/ We Had Sighs Fires In Mount Joy Borough During 1940 Entailing A Loss Of $5.006.00 MOST THE MINUTE WEEKLY | LANCASTER COUNTY] The Mount Joy Bulletin VOL. XL, NO. 30 Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday Morning, January 2, 1941 $1.50 a Year in Advance | Clarence Schock Creates Trust Fund For The Benefit of Lanc. Co. Schools Profits of The Million Dollar Schock In- dependent Oil Co. To Be Given Away Annually First Contribution Given Away Monday Was Over $20,000.00 On Monday the pended literature thruout the county. planatory: To the School School Districts nuinty: os of Schock Independ- Joy, Pen J dedicated to of service. Its sole stock- N a Trust Estate. All divi- of Schock Independent Oil faipany (herein sometimes called {iCO”) are payable to this Trust. a of this trust, except such hited part as payable to the Donor and the Donor's wife during their natural lives, will be expend- ed for the benefit of the commun- During his natural life the shall be Trustee and (Turn to page 4) — —- 0 Aged Farmer morning ap- Directors of the of 1S 3 § incom is ity. Donor scle Dies as Result Of Bad Fall William Bowers, about of near Lancaster Junction, 3:45 a. m. Sunday at St. hospital, about seven hours after he had been injured in a fall. Dr. Harold K. Hogg, deputy cor- oner, said death was caused by a fractured skull and crushed chest. The man, he said, had been given permission at the farm of Daniel Fry, Manheim R. D. 1, to sleep in the barn Saturday night. About 10 p. m. Saturday Mr. Frye and his son found Bowers lying under the forbay of the barn, Dr. Hogg said adding that he apparently had fall- en through a hay-hole. Mr. Bowers lived in a along the Chickies creek farm of Phares Rohrer. A brother and sister survive. eet lil I ——— died at Joseph's cottage the on RICHLAND CLUB HERE #)BSERVED LADIES NIGHT The Richland club here entertain- ed at a Ladies Nite Friday evening in the club rooms at which time bridge and “500” were played and refreshments were served to 28. Prizes were won by E. F. Kochen- our, Clyde Nissley, Mrs. J. G. Lon- genecker, W. R. Heilig, Lester Mumma, Mrs. Mary B. Toppin, IL Morris and C. R. Gilbert. It was decided to hold another card party sometime in January. em sel LANCASTER MAN GETS ROAD BUILDING CONTRACT John H. Swanger, Lane. contract- or, has been awarded a contract for the construction of 3.14 miles of macadam road between Eliza- bethtown and Hershey on Route 340. it was announced in Harris burg by the State Highway Depart- His bid was $113,483.52. WAS PROSECUTED HERE Edgar B. Zug, Manheim R. D. 1, was prosecuted | by Chief of Police Elmeg Zerphey, before Justice of t pace Arthur Hendrix for a gn violation. ment. seventy, was distributed | It is self ex- | Lancas- | CLARENCE SCHOCK A Native Son Mr. Clarence Schock was born in Mount Joy, December. 22 1865, a scn of John Schock whose ancestors lived at Schock’s Mill (now Rowenna) and near Creswell. His mother was Mary Ann Patterson, descendant of Arthur Patterson who settled in Rapho township prior to 1721 and was one of the founders of the Donegal Presbyterian church. Educated in Mount Joy High school, before the days of com- mencements and diplomas; was graduated at Millersville State Normal school in 1883; attended Franklin and Marshall college in 1885-86. Entered business with father in 1886, became owner of business in 1895, and pioneered in the marketing of petroleum products in Lancaster county. Ir. Schock is a liberal in re- ligion and politics. Married in 1916 to Evetta Tup- per Jeffers, daughter of E. T Jeffers, president of York Col legiate Institute. his Two Youths Injured In A Collision A collision involving two trucks and a pleasure car on the wet and road resulted in seri- youths who were passengers in the auto, Sat- urday evening at 7:45 o'clock. Those injured were William Stumpf, nineteen, Bainbridge, who was admitted to the Lancaster Gen- eral Hospital suffering a deep lacer- ation of the forehead, concussion of the brain and a sprained wrist, (Turn to.page 2) QQ Arr PROSECUTED BY POLICE Jerome H. Davis, Mount Joy, Route 2, was prosecuted by Lan- caster City police for driving too fast for conditions. foggy River ous injuries for two * Lane. rencer-Journ: ul Cut Cour Intellig “ha 4. H Sicors Distributed Here Satur. Fourteen head of en S. Stoltzfus, D. 1, and were 4-H Baby Beef morning at the vards here. around 450 pounds, Keller Brother Stoltzfus farm for six weeks. The boys and girls, with a par- The Union National Bank here is financing ent, attended the drawing. (Turn to Page 2) Mins HIT-RUN DRIVER SOUGHT BY STATE POLICEMEN An auto owned by Walter Reese 600 Fairview avenue, Columbia, was struck by slightly damaged when Hereford steers were purchased from Steph- Bird-in-Hand R. distributed among the 14 members of the Mount Joy club Saturday The steers, averaging originated in Montana and were on feed at the The Winners | In Our Buy At HomeContest of here the an- } Merchants’ division Cha of Comme ncunce the winners of thei: “Buy At Home” Each year the | bor: sugh give away $150 in cash as the The r ce annual contest. merchants in contest. of West oa] strzet, Mount Joy. | The winners of the $10 prizes were O. Brubaker, Mcunt Joy R. D and Mrs Paris 2. &y Mrs. Harry Wintermyer, Harry Walters, Mount Joy. Won $5 Fach were presented Kaylor, Barbara Kathryn Mary Turn to page 2) re © Completed Catalog For I GreylronC.Co. | On Friday the Bulletin delivered | an order of catalogues which were | printed for the Grey Iron Casting | lccal industry which s many kinds of hard- household specialties, $5 awards The Balm- Louise to Florence | er, Leib, | Company, a [ manufactur: ware, useful | 3 {| iron toys, cte. When strelling { many five any city, thru one of the and dime stcres in almost you will notice numerous novelties and “what-nots” but how many you know that a large majority of those were manufact- ured right here in Mount Joy! The local industry's production in- cludes ice crushers and shaves, min- cing knives, nut and lobster crack- (Turn to page 2) A Qn ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT OF MISS HELEN WARFEL Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Warfel, Mount Joy R.D. 1, announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss “| Helen, to Jay R. Snyder, of Mount Joy, R.D. 2. Miss Warfel is a graduate of the | East Hempfield High school, class of 1939, and is employed at the F. W. Woolworth company. Mr. Snyder a graduate of the Mount Joy High School, class of 1938, and is employed by George Brown and Sons Inc. No date has been set for the wed- of of is ding. et mire ie RALPH GABLE’S CONDITION AT HOSPITAL IS FAIR The condition of Ralph C. Gable, thirty-two, Mount Joy R. D. 2, who | was admitted to the Lancaster Gen- eral hospital Friday suffering from pneumonia, was repcrted as fairly good by attendants Sunday night. He was recently discharged from the institution after having been unde: weeks for “the S treatment several same ailment. A Man's Ashes Put On Mother's an auto that failed to stop on i Grave at Maytown road between Marietta and Moun Joy at 5:50 p. m, Thursday, State | Policeman Roy Radcliffe, of Motor the Columbia sub-station reported. The officer said Reese was travel- about three miles north of Marietta. when his auto was side- | | ing north, swiped the other auto which was going south. A noses MUSSER'S SCHOOL CLOSED Because of the West by Hempfield ser’'s schoolhouse. The other school in the district. —— OE WAS 75 CHRISTMAS We want to congratulate Democratic friend Silas editor of the Denver Press, lack of attendance, Township board of education has closed Mus- twelve pupils enrolled will be assigned to our E. Bard, who Ashes of the late David G. Heisey, thirty-seven, of El 'Portal, Calif. were strewn over the grave of his mother in the Maytown Lutheran { cemetery Sunday afternoon. The ceremony was in compliance with a | death-bed request of Mr. Heisey. The deceased was a son of David L. and the late Laura Heisey, of Mountville. He died November 29 at his home in El Portal and a mil- held there on was a native of funeral was He itary December 2, Marietta. He is survived by his father, a brother, John, both of Mountville; two sisters, Mrs. Rebecca Smyth, of Neffsville; and Mrs. Helen Sirham of Lancaster; and a brother, North of Millersville, Ohio, ere celebrated his 75th birthday Christ- | BIRTHS ’ mas and is “still in the harness. Continued good health Silas. Se cd AUTOIST IN TROUBLE Clyde Simpson, Manheim Route 2 <, | i Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Miller of { Landisville, announce the birth of a | daughter at St. { Lancaster, Friday. | —— § Een. | was arrested by a State Policeman |IS IMPROVING Friday afternoon. . . | Given an im-| Mr. George B. Zeller, who has of the | Joseph's Hospital, | | DR. A. C. BAUGHER ai ROTARIANS | The Rctarians met Tuesday ncon | in regular weekly session. | Dr. A. C. Baugher, Dean of Men, | at Elizabethtown College, spoke to | the assembly. His pe was “Don’t i Cry Over Seilt Milk”. . Baugh- | er 's talk was based on oe passing lof 1940 and the entrance of 1941. Thirty Rotarians and three Harry Revare, of Harrisburg; R. W. Schiosser, of Eliza- visi=- ters, | Prof. First prize | bethtown College; Fiank Miller, of Andvow Helse | the meeting. AD Qin. | YOUNG MEN’S CLASS GIVE | Fr AG TO CHURCH HERE At { the the Christmas Exercises oi Church School of the Preshy- | terian Church on Sunday the 22nd | the young men’s class had an un- | announced part in the program. prizes ; $25 (was awarded to Mae Hinkle | the Elizabethtown College attended p,. | They surprised all by presenting a | beautiful American flag and stand | for the pulpit. Raymond Sumpman made the pre- | sentation. Around him stood the members of his Class-Martin James Eshleman, Harold James Hostetter, Clar- Robert Stoner and | other { Bowman, | Fellenbaum, ence Newcomer, James Workman. a LEG FRACTURED WHEN STRUCK BY AN AUTO Louis Blane, about fifty, of town, was admitted to St. Joseph's Hos- pital Saturday night suffering a possible fracture of the leg, receiv- ed when struck by an automobile at 11:15 p. m. According to Chic of Police Elmer Zerphey, the driv- of the car was Max Koenig, thirty-eight, Hershey. The officer said the driver told him the man walked into his car on Main Street. Local Affairs In General Briefly Told Twenty muskrat hides were stolen from a garage near Strasburg. 21 dozen eggs were stolen from a Central Market stall at Lancaster. Thieves stole 16 pigs from a farm near Lancaster in broad daylight. John H. Myers, Manheim Route 1, was jailed for issueing a worthless check. Ziegler Wyliga, 38, town, was arrested for drunken driving. David A. Miley, 70, was struck by a truck and killed in front of his home at Paradise. The Ionian Singers, an all Ameri- can Quartet, will give a concert at Elizabethtown College Jan 30. While a man near Lancaster was absent from his home Christmas, boys broke fifteen window panes. Wm. Reed Harrison, 56, of Lan- caster, was the 57th person to be killed in the county during 1940 by an auto. rrr Qs TWO CARS COLLIDED HERE XMAS MORNING On Christmas morning at 1:45 A. M., a Chevrolet sedan, driven by Geo. J. Bauman, of Enhaut, going east ‘on Main street, collided with a car operated by Geo. Leaman of this place. Both cars were badly dam- aged. Bauman was prosecuted by Chief Zerphy, on a reckless driving charge, before Squire Hendrix. er of Elizabeth- at Harrisburg HE WAS “PICKLED” HERE ON CHRISTMAS DAY Albert Wagner, Asbury Park, N. J., was arrested by Chief of Police Elmer Zerphy, for drunk and dis- orderly conduct on Christmas Day. He was taken before Justice of the Peace Arthur Hendrix and in de- fault of ten dollars fine and costs was committed by Hendrix to the county prison for a period of ten days. THE WEATHER WAS IDEAL The weather around here was be- | yond a doubt, the finest Christmas | day we can remember in years. The | sun was bright the temperature around 50 and it reminded one of 2 | Spring day. SU | FIRST TOBACCO SALES The first tobacco Sales in the co- mediate hearing he gave bail for |been cofined to his bed with illness | unty were reported around New court. Simpson admitted his license [for the past month, is improving | Providence where several crops were was revoked two years ago. slowly. sold at 10 and 11 cents thru. ‘Miss Heisey Given Party On Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Heisey Rh:ems, entertained at a party cently in honor their Geraldine, who celebrated her tecnth birthday anniversary. The guests included: Mr. and Mrs ey, Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Dorothy Arnold Ruth Sip- ‘ling, Bertha Singer, Bernice, Nancy and Doris Ginder, Edna Brandt | Jean and Sara Jane Brandt, Dorothy Gibble, Evelyn Eshleman, Dorothy Jeanette, Thelma and Ruth Heiszy Mildred Gibkle, Virginia Pyle, Lu- rene EBringcer, Joanne McCauley, Hel- en Stephens, Jean Heisey, Kathryn Firma Lehman, Elva S Turn to Page 2) re- of daughter six- andl, Murphy, olen- House Afire, Mayt'wn Lady Is Burned Mrs. Joseph Ney, Maytown, was burned slightly about the hands while attempting to fight a fire which damaged her heme and en- dangered the lives Ler three children about 2 p. m, Monday. Abandened railroad ties that were being burned in the furnace created an intense heat and set fire to cloth- ing hung over an open register to dry, according to firemen. Mrs. Ney first attempted to smother the flames and was burn- ed about the hands. Unable to stop the fire removed her three children from the house, The May- town, Marietta and Mount Joy fire companies responded and saved the dwelling, The front portion of the home was damaged. Firemen estimated the damage to the contents at $300 and the dam- age to the house at $1,000. They said the house is insured, but the contents were not. sneer A A rn H. L. RUPP, HARRISBURG SUCCEEDS RALPH DUNCAN The Mount Joy Borough School board, at a special meeting, inter- viewed and appointed Henry L Rupp, Harrisburg, to the position of science teacher in the borough high school. Rupp, a graduate of Shippens- burg State Teachers college and a former teacher in the Harrisburg schools, succeeds Ralph Duncan, whe was appointed to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Capt C. E. Stauffer, now stationed with the National Guard at Camp Pen- dleton, Virginia, Duncan recently tendered this resignation to take effect immediately. of she Former Teacher Here Promoted To Army Captain The many friends of Mr. Carry] Stauffer, until quite recently a mem- ber of the faculty of Mount Joy High School will be pleased to learn that he was promoted to the rank of Captain. Word to that effect was received by his mother Mrs Barbara Stauffer, at Columbia. Capt. Stauffer is in command of Battery F., 13th Coast Artillery, stationed at Camp Pendleton, Vir- ginia, Capt. and Mrs. Stauffer and their son, Shannon, have been in Virgi- nia for the past several months. While in town he resided in the Newcomer property opposite the Bulletin office. EVANGELISTIC SERVICES AT MT. PLEASANT CHURCH A series of Evangelistic will begin at the Mt. Pleasant church Sun, Jan, 5. The Rev. C. H Moyer, of Elizabethtown will be the evangelist. Everyone cordially invited to attend. Umit ee SCHOOL TEACHER RESIGNS Luther Ulrich, teacher at the Sil- ver Springs, tendered his resigna- tion effective January 2 to accept another vosition. He will be suc- ceeded by Benjamin Weaver, who has been er at Musser’s school for the past ‘welve years. services is An Express Of Appreciation ion Elsewhere in the columns of The Bulle- tin, a news item appears concerning a gift of approximately $20,000.00 from a citizen of Mount Joy te the school districts of Lancaster County. Never before in its long and glorious history has our com- munity experienced such a thrill. At this very minute with Europe torn by the tragedies of another great war and the entire world seemingly gripped by barbarism, a man from Mount Joy, Penn- sylvania, whe has an unwavering faith in the democratic way of life and whose philosophy of living must have come from the inspirations given us by Christ, Him- self, in His Sermon On The Mount, steps forward te give of his time, energy and savings to those upon whom will come the leadership of our great country and in whom the hope of our nation lies, the boys and girls of America. In designating the school districts of Lancaster County as the recipients of the income from his business, this outstand- ing citizen is embodying in practice what many claim to be the right thing to da, but. who because of the lack of courage of their convictions, never do it. It is addi- tional evidence of the sterling character of the donor who has never left an oppor- tunity slin bu to help these who are will- ing ‘to help themselves. It is, therefore, fitting and proper that we salute you, Mr. Clarence Schock, as a man among men, o loyal citizen whose love and service for others come first and whose life itself was lived so that others will enjoy their lives more abundantly. Again, from the bottom of our hearts we gratefully express our sincere thanks for thie humanitarian act and extend to you and Mrs. Schock our best wishes for con- tinued happiness throughout the new very and for many more years to come. Misc Marion Nolt Of Landisville To Broadcast Miss Marion Nolt, will participate in a radio broadcas’ from Washington, D. C. at 12:3" o'clock Saturday afternoon, in a pro- the Service re- of Landisville gram by Federal! Agricultural Extension lating to 4-H work planned in the nation during 1941. othe: farm youths from West Virginia an” Pennsylvania will have part in the Station WGAL, Lancaster broadcast. sponsored Several prog will carry ram. the Marion , member of the senio: class at the Landisville High School is president of the Girls’ 4-H Clut Council of Lancaster County. She has had of experience in club work under the direction of Miss Anne Fort economics representative, and last summer attended the 4-H leader- skip school held at State College RICIIARD RICE WAS ARRESTED HERE Tuesday evening at 6:30 p. a hit and run accident occurred on New Haven Street here. Richard Rice, Marietta street, was prosecuted before Justice of the Peace Hendrix charged by Irvin Smith Jr. for scene of an accident. Ee Re ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Mr. Chas Dillinger, North Par- bara Street, announces the engage- ment of his daughter, Elsie May, to Mr. Clyde Brill of Marietta, Pa. No date has been set for the wedding. sl A Ai HE WILL BE 70 We want to congratulate our vet- eran townsman, Mr. Clinton Eby, on North Barbara St., who will cele- brate his 70th birthday anniver- a eight years bes, local home nm. failing to stop at the sary on Saturday, January 4th, The £ Annual Fire Report For 1940 Appended is the annual revort of Mr. Ray Myers, Chief of Friend- ship Fire Company No. 1, of this place: The answered calls during the year; 19 were in the country and 8 in the borough. The value of property endangesr-= ed by fire during the year, $72,158 Damage to property $26,101. Of that amount the borough. The total amount of property saved by the firemen was $46,049. The value of property saved in the borough was $132%4. he following calls were answer- ed by the company: Dwellings 8, chimney fire 5, garage 1, brooder house 1, grass 1, dump 1, automo- bile 3, bridge 1, barns 2, green- house 1, washhouse 1, hay in barm 1, false 1. The company miles, used 30812 gals gals. oil, laid 6050 ft. and 1,950 ft. year. This is a very creditable report, and we congratulate the firemen for their good work thruout the year. on company was traveled 14815 gasoline, 18 2% in. hosa 3% ft. hose during the AA AR ns mes W. MAIN ST. PROPERTY SOLD AT PRIVATE SALE Mr. Charles M. Eshleman, of Eliza~ bethtown, cold the two and one-half story frame house at 225 West Main, street, Mt. Joy, to Phoebe Barto, at private terms. Immediate possession was giz and the house will be conve . into two 3-room apartments.= Spain fearsits | te will be 80 2 $5,006.00 was “in