The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, January 03, 1952, Image 1

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State Farm Show
Is Spark Plug Of
Pa. Agriculture
Never hefore
setting provided
has so favorable a
been to demons
strate the educational value of the
Pennsylvania Farm Show as in the
1952 show to ke held January 14-
18 in Harrisburg, according to Miles
Horst, State Secretary of
ture, and chairman of
Show Com
The coming farm show is plann=
and
Ag icul-
the Farm
mission,
ed to provide both incentive
to farmers toward great-
for
pay
assistance
er production of food defense
and at the same time tribute
to farm boys and girls who will
carry on in the years to come, Sec-
Horst declared.
an
retary
“Like
Pennsylvania needs
engine needs its snark
plugs, its farm
show,” is an accurate description
of the overall purpose of the great
he added. Ever
founding in 1917 farm
has been a definite aid to the state’s
has become the
large: its kind in theUn-
ited States. Crowds are attracted by
the
of farm machinery,
try farm products and
Lecause in that
no charge is made for admission or
all
exposition, since its
the show
agriculture and
t event of
effective displays
livestock,
massive ond
poul-
and other
the show is unique
parking and midway and simi=-
lar entertainment features are
ned, the
New
36th farm show
ban-
Secretary said.
established
the
stock
the
largest
records for
include
entry of
known, the biggest dairy show in
history and the largest amount in
premiums offered. New attractions
include farm tractor safety driving
for 4-H Club and Future
members, also the first
for of
advance live ever
centests
Former
Si) meeting
tate Grange.
a
statewide
be held
speakers
an-
n women the
S
of
organizations
the
include U
Richard N. Nixon,
Herschel D
thirty
will
week. Visiting
S
tional meetings
farm
during
Senator
California,
Newsom, Master
National Grange, Greater ef-
food production and
kevnote 61 different
scheduled the
More thon 2.000
Future Home-
and 4-H Club members will
attend the show.
of
and
of the
ficiency in
marketing will
agricul-
cessions by
tural associations
Future
makers
Farmers,
Evening programs in the large
arena include formal opening
(Turn to nage 3)
———— eee
Air Base Decision
by
will Take 90 Days
report Washington dat-
of i 24,
“A final
funds
Ah
out of
says
decision on requested
for the proposed $62
Force
in
maintenance and supply
Lancasier County is
“for at
Mahon,
Appropria-
expected to be forthcoming
Rep. George
of the House
tions Committee,
Mahon stated
will that
Force reaches a
least 9) days,”
chairman
today.”
he believes it
the Air
on the
had
rmation,
said here
that
be long before
decision
ind his committee has
site a
the info
held
fall
location was settled.
chance to digest
His
nary
committee up
funds last until
the
a dispute
over
dl ats
DEPARTMENT IS LATE
licenses for 1952
15 days
Fishing and dog
ready for at least
All can go about their
won't be
oi this year
business without being molested on
their old tags.

million |
i pack of 25 cards will cost
not '
| BE
prelimi-
i by
ty
| morning,
Jewelry Thieves
Had Robbed a
Harrisburg Store
Three of four men arrested last
Thursday for the of
Greer'’s jewelry store were
linked to the theft of sixteen rings
from a Harrisburg jeweler on Dec.
21,
Larry Moore Woodburn, 21, and
William Henry Jackson, 35, both of
Harrisburg, were both charged with
robbery by Harrisburg detectives.
Amos Frazer, 56, of 458 S. Duke
Lancaster, named as the
“fence” in the Mount Joy
was charged by city de-
Al Farkas, with receiving
goods from the Harrisburg
robbery
here,
street,
other
robbery,
tective
stolen
theft,
Frazer was released he
posted $1,500 bail before Alderman
William A. Hull,
ed amount of bail before Alderman
J. Edward Wetzel, the latter
receiving stolen
when
and an undisclos-
on a
charge of goods
brought Thursday by state police,
Jackson, with
20, of Steelton,
custody. Care-
in
Woodburn and
Crawford Carelock,
remain in police
involved
robbery but did not
the Harrisburg
lock, police said, was
the Mount Joy
participate in in-
cident.
Ab-
men
Captain of Detectives John
at Harrisburg, said the
used methods
Mount Joy when they took 16 rings
at $1,300 from the Davis
(Turn to page 6)
i ——
Quite A Change
In Postal Laws;
Post Cards 2 Cts.
Office
rams,
similar to those at
valued
Looks as though the Post
Department will make an effort to |
on |
collect some of its annual loss
As of Tuesday,
have been quite a
handling mail. Jan-
uary lst, there
number of increases in mail, par-
ticularly post cards,
doubled. Congress figures that
increase may bring in $120 million
dollars extra.
a big
A person who deals at
postoffice will be limited to sending |
of
postoffice. means
will be to bigger
packages from any postoffice in the
the
smaller packages than a patron
Which
send
a smaller
you able
county than from the one in
city.
But service members will be able |
to send and receive packages the
same size
Postrards will
penny to two cents aw
as at present.
not only go up in
cost from a
but
fee
piece, there will be a 10 per
added when a customer
at
cent.
buys 50 or more one time.
50 cents
a pack of 50 will cost you $1.10.
2)
but
(Turn to page
—
TWO TOBACCO SHOWS WILL
HELD AT LANCASTER
Gants To-
be held Jan.
the Si
226 North Prince
The
bacco Show
annual Lancaster
will
of
Ranck warehouse,
the basement
street, Lancaster.
Another
Bayuk Cigars Inc.
members of the Lancaster Coun-
-H Tobacco Club on Saturday
Jan. 5 in the Bayuk ware-
850 North Water St. Bayuk
award cash prizes and ribbons,
by the
be staged
show sponsored
will
heuse,
will
premium lists and other
details of both
nounced later.
Classes,
shows will be an-

Those In The Service
The Remembrance Committee
tokes this opportunity to wish each
service man a very hap-
quick
ond every
New Year
fe return home.
with a and
per-
onnel the
Lenefits of the Remembrance Com-
mittee due to the fact that the ort-
There are numerous service
who are not enjoying
to secure their
Will friends
listed below,
nization is unable
addresses. or
the
please forward their
Box 243 Mount Joy immediately?
Robert Nissley, Richard Boyd, Rob-
ert Bradfield, James Garber, Clar-
ence Wagner, Banks Wagner, Frank
Zimmerman, Kenneth Leed, Wayne
Wolgemuth, John and
Reuben Swords.
Your corporation
possible for these boys to receive
The Bulletin weekly well as
any other token the committee
able to fend.
Family Joins Major
Alexander MacNutt
ervice
| of
tives men
addresses
Loewen
will make it
as
is
Jr.,
Maj.
to
{

of Florin
was join
office
Inc.,
manager
Mount Joy,
recently
former
Farms,
ed in the Philippines
his wife, Caroline, and two children
Susan, 5, and Alexander III, fifteen
months.
Maj.
training for
Clark Air Force
north of Manila.
a student at the Uni-
of
at
MacNutt is a director
the 13th Air
Base,
Force
60
The major,
versity of Pennsylvania before
1941
served as a military training officer
at Olmsted Air Force Base before
his Philippine assignment last July.
entered the service in October,
21 December 1951 |
Kunsan, Korea |
Dear Friends; I received your
package yesterday and 1 was sure
surorised and pleased by it. It sure
is fine to know that no maiter how
few or many miles a man is from
Mount Joy, he is being thought of
by some, enough to make the Xmas
season a happy and merry one.
Where I am at here things are-
not very bad, but I sure hope the
(Turn to page 4)
which were |
the |
ig |
Al
by |
miles |
he |
MOST
Th
e
O-THE-M
I NUTE

2
VOL. LI, NO. 33
Haver! d Exchange
Student toGermany
Is Simon Garber
The following article is reprinted
from the Upper Darby News of
Thursday, December 27. It con=-
cerns Simon Garber, a son Myr.
Mrs. Norman E who
formerly resided on a farm between
Mount Joy
of
and Garber,
Flarin and Rheems, in
Township.
“An
program developed between
Haverford Township High School
and Erica Schule in Hamburg, Ger-
by way of the American
School Affiliation
unique exchange student
has
many . . .
Friends Service
program.
And its culmination Friday
announced that Simon “Si”
16, of 1603 Melrose Ave.,
wood Park,
year’s scholarship
ning April 1, 1952.
It all began when
school’s World Wide
Friends
was
Garber
Lynne-
awarded a
Erica,

has been
at begin-
the high
Workshop
the three
years ago
[with Erica
(Turn to page 2)
EE
SOCIETY OF FARM WOMEN
| HELD CHRISTMAS PARTY
A Christmas party in the form of
held
re~
joined program
started corresponding
students, exchanged

was
4
| @ covered dish luncheon
by Society of Farm Women
{ cently at the home of Mrs. Harrison |,
| Nolt,
The
| singing of carols,
| with Mrs.
a Christmas reading by Mrs.
Columbia RI.
program included group
led by the hostess,
Eva Swords accompanist.
Willis
Rob-
Miss
exchanged
Reapsome:
{ ert Baker,
Nolt.
and a solo by Mrs.
accompanied by
| Grace Members
| gifts.
Mrs.
| short
jw York will
| decor: ating at the next meeting, Jan.
26, at 2 p. the hone of Mrs.
| Chester Livingood, Columbia RI.
erties leven
£800 DAMAGE WHEN THREE
CARS CRASH NEAR MANHEIM
at $800
three-vehicle
Robert Nolt
business session.
at
How-
presided
Mrs.
on
a
speak interior
m., at
Damage estimated
reported
was
in a crash
mile
No one
about
Monday
on a township road,
Manheim,
| was injured
State
| Miss
west of
Policeman Paul Mikos said
Kreider, 19, Manheim
was driving east when she
brakes,
truck
Hollinger,
truck
a parked auto belonging to
_Brosey, Manheim R3.
ar
Keystone Holstein
Breeders Here
‘Held Banner Sale
The
held another
Emma
0
tu, ap-
plied her skidded into a
Ar-
R2.
westbound
thur S
| The Hollinger
operated by
Mt.
was
36, Joy
shoved
|
Kenneth
Breeders
at their
of
Keystone Holstein
banner sale
immediately east
230
sales barn
last
lot
were
| boro, along Route
An
|
[ were sold.
exceptionally fine of cows
Buyers
| from several surrounding counties |
present
| and Mayland. This was their 28th |
| sale.
| .
Two cows consigned by Edward
| O'Neal and Sons,
| sold for $720
Palmyra,
each.
was bought by Everett
| D. Benjamin, Holtwood R2, and the
| other by Graybill G. Gibble, Man-
| heim R3. A heifer
| bred artificially
One cow
calf, a week old,
a Curtiss Candy
to Roy S. Koontz,
by
| si sold for $175
of Bedford.
| Several other
$600. The
held January 11.
EQ I.
| OUR NRW STENOG.
Miss Mary Fitzkee, East Main
| street, made a New Year's resolu-
cows sold for more
than next sale will be
tion and we know its a good one.
She decided to be the
| at The Bulletin office instead of
[ clerk at Murphy's. The change ck
| place Monday.
| > —
| CELEBRATED ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Matoney,
11 East Main St., celebrated their
| first wedding anniversary on Mon-
day, December 31st.
the |
Friday |
| SHOULD BE A LESSON
FOR MANY YOUNG MEN
| Many
attended
years ago when the wlth]
at Carlisle
those Carlisle Indians
the best in foot ball
could produce includ-
Jim
football games
witnessing
bowling over
the country
ing Penn, Harvard and others,
Thorpe was at his best
Just Thorpe |
caught a kickoff on his own 5-yard |
line and ran 95 yards for a touch- |
one of his feats.
down only to have the play
nulli-
fied because On the |
next kickoff the ball |
yards behind his own goal and |
of a penalty.
Jim caught
five
again ran the distance 105 yards for
That
is was conceded
one counted. |
| a touchdewn.
After
day, that Thorpe was the
athlete of all
down, out and broke,
and is to- |
greatest |
times, today he is]
read what he!
has to say:
“If T had it all to do over again, |
including my days at Carlisle, par-
ticipating in the Olympics, playing
ball the New|
York Giants and others, and form-
professional with
ing and playing in the nation’s first
professional football league, I would |
do just as I did then—only I would |
hang onto my money.” |
0 -—
Brief News From
The Dailies For
Quick Reading
New York City's
had the dullest
marty years. [
Police seized 13 slot machines, 24 |
five |
237 |
thruout |
liquor dealers |
holiday season in |
punch boards, and arrested
at Hanover.
State
slot machines in
men
Police seized
49 raids
Penna
the state Saturday. |
|
post office broke |
last
The Lancaster
all for
172 million dollars.
A
friends
records receipts year:
bet
drink a pint of
30-year-old farmer his |
could
He
he !
liquor at once was buried Mon- |
day.
A
formed
hatch of 20,000 others at a New Jer re]
chick with three perfectly |
legs was born among a
sey hatchery.
Firemen from three companies
battled two hours to extinguish the
Middletown on
Elks theatre fire at
Year's Day.
reduced
New
|
f
Two strikes, patronage, |
plus rising taxes and material costs
Tran-
the
have put the Lebanon Valley
sit Company, at Lebanon on
rocks
The Berkshire
Reading,
Mills at
full
cut |
Knitting
largest producer of
fashioned hosiery in the world,
the wages all
workers January
Former
that during the
of its production
2
President Hoover says
past year there was
dishonesty of of-
at
more government

ficials than time history
A
coal,
any in
with nine |
the
truck loaded tons of |
fell |
the |
skidded on ice, upset,
on a passing car and crushed
driver to death ncar Philadelphia.
— a
PAYS DISORDERLY COSTS
Nissley Habecker,
Delta St., this
disorderly

| Joseph
120 dim
Martha
Lancas- |
boro,
i with
i DiCola,
| ter, and paid
| yesterday before Alderman J. Ed- |
| ward Wetzel.
|
News In General |
From Florin For
The Past Week
The Zielke
the weekend from a two
in Miami Beach, Florida. |
Mrs. J. B. Hershey re-|
New York City
after |
spending the holidays here and
conduct by
619 N. Shippen St.,
pleaded guilty
SL
x
costs |
|
CY ee. |
|
were |
family returned over
weeks |
stay
Mr.
turned
and
to
at
Columbia with their parents.
The Church of the Brethren held
their weekly Prayer meeting on|
Wednesday evening at the home of
Mur. Mrs. Benj. Hambright. |
Mr. Mrs. Clarence Todd of |
Manheim visited Mr. George Shet- |
ter and family on Sunday. |
Mr. Mrs. Mumper
had as their New Year's day guests |
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mumper and |
daughter, of Neffsville
(Turn to page 3)
and
and
and George


First
by
{ Brubaker,
| He
{ Norman
living.
| Allen Alleman,
| 11 grandchildren
[70 SUPPORT FAMILIES
| per
|
to
No, We Weren't
Drinking; These
injuring eleven people
| autos.
| ped big chunks out of chimneys on
! the
Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, January 3, 1952
‘Weddings Thruout
Our Community
During Past Week
Mary L. Stoney
William G. Gassman
Miss Mary L. Stoner,
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Jacob street, this boro,
bride of William G
Mrs. Joseph Gassman,
Avenue,
Mur.
Pres
Rev.
at the
Wright,
the wedding
Eby Jr.
The
her
daughter
L. Stoner,
became the
Gassman, son
866 Mar-
and the
in the
of
tha
late
Lancaster,
Gassman, Saturday,
byterian ehurch here.
Harlan C. Durfee, offi-
ring ceremony.
Holland,
and
The
ciated
Glen
double
New
music,
played
Warren
Lancaster, was soloist.
marriage
and was attended by
James W. Eshle-
matron of honor.
bride was given in
father
Mrs.
town,
her sister,
man of
Harold
and the
as
Zimmerman served as best
ushers were Richard
RD and Paul Sto-
of the
reception in
men,
Diller, Lancaster
ner Jr,
After
social
bride.
church
brother
a the
the couple left on a
short wedding trip. Upon their re-
| turn they will reside here.
The bride is a graduate of the
| Presbyterian Hospital School of
| Nursing in Philadelphia and is em-
in South-
room,
ployed as a school nurse
(Turn to page 5)
— —
WILL CELEBRATE GOLDEN
WEDDING ON SATURDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Heisey of
Mount R2, their |
50th wedding anniversary Saf.-
5th... The couple
married by the Rev. Jacob
January 5th, 1902.
former
Clayton
Joy will observe
on
urday, January
were
Mr, farmer.
Heisey was a
is now employed with his son
The
of five children,
They
Norman of Mit.
Heiseys are parents
four of whom are
and
wife of
Clayton
also have
Raymond
Joy: Elsie,
Mt Joy R3;
Lancaster. They
and 4 great grand-
are
Farl, of
children.
— —
THE COURT ORDERS MEN
i Services in Each Church
$2.00 a Year in Advance
Universal Week Of Prayer For The Churches
In Mount Joy, January 6 to 13, 1952 ih
Sponsored by The Mount Joy Ministerial Association
for the observance of the TUESDAY, JANUARY 8
Here in the United States
Joint
This is the 106th year
Universal Week of Prayer.
the plans and program are sponsored
Department of Evangelism of the National Council of
United States
by the
the Churches of Christ in the of
America.
The theme used for the Universal Week of Pray-
by Mr.
State,
The
prepared by David
New Haven,
’}
1010
Plan"
‘e and Master
JANUARY 9
was taken from an unusual book written
Sumner Welles, Undersecretary
“Seven Decisions That Shaped History.”
the theme was
Yale Divinity School,
er
former of WEDNESDAY
series
of topics under
Mac
Connecticut.
Lennan of
Active Force"
Elton Trueblood states,
latitudes of history.
“We are passing through
America,
the world, are “standing in the need of prayer.”
Apostle to the Gentiles “Brethren,
heart's desire and prayer to God for them is that they
and
The
my
one of the stormy
exclaimed,
This is our prayer for our America at
that this land
may be saved.”
the beginning of the New Year,
be saved.”
the Textbook of
md Tactics”
“may
The early Christians advanced their knees.
They were in touch, with the inex-
haustible resources of God's power. This is the way
they met their “Prayer changes things” and
prayer can change us.
on
constant touch, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11
rinity Eyangsile 11 Lutheran Church
Rev. C.F.
Theme: *
crisis.
lelwig, speaker
Decision to Maintain the Lines of
The Mount Joy Ministerial Association cordially C :
invites you to these services. to lift your hearts
Prayer.
inication”’
mimi
in

UUNDAY, JANUARY 13
Evangelical

o
Y, JANUARY 6 i)
rint Mark's United Brethren
Church
Rev. H. C
eme:;
SUNDA
Durfee, speaker
"Decision to Fn
™y «4 al!
Operation:
"Choice of the Supreme Com
mander”’
The Local News |
The Past Week
Very Brieflv Told
Two of Councilmen
resigned Tuesday.
Theme: jage in Combined

|x ‘W LIENS FILED AT
COUNTY COURT HOUSE
The annual and final time for fil-
tax at the Court House
I: 't Lancaster last of
| year and as usual quite number
|
Mortuary Record
Throughout This
Entire Locality
Manheim
82,
ing liens
is the day the
a
were filed. 159 revivals
| were filed.
Only two new
from Mount
In addition
R3.
at
Columbia's Samuel B Long, 63,
H
liens were filed |
Joy, one for borough Christian Brubaker,
hrerstown
Myrtle N
‘olumbia R1, at he:
Mary, wife of Samuel C.
Washington Boro, aged
Up to now, how often have
written 1951 by mistake?
The Sheriff's office at
served 820 suits during 1951.
you tax and one for school tax I
More Liens Filed 82, Nor-
home.
Miss Oberlin,
wood, (
Anna
{ Shand,
| 56.
Lancaster| Since the above was written and
eleventh hour
filed
on the last day at the’
There were 5303 babies born in| these additional liens were a- at
~ : sainst real estate:
Lancaster County’s five hospitals] 8410St 1¢ il estate:

Columbia R2,
ordered $10 per
the support of his wife Helen Kehl-
Columbia R2
of $4 a week for
child was
George Kehler, was
to pay week for
er, A previous order
the support of his
wife and one set aside.
| last year
| business.
78, widow
East Pe-
Clara
H
Mrs
Samuel
Conoy School District. S. Cooper
East Donegal Twp. School | «
8: same
township

112 new; Cooper, at
District,
operated between
The
Harrisburg
busses
district 14 revivals | tershurg
and Myerstown quit
W. Groff, 41, of Conestoga
Brooklane
R5, Md.
Mount
Ivan
at the
Hagerstown
and also 7 revivals for road tax: |
Farm Hospit-
Elsie,
Joy
same township, tax; | R2,
West Donegal District, 3 | al,
10 new road
two cafes and an auto
burgul-
Two clubs,
at
wife
R1
Can
agency Lancaster, were School
Smoke is

Swords,
$15
|
the |
The order of Sylvester R
of Florin, decreased from
was
week to $9 per week
child. In
ordered to pay $3 per week
for
support one addition,
he
of
was
|
| new; Mount Joy Boro, 3 new. | of Ivan
10K
arized over the week-end.
A 20x40 ft.
Carl Huber,
shed sister
tobacco
Lititz R1 farm
destroyed by loss $8,000.
Miss Bethea Myers, 33,
was
«|
on the!
Amos D. Walters
Amos D. Walters, at
Elmer Zerphey Is
fire,
Manheim, the Oreville
8
Two daughters

P
boro,
wife Marguerite
Main St,
former
Young, 223 E
on the $6¢0 he owes her. |
— |
his
this
‘Things Happened
a few unusual news
You
but
Here are just
items which occurred recently
may not think them possible
they're true.
A bit
and his wife
and scratched a man
so badly that both are
cat
now hospitalized.
When
an auto
road,
it,
car,
ran across the
to
into
a pig
trying avoid hitting
banged headon another
in the two
At Baltimore a colored man went
berserk. With his bare hands, rip-
kicked in
television
sky-
aerial,
11 houses, nine
lights,
fell through the roof of one
uprooted a
house
two
wrecked bedrooms,
the
where he
tore out plumbing and
flood, then did bat-
tle with a policeman. He
going yet but a policeman shot him.
——c i
TELLS BEST ONE
they held a Liars’ Club
contest and a preacher was award-
the
caused a minor
might be
PREACHER
Out west
ed first prize for the best yarn-
old watermelon story. That's an old
one around here, the writer having
heard it forty years ago.
A
Congressmen cannot be arrested
i Good farm near


for traffic violation
was sent to the hospital after her
ne
Mae
wife of Elam
5)
hand was caught in a clothes wring- | Reappointed “ PA i ples
Deputy Sheriff
|
er | 0
The barn on the Mrs, Margaret S.
New Holland,
last night,
FLORIN NATIVE WILLS
NEPHEW GRETNA COTTAGE
A Mt owned
Mary Lutz of
was |

destroyed by fire
$25.000.
Ten
automobile were
Queen Motors at
day night,
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shea, Lancas-
R1, got into an argument while) Mrs
she was He grabbed wilh ite Harry I
the 4 gal Springs
set
loss |
Gretna,
M
Harrisburg,
d Ellis
Mrs. Lutz
at $12,000
of the
Done-
of
late
cottacg at
cash and a 1950 the
from the d 2
Satur- at, 4
AH Kenner, L
elt tate
dollars in
stolen nd street,
Richar
Pa.
estimated
the
Lancaster left nephew
nsdowne,
an e
ter Lutz was widow
a native of
She
at the wheel.
native
the
steering wheel and the car up- was a
a daughter of
Keener.
Florin and
My. and Mrs. John
— ©
re cee tll
AGED LADY FRACTURED
HER ARM IN A FALL
Abbey
RESIDENT HURT;
TIP SEVERED
Schuylkill Haven,
was injured
W. J. Biever
Schuylkill Haven, last
Kose the ice
while uncoupling some farm equip-
his the
The tip of one finger on
hand was severed.
—
Week's Birth Record
Mr. Mrs. Paul W. Baker, of
Florin, Tuesday at the Lan-
caster General Hospital.
Mi. and Mrs. Richard Stark, 307
West Donegal street, this
daughter at the General
last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Breneman,
Manheim R2, a daughter yesterday
at the General Hospital.
Fred Jr., and Dr. E. Jane Flem-
ing Mishler, Landisville, a son at
St. Joseph's Hospital Tuesday.
FORMER
FINGER
Paris
Pa.,
while


69, of 45
Columbia suffered a fractur-
left arm fell the
while walking to work Monday
at St.
Joseph's Hospital and discharged.
EE
BIG INCREASE IN FIRES
There
the
county
Darrenkamp,
Ave.,
when
L
formerly
Koser,
ol town
work on the
ed she on
ice at
morning. She was treated Farms,
week slipped on
hand caught in
ment and
machinery
the
double
Lancaster
there
were more than
of
year
number fires in right
ZERPHEY
few
the
January
Tt than
1950
were DEPUTY SHERIFF
There
changes in personnel
Court House
Ist. In fact all changes will only he-
(Turn to Puge 4)
- —— § >
during
Acres of Our
Police Officers
Chief of Police Parke Neiss and
Constable Irvin Kaylor, returned
Homer Reitz, Jamaica Plains,
Mass., from Bostoh. s
He was committed for a hearing
Wednesday evening on a charge of
larceny by Bailee brought by Key-
stone Holstein Sales. Inc. J
were comparatively
around
at Lancaster and
a son
FIND ELIZABETHTOWN MAN
INJURED IN WRECKED CAR
James Wingate, 27, of Elizabeth-
suffered chest and head in-
juries when his car crashed into the
concrete bridge over the Conewago
Creek on Route 230, just west of
the Lancaster-Dauphin County line
at 4 a. m. New Year's Day.
boro, a
Hospital
of town,