You Have The Connecting Link Between The Wise Merchant And The Judicious Ce Mount Joy Bulletin [AN EDITORIAL After many requests for suggestions on a suitable and ap- propriate memorial for veterans of World War 11, the consensus of opinions centered on improvement of our Boro Park. At a recent meeting of our Memorial committee, the subject was dis- cussed and it was the general impression that marked park im- provements would, for the present, have serious consideration, even to the extent of raising a $50,000 fund for the purpose. Since all of the above, several news items which appeared in last week's Bulletin, may, to some extent put a different as- pect on the Park proposition. A SUGGESTION It is the writer's privilege ta broadcost several suggestions for thought to Boro Council, our Town Planning and Zoning com- mission, all our citizens and particularly the Memorial commitee, By a new realty and development company putting in an ap- pearance here, acquiring a 77-acre plot of ground nearly all of which is within the boro limits, and all of which is adjacent to the Little Chickies creek on the West, offers an opportunity to really do things in a “big way” if our citizens see fit. The Water Right The Joy Company, when it purchased the Snyder farm ac- quired a water right thru the old mill there, which extends from the State Highway North approximately several miles (following the creek) io the Boro Water Works. This water right for which the purchasers have absolutely no use, could as we understand be purchased. Boro Council or the Remembrance committee, purchased same, how's this as a suggestion: First: Rebuild the dam near the Mill, making it high enough to give the citizens many bathing advantages (such as we en- joyed for many years until the dam washed out) thereby taking the place of the execution and maintenance of an expensive pool. Second: This would give us ample water for motor and sail boaling, most excellent canoeing along with skating and ice hockey in Winter. Third: There are sturdy oak, elm, buttonwood and willow trees along said stream, some of the oldest and largest in this section. We refer to Snyder's Woods. Fourth: The open field or peninsula in Snyder's woods could be converted into one cf the best athletic fields in the State. Fifth: With improvements to the creek as above mentioned, it could be stocked and would afford men, women and children excellent fishing. Sixth: There are several good springs along this stream which could be “dolled up” and which would refresh the thousands who would go there annually for their favorite recreation. Seventh: The stone dwelling adjacent toi the dam breast could very easily be converted into a recreation center, bath house, etc. Nearly all of these advantages are lacking in, our present park and it may be good business to convert our park into build- ing lots, which would be a decided financial gain to Boro Coun- cil and purchase Snyder's Woods and its water right for a boro park. There isnt a bore in this section cf the state has a possibility staring it in the face as is Mount Joy Boro RIGHT NOW. Now folks here's the suggestion—you can either take it or leave it. JULY MEETING OF FIRE CO. The July of Friendship Fire Company will be held next Thursday evening at the Fire House. Immediately after the session, a party will be held for the returned Prisoners of War, to which any member of the armed forces in Mount Florin, home on furlough, whether a mem- ber of the Company not, is in- vited to attend this party. APPROVE PAYMENTS TO FIVE SCHOOL DISTRICTS G. Harold Wagner, Auditor Gen- eral of Pennsylvania has approved totalling $6,970 five Lancaster County school districts. The money is earmarked for addi- tional teachers and additional closed meeting payments to business schools. Joy community or The districts to which the money and the amount each or was allocated, will receive, are: Manheim Township, $3,800; Den- ver Borough, $640; East Donegal Township, $1,780; New Holland Bor- ough, $550; Paradise Township, $200. ree tl Qe 1,000 ARE IDLE AT MANHEIM About 1,000 workers at the As- bestos plant at Manheim, are not working since Tuesday due to labor OVERCEILING SUITS SETTLED Each of the following paid the OPA fines of $25 each for violations: Clayton Miller, Marietta, overcharg- ed on butter, bananas and cigarets. Levi Ebersole, E'town R1 and I. B. Foreman, E'town R3, overcharges on chickens. fe emt ro CUT ON PIECE OF GLASS Jean Buller, fifteen, Florin, suf- fered a lacerated ankle when she fell on a piece of glass Sunday, cording to attendants at St. Joseph's Hospital. irouble. ee etl Qe HAD FOOT AMPUTATED Mr. Otto Dodenhoeft who was ta- ken to the St. Joseph's hospital sev- eral weeks ago, had his left foot am- putated. All In The Service Overseas Must Request Papers According to a new order issued by the Postmaster General, every member of the Armed Forces, must send The Bulletin a request if they want to continue re ceiving the paper. Fill out the attached request and mail it to The Bulletin, Mount Joy. Pa. immediately. If you fail to comply, your paper will be discontinued. ac- Date... i 1945 You are hereby requested to continue sending The Bulletin to me regularly. Yours, MOST VOL. XLV, NO. 4 East Donegal | Township School News The following awards were pre- | sented at the last assembly of the year, June 7, in the East Donegal Twp. High School. 1. The D. A.R. Good Citizen- ship Award to Lois Erb. 2. Baseball letters and certificates were presented to Harold Aungst, Lester Hawthorne, Charles Johnson, Ben Hess, Herbert Shelly; certifi- cates to Henry Weidman, Dale Ar- nold, Dwight Hess, Lehman Smith, William Walters and to the manager Richard Eshelman. 3. The Beacon Journalistic Awards | to — Dale Arnold, Helen Fletcher, | Joyce Baker, Rae Trego, Jean Ren- sel, Jeanne Martin, Glenn Hoffman, | Mary Singer, and Robert Sload. 4. Library Assistants were presen- ted with certificates—Louise Hicks, Jean Strickler, Vivian Snyder, Jean- nine Roth, Jeanne Hutchinson, Eth- el Wolgemuth, Frances Raber, Bet- | (Turn to Page £Z) { et ce tl Ae re | RELEASED FROM AIR FORCE AFTER 29 MONTHS OVERSEAS M/Sgt. Eugene Crider, twenty- | five, son of Mr. and Mrs. William K, Crider, of 34 Donegal St., his discharge with 107 points. He en- January, 1942, and 29 months received | tered service is served overseas for as a member of the B-25 greund crew with the 12th Air Force in Italy. He holds five citations. Prior to entering the service was a linotype operator at office and his job awaits him any time he feels like back to | punching the keys. — Brief News Of The Day From Local Dailies he this going Mo., 12 soldiers were killed and 28 | injured. The government furnished 446,359 | harmonicas for the Doughboys ov- erseas. Charles E. Wilson, president of | General Motors, was paid $459,000 | salary last year. The Presbyterian Synod of Penna. will be held at Wilson College, at | Chambersburg in 1946. | 5000 National Guardsmen are | getting their annual two weeks Ar- | my life at Indiantown Gap. The total number of workers idle in strikes thruout the United States today is over the 60,000. While smoking in bed at the Her- Henry Entweiler, died several | shey Hotel, was so badly burned he hours later. | Thirty sailors from Md. Naval Training working in a cannery during pea harvest. Trans-atlantic private tions, banned since 1939, permissable at $12 a call. were 100 the first 24 hours. The State Agricultural Depart- ment says a survey shows farmers are paying the highest wage in his- tory—$4.50 per day without board. The Government reported a total of 7,617,794 Nazis captured at the] end of the Over 4,000,000 of those were in prison camps when the Germans surrendered. tf ree AUTOMORILE MANUFACTURERS | MAY PRODUCE 700,000 CARS The War Production Board nounced that ten automobile com- panies had been authorized to pro- duce 241,916 cars by the end of 1945 and nearly 700,000 by the first of | next April, and indications were that these goals would be met. es DQ Ir SUGAR QUOTA IS EXHAUSTED Station, at Christiana are concersa- | are now | There | war. an- ed its quota for this month was ex- hausted June 18, and 2,500 applica- tions are unfilled with “more com- | |ing in all the time.” The Mount Joy of sugar. , | HARRY’S HOME, FOLKS Mr. Harry A. Darrenkamp, lo- turned home Wednesday afternoon has been receiving treatment for the past eleven days, When a bus hit a cow near Joplin, | | oy Emma {the | FOOD SALE SATURDAY | for tef said | it The local rationing board report- | {for Sico Company, {board's June quota was 40,000 lbs. | cal confectioner and tobacconist, re- | | day, THE -M Local Affairs In General Briefly Told John E. Keener, 31, Manor | has undulant fever. General Shannon, Columbia, cele- brated his 75th birthday. An antique foot-stool brought $22 a gale at Conestoga Center. Anna Mae Bryant, seven, was found dead in bed at her home in Marietta. It cost Ralph E. Sharp, 18, of Mari- etta, $10 for driving an auto without an operator’s: license. The Arnold Gas Station at Man- heim was broken into and robbed. Fifty dollars in cash was taken. John Emerson Douts, aged 11, of | Willow Street R1, drowned while bathing in the pool at Maple Grove. Margaret Stauffer 25, Elizabeth- fractured her right ankle tennis at Williamson twp., at town while playing Park Sunday. Raymond Delk, Flizabethtown, was and shoulders when kettle of boiling water on aged 14 months, scalded on the face, neck he spilled a himself. lille The Affairs ‘At Florin For Past Week Mr. dren, and Mrs. Ray Miller and chil- of York spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Buller. Mrs. Annie Harro and Mrs. Rich- ard Funk, of Lancaster were Tues- | de iy visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Schlegelmilch. Mrs. Samuel Crow! spent Wednes- day at Harrisburg and visited Mrs. Sue Harcleroth. Mrs. Emma Peifer spent Tuesday in Elizabethtown visiting friends. Mr. and Mrs. George Mumper Sr., spent Sunday at Bridgeport, Perry county, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Clar- nce Frye. Mrs. Lillian Hamilton is spending | {several days at Gap visiting Mr. and | «| War Memorial Here id Mrs. Ross Ammon. Mr. and Mrs. James Eichler { Franklin Eichler spent Thursday Philadelphia visiting friends. Mrs. Peifer spent Wednesday Lancaster visiting Rev. and Mrs. James Wagner and family. Mr. Mrs. Harry Grosh and | daughter, Barbara, of Midland are | visiting Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Boyer. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Musselman and daughter spent Wednesday af- at Lancaster. and ternoon INUTE WwW E Mount Tov, Pa, Atctnonn, June 28, 1945 | of Men and Women of Tomorrow some of the “Younger frey”, or the infants to be exact. They're mighty cute bunch of tricks and we offer for your approval Group four and five. a There’s many more pictures to be printed so do not miss the com- ing issues of the Bulletin. GROUP 4-5—Row 1, left to right, Harry, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Brooks, Florin; Joan, daughter of Benjamin Kaufffan and Mrs. ne at | Tuesday evening with five members To Raise $50,000 For Memorial Committee Council Chamber on War the The at of Council present in a joint meet- | ing. After much discussion the entire | group present agreed on the follow- | ing: A financial committee to be | appointed to raise $50,000 for the following purposes: | A Memorial plot in the Borough This week we bring to our group, EKLY I The Mount Joy Bulletin BA Men and Women o f Mt. Joy; and Mrs. Benjamin Clinger, Mt. Joy: Linda, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Morton, Jr., Mount Joy; Judith Ann daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Niss- ley, Mt. Joy; Mary, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Zerphey. Row two, left to right, Larry, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Jones, Mount Joy; Mary Ann, daughter of Mr. {and Mrs. R. W. Rohrer, Mount Joy; Paul, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. G. ‘Doc’ Shoop Now Heads Local Rotary Club To most people Tuesday was just another day, but to the Rotarians it was the end of another year, the end of fifty-two meetings and programs, under the leadership of our good | president, Rev. Koder, who now becomes the 19th past president of the club, Serving for those fifty-two meetings as Vice-President and the | Chairman of the program committee was Doc. Shoop, who becomes the and Mrs. J. S. Shearer, of Mr. Mr. Sharon, daughter Mrs. John Bender and Pfc. Ben- | Park, with a Bronze marker, bear- | club's twentieth president. Serving jamin Bender and wife, visited Mr. and Mrs. George Mumper Sr. on Wednesday. Mrs. John Kissinger and son, of | Buller’s. Mrs. Robert Kraybill was taken to St. Joseph’s hospital on Mon- day. Mr. Wood Samuel Crowl, of at Open and Mrs. street, entertained (Turn to page 3) ee eee EY re eens » The Higem class of the Methodist Church hold a food sale at Hosletter's Saturday, beginning it 10 o'clock. This food sale will take the place that was scheduled | will on of the supper June 30th, and was due to the present food conditions. ee etl eee EXCAVATING FOR DWELLING Mr. John Haines, extensive truck- who erected a spacious garage trucks a short distance recently, the erection of a fine postponed, er, for his large East of cavating town for modern dwelling on the west side | lot. He expects to occupy as soon as completed. CELEBRATED 68TH BIRTHDAY Mr. William Sheaffer, messenger sixty-eighth birthday on June 26th. Mr. ploy of the Sico Company for the | | past forty-four years. RE BANKS CLOSED JULY 4TH Wednesday, July 4th, a legal holi- | National | Mt. Joy Bank will be closed for the day. is now ex- | celebrated his! Tuesday, Shaeffer has been in the em- | both the First National Bank | from St. Joseph's Hospital where he |and Trust Company and the Union heim R2, a son at 12:33 p. m. Sun- MARRIAGE LICENSES | | ing the names of veterans, and trees | as a living memorial, improvements {to the Park with many more shade | trees and benches; construction of a Bainbridge | Lancaster spent Wednesday at the | swimming pool in the Park. The War Memorial committee will again meet with Council | Council Chamber on Tuesday eve- | ning, July 10th, at [ The public is invited to attend this meeting. a | AUTO USE TAX STAMPS | ON SALE AT POST OFFICE The new Auto Use Motor Vehicle Tax Stamps are now on sale at all { Post Offices. Postmaster Bennett f cz alled attention to the fact that all | cars in operation after July 1st will be required to display this new 1945 Stamp. | CLASS OF THIRTY-EIGHT Franklin & Marshall College, Lancaster, graduated a class of 38. { Among them was Lieut. James War- |ren Eshleman, this boro, bachelor of arts, who is on active duty with | the Marine Corps. eee tl A I | FREE LICENSES FOR GI's GI's can get free hunting licenses the county treasurer’s office if they have the inclination to go | Ground Hog hunting. The season opens Monday. ema — lie eimai. SO SAYETH THE COURT Harold Bruce Rineer, Mt. Joy R2, | agreed to pay $15 a week for the support of his wife, Pauline, Roths- ville, and one child. | ———- Eee BIRTHS | Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ginder, Man- at | day, at the Lancaster General Hos- ‘pi tal, ——— fa in the | | eight o'clock. | i under him as Vice-President will be Paul Stehman. | The speaker for Tuesdays meet- ing was T. T. Tompkins, Assistant Trainmaster of the Pennsylvania (Turn to page 4) ED A em — DEEDS RECORDED Frank B. Snyder and Ella Louise Snyder, his wife, Bethlehem, to Henry H. Koser, Landisville,. 79 acres in Mount Joy borough” and "Rapho Twp., $25,000. Henry H. K.oser and Annie B. Koser, his wife, Landisville, to the Joy Co., Inc., Mount Joy, 77 acres in Mount Joy borough and Rapho twp. Henry H. Koser and Annie B. Ko- ser, his wife, Landisville, to Clarence Schock, Mount Joy, tract of two acres in Mount Joy on which is a warehouse and coal trestles. | Robert F. Schroll and Maude Z. Schroll, his wife, Mount Joy, to Cal- vin R. Kramer and Jeannette Kra- mer, Mount Joy, lot in Mt. Joy. Robert F. Schroll and Maude Z. Schroll,” his ‘wife, Mount Joy, lot in Mount Joy. | tll A ea ' WORLD CHARTER SIGNED One of the greatest milestones in man’s upward climb toward a truly civilized existence was the adoption of the World Charter signed by fifty nations at San Francisco, Calif. this week. | ee ADJUDICATIONS FILED These amounts remain for distri- bution in the. following local estates: | Susan Dougherty, Mt. Joy town- ship, $10,864.39. David Sternberger, Mt. Joy Boro, $24,748.03. \ | Donald Kersey, Elizabethtown, and Orpha Heisey, Florin, LANCASTER CouNTY a ET 21. 50 a , Year in Advance — — Tomor J S. B. Long, Mt. Joy; Arthur, son. of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Schneider, Mt. Joy. Row four, left to right, James, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Dangler, Mt. Joy; Barbara, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown, Mt. Joy; El= wood Gary, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Nentwig, of Florin; and Sylvia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Emenheiser, Mt. Joy; Terry, son of H. T. Brown, of Mt. Joy; David and Mrs. L. L. Stark. Mt. Joy; son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Geib, Florin; ; Margaret, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Audrey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.;C. M. Brill, Mount Joy. Linda C. R son of Mt. and Elizabethtown. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sumpman, Mt. Joy; Bobby, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eshleman, Joy; Linda Lee, daughter of Mr. Mrs. H. M. Shields, Mt. Joy. Row three, left to right, Shirley Ann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Faus, Manheim; James, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Hockenberry, Mt. Joy; Cheryl], daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mumma, REPRESENTING FOUR GENERATIONS Ezra Souders, Mrs. Harry Geib, Arthur McGill and daughter, Jean. Mrs Mr. Alice PERSONAL MENTION S/Sgt. Robert Laurer, from California, spent at the this week Mrs. Robert Barbara at Virginia with S 2/¢ returned ADJUDICATIONS FILED The following adjudications were filed in the Orphans’ Court in these | on fur lou 8 a several day sii [1 states: ' | William township, $4,805.37 William D. Sheaffe p, $713.18. East Donegal editor's home Horner Jack Beach in R. M. Horner, from a shakedown and children, Parson, West Hempfield and spent sometime Virginia, Mount Joy who has | {owns Lewis Hall, cruise. ship, $2,048.77. see mms imran irre SUPERVISORS WERE FISHING The Supervisors of Mount Joy township, Messrs. James M. Berrier, Jacob Risser and Lloyd Risser, took a day off yesterday and went fish- They were at Rock Hall. Ce IN THE ANVY NOW Richard S. Frey and Herbert W. Young, local men, enlisted in the U. S. Naval Reserves this week, just town- Mr. Harry F. Brooks, ann this week that due to overcrowded conditions, he will not make ajy | collections for the next few wi See his ad on another page of issue. ing. RH UNDERWENT OPERATION Hubert Rice, of town, an operation at St. Joseph's al on Tuesday.