I?—Lancaster Farming, Friday, January 27, 1956 Detectives at Oak Hill Turning to Horses, Chase Thieves: Date? 1912 Here is the second of a series of articles prepared » for Lancaster Farming by Charles Slentz of Quarry ville. a look fiom years ago; At the annual get-together of the Detective Associations Union at Oak Hill early in January, 1912, one very important piece of routine business preceded ad journment of the meeting of the union which comprised ten com panies. That item was “appoint ing 14 horse-back riders, who u ill be ready to mount their high spirited hoises to run down thieves ” , While there was no publicized account of what thiev eries were thwarted by these ugilantes during 1911, the In tercourse Detective Association had a one-theft record for a 12- month period, 19 years later. Accordingly, this alert group, conceded to be “one of the oldest organizations of its kind in the country,” virtually threatened to go out of business when it re viewed this inactivity at its 79th annual report meeting, end of 1930 “Only one theft had been reported during the year a flock of chickens from the farm of Benjamin Greider, near Gor donville.” The 220 members, in considering this unusual lull-in pilfering, “agreed that times, in deed. were changing ” In com (trast, it was Said that “once up on a time, the Intercourse De tective Association rode almost nightly upon the trails of horse, chicken and livestock thieves, with fairly good results” But despite the fact that the “total payout for the year (’3O) had been $25 for Greider’s stolen pullets the boys decided to stick together, just in case” . . • And so much for leaf ing through pages touching on protection for life and property on farm and in countryside. Speaking of high spirited faorses (and 'we were a few mo ments ago), a local newspaper paragraph of late Jan, 1907, told about the makings of one in this brief concerning “a wild colt” The animal “owned by Hany Roop which wtas chanced off heie (Andrews Bridge neigh borhood) on Thuisday night was von by A B Simmons, Christi ana " The wild and spirited streaks in horse flesh are ever a chal lenge to riders and drivers. We tiuly believe that "both horse and driver in this particular piece of news of mid-January, 1912, had plenty of spirit, but judge for 5 ourself 'asS r ou read about this farmers thrilling, though im agined race “One of East Dru more township’s prosperous farm ers, while on his way home from Quarryville recently, thought he was racing down the pike It was about dusk and it was the rat tling-noise of the other wagon (that he had tied on behind his (that made it appear to him that some one was trying to pass him When near Unicorn the people heard him coming like Jehu of old, crying out ‘You can’t pass me' Come on'. No, you did not 1 ’ He felt flat when he discovered his mistake ” Philadelphia to Unicorn Another horse-rider newsflash of January (this time. 49 years ©go) 'and the rider might well have been U worthy mounted candidate for any detective as sociation, for note. “James Wat son purchased a horse Phil adelphia. riding it all the way home” meaning, to Unicorn Post-holiday week fires, in 1905. plagued both city and coun ty In Lancaster, “flames broke out in a frame stable at the rear of the Hoifman House, front ing- on West Mifflin St, and quickly consumed the structure, along with three horses and the rolling stock owned by A. E. Rudy, of the Standard Ice Cream Co, who occupied part of the building as a manufactory.” On (two farms, Christmas time of the {Same iyear, eight horses were lost, as well as other stock, crops and equipment. One fire result- ed in the destruction 6i a “large barn on the farm of Mrs Julia M. D Lant,. halfway between the Harrisburg Turnpike and the rail read bridge over Little Conestoga Creek ” In addition to two horses, the following contents of the barn were also burned- “20 head of steers and cows, 20 pigs and 250 chickens, along with the year’s yield’of corn, the year’s crop of tobacco and all the farm equip ment . . . They were able to save only one horse and one small wtegon” The other fire leveled the large born on the farm of Mr- I>a vid W Jackson, one mile north west of Bartville. This large structure, almost new, Jioused six horses,, one cow. 15 head of steers, crops and farming im plements valued at thousands of dollars Everything was destroy ed, the barn reduced to ashes.” Something to Beef About While destructive fires invari ably give losers considerable cause for lament, a man not too far from the Octoraro neighbor hood really had “something to beef about,” just forty-four years ago this month The m!an was John B. Keene, of Green Tree, and the story goes that he, “with a few of his kind neighbors, at tempted to butcher his beef one the fence and made his escfape, coming toward Green Tree There he turned north and was lost to The Weather Bureau’s 30-day outlook for mid-January to mid-F-ebruary calls for temperatures to average above seasonal normals in the western half of the coun try. East of the Mississippi generally be low normal temperatures are indicated, except for near normal in the Great Lakes the posse on foot that were aft er it. They returned home to get teams to further trace it and Tuesday afternoon- One who pro The First Six Weeks Are The Hardest upon your choice TODAY! The first six weeks of a chick’s life are the crucial weeks which determine, to a very great extent, its future egg production. The wise poultrymen knows that it is during this period that he must lay the foundation for high level egg production if he is to receive top profit from his flock. 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Precipitation Reports fesses to be a crack shot missed his mark and the beef imagined what was on the move, scaled on later accounts did not get p Phone Lancaster 2-2145 area and the Northeast. Precipitation is expected to be subnor. | mal in the southern half of the nation. , Greater than normal amounts of rain and snow are predicted for , the Northeast, Northwest, and northern Rocky Mountain States, with near normal elsewhere. fresh beef for their supper. Last | accounts were it was heading tor I Gap, with the ownei in hot pur [ suit.” j ends