The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 26, 1964, Image 3

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Landisville-Salinga
Mrs. William K. Risser

Steve Coulson of 2717
Buck Lane, received the
Eagle Scout award recently
from Explorer Post 229,
sponsored by the East Hemp-
field Lions Club.
* * *
Coulson, a sophomore at
Hempfield high school has
earned 21 merit badges in his
present scout career and is
president of his post. The 15-
year-old scout is the son of
Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Coul-
son.
* *
An information meeting of
parents of 8th grade students
of Hempfield high school was
held in Harkness auditorium
recently from-7:30 to 8:30 p.
m. Information relative to
course selection was present-
ed, followed by a question
and answer period.
* * *
Final plans for a food sale
to be held Mar. 5, and a trip
to the New York's World's
Fair on May 9 were made af
a recent meeting of Society
of Farm Women 18 at the
home of Mrs. Benjamin L.
Greider, Main St., Landis-
ville.
* * *
Outstanding senior music
students of the various school
districts were honored at a
recent meeting of the Lancas-
ter County Music Educators
Association. Those who were

Mortgage

IF YOU CAN FIND
The House
of Your
Dreams—
WE CAN MAKE YOUR
DREAMS COME TRUE
5h
AVAILABLE AT
J04 HF
’
recognized from Hempfield
Union high, Landisville are]
as follows: Nancy Wise, Lee
Brubaker, Herb Steffy, Bar-
bara Gard, and Carol Eshel-
man.
* * ¥
J. Richard Bauman, 1918
Park Plaza, received the Ser-
vice to Mankind award of the
Hempfield Sertoma Club dur-
ing a dinner meeting Wednes-
day, Feb. 19 at the Mt. Joy
Legion Home. Bauman, of-
fice manager at the Arm-
strong Cork Company, receiv-
ed the award on the basis of
community and civic activit-
ies.
A Hugh Forster, head of
the department of public af-
fairs and public relations at
the Armstrong Cork Co. was
the speaker at the meeting.
*
*® *®
Works of Walt Disney were
featured at the first of three
Hempfield high school music
programs held Saturday, Feb-
ruary 22 at 8 p.m. in Hack-
man auditorium, Kenneth
Kline as Disney, narrated as
the Junior Singers presented
Disney's ‘Wonderful World of
Music,” with selections from
“the Three Pigs’, Cinderella,
“Pinocchio”, and ‘‘Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs
The Senior Orchestra, Girls
Choral Club and Intermediate
Band participated. Soloists
were Barbara Gard, violin,
and Carol Eshelman, piano.
#* * *
Arthur A. Hackman, Lan-
disville, supervising princip-
al of Hempfield Union School
District, was appointed re-
cently as a county representa-

{
!
!
Money at


LANCASTER
COUNTY
FARMERS
| NATIONAL
| BANK



| One West Main St.

MOUNT JOY
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
801 Main St.



—


VIOUN OY
pe ” \ 1
BU » 3


e Deaths
NEDRA MAE ROHM
Mrs. Nedra Mae Rohm, 53,
of 104 Columbia Ave. died
at 4:25 a.m. Monday, Feb. 24,
at the General hospital after
an illness of six weeks.
She was the wife of John
Rohm. Her mother and step-
father, Mr. and Mrs. Benja-
min Reinhold live in Mount
Joy.
She was employed as an in-
spector at AMP, Inc, Mount
Joy, and was a member of
the Ladies’ Auxiliary of the
Friendship Fire Co. No. 1,
Mount Joy. Her church was



WITH MARINE AIRWING
Marine Sergeant Lester M.
Huber, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. Lester Huber of 133 Ston-
ey Battery Rd., Salunga is
serving with the Second Mar-
ine Aircraft Wing's Head-
quarters and Maintenance
Squadron 14 based at the
Marine Corps Air Station,
Cherry Point, N. C.

tive to the Lancaster Free
Public Library Board of Di-
rectors. Appointment was
made by the county commis-
sioners at a recent meeting.
Hackman, a native of Lit-
itz, has been supervising
principal at Hempfield since
{1952. He had previously been
supervising principal of East
Hempfield Township schools
for 14 years prior to the Un-
ion districts’ formation. In
1962 Harkman served as the
chairman of a library study
committee.
# *
The Salunga Women’s club
will meet at the Salunga
Church _of the Brethren Mon-
day, Mar. 2 at 7:45 p.m. The
Girl Scout troop which is
sponsored by the women, un-
der the leadership of Mrs.
Thomas McGuire, will furn-
ish the program. The Women
of the club will furnish the
refreshments.
*
Norman L. Bowers, 56-yr.-
old banker and church lead-
er, was recently awarded a
distinguished service citation
by the Hempfield Junior
Chamber of Commerce.
The citation was given dur-
ing a dinner meeting at the
Mount Joy Legion Home.
*
» »
%*
* *
Hempfield "Union Schools,
did not have school on Wed-
nesday, Feb. 26 due to the
109th Annual Lancaster Co.
Teachers’ Institute.


Are you
GUILTY
of Business
Neglect?
Don’t neglect the safety of
business records by the false
security of steel files or “fire-
proof” buildings. Be sure of fire
protection with Shaw-Walker
Fire-Files. They keep records
vault-safe right at point of use.
Wehave all
types. See them
at our store.




SHAWWALKER
CERTIFIED
PROTECTION
PROVIDENT
BOOK STORE
formerly Weaver Book Store
40 East King Street
LANCASTER, PENNA.
Trinity E. C. Church, Mount (7:50 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 22,
Joy. lin the Oreville Mennonite
Other survivors include! Home, where she had been a
two daughters, Doris, wife of | guest for some time.
Phares Aument, Mount Joy, | She had been in ill health
and Jacqueline, wife of Stan-|the past three years.
ley Gingrich, Lancaster; a| Born in West Donegal Twp.
son, Carl, at home; a brother | a daughter of the late David
John R. Sillers, Abington; a{S. and Ellen Schuck Barn-
sister Edna C. wife of Wood- | hart, she was a member of
row W. Fitzkee, Mount Joy | the Mount Joy Mennonite
R1: four grandchildren and 2|Church.
great grandchildren. | Survivors include two bro-
Private funeral services| thers and one sister: John S.
were held. Interment was|of Lititz R1; and Howard S.
made in the Eberle cemetery and Mrs. Alice Welfley, both
with the Heilig funeral home | of Mount Joy.
in charge. | Funeral services were held
ne { Tuesday morning, Feb. 25
MISS MARY BARNHART
from the |Nissley funeral
Miss Mary S. Barnhart, 79, home and burial was made in
formerly of Florin, died al)
Two-Day Public Sale
—QOF ——
Implements & Registered & Grade Holsteins
To be held on the premises located along Route
241, midway between Elizabethtown and Bainbridge.
Dairy Herd Dispersal To Be Held
FRIDAY, MARCH 6th, 1964
AT 12:00 NOON
50 Reg. & Grade Holsteins
Bangs and TB. Tested. 32 milk cows, some fresh,
springers and all stages of lactation, Bred Heifers,
Open Heifers and calves.
DAIRY EQUIPMENT: 3 Surge Milker Units; Milk-
er pump; pipe and stall cocks for 30 cows; milk cans;
10-can Cooler; can rack; water heater; double tubs;
buckets and strainer.
Implement Dispersal To Be Held
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1964
AT 10:00 A. M.
FARMALL SUPER “M” TRACTOR; Sauder Bros.
Manure Loader; Sauder Bros. Bulldozer Blade; FARM-
ALL SUPER “C” TRACTOR with fast hitch, 2-bottom
14 in. International Plow for fast hitch, cultivator and
International Corn Planter for fast hitch (like new);
Farmall “A” Tractor with cultivator and tobacco
hoers; Ford “871”, like new, Select-O-Speed Line,
P.T.O., Auto. wheels, has 400 hrs. on it, with 3-bottom
14 in. Plow with trip bottoms, 7 ft. Grass Mower, set
of chains and jacks, and mounted circular saw; Massey
Harris “No. 26” Self-compelled 10 ft. combine in good
condition; New Holland Baler “No. 69” Super Hay
Liner. like new; 3-bottom 14 in. Little Genius Plow; In-
ternational disc Grain Drill on rubber; Lime Drill on
rubber; Field Sprayer on rubber; New Idea Hay con-
ditioner; New Idea Bale and Corn Elevator; New Idea
Manure Spreader; John Deere Manure Spreader; Her-
shey double-row Tobacco Planter; Wood Bros. single-
row Corn Picker; 7 sets tobacco ladders, 24 ft. long, 3
on lowdown wagons; 5 flat wagons, International and
New Holland Heavy Duty, 3 with sideboards; Oliver
Stover Hammermill, New Idea Side Delivery Rake,
4-bar on rubber; 3-bar New Idea Side Delivery Rake;
12 ft. Spring Harrow; International Disc Harrow; two
other disc harrows; 10 ft. double Cultipacker; 2 steam-
ing pans & steam hose; Cyclone Seeder for tractor
with electric motor; Fairbanks Platform Scale, 1000-1b.
cap.; Minnich Tobacco Press, 3 fence chargers; hog
feeder, 500-1b. cap.; 14,000 tobacco laths; Air Compres-
sor; elect. cow clippers; hand sprayer; grease guns;
double-hole corn sheller; Rotary spader; forks; shovels}
wheelbarrows; hog troughs; locust posts; hay & straw
by the ton; corn & oats by the ton; tobacco paper; log
chains; 50 gal. drums; fence wire; 2 small stoves; to-
bacco cellar stove; 6 sets tobacco shears; tobacco
spears; electric fence wire; 2 watering troughs; digging
iron; two 3-horse plows; two 1-horse cultivators; potato
plow; 50 ft. endless belt; butchering kettles and tools;
ALSO AT SAME TIME AND PLACE A LOT OF
HOUSEHOLD GOODS:
Tappan gas stove; Hardwick gas stove, 30 in. oven
4-burner; Kelvinator refrigerator; G.E. refrigerator; 21
cu. ft. deep freeze, chest type; 5-pc. Waterfall bedroom
suite; double & single beds; % folding bed with head-
board; springs & mattresses; studio couches; metal &
wooden wardrobes; two 3-pe. living room suites; 9-pc
dining room suite; oak China closet; extension tables;
plank-bottom chairs; cupboards; wood box; end tables;
breakfast set; Zenith radio & phonograph combination;
Domestic elect. sewing machine, desk model; G.E. elect.
sweeper: galvanized tubs; lamps; clothes hamper; small
tables; stools; what-nots; medicine cabinet; dishes; jars;
crocks; 1-gal size home milk pasteurizer; cooking uten-
sils; and a lot of articles too numerous to mention.
Household goods will be sold first, then farm equip-
ment. Conditions will be made known by
ARTHUR C. LICHTY
DUPES & GERBERICH, AUCTS.
KRAYBILL, MILLER & MILLER, CLERKS
NAUGLE, ANNOUNCEMENTS
Refreshments served by the H G.L. Club of Bainbridge