SECTION TWO VOL. 64. NO. 28 we MOUNT JOY BULLETIN -- Weddings -- KOMETA — HAWTHORNE The marriage of Miss Har- riet L.. Hawthorne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Haw- thorne, 23 Poplar St., Mount Joy, to Michael John Kometa III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mich- ael Kometa Jr., 3139 Engle- wood St., Philadelphia, was solemnized at 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 13. The Rev. Ralph War- ner officiated at the cere- mony in Mount Joy Church of God. Mrs Ethel Broske was - organist and William Gassman, soloist. The bride was given in marriage by her father and attended by Miss Jane Whit- ney, Abington, maid of hon- or; by Miss Barbara Winter- er, Abington. bridesmaid and by Debbie Sarbaugh, Mount Joy, flower girl. Ronald Kometa, phia, was best man for Philadel- his or — Arthur R. Schneider, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Schneider of 147 Manheim Street, a junior at Grove City college, has been elected president of the junior class. Art is majoring in Business administration and is a mem- ber of Nu Lambda Phi Fra- ternity, Head Waiter, Couns- elor, and the Student Coun- cil. brother. Ushers were Jeffrey Hawthorne, Mount Joy, the bride’s brother, and Thomas Finley, Philadelphia. John Hawthorne, Lancaster, cousin of the bride, was ring bearer. A reception was held at Hostetter’s. The couple will live at 137- A College Ave. Lancaster. Th bride graduated from Donegal High School and Mil- lersville State College and is a member of the faculty of Hempfield Union School Dis- trict. The bridegroom was grad- uated from Lincoln high school and Millersville State College. He is a member of the faculty of Conestoga Val- ley high school. The bride was honored at several showers. Among them were parties given by Mrs. Kometa, mother of the bride- groom; his aunt, Mrs. L. Jan- kauskuus; and the bride's aunt, Mrs Robert Hawthorne another by Miss Whitney and Miss Winterer; and a third by the teachers at the Rohrers- town Elementary School. ® NEWTOWN Mrs. Norman Brosey Visitors of Mrs. Amanda Haines and son were Mr. and Mrs. Amos Martin of Mount Joy R.D., Mr. and Mrs. Dav- id Afford of Lititz, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Alexander and family, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Nentwig and daughter Linda, Mrs. Daryl Davies and child- ren Barry Lynn, and Stevie, all of Mount Joy. Norman Brosey and son Barry called on Mr. and Mrs. John Brosey and daughter Debbie of Manheim R.D. Mrs. Irvin Witmer was ad- mitted to the St. Joseph's hospital on Monday. Visttors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Frank were Mr. and Mrs. Russel Herr and daugh- OPEN Close Christmas Eve 9:30 pm NR EVERY NIGHT & > F z . Santa In His Castle 55 Market Square EVERY NIGHT UNTIL TUESDAY BEFORE CHRISTMAS, 7:00 TO 8:00 P.M. ALSO SATURDAY AFTERNOON 1:00 TO 5:00 P.M. Manheim Retail Merchants Assoc. A A Er A se LS A A A BE PA WAT VE Pa Pe PA UA YA Santa Is In Manheim | and has also brought Extra Store Hours ANHEIM STORES a An underground beer cel- lar, now the better of Mariet- ta’s two Civil Defense shel- ters, may be sold to a private concern in the near future, the borough council was told recently. If it is sold, the borough Mount Joy, Penna., Wednesday, December 16, 1964 Marietta May Lose Best C.D. Shelter will have to give up the shel- ter and find a substitute if it wishes to maintain its pro- gressive Civil Defense stand- ards. The cellar-shelter is locat- ed at 243 East Market Street. The owner, Mrs. Anthony B.P.W. Holds Meeting Mrs. William Parmer of Lancaster presented “Christ- mas Sketches in Music” at the Dec. 14 meeting of the Mount Joy Business and Pro- fessional Women’s Club. Her vocal selections includ- ed compositions representing Italian, German, Russian, Ir- ish, American, English and French composers with brief remarks about the works and countries. Mrs. Parmer is ac- tive in both the Lancaster Opera Workshop and the Mu- sical Art Society. She was ac- companied by Given Wise- man, who is accompanist for the Lancaster Opera Work- shop. “Why the Chimes Rang” was read by Mrs. Jay Barn- hart who was accompanied by Mrs. George Broske. Miss Carolyn Boltz, girl of the month, and her mother, Mrs. Benjamin = Boltz, were introduced by Mrs. Earl Ko- ser, chairman of the Person- al Development Committee. A brief business meeting was conducted by Mrs. Mar- lyn Singer, president. Mrs John Melhorn, chair- man of the Hospitality Com- mittee, was in charge of the CHRISTMAS PAGEANT AT CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH Sunday night, Dec. 20, at 7:30 o'clock, a Christmas pag- eant, entitled “The Lord Reigneth”, will be presented by the Intermediate Bible School class at Calvary Bible church, Donegal Heights. Throughout the pageant musical numbers will be ren- dered by a selected group of singers and musicians. The public is invited. CHRISTMAS PROGRAM The characters of Christ- mas Speak, the story of Christmas, the Message of the Cross, and its meaning, in- terpreted in the lives of three Christians, from the Moody Monthly will be given in ‘Shadowgraph’ at Milton Grove EUB Church on Satur- day evening, Dec. 19, begin- ning at 8 o'clock. IN TRAINING OPERATION Seaman James W. Gerber, III, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Gerber, W. Main Street, participated Dec. 9 - 12 in a large scale fleet train- ing operation in the Western Pacific called “Operation Tall Back” while serving aboard the guided missile destroyer USS Robison. ter Debbie of Columbia RD. Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Mec- Farland and daughter of Man- heim visited with Maurice Frysinger and son. Visitors during the past week of Mr. and Mrs. Norm- an Brosey and family were Mrs Oscar Buch of Manheim, Mr. and Mrs. Levern Lucas of Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Brosey of Elizabeth- town RD. : program. Other committee members include, Mrs. Jay Barnhart, Mrs. Edw. Brown, Mrs. George Hardish, Mrs. Simon Nissley, Mrs. Beryl Frey, and Mrs. Kenneth Smith. The January meeting will be planned by the Civic Par- ticipation Committee with Mrs. George Broske as Chair- man. D.H.S. Musicians To Give Concert The Senior High Chorus of Donegal high school will pre- sent its Christmas Concert on Saturday, Dec. 19 at 8 p.m. in the school auditorium. The program will include Handel's Messiah Part 1; “Hallelujah Chorus;”’ Winter Wonderland; Toyland, and Deck the Hut with Cocoanut. Appearing will be a girls trio, folksingers and the 9th Grade Chorus. The chorus, accompanied by George Broske, will have as soloists: Carolyn Blantz, Kathie Brown, Joan Aument, Lucy Eshleman, Nancy Oliv- er, Judy Emenheiser, Rachel Miller, Ted Fellenbaum, Jim Spickler, Harold Smith, Dale Heisey and Fred Miller. Har- old Smith is student director. CANDLELIGHT SERVICE The young people of the Florin Church of the Breth- ren will have charge of a Candlelight Service at the church on Sunday evening, Dec. 20, beginning at 7:30 p. m. The public is invited. CANDLE SERVICE The annual Candlelight Service will be held in Chiqg- ues Methodist church, U. S. Route 230 East of Mount Joy on Christmas Eve at 8 p.m. The service consists of tra- ditional carols and scripture readings about the birth of Christ. The Youth Choir will sing “Infant Holy, Infant Lowly” by Reed, a Polish Carol, under the dihection of Mrs. Menno E. Good. Following the service the youth of the church will go carolling to the shut-ins of the community. B. Sahd, 240 Walnut St., Co- Jumbia, has also offered {to sell the beer cellar to the borough, but the borough council has indicated it would - rather find another rent-free shelter somewhere in Marietta Under Civil Defense auth- ority, the borough has been using the deep beer cellar rent-free. The owner can sell it after giving council 90 days notice. However, because of its depth, the beer cellar is prob- ably the best type of shelter from atomic fallout, explain- ed Marietta’s Civil Defense director, retired businessman John Schock. In fact, the beer cellar is rated much better than the other Marietta shelter, in the Municipal building basement, Schock said. The beer cellar can accommodate 90 people and the Municipal basement, a7. Marietta has the only such survival unit in Lancaster County, Schock said. * * * Police Chief The position of police chief of Marietta has been offered to a Lewistown man, a form- er member of the Lewistown police department with nine years of police experience. He is Ira Rhoads, 37. He would take office in January. The council's safety -com- mittee will contact him short- ly. Paul Portner of the com- mittee, said Rhoads would probably accept. He would be the Marietta chief on a three- month probationary period. The salary is $5,000 a year. Rhoads would succeed An- thony Discavage, 29 N. Broad St., Lancaster, who will re- sign for another position. Dis- cavage has been chief for slightly more than one year, Portner said. w 3 " Decorated Members of the Marietta Lions club have decorated the square in Marietta. They feature two large trees and four candles, loaned by the Jaycees. Square * * * Garage, Tr> h Collection Borough Council will open bids Tuesday, Jan. 12, and determine whether a contract will be let for garbage collec- tion or for garbage and trash. A three-year contract for gar- bage alone will expire Jar. 31. A new three-year arrange- ment is being sought. Children’s Party The Marietta Lions will sponsor a school child- ren’s Christmas party on Wednesday, Dec. 23, begin- ning at 1 p.m. club etn sm Injured In Highway Crash Eliza- Route 1, a custod- Roy B. Kaylor, 62, bethtown ian at Donegal District's Grand View school, was criti- cally injured last week. For several days he was in the intensive care ward at St Joseph’s hospital, but is im- proved enough to be remov- ed from that section early this week. He suffered injuries early Thursday morning, Dec. 10, when his pickup truck was rammed about 5:45 o'clock on Route 230. He was traveling eastward less than a mile west of the Florin ward when he was hit from behind by a semi- trailer driven by Douglas Le- roy Flood, 40, Wheatland, Pa. The Kaylor truck was driven off the highwa across a strip of railroad right of way, knocked down a railroad telephone pole and onto the westbound (north) tracks of the Pennsylvania main line. Three crack passenger trains were delayed while the wreckage was being cleared away. Driver of the was not inpured. big truck
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