WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1971 THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Life With The Rimples PAGE FIVE IN UNIFORM re Te PROMOTED Edward L. Burkman, son of Mrs. Margretta R. Sholly, Columbia R1, recently was promoted to Army sergeant upon graduation from the noncommissioned officer can- didate school at Ft. Benning, Ga. ed pd ty . a Ww Ye VV , STAND IT! Donegal School Menus HIGH SCHOOL & JR. HIGH Friday, April 9 Easter Vacation : * * 3 Monday, April 12 Easter Vacation * * 3 Tuesday, April 13 Ham barbecue on heated bun Glazed sweet potatoes Succotash with butter sauce Fruit cocktail Milk *® % *»: Wednesday, April 14 Donegal meat loaf with brown gravy Steamed buttered rice Peas with butter sauce Celery and carrot stix Rusk and butter ~ Jello with topping Milk x * x Thursday, April 15 Steak sandwich French fries Creamed slaw Fruit Cookie Milk Ssmp— ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS Friday, April 9 Easter Vacation * * 3 Monday, April 12 Easter Vacation to MOUNT JOY Take one phone eall (or coupom below), add hostess with baskets of gifts and Information about the olty, stir In genuine hospitality, and you'll have a generous and delightful welcome, Just phone 2 Ann Hetrick 653-4147 | WELCOME NEWCOMERS! % Use this coupon fo let us know you're here. Name. Address ee & Clty. Ir lin ie Ja eth Please have the Welcome Wagon | Hostess call on me [3 | would like to subscribe te the } [3 1 already subscribe te the } Fill out coupon and mall te Cireulation i Dept., Tuesday, April 13 Ham barbecue on heated bun Corn with butter sauce Lettuce with dressing Fruit cup Milk 5 » # Wednesday. April 14 Donegal meat loaf with brown gravy Whipped potatoes Peas with butter sauce Celery and carrot stix Jello with topping Milk 8 %» Thursday, April 15 Fish sandwich French fries Celery stuffed with peanut butter Fruit Peanut butter cookies Milk Robert Marker, an Eighth grade student at - Centerville Junior high school in Hemp- field School District, has been named the first prize winner in the Colonial Dames 1970 Essay Contest. The contest, open to 8th grade pupils thru- out Lancaster county, drew a total of 138 entries. ‘It Hap- pened This way” was the gen- eral theme for the contest. Contestants were permitted to select any incident in Ameri. can history and explain its ef- fect on the nation today. Marker, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marker, of 1020 Sherry Lane, based his win- ning essay on the Loyisiana- Purchase. He was swakded a $50 Savings Bond. Judges for the contest were members of the staff of the Lancaster County Historical Society. The contest is sponsored annually by the Lancaster Committee of the National Society of Colonial Dames of America. Ed ES ES Hempfield Future Home- makers of America is one of several Lancaster County Chapters represented at the 26th annual State FHA Con- ference held recently in Pitts- burgh. Delegates from Hempfield, led by Carol Staman, third vice president of the Pennsyl- vania Association of F. H. A,, included Mary Kay Grab, mer, Barbara Hill, Penny Sheryl Rohrer, Debbie Brom- Frey, and Donna Geisler. The girls were accompanied by Mrs. Barbara Shenk, chapter advisor. The Hempfield Chapter led the “relaxer session of the program with a rendition of “The Austrian Yodel.” Mrs. Staman, besides her other convention activities as a state officer, offered the in- vocation for the fourth gener- al session. ¥ ok sk The third annual Solo-En- semble night, presented by the Hempfield Music Depart- ment, was held Monday, Mar. 29 at 7:30 p.m. in Hackman Auditorium, Hempfield H. S. LANDISVLL - SALUNGA NEWS followed by Nancy Bulson, soprano soloist, accompanied by Sandra Newcomer. James Zeigler performed a trombone solo, and Lisa Houck played the piano. A clarinet trio of Terre Amand, Pam Kirchoff and Debbie Slaugh also perform- ed. . Other solo presentations were given Barry Krueger, organ; Sheryl Forte, soprano vocal; Nancy Bulson, flute; and Becky Glatfelter, piano. The Girls Ensemble includ- ing Nancy Bulson, Penny Frey Sheryl Forte, Linda Gard, Karen Goldstrom, Bren- da Hess and Lisa Huffman vocalized. The Hempfield dance band played several sel- ections to close the evening musicale, ® wo ® The Landisville - Salunga Lancaster General hospital auxiliary Spring activities include a slide talk in March on Spring Flowers and ‘“Cre- ators and Collectors” will be the program for May. The auxiliary is presently selling pecans. # % ok Seven girls from the Hemp- field School District competed in the Miss Hempfield Contest Pageant on Saturday, April 3 at 8 p.m. in the Hempfield H. S. Hackman Auditorium. As an additional feature this year the Hempfield High stage band, under the direction of Henry Fox, provided the mu- sic for the pageant. The event is sponsored by the Hempfield Jaycees. The contestants were Miss Pamela Potrick, Miss Bonnie Brinser, Miss Teddi Fultineer, " Miss Judy Fry, Miss Cyntha McKonley, Miss Sally Witten- burg and Miss Sheryl Forte. 2. Bo Over 700 Girl Scouts took over the Centerville Junior High School gymnasium Sat- urday, April 3 for a Julietta Law Friendship Fund Rally from 1 to 3 p.m. Sponsored by the Hempfield Neighborhood of the Penn Laurel Girl Scout Council, the rally had an international theme. Each of the 40 brownie, junior, cadette and senior troops participating repre- sented an individual county to keep with the theme. Patronize our Advertisers : During his 12 weeks of Ec 7 > - * EAE A SORE PACA AONE Eran s an ZZ] YOU MEAN WHEN YOUR ITS THAT training, the sergeant received MUSCLES WHEN 1 GROW UP--| [po my ORAM BRAN WORKS IT MAKES RINGING IN instruction in leadership, light NO LABORING JOB FOR ME! WORK! JY HEAD HURT 2 Mm EARS weapons, infantry tatics, map , rl NOT ME -= NY reading and communications. I COULDNT : He was selected for the course under a specialized Army program that grants rapid promotions to outstand- ing individuals. He entered the Army in July 1970, completed basic training at Ft. Dix, N. J., and was last stationed at Ft. Polk, La. The 20-year-old soldier is a 1968 graduate of Hempfield high school. When railroads started op- erating in this country, angry mass meetings were held, protesting that cattle would be injured, health ruined, and passengers blown to bits by 15-mile an hour speeds! When in need eof printing remember The Bulletin. Ackley Covered Bridge, Pennsylvania 7€ 1832 > J 7. UV i ES Pi . > B ~~ — Sere ON APRIL 14, 1894, THE first Kinetoscope parlor opened on lower Broadway in New York for the exhibition of ‘“The Wizard's Latest Invention.” Crowds on Broadway waited all day and far into the night to see the pictures that lived and moved for ninety seconds through the eyeholes of Thomas Edison's device, the Kineto- scope. The exploitation of the motion picture thus began cs a form of mass entertainment. For more than a century men had been working with devices to give the inipression of motion. By the 1870's, photo- graphs were being used with some degree of success. Edison attacked the problem in 1887. His first motion picture ma- chine recorded spirals of tiny pictures on a cylinder, in the pattern of a phonograph groove. The pictures were viewed under a microscope, and the results were generally unsatisfactory. Work went slowly as Edison experimented witn enlarging the picture size, perfecting a device to move strip film past the aperture and developing workable materials. Progress continued, however, until 1889 when George Eastman began the manufacture of film on a nitro-cellulose base which met the problems of ‘ ‘roller photog- raphy.” That same summer, Edison perfected the mechan- ism to advance the film side- ways along the focal plane, while at the same time activat- ing the shutter. This ponderous machine, the kinetograph camera, is the true father of all modern motion picture cameras. The kinetoscope was a peep show device in which the film ran between a light source and a magnifying lens for about 13 seconds. For several years, Edison was unable to interest “promoters in backing his machine. ‘By 1893, however, some éen- terprising men had begun to see promise in the strange little if ST - ——— ZH ~~ v Z TH N . \$r 5 2 1 Li 24/0 \ ad 0 7 =PAST box. Filming of vaudeville skits and prize fights began in earnest, resulting in the first public showing in 1894, It was a scant two years later that in combination with Thoma Armat who had discovered the ¥o Model) (¥e Mode! T. A, EDISON, Bu~-R18 b KINETOORAPEIC CAMERA. 33; No. 889,168, @ hugy 8}, LH ll | MWitntsoes : wie A ban : A FT WvY 5 p Wy be Figure one of Edisen’s patent drawing for the Kinetographie camera. principle of the modern movie projector, Edison’s films had their first projected publie showing. The audience at Kos. ter and Bial’s Music Hall on the night of April 23, 1896 was astonished by this newest “miracle of science’ and sent up great cheers. The Communications collec tion inthe Henry Ford Museum at Greenfield Village in Dear- born, Michigan houses exam. ples of Edison's kinetograph camera and kinetoscope viewer as well as the mechanisms of many other motion picture pioneers. These devices stand as a bridge back to the time when Americans, like people all over the world, were con- stantly amazed at the wonder- ous advances of science.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers