- Advertising that “Pulls” Must Be Placed in a Paper with Reader Interest — Around Here Everybody Reads the Bulletin — ’Nuf Sed C of C Will Centennial Nineteen fifty-one will be Cen- tennial Year for the Chamber of Commerce. Not only that, The Mount Joy Bulletin will celebrate its Golden Anniversary along about the same time. The Chamber will celebrate May 27 to 30. The Bulletin will celebrate the end of its fiftieth vear (under the same personnel and those years) June management all 1st. The Bulletin has already started, over a year ahead of time, to make great preparations for its anniver- sary. One of, the things the Chambery is planning to do it to sell 100th Anni- versary labels for letter- cads and envelopes. These will no doubt sell for one cent a piece and ft expects all business places and industries to use them. This is the year they really want to advertise our Borough and Community. More of this will be heard of in the near future. The 100th Anniversary Commit- tee consists of the following: Lester (Turn to page 6) ll Qe The Heiseys Were Hosts At Rheems Musicale Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Scott Heisey were hosts at a Sunday afternoon mu- use on sical, April 23 at their home in Rheems. The guest of honor was Miss Geraldine Heffner, sixteen- year-old pianist of Reading, Penna. She presented program ranging from music of the seven- teenth century to that of contemp- a varied orary composers. The following program was presented: \/ Melody-Gluck-Sgambati, Pastor- ale-Scarlatti-Lansig, Gavotte in D major-Bachmason, Allegra, (Sonata op. 14 No. 1), Beethoven, Intermezzo op. 118 No. 2-Brahms, Ballads op. 118 No. 1-Brahms, Nocturne Op, 9 No. 1—Chopin, Waltz op. 69 No. 1- Chopin, Impromptu op. 29—Chopin, Arabesque No. 1—Debussy, The Spell—Bridge, Valse Brillante—Ma- na Zucca, Claire De Inne—Debus- Chop sticks with variations- Thompson. After the musicale a buffet sup- per wag served to the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. Walter Heff- ner, and sons David and Kenneth, Mrs. Heisler, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Trait, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Trait, Mr. and Mrs. Ringler, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Emore and sons Daniel and Douglas all of Reading, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lerbscher, Jr. and chil- dren Rosemary and John, Mr. and ! Mrs. W. J. Williamson, and Mrs. John D. Weaver, Lancaster, Mrs. | Alice W. Brubaker, Lawn, Mr. and | Mrs. John Leggoe and daughters Margie Sue and Dotty Ann, Rheems. rr Activities of Our Police Officer Chief of Police Park Neiss report- ed these activities the past week: Robert L. Golden, Hyndman, oper- ating a Reo truck with a 27,960 lb. load, allowed 23,000 lbs.” He was summoned for hearing before Justice of the Peace Robert Brown. Norman N. Heisey, Mount Joy R1, driving fifty mile an hour on Donegal Springs Road. Was sumi- frioned before Squire Jas. Hocken- berry for a hearing. Walter R. Kauffman, Hummels- town, charged with ignoring a red light was summoned for a hearing before Hockenberry. Mrs. Robert Lawrence, Mt. Joy R1, was arrested by Officer Neiss on a disorderly conduct charge brought by W. R. Johnson, Mt. Joy Rl. She was given a hearing before Squire Hockenberry at which time she paid the costs and the charges were dropped. sy. a DO Cer BROTHER (AND SISTER HURT ON THEIR WAY TO SCHOOL Allen Good, eighteen and his sis- ter Jean Good, fourteen, Conoy township, were injured when an auto in which they were going to school skidded and crashed into a truck near Bainbridge. Both were taken to St. Joseph's Hospital. Bulletin To Its 50th Anniversary MARVIN LANDIS HEADS THE BAINBRIDGE-MAYTOWN CLUB Club elected the officers at a recent meeting: Marvin Landis, president, Elwood Smith, vice president and | chairman of program committee; John Charles, treasurer; Lewis Dor- ward, secretary, and Wilbert Mohr, John Charles, Phares Landis, Frank Dall and George Rutherford, trus- tees. COLLAPSED IN A CAFE Mount Joy R2, was stricken ill and collapsed at Hildy’s Cafe Lancaster, summoned but the man refused medical attention. Celebrate During ‘50 Celebrate COUNTRY WILL GO ON PAST TIME SUNDAY, APRIL 30 Next Sunday, April 30, will mark the onset of Daylight Saving Time here until Sept. 30. Lancastrians will join some fifty million Americans in turning their timepieces ahead one hour next Sunday. The city, all county bor- oughs and most rural sections are expected to observe the advance. Clock-switching will be general in the heavily industrialized areas of the East and in most of the na- tion’s large cities. atl A OUI. STORE ROOM OF WOLGEMUTH INC. ENTERED BY THIEVES The Store room of Wolgemuth Inc., across the street from The Bulletin, was entered by thieves the other night. They must have been very well acquainted about the premises from the manner in which they gained an entrance. They went in an unlocked cellar door on the Delta street side of the building, then thru the cellar and up the cellar steps into the store room. Loot taken was an electric toaster, box of flashlight batteries, a radio, ete. ree ent lens cae DIVORCES ARE GRANTED L. Harold Myers, twenty-two, 250 W. Main St.,' Mount Joy, from Wil- ma Eileen Trostle Myers, twenty, 219 E. Willow St, Elizabethtown. They were married Aug. 4, 1946. Myrtle J. Snyder, nineteen, Man- heim R2, from Donald G. Snyder, twenty-five, 300 Coral St. Lancas- ter. They were married May 24, 1947. Myrtle E. Deshong, thirty-five, Elizabethtown R2, from Pleasant E. Deshong, forty-nine, Needmore, Fulton County. They were married Sept. 27, 1927. nse ll Cnt. LUTHERAN CHURCH GETS BULK OF A $6251 ESTATE Mary Feist, late of East Hemp- field Twp., left the bulk of her $6,- 251 estate to Trinity Lutheran Church of Mount Joy, according to an adjudication passed upon by Judge John L. Bowman in Orphans’ Court Thursday. The East Hempfield Twp. woman left bequests to the Church for pay- ments of salary, to the Ladies Aid Society of the Church, the Mission- ary Society, as well as the net in- come from the residue for use as the Church Council shall direct. et eee FRANK WEIDMAN PURCHASED ARTHUR MAYER'S PROPERTY Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weidman purchased the Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Mayer property on Marietta St. at private sale and on prive terms. The Weidmans will take possssion in May. Mr. and Mrs. Mayer will move to the farm they recently purchased from Guy Musselman, along the Marietta pike, at the southern boro limits. Mr. Weidman is the janitor at the High School here. eet sisi BARBARA NOLT HEADS THE SS 4-H CLOTHING CLUB Barbara Nolt was elected presi- dent of the Silver Spring 4-H Cloth- ing Club at a recent meeting in the home of Sylvia Sellers, Silver Spring. Others elected were: Daneen Webb, vice-president; Beverly Co- vert, treasurer; Barbara Ann Fas- nacht, secretary: Jeanne Gingrich, song leader; Jeanne Fisher, game leader; and Arlene Hubley, news reporter. rr Aree. The Bainbridge-Maytown Rotary rr ee GG Robert Johnson, twenty-four of ast Thursday. City police were MOST VOL. XLIX, NO. 48 UP-TO-THE-MINUTE The Mount Joy Bulletin WE EKLY I N LAANC ASTER Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, April 27, 1950 COUNTY $2.00 a Year in Advance Drive F or Funds For Memorial Day Now Under Way The Citizens Memorial Commit- tee are making great plans for our annual Memorial Day celebration. Naturally to do this, it takes a great deal of money, and the only source of revenue is from you the be solicited, and it is hoped you will give generously for this cause. This is your day, your parade and entertainment. Give as much as you can. Judge Guy K. Bard will be the speaker at ceremonies Memorial Day in the Boro Park, it was announced by the Memorial Day Committee headed by Charles Bennett, Jr. The program for the day will in- clude services at the boro cemetery at 10 a. m. conducted by the Ameri- can Legion and Veterans of For- eign Wars; a parade at 2 p. m. with prizes totaling $1,225; housing of two new fire trucks at the fire house at 5 p. m.; Judge Bard's speech at 7 p. m.; and fireworks in the Boro Park at 9 p. m. ‘Local Rotarians ‘At Dist. Confer. Held At Hershey Delegates Wilbur Beahm and Ray Wiley gave a report of the District Conference, at Hershey, April 16 to 18th, at the regular Rotary Club meeting on Tuesday. Highlights of the conference were Sunday even- ing worship service in the Hershey Theatre. The sermon was deliver- ed by Rev. H. Lewis Clark, Llanel- ly, Wales, a Rotary Foundation stu- dent, studying in New York City. Special music was rendered by the Lebanon Valley College Glee Club. On Tuesday the Conference ban- quet was held at the Hershey Park (Turn to Page 6) etl ems Excitement Over Game Played 85 Miles Away | Talk about excitement, we had it | here good and plenty Saturday af- | ternoon at Shatto’s Barber Shop. The three barbers as well as most of the patrons, are base ball fans and it is very seldom that you can’t hear a game there over the radio. The scene here was a tie game between Connie Mack’s Athletics and the Boston Red Sox. They vere in the last half of the 15th in- ning. Mack put in Paul Lehner as a pinchhitter and he smacked the first pitch into the stands for a home run, the A's winning 6 to 5. The barbers were all busy but that smash was too much for .Char- lie Roth. They tell me he let out a yell, almost jumped over the customer on the chair and came (Turn to page 5) IN STATE CHORUS FESTIVAL Fourteen student singers from your Harrisburg at the William Penn High School May 18, 19 and 20. Among those chosen was Miss Barbara Ranck, of this place and F. Samuel Nolt, of East Hempfield. rp A A A LEFT FOR WASHINGTON Forty-two members of the grad- uating class of Mt. Joy high school left Wednesday morning in two busses for a three-day sight seeing tour of Washington, D. C. They were accompanied by Prin- cipal Wilbur Beahm and Mrs. Beahm and teachers, Miss Catharine Zeller and John Day. KILLED ON HIS BIRTHDAY Gordon Kinard, thirty-two, Mari- etta truck driver, was burned to death in a tractor-trailer and a light car crash at Marysville early Tues- day morning. He was a veteran of public. In the near future, you will planned for Lancaster City and County were] chosen Sunday to sing in the All- | He was removed to the Lancaster State Chorus festival to be held in General LOCAL LEGION WILL START ACTION ON MENTAL ILL CARE Officials of the Walter S. Ebersole Post 185, American Legion, have announced that delegates to the Co. Council meeting at Elizabethtown on Friday, April 28, will present an issue to start action on the care of mentally ill and to eliminate their being placed in county prison. During a recent meeting of the post, the group voted to donate $200 to the Memorial Day Commit- tee. It was also that bids will be received for the erec- announced | tion of a neon sign along the Har- risburg Pike to designate the loca- tion of the post home. The group also accepted an invi- tation of the Salunga Fire Company fo parade in Salunga on May 27. The parade is being held to house Salunga’s new fire engine, ce St ll ones Safety Patrol Rally At Lanc. Free To Public Five acts from the Pennsylvania State Pclice Rodeo, including the trained dogs, will be featured in the big program to be staged at Wil= liamson Field of Franklin and Mar- shall College following the Annual Safety Patrol Parade in Lancaster ond. Saturday morning, May 6th. Eighteen school bands will March in the parade and will have part in the outdoor rally. The Lancaster Automobile Club, sponsor of the parade and rally has announced that the Williamson Field program, which will start as soon as the final division of the pa- rade enters the field, will be open to the public without charge. The West stands will be reserved for the marchers and the East stands will be available to the general public. In addition to the trained dogs, the State Police rodeo acts will in- clude a clown and donkey comedy sketch, trained horses, a colorful Indian drill and a balloon shooting act—all by officers from the State Police Training School at Hershey. The parade, in which more than 3.000 Safety Patrol members and their will start at 9:30 am. daylight time from Ann bands will march, and East Chestnut streets. The route will be west on Chestnut St., to College Avenue, thence along College Avenue to Williamson Field. BRR MISS BENNETT HONORED AT A KITCHEN SHOWER Miss Charlotte Bennett, East Main at a kitchen by Miss Street, was honored shower Monday evening Florence Kaylor, of town. Lace paper parasols were gestive of the shower. Guests included Mrs. Charles Bennett, Mrs. Charles Bennett Jr., Mrs. Roy Brandt, Mrs. Gene Eich- erly, Martha and Sara Chubb, Mary Buchenauer, Mrs. Alpheus Norn- hold, Mrs. Myrtle Bates, Mrs. Clar- West, Martha Reidenbaugh, Doris Rice, Mrs. Tom Bronson and "Mrs. Aldus Hannon. WP ee MAN HAD A BAD FALL Valentine Kupres, of Sporting Hill, while assisting in the construc- sug- ence tion of a two-story building, fell from the first floor to the cellar striking his head on a concrete block. Hospital where he was treated for severe head injuries and a bruised chin, and returned to his home. . COME AGAIN, REVEREND Rev. L. M. Martin, pastor of the Evangelical and Reformed church at Catawissa for the past twenty- two years, made a pleasant call at this office Friday. Rev. Martin is very’ well known here, having been a former resident. WITNESSED DOUBLE HEADER Messrs. Chas. J. Bennett Sr., Al- bert Huck Charles Roth, Harold Kulp and Russell Halbleib motored to Philadelphia Sunday where they saw the Athletics and. Boston Red Sox split a double header MARRIAGE LICENSES Walter E. Gish, of Rheems and ’ W World War II. Miss Emma E. Gantz, Mt. Joy R2. 3 Persons Hurt When Two Cars Crashed On Mon. Three persons were injured Harrisburg pike three miles East of town at 7 p. m. Monday, State Policeman Edward Maloney said. Calvin A. Shumaker, thirty-eight, Bainbridge RI1, driver, was treated at Lancaster General Hos- pital for laceration above the right eye and an injured left shoul- der. A sister, Theresa Shumaker, | forty-eight, Elizabethtown, Box 212 | was treated at the same hospital for | a bruised left arm. Pvt. Maloney said Shumaker was | driving West when he ran off the | South side of the road and in at- | tempting to regain control of the | vehicle, swerved into the Eastbound | lane, colliding with’ another vehicle driven by Harold Hollinger, seven- teen, Mt. Joy R2. Hollinger’s sister, Anna Ruth, 21, Mount Joy R2, suffered a bruised left eye but wasn’t treated at the one hospital. The Shumakers were con- veyed to the hospital by Harold Stauffer, Manheim Rl, a passing motorist. Total damage was esli- mated at around $250 by police. — Brief News From The Dailies For Quick Reading Russell Kipp, 42, Middletown, was killed when covered in a slide of powdered clay. Eastern Airlines purchased ten new ships at a cost of $18,000,000. They carry 110 passengers each. The Metropolitan Edison Com- pany is stringing a new power line across the river above York Haven. The Postoffice Department has decided that Hallam, York Co. be spelled with an ‘e’ instead of an ‘a’. Mrs. Sarah A. McIntosh, thirty- two, of New Brunswick, N. J., hang- ed herself in a tourist cabin east of Lancaster. A Representative in Washington, ordered 12 new shirts at $22.50 each. They were delivered to the wrong address and now they are lost. Forty neighbors of John K. Stoltzfus, near Churchtown, went to his farm with horse and mule teams and prepared two large fields for planting. Baltimore Markets, a chain store, | will erect a large food market on | the corner Harrisburg Ave, and Prince Sts., Lancaster on a lot 172x 410 feet recently purchased. Truck Skids Into 1 Tree Early Tuesday At Florin John Ervin Ream, twenty-seven, Westover, Md., suffered a fractured collar bone and bruises when his panel truck skidded from the Har- risburg Pike into a tree at Florin, at 2:30 a. m. Tuesday. He was ad- mitted to the General Hospital. State Policeman Joseph Reed said he learned Ream was headed east when his vehicle skidded into the tree and then rebounded onto the highway. Passing motorists who witnessed the crash assisted the in- jured driver from the truck just before a tractor-trailer; owned by York Motor Express and operated by John M. Henley, thirty-nine, of Philadelphia, crashed into the panel truck and hurled it back against the tree the second time. Police estimated damage to the panel truck at $500 and to the trac- tor-trailer at $350. ———— FIRST MEETING HELD HERE The first of four meetings to ac- quaint the operators of automobile inspection stations with state rules and regulations was held here one evening last week. | SOLD A BUNGALOW HERE . Schram Realty Co., at Lancaster, sold a bungalow on road from Mt. Joy to Donegal Springs for Rich- ard M. and Jean Stark to Arthur T. slightly in a two-car accident on the | | HENRY W. GARBER Henry W. Garber, who celebrat- ed his seventy-ninth milestone on Saturday, is a native of our boro. He is a baker by trade and for many years was employed in local | bakeries. He also worked at bak- ong in Reedsville, Pa. for some time. When the small local bakers were compelled to give way to large city bakeries, Mr. Garber took over a bread route here which he conduct- ed for forty-two years. Mr. Garber’s wife, who died sev- eral years ago, was a Miss Buch, of Manheim. To this union sons were born, Carl and Lloyd, both living with their father on West Main street. The latter is married. “Henny” is quite a baseball fan and his younger days played on local teams, pitching them to vic- tory on numerous occasions. A A Mn NViAN AND TRUCK COLLIDE, LATTER GETS THE DAMAGE It is rather difficult to believe but just the same its true. Mr. Ragnor Hallgren, one of our local dairymen, who tips the scales at over 200 and stands over six feet, was crossing the street at Harris- burg Saturday evening. Suddenly he was bumped on the shoulder but not even thrown off his stride. Ragnor at first thought a friend was saluting him but turning around discovered he was struck by a truck. A large rear vision mirror on an iron arm extending from the truck struck Mr. Hallgren as the two \ truck, passed. The mirror was com- pletely demolished and the rod bent. Ragner brushed off his shoulder and went about his business. And was that truck driver's face red? ns DR. AND MRS E. W. NEWCOMER CELEBRATE GOLDEN WEDDING Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Newcomer, E. Main street, quietly celebrated their fiftieth wedding at their home yesterday, Wednes- day, April 26th. Dr. Newcomer has been a veteri- [ | | anniversary narian here for many years and al- so served as a school director, be- ing secretary as well as a director of the First National Bank Trust Company for a long time. Both Dr. and Mrs. Newcomer are in good health. The Bulletin joins their many friends in wishing them a very happy future. ral A Willies — STATE PAID THESE DISTRICTS TUITION REIMBURSEMENTS Auditor General Weldon B. Hey- burn announced today that he has approved payments totalling $50,- 989.42 to 43 school districts in Lan- caster County for the school year | which ended July 1949. Payments are authorized by the appropriation for tuition reimbursement. These local districts and the a- mount each will receive were: and ‘Ephraim Hoffman Maytown, Was 90 Yrs. Old Sunday of the younger gen- Ephraim Hoffman, Maytown whose advice to r eration is to slow down and take it easy, celebrated his nintieth birthday on Sunday. Mr. Hoffman, a retired farmer who was born in Maytown, is a Col- lege of Pharmacy, and was a prac- druggist in Wichita, Kans, taking up county. His activity today is a daily visit graduate of the Philadelphia ticing | for | farming ten years before in Lancaster | only {to his farm, located hetween Col- 0 \ : i i umbia and Marietta, As a farmer, he grew much to- (Turn to page 3) A UU wr ‘The Local News For The Past Week Very Briefly Told Columbia boosted its sewage rates almost double. Manheim twp. is planning a $96,- | 000 loan for an addition to its schools. The Boy Scouts at Manheim col- lected seventeen tons of paper in| one day. Chas. E. Roland, Elizabethtown, reported his auto stolen while park- ed at Lancaster. James R. Rice, Marietta R1, was prosecuted at Columbia for driving too fast for conditions. Dr. Sylvester K. Stevens, State Historian, will .be Manheim’s Feast of Roses speaker June 11. Raymond Geib, 28, Elizabethtown R1, was injured when motor- cycle struck a parked car. his New safety measures are to be placed at six railroad crossings at Columbia within the next thirty days. Paul Hoover, farmer, Ephrata R2, was fined $50 and costs for chaining his 11-year old son to a tree in his] yard near Akron. On their at Lancaster Monday evening, James | M. Johnson, 22 and Gordon R. Mec- | | Columbia, were way to the movies | | Peak, 27, both killed when their auto hit a tree, of Two Elizabethtown College stu- dents were injured at 5 5 a. m. Mon-| day when their car overturned on | a curve 300 feet Hanover St. in Elizabethtown. ar it ier Connie Lane Won Third| PrizelnPoster Contest Two pupils of the Mount Junior High: Schoal received prizes in the Shrine Circus Poster Contest. Winners were announced at special | Saturday evening, Ap- Annual Shrine and skidded on Joy ceremonies ril 22, during the Circus. Connie Lane, daughter of and Mrs. Edward Lane, third prize and Carol Ann daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Smith, received Honorable Mention. | Both girls are members of the 8th | grade of Mount Joy High School. | Mr. ! received Smith | Irvin | Conoy Twp., $25293; East Hemp- field Twp. $55.49; Mount Joy, $1,- 561.20; Rapho Twp, $40685; W. Donegal Twp., $1,608.73; W. Hemp- | field Twp. $4,252.71. > MAN'S CAR OVERTURNED ON HIS WAY HERE THURSDAY Monroe H. Hostetter, 130 South Charlotte St., Manheim, escaped in- jury at 9:30 a. m. Thursday when an automobile he was ' driving turned as he was enroute to Mount Joy. Hostetter, a Manheim florist, was delivering flowers here in an auto- mobile owned by Adam Enck, Jr. Manheim R1, an employe. He said the car skidded on the wet road and overturned. | over=- | AT GENERAL HOSPITAL Mrs. Guy Myers was admitted to and Blondena M. Maxwell, Wednesday as a surgical patient. J the Lancaster General Hospital on day at the Lancaster General Hos- | About 500 from High Schools of 9 counties were entered. | posters Five pupils from Mount Joy enter- the Prizes | were awarded for both Junior High | School and Senior High School con- testants. In each group First Prize was $50; Second, $25.00; Third, $15; Fourth, $10.00; and Honorable Men- tion $5.00. These posters were produced un- der the Supervision of Mrs. Beryl ed posters in contest. Hahn, the Art Supervisor of the Borough Schools. ee ee Week's Birth Record Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Dyer, 119 Co- lumbia Avenue, this boro, a son at the Osteopathic Hospital at Lan- caster Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Leib« erherr, of town, a daughter Thurs- pital, Mortuary Record Throughout This Entire Locality Mrs. Lucinda K. P. Kahler, sev- enty-eight, at Columbia Monday. Geo. McLaughlin, seventy-nine, at York. He was a native of Colum- bia. Ralph M. Busser, former burgess and business man of died in Chester County. Tarleton L. Beane, seventy-one, a native of Bainbridge, at his home in Northmont,, Berks Co. Herman C. Reinhold, retired farmer of East Petersburg, at the Lancaster General Hospital. Mrs. Jennie M. Inners, sixty-one, wife of Raymond J. Inners, Eliza~ bethtown RD, at her home Satur day. Susan B., wife of Dale C. Hanni- gan, of Marietta, at the General hospital. She was fifty-four and a daughter of the late John and Mar- tha Hoffman White, of Maytown. Mrs. Samuel A. Moore Mrs. Naomi B. Moore, sixty-one, wife of Samuel A. Moore, Kinder- hook, Columbia R1, died at her home after an illness of five years, (Turn to Page 3) BACHMAN CHOCOLATE CO. EMPLOYEE INJURES HAND A 63-year-old carpenter was ad- mitted to St. Joseph’s Hospital one day last week after he mangled his left hand in a machine at the Bach- Chocolate = Factory, Florin, where he is employed. John Balmer, 27 W. Willow St. Elizabethtown, suffered the injury. Attendants at the hospital said one finger may have to he amputated. BP The Prize Winners At BW Class Bee The following were the prize winners at the Spelling Bee held in the high school last Friday night by the Busy Workers Class of the Evangelical Church: first class for children twelve years and under taught by Miss Irene Heisey, Ken- neth Heisey first prize, Anna May Toewen second, and Joan Schneid~ er third. The adult class taught by Mrs. George Broske was won by \ man Walter Heisey first, Amos Ham= bright second and Connie Lane 4 third. The General Information > class was taught by Mr. Ted Mil= ler and the winners were Walter Heisey first, Mae Zink second and Mary Jane Groff third. May Zink received first prize for gelling the most tickets and Gloria Gish was second. The Busy Workers wish to thank all who participated in making the Bee a success. Everyiling That Happened At Florin Recently Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Roberts, of Mechanicsburg, David and Helen Nolte of Harrisburg, Mr. and Mrs. John Lewis of Donegal Springs cal- led on Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Hershey on Saturday evening. This Sunday afternoon at two o'= clock the Male Chorus of the Mes= sinh College, Grantham will give a song service ‘in the Cross Roads Brethren in Christ Church. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mateer who (Turn to Page 4) OFFICERS REPORT PROGRESS Officers of the Lancaster Menno= nite Hospital Organization will re= port on progress toward construc- tion of their proposed institution rear Mt. Gretna, at a meeting next Thursday at the Rohrerstown Men- nonite Church. eet @ MRS. KLINE HONORED Mrs. Lloyd Kline, of Columbia, formerly of town, was elected pres- ident of the Lancaster County Re« gional Women's Guild, Evangelical and Reformed church at the annual business meeting held at town.