VOLUME XXIII NO. 47 '1'he Don’t Forget the Sunday Schoo ALL THAT WORK FOR Salunga Man Was 80 on Saturday MR. JOHN HERR WELL PRESERV. ED MAN—EYESIGHT IS AL.- MOST GONE—IS VERY WIDELY KNOWN the well known riverman of three score and ten years, while cu had gone adrift about a mile dow the river. Mr. wade to knew he could build a Mr. John Herr, of Salunga, as 80 years old on Saturday and in hon- or of the event a number of his|the coal dirt almost to his neck. {1g by the vast collection of Indian | lected to teach music. On the 25t friends assembled at his home. He | After working himself almost to ex-|..q old Coloninl relies in the posses- | of April at 4:30 o'clock P. M, Prof. is well preserved in body and mind, | haustion he finally extricatel him- {gon of Louis Hartman, barber, of | McHose will bring his class of sixt with the exception of his sight which [self after an how's perilious strug- Maytown, who in his 40 years of col- | Pupils from Lebanon to this plac THE SAKE OF A BOAT David Sherick, of Washingtonboro over ting poles Saturday to sell to truck- ers suddenly discovered that his boat Sherick started to Shertzer’s Island where he get some boards to raft when he sank donw in Mount Joy Bulletin Mount Joy, Penna., Wednesday, April 23rd, 1924 | Convention Which Will 1 MUSICAL. DEMONSTRATION Maytown Man Has HERE FRIDAY EVENIN t- | evening for the purpose of conside ASSORTMENT OF INDIAN REL. m ICS FOUND IN THIS END OF COUNTY i matics, teacher in science, teache i and first and second grades, and | teacher in music. Professor History, wunusally interesting and romantic because it is unwritten, is | be Held : : A special meeting of the Mount A Big Collection Joy School Board was held on Friday LOUIS HASTMAN HAS UNUSUAL | ing applicants for the following posi- | tions: Principal, teacher in mathe- | in seventh and eighth, fifth and sixth Clar- ence McHose, of Lancaster, was e- o|U. S. Official Warns r- FINANCIAL LOSS FOR FARMERS AND PRODUCERS AS WELL AS Tr HEALTH MENACE IS PRE. DICTION a The following special from Wash- ington, D. C. appeared in the New h | Era Monday night: So prevalent is cattle tuberculosis v|in Lancaster County that it has e {earned the unenviable distinction of is almost gone. His wife is a few|gle. lecting, has gathered oddities as a | and demonstrate to the people of being the “worst plague spot” in the years younger. They have three With the aid of a hatchet he con- hobby. { Mount Joy just what can be done United States. children: Enos, of Seattle, Wash- | structed a raft and poled himself to Although Louis Hartman's relies | With boys and girls if properly train- This declaration was made to-day ington; Lillie, wife of B.D. Stanfer's Island where he made o include curios of many nations and | ed. ; This demonstration will be giv- by Dr. A. E. W hite, assistant chief perger and Mary, wife of I. M. Herr, | stronger raft and then proceeded | classes of people, his especial inter- | en in the school building and the {of the division of animal tuberculin after his boat which had drifted o public is invited. The various othe of Salunga. They are members of the church of the Brethren for many | Wisler’s Island. Mr. Sherick ar- | field he excels. Onfe he started to | Positions will be filled at the next |the federal Department of Agricul- | vears and he was a member of the |rived home cold and wet after four count and catalogie the collection, | SPecial meeting to be held on Friday | ture, in explaining that Lancaster official board for forty years. The [hours absence. | but before he was half through, he | April 26. } omy. farmers are losing annually official church board and a few oth- - hadNnumbered 1,433 arrow heads ii jens of thousands of dollars because | ers helped celebrate the event at the There he gave up the job, and as a jof the entrenchment of the disease | The F. W. Society home of Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Herr. Those present were: Elder Amos Hottenstein, Rev. and Mrs. Milton M S vd i Forney and granddaughter, Anna et on atur ay| Ruth, Rev. and Mrs. Phares Forney and children, Ella Mae and Mr. and Mrs. Philip Hottenstein, Mr. YEAR—TIME AND PLACE OF and Mrs. Elam Weamer, Mr. and FUTURE MEETING AN- Mrs. J. B. Becker, of Petersburg; NOUNCED Mr. B. G. Musser, Rev. and Mrs. LL rene N. Musser, of Columbia; Mr. and The Farm Women Society, No. 8 | Mary; | ELECTED OFFICERS FOR THE Nn | est is Indian handcraft, and in this Special Meeting result, left several thousand unnum- bered, although all handsomely mounted in color de- | signs. are harmonious r | of the bureau of animal industry of jin their dairy herds. So far as federal records Lancaster’s record of | While \\most of his Indian relics | — {per cent of infection, according to | were collected by himself and friends | BOUGHT A ROAD OILER AND Dr. te, : : | along the Susquehanna in the vie- | STORAGE TANK—OIL BIDS | w hn Toas Ste mn every four milk { inity of Maytown, a long bow and’ RECEIVED BUT CON. and feeding cows there are infected i J ’ € } for sntire state the nercentaons | | thirteen feather-tipped arrows that | TRACT WITHHELD Sin the via ths Per Ean { came mr ol infection is declared to be about | Irom out west are of special | The The Mount Joy Boro Council hel 1€5 a special meeting here Monday even inter were used in an at- | Mrs. Daniel Neff, of Central Manor; {met at the home of Mrs. John Mum- tack on a pony express rider in|. BE Byer Bal Miss Mae Martin, of Bridgeport; Mr. | mau, Saturday April 19. This was | (Turn to fage Five) | ing with Burgess J. A. Bac man I. L. Risser, of Elizabethtown; Mr. | the first meeting held for some time. | ee eee Geen { President E WwW - Garber, and ( oun Emma | It was a get together meeting. In| gave YOU EVER HEARD { cilmen J. Ross Eshleman, 8. H. Mil and Mrs. Harry Little, Mrs. a. g chair-lady, the Hershey and Richard Long, of Lan-|the absence of the 8 | OF THIS HERETOFORE? | (°F 31 ; present disville; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Musser, | vice-chair-lady presided. The serip- am | Bids for off. were opened and reac Mrs. Amanda Herr, Mrs. Annie Ben-| ture lesson was read by Mus. | Leonard Til nan, of Marietta, a {irom the following: Ugite Oil Com- der, R. D. Raffensperger and family, | man Garber after which the Lor fancier of Rhode Island Red chick- | Pany, Star Indepc ndent il Company 278 pissy fw of tl I. M. Prayer was repeated in unison. | ens, te is trying to figure out he te Atiantic Rofiongy Company “Herr family, The son Enos, of|Eight new members were added al- | how tv when placed un- | A road oiler was bought from R. E Seattle, though absent flesh, | so a new secretary and treasurer e- | a sett resulted in thirteen Guthrie, of ho Austin W beter Rost was present in the | spirit as was lected. Music was furnished by the | chicks. Mr. Tillman declares that | Machinery Company for $1,250. proven by the telegram received on|radio. Mrs. Norman Baer gave a | he originally placed 13 eggs under | fen thousand gallon tank for a Saturday and which was read at each | very interesting talk on, “The His- ga hen, but on Saturday he removed | tainer was bought from the Lancag { ler and Samuel Eshleman + > ET | . 3 ; i tap . Ww 16 Nf table. The devotions were enjoyed | tory of the Farm Women’s Societies {one of the eggs. Yesterday when ter Iron W $460 F. O by all present. Numerous gifts i Lance Co.’ Refreshments | he visited the nest he found thirteen | Il be purchas- : ve 1 i { honk 3 the wos an abundance of flowers and fruits]and a soc hour was enjoyed by | chicks strutting about the nest. : Shenk in the west were received all. eee Ge { end of the boro on which to place the fica Following are the officers of the | { oil tank at a cost of $60. Society No. 8: 1} 1 ews Or Ss. H J To ported that a sewer oung 0 S re Chair-lady—Mrs. John Smith. i { pipe on Manheim street had caved in Vice-chair-lady—Mrs. David Wit- | pipe running through mer. Seeretary—Mrs Treasurer—M Abner Risser. rs. Norman Garber. Throughout the summer the socie- ty will meet at the following homes to which every farm lady is heartily Joined in Wedlock NUMBER OF VERY WELL KONWN YOUNG FOLKS ARE JOINED IN THE HOLY BONDS OF MATRIMONY invited: May 17—Mrs. Harry Hershey. Zerphey—Kling June 21—Mrs. David C. Witmer. On Saturday evening at 7:30 at the pasonage of St. Mark’s United Brethren church, Mr. Winfield L. Zerphey, of this place and Miss Dor- othy G. Kling, of Florin, were united in marriage. The ring ceremony was used. The couple was unattend- ed. After a short wedding trip they will reside at the home of the bride's parents for the present. July 19—Mrs. Clarence Garber. Aug. 9—Mrs. George Endslow. Sept. 20—Mrs. Norman Garber. Sse eet) neem. COMMENCEMENT DATES FOR BAINBRIDG SENIOR CLASS The Class Day exercises of the Bainbridge High School will be held in the Methodist church Tuesday evening, April 29. The commence- ment exercises will be held at the same place Wednesday evening, April 30. The graduates are as follows: Anna M. Bryan, Martha L. Lehman, Dorothy M. Smith and Carrol J. Pres- cott. Mr. Arthur D. Reese, of Philadel- phia, will deliver the address to the graduates. The Baccalaureate ser- mon will be preached by Rev. Ellis, pastor of the Methodist church. a Miller—Sprout A very pretty wedding was sol- emnized on Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, by the Rev. H. S. Kieffer, pastor of St. Mark's United Brethren church, when Miss Bertha E. Miller, of this place became the bride of Clayton S. Sprought, May- town. The ring ceremony was used. The bride wore a white satin gown of satin crepe and carried a shower bouquet of roses and carnations. Miss Edna M. Kline, Lancaster, at- tended as maid of honor and wore a grey silk dress and carried a bou- quet of pink roses and carnations. George F. Trostle, Marietta, attend- ed as best man. Following the cere- Given Package Surprise A birthday package surprise was given in honor of Miss Dorothy Kaylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kaylor on Thursday. She was mony a wedding supper was served. | remembered by her many friends Mr. and Mrs. Sprought will reside | With gifts. in their newly furnished home at TTT Maytown. Gypsies Pass Thru eee eee ene Eight machines containing a full Have Broken Ground trile of gypsies stopped here Mon- Mr. Earl Snyder has broken |98/ causing much disorder among ground and is now busy excavating [the citizens. After about a ten for his new house on Detwiler Ave- | Minute stay the gypsies were sent westward by the town officials. ———— 4 Cee. we nue. Mr. Amos Garber is busy excavat- ing for a new house which he will Next Community Sale erect on Frank street next to the The next Community Sales Co. residence of Mr. P. Frank Schock. | Will hold its next public sale at Flor- Ll in on Saturday, May 3rd. General New Bible Class Teacher line of merchandise, farm imple- | Mrs. George Althouse was elected | Ments and household goods, also teacher of the King's Daughter’s | COWS. Sale starts at 12:30 P. M. Bible Class of the Church of God at! EAS Gd { Bad Street in Florin Constable George S. Vogle report- ed Church street, in Florin, in bad condition. The report was made to the Court on Monday. The street in question is in Mount Joy towne ship. the meeting held at the home of Mrs. Eli Shank, due to the resignation of Mrs. R. J. Myers, teacher for a num- ber of years. Miss Bessie Shearer was elected assistant teacher. rm. = A ER ent cn: 90 Dozen Donated The Mount Joy Auxiliary of the General Hospital at Lancaster take pleasure in thanking the citizens of Mount Joy and vicinity for the very liberal contribution of eggs for the Easter-tide. ——— A ern. Y. P. Conference Here The Young People’s Conference of Mount Joy and Community dis- tricts will be held in the First Pres- byterian Church on Saturday, May 10th. et eee Stuccoing His House J Mr. Charles Bennett is having his frame house on East Main street treated tc a coat of stucco. This will greatly add to the beauty of the property when completed. ’ —— eee. Hospital Head Resigns N Tunis Kivett, superintendent of the General Hospital at Lancaster since October 1, 1923, has resigned The gas company : : ! because of a gas Quick Reading foes | 2 will be and repair all damage done to | INTEREST HAPPENINGS | { FROM ALL CVER THE COUN. |sewer pipe, : Sra { TRY FOR THE BENEFIT { The boiler at the Pumping Station | OF BUSY PEOFLE | was inspected by an inspector from i the State department and the report | The Lebanon fair grounds and | was read to Council, which approved | buildings were sold for $50,000 on [the report and the boiler will be re- | Monday. paired immediately. A Im IMPROVED SANITATION After deliberating seven hours, a Philadelphia jury declared Harry K. Thaw sane. FOR RAPHO SCHOOLS Eight auto drivers licenses were revoked by the state department at At a special meeting of the Rapho Harrisburg on Monday. School Board last Friday, it was de- Arthur Boots, colored, was found | cided to take a step forward on San- guilty of murder in the second de- gree at Lancaster yesterday. ical Indoor Toilet equipment for the Records were broken at the Court | Garfield and Sporting Hill Schools. House at Lancaster Saturday when | At these places the outside toilet thirty-seven marriage licenses were | buildings are condemned. To re- issued. build them, in accordance with the A large portion of a corrugated! State Department iron roof on the barn of William R. {would be almost as expensive as Bently, near Washingtonboro, was blown off during Sunday's storm. Mr. Thomas Kesserling, of Mari- etta, an auto mechanic employed at placing Kaustine equipment inside. Furthermore, the outside building is annually defaced by the public Ream’s garage for some time, has | children to use. i resigned and accepted a position at To the taxpayers we feel safe to; Rohrer’s garage. NN say that Kaustine equipment has, passed the experimental stage. Dis-| tricts in other counties have every | school equipped . The Board is back- | ed up by the State o nthe deal and | will co-operate on the requirements. | The Pennsylvania Railroad Com- pany has adopted this equipment] wherever there is no water conven-| ient for a flush system. ee WAS STRUCK BY TRAIN Noted Speaker Coming Owen Rowe O’Neil, renowned author and explorer, will give his famous travelogue lecture “My Ad- ventures in Swaziland” in Moose Theatre, Elizabethtown, on Monday evening, April 28th. He tells the story of his adventures among the savage tribes of Africa, and is the only white man who has ever secured information and moving pictures of | AND KILLED INSTANTLY | these tribes. Mr. O'Neil is a native | —_— of Africa, and a son of the Minister | Lloyd Brenner Garmen, agel 23 of Linince in the Cabinet of Oom | years, of Washingtonboro, who was Paul Kruger, President of the late | employed by Hartman Brothers, of Boer Republic. He has appeared in | Mountville, as a truck driver, was Lancaster on two occasions during instantly killed last Wed at last winter by popular demand. ithe Fridy avenue cro et ee eee 300,000 Dogs Licensed Railros: occurred | Pennsylvania { The accident More than 300,000 dogs have been | plant of the Mountville Brick Com- licensed in the State this year up to | pany. | March 1,. aecording to a report The truc® was loadel ith made to F. P. Willits, secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Ag- riculture. The records show 65,000 more dogs were licensed during the first two months of 1924 than during the same period last year. tons of brick. Young left the brick plant, it being trip of the day. He had just rea the railroad, the front of the truck being on the track when an bound train came along and hit it, badly smashing it and stant death for Garman, hurled 35 feet into a ditch. ————— En Want to Adopt Child Katie E. Blymier, of Marietta, pre- sented a petition for the adoption of Rosie M. Bankler, the minor child of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bankler, of Marietta. The child has been with the Blymiers for some years and the father is willing to have them adopt his daughter. The mother cannot be his east- ] Horse Ran Away a Jacob Boyer, of Florin, was slight- ly injured several days ago when the Gunzenhauser bread wagon which he was driving was upset in the field near the railroad track opposite the rear of the Donegal Gas Company’s building when his horse became un- manageable. All of the windows of the wagon were broken, and a quan- tity of bread was ruined. —— who was to take effect May 1. It pays to advertise in the Bulletin | found. notified to remove their pipe] the! : ~ | itation and purchase Kaustine Chem-! specifications, i early this morning the vote stood: to the primary here yesterday as there such an extent that they are unlt for K were | for | leading to all who did not know of| i the recent action. 1 one in twelve, - ties in Pennsyly ractically f 1 ATO UP SIDE DOWN $1.50 a Year in Advance in the Church of God Here Tomorrow, April 24 CHAUFFEUR IN HOSPITAL Road We All Must on oe Co. Milk Dealers] irr civson, sz. iimyer, was { seriously injured as he sped to bedside of his sick wife late yvester- | day afternoon. Gibson, was in | the when he according to Columbia story ily taken ill at their Billmyer home He started for that place over what {is known as the “river road.” received {a message that his wife had sudden- Travel Sometime MANY WELL KONWN PEOPLE ’ HAVE PASSED TO THE GREAT BEYOND ‘ L. E. Crowley died at Columbia aged 61 years. | 1 | At the intersection of the Mariet- | The four-day old infant son of [ta-Maytown turnpike, West of Mari- the machine struck ruts in the highway, | etta, | deep { under women buried several Gibson was | wreckage and living several leaped { high in the air and landed on its top. the Frank Mr. and Mrs, William Glass, Eliza- bethtown, died at St. Joseph’s hos- pital. Shertzer, aged 62 years, . | a native of Columbia, died near Phi- Mrs. nearby dragged him unconscious | ladelphia. Cornelia Fritz, of from the tangled mass. He was | Marietta, is a sister. taken to the Columbia hospital. | wt ———— Miss Daisy Hendrix . | Miss Daisy Hendrix died at the Picked From Our home of her sister at Columbia. She Weekly Card Basket PERSONAL MENTION ABOUT THE MANY COMERS AND GOERS IN THIS LOCALITY disclose | *l no other county in the country ap- | of Boro Council i ord of 26 | Master Russel Halbleib spent day at Harrisburg. Miss Esther Sweigart is the guest f Miss Florence I Charles Carpent ( r, of Lancaster visited Emanuel Hendrix on Sund Beatrice Pennypacker anc nT; notored te spent the with Miss Mary of Hershey, spent Sat- | iting Mr. and Mrs. M. G.| Schutte. Mrs. Harry L ted her moth- | I 5 4 I Ss He es um 1ingham, at Lan- | La HULL AC ] Est) Mrs. C. S. Gingrich visited her a jdaughter, Mrs. Emil Meyre at Lan- STRASSBURGER LEADS PINCHOT | cast Saturday. BY BIG MAIJORITY— GREIST| J Mrs. J. H. Weid: GIVEN A BIG VOTE | La r, visited on Easter w HERE YESTERDAY {and Mrs. D. W. Strayer. Returns from more ter of the state mary election Ralph Beaver Strassburger, Norristown publisher, leading Governor Pinchot], than one showed wealthy in yesterday's pri-|My daughter, of Lancaster, were Mr. and Mrs. Emil Meyre, of Lan- ‘aster, spent Sunday r. and Mrs. C. S. Mr. Mis. as the guests of Gingrich. i Allen Way and and guests f her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Good. | {for delegate-at-large to the Republi-| Mise Pauline Shoop and Mr. El | {can National Convention by 145,000 0: C. Barnes spent Easter with | {votes. Of this lead Philadelphia Barnes’ parents at Hagerstown, tributed 113,387. Md. a: | | Returns from 2,446 of the 8,119 { districts in the state gave Strassbur- | ger 217,729 and Pinchot 72,596. {| These returns also include 135 Alle- | gheny districts. The vote there was | Strassburger 10,157; Pinchot 2719. { The contest between the two injg | Lancaster county was a neck and ‘neck race. In forty-four Lancaster {city and county districts heard from i Strassburger 2699; Pinchot 2430. The Vote Here There was very little interest in practically no contests. The vote for Pinchot in both wards to- talled 117, while Strassburger re- ceived six less, 111. In the vote for Delegate W. W. Greist received 171 while the Cum- mings vote was 166. For Representative Mr. 186 votes against 28. Greist was t Mr. Mus- { given ser’s County Committee H committeeman was rather mis- Not long ago the! Republicans in Lancaster county de-|a cided to elect a County Commit man and a County Commi Ward J Republican com- | mitteewoman. Mr. Harry S. Hinkle was elected committeeman by the Democrats, receiving 21 votes. —— ree A Birthday Supper | £ birthday anniversaries of Mr. Weldon | and Miss Dorothy Kaylor. All en-}) joved the surprise. re A AAI Nursing a Sore Foot Justice of the Peace, Jacob H. Zeller is confined to the house since last Friday with a sore foot. spent the week-end as the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Ging- rich. Ernest McClellan visited the latter's week-end. Elizabethtown, visited Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. El- mer Heisey. Shenk, Mrs. Russell Sumpman, and Mrs. Ed. Hoffmaster spent Wednes- day in Lancaster. daughters, Charlotte and Anna, and son, spent guests of his parents. Mo., is spending a few weeks vaca- and Mrs. E. Frank Gainer. i Lloyd Snyder, of Manheim, and Mr. The vote on the Republican ticket|{ Arthur Witmeyer, of Baltimore, vis- | 3 3 3 +o ~ 3 |ited Miss Alta Gingrich, on Sunday. les Gertrude Munro, Grace Bentz, of § A birthday supper was served on | Royerford, Miss Thursday evening at the home of | Mr. Boyd McGinithen, of Reading, Mr. and Mrs. William Weldon at their | were Sunday guests home on New street, in honor of the|Jjohn H. Zeller. church here day, May Miss Alta Gingrich, of Lancaster, Mis Beatrice Hawthorne and Mr. ister at Wilmington, Del., over the Mr. and Mrs. Mark Basehoar, of here Mrs. C. S. Gingrich and Fanny Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sload, two Sunday at Maytown as Stanley S. Gainer, of St. Louis, ion at the home of his parents, Mr. Miss Helen Kauffman and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Edwarl Hoffmaster, ghter, Miss Dorothy, Mr nd Mrs. Neal spent Satur- and at Ironville as r. and Mrs. George and James v and St unday the Ret- ana mM Haven str W. Gerber fr. and Mrs. J. S. Bru- eel: and son and daughter Amspack- and daughter, Bertha, of Hanover. Mrs. C. C. Keim and son reemond, Mr, Stanley Auchy, Miss- ar of Enola; Mrs. Levi Mr. and Koltea Harlen and of Mr. and Mrs. Dedication May 18 The fine new United Brethren will be dedicated Fr; 18. It pays-to advertise in the B Subscribe for the Mt Joy 1 Tr 1 Mullen at | | | noon. Int | diseases, aged 85 years. { was one of the active workers in the | Furnace Chapel near Chickies for vears. The remains were in- terred in the cemetery at Newtown | to-day. ( many | Mrs. e Tuneral 217 Eas Amanda Swade of Mrs. Amanda Swade t King street, Lancaster, who died Thursday morning in St. Jos- | eph’s hospital, was held from the { Fisher Undertaking parlors, East { Orange street, Lancaster, Monday af- | ternoon. Interment was made in | Mount Tunnel cemetery, Elizabeth- | town, | AL | Ephraim D. Shank | Ephraim D. Shank, 68 years of age, a well known school teacher in | Lancaster county, died at his home i at Elizabethtown. s wife, Ellen Effie, at f Chicago. or Shank, of Lancaster, He is survived by Shank, one daughter, and one son, Russel, One brother, George also survives. s held Tuesday after- in Ober hom The funeral rment was made ‘emetery. Ezra Ruhi x Ezra Ruhl died at the home of his i son, John L. Ruhl, of Mastersonville, i Wednesday, from a complication of He was a member of Unitel Brethren church and is ed by the follow- ing children: Mrs. Israel Bender, of Lititz; John, with whom he resided, and Henry D. Ruhl, of Elstonville. Funeral services were held from his Ruhl’s late home Saturday, with further | services in the United Brethren church. Burial was made in the ad- joining cemetery. Mrs. Joseph Demauss Mrs. Joseph Demauss, thirty-nine, of Merchantville, N. J., formerly of Bainbridge, died Sunday morning at the National Stomach hospital Phila- delphia. She is survived by her hus band and the following sisters: Mrs. Carl Bachman, Bainbridge; Miss Ly- dia Hoke, Merchantville and Mrs. Annettee Rutherford, of Riverdale, Md. Funeral services will be held Thursday morning at 10 o'clock from the Bainbridge Lutheran church. Interment will be made in the Bainbridge cemetery. Phares Snyder Phares Snyder, thirty-nine, of Manheim, died Monday morning in St. Joseph's hospital, from pneumo- He is survived by his wife and following children: Gardner, Vera, Marguerite, Phares, Charles, and Pauline, all at home. One sis- ter, Mrs. Joe Griffiths, of Loganville also survives. Funeral services Thursday afternoon from Keech’s Manheim. nia. the will be held at 2 o'clock undertaking parlors, Interment will be made in Hernley’s cemetery. Miss Elizabeth Kob Miss Elizabeth Kob, aged 39, of Elizabethtown, died of complication f diseases Thursday night at the ter General hospital The fol- brothers and sisters survive: Arthur Stauffer, Columbia; Harisburg; amuel, Middle- n; Leo ary, Elizabeth- n; Jacob, L Isaac, town. The funeral was held he undertaking parlors of Mil. d Son, Elizabethtown, Monday I 1g, followed by services in the Christ Reformed church. Interment was made in the Mount Tunnel cem- and M ster, and (Continued on xe 8) —
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