, the cheapest. Holy Cow! Maybe we could do just half this year and half next year Carol said to me. OK. I called Century Siding, the least expensive, and asked if he could come back and give me a price for just two sides. When he arrived we walked around the house and I gave him my idea about what I wanted to do. "Why don't you just stain it again?" he said to me. "I know that I'm here to sell you siding, but this house was meant to have cedar siding on it, not vinyl siding. Won't look halve as nice if you put it on. Think how many time
s you can have it stained for the price you'll have to pay me for the vinyl. I don't think you'll be here that long." Gee, thanks a lot. Yep, he talked me into it. Stain the house. Carol nixed the idea of me doing it myself because of the heights and my age. I did get an estimate and had scheduled a time for the staining to take place, and then while talking about it with my son, Tad, he suggested he could help do the high spots for me. So here I am, for the third time since we moved here, applying stain to the house. Two coats will help it last longer. Taking my time, but will have it done before the cold weather sets in. Already have gone through 8 gallons and I'm only half way there. And, it's only costing me for the stain and the labor for my son. Looks great again! It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - I'm in top photo and Tad is in the bottom
g photography in my collection. I started collecting Wallace Nutting photos in 1995 when Carol and I were making a trip to
-tinted. I taught hand-tinting in my photography class at high school and really appreciated the photo. Then I saw that it was a Nutting print. Had talked about him it in my class many times. Wallace Nutting was born in 1861 and became a minister after graduating from Hartford Theological Seminary. He started taking photos in 1899 and in 1904 opened the Wallace Nutting Art Prints Studio in New York. He eventually moved the gallery to Connecticut, t
hen to Massachusetts. In the peak of his business he employed about 200 colorists. He claims to have sold ten million pictures. The colorists painted the photos which he took and sometimes signed his name on them for him which is why the signatures vary. I have a book showin
g all the different signatures so I can check to see if any print I may want is actually an original Nutting. He was more prolific with pastoral scenes, consequently his interiors are more valuable. He was also famous for his Windsor chairs which he produced in the early 20
State College, PA called "The Maple Sugar Cupboard." This print is probably my most valuable since it is an interior scene. It was taken in 1935. The photo that I just sold today I had purchased on eBay and was my least favorite. I sold it to the guy that was doing the drywall for our bathroom remodel. He was
could buy. Gave it to him for the price I paid for it. Nice to see someone who has the same appreciation for hand-tinted photos that I do. Told him I would call him if I decided to sell anymore. Not going to happen!! It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - Photos from the top are: "The Coming Out of Rosa", "The Beckoning Road", "Maine Coast Sky", "The Golden Wish", and "A Little River in Mt. Washington", and "The Maple Sugar Cupboard"
at age two and got a pretty nice shiner. Carol and I were sure people would think that we abused her. Broke her arm at age four when she fell off of the new activity set in the back yard. Was going across the monkey bars and lost her hold and fell to the ground.
She shared a bedroom with her older brother Derek for a few years until her younger brother Tad arrived, then she got the second floor rear bedroom to herself as the boys moved to the third floor. I built her a bed with a desk and shelves below and the sleeping quarters on the top. She loved the bed. In elementary school she got in trouble one day when she took a hammer and nails to school to try to get into the boy's locker room from the girl's locker room. Got caught, naturally! Had to walk around for a week with a block of wood with nails in it as her punishment. In ninth grade she was cleaning one of her display cabinets that held her spoon collection and after taking the glass front off and sitting it on the floor, forgot about the glass and walked right into it. Cut off the top of her second toe. In her junior year she was opening the front door in her bare feet and got it stuck under the door and ended up having her t
oe nail cut off at the doctors. Also, during her junior year she started dating one of the best athletes on the baseball team. They dated a few times and then Andy was tragically killed in an automobile accident. Life's lessons are sometimes learned the hard way. With the help of her family and friends, she worked her way through her grief. During her high school career she visited Italy with her church youth group, was Mary in the Christmas Pageant at church, was the editor of the yearbook in her senior year, won numerous national awards in the Scholastic Arts and Photography Contest, was the goalie and captain of the field hockey team, played basketball, and was named a Lancaster County All-Star in softball. She had decided that she wanted to be a textile designer and was planning on the Univ. of Delaware until she found that she would have to travel out of the country quite a bit in an occupation like that. At this point in my story I should clue you in that Brynn got homesick easily. REAL EASILY!! She decided on Elementary Education and entered Millersville and roomed wi
th a longtime friend ...... for two weeks. Decided she missed her mother too much and talked us into letting her come home and commute. She did try again in her sophomore year and rented an apartment with another friend. Her junior and senior years she stayed on campus in an old farmhouse with three other friends. It was during this time that she met her husband, Dave. They were married two years after college and moved to Maryland. Dave was a teacher and football coach and Brynn taught elementary school. Then Courtney and Camille arrived. She became a stay-at-home
mom for the kids for a few years and is now back in education as an early childhood teacher. She is world famous for her Chocolate Chip Cookies. Just ask anyone who knows her. Brynn has been everything a father could want in a daughter. A sensitive, caring person who is a real charmer. I could go on and on and on. And ..... she learned excellent mothering skills from her mother. Her daughters will someday realize just how lucky they have been to have had her as their mother. Most girls don't realize how good a mother they had until they have children of their own. My daughter may be all grown up now, but to me she will always be "My Little Sweetheart! Luv you, Brynn, Dad. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - pixs from

on the Rt. 230 Bypass heading to Mt. Joy. That one only held 600 cars. Same deal there with the screen facing away from the highway so no one could see the movie unless you paid to get in. When I started dating Carol, we would go to the Columbia Drive-In on the Columbia Pike. This theater opened in 1956 and also had the speakers that you hooked to your car window. Used to run movies that had already been
in the downtown theaters for half a year. Uaually had a double-feature. Sometimes they were the horror type and then later they switched to the R-rated. That was when R-rated was really risque. But, who watched the movies anyway? On one date we placed the audio box on the window and by the end of the evening it was cold outside and we had rolled the windows up. Went to leave and forgot to take the box off. Ripped it right out of the pole next to us. I'm sure we weren't the first ones to do that. They eventually provided AM & FM radio broadcasts for the movie audio. Pretty neat! Now the Columbia Drive-In had its' screen facing away from the Columbia Pike, but it could be seen from the new Route 30 Bypass which ran
om the bypass and cars would line the edge of the bypass to watch the movie. Didn't have sound, but didn't seem to matter to them. They eventually put up "No Parking" signs along that stretch to keep the traffic flowing better. Now all the drive-in theaters are closed in the area. Either made into shopping malls or used for farm land. I'm interested to see how the restaurant DJ's is going to show their movie outdoors. Guess I'll find out soon. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - pixs from the top are: Ad for DJ's Taste of the 50's, highway sign from The Comet Drive-In, highway sign from the Columbia Drive-In, and the Google map of the Columbia Drive-In. The Columbia Pike is on the bottom while the parallel Route 30 is not seen in the top of the photo.
ou buy another one of those after all the trouble you had with the first one?" Because we loved it. And the new one had an extended body with a gray to and bottom and burgandy stripe around it. Couldn't be unlucky two times in a row. It served us well for three years and then we didn't want to push our luck, so we purchased the MPV. Still see a few of the Aerostars on the road and wonder what ever happened to the two that we once owned. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
toss and the game began. One of the most exciting high school games I have ever attended. Quince Orchard lost the game 27-23 after the pass for a touchdown on the final play of the game went incomplete. After the game, we all went onto the field to talk with Dave. His team may have lost the game, but he realized that his daughter will someday benefit from the over $2000 that was collected to help in the "Battle for the Cure." It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - Pixs of Courtney and the game from the top: Courtn

n his hands when he was in his infant's seat. Could really throw, also. He threw everything when he was younger; balls, rocks, cherry bombs, eggs, get the idea. He always seemed to be in trouble because of one of his two best traits: his ability to throw things and his honesty. Always told the truth. When Derek was about 12 he came home with a brand new softball. "Where did you get that," Carol asked him. "Oh, Mr. Bianci our neighbor gave it to me. Told me to use this instead of throwing rocks over our roof," he replied. Seems some of the rocks may have found a home in his yard. Other stories will go untold! Derek loved vacations with the family. Yearly trips to the bay were some of his favorites. He had very good mechanical ability and was learning to enjoy photography. But, like me,
his passion was baseball. We would spend endless hours in the back yard throwing the ball and perfecting his delivery. A "lefty" with sneaky speed. By the time he started Little League he was dominating on the pitching mound. By high school he was the pitcher the coach would put in when he needed a win. Still holds many of his high school records. Villanova University awarded him a full-paid scholarship to play Division I baseball. In his freshman year he came down with mono during Christmas break and spent a few days in the hospital, but still managed to have the 3rd best ERA in Division I when he returned. He did fall three innings short of the required minimum innings pitched to qualify for any award. In his sophomore year he led the Wildcats to the Big East Title, beating St. John's in the championship game. Arm injuries in his senior year cut his playing time and career short. He managed to get his degree
in Psychology with a minor in criminal justice from Villanova in 1993. A proud moment for Derek and his family. The family was there to watch him receive his degree. He worked a variety of jobs after graduation and is currently a pressman in charge of running a web press for Donnelly Printing in Lancaster. In 2003 Derek met a girl by the name of Barbara who worked with him at Donnelly. Not long before they fell in love and were married. He foun