s 29¢ a | 5¢ 5 [90 5 9c DS 39¢ 39¢ 39¢ 27¢ n to ake ambi, Farmers Having Spring Sales Should Get Their Dates In Our Register—FREE If We Print Your ill LANCASTER The Mount J oy Bulletin | Mrs. Clar'nce Roth Injured In a Crash At Chicago, III. When an airplane crashed during a takeoff at Chicago last week, it injured three of its passengers, among them Mrs. Clarence Roth, twenty-one, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Berrier, Elizabethtown, R3. The county woman who will he- come a mother in March, was re= ported in a satisfactory condition by authorities at Holy Cross Hos- pital, Chicago, Ill. A long distance telephone call to the hospital revealed to her rel- atives that she is suffering a pos- sible dislocated hip. X-rays were taken to determine the full extent of her injuries. Mrs. Roth, the former Marjorie Berrier, was enroute home from San Diego, Calif, prior to her sail- or husband being sent overseas. A graduate of the Mt. Joy High School. Mrs. Roth had served as secretary for Arthur P. Mylin, Lancaster county superintendent of schools, and later was employed at the Klein Chocolate Co, Eliza- bethtown. She and her husband were mar- ried Jan. 7, 1950. Mr. Roth, a Navy reservist, was recalled to active duty about six months ago. Since the accident, through the intervention of the Red Cross, he has been granted a fifteen day leave and is now with his wife here. Boro’s Centennial Celebration Was Extended 2 Days The borough's bration was extended for two days during a meeting of the Mount Joy Citizen’s Centennial Committee Thursday evening. The celebrationy originally sched- uled tp be held from May 27 to May 30, has been extended to June 1, according to Charles Eshleman, committee chairman. It was announced that a produc- tion company from Ohio has been secured ‘to arrange the complete celebration with the assistance of local committees. The program will include a pa- triotic pageani on each evening, from Monday to Friday, with a religious program on the evening of May 27. Local churches will be asked to participate in the Sunday evening program. The entire program will be held centennial cele- outdoors with the Religious Day program and the pageants to be presented on the grounds at the rear of the Mount Joy High School. Instructions For Mail Delivery By Postm’t’r Bennett The first part of this article is for aliens living within the delivery routes of this office. Remember you must register at the post office. This is a very simple matter. By calling at the office, you will ob- tain a card which must be filled in and returned to the Postmaster. The deadline for filing this card is January 24, 1951. It will be to your advantage to have this card filled in as soon as possible, if you have not already done so. Remember the deadline is Jan- uary 24, 1951. After that time there is a different and much more com- plicated procedure. This portion is addressed to those who move off or on any of the town or rural routes. If you are a3 new- (Turn to Page 2) corel A Ae. ee. MRS. SCOTT HEISEY, RHEEMS WILL TAKE SCOUT COURSE Mr. and Mrs. W. Scott Heisey, Rheems, left Monday for Asilomar, Monterey Bay, Calif, where Mrs. Heisey will attend a two-week Girl Scout course. Mrs. Heisey, who was named a professional Girl Scout last No- vember by national headquarters at New York, will take the course “Professional Orientation.” She is a scout leader at Rheems and teaches leadership training courses throughout the county. erent Ae ~~: RAILROAD TIES ON FIRE Friendship Fire Co. extinguished a small fire in a pile of railroad ties along the Pennsylvania Railroad at the rear of the property of Benja- min Fair, Florin, Monday night. There was no damage. 3 Districts Agree On Jointure For a $1,200,000 Building School directors of Mt. Joy and Marietta boroughs and East Don- egal Twp. negotiated articles of a- greement Tuesday night which of- ficially fused the three districts in- to a jointure. The transaction, which took place in the public school building in Marietta gave birth to a new school administra- tion body known as the Donegal Joint High School Board. Signing of the articles of agree- ment culminated six years of or- ganizational planning as individual boards and eighteen months of ne- gotiations by the joint steering committee. The first official action of the new board was to give green light to engineers to begin work on prelim- inary plans and working drawings for a new $1,200,000 junior-senior high school building and to author- ize delegates of the board to seek an option for the purchase of a 16- acre school site. Paul E. Portner, of Marietta was elected president of the new joint- ure. Other officers named were: Albert D. Seiler of Mount Joy, vice president; H. D. McMullen of East Donegal Twp., secretary, and May- town National Bank. treasurer. Paul L. Stoner, of Mount Joy was named chairman of a committee di- rected to seek a solicitor and Cur- vin Martin of East Donegal Town- ship was appointed chairman of the committee empowered to acquire an option for the purchase of a school plot. The Buchart Engineering Corpor- ation of York was authorized to prepare preliminary plans. In order to finance preliminary engineering work, the board applied for a Federal loan of approximately $40,000 which, the directors were advised, might be secured without interest charges. If granted, the entire amount will not be given the board in a lump sum but will be forwarded as needed after various stages of planning are completed and officially approved. Sm CR — ee ——— THEY BOTH PLEAD GUILTY; FINED AND IMPRISONED John Clayton Roeting. nineteen, Elizabethtown RD, and Harold Ja- cob Herr, nineteen, Marietta RI, pleaded guilty to burglary and lar- ceny charges and each was fined $50 and costs and sentenced to six months in the county prison. Judge Schaeffer said the terms will start at the expiration of minimum terms given the two youths previously on malicious mischief and larceny charges. State Policeman P. P. Oreszko told the Court that since Roeting and Herr were jailed, they were linked in seven other cases of burglary and malicious mischief. i LT. GEORGE SANDOE WILL BE GUEST SPEAKER HERE A meeting of the Friendship Fire Co. No. 1 was held Thursday when arrangements were made for a special program at the March meeting with Lt. George Sandoe, of the Lancaster City Fire Depart- ment, as guest speaker. It was reported that invitations will be sent to members of the high school fire patrol, the Boy Scouts and Wilbur Beahm, super- vising principal, to attend this ses- sion when Sandoe will discuss the topic, “Flre Prevention”. Earl Zink presided at the ses- sion which featured the installa- tion of new officers for 1951. cermin isms FARM SHOW ACROBATS HURT IN E'TOWN CRASH Three acrobats, returning from a performance at the State Farm Show, suffered minor injuries when they were tumbled from their car in a collision with another auto on the Harrisburg Pike, one mile west of Elizabethtown. They claimed an auto driven by Peter Sawadsky, fifty-nine, Mount Joy R1, pulled out in front of them at the Crippled Children’s Hospital road. — reat A RI een. WILL GRADUATE THURSDAY David Merle Risser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Rsser, of Lan- disville, will be graduated from Millersville State Teachers College Thursday, January 18. "He is enrolled in the Secondary curriculum: and will receive a Bacheler of Science degree. rrr AR FIRST TOBACCO SALE The first sale of 1950 Lancaster County tobacco has been reported at 20 cents thru. It was grown by a Lancaster R7 man and bought by Bloch Bros. MOST VOL. L, NO. Senior Class Will Take 3-Day Trip To Washington The local School Board met Mon- day night, when it was announced that a daily milk program was be- gun in the local schools on Monday with 248 pupils receiving a half pint of milk. It was announced that two rooms in the grade school building have been painted by students of the seventh grade under the direction of the teacher. The students, it was revealed, asked to do the work. Paint was furnished by the school board. The senior class was granted per- mission to go on a three-day trip to Washington on April 25, 26, 27, Permission was also granted the girls of the high school to organize an intra-mural basketball league under direction of Miss Mildred Wilson, girls’ athletic director. The scheduled evaluation of the high school has been postponed, it was reported, due to the present consolidation talk with surrounding school districts. Permission was granted the Cen- tennial Committee to use the ath- letic field during the centennial celebration from May 26 to June 1. A motion was made to purchase | ten new typewriters. Bids for fuel oil were received with the contract being awarded the Sico Oil Co., here, at a cost of 10.2 cents per gallon. Bills were or- dered paid. eel Former Oil Tanks Are Now Filled With Corn-Wheat The largest grain storage project in Pennsylvania outside of met- ropolitan Philadelphia went use in December when Cargill, Inc. started accepting Pennsylvania and Western grain at their new instal- each Ae: into lation west of Marietta. The ele- vator is located on highway 441, Cargill, Inc., rated the country’s largest grain handlers has it’s head - quarters in Minneapolis, Minn. The project tock form last sum- when the nation-wide firm purchased storage tanks from the Fastern Transmission Corp. 118 feet in width and 30 feet in height. The tanks moved from their former site near the Marietta Army Depot to their (Turn to page 2) — 2,626 Babies Born At Gen'l Hospital new record hospital ser- vice was established at the Lan- caster General Hospital last year when it was reported that 2,626 babies were born at the hospital. This announcement was made. by Dr. Roger DeBusk, executive di- rector of the hospital, at the monthly meeting of the hoard of directors. Twelve thousand patients were admitted during the last calendar year requiring 102,970 days of patient service. Other cen- sus figures include: 8512 were treated at the receiving ward; 5.150 persons made 7,175 visits to the dispensary. One thousand three hundred for- ty-cne patients received free hos- pital service requiring 13974 days of hospital care. ee © ere LEGION’'S HAM CARD PARTY [HERE MONDAY, FEB. 5 A ham card party was planned mer grain four former oil Texas~ which measure were in twenty-one patients for Feb. 5 at a meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Walter S. Ebersole Posi 185, American Le- gion, Tuesday evening. Next meeting of the group will be held Feb. 13 at Bennett's res- taurant, when the troop committees and leaders of the two Girl Scout troops which the auxiliary spon- scrs will be the guests of honor. el The Millersville State Teachers College will graduate 27 students January 18 -THE-M OFFICERS INSTALLED BY GIRL SCOUT A covered dish social was by the Girl Scout SR of Mt. Joy, Monday, St. Mark’s Evang. January 8th in United Brethren Church. Mrs. Henry Musser, north-| spoke to west district chairman, the group on the importance of Girl | | Parents will meet in the Washing- Scouting today. . | Mrs. Musser installed the officers! for 1951. Miss Anna May Eby was installed as neighborhood chairman, Mrs. Edward, vice chairman, Mrs. Clyde Mumper, secretary, and Mrs. Lester Hostetter, treasurer. It was reported that 875 pounds of fat were collected in Mount Joy and Florin. Another fat collection will be held in the near future. The Scouts will appreciate all fat. The next meeting will be March 5th. —— a enn Weddings Thruout Our Community During Past Week Sgt. and Mrs. John E. Matoney returned Sunday from a wedding trip to Pittsburgh and Cleveland,O. The couple was married at 2:00 p. m. Sunday, December 31st, in Memorial Lutheran Church, Harris- burg. The Rev. Lewis C. Manges officiated at the double ring cere- mony. The bride is the Miss JacquieLyn Hendrix, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Hendrix, of this place. She is a graduate of Mount High School and is employed Eliza- former JOY by Joseph F. Gingrich, Inc, bethtown. The bridegroom is the son of the late Anthony Matoney and Mrs, Jack Painter of Pittsburgh. He is a graduate of Patton Trade School, Elizabethtown and is now a member of the Intelligence Section, 2nd Marine Division. He is serving his fourth year with the Marines. A member of the reserves, he was called back to active duty in Octob- stationed at Camp Carolina. er, and is North Lejeune, Arlene Goodman Snyder Henry R. Zerphey Miss Arlene Goodman Snyder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond (Turn to page 5) Ed RHEFMS FIREMEN DECIDE TC PURCHASE SQUAD TRUCK Rheems Com- a squad truck Members of Fire pany voted to buy at a meeting on Monday evening. The Group appointed a commit- tee headed by Max Ricedorf to in- vestigate and get bids for the new piece of equipment. The of officers. group also had installation A discussion was held on the street light situation and the committee is expected to give a decision at the next meeting. ei a A — en SET CEILING ON FIRE WHILE BURNING PAPER Friendship Fire Co. responded to a call at 11:15 a.m. Saturday at the home of Charles Anderson. between Florin, burning from a outside here and where paper pipe in an washhouse ‘had set fire to the ceil- ing of the building. One corner was burned out. nl rps Deeds Recorded and Martha J. to Mount Joy Mills 127 Mount Joy Street, this boro, $3,000. Daniel S. Geltmacher, Jr., and Esther Arline Geltmacher, New- town, to Gilbert and Betty J. Gelt- macher, Mount Joy Twp., lot of un- improved ground, Newtown. Lester E. Roberts, executor of the last will and testament of Mi- chael H. Wagenkach, late of Flo- rin, to Samuel W. and Rita C. Engle, East Donegal Twp., premises and garage, East Donegal Twp, $10,900. a PUBLIC TURKEY DINNER The Ladies Auxiliary of Friend- ship Fire Company ‘will serve a turkey dinner at the fire house on Sunday, January 14, from 11:30 a. m to 3:00 p. m. Dinners will be $125 each the, proceeds going to the fund. v partly Benjamin H. Horst, Inc, of town, premises at ambulance; INUTE Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, January 11, | Parent & Teacher Meetings In East Donegal Schools The Washington School (Florin) School Monday evening, Jan- vary 29 at 8 o'clock. Teachers will be in their rooms at 7:15 o'clock to confer with parents. Mr. Albert Kleiner will be in charge of the meeting. His planning committee consistt of Mrs. Walter Sloan, Les- ter Wolgemuth, Mrs. Jno. K. Wittle and Mrs. Aaron Longenecker. The new elementary report cards will be discussed. A short film will be shown. Supervising Principal J. W. Bingeman will discuss the pro- posed school jointure and its effect elementary schools of the There will ‘also be sev- (Turn to page 5) wn we. A A Ae BURGESS ELMER ZERPHEY NAMES DEFENSE AIDES Burgess Elmer Zerphey, director of the local Civilian Defense pro- gram, has made the following ap- pcintments: Thomas B. Brown, dir- ector; Wilbur Beahm, chairman, Education and Welfare; Park Neiss, chief, Security division; Clark Berrier, Communications; Samuel Dock, utilities and trans- portation; Dr. John Gates. medical; Clayton K. Newcomer, evacuation and repatriation; Ray Myers, tech- nical civil defense; and Lester Hos- tetter, chairman of auxiliaries. This group, together with other chairman to be named, will meet in the near future. ton on the township. police Florin Fire Co. | Officers Installed; Other Florin News Mrs. Clarence Lehman of Man- heim visited with Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Hershey on Thursday. Mr. and Myps. Christ S. Brandt and Misses Annie and Elizabeth Brandt of Maytown called on Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Hershey, Thursday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Eshleman and daughter called on friends at Florin on Saturday night. Mr. Irvin Bishop is a surgical patient at the St. Joseph Hospital. Mr. John Frey is confined to his Led cn account of illness. Mrs. Emma Peifer of Elizabeth- town, spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Benjamin Kauffman. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Breneman, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Foreman, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Greenawalt were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Greenawalt near Pequea. The following were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Mumper on Tuesday: Rev. Wag- ner, Mrs. Israel Dupler, Mrs. Christ Kauffman and daughter, Rhoda and granddaughter, all of May- town. Fire Co. Meeting Fifteen members attended the regular January meeting of the Florin Fire Co. ‘held Tuesday eve- ning at the Hall with Benjamin Staley presiding. Rev. John: Gable’ installed the officers and president Benjamin Staley appointed Charles Johnson, Robert Johnson and Clarence Hol- linger auditors. Two members, Gerald J. and John Grubb were accepted to the company. There are now 252 active members and eight social members to date. sient A lira TO REPORT FOR PHYSICALS The County’s three draft boards have called 187 registrants to take their physicals. Those from this lo- cality are: Daniel M. Heisey, Mt. Joy R2; Warren S. Spickler, Mt. Joy R1; William ¥F. Conrad, and George Linton, this boro; John N. Weidman, Mount Joy RI. rr A Ie MASTERSONVILLE FIRE CO. WILL INSTALL NEW SIREN Mastersonville Fire Co. plans to install a new two-horse power fire siren on its Fire Hall. At a meeting last week members of the company were told they are not taking enough interest in new Bechmould WEEKLY weekly fire drills. I N EAST DONEGAL TOWNSHIP WILL TAX TRAILERS At the township school board meeting held last Friday evening, the directors voted to tax all trail- ers in the township beginning with the new fiscal year-—July 1951. The directors also approved the final draft of the joint school agree- ment with Mt. Joy and Marietta and authorized the proper officers to sign the agreement. The January issue of the board's newsletter “News of Our Schools” was approved for distribution to the township residents. The January issue discusses the effect of the proposed jointure on the element- ary schools of the township and the cost of building and operating a joint high school. Also discussed by the board were preliminary commencement plans and plans for the 1951-1952 school year. Sico Truck Driver Killed In Crash at Wilmington, Del. George H. Rehrer, thirty, 139 Manheim St., was killed in a crash of two trucks in Wilmington, Del, at 3:30 a. m. Tuesday. Rehrer was operating a tank truck, owned by Schock Indepen~ lent Oil Co., loaded with 4,200 gal- lons of fuel oil and was enroute from Wilmington Sico bulk plant to Mount Joy. The second truck, driven by Howard H. Trice, twenty-seven, of Denton, Md. carried 15 tons of lime Trice is being held on manslaugh- ter charges, pending an inquest and a’ preliminary hearing. According to police, Rehrer was heading west on Front St, Wil- mington, when Frice who was driv- (Turn to page 5) ED QC rr J. EDGAR BARNES WAS ROTARY’S GUEST SPEAKER J. Edgar Barnes, Lancaster, was the guest speaker at a meeting of the lcal Rotary Club at noon Tues- day. Mr. Barnes, a probation officer spoke on “Vouth”. Ladies’ Night has been set for February 20 at which time the club will celebrate its 25th anniversary. I. F. Bailey will be the special speaker for the occasion. Wilbur Beahm, president, was in charge. RE RG FIRE COMPANY PRESIDENT NAMES HIS COMMITTEES James Heilig, president of the Company, appointed these commit- tees for the year ‘on Tueslay; fi- nance, Miller Wolgemuth, Elmer Zerphey, Samuel Dock; house, Park Neiss, Thomas Brown, III, Earl Derr, Miller Wolgemuth, Huber Rice; Memorial, Roscoe Hassinger, Raymond Pennell, Richard Divet; auditors, Earl Miller, Charles Esh- leman and Christ Walters. The Local News For The Past Week Very Briefly Told Robert O. Binkley, Manheim RI, was arrested on a fraudulent con- version charge. A 98-acre farm at Lincoln, county, was sold at public Saturday for $724 an acre. The Lions Club, at Mountville, has purchased a $5,000 building to be used as a civic center. An ordinary market wagon, rath- er scarce around here, was sold at a public sale at Intercourse for $140. It cost Urban Sloat, Elizabeth- town R1, $20 for cutting two trees and $10 fine from the Masonic Homes grounds withcut permission. this sale Mrs. Margaret Elizabeth John- son. sixty-five, Lancaster, was struck and killed by a motorist while crossing the highway near East Petersburg. ————— Qe = eres LETTERS GRANTED Roy W. Martin, Mt. Joy Twp., and John M. Martin, East Earl Twp. executors of the estate of Abram H. Martin, late of East Donegal Township. Esther M. Oliver, Mount Joy Rl, administratrix of the estate of El- mer R. Oliver, late of East Donegal Township. 1951 Estimate Receipts Lan. Countians Scored Heavily at | At $56,402.98 & Expenses $55,920 Borough head tax will be reduc- ed from $8 to $6.50, borough eoun- | warded by the State Farm Show at cil decided Monday night in a pre-| pa this week for tobacco liminary discussion of the 1951 borough budget. Councilmen at the same time de- cided to retain the 10 mill real es- tate tax. The borough head tax was jump- ed from $5 to $10 in 1949 to pay for a new fire pumper. Last year it was reduced to $8. A Special Meeting Council met in a special session at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday to discuss the proposed budget for 1951. The budget will then be advertised for ten days and presented to Council at the February meeting for adop- tion. The proposed budget includes es- timated receipts of $56,402.98 and estimated expenditures of $55920- 00 Salary of the boro supervisor was increased from $200 a month to $225 and the hourly wage for horo em- ployees was increased from 75¢ to 85¢c. Council decided to advertise for bids for constructing a road into the housing development erected by Henry Weber and recently annexed. RAR NPR ANNUAL MEETING OF THE MT. JOY FARMER'S CO-OP The annual meeting of the Mt. Joy Farmers Co-Operative Asso- ciation will be held in the social rcom of the Evangelical United Brethren church on East Main Si, Monday evening, January 22. Mr. Miles Horst, Secretary of Agriculture, will deliver an. address. Among the business to be trans- acted is the election of three di- rectors for a term of three years. Every member of the association ig invited and can bring a guest. A turkey dinner will be served. el ns The Community Banks Elected Their Directors Appended are ‘the directory elected by the various banks thru- out this locality. First National Bank and Trust Company, Mt. Joy The annual meeting of the stock- holders of the First National Bank and Trust Co. was held cn Tues- day in the bank building. Directors were elected as follows: Henry H. Eby, John E. Melhorn, Amos H. Risser, Paris Hosteiter, Dr. E. W. Newcomer, Daniel M. Wolgemuth, John M. Booth, S. Nissley Gingrich J. Musser Wolgemuth. The recrganization effective on Tuesday morning follows: Henry H. Eby, president. Mr. Eby has been a member of the board of the First National fer 35 years and was re-elected president hig eleventh term. S. Nissley Gingrich, president; Dr. E. W. New- (Turn to Page 6) Week's Birth Record Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brosey, Sa- lunga, a daughter at home Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Eshleman, of Florin, a daughter at St. Joseph's Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Rheems, a daughter Hospital Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Jno. M. Wolgemuth, Mt. Joy R1, a son Wednesday at the Lancaster General Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Conner, Manheim, a son Tuesday at Lancaster Osteopathic Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. D. Ormsby, of and for vice Webster, Stoner, at St. Joseph's of | the | Glen Riddle announce the birth of oth a daughter, Adele Rosalie, Dec. 27. tl Cee MARRIAGE LICENSES Samuel E. Drace and Beryl M. Singer, both of Maytown. Donald Pierce, Marysville and Evelyn Fay Gilson, Mt. { Joseph Sheaffer spoke. R1. Henry Eli Rest, Mt. Joy R1 and Hazel Eileen Nolt, Landisville, BEdwarl Martin, Reading, and Madeline Stanley, Landisville, a MAGN SO AN ‘CommerceElected | Walker, J Krall, treasurer, COUNT ————— $2.00 a Year in Advance State Farm Show Fighty-eight of the 94 prizes a= were won by Lancaster County growers. The management claimed an ate ; tendance of 95000 on opening day Monday. Up until Wednesday morning Lancaster County exhibitors had won 251 prizes at the State Farm Show. Two Mt. Joy R2 exhibitors, Jos= eph A. Hook and Herman Ginder, Jr, of Penn's Peaceful Meadow. Farm, won the grand champion buil award for the Holstein-Freisian breed. The bull, Wee Joe Sanar, classi= fied excellent, was born December 20, 1944. His sire is Montvie Loch= invar. He gets Rag Apple blood through his sire and dam's sire, who is out of New Year Belle, (Turn to page 3) Mortuary Record Throughout This Entire Locality Mrs. Effie Mae Fishel, sixty-five, at East Petersburg. Engle Forrey, fifty-three, Columa bia Rl, at St. Joseph’s Hospital. He is a native of East Donegal. George Rehrer Funeral 3 Private funeral services will be held at the Miller funeral home, El- izabethtown on Friday at 1:30, with further services in the Evang. U. B, Church here at 2 p. m. Interment in the Mt. Joy cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home tonight 1 to 9p. m. Mrs. Martha Haine Mrs. Martha H. Haine, ninety= two, widow of John Haine, Bain- bridge R1, died Sunday at Lancas= She was a member of the Eliz= akethtown Evangelical United Brethren Church and is survived by ‘these children: John Fisher, and Robert Haine, both of Elizabeth- town RD; Mrs. Jonas Leinart, Flo- rin; Milton . Haine, Bainbridge RD; Clayton Haine, Columbia RD, and Andrew Haine, Hershey RD. Nine- teen grandchildren and 40 great- grandchildren also survive. The funeral was held Wednesday with interment in Goods cemetery, David B. Ginder David B. Ginder; seventy-eight, retired farmer of Mastersonville, Mt. Joy R2, died Friday morning in the Messiah Home, Harrisburg, where he resided for the past fwe * years, He was a member of the Master= sonville Brethren in Christ Church. Surviving are a foster-daughter, Mrs. Henry Nornhold, Manheim R2; a step-son, J. Earl Martin, Mt. Joy ter. R2; a step-daughter, Mrs. Jacob Stern, Orrstown; and these broth- ers and sisters: Joseph, Missiah Home; Daniel, Pleasantville, N. J; Mrs. Henry Frey. Messiah Home; and Mrs. Irvin Wenger, Manheim R3. Local Chamber of Six New Directors Six directors were elected at the annual dinner of the Chamber of Commerce Tuesday evening at . Hostetter's. Directors elected for a term of three years are Theodore Weidler, | Panis Hostetter, C. G. Eby, Edward Lane, Arthur Sprecher and John J. W. Bingeman, principal of Be Donegal Twp. Schools, was master of ceremonies and intrp- duced the speakers who spoke on the Progress of Mount Joy in 1951. Wilbur Beahm, George Keener, and Officers are John Roland, presi- dent; George Keener and Robert vice-presidents; Maurice N. Bailey, secretary, and Carl Fy Ra AA Ty Pty i Art