’ em ~~ i - SY HAM mh ww Ay January 10, 1979 Crafts show Joycee-ettes will hand out ribbons to winners A ‘‘Creative Craft Day’ will be sponsored by the Mount Joy Joycee-ettes on Saturday, March 24th, at St. Mark’s United Method- ist Church, Main Street Mount Joy. The Craft Day is a chance for you to show your talents to the public. All crafts will be judged. Three winners in each cate- gory will recieve a ribbon. Listed here are the 12 categories: . paintings . macrame . sewing . knitting crocheting . quilts . embroidery, needlepoint, and cruel NOAA UNA WN = 8. hook rugs and wallhangings 9. cake decoration 10. flower arrangements 11. paper arts 12. sculpture, carving, and ceramics To enter, you need only fill .out an entry form and pay 2S cents for each entry. Forms are available by calling Patsy Hoffer at 653-5958 or Connie Ginder at 653-8535. The deadline is March 10th. The event will be held for the public on Saturday, March 24th, from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM. During the day the Joycee-ettes will have a spring bazaar, food and bake sale. Columbia Little Theater plans new season The Columbia Little Theater held its first meeting of the ’79 season Sunday evening at St. Mary's Church in Marietta. A full schedule for the coming year is planned. The company will offer its audience their first chil- dren’s production, ‘‘Let’s Go To the Moon,”” on March 9th and 10th at Columbia High School auditorium under the direc- tion of Duane Peters. Auditions will be held on Monday, January 15th. Adults and children, male and female, are needed. If you are interested in reading for a part, call 684-7282. Other offerings for 1979 will include ‘‘Star-Spangled Girl,” ‘a modern comedy by Neil Simon, to be staged in May. ‘‘Oklahoma,’”’ a classic Rogers and Hammerstein musical, is planned for a September opening. Because of its success Hershey Theatre looking for singers, actors & dancers The Hershey Theatre has announced that auditions for its next production will be held on January 24th and 25th at the Hershey Little Theatre, Community Center Building, Hershey, from 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM. A piano accompanist will be available for the auditions, which will be for singers/dancers/actors. No more than three minutes per audition is requested. Dancers should bring shoes and be ready to improvise. Please have sheet music clearly marked. Rehearsals February 14th. begin on with children last season, the Little Theater will stage a second children’s produc- tion in November: ‘‘The Red Shoes,” a Hans Christian Anderson favor- ite, will debut on the Columbia stage. Many fund raising activ- ities have been planned, the first of which will be a dance to be held on March 17th at the Susquehanna Fire Hall in Columbia. Music will be by ‘‘Hog Wild.” The cost will be $12 per couple or $7 for singles. Refreshments and food will ‘be provided. For information on this, call Ron Haug at 684-6663, or Mary Jane Demmy - at 426-1234. A March dinner meeting is planned and a member- ship drive has started. Anyone interested in com- munity theater, both on stage and off, is most welcome. Ken Brandt elected to House Internal Affairs. Committee Local state legislative representative Ken Brandt has been elected to the House Internal Affairs Committee, a ‘‘watchdog’’ group which oversees hir- ing and salaries in the House. The Committee has responsibility for work ... Marietta artist re-discovered [continued from front page] equaled Eicholtz’s, locally. But Armstrong died young—at age S54 in 1852—before he could establish himself in Phila- delphia, where artistic repuations, including Eic- holtz’s, were made. Ten years ago, a Lancaster collector who bought an Armstrong was advised to throw away the painting so that he could use the frame. Today, that advice would be foolish indeed. “lI think Armstrong was every bit as good as Jacob Eicholz,’”’ says art and technology historian Irwin Richman, who is spear- heading the movement to revive Armstrong's reputa- tion. Richman became inter- ested in Armstrong after he spotted a self-portrait of the artist, and a companion piece of the artist’s wife, in Hovie and Evie Gleason's Marietta antiques shop. Impressed by both the quality of the paintings, and the relative anonymity of the artist, he set out to learn all he could about Armstrong and his work. One of Richman’s stu- dents, Penn Museum public relations curator Ruth Arnold, did most of the legwork in the investi- gation. She and Professor Richman managed to track down forty-three surviving Armstrong paintings, which were scattered from Phila- delphia to LeHabre, Cali- fornia. Most of the paint- ings, however, are still in Lancaster County. Armstrong was born in Manor Township in 1798. He taught and painted in Marietta during the 1820's, then moved to Lancaster, where he enjoyed consider- able success as a portrait- ist. Many of the town's leading citizens commis- sioned him to paint their likenesses. There is a tradition, however, that Armstrong refused to paint anyone whom he did not like. He married Harriet Wentz, who bore him five girls and a boy. In the artist”s portrait of his wife, she looks quite beautiful. No Armstrongs of his line live in this area today. assignments, reposts, job locations, and working hours of the House's employees. SUSQUEHANNA TIMES—Page 7 Larry Bradley’s Arco Rte. 441 & 743, Marietta Yalolo RE + See Larry for your Auto needs Hours. aily 7 - 11 Sunday 11 - 11 Phone 426-2731 TIME AT ARNOLDS 1977 Pontiac Lemans 1976 Olds Cutlass 1975 Pontiac Catalina 1975 Pontiac Lemans COMPANY CAR TRADE INS 1976 Pontiac Catalina Sedan 3 1977 Pontiac Catalina Sedans MAYTOWN 426-1121 PONTIAC $ OLDSMOBILE usd youR carci in WATE ¢ pecials throughout the whole store!!! Today thru Saturday STORE HOURS: 9:00 AM.-5:00 P.M. DAILY-FRI. 7 9.00 AM.-9:00 PM. CLOSED SUNDAYS GC.C. MURPHY CO.-THE FRIENDLY STOREY 14 WEST MAIN ST.-MOUNT JOY, PA