aw- 258. I've uy - it There's No Better Way to Reach the Peopl Auto Rolled Over; Tractor- Trailer and Frazer Collided; 81-Yr.Old Man Hit by a Car A Daily Vacation Bible School Here Is Well Attended The DVBS of this place, under the auspices of the Calvary Bible Church, week continued throughout the past with the attendance reaching 153 on Friday night. The school consists of a begin- ner class taught by Mrs. John Henry Brubaker, assisted by Mary Shelly, Lois Rutt, and Frances Wolgemuth. Primary I taught by Miss Doris Shaver with Mrs. Nor- man Smith assisting her. Primary II, taught by Miss Betty Barr with Mrs. Clara Myers and Marion Rutt assistants. Primary III is taught by Mrs. Roy Wolgemuth and assisted by Barkara Shelly. Junior I taught by Miss Betty Shelly and assisted bv Carol Ann Smith. Junior II taught Jack Eberly and assisted by Anita Mv- ers. The Intermediates are taught by Ezra M. Wolgemuth. There is an adult class, with Rev. Paul Wilt as the instructor. The school secretarvis Miss Ber- nice Strickler, and Clarence Bru- baker is treasurer. Each (Turn to nage 2) Rev. Elmer Keiser Ordained a Priest At Service Here Ordination of the Rev. Elmer Adam Keiser, Deacon, to the Sac- red Order of Priests took place at Friday morning at St. Luke's Episcopal Church, here. The Rev. Mr. Keiser, rector of St. Luke's “Chureh~since January, was ordained by the Rt. Rev. John Thomas Heistand, D. D,, S. T. D, Bishop of Harrisburg. He was for- merly of Schuylkill County. The Rev. Canon Heber W. Beck- er, rector of St. John's Church, of Lancaster, and president of the Standing Committee of the Diocese of Harrisburg, delivered the ordi- nation sermon, followed by Holy Communion. : The Rev. Canon Clifton A. Best, Canon Missioner of the Diocese of Harrisburg, the date for ordination, and the Litany and Sufferages Ordinations were read by the Very Rev. Thom- as H. Chappell, Dean, St. Stephen's Cathedral, Harrisburg. The Rev. Julian Dozier, Vicar of St. Gerald's Church, = Harrisburg, read the Epistle, and the Ven. George H. Toadvine, Jr. Archdea- con, Archdeaconry of presented the Gospel. ———— 4 reer PRESENT FROM THE LIONS The Mount cently equipped our new Fire Co. with puncture tires and tubes. as her by evening services presented candi- for Harrisburg, Joy Lions Club re- ambulance proof Seven of ten children from the Brethren Children”s Home were injured when the car in which they were riding collided with another auto. The accident happened at Kissel Hill. Car Went Over Bank Although their car rolled down a 25-foot embankment, landing on its top, Mrs. Sadie G. Becker, for- ty-three and her teen-age daughter Dorcas, Mount Joy R2, escaped in- jury in an accident about noon on Friday. State Police said Mrs. Becker was approaching the junction of old and new Route 230 about half a mile east of Elizabethtown, when another car pulled in front of her, forcing her off the road. Witnesses were unable to give the license number of the second car, although they could describe it. The two women were pulled from the wrecked car by passing motorists, police said. They are continuing their investigation, they added. Collided West of Town A tractor-trailer truck collided with a 1951 Frazer automobile on Route 230 just west of Mount Joy at 7:35 p. m. Friday, damaging the new vehicle to the extent of $500, police said. No one was hurt. State Police Nagle, who also investigated this accident, said the truck driven by Benjamin Clifford Feckard, forty-two, Fairmount, W. Va., was overtaking another truck at the same time. Lewis J. Smith, forty-two, Phil- adelphia, driving the car in front of the second truck, attempted to turn left onto the road leading to FEheems, and Reckard’s tractor struck the automobile. Damage to the tractor was estimated by police at $150. Man 81, Injured An eighty-one-year old man was admitted to St. Joseph’s Hospital Friday for observation following an accident which occurred about 2:30 p. m. on Route 230 at an intersec- tion in Landisville. The victim, Aaron Heisey, Mount Joy, was a passenger in a light truck driven by his grandson, J. Arthur Oberholtzer, twenty-two, Mount Joy, when the truck collided with a auto crossing the highway, State Police Heisey received bruises of the head, chest and left leg according to hospital records. Police said the car which pulled in front of Oberholtzer’s truck was driven by Edward W. Herbst. thir- ty-one;Red Lion R3, who told them he had stopped at the stop sign and pulled dnto the highway when he didn’t see anything coming. Herbst’s 1950 sedan was dem- olished, police said. Although he was threwn from the car onto the said. grass plot in the center of the four- lane highway, he escaped injury, as May Godrey. Police are continuing their investigation of the accident. — Eee SURGICAL PATIENT Mr. Paul Frey, West Main 6 St., underwent an operation at the Os- | did a passenger, in his car, teopathic Hospital, Lancaster, last | Saturday. The Story of School Board Ups Tax To 30 Mills A budget of $143,648 was adopted Friday night at the School board meeting. Mileage was increased from 28 to 30, and per capita rate from $5 to $7. y Contract was awarded to paint ‘all the rooms in the elementary school to John Nissely, Lancaster, for $2100. Also awarded was the school supply contract, to L. B. Herr, of Lancaster, in the amount of $2,895. Three new teachers ap- pointed to the elementary school. They are John Lichty, Florence Barbara Ann Nelson, Elizabeth- town, and Mrs. Kathryn Shaeffer, were Rheems. Miss Mildred Booth was appointed census enumerator for the year. Insurance coverage was increas- ed by $68,000 with S. Nissley Ging- rich, Lancaster. rr AQ AQ Ninety-four persons were injur- ed in motor accidents in Lancaster Our Independence Won 175 Years Ago By H. FRANK ESHLEMAN We are informed by Metropoli- | tan and some local newspapers ' that elaborate observance and cel- ebrmtion of the 175th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of our Independence, will be stag- ed during the week of July 4th this year. Therefore, as my humble contribution toward refreshing our historical knowledge of the stages through which our forefathers struggled to achieve that glorious project, I purpose furnishing to the Local Press, the weekly progress our revered Revolutionary Heroes made to win the Great Achieve- ment First, let us go into a brief re- view of the initial stages of effort expended and achievemenis at- tained ky our Revolutionary Fore- fathers in the Continental Cong- ress down to the said date 175 years ago. The following is a re- sume of the struggle: The delegates of the Continental Congress gathered into Philadel- phia during August 1774; and Sept. 5. John Adams stated: At 10 o'clock the Delegates all walked from City Tavern to Carpenter's Hall, where they took a view of the Chsmber and Room. All pronounc- ed it a good place for their busi- ness.” He said: “They organized and all were apnalled and feared to proceed until Patrick Henry broke the spell, with such unusual force of argument and such novel and impassioned eloquence as coon | will be games for all ages with none MOST UP-TO-THE~- The VOL. LI. NO. 3 2 Teachers Resign; District to Sponsor Florin Playground At a regular monthly meeting of East Donegal Twp. School Board held Friday evening, June 8, the resignations of Mrs. Doris Slaugh, homemaking teacher, and Mrs.Rho= da Longenecker, first grade teach- er at Florin, were received and ac- cepted, with regret. Mr. John Hart, of the school faculty, was appoint- ed to take the school census. Coal bide will be received at the July 6 meeting, as will bids for grade school furniture and for typewriter replacements. It was also announc- ed that the next regular meeting of the Donegal Joint School Board will be held in the High School at Maytown, June 21. The girls chorus, the high school, will sing several selections at the Donegal Reunion Thursday afternoon, June 21. The chorus is directed by Mr. Eugene Saylor. Mr. Saylor is spending this week at Penn State College where. he is di- recting the State F. F. A. Chorus in concerts June 14 and 15. The school district, in cooperation with the Florin Hall Association, is again sponsoring a summer play- ground at Florin. It will be dire~t- ed by Miss Lily Martin and Mr. Richard Brubaker. The playground will be open every afternoon, be- ginning June 18, but not during the week of July 4. te peat A CRI The Playgrounds Here Will Open For Season Mon. The Playground will open June of 18th with George Houck and Nancy Ziegler as instructors. Both are teachers in the Mount Joy Boro Schools. This will be the third year for Mrs. Ziegler who is in charge of the girls and instructs their ac- tivities. Mr. Houck will be in his first year and he will be in charge of the boys. The hours of the park from 9 to 11 1 to 3 will be and There being slighted. Grades 1 to 12 will be taken care of. Some of the games this year will be: basketball, baseball, softball, horseshoes, ball, badminton, cards, checkers, puzzles, etc. Thus far 164 students have sign- ed for the play ground, with more expected. All children will be rat- ed on a merit system, with only those reaching a certain number of points at the end of the year being able to make the Shibe Park, Philadelphia, to see a base- Each Friday the in- endeavor to take swimming. soccer, volley trip to ball game. structors playground participants will This will probably be a pool in nearby Lancaster. | ee et MISS BAKER GRADUATED WITH HONORS AT MIAMI U. Lois Ann Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. U. Baker, Landisville, graduated with honors as a bach- elor of arts cum laude at Univer- sity of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla. Miss Baker, a graduate of East Hempfield Twp. High School, was a government major and a history at Miami. She was active minor on campus as a member of Zeta Tau Alpha social sorority, Alpha Sigma Upsilon leadership society, and the Student Senate. She is al- so listed in “Who’s Who in Ameri- can Universities and Colleges.” atl) 4G ees ween CELEBRATE THEIR GOLDEN WEDDING NEXT TUESDAY Mr. and Mrs. George Schneider, 220 East Donegal Street, will cele- EAST HEMPFIELD SCHOOL TAX GOES UP THREE MILLS The budget for the 1951-52 schoo term, which provides for a three mill tax increase, was adopted b; the East Hempfield Twp. Schoo Board Wednesday night. John WM. Swarr, Landisvilld board secretary, said the budge calls for raising the tax rate’ fro 25 to 28 mills. The increase is du principally to the increase in in structional costs which estimated total $263,302. Swarr said. Weddings Thruout Our Community During Past Week The marriage of Miss Velma May Rarnhart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Omar R. Barnhart, Elizabethtown R1, to George O. Hemperly, Bain- bridge R1, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hemperly, took place Saturday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hemperly, Falmouth. The Rev. Chester W. Hartman offi- ciated. Mrs. Boyd L. Bubb, sister of the bride, was matron of honor and John W. Hemperly served as best man for his brother. Glenn Hem- perly was usher. Frances E. Rohrer David C. Forry The marriage of Miss Frances E. Rohrer, daughter of Mrs. Martha (Turn to page 3) err ere BOY ON BICYCLE AND A MOTORIST COLLIDE Ralph Larry Geib, thirteen, of Florin, riding a bicycle home from his grandmother’s residence, was slightly injured when struck by an automobile about 3 p. m. Tuesday, State Policeman Paul Mikos said. He said the accident occurred at a sy" the Milton Grove road, about four miles north of Mount Joy, when the bicycle was hit broadside by an automo- bile driven by George L. Mumper, seventy-six, Florin. The boy was treated by Dr. Da- vid B. Schlosser, Mt. Joy, for ab- rasions of the left shoulder and a lacerated face which required 5 sutures to close. He told police he was riding home after visiting his been intersection on grandmother where he had working in a garden. A sen MAN IS FINED $500 AND COSTS IN A HIGHWAY DEATH Pleading guilty to involuntary manslaughter Roy L. Sumpman, 26, Columbia, was fined $500 and costs by Judge Wissler Monday after- noon. Sumpman prosecuted by State Policeman George Spotts in the death of Ralph E. Womer, 38, Salunga, last ‘December 6. State Pclice charged that a truck driven by Sumpman left Old Harrisburg Fike, east of Landisville, and hit two poles. Womer was a passenger on the truck. Assistant District Ww. mishap apparently fast driving. bin LOCAL WORKER INJURED AT NEW ARMSTRONG LAB William B. Laughman, 119 Lum- ber St, a construction worker at the new Armstrong Cork Company laboratory, Lincoln Highway West, suffered injuries to the left hip and abrasions of the left hand when a pile of transite toppled over and and pinned him to the ground. was Attorney John Beyer told the Court the fatal resulted from brate their golden wedding anni- versary Tuesday, June 19th. In honor of the event they will be entertained at a dinner Sunday by their children and will have open house from four until eight o'clock, June 17th. —————— SNAVELY ELECTED TREAS. At a meeting of the Board of Di- rectors of the Lancaster General Hospital, Jesse C. Snavely Jr. of Landisville, was elected treasurer electrified the whole House.” Those County during the past ten days, a new record. (Turn to page 3) He was removed to St. Joseph's Hospital where he was treated and later discharged. Laughman was unconscious for about five minutes after the accident, according to hos- pital records. = ee Mee THEY FACE PROSECUTION Lancaster police charged twenty niotorists with violations this week. Among them were G. Frank Kreid- er, Columbia R2 and Stanley Von Neida, Mount Joy R2, both for for the coming year. includes receipts amount to Other business included granting approval to establish a kindergar- ten in the new school building at EK LY I N y Afternoon, June 14, 1951 LANCASTER Joy Bulletin COUNTY $2.00 a Year in Advance | | Success erously Service 15 1 service conducted . in thé | helped annua Eby's Church is located one and a-half miles northeast Joy. The program for the afternoon consists of German songs, (led by address by Dr. D. E. Young, confer- ence Superintendent, musical sel- ections by the choir from the Flor- in Church, and greetings former pastors and other ministers present. Following the afternoon services at 4:00 p. m. Dr. D. E. Young will conduct. the Quarterly Conference This will be followed by a fellow- ship supper. The day will close for the Eby’s and Florin Churches. with a hill-side service. Rev: John H. Gable will speak at this final service. A Geer LOCAL GIRL SCOUTS ELECTED TO SENIOR PLANNING BOARD Mount Joy Girl Scout Troop 96 was honored by having three if its members elected as officers of the Lancaster County Senior Planning Board during a meeting held at the Campference at Furnace Hills Camp, June 10 and 11. They were: Mary Bailey, President; Shirley Eby, Secretary and Elinor Lane, Treasurer. Other Girl Scouts from Mount Joy attending the Campference were Maryanne Spangler,, Gene- vieve Zimmerman, Rachel Lehman, Nancy Swanson and Connie Lane.. Mrs. Robert Hawthorne was _a Init Leader .Maryanne Spangler was Scout President of Hillcrest | everyone | spent to try to t one of the ! h P 4 . | biggest celebrations that Mt. Joy | t e enitentiary s | has ever seen. li I would | MARY THANKS TO ALL [FOR YOUR ASSISTANCE | On behalf of | nial Committee, who helped Much make i like to | 1 | thank-you to everyone who so gen- his decorated { They were wonderful the to make teachers’ slaries, text books and | . Seelam a alan wae a school supplies, he said. church during the year. Presently | worthwhile project. ph B. Wissler. He also was fined Estimated total expenditures on there is. only one member, Mm | At the present time, the budget are $260,421.25 while the | Harvey Zink, of Rapho Township. | cannot he settled since all money Sentenced: was imposed after and bills are not handed in. There- | Glassmyer, pleaded guilty to as- of Mount | fore, it is not known just what kind of financial profits remains. Souvenir Centennial Rev. Harry Tobias, of Manheim, an | expected to arrive next; week. Or- ders are being received at the Titus Rutt Insurance Agency. Thank you again for everything from | that you've done. Vera Albe BOY, 12, KILLED WHEN TRACTOR FELL TO FOREBAY the entire offer a special Centen=- Archie C. Glassmyer, year-old Lancaster barber, windows. Archie Glassmyer I wish ppd Given 2 to 4 Yrs. work and time was | forty was sentenced to two to four years in Mortuary Record Throughout This Entire Locality Mrs. Ella Trump Weigel, sixty= three, wife of J. Wesley Weigel, at Columbia. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Best, nine= Centennial a the Eastern State Penitentiary on really Tee Y by Judge Jos- and Tuesday afternoon sault with intent to kill in the par- ing-knife stabbing of his wife, Ruth thirty-three, during the early af- ternoon of May 2, in their third floor apartment at 64 N. Queen St., Lancaster. Shortly thereafter Glass- myer had stabbed himself several plates are times with an ice pick City Detective Paul R. Cogley, prosecutor, outlined to the Court the events surrounding the knifings which had caused considerable ex- citement in the first block of North Queen Street then crowded with pedestrians, many of whom heard portions of the commotions.. Police found Mrs. Glassmyer on the second floor of the building where she ran to escape her hus- band. She suffered from three knife wounds, one in the neck, an- other below the left breast, and a third in the back Glassmyer had inflicted a series of wounds with] an ice pick in his left chest. Each| was admitted to a hospital. Cogley said that Glassmyer at|t (Turp to Page 2) ALUMNI ASSOCIATION HONORS MISS MARTIN The Mount Joy High School Al- umni Association has honored Miss Edna Martin who is retiring after fifty years of teaching, 40 of them in Mount Joy schools. A pocketbook containing $200 was presented to Miss Martin at a dinner Saturday night. W. G. Dif- fenderfer toastmaster. The admitted to as- rt, secretary was The Dailies For thru the barn and fell to the fore- bay. The boy was under the trac- HERE IS NOW COMPLETE ty-two, at the Masonic Homes, in Elizabethtown. Harvey H. Nolt, seventy-eight, of Columbia, at the Oreville Men=- nonite Home. Ruth, wife of Char- les Felty, of Maytown, is a daugh= ter. Otto Dodenhoeft Otto A. Dodenhoeft, seventy-sev=- en, formerly of town, died Tuesday at the home of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin N. Rutt, 340 Lancaster Ave, Lancaster, following a two months’ illness. Born in Germany, he was a son of the late August and Marie Deaack Dodenhoeft and was a resident of the country for 43 years. He was naturalized six years ago. Surviving are these children: Gertrude, wife of Alvin N. Rutt, with whom he re- sided: Vera, wife of Thomas Davis, Long Beach, Calif; Mrs. Ella Zink, Lancaster; Helen, wife of Elmer L. Zerphey, of town; Charlotte, wife of Irl Stewart, Los Vegas, Nev.: and Martha, wife of Earl Shonk, Man- heim. Nine grandchildren and nine also survive. Funeral services from the Nis- sley funeral home here Friday af- ernoon with interment in the Eb- The For The Past Week Very Briefly Told Local News Columbia High school graduated a class of 105 pupils. There were 2,762 births at the General Hospital last year. Unit, Genevieve Zimmermas as lass of 1951 was : y ian we Donald, 12-year-old son of Mr. 7 "gd 4 Albert Myerhoffer, Elizabethtown Scout President of Ferndell Unit . . sociation membership. r1 as fined $200 and costs for : . |and Mrs. Harry Miller, Manheim SE ; a 1, was fine and Shirley Eby was Scout Presi- These alumni officers were el- runken driving dent of Sunset Unit R3, near Penryn, was killed in- ected: Ammon Hoffer, president; hii STV re a stantly when crushed beneath a] totem Sore | There is a marked decrease in eng RRO y enneth Gainer, vice president; 1 rab f eattl] t th tractor on his father’s farm. Neda. the receipt of cattle at the Lancas- . Miss Jean Wagner, secretary, and ¢ stock eds rief News From His, parents were away, he drove [y Hostetter, treasurer ter stock yards 5 the tractor into the barn floor, me Was The County Grand Judy in its | couldn't get it stopped and it ran ; dives oar a oi report has recommended the erec- CIVIL DEFENSE STAFF tion of a new jail. Cora Kramer, sixty-two, wife of boi Quick Reading | In Korea the Allies guns that will shoot thru five inch- |e of steel. They had Russian-made captured tires on the wheels. At Reading a 37-year-old woman called on an undertaker and told him to arrange for her funeral. He called at her home and found the woman dead. During the price war now going on in New York City, nationally known watches such as Gruen, El- gin, Benrus, Bulova, and Longine are being sold at exactly half price. Earlon Sell, Annville R1, who spent 13 of his 24 years in jail or in detention homes, was sentenced to 10 to 20 years in the Eastern Peni- tentiary for stealing burlap bags in this section. The : U. S. Crime June 3, Investigating ee Al) Aen tn REV. ABRAM HESS Of this place, who celebrated his ninety-second birthday on Sunday of an account published in last week’s Bulletin. amie A moc Mount Joy is one of the first sec- th iors in the county to have a com- plete defense staff. Appended are the chairmen: Postmaster Charles Jr. James A. Phillips, deputy director; W. L. Beahm, ed- ucation; Park E. Neiss, Clark G. Berrier, Dock, Gates, J. Bennett, director; security; communications; transportation; Dr. C. K. New- comer, evacuation; Ray Myers, en- Samuel John medical; gineering; Lester Hostetter: finance Mumma, Robert and auxiliaries; Lester emergency Kunkle, warden. ————— ere TRUCK ENGINE CAUGHT FIRE AT FLORIN MONDAY The Florin Fire Co. sum- moned at 12:15 p. m. Monday when the engine of a truck, the property of the J. Miller Eshleman quarry, Landisville, became ignited. welfare, and was which was Harry E. Kramer, was found dead in a cistern at Akron. Mervin E. Peifer, twenty-seven, Manheim R1, was injured when he was kicked by a cow. 3 800 baby chicks died when an | auto left the highway near Leaman Place, hit a service pole and dis- rupted electric service. Elizabethtown firemen exting- = % vished a small fire on the roof of F the summer kitchen at the home of t Glenn Zeager, Bainbridge R1. Mrs. Harold Bender and two og children of West Donegal Street are vacationing for the month at Mrs. Bender's home, ‘in Lewes, Del. rents enn Emir TRUCK DEMOLISHES STORE; STEERING DEVICE BROKE When the steering device came apart on a 1940 truck driven by Marlin K. Ressler, 21, Middletown R1, it ran off the highway, struck investigation on gambling tions in Reading. mayor, city council, city called to Washington. _— BUTCHER CUTS cut on a chopper blade. SO SAYETH THE COURT Wayne Donald Ginder, ville Hotel, was ordered beth A. Ginder, 255 New one child. Is on sale each week at News Stere, West Main street. parking violations. Committee, is making an extensive As a result the and their police chief have FINGERS . Robert D. Zook, twenty- Manheim R2, suffered torn middle and index fingers while at work in a meat market. Zook was treated at St. Joseph's Hospital. He told staff members his fingers were rll limi omen ly $12.50 per week to his wife, Eliza- Ave., Lancaster, for the support of THE BULLETIN Agency and Tyndall's THREW CHAIRS AND BROKE WINDOWS IN FIRE HALL There was a bit of excitement in that quiet river boro, Marietta, Sun- opera=- solicitor, been | day. A fight of some kind started, chairs were thrown about and win- dows were broken but no one was badly injured. The scene of the four, of | excitement was the boro fire hall. right | Council is investigating. LARGE BARN NEAR E'TOWN IS DESTROYED BY FIRE A short circuit in a poultry house started a fire causing a loss of near- $25,000, on a farm owned by Lester Hess and Paul Snyder, one mile northeast of Elizabethtown last night. It destroyed a large barn, silo, milk shed and chicken house. Also most of the contents. ————- ree Landis- to pay Holland A WOMAN MOTORIST CAUSED TRAILER TO UPSET W. Bard Brubaker, Manheim R2, driver of an oil carrier, escaped with minor injuries when he swer- ved to avoid hitting a woman mo- torist who kept on going after the Kulp's Firemen, who used chemicals to | extinguish the blaze, said the fire | originated in the ignition. The dam- | age was not determined but it was] oi reported that the engine was not a total loss. rr re, SILVER SPRING BOY, 10, FLIES TO DENVER, COLORADO Ten-year-old Jon B. Fackler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Fackler, | Silver Spring, is in Denver, Colo. A A an uncle and aunt, Maj. and Mrs. Robert H. Baker. Maj. Baker, formerly of Landis- ville, is an Army doctor now sta- tioned in Colorado. ED A en. DONEGAL SEWING CLUB MET AT THE CLUB HOUSE The Donegal 4-H Sewing met last Tuesday at the Club House with two leaders and fifteen members present. After the business meeting the|(C work period followed and refresh-| A ments were served by Mary Ann accident. The trailer upset and caught fire near Gap Felty, Arlene Musser and Elizabeth Nolt, Heisey. | and completely demolished a 10x14 conducted by John B. No one was hurt. The ac- dent occurred on Route 241, two | store miles west of Elizabethtown. BL... 40-UNIT HOUSING PROJECT T MARIETTA DEPOT 40-unit housing project at the rmy- Transportation Corps depot at Marietta is included in a $12.- aft taki his fi rol 000,000 military construction pro- alter wating his first airplane ride.| om for this portion of Pennsyl- The child flew to Denver to visit vania Week's Birth Record Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rudy, of Lan- disville, a son Monday at St. Jos=- eph’s Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Hess, Mt. Club| Joy R1, a son Wednesday at the Donegal | f,ancaster General Hospital. WP —— The new shipment of souvenir entennial plates has just arrived, nyone wishing to purchase these plates can do so at Rutt’s Insurance Agency office or at the home of Mrs. Vera Albert on N. Barbara St,