JAY EICHERLY has the proof! At some time in the dim, distant past there was a building on Mount Joy’s Main street which had log walls. Last week as the Eicherlys and Charles Maurer were preparing to panel the east and south walls of the first floor of what for many years was the home of Mrs. D.C. Stoner, at 74 E. Main, they discovered huge, solid hand-hewen logs - believed to be chestnut. Over the years, the rooms have been used for many many purposes and now are to become an insurance office. Much of the original mud and mortar chinking was in place and here Eicherly is chipping away to even up the walls for a new panel installation. MILLIONS OF YEARS OLD Scout Makes Rare Rock Find He’s been interested for several years in rocks, fossils and such, but Dale A. Boyer, 14, never expected to make the rare find he came upon Saturday, April 7. On a special hike, he and other members of Mount Joy Boy Scout Troop 39, went to Swatara Gap in the Blue Mountains, north of Lebanon. As they scrambled around over the stones, looking for anything of interest, Dale’s eye ‘‘just hap- pened’ to focus on a rock bet- ween the feet of one of his bud- dies. The Baron Stiegel Room REGULAR MENU SELECTIONS The Colonial Room WILL SERVE FAMILY STYLE MEALS Children Under 10 Years Old '2-Price “Don’t he com- manded! What he had spotted was the fossil of an animal which lived on this earth in a swamp between 425 and 500 million years ago. The crab-like bony animal, now ex- tinct, lived during the earth’s Ordovician period. Dale, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Boyer, Marietta R1, realized at once that he had something unusual, but it was John Rogers of Elizabethtown, one of the three Scout leaders with the boys, who spotted the ro¢k as something move,’’ EVANS’ Restaurant INVITES YOU TO ENJOY IN ALL ITS DINING ROOMS The Robert Morris Room Roast Turkey — Baked Ham — Roast Beef AND ALL THE TRIMMINGS RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED NOW Call 665-9520 or 665-2458 168 South Main St. Manheim, Pa. 17545 We” (Seating 300) In Colonial Splendor April 11,1973 Mount Joy Bulletin - Page 5 East Petersburg Rotary Club PRESENTS THE FIFTH OF THE 1972 - '73 SEASON Thavel & Adventure Series SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1973 8:00 P.M. JOE ADAIR and His Film entitled “The Golden State of California” Centerville Junior High School CENTERVILLE ROAD, LANCASTER, PENNA. SEASON TICKET HONORED FOR ADMISSION Single Admission at Box Office: Adults $1.50; Students $1.00 TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR VERY special. He, too, is a rock buff and immediately recognized the unusual value of the discovery. The boys, whith their other two leaders - Dale T. Boyer and Jim Kinsey - had gone on an overnight camping trip to the area and one of the prime objectives was to take the hike to the rock banks. Dale is keeping the speciman safe and plans to follow up his interest in the rock by taking it to a professional geologist who is expert in the fossil field. Beth Ann Becker Named Yearbook Editor Beth Ann Becker has been selected as managing editor for Donegal high school’s 1974 Emerald yearbook. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Becker, Richland Lane, and was chosen by the executive com- mittee of the Class of 1974. She will have overall responsibility for the year book. Patricia Wolfe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Rice, 220 W. Donegal St., was picked to serve as business manager of the WOLGEMUTH’S HAVE ROHRER’S GARDEN SEEDS SEED POTATOES—VEGETABLES PLANTS—FLOWERS FERTILIZER — PEAT MOSS — COCOA BEAN SHELLS MULCH— COW AND SHEEP MANURE EGGS: Jumbo 2-$1.30—Large 62c—Not Classified 55¢ POTATOES — FRESH VEGETABLES — GROCERIES FROZEN FOODS — Small Lots or 20lb. Boxes FROSTY ACRE — PEAS 2lb. 69c 5lbs. $1.65 20Ibs. $6.00 FORDHOOK LIMA BEANS 2Ibs. 95¢ 5ibs. $2.10 10ibs. $7.00 GREEN BEANS 2lbs. 39¢ 5ibs. $1.75 20lbs. $6.50 KIMS CANDIED SWEET POTATOE PATTIES $1.10 MRS. PAUL'S IRREGULARFISHSTIX Precooked and Breaded 2lbs. $1.105Ibs. $2.35 10lbs. $4.50 40Ibs. $16.00 WOLGEMUTH FRUIT MARKET %a MILE WEST OF MT. JOY ALONG ROUTE 230 Store Hours: Phone: 653-5661 Hours: Daily 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. — Friday 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. publication. Production management and scheduling will be the responsibility of Patricia Ann Reidy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Barr, 24 Elizabeth Street, Maytown. Jay Richard Kopp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy G. Kopp, Mount Joy, RD2, will be the chief staff photographer. Additional staff heads will be appointed at a later date. Yearbook adviser is John W.W. Loose. Edgar Allen Poe only earned a few hundred dollars for all of his great works. Gas. Specialized Service — Repair, Maintenance, Installation of Commercial, Industrial and Residential Gas-Fired Equipment using Natural or L. P. D 0 Service Go. 305 Church St. Landisville 17538 Phone: 898-8264 After 5 p.m. 394-9552 PANCAKE BREAKFAST Mount Joy Lions Club will hold a Pancake Breakfast on Saturday morning, April 14, at the organization’s activity building, near the swimming pool. Serving of juice, sausage, coffee, milk and ‘‘all the pan- cakes you can eat’’ will begin at 6 a.m. and continue until 11 a.m. “Men do not care how nobly they live, but only how long, although it is wihtin the reach of every man to live nobly, but within no man’s power to live long.” Seneca. Mount Joy Lions Club PANCAKE BREAKFAST Sat., April 14, 1973 bam. - 11 a.m. Lions Activity Building Adults *1.50 Children under 12 *1.00 44 - 2C
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers