The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 15, 1952, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ws
/
f.
taste
of In-
/ings.
'6 -
size
gi



High School Activities — Class Day, May 29th — Baccalaureate, June 1st — Commencement, June 3rd

Boro Authority Considers
Cost of Two Standpipes


Auto Accidents
In This Section
During The Week
Mrs. Susan E. Miller, Masonic
Homes, Elizabethtown, was injured
Saturday when thrown from a car
in a collision with another auto at
Lancaster.
Auto Damaged
J. Elwood Brubaker, 23, Florin,
reported State Police his auto-
mobile was slightly damaged by a
hit-run driver on a legislative route
between Florin and Marietta at
7:15 p. m. Sunday.
Brubaker told police
automobile was painted blue
was either a 1936 or 1937 Dodge or
to
other
and
the
Plymouth.
Two-Car Collision
A driver looking for a parking
space caused a two-car collision at
8:50 p. m. Saturday,
Lancaster City police.
James Booth, 122 Delta St,
boro, was traveling west on West
Chestnut Street, looking for a place
to park and made a left turn into
the path of an auto going east, op-
erated by Oran C. Correll, Bethle-
hem, police said. Total damage was
estimated at $600. Booth was charg-
ed with reckless driving.
Admits His Guilt
John W. Frecht, 26, of 146 North
(Turn to Page 6)
en cs. etl (Ie.
Credit Buying
Curbs Are Lifted
By Government
For the
months the
you free reign to buy that car, tel-
according to
this
first time in twenty
government has given
evision set, or furniture on what-
ever terms you can get.
That means there are no more
controls over down payments and
time-to-pay. The federal
board announced the suspension.
Reaction
split teday. Some saw the lifting of
reserve
in this trade circle was
installment buying controls as pro-
moling a boom to
and they prepared to meet the sit-
uation with new easy terms.
Others, however, sounded a note
caution. They said they plan to
their business,
of
keep down payment requirements
and limit the payment time on their
own volition.
They voiced the fear of loss from
too One
don't
terms. television
ol | 4
2 down payment on television sets
easy
dealer said: we require
and set an easy time limit, the set
may wear out or color television
may come in before we get
money.”
— ——— Aree
Ex-Slave Marks
Birthday Today
With ‘Nice Walk’
William Adams of Landisville, a
runaway slave, will read a “lil bit
co de Bible” and take a “nice walk”
to-
our
in celebration of his birthday,
day Thursday.
“When a man gets as old as I is,
son — he wants to do alot more
than dot, but he jist kain't.” Wil-
liam observed, summing up his age.
William says he will be 107 years
old. He has no birth record to show
it, but his claim has won the ac-
ceptance of his neighbors and Old
Age Assistance which lists his pres-
ent age as 106.
The frail old man says he fled
from a Louisiana cotton field dur-
ing the Civil War. Today, hardly
impressed with the fact he may be
one of the oldest men in America,
William “jist takes it easy like most
other old folks.”
Since 1932, Uncle Bill, as he is
known in Landisville, has lived in
a furnished building on the land of
J. C. Snavely, lumbermjan. He sub-
sists an old age assistance and the
help of the Snavely family.
Far from being helpless, William
works in the Snavely garden, car-
ing for the plants and vegetables.
While he usually eats with the
Sanvely family, he sometimes pre-
fers to “stay home” and “fry my-
self a little bacon and eggs.”
ntl | i
TAXES! TAXES! MORE TAXES!
Penna. municipalities have levied |

2,148 new taxes to date under the | tary Club Tuesday. Gamber spoke
. state’s board local tax law and that
number is still climbing.
The Mount Joy Boro Authority
held a meeting at the Gerberich-
Payne Shoe Factory office Tuesday
evening with all members present
Also engineer Jas, Michaels, Dal-
lastown.
The meeting was called for
purpose of considering bids
standpipes, other pipes, valves, etc,
Also the cost of laying of water
mains,
the
on
Standpipe Bids
Several bids were opened
supplying standpipes as follows:
The Pittsburgh Steel Co. bid: Tank
of 350,000 gals., $23,000; one of 700,-
000 gals, $32,800; 1,000,000 gals.
$42,100. All are approximate bids
Chicago Bridge and Iron bid:
350,000 gals, $21,380; 970,000 gals,.
$41,841.
No action was taken on
the above.
The East Penn Construction Co.,
of Landisville, bid as follows for
laying water mains, exclusive of
the cost of pipes: 6-in. main, $2 per
foot; 8-in. main, $2.50 per ft.; 12-in.
main, $2.80 per ft.
It was brought out at the meeting
that the cost of extending the bor-
ough’s water main out the Mariet-
for
of
any
ta pike to the proposed new school
building would be $30,000 to $35,000
the expense of which must be paid
by the joint school board.
The next meeting of the Auth-
ority will be held Wednesday, June
4th.

——-_———
FRMA ESBENSHADE HEADS
DONEGAL 4-H CLUB
The Donegal 4-H Club held their
first meeting at the home of the
leader, Jane Roland with
two members present.
Officers elected were:
Erma E. Esbenshade:
dent, Mary Ann Felty: secretary,
Miriam Roland; Kay
Warfel; song leader, Barbara War-
twenty
president,
vice presi-
treasurer,
fel; news reporter, Kay Stevens:
game leaders Kay Stevens and
Helen Felty.
The project for the season is
Lunch Box Packing.
The meeting was then adjourned,
games weve played and refresh-
ments served.
—————- ———————
CO COURT DISPOSES
OF SUPPORT CASES
The County Court
two support cases of local
last week:
To Pay $20 Week
George Rafferty,
instructed to pay $20 a week to his
wife Sara Rafferty, R4,
for the support of herself and four
children. He was told also to pay
$2 a week on arrearage.
That’s His Punishment
Alpheus S. Nornhold, 308 S. Mt.
Joy St., Elizabethtown, com-
mitted to County Prison for failure
to pay his wife Myrtle M. Nornhold,
147 N. Market St., Mount Joy, sup-
for herself and two children.
—
$450 AUTO DAMAGE SUIT
FILED AGAINST LOCAL MAN
Court proceedings started
against a Mount Joy man to recov-
er $450 in automobile damages in-
curred in an accident on Route 441
of
interest
disposed
Salunga, was
Lancaster
was
port
were
a mile south of Bainbridge last
June 23.
Defendant in the action is How-
ard Sharp, 125 Donegal St. this
horo. Mattie Hemingway, York, has
brought the suit.
She claims in her complaint that
the automobile operated by Sharp
collided with her car when Sharp,
fell asleep, and his car veered into
the lane of oncoming traffic. Ray-
mond Bott was operating the Hem-
ingway automobile at the time.
Week's Birth Record
Mr. and Mrs. Elam Haldeman, of


Salunga, a daughter at St. Joseph's
Hospital Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Summy,
Mount Joy R2, a son at the Lan-
caster General Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Miles Robinson, of
Florin, a daughter at St. Joseph's
Hospital last Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Rettew,
disville, a son Monday at the Lan-
caster Osteopathic Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Brady, of
Manheim R2, a daughter the
General Hospital on Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fdward G. Myers,
Salunga, twin boys at the General
Hospital Wednesday.
Lan-
at
een
SPOKE HERE ON BEES
Ralph Gamber, Lancaster, was

speaker at the meeting of the Ro-


on “Bees”. He is president of the
Bee Keepers of Lancaster County.
MOST
UP-TO-THE-MINUTE
The Mount Joy Bulletin
WEEKLY I
N
LANCASTER
COUNTY

VOL. LI, NO. 50
The Straleys Held
Open House On
50th Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Straley,
7 E. High St, Maytown, celebrated
their 50th wedding anniversary on
Wednesday, with an open house at
their home from 6:30 to 9:30 p. m.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Straley, who
are 74, are natives of York County.
Mrs. Straley, the Rosa F.
Kraut, is a daughter of the
Joseph and Elizabeth Richter Kra-
ut, of New Salem,
band is a son of the late Samue] H.
and Catharine Miller Straley,
Kralltown.
The couple was married in Hal-
lam, York County, in 1902, and in
the same year moved to Maytown
where Straley, a harnessmaker by
trade, established himself
riess. They have been lifelong mem-
bers of St. John's Lutheran Church.
Maytown, and active in community
affairs.
Straley has also
]
|
former
late
while her hus-
in busi-
been interested
in genealogy and founded the
Straley Family Association, some
vears ago. He was its first presi-
dent. The couple has two sons and
three daughters: the Rev. Luther
S. Straley, Athens. N. Y.: George
H. Straley. Wilmington, Del.; Mary
E.. wife of the Rev. John D. Foers-
ter, Redands, Calif.: Martha E. and
Fsther K. Straley, both at
There two grandchildren.
home.
are also
— —
The Oldest EUB
Church In County
Glossbrenner Evangelical United
Brethren Church, Florin, the oldest
E. U. B. Church in Lancaster Coun-
ty, passes another mile stone in its
long history when on Sunday, May
18th at 2:30 P. M. the corner stone
will be laid for the $76,500,
Sunday School and Parsonage unit
now under construction.
Dr. D. E. Young the Superinten-
dent of the East Penna. Conference
(U. B.) will address the worshipers
the
Ceremony.
Gene
the and Seraph
choirs join in singing “We Would
Be Building” by Deitz. The Cherub
new
at this service and officiate at
Corner Stone
Under the
laying
direction of
Swords, Senior
choir under the direction of Mrs.
John H. Gable will be present to
sing Jesus Loves the Children by
Russell. Mr. Norman Will is the
accompanist for the musical groups
this service
held
will
If weather permits,
in its entirety will be out=
The
charge of Rev. John H. Gable
tor.
be in
Pas-
doors. service
—— —— rs
Girl Scout Leaders
Meet At Rheems
Girl Scout
day, Thursday at the Heisey Ranch
at Rheems, home of Mrs. W. Scott
Heisey, for a program of workshops,
leaders will meet to-

business meeting and panel discus-
sion.
The workshops, !
held from 5 to 7 p. m., will include |
courses on first aid, instructed by
Mrs. Arthur Holmes: Mrs.
William Cash; bedroll and emerg-
ency knapsack, Miss Mildred Zink;
Mrs. Daisy
which will be
games,
and direction,
compass
Schoenroch. The group also will
practice fire building and cook
one-pot meals.
There will be a business meeting
beginning at 7:30 p. m. and after-
wards Dr. S. June Smith will lead |
a panel discussion on “Leadership
-Girl Relationship.” Square
ing will follow. Troop leaders have
bring
danc-
been requested . to along |
samples of camperaft or
crafts which their groups have been
outdoor
doing.
amet li ni
CRASHED INTO TREE, KILLED
Harold Schlopp, 30, Ephrata, was
crushed to death when he crashed
into a tree felled across the high-
storm: Sunday
way during a rain
on Route 222.
Gee.
BE ON YOUR GUARD
We have reports that there are
fake magazine subscription solici-
tors working thruout the county,



Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday Afternoon, May 15, 1952
MARYLAND MADE TEST
ON TRUCK-ROAD DAMAGE
The theory, roughly: twice
much load does several times more
than twice as much damage.
cited
tests run more than a year ago on
a l1l-mile stretch of U. § 301 near
La Plata, Md. 41
Washington.
The first published
For proof, the engineers
miles south
of
summary
the tests showed these main find-
ings:
A 22400-1b. axle load on trucks
cracked the cement slab 6.4 times
18,000-1b axle load.
more than an
On trucks with two sets of rear
wheels and axles, 44,800-1b. loads
caused 12.3 times as much cracking
as 32,000-1b. loads.
Highway engineers and the truck
bitterly disputed for
years the damage done
ments by heavy loads. Neither side
has been able to put up much sci-
people have
to pave-
entific evidence.
—- —— ee
The GAO Report
Accuses Cargill
In Grain Report
A report out of Washington says
that the General Accounting Office
(GAO) reported to Congress that
the Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC) paid one firm about 10 cents
for
of
not
a bushel more than necessary
to bushels
milllion
the
even have on hand.
This 1949 transaction
gill, Inc., Minneapolis grain
ers, between
four Six
wheat grain dealer did
Car-
deal-
half a
million and one million dollars, the
with
“dissipated”
report said.
the CCC of unneces-
sarily the wheat at
prevailing high cash market prices
when it could have been “more ad-
It accused
purchasing
vantageously acquired” later.
Cargill, Inc., has four huge grain
storage tanks near Marietta capa-
ble of storing 250,000 bushels of
grain. William Larsen, had no
knowledge of the “action and had
no statement to make.
EE
Twe East Donegal
Teachers Resign;
3 Vacancies Exist
Two resignations were accepted
by the school board at their meet-
ing Friday evening, May 9. Robert
Phillips resigned to accept a teach-
Millersville State
Mrs. Wilbur
Bedhm resigned as a regular teach-
substitute
ing position at
Teachers College and
er but will continue
teaching in East Donegal Twp. Miss
the
Maytown will
take Mr. Phillip’s position and Miss
Rachel LeCates, Maytown Elemen-
Lilly Martin, now teaching in
Elementary school
tary school, will teach Spanish and
the There
three the
schools of the township,
English in high school
now exist vacancies in
elementary
grades 1, 4 and 5
A school
was approved which
beginning September 3 and closing
activities were
announced. Junior High Promotion
will be held May 29, Alumni Ban-
quet, May 31, Baccalaureate Ser-
vice, June 1, Commencement, June
3, and Senior Class Trip, June 4, 5
and 6. A special meeting will be
held May 29 to adopt the budget.
Ae
Jno. A. Hipple, 76
Business Man--
Attorney, Died
John A. Hipple, a former practic-
ing attorney, died at 12:05 a. m. on
Wednesday at Lancaster General
Hospital at the age of 76.
Hipple formerly had an office at
40 N. Duke St., Lancaster, but was
semi-retired as an attorney in re-
cent years. He operated the Penn
Lime Stone Cement Co., of
Rheems, until several years ago
A resident of 132 S. Market St.,
this boro, Hipple had been a hos~
pital patient for 10 days. He was
graduated from Franklin and Mar-
shall College in 1903 and Columbia
(Turn to page 6)
1952-53
shows school
calendar for
June 3. Year-end
and
of |
| Piano And Voice
Recital In High
School May 22
On Thursday, May 1952 at 8 |
p. m. an organ, piano, and voice |
recital will be held in the Mt. Joy |
High School Auditorium. Mrs. Eth- |
the or=-
the |
will |
29
“ay
el Broske will perform at
Dr. David Schlosser,
piano and Mr. George Houck
sing a few selections. The program |
gan, at
is as follows
PART 1 |
Grand Offertoire de Ste. Cecile |
No. 2 op. 8 E. Batiste, organ - Mrs. |
Ethel Broske |
Malaguena - Lecuona, piano - Dr. |
David Schlosser. |
Where'er You Walk - Handel. |
Tu Lo Sai (Will Thou knowest) |
Torelli - voice {
Toccatto de Fuge - Bach. Prelude |
in G. Minor - Rachmaninoff, Mis. |
Broske and Dr. Schlosser.
PART II |
Piece Heroique - C. Franck, or-
gan - Dr. David Schlosser.
Polichinelle = Rachmaninoff,
ano - Mrs. Ethel Broske.
Little Bov Blue, Nevin: Song of
Songs = Moya - voice, Mr. George
pi-
Houck.
Pavane - Ravel: Scheherazads -
Remsky - Korsakov. organ and
piano, Mrs. Broske and Dr. Schlos-
ser
A silver offering will be taken.
- rr ——- —
RIRTHDAY WELCOME HOME
PARTY FOR IRVIN GERBER
Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs.
Elwood Gerber of Marietta R1 held
a birthday and welcome home par-
ty in honor of their son, Irvin who
just returned from Korea.
Those present were Mr. and Mrs.
Mahlon Foreman, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Kuhn and son, Russel, Mr.
and Mrs. Elwood Martin and sons,
Richard and Donald, Miss Sarah
Brown, Mrs. Alice Shenk, Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Shenk and daughters,
Gloria and Patsy, and Mr. and Mus. |
Guy Spittler, all of Mount Joy.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Gerber, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Gerber and
daughter Linda, Mrs. Glen Corley |
and daughter, Joan, all of Eliza-
bethtown

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kuhn, Man-
heim; Mr. and Mrs. Christ Hershey
and children, Richard, John, Doris,
Dorothy, Beverly and Donna, East
Petersburg; Mr. Mrs. Michael
Johns and son, Larry, of Maytown, |
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Woods
children, Karen, Ronald, and Wan- |
da, of Hellam, R1 York Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Gerber and |
Chris,
|
|
and
and
and |
children, Irvin, Charles and |
Sandra. f
Irvin beautiful |
the
of everyone present.
received many
and useful gifts, as well as
best wishes
_—
News In General
From Florin For
The Past Week
Mrs. William Beck was admitted
to St. Joseph hospital (Thursday)
today as a surgical patient.
Mr. and Mrs. William Smith of |
Elizabethtown were Sunday supper
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin
Hess and family
Mr. and Mrs. Landis Herr spent
the weekend at Loysville, Perry
Co. with the formers parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Hess.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Fenster-
macher Sr. spent the weekend at
Ocean City, N. J, with Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Fenstermacher Jr. and
family.
Miss Margaret Eichler enjoyed a
(Turn to page 4)
etl eee
TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS
Chief of Police, Park Neiss, re-
ported these violations the past
week: C. E. Disney, Elizabethtown,
charged with improper passing and
Ray Gockley, Ephrata, and Kenneth
Smith, Norristown, both charged
with ignoring red lights.
etl er
GARY SHANK WAS LUCKY
Mr. Gary Shank, of Bainbridge,
Pa., was the winner of the set of

Silverware given away at the open-
ing of Koser Jewelry on East Main
street

Sh wh ne ma meh me
A VERY DESTRUCTIVE
RAIN- WIND STORM SUNDAY
A very destructive wind and rain
storm struck in the east and south-
ern end of the county Sunday.
Near Heller's Church took
the roof off a brooder house 500x36
wind
feet and dropped it on a house 100
feet away. The
demolished, 23,000 chicks killed, loss
$25,000.
At Conestoga R2,
houses were flattened,
killed, damage $10,000
A barn
porch destroyed and a pig sty mov-
brooder house was
two brooder
16,000 chicks
house
was demolished,
| ed off its foundation at Bethesda
High school sessions at Elizabeth-
town were called off Monday be-
cause high water flooded the boil-
Crs.
At Neffsville all the street light-
| ing hulbs were burned out
— —
1,500 Petitioners
‘Want New Road
Over Chickies Hill
A petition, signed by approxi-
mately 1.500 persons, asking that
the Chickies Hill Road, between
Marietta and Columbia be relocated
was filed with the State Highway
Devartment.
The petition was taken to Harris-
burg by State Senator G. Graybill
Diehm,
County Board of Commissioners.
The drive to have the road relo-
chairman of the Lancaster
cated was started by Woodrow A
Zeamer, Columbia,
County Commissioner.
Most of the signers are residents
of Columbia, Marietta, E. Donegal,
W. Hempfield and Manor Twps.
Efforts to have the road relocated
have been mpde many times dur-
Democratic
ing the past 35 years.
al Op mmm
DESTRUCTION OF LIQUOR,
WINE, BEER APPROVLD
The Court approved destruction
of liquor, wine, and beer seized last
year in a raid on the residence of
Gardiner L. Cannon, Rowenna RI.
Liquor agents confiscated six
cases of beer, 3
and two fifths of whiskey. The des-
truction petition was presented by
at-
gallon jugs of wine,
A. Segelbaum, deputy
Horace
torney general of Penna. in behalf |
of the State Liquor Control Board.
Cannon was committed to the Lan-
caster County Prison last Sept. 12, |
in default of $100 fine.
———— et re ee
CLOUDBURST AT E'TOWN
HALTS ROUTE 230 TRAFFIC
Homes and business places in
Elizabethtown were flooded when a
cleudburst caused the Conoy creck
and another smal] stream to over-
flow in several sections of the com-
Traffic 230
was halted as
(
munity. along Route
high water covered
| the highway
eee ABO
MISS MARK GRADUATES
SCHOOL OF NURSING
The School of of
Lancaster General Hospital will a-
Nursing the
ward diplomas to 46 nurses at the
18th
cises on May 29.
Miss Betty Jane Mark, West Main
annual commencement exer-

Street, this boro, is a member of
the class.
tari so
TOOTH WASN'T PULLED
BUT ARM IS FRACTURED
Irvin Peiffer, Bainbridge R1, went
to the dentist to have a tooth pul-
led. When he got into the chair he
began to squirm and thru the den-
tist's effort to hold him, the
tient’s arm was broken at two plac-
pa-
es and he still has his tooth
—— re tll 4 Ct commen
TWO MOTORISTS IN TROUBLE
Robert B. Harvey, Elizabethtown
R2, was clocked at 70 by the police
while Anthony Resh, Marietta, must
answer a charge for failure to stop
and identify himself. He ran over
a bicycle at Lancaster.
—
STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL
St. Hilda's Guild St.
Episcopal Church will hold
annual Strawberry Festival Satur-
day, June 7th, 4 to 8 p. m.
church grounds.
ga
THE PAUL FRANK ESTATE
The Orphans’ Court has released
$10,628.16 for distribution among
the heirs in the estate of Paul
of
Luke's
their
on the
‘Throughout This

Frank, late of Florin.
a
$2.00 a Year in Advance
Mt. Joy High Seniors Had a
Wonderful Trip to N. Y. City
class of Mount Joy
York
three
The senion
High School traveled to New
last Wednesday to stay for
days. The class wa
Miss Catharine Zeller
Miss Marilyn Young,
Mr. Wilbu
ing principal of the Mount Joy Bor-
accompanied
by class ad-
visor, librar-
ian, Beahm, supervis- |
|
|
ough Schools, and M Homer
Schoener, science instructor
Leaving Mount Joy by bus at |
5:15 a. m, the class arrived at their |
hotel, The New Yorker, at about 11]
y |
On Wednesday
guided tour of the city was taken in |
a.m afternoon a
a glass-roofed bu Important
buildings and historic chrines, as |
well as such famous streets as 5th
Avenue, Wall Street, Broadway, |
and Times Square, were viewed. |
The Bowery presented a different |
of life to the students.
left the bus to walk through |
side city
They
visit a Chinese
Chinatown and
Temple before riding back through |
the
projects, past the docks, the Brook |
Manhattan, Williamsburg,
(Turn to Page 6)
many of city’s new housing
lyn and
— —
NINE CO. BOROS IN 1951
Homes for 408 families were built
108 NEW HOMES IN |
in nine county boroughs at
of $2,108,400 during 1951, the State
a Cos
Department of Labor and Industry
{
reports. |
borough-by-borough |
the of |
family units and the cost:
Adamstown, 9, $40,000; Akron, 16, |
$165,500; Denver, 10, $94,200; Eliza- |
bethtown, 52, $526,200; Ephrata, 34, |
$353,500; Lititz, 28, $348,000; Man- |
heim, 41, $422,000; Mount Joy, B5,|
$45,000; and New Holland, 213, $2.- |
108,400.
Mortuary Record
Here is a
breakdown, with
Entire Locality
Mrs. Ella M. McQuade, 75, at East
Petersburg
Percy Gross, 57, of Manheim, at
St
Charles O. Kelly Jr, 33; M:
ta, after a 5-days illness

Ira Good, 70, retired factory
worker of Lititz, hanged himself
Miss Christine M. Brubaker, 39,
of Neffsville, at the General Hospi-
tal.
John H. Mellinger
H. Mellinger, 93
Mennonite churchman and a
John prominent
|
{
i
|
i
wie
retir- |
ed farmer, died at the home of his
grandson, Amos Mellinger, Lancas-
ter R1,
|
|
|
near Silver Spring, after a
ten-day illness. |
- ——
MISS HELEN M. SWARR TO
GRADUATE AT READING
Miss Helen Marie Swarr, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mr: J. Arthur |
Swarr, Main street, at Landisville, |
will graduate from the Reading |
Hospital School of Nursing at the |
commencement exercises today, |
Thursday, at 3 p. m. in Wyomiss=
ing School
She graduated in June 1949 from
East © Hempfield Township High
School |
stat sega tli Ag lr sass
TWO BOYS ADMIT THEY
BROKE 72 WINDOW PANES
Two 11-year-old boys, taken in- |
State Police, admit-
ted breaking 72 window
to custody by
panes m &
tobacco stripping room at the barn
of Joseph H. Cooper, Salunga
The boys were
the
restitution
released to their
latter
for
parents when promised
to make damages to

the building
— ——— |
JAY PROVED HE'S MIGHTY
GOOD ON A GUESS |
Jay Meckley won the free pair|
of Wolverine Shoes at
Bros., on Saturday
Eshleman
when his guess |
for the big cake of ice to melt was
|
31 hrs. 7 min. The exact time was
{
31 hrs. 22 minutes.
rast lion comer
MARRIAGE LICENSES
|
St., this boro
Be a
|
|
Joseph's Hospital I

Legion Auxiliary
Plans a Party At
Vets’ Hospital
Tuesday evening a meeting of the
the Walter S. Ebersole
185 Auxiliary held their
meeting the Legion home.
A rummage sale was planned to
be held in Lancaster in the near
future. All members and interest-
ed persons are asked to keep this
in mind and notify any member if
they contribute rummage.
The group sell Poppies on
Saturday, May 24, Poppy Day.
Contributions were given to the
fund, collection
fund of the bi-
ladies of
Post No
at
would
will
veterans cigarette
and scholarship
| county Council, of $7.00; and $5.00
toward the draperies in the new
auxiliary library of the Valley
Forge Hospital; and one dollar to
Jeffrey Hinkle, (the little adopted
Scotland Soldiers’ Or=
(Turn to Page 2)
li ————
Nearby County School
Project Is Approved
county school
boy from
A total of eight
building projects was approved by
the County School Board holding
among them
was the proposed six-year high
school for East Donegal Township,
Marietta Borough and Mount Joy
Borough, with 38 classrooms for 787
between
its monthly meeting
pupils on a 26 acre site
Marietta and Mount Joy.
Miss Helen Shirk
Chosen Queen of
May At Maytown
Helen Shirk, a senior, was crown-
ed “May Queen” of E. Donegal Twp.
High School, Maytown, highlighting
in impressive ceremony at the
school last Friday.
Eleven candidates for “Queen”
honors participated in the program
the theme “Wheel of
Fortune.” Each of the candidates
unwound a crepe paper ribbon from
the of At the end
of the winner's ribbon was a card
designating her as “May Queen” of
1952
based on
wheel fortune.
Selected By Students
The queen was selected by stu-
revealed
unwound.
Fourteen former watched
is the crown was placed on Helen's
head by last queen, Doris
(Turn to Page 5)
Hii —————
3 School Boards
In Joint Meeting
At Elizabethtown
dent body voting, but not
until the ribbons were
queens
years
A joint school board, composed
of directors from Elizabethtown,
Conoy Twp., West Donegal Twp.,
and Mt. Joy Twp, met in the Eliz
abethtown school Tuesday evening
with the solicitors of three of the
districts :
Among the solicitors attending
were Alfred Alspach, West Donegal
Jack Horner, Elizabethtown;
and Mr. Arnold, Mt. Joy Twp. K.
L. Shirk, the Conoy Twp. solicitor,
was absent.
Twp.:
At last month's session the in=
dividual boards were asked to de=
cide whether they favored a joint
(Turn to page 5)
—
FIRST NATIONAL RECEIVED
SUPPLY OF RARE COINS
The First National Bank & Trust
Co. of Mount Joy just received a
small shipment of the newly mint=
ed George Washington Carver and
Booker T. Washington memorial

| half dollars. This will be good news
John D. Reid Jr. Baltimore, Md,! for those
and Joan Hardish, 101 New Haven |
interested in rare coins.
These coins are for sale at the
bank
nl cada