The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 12, 1942, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    
HTOWN
| St.
ne 24.R
Fri.









Bulletin Advertising Is Money Well Spent—Everybody In This Section Reads It Regular

Autoist Claims
Child Ran Into
Side (Of His Car
Mr. Horace Raymond Swarmer,
formerly of Baltimore; Md., now re-
siding at 111 W. Walnut St., Mari-
etta, and who is a Guard at the
Marietta Project, reported to Officer
Zerphey that while he was driving
toward Marietta, on Marietta Ave.,
Mt. Joy., at 2:50 P. M. Thursday
afternoon, Charles Bowman Miller,
aged four years, ran into the side of
his car.
Dr. W. M. Workman removed the
child to the General Hospital, where
he was discharged by Dr. Atlee on
Tuesday and taken to his home in
Eershey.
The child is a son of Mr. and Mrs
Charles H. Miller, of Hershey..
mt 4
SPECIAL MEETING OF B. & L.
A special meeting of the Mount
Joy Building and Loan Association
was called last Friday evening for
the purpose of considering several
applications.
Four applications were presented
and approved at this time. The
regular monthly meeting was held
last night.
Yn
Fire Company
Nominates
Officers
Friendship Fire Company met in
regular monthly session last Thurs-
day evening with forty-two mem-
bers in attendance.
An important feature of the
meeting was the plans made by the
company for the Victory Scrap
Drive to be made on Saturday,
November 14th. All monies derived
from this campaign will be given
te the Fire Company to help pay
the indebtedness on the new fire
engine,
The entertainment
turned over $58.03 as
profit for the month.
The ticket committee reported
good success in the sale of Victory
Bond tickets.
The company rejoined the Nat-
ional Fire Protection Association

committee
their total
and will receive the association
magazine,
The uniforms of the
company
will be cleaned by J. G. Eicher rly.
(Turn to Page 5)
Vv
SEEKS A DIVORCE
Susan Campbell Schatz, Center
Square, Marietta, vs. Russel C.
Schatz, Marietta, subpoena for di-
vorce on the grounds of desertion;
married October 3, 1931, separated
June 7, 1937.
—Y
All New Farm
Machinery Frozen
Effective Nov. 1
All new farm machinery and
equipment except repair parts have
been frozen as of November 1 un-
der Temporary Rationing Order B
announced by Secretary of Agri-
culture Claude R. Wickard, accord-
ing to James E. Walker, Chairman
of the USDA State War Board for
Pennsylvania. The order will re-
main in effect until state and county
quotas are established as a basis for
a permanent rationing order.
The freeze order covers two main
types of farm machinery. The first
—Schedule I—includes most of the
heavier labor-saving machines
which are important as a result of
the farm labor shortage. Dealers,
distributors, and manufacturers,
under the freeze order, may notsell
or transfer any of the 144 items
listed in this schedule.
The second — Schedule II—in-
cludes miscellaneous items of farm
machinery and equipment, general-
ly requiring less metal in manufac-
ture. The order will stop transfer
(Turn to page 3)
—
CARD PARTY TONIGHT
St. Mary’s Catholic Church will
hold a card party, tonight (Thurs-
day) at 8:30 o'clock at the home of
Mr. and Mrs, Paul Frank, Wood
Street, Florin. Pinochle and 500
will be played.




Ve
REV. JNO. L. BRUBAKER
IS SLIGHTLY IMPROVED
The condition of Rev. John L.
Brubaker, of Florin, who fell down
a hay hole last week, is slightly
improved at this writing. He is in
the Lancaster General Hospital.
MO ST
UP -TO
The Mount Joy Bulletin
WE
EK.LY I N
LANCASTE
R COUNTY



VOL. XLII, NO. 24
Mount Tos, Pa Thursday November 12, 1942
$1. 50 a Your | in _ Advance

Registration
Of Tires On
Nov. 19-20
Motorists from ten Central Penn-
caster counties, including Lan-
caster county, will register their
tires on November 19th and 20th,
with the exception of Columbia and
Lancaster city.
At the same time the rationing
officials were told that the supply
of tires to be rationed is growing
smaller.
At registration centers, motorists
will list serial numbers on every
tire owned by themselves or fam-
ily members. Passenger car owners
with more than five tires for each
vehicle are required to dispose of
the excess tires by November 21.
They may be sold to the govern-
ment through Railway Express of-
fices, it was pointed out.
Registrants To Get Records
(Turn to page 3)
v
VETERAN HUNTERS
RECEIVE LICENSES
Three veteran hunters have ap-
plied and have received hunting
licenses this season in the county
treasurer’s Office, Officials said they
are the oldest men to apply for li-
censes for the past several years.
The men are: Samuel Adams,
Negro, ninety-eight, Landisville;
Samuel Walker, eighty-three, Lan-
caster R. 5, and John M. Sweigart,
eighty-three, Elizabethtown R. 1.
Asks Men Over
65 Ta Help On
Penna. Farms
State Secretary of Agriculture,
John H. Light, has asked Pennsyl-
vanians over 63 years of age to
ease the farm labor shortage by
volunteering their services.
“Pointing out that no source of
farm labor can be overlooked,”
Light said, “they could contribute
greatly to the solution of the prob-
lem’ even though they cannot be-
expected to carry a great portion of
the tremendous load.”
His comment followed appeals
sent to 72,000 Pennsylvanians over
65 now receiving Federal old age
insurance to enlist in farm labor
ranks wherever possible.
The Department of Public As-
sistance said it has been “giving
every encouragement’- to the phy-
cically qualified of the 96,500 per-
sons over 65 now obtaining State
assistance.
H. Raymond Mason, State em-
ployment director, added that per-
sons receiving old age assistance
would not lose the income if they
obtained farm jobs since agricul-
ture is exempt from Social Security
provisions.




Vv
BILLY BATES CELEBRATED
HIS FLEVENTH BIRTHDAY
A birthday surprise party was
held for Billy Bates on Tuesday
evening, Nov. 10th, in honor of his
eleventh birthday.
An enjoyable evening was spent
by the following Jean Wagner,
Nancy Mumper, Betty Gutshall,
Faye Gutshall, Marion Breneman,
Shirley Schofield, Cyrus Piefer,
Joseph Cover, Johnand Carl Krall,
Frank Tyndall, George . McCue,
John Hershey, Edward Pennell, Bill
and Leroy Bates.
Vee
REMOVED TO HOSPITAL
Mr. Clarence Grissinger, was re-
moved to the General Hospital by
ambulance on Tuesday morning.





ATTENTION, PLEASE!
Registration for the Red Cross
Home Nursing course is still
open to anyone in Mount Joy
and vicinity desiring this in-
struction.
This course is sponsored by
the Red Cross ant is free to all
interested persons.
Actual class work will begin
next Wednesday evening, Nov-
ember 18th, at 7:30 P. M. in the

Mount Joy High School Building.







WM. M. WORKMAN JR.
Who has recently received his
commission as a second Lieutenant.
Last week’s Bulletin contained the
complete news item,

ANNIVERSARY DINNER FOR
MR. AND MRS. AARON HEISEY
A Golden wedding anniversary
surprise dinner was given in honor
of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Heisey, at
their home on Donegal Springs
Road, on Saturday.
Those present were: Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Heisey and daughter, Beu-
lah, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fahringer
and daughters, Anna Ruth and
Eunice, Mrs. Katie Heisey, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Oberholtzer and children,
Arthur and Janet, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Heisey ar{l son, Bernell,
Mrs. Maggie Wolgemuth, Mr. and
Mrs. John Melhorn and Misses
Mary and Ethel Heisey.
wv
MOTORIST SUCCUMBS OF
SKULL FRACTURE
Herman Nestler, 25, Elizabeth-
town R1, died at 12:10 a. m. Sunday
in the ambulance of the Good Sa-
maritan Hospital, Lebanon, while
enroute to the hospital following
an auto accident in Annville,
According to Chief of Police
Charles R. Ristenbatt, of Annville,
an auto operated by Nestler and
one operated by Eli Kline, sixty,
Annville, collided head-on at the
intersection of Mill and Main St.
The officer said both men were a-
lone at the time and that Kline was
only slightly injured.
V ——
Mortuary
Record In
This Section
Mrs. Clara Kissinger, 67, died at
Manheim.
Amanda Stewart, 14, East Earl,
R1, died of typhoid fever.
Chas M. Reiling, 75, former court
stenographer, Lancaster, died Tues-
day.
Carl C. Blotten, 49, bricklayer,
Marietta, died at St. Joseph’s Hos-
pital.
Rev. Wm. H. Bond, 50, rector of
St. Paul's Episcopal church at Man-
heim, died yesterday.
Mrs. Tacie Stanley, widow of
Richard Stanley, died at the Ma-
sonic Homes, Elizabethtown.
John Spickler, 59, of Elizabeth-
town R. 3, died Thursday at the
Lancaster General Hospital after a
week’s illness.




Paul .Wittle Baker
Paul Wittle Baker, one month old
son of P. W. Baker and Ruth Flow-
ers Baker, died at 10 a. m. Sun-
day at the Lancaster General Hos-
pital. Besides his parents, he is
survived by his maternal grand-
parents, Samuel Flowers, Florin,
and Mrs. Christian Aston, Mt. Joy;
and his paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy L. Baker, Florin.
Vv
C. S. FRANK & BRO. SALE
On Tuesday afternoon, November
17, C. S. Frank & Bro., will have sale
of 35 head of Potter & Tioga Co.
cows, 200 pullets, 12 registered cows
arid a few good heifers.
Vv
MARRIAGE APPLICATION
Eugene G. Carper, Manheim RI,
and Blanche Ibaugh, Salunga.
John Hawthorne, Mount Joy and





Margaret Greenly, Elizabethtown.
Ev’rybody Ev'ry Pay Day|

16,000,000 Women Enrolled in War Savings
Payroll Plan,

WASHINGTON, D. C.—Women At
War Week, opening Nov. 22, during
. which women will seek to sell the greatest single week’s volume of War
Bonds and Stamps will serve to put
the spotlight on the mighty contribu-
tion women generally are making toward financing the war.
Six million women are on War Savings payroll plans.
“deductions total $70,000,000.
The customers of 300,000 newspa-
per boys who have sold more than
$50,000,000 in War Bonds and Stamps
are mostly women.
Volunteer saleswomen run nearly
all the Bond booths in theatres from
Maine to California. They also are
sparking the War Bond sales in re-
tail stores.
Ralph G. Engelsman, Associate
Field Director of the payroll savings
section of the War Savings. Staff,
readily admits that without the sup-
port of women the phenomenal rec-
ord of payroll savings enrollments
would not have been achieved. Pay-
roll savings plans are now in opera-
tion in 148,000 businesses and fac-
tories. Employees of twenty-five
thousand of these firms are convert-
ing at least 10 percent of gross pay-
rolls into War Bonds every payday.
Associate Field Director Engels-
man says that women have contrib-
uted directly and indirectly toward
this record. When a man devoted 10
or more percent of his pay envelope
to War bonds, the woman at home
has had a powerful voice in the de-
cision. Her planning, her economies
and her cheerfulness play their part
in the success of payroll savings.
The Treasury Department is count-
ing upon this woman influence in its
current campaign to “top that 10
percent by New Year's.” By the
first of the year the Treasury hopes
to enroll at least 3,000,000 women
Their monthly

‘This Is My Fight Too’




Proud of her investment in the Ameri-
can way of life and equally proud of the |
grime of war production on her face and
arms, the young lady in this “Women At ,
War Week’’ poster symbolizes two of the
chief activities of women at war.
and 5,000,000 more men with total
deductions for War Bonds over the

workers in a payroll savings plan
10 percent mark,


Local Draft
Classifications
By No. 1Board
Class 1-A
Paul Richard Diffenderfer, R. D. 2,
Manheim.
Cloy Miller Hoffer, General
livery, Rome, New York.
Glenn Harold McKonly, 414 Main
De-
John Steven Dutt, 138 S. Grant
St., Manheim.
Marlin L. Frey, 73 S
Manhesm.
Robert Grant Reese,
Street, Elizabethtown.
Richard Bernard Young, 1326 South
. Hazel Street,
27 Locust
51st Street, Philadelphia.
Joseph Sylvester Ebersole, 159 N.
Poplar Street, Elizabethtown.
Wilbur H. Stark, 62 S. Grant St,
Manheim,
Class 1-C
James Andrew Smith, 56 S. Char-
lotte St., Manheim.
(Turn to Page 5)
Vv


NEW NAVY RECRUITS
Yesterday another group of Navy
recruits left Lancaster for assign-
From this locality were: Frank
F. Schneider, and Clayton S. Hick-
ernell, of town; Earl W. Hecht,
Marietta, and Paul S. Shank, Man-
heim, Route 1.
ent.

Local Affairs
In General
Briefly Told
A new Rotary club was organized
at Ephrata with 18 members.
45,000 residents of Lancaster Co.
will pay income tax this year,
Two hunters from Kissel Hill,
Street, McSherrystown. ford kagged two wild turkeys up-state.
David Brandt Bucher, Shadfor : d
Apts., 1900 Derry St, Harrisburg. Fi Ruins yi Buk i a
Glenn Sewell Hartman, 711 pire hear ai boro.
St., Lancaster. Raver Miller shot a Red Fox
Charles Franklin Morningstar, 453 [while hunting on the Carl Schatz
E. Market St, Marietta. farm last week.
Geiss Bony uns i 125 New Mr. Frank Brian, of town, was
Roy Hessel Weidman, R. D. 2,|taken suddenly ill at his home on
Manheim, Tuesday morning,
At a public sale in Lancaster, a
4-inch cream pitcher sold for $90.50
and a dozen saucers sold at $4 and
$5 apiece.
Ruth Mae Caldwell, 17, of East
Petersburg, left for church the oth-
er evening and since then has not
been seen or heard of.
Vv


GRANTED A DIVORCE
Charles T. Becker, Mount Joy R.
2, received a decree from Erma G.
Heisey Becker,
the grounds of desertion.
were
separated February 10, 1940
Elizabethtown, on
They
married June 24, 1939 and


Vv
WILLS RECORDED
Lizzie O. Gibble, Rapho Twp. per-
sonal property estimated at $500.00
real estate $4,000.00; estate to kin.


ompany

Help our Friendship Fire Com-
pany of Mount Joy in our drive for
Scrap Metal - - - - This is the last
scrap drive of this year.
Our
scrap to keep our steel mills going.
Remember we cannot let the boys
down. We Must Win This War.
Over seventy Firemen have already
been called into the Service to de-
fend and win victory for our people
and Freedom for the Whole World.
With so many of our active mem-
bers called into Service we ask
you to help get this scrap in. Have
it ready for Saturday the 14th.
It will serve a three-fold pur-
pose, it will help our service boys
Government needs more


Friendship Fire
's Scrap
Drive Starts Satur.
win this fight, it will help the fire-
men pay a debt for equipment you
might need and it will mak» your
farm look neater and well kept
when unused metal is removed.
Co-operate - - - Help your local
Fire Company. They receive all the
money derived from the sale of this
scrap. Help us pay off the indebt-
edness for equipment purchased for
our communities protection in this
crisis. Mr. Citizen and Mr. Farm-
er - - - you owe an obligation to
your Government to help win this
war and this is one way to help do
your part in this struggle for Free-
dom.
Salvage Committee
Friendship Fire Company
WINFIELD K. ZERPHEY
COMPLETES HIS TRAINING
U. S. Naval Training Station,
Newport. R. I, Nov. 7th Winfield |
K. Zerphey, 18 of 160 Maven
Street, Mount Joy, son of Mr.
Mrs. Winfield Zorphey, Gea
at thig Station and will attend a
school for Radiomen,
Zerphey was graduated this year
from Mount Joy High School,
where he was on the soccer, bas-
ketball and baseball teams. He has
worked as heel seat laster for the
Gerberich-Payne Shoe Company.
A Radioman must be able to
operate Navy radio transmitting
and receiving equipment; maintain
and care for radio batteries; send
and receive on all frequencies used
by the Navy; encipher and deciph-
er Navy code messages; adjust and
repair radio direction finders and
sound equipment; understand basic
operating principles of all Navy
radio and electrical equipment.
Vv
Home Nursing
Class Organized
Monday Night
An organization meeting
Red Cross Home Nursing
was held in the High School on
Monday evening.
An explanation of the various
rhases of the work was given by
Mrs. Ralph Walters, the instructress.
Twelve two hour classes, a total of
twenty-four hours work, with pass-
ing grades are required to receive
the Home Nursing certificate.
With present conditions demand-
ing the services of doctors and
nurses it is vitally important that
more women are capable of tending
the members of their own family,
or helping their neighbor, in time
of illness that does not require
regular professional care.
The practical knowledge gained
through this course is well worth
the small amount of time necessary
to acquire it. You owe it to your-
self, your family and your country
to prepare for emergencies.. Class-
es start next Wednesday, you can
still enroll.


of the
course
es ce
War Bond Dance -
On Thanksgiving Eve
A $100 War Bond dance will be
held on Thanksgiving Eve, Novem-
ber 25th, at the Moose ballroom,
Lancaster. The dance at which
dress will be informal, is sponsor-
ed by the “Minute Women” of the
War Bond committee, of which
Mrs, Hostetter and Mrs. C. Dudley
Armstrong are co-chairmen.
All citizens in Mount Joy and
vicinity who plan to attend the
party are urged to notify the local
minute women, Mrs. Clarence
Newcomer, on South Market St.
(Turn to Page 6)
Vv
ANOTHER DEER KILLED
NEAR ELIZABETHTOWN
A wounded deer was found lying
on the Harrisburg pike near the
entrance to the State Hospital for
Crippled Children at Elizabethtown
by a group of men at 10:15 p. m
Friday.
They called Justice of the Peace |
Lester Weidman, of Elizabethtown,
who after finding that its back and
a leg were broken, shot the animal.
It was a buck, weighing slightly
more than 100 pounds,
The carcas was turned over to
the hospital.
The deer was struck at. thé same
spot as one ten days ago.
A




completed his basic Naval training |
_ Profit of $1 18
: Realized From
Victory Party
The committee for the Victory
Card party held at the Washington
School at Florin on Friday, wishes
to thank everyone who assisted and
donated toward the success of the
party, all proceeds were given to
the War Remembrance Committee
fn this place.
Mrs. John Bender
lamp, as a door prize and Mr. Oliver
Snyder a Victory Bond.
Winners at cards were: Bridge,
Mr. Isaac Morris, Mrs. C. R. Gil-
bert, Oliver Snyder, Mrs. George
Brown II, Andrew Ricker, Daisy
Ricker, C. R. Gilbert, Mrs. Lee For-
rey.
500 - Mrs. Bard Buller, Eva Reig-
le, Elsie Lefevre, H. Roy Nissley,
John Masterson, Mrs. Wm. Hendrix,
Mrs. H. Roy Nissly and Clara Esh-
leman.
Pinochle - Calvin Kramer, How-
ard Barnhart, Mildred Zerphey,
Omar Groff, Anna Mumper, Henry
Farmer, Mrs. James Pennell, Wm.
Hendrix, Norman Mateer, Miriam
Ellis, Frank Germer, Mrs. Burle
Schofield, Mrs. John Zeller, John
Wittel, Dorothy Stauffer, Mrs. C. S.
Frank, Luther Hess, Mrs. C. B. Hol-
linger, Caroline Groff, Dorothy
Zerphey, John Reigle, Harold
Schneider and Dewey Kunkle.
Hearts - Mrs. Barnhart.
Seniors To Present
“The Tower Room
Mystery”, Nov. 19th
“The Tower Room Mystery’, a
three-act mystery farce by Robert
St. Clair, will be presented by the
senior class Thursday, November 19,
at 8 o'clock, in the high school
auditorium. It is a Northwestern
production.
Miss Catharine Zeller is direct-
ing the production and is being as-
sisted by a student, Emma Reigle.
The cast of characters includes:
Jack Chalice, who inherits a haunt-
ed castle, Bill Leib; Kate Chalice,
Jack's sister, Joanne Brown; Myra
Vernon, a girl Betty
Boyd; Kennedy Elsworth, a young
writer engaged to Kate. David Ris-
ser; Matilda, an old servant with a
(Turn to page 3)
Vv
CELEBRATES HIS 75TH
BIRTHDAY ON FRIDAY
Mr. Samuel F. Eshleman, on West
received a


of mystery,


Donegal $St., will celebrate his
seventy-fifth birthday on Friday,
November 13th.
We join his many, many friends
in wishing him congratulations.
He was honored at a dinner, at
his home on Suniay.
Attending were: Mrs. S. F. Esh-
leman, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Esh-
leman and son James, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Eshleman, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Watt and sons, John and
James, Mrs. Katie Eshleman, of
town, and Miss Ella Eshleman, of
Manheim.
v
ARRESTED FOR STEALING
GASOLINE IN THE BORO
Having


received several com-
N. Barbara Street.
He confessed to stealing gasoline
four times within the past three
ent were
secretary,
tary, Parsons; treasurer, Vogel and
fifteen members.
ed as
God Minister,
C. R. Robson,
Congregational
prayer,
School Band's Scrap
Drive Wednesday
Was A Big Success
The School Band's Victory
Drive far surpassed all e
on Wednesday afternoon.
rags and rubber was piled almost
high as the theatre marquee.
Approximately 750 adults
children were admitted to th
theatre after donating 1,300 lbs
lbs. of scrap that netted $53.59.
total of 11,040 lbs.
that made a net profit of $79.59.
The band, fully
band fund.
V
RHEEMS P. T. A. MEETING

ing at the School House.
Election of officers,
iod.
Sportsmen
Admit Nine
New Members
The monthly meeting of the
Sportsman’s Association of Mount
J was held Monday, November
9 at the Legion Home. Those pres-
vice president, Bailey;
Pierce; financial secre-
The nomination of officers result-
follows:
Mr. Charles Vogle was elected for
three years on the Board of direct-
ors to replace Roscoe Hassinger.
It was voted that we contribute
$10 to the Community Remember-
ance Committee for the
boys in
(Turn to Page 5)
V ——

WILL DEDICATE SERVICE
FLAG HERE SUNDAY P. M.
A service flag will be dedicated
to the boys in the armed forces by
the
Street,
ternoon at 2:30 P. M.
residents of West Donegal
Mount Joy, on Sunday af-
Rev. H. M. Mumper, Church of
will speak and Rev.
of the Evangelical
church will offer
You are invited.

The Affairs
At Florin For
Past Week
Pvt. Elmer Wittle is spending a
ten days furlough at his home.
Mrs. Lillian Hamilton celebrated
her birthday on Wednesday.
Mrs. N. E. Hershey attended the
funeral of Mrs. Walter Hoffman last
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Garber, of
Carlisle, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. A. D. Garber.
Miss Sara Hershey returned to
Philadelphia Monday after spend-
ing the week end with her parents,
Private Albert Forry, of New
plaints that some one was stealin ate
gasoline in the Borough, oh River, North Carolina is spending a
Zerphey made an investigation few days with his mother, Mrs,
which resulted in the arrest of Edna Forry.
Paul H. Ickes, 19, residing at 105 Mr. Jacob Landvator and daugh-
ter, Barbara and housekeeper, Mrs.
(Turn to Page 6)
V mre


weeks, and was prosecuted on Sat-

AWARDED SERVICE PINS
Service pins were awarded to
mothers or the next of kin of sol- |
diers of the Marietta area at al
Armistice Day celebration on Wed- |
nesday evening at the Marietta
High School. The program, open |
to the public was sponsored by the
Marietta Legion Post.
Vv
LANDISVILLE HOUSE SOLD |
A 2%-story property in Landis- |
ville, owned by Benjamin H. Lovg,|
was sold at public sale Tuesday
afternoon to Mary G. Greider, Lan-
disville, for the sum of $4,980. Ed- |




J
gar F. Funk was the auctioneer. |
| urday,
by Officer Zerphey before |
TWO PROSECUTIONS
Chief of Police Elmer Zerphey
Soins Hendrix. In default of $300 prosecuted Irvin Rubin, of Phila-
sail, he
Count vy
was
prison for Court.
—_—V
UNION THANKSGIVING
SERVICE WED. NOV. 25
i
i
|

committed to the |delphia for improper passing. Ru-
| bin paid the fine and costs of $12.25,
Roy Miller, of York, was also
prosecuted for speeding in a large
[tr ruck and will be summoned for a
The Union Thanksgiving Service | hearing before Squire Hendrix.
will be held in the United Brethren
Church on Wednesday evening,
November 25th, at 7:30 P. M. |
Rev. C. B. Segelken will deliver |
| the sermon and there will be an- |
thems by the Union Choir.
Vv
It’s just a season's throw from
the wood pile to the ice-box.



tle as assistants.

v

ON PAYROLL COMMITTEE

The committeemen for the pay-
roll committees thruout the count
have been announced. For the Bj
Joy District Charles D.
Chairman with Nevin G. Bachr,
Carl E. Shaeffer, and John K. _

 



Scrap donations, the entrance fees
to the special matinee, began arriv-
ing early Wednesday morning ‘and
by one-thirty a mountain of metal,
rags that brought $26.00 and" 9,740
or 5% tons,
marched to the theatre led by three
boys bearing a huge banner con=
cerning the Victory Salvage Drive,
All monies derived from this cam=
paign will be turned over to the
On Friday evening, November 28,
the Rheems Parent Teachers Assoc-
iation will hold their monthly meet-
interesting
program, followed by a social per=
president Charles
Bailey and Roy Sheaffer; vice pres-
ident, George Peirce; recording sec-
retary, Alvin Koser and Charles
Titus; financial secretary, Richard
Parsons; treasurer, Roscoe Hassing-
er.