The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 18, 1963, Image 4

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64 CHEVROLET



















































































FRONT TO REAR: Fleetside pickup, 60 Series slake, chassis-cab with wiility body, T80 till cab models
A new ’64 Chevrolet is a lot more truck than your
money bought the last time. Bodies, cabs, engines,
frames, suspensions—all have been improved to
give you more value for practically the same
investment, Let us bring one over to show you
why Chevrolet's the truck to put your money on,
QUALITY TRUCKS COST LESS
NEWCOMER MOTORS, Inc.
WEST MAIN STREET, MOUNT JOY
sn
PH, 653-4821
Telephone your Chevrolet dealer about any type of truck


, BULLETIN, N
- Notes From Florin -
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Shoe:
maker and family enjoyed a
late summer picnic at their
home Sunday afternoon
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Jonas Spittler and daughter
of E-town RD, and Mr. and
Mrs. Irvin Forry and daugh
ter of Manheim RD.
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Brandt
visited with Mr. and Mrs
Lester Ruhl of E-town Satur-
day evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Balm-
er and family of E-town cal-
led on Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Gebhart Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Barn-
hart of Elizabethtown visited
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shetter on
Sunday evening
Arthur Graveno spent the
weekend at home with his


Mortuary Record
VINCENT PERNA
Vincent Perna, sixty-five,
2419 S. Reese St., Philadel-
phia, died at the Graduate
Hospital, Philadelphia, at 3
a.m. Saturday, Sept. 14. He
was the husband of Martha
Fogie Perna and was a native
of Italy.
He was a machine operator
for the Container Corpora-
tion of America in Philadel-
phia. Mrs. Perna is a former
resident of Newtown,
Besides his wife, he is sur-
vived by a step-daughter,
Antionette, wife of Andrea
D’Angelo, of Levittown, Pa.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the
Nissley Funeral home and
burial was made in the New-
town cemetery.



ABRAM M. HESS
Abram M. Hess, seventy-
three, Mount Joy Rl, died
Wednesday, Sept. 11, at
Columbia, Robert Bishop of | Vising
mother. He is serving aboard
the aircraft carrier U. S. S
Wasp.
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Buck-
[walter and Miss Susan Miller
visited Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Seldomridge of Lititz Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sul-
{livan and family of Harris-
burg visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lester H. Brenneman Sun-
day
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sul-
livan and family of Harris-
burg and Mr. and Mrs. Lester
H. Brenneman enjoyed a late
summer picnic at the home
of Mrs. Anna Ranck of Leola
on Sunday afternoon.
Winners of Saturdays
drawing at Klines store were
Vicky Reinhold, 217A Done-
gal St. and Mrs. D. C. Kear
of Mount Joy. A drawing is
held every Saturday.
Miss Nancy L. Erb, 16, of



B. McCLEAN COCHRAN
B. McClean Cochran of
| Harrisburg will be the speak-
ler for the annual Chiques
| Methodist church Sunday
| School Rally Day service, to
[be held on October 6 at 9:15
am,
Since 1957 he has been
iti Ee. ferrin y inter. | B€neral secretary of the
section of State road and Ri, | Pennsylvania State Sabbath
230, when her car was struck | School association.
[by a car driven by Warren A graduate of West Chest-
Ray Shaffer, 43, of Hershey. |er College and of George
Total damage was estimated | Washington University, he
at $415. State police are in- | has been field secretary of
vestigating. the Penna. Christian Endeav-
Rev. Charles W. Wolfe of |or Union, a teacher, athletic
Florin ward, John Dietrick of | coach principal, and super-
principal. He is a
Landisville, O. D. E. Pottieg- | member of the Calvary Meth-
er of Lebanon will leave on |Oodist church, Harrisburg.
Thursday night for a three
week hunting trip to the Sal-
mon River district, Idaho.
They will hunt Elk, Deer,
and Bear in the most primi-
tive area that still remains
in the U. S.
Due to the absence of
Rev. C. W. Wolfe, this week
services of the Glossbrenner
EUB church will be taken
over by Rev. Bruce Sauders,
director of Public relations
of Lebanon Valley. He will
have charge of the Rally day
observance which is also this
Sunday.
Thursday, Sept. 19 the




Teaching in Africa
Word has been received
from Priscilla Lane, former-
ly of Mount Joy, that she is
| situated at Nabumali High
School outside of Mbale, Ug-
anda, where she will teach
mathematics and coach the
girls’ hockey team. Priscilla
attended a six weeks training
course at Columbia Univer-
sity in the Teachers for East
Africa program. She then
flew, with a group of eighty,
to East Africa where individ-
ual assignments were made

his home after an illness of
seven months.
He and his wife, Esther K.
Earhart Hess, observed their
50th wedding anniversary on
Sept. 7. A son of the late
Rev. Abram Z. and Elizabeth
Musser Hess, he was a retir-
ed farmer, but most recently
had been employed by the
Gerberich-Payne Shoe Co., of
Mount Joy.
He was a member of the
Cross Roads Brethren in
Christ Church, and had been
superintendent and teacher
in the Sunday School for a
number of years.
In addition to his wife, he
is survived by these sons,
Lester R,, Elizabethtown;
Kenneth E., Lancaster; and
A. Clair, Grand Rapids, Mich
also 13 grandchildren and
these sisters and brothers,
Mrs. Anna Zercher, Mt. Joy;
Mary, wife of John Climen-
haga, Messiah Home, Harris-
burg; Katie, wife of Stephen
Heisey, Center Hall; Henry,
Mount Joy R1; and Ben, of
Englewood, Ohio.
Funeral services were held
Sunday afternoon from the
Nissley funeral home and
from the Crossroads Breth-
ren In Christ Church. Burial
was made in the adjoining
cemetery.

CARSON C. ENGLE
Carson C. Engle, 67, a na-
tive of Mount Joy, died Sun-
day, Sept. 15 in a Saginaw,
Mich. hospital.
Engle had been a resident
of Saginaw for the past 45
years.
Born in Mount Joy, a son
of Harvey C. and the late
Lillie Carson Engle, he was
a member of St. Mark's EUB
church, Mount Joy.
He was a veteran of World
War I and was employed as
an office manager with the
Chesapeake and Ohio Rail-
road in Saginaw. He was a
member of the Masonic
lodge.
Surviving are his father,
his wife, Helena Walsh Engle
two sons, John H. and James,
both at home; four brothers,
A. Charles and Chester C.

Good Cheer class of Gloss-
brenner EUB church will
hold their bi-monthly meet-
ing.
Saturday, Sept. 21 Young
Adults will hold their month-
ly meeting.
by the government of Ugan-
da, Kenya and Tanganyika.
T.E.A. is a program of the
United States department of
State’s Agency for Interna-
tional development.
Nabumali is a coeducation-
al secondary school patterned
after the British school Sys-
roy C.. Elizabethtown, and tem. The staff of the school
Harvey C. Miami. Fla. and numbers fourteen, of wiiich
these sisters, Hildz €. and] SIX are Africans, two Ameri-
Arlene N. Engle, both of Mt. |¢ans and six English. The
Joy; Martha, wife of Joseph town of Mbale is 160 miles
D. Detwiler, Mount Joy, and northeast of Kampala, the
Mabel Jane, wife of Henry chief city of Uganda. Priscil-
K. Greiner, Elizabethtown. la writes that she is located
Funeral rites were arrang- 1 degree north of the equa-
ed for Thursday at 2 p.m. tor in the foothills of 14,000-
from the Heilig funeral home | 20! Mt. Elgon,
Burial will be made in the
——— F.F.A. Officers
HARRY E. GETZ
Mount Joy cemetery.
Harry E. Getz, 226 Main In Training
St., Ephrata, died early Sun- . on
day morning at the Wetzler| Five state officers of the
Convalescent Home in Blue | E€Pnsylvania Association of
Ball. He had been ill for sev- Future Farmers of America
eral years. from Lancaster county, along
At one time, he and his| With other state officers par-
brother, Paul, owned and |!i¢iPated in the 20th annual
operated Getz Brothers store |l«6adership Training confer-
ence on the campus of the
in Mount Joy, dealing in : :
men’s clothing, in the busi- Dewns State University last
ness room more recently oc- I i
cupied by the Eshleman Bro- ncluded in the group was
thes. Carl Ginder, R2, state presi-
During World War I, Getz dent and Donegal high school
served in France with the |&raduate. : i=
316th Field Artillery, 79th|. Lhe Leadership Training
Division, of the U. S. Army. Conference is designed to
For many years he was em.|Prepare these young future
ployed as a doorman at the [farmers for a year of service
Ephrata Legion Club. throughout the state. They
He was a member of Eph- had training sessions on how
rata Masonic Lodge, 665 F &|!© conduct a successful area
AM, and the American Le-|!raining conference. They al-
gion, Cloister Post 429. so received instruction in
Born in Reamstown, he public speaking, social con-
was a son of the late Jacob|duct, correspondence, and
G. and Alma M. Erb Getz, public relations.
lived most of his life in Eph-
rata and was a member of
the Lutheran faith. er onto the road in open
Surviving are a brother, range areas, which at night
Paul E., Mount Joy: two sis-|is particularly hazardous be-
ters: Miss Pearl G. Getz, with | cause they are easily blinded
whom he lived in Ephrata; by headlights, Don’t follow
Helen I. widow of Joseph |the animal with your eyes.
Buch, Lancaster; and a nep-| Keep your eyes on the road
hew. to avoid hitting other ani-
mals which may be on the
heels of the first,

Engle, both of Lancaster; Le-


Animals frequently wand-




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