ess + + Ise youl mpany's r valued ood you times, pk nd Par I b > a -_ = or ny g] A 4 ATC TE WE CT OUP OT OTE Eww <Q aay © Ic Y 35¢ 1629¢ a §3¢ On » + ©0000 0 0 "A TT V VV VVVVVV VV NX < de 3¢ 3¢ lc 3¢ ic 3¢ de FARIS wine #4 gee ET Lanc. County ! i i : Co — ope + aga Ns ah Pm SAR A A AS ET nr hy ath oui - I J Music Festival In Mount Joy High School Saturday, March 1 5th Donegal High School Directors Are ‘Puzzled And Confused” 1t Erected Now, New School Building Would Cost $1,750,000 Fiscal Agent Says THAT WOULD INCREASE TAXES TO EAST DONEGAL 27 MILLS, MOUNT JOY 37 MILLS, MARIETTA PER CAPITA TAX; FIRST YFAR OPERATING COSTS. $275.00 PER PUPIL, ~ 1954-55 OPERATING COSTS, $315.00 PER PUPIL Just what will be the actual cost of that proposed Donegal High School is now the sixty-four dollar question. Original plans called for its construction at a cost of $1- Later it was estimated 260,000. At a special meeting of the directors, John Bradbury in- formed the Board it would cost $1,750,000. Florin Fire Co. Burned Mortgage On Fire Engine Those fire laddies up Florin way certainly deserve a lot of credit. Four years ago they undertook to wipe out a debt of $16,000 and they succeeded. Mortgage = burning ceremonies highlighted Tuesdav night's meet- ing of the Florin Fire Company in the fire hall when the final payment of the $16,000 debt on the fire en- gine purchased in 1948 was made. Members of the Ladies Auxiliary were invited to attend the meeting. | A great portion of credit is due] the Ladies for their faithful coop- eration and donations toward this debt. Tht Firemen were given $500 at the meeting, Participating in the was Benjamin H. Staley, Company Richard Martin, vice ress forty, Jas eis secretary; Omar Groff, financial secretary; O. K. Snyder, treasurer, and William Mateer, fire chief. Staley pointed out that there re- mains an indebtedness of $7,000 in- curred on property adjoining the fire hall purchased in January for a proposed new fire house. et Ceres Annual Easter Seal Campaign More than 45,000 envelopes con- taining sheets of 1952 Easter Seals ceremonies | president; were sent to homes in Lancaster | City and Céunty on March 13, as the annual Easter Seal campaign to help crippled children get under way. The mailing was made by the Lancaster County Society for Crip- pled Children and Adults, sponsor of the drive. The sixth annual campaign op- ened officially March 13 and con- tinues through April 13. A quota of $18,000 is expected to be reached during that time, Campaign Chair- man, Dr. John B. Noss, said. “The 6,000 handicapped children and adults in our community need continuing services, expensive ones, to help them become self-sustain- ing adults. We are confident that our citizens are willing to lend a helping hand to help finance these services and to expand them to reach children not now receiving help,” Dr, Noss added. I SCHOOL’S SPRING VACATION FROM APRIL 9 TO 14 At d meeting of the School Board here the directors scheduled Spring vacation from April 9 to 14 and announced it will cooperate for the first time in the youth-in-govern- ment activities. Frank Walters was named ath- letic committee chairman. It was announced that the State will discontinue its school milk program on Apri] 1, The directors voted to continue the program themselves. The State had been paying two cents and pu- pils had been paying four cents per half pint of milk. wml seems ERFCTING NEW DWELLING Contractor Henry Webber is er-' ecting a dwelling on Marietta Ave, for Mr. Earl Balmer of near Eliza- bethtown. The lot was formerly owned by Mr. Warren Bentzel and is next to 38 MILLS, WITH A $10 the cest would be $1,400,000. The special session of the joint= ure was held here last Thursday evening, at which time the Board directed fiscal agents to revise ten- tative school construction and in- istructional costs for 1953-54 and 1954-55 terms. After the formal presentation of a complicated financial sketch of operations by John E. Bradbury, of Philadelphia, who represented Dol- phin & Co., Philadelphia, employed by the jointure as fiscal agent, the schoolmen disclosed that they were both “puzzled and confused” and wished to have additional explana- tions concerning cost increases. For instance, it was explained by Bradbury that by the 1953-54 term, it would be necessary for the three boards to raise a total of $171.353 in real estate taxes and $50,363 from per capital levies, This, he disclos= ed, would require real estate levies as follows: Marietta, 38 mills; Mt. Joy, 37 mills and East Donegal Twp., 27 mills. Each of the districts would assess a $10 per capita levy under the proposal. Bradbury's estimate of cost per high school pupil under the pro- posed jointure operation next year would ke approximately $250 plus an additional $25 for transportation annually, By the 1954-55 term, he predicted, the cost per high school pupil would ‘to $315, in- cluding transportation. Over the same period, his report indicated, elementary per pupil costs would increase from $150 to $275. As Bradbury continued port, members of the three (Turn to page 2) rr QA ns MASTERSONVILLE MAN, WORKING FOR THE BORO, JAILED; RELIEF CHISELER In the Court Tuesday, Effinger C. Blantz, Mastersonvillé, charged as a relief chiseler, was jailed for three months and fined $50 and costs by Judge Schaeffer. Blantz pleaded guilty to obtain- ing a total of $171.20 by making false statements in violation of the Public Assistance Act. Of this, he received $80 between March 6 and 28, 1950, and $91.20 Letween March 7 and April 27, 1951, he admitted. Married and fatf%r of one child. he said he had paid bock $40. He was now working, he said, the Mount Joy borough street depart- ment and asked chance to make full repayment. Judge Schaeffer he had sentenced Friday for a similar defense, all persons should treated like. increase his re- boards for that a woman to jail and a= commented be a GARTER SNAKE DOESN'T MIND THE COLD WEATHER The Elizabethtown Chronicle last Thursday . says: “Richard Stone, Elizabethtown R1, reported killing a two-foot gar- ter snake Monday morning in his back yard. Stone said he followed the markings in the snow for about 15 feet, made where the reptile had crawled to a clump of grass, where he found it and killed it.” ER i SEVERAL LOCAL NURSES off received their caps at the exercises held at the Lancaster General Hos- cinity were: Patricia M. Gibble, of Manheim R2; Beverly A. Myers, of 147 New Haven street, this boro; Thelma M. Sherk, Mount Joy R2. ————— — THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Alvin J. Reist of Mount Joy Rl, celebrated their 30 B. A. Shupp residence. Ground was J proken Monday. wedding anniversary on Tuesday March 11th, IMosT schoolroom in vey Groff Jr. Mrs. Verne pital Tuesday. Those from this vi- | ter enecker, Harold Rittenhouse and Miss Bet- ty Lou Wagner Clayton Aument, der, Mrs, Goeke, Mrs. Curtis McElhenny, Mrs. Clar- ence Mowery, Mrs, Maggie Myers, UP-TO-THE-MINUTE WEEKLY I N LANCASTER COUNTY The Mount Joy Bulletin VOL. LI, NO. 43 Special Trophies Were Awarded at 4-H Club Banquet Seventeen special awards for out= standing work in their projects dur- ing the past year were presented as the closing feature of the final session of the 1951 Red Rose 4-H Baby Beef and Lamb Club which took the form of the annual ban= quet held Friday night in the Arm= strong Cork Co. with a total attendance of 750 persons. Although his magnificent Angus steer died before the judging at the Harrisburg Farm Show, Jay Nis- sley, Manheim R3, was adjudged the champion baky beef exhibitor of Lancaster County. He received a trophy, donated by J. C. Snavely & Sons, Landisville, and a radio from he New Holland Machine Co. In the Baby Beef showmanship, Wilbur Erb, Mount Joy RI, first at the district meet in Lancas- ter. Merlene Good, champion lamb feeder, auditorium, was Lancaster R1, was the county her pen of first at Harrisburg. Jane Greiner, Manheim R4, the reserve championship with her pen of Hampshires. She received a trophy M. M. Wenger, of Rheems. toss Eshleman, of Florin, pen of Shrovshires, had the highest Southdowns ranking took from with a daily gain 331 pounds per day per lamb. Right behind was David Lapp of Bareville R1, whose Hampshires gained .330 pounds per Both got trophies from Eby's Mill. Three Local Men Participate In 38th Annual Meeting Three day. prominent Mennonites from here are partcipating in the of the 38th annual ing of the Eastern Mennonite Board of Missions Charities. and the 100th quarterly meeting of that board and the Con- ference Board of Bishops at Weav- sessions meet- and Lancaster erland Mennonite Meeting House near Blue Ball. The meetings close today. Devotional periods, missionary sermons, and reports on the world- wide program of mission work and ses- relief were scheduled at all sions Tuesday. The session that evening center- ed on youth work, in charge of Raymond Charles, R1, with reports on Evangelism through Colonization,” by Martin Hauck, of York County and a sermon by Robert Garber of Mount Joy. foreign Luxembourg, Honduras, Tanganyika and Pales- Wednesday Lancaster Reports on the work, mainly in E(hiopia, tine, are scheduled for morning's session; with testimonies furloughed and appointed workers at the afternoon meeting. The Rev. Henry F. Garber, Mt. Joy, is president of the Board of Missions and Charities, and Bishop Henry Lutz, Mt. Joy, of the Lancaster Conference oi Bishops. by is moderator Board el Pn A Minstrel Show By Mothers Club A Minstrel Show will be duced by the Mothers Club of Sa- lunga next Thursday and Friday at 8:15 p. m. in the Maple Grove Salunga. pro- show will be directed by Ray Wiley, with Mrs. Har- as musical director, the The Mrs. Hiestand will ‘be RECEIVED CAPS AT GENERAL pianist and Mrs. Jack Moss inter- A graduating class of fifty nurses| locutor. Others participating in the show are: Mrs. Rchert Bishop, Mrs, Wal- Harold Long- Peifer, Mrs. Mrs. Walter Eshelman, Mrs. as endmen. Mrs. Mrs. John Ben- Mrs. Jack McFarland, Earl Ginder, Mrs. George Mrs. Eva Schreiber and Mrs. Ellen Wetzel in the chorus, MISS ETHEL HEISEY SAILED FOR AFRICA Mr. and Mrs. Warren Heisey an son, Bernell, of 107 Poplar Street, spent from Thursday to Sunday last week in New York. They bid bon voyage to Mr. Heis~ Miss Ethel Heisey, who Africa aboard the Queen The Heiseys had a most ey's neice, sailed for Elizabeth. interesting trip. They not only spected the giant Queen Elizabeth from stem to stern, ored guests on the television pro- gram “Take a Break” originated in | the Dumont Studios. Mr. Heisey appeared as a contestant, convers- | in- ing with the master of ceremonies | prize | in Pennsylvania Dutch. His was two General tires. The last two days of the trip were | spent visiting Mr. Johnson in Freeport, Long Island. —— SE Jurors Are Drawn For Coming Courts Nantes of 324 spring sessions of Lancaster County jurors to serve in Courts were drawn this past week. They included 24 for Grand Jury duty; 95 each for the April 28 and May 5 terms of Common Pleas Court and 110 for the June 9 term of Criminal Court. April 28 Term Petit Jurors were this term. Those from Joseph R. Bixler; Virginia V. Zink, this boro; Anna B. Reuter, Maytown; Susan H. Trostle, Marietta R1; Harry Greider Columbia R1; Edith C. Peifer, of] Ninety-five drawn for around here are: Salunga. May 5 Term jurors were drawn of Common Pleas names Madeline Landisville; Charles C. Hicks, Maytown; Clyde F. Eshle- man, this boro; Robert G. Shank, Maytown; Christian R. Sherk Jr., of town; Dale M. Arnold, Maytown; Jacob Stigler, Nora R. Derr Ninety-five for this term, Court. Local V. Gool, are: Florin; of this place. June 9 Term Twenty-four Jurors were from the Grand drawn wheel to serve in the court of Quarter Sessions. Only one was named from this locality in | Florin June 9 Jurors Franpes M. Frank, One Petit Jur- ors were hundred and ten drawn for this term. cally they are: John H. Kraybhill, | Rheems; Martin S. Musser and Al- | ice H. Myers, Mt. Joy Rl; Henry Faus, Manhie m R2. ri Alli ism MRS. JOHN HENRY HEADS THE RHEEMS AUXILIARY Mrs. John Henry has been elected | president of the Rheems Fire Com- pany’s Ladies’ Auxiliary. Other of- ficers are: Mrs. Blanche Ricedorf, vice president; Mrs. Alverta Pautz, | secretary: Mrs. Daisy Shoenrock, assistant secretary; Mrs. Mary Lee- | dom, treasurer; Mrs. Edna Heisey, | assistant treasurer; and Mrs. Chas. | Shank, chaplain. - — OE MRS. R. FELLENBAUM IS VISITING IN INDIANA Mrs. Reuben Fellenbaum, 3 West Main St., is spending three weeks at Gary, Indiana, with her son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mus. Harry Jennings and family. The Jennings announced the birth of their second daughter on March 3rd. nee seme lA ee eee CHILD FRACTURED SKULL; STRUCK HEAD ON BATHTUB Gary Lefever, son of Mr, and Mrs. Titus H. Lefever, Manheim R4, suffered a fractured | skull when he fell and struck his | head on the bathtub at home. He was admitted to ter General Hospital. EE —————— WAS DRIVING WHILE TIPSY; HE PAID THE PENALTY Lever C. Mummert, of Elizabeth- town Rl, was fined $200 and costs for driving while under the influ- ence on Feb. 5 in Elizabethtown. He was prosecuted by C. K. Co- ble, Elizabethtown policeman. SARI i PASTOR IN HOSPITAL The Rev. of the Evangelical United Brehren the Lancas- | Church, Fltorin, is a patient at the | for Monday, April 3rd, at the Le- Lancaster General Hospital and at| gion Home. A door prize and two this writing his condition is slight- ly improved Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday Union National Bank Installed Proofing Machine A new “mechanical brain” has been added to the staff of the Union National Mount Joy Bank of equipment but were hon- | and Mrs. Karl | the bank for the purpose of simp- Lo- | | High School as announced in last | week's Bulletin, are: Progressive Party-—-Burgess, Ger- | | John H. Gable, pastor | new troop | ed. i | sley; | Shenk collector, This ingenious piece is known as a “proof machine.” In addition to saving countless man- hours and speeding customer ser- | vice, it proves every deposit and discovers mistakes even if they have been made by the customer. One of these ve ly The Nationa] Cash Regis- has been installed in machines, manufac- | ter Company, | lifying the bank's accounting sys- | tem. It adds to the [em equipment of the institution as already mod- a further step in keeping abreast of up-to-date banking practice. The new brain® is almost human in its operations. In fact, it surpasses the human brain in speed and accuracy Its twenty-adding-machines- “mechanical of calcula- tions. in-one keep a constant proof check on the records of each department automatically. The machine is such a way that the debits of each transaction must equal the credits, or the machine will lock automatic- constructed in ically, It will not operate unti] the error is found and corrected. The search is made easy, however, since the machine localizes the er- | ror to one transaction, prints the | amount of the error, and shows whether it is on the debt or credit Corrections are | . i made easily | because the machine | side. will add or subtract with equal ease. As a further example of the sen- sitivity of this the sorting of modern machine, items is directed automatically by the opening of shutters on sorting rack compart- ments. When recording an item, | the depression of any classification | key | open on causes the proper shutter to the All remain closed thus forcing the the compartment. corresponding com- partments. other compartments op- the let- ters are written as a by-product of the proof machine operation. The greatly erator to place item in Transit proper machine will in- { crease the operating efficiency ol | our bank and provide quicker and more satisfactory service to our customers,” Carl S. Krall, Cashier | of the bank, said today. “We like | the way this machine streamlines | our operations. We believe it will | repay the investment cost in a | short time. But even if this were | not true, it is worth more than its cost in the satisfaction it brings to our employees. It definitely re- moves a lot of drudgery from the work.” a — day's | HERE'S THE SLATE FOR THE COMING ELECTION | Those nominated as a result of | the primary balloting of Mount Joy ald Wilson; councilmen, Earl Shel- ly, Robert Sherk, Loretta Kline, Donald Thome and Sally Ann Nis- justice of the peace. Theda and Asher Neiss; tax Harry Sheetz. Liberal Party— Burgess, Jay Brooks; councilmen, Barbara Shel- lv, Pat Brooks, Frank Eichler, Paul and Fitzkee, Claudette Zeller and Georgann Shatto; justice of the peace, Mary Ann Spangler and Nancy Ashenfelter, and tax collect- or, Gerald Berrier. — HSE LEGION AUXILIARY WILL | ENTERTAIN LANCASTER POST Tuesday evening the Ladies Auxiliary of the Walter S. Ebersole Post No. 185, met at the Legion Home. The Unit planned to entertain Post No. 780 of Lancaster at a St. Patrick’s Gavel Bell party. A new Brownie Troop No. 108, of thirteen members will be sponsor- ed by the Auxiliary as the present eroup disbanded. The purchase of hats and pins will be made for the Another card party was planned prizes to each table will be award- 1952 $2.00 a Year in Advance ‘Water Consumers Mortuary Record Afternoon, March 13, JOHN ABEL ALASKA SGT. AND MRS. RETURN FROM Sgt. and Mrs, John Abel arrived here Monday evening from Alaska, Fi | Obs Throughout This enroute to Shaw Field, South Car- 1 e jections | olina, and are staying at the latters ti To Rate | Entire Locality The Abels flew from Anchorage | 0 a € ncrease Irs. Cora May Greer, 71, at Co= to Seattle in a C-54 and (hen by | The Public Utility Commission | i lumbia Northwest Airlines to Chicago. The fixed a hearing for next Thursday, | Lynie B. Kulp, 50, of Rothsville, balance of the trip to Mt. Joy was: March 20 at Lancaster to consider hanged himself in a garage. made by train, complaints against a recent rate | py ghia; 76, very well known Sgt. Abel was stationed at Elm- increase granted the Rheems Wa- candy store Wet al "Lancaster endorf Air Force Base near An-|'er Co. of Rheems, Lancaster. Co : | William H. Lynn, 78, Bainbridge, chorage for the past twenty-five The PUC called the hearing af- lat St Joseph's Hospital Tuesday. months with the 39th Food Service | ter receiving formal complaints | Emanue] D. Peters, 85, well He has now completed his tour of | from Martin H. Cope Co, Rheems, J xsiown tomato farmer near Wash=! duty and has been reassigned to| Clyde R. Brinser, Rheems, and | ton boro the 363rd Tact Reconnisance Wing Howard M. Sipling, of Mount Joy. | Ida, wife of Milton R. Dietz, of at Shaw Field. The Cope complaint charges that Columbia, at the hospital there. Both Sgt. and Mrs. Abel are for-| the increase permitted Feb. Ist! =o 0 or and was born at Row= mer residents of this community, would result in a “grossly exces- enna Mis. Abel was formerly Miss Mar- sive return” on the water com- The 4-months-old son of W. Le= garet Kramer, daughter of Mr. and pany’s investment. A joint com- roy and Jane Tracey, at Marietta, Mrs. Calvin Kramer, W. Donegal | Plint submitted by Brinser and oo 604 dead in bed Sunday. He St. She has been in Alaska since | Sipling said the rate boost is “un- suffocated in the bed clothing dur- August. just and unreasonable.” ing the night, Sgt. Abel is a former resident of The company estimated the rate . Lancaster. boost would raise revenues by $563 Mrs William Hossler They expect to remain here un-| year. It affects some 111 cus- Mrs Katharine Hossler, 75, Eliz=~ til the beginning of April. tomers the Rheens section abethtown R2, widow of William E Hossler, died at her home. She y SCHOOL AND HOME ASSO. a member of Elizabethtown Mote Brief News From MEETING NEXT THURSDAY nite church and is survived by one The meeting of the School and} 4 wghter, Mary, wife of Byron Co= Th D ih F Home Association will be held in ble, and a Son Jerry both of Eliza~ e al 1€S or the elementary building Thursday, | R2: ote grandchilds he Tarch 20, at 8:00 p. Teachers | anda March 20, at 8:00 p. m. Teachers great-grandchild and two brothers: will be in their rooms at Quick Reading y respective John Poorman, Elizabethtown RI, 7:30 p. m. to greet parents. Dr.|.n4 Louis Poorman of Kansas, Columbia will break ground for | Henry Bucher, dean of Elizabeth- aaa : its $450,000 sewage disposal plant! town College will discuss “Chil- Miss Jane Mae Zeller. March 22. ; dren’s fears, their consequences Miss Jane Mae Zeller, 77. North Forty-four slot machines were {4nd remedy.” Market street, Florin, died last seized in a raid at Dauphin, north As an attendance award, an el-!| Wednesday in Lancaster after a of Harrisburg. : ectric wall clock will be given to] jjlness of several years, a brief ae- Wilbur Hanford Sheaffer, 48, of the home room having the high-| count of which appeared in fast Ephrata, wholesale egg dealer, Was | est percentage of parents present | eek's Bulletin. She resided in killed in an auto crash in New| 4 the meeting. Florin with two nieces, Mrs. Max Jersey. : Plans for a Spring festival tenta~| Kaplan and Mrs. Thamas Bronson, Augustus Bradshaw, 22, Harnis- | tively planned for June 6 will be| Born in Florin, a daughter of the burg, was burned to death in an | discussed. late Jacob G. and Martha Becker auto crash on the Super Highway — Zeller, she was a member of the near the Downingtown Interchange. Miss Caria Mia Ortleib, 39, of Loncaster, who pleaded guilty in $1,999.00, {JAMES HEILIG HEADS ROTARY CLUB Youth Day in the topic of a talk presented to the United Brethren church. She is sur- vived only by two nieces. Government was M1 shor yas i Court, being short was Mrs. Rebecea Jane Hipple. sentenced from one to three years | Rotarians at luncheon Tuesday by Mrs. Rebecca Jane Hipple, 78, in the bastile. Mr. Carl Maio, County Chairman | Middletown, died at a Harrisburg : The authorities must Expect an | of the youth government committee | Hospital. She was the wife of the increase in patronage as it order- at Lancaster. late Perry Hippleé. ed a general cleanup of thirty jails Mr. Maio was sponsored by the Formerly ‘a resident of Mount thruc ut the st.ate. local Junior Chamber of Commerce! Joy, which she left 15 years ago — -— Sedo : a whose president, Mike Pricio, was| she was a charter member of thei CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION a guest ar the meeting Legion Auxiliary Post here. She MOVIES WERE SHOWN HERE Directors and officers elected | was a member of the Methodist Mr. R. Chandler Heagy, of Lan-1| ere: president, James Heilig; vice | church and the Independent Order caster, showed movies of the Cen- president, Charles J. Bennett, Jr;| of Shepherds, Middletown tennial celebration held here Jou secretary, Charles Ruhl; treasurer, | She is survved by two daughters Summer, and a recent County Fire- | paris Hostetter; directors, Theodore | Mrs. Benjomin Houser and Mrs. men’s parade at last They Weidler, Harold Clark and Ray| Williiam Givens, Middletown: four night's meeting of Pe Ire | Wildy. sons: Paul, Mount Joy: Raymond oy in the Plan - Firemen = = A Ge eee and Harry, Elizabethtown; and Ab- ahh Cn ht WT BENNETTS RESTAURANT ram, Goidshoro; 13 grandchildren, BE A ws fllid us fol. | FIVE YEARS OLD MONDAY id 19 great grandchildren. I Pliny Suan Roe Were : ii Ss o> Five years of service to the comp PA ch cio ows: FE: srr, 3-year term as : ‘ 1 . : ws: am | t os lini A : munity will be marked St. Patrick's trustee; anc wrist Shirk, alternate A : . , | Day, Monday, March 17th, when F delegate to the County Firemen's 2h i ia Gh : : | e ews rom ti : Bennett's Restaurant celebrates its convention. : e oo » fi! th anniversary. The annual firemen’ memorial . Fl d V t X : A 3 20 The Bennetts wish to thank their| # orm an ICIN y service will he held in the Evan- 4 x y us ap eir a age Mr. anc 5. Jacob DD Sirickiayr gelical United Brethren church at tu o! i Ir. and Mrs. Jacob D. Strickler oo . - which made these five years pos=-|returnel home after several weeks 7:30 p. m. Sunday, March 30 | in Orlando. FI 2 2 a sible and assures you that they will y Ila, i pn : : x Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Hershey vis- y . enter their sixth year with an en-{ jjcd Mrs Fannie Erb and family, Week S Birth Record deavor to serve you with utmost] also Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Alwine in courtesy. Middletown Saturday evening, Mr. and Mrs. J. Earl Wolf, 205 E. = nei Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Koser re- : : 0 turned home last week after spend- Main street, this boro, a daughter | COUNTY MAN DOESN'T KNOW | in: three weeks in Florida. at St. Joseph’s Hospital Monday. | HOW MANY CHILDREN HE HAS{ Mrs. William Lawton Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Hostetter, of Hayes McCarthy. 32. Quarryville | MM! 5. Fred Hauer and daughter, of : ; i A br te . : ancaster spent Tuesday wit , Rheems, a daughter at the General R1, told the County Court he did- ond BT: Love Vole ad ney Hospital Friday. n't know how many children he Mrs. Paul A. Martin Sr. is a sur- Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. Eber-| had. He thought he had 13 and lai-| ical patient at the General Hos- 1 1 sole, of this place, a daughter at| er daid it could be 11 or 12. pital ha | General on Triestove | OF co re a Mr. and Mrs. John A. Eshleman t. le reneral ospita on Tuesc ay. Of course, he hasn't been home| nd family spent Sunday in Mary- Mr. and Mrs. Willard A. Smith, | lately as he is in the county jail land visiting the latter's relaiives. Salunga, a son yesterday at the] for non-support. My, and Mrs. Warren Eshleman General Hospital. — li Sees of Emigssille, York Co. ele Sate op, TQ 5 aa) venng guests a Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Garber, | E'TOWN SCHOOL DISTRICT Mrs. George Mumper. Elizabethtown R1, a daughter yes-| RAISED TO CLASS THREE Mr. and Mrs, Horry Miller, of terday at the General Hospital. The Elizabethtown School Dis- | Bheems. visited the latter's father, and Vive. Aah Good. Mt tik Yeas rl bc Mr. Samuel Shelly on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Good, Mt. | trict has been raised from a class| apes. Lillian Hamilton entertain- Joy R1, a son Wednesday at the| four to a class three district, the | ed the following to dinner Sunday: General Hospital. Board announced at its recent] Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hatton, Wash- Te meeting. The 1950 census rose to im D ang and Mos Row ; : , pre : En Ammon and children, ap; Miss STOLE, THEN SOLD 2 AIR 5083 which puts the district in a Byenda Pierce of Lancaster and Mr. RIFLES AND BINOCULARS higher category. and Mrs. B. F. Kauffman. Charles Thomas, 17, Columbia RI, | A A ern N and Ss. Sr. has Leen arrested for the alleged | MAKING A STORE ROOM ea ty . ‘ y : ( ds thefi of two air rifles and a pair of | AT FORMER SHEETZ HOME , binoculars from the home of Daniel Dr. E. K. Tingley is converting Appo FLYING CLUB MET Good, Columbia R1. the corner room of his property, ! Mr. Alvin Reist, entertained the State Police said the youth sold | Main and Delta streets, into a bus- | Chiques Aero Flying Club at his the articles for $70 at ; ancaster | iness locati arpe rs are : yr fied r $70 1 Lane aster ine SS location. Carpenters are now home Tuesday evening, at which pawn shop. He has been jailed in| installing two show windows and a time the monthly meeting of the the custody of Edgar Barnes, pa-| door on Main street side. | Club was held with Vice President role and probation officer, at | Reist presiding Te lr ones MEMORIAL SERVICE re etal Were ioe DIDN'T TAKE US THAT LONG After being under discussion ev- er since 1950, Terre Hill Council has passed a zoning ordinance. The annual Memorial Services of |, FIXED THEIR TAX RATES Friendship Fire Co., will be held New Holland's boro tax rate was ; on Sunday, March 30, in the EU.B., fixed at 19 mills for this year while +] Church at 7:30 p. m Lititz will get along with 10 mills,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers