The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 19, 1974, Image 2

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    Page 2 - Mount Joy Bulletin
June 19, 1974
THE
Mayor Reports
This past month we had our first hearing on the bridges in
the Mount Joy Borough. The primary hearing was held with
P.U.C., Penndot Lancaster County Commissioners, Penn
Central Railroad and the Mount Joy borough. We explained
the physical situation of the bridges and the problem of not
being able to cross the bridges with our emergency vehicles.
The Lancaster County Commission, however, did state that
they would do a study to find a way in which to solve our
emergency problem. It was announced that another hearing
willbeset up at a later date on this matter.
The tennis court lights are now in operation and are there
for your use with a small donation of $1 per hour. We hope the
people use them and enjoy what Mount Joy is trying to
establish in the community.
Weeds, rubbish and piles of trash around properties are
eyesores to the community. I ask you to try and clean up
around your own properties during the month of June.
Failure to comply with the weed and trash ordinance makes
you liable for prosecution or fine.
William Rueter, part-time officer, will be joining the police
force on a full-time basis, effective June 10.
To clarify last month’s article on the bicycle licenses
everyone, adults and children, owning a bike and intending to
ride must purchase a license at the Borough hall by June 30,
1974. Borough hall is open from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. Monday
through Friday. June 22nd, Saturday morning, from 10 a.m.
until 12, noon, will be set aside as a special time for those not
able to get in during the week to obtain their licenses.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who
had a hand in making our Memorial Day celebration a
memorable time. The cooperation of the fire police and
police department should be commended for a job well
handled.
I will be in the borough hall on Friday, June 21, from 7:00 to
8:30 p.m. If you feel that you have a problem concerning the
borough, I ask that you come in and that we discuss the
matter.
MAYOR JAMES A. GINGRICH
Zwally & Packer Win
Partner Golf Tourney
L. Zwally and R. Packer
were winners Sunday, June
* 16, in a Best Ball of Partners
tournament, played at the
Cook Creek gol‘ course,
sponsored by Root’s
Distributors, and staged by
the Mount Joy Golf
association.
The pair had a 72 com-
bination score. Packer also
drove nearest the pin on hole
No. 2.
B. Young and D. Houseal
had next best with a 74.
Young posted the best actual
score of the day with a 75
card.
S. Keller was nearest the
pin on his drive to hole No. 5;
B. Hurst at No. 11, L. Lacy on
No. 14, and K. Houseal, No.
15.
Team scores were as
follows:
The Mount Joy
BULLETIN
11 EAST MAINSTREET
MOUNT JOY, PA, 17552
Published Weekly on
Wednesdays |
Except Fourth of July Week
and Christmas Week
(50 Issues Per Year)
{Richard A. Rainbolt N
Editor \
and A
Publisher gi
Advertising rates upon
request. Entered at the post
fice at Mount Joy, Penna.
s second class mail unde
e Act of March 3, 1879.
A Flight — L. Zwally and
R. Packer, 72; B. Young and
D. Houseal, 74; R. Crum-
bling and L. Ellis, 75; C. Bell
and R. Flick, 75; J. Hostetter
and J. Dietz, 75, and J.
Allen and S. Keller, 75.
B. Flight — G. Berryhill
and J. Mummau, 76; B.
Pennell and L. Lacey, 80; E.
Lindemuth and P. Hoffman,
81; C. Johnson and C. Lauth,
82; and R. Hurst and J.
Pennell, 84.
C Flight — D. Arnold and
C. Stites, 82; G. Sheetz and
G. Funk, 83; N. Godshall and
C. Drescher, 86; R. Hallgren
and E. Koser, 91; H.
Gingrich and P. McKain, 93,
and B. Eshleman and M.
Pricio, 85.
D Flight — B. Hoff and R.
Hollis, 86; V. Roberts and H.
Blasser, 87; J. Booth and J.
Charles, 96; D. Halbleib and
H. Zimmerman, 98, and J.
Funk and W. Kretzing, 100.
On Dean’s List
At Millersville
Three Mount Joy residents
are among 763 Millersville
State College students
named to the Dean’s List for
the Spring semester.
Cynthia L. Myers, 116 S.
Barbara St., is among 163
students with perfect 4.0
averages, all “A’s”’.
Other local residents
named to the Dean’s List
include: Leslie D. Engle,
R.D. 1, Box 217, and Susan
Carol Hurst, Pinkerton Rd.
BRICKER’S DINER
(Continued from Page 1)
““Goodies’’ referred to
materials which salvage
companies are interested in
having as part of their
compensation for under -
taking the demolition job.
It developed that a group
of people - wives and
children, included - had
visited the site over the
weekend, pitched a big
tent and spent the time
during and between rains
salvaging materials.
The land upon which the
diner and the service station
are located is owned by
Lloyd Lapp, Fruitville Pike.
The area was purchased by
Lapp and annexed to his
adjoining farm property,
known as Huber’s Nurseries.
The third building still
belongs to the Pontz family.
A member of the Lapp
family said Monday af-
ternoon that permission had
been given the York group to
remove the salvage.
The PennDOT men on the
scene indicated that the new
state of the site may com-
plicate removal pians.
People interested in
bidding on the removal, they
said, were due to visit the
site later this week.
It was their opinion that it
may be more costly to
remove the buildings now
than it would have been prior
to this past weekend.
P.P. & L. Proposes
To Sell Additional
Company Shares
Pennsylvania Power &
Light company has filed a
registration statement with
the Securties and Exchange
Commission covering a
proposed sale of two and one-
half million additional
shares of the company’s
common-stock. Sale is
scheduled for July 10.
The shares will be sold to
an underwriting group
headed by the First Boston
Corporation and Drexel
Burnham & Co., Incor-
porated, who will offer the
shares to the public.
Robert R. Fortune, PP&L
financial vice-president,
indicated that proceeds from
the sale will be used for
general corporate purposes
including the repayment of
short term loans incurred to
meet construction ex-
penditures. For 1974,
PP&L’s construction ex-
penditures are estimated to
be $305 million.
DHS Class Of 1969
To Hold Reunion
Members of the Donegal
high school class of 1969 will
hold their fifth year reunion
on Saturday, June 29, at the
Sheraton Conestoga, Route
222, north of Lancaster,
beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Class advisors, Mrs. Vera
Gingrich, Catharine Zeller
and John W. Loose, and
D.H.S. Principal Donald
Drenner will be guest
speakers at the dinner
meeting.
RAZING OF ONE OF THREE buildings along Road 283, east of Mount Joy, scheduled for removal this
summer as part of an ‘“eyesore’’ demolition project, had an early and unexpected beginning last
weekend. A group of York people - working with permission of the property owner - removed portions of
the delapidated former Bricker’s Diner. The building and three others were scheduled to be bid for
removal by PennDOT next week. A huge chunk of the east end of the building, formerly the dining room
area, has been torn away to permit salvage.
~ WEDDINGS
MUMMA — BOLAND
Announcement has been
made by Mr. and Mrs. John
J. Boland, of New York, and
Spring Lake, New Jersey,
formerly of Washington,
D.C. of the marriage of their
daughter, Joanne Noel
Boland to James Mark
Mumma, son of Mrs. Mark
H. Mumma and the late
Mark H. Mumma of Mount
Joy.
The ceremony was per-
formed on Saturday June 15
by Rev. E. Albert Rich at St.
John’s Episcopal Church in
Ellicott City, Md. The bride’s
sister, Mrs. Hardin E. Ross
ITI, was matron of honor and
Hardin E. Ross III was best
man. A small family
reception was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Hardin
E. Ross III of Columbia, Md.
The bride, who was
graduated from the Hewitt
School and Finch College in
New York, was presented in
1965, in New York, at the
Grosvenor Debutante Ball,
the Junior League Ball and
the Debutante Cotillion and
Christmas Ball. She also was
a member of the New York
Junior Assemblies that year.
She is presently a set-
tlement officer for the James
W. Rouse and Company,
Inc., in Columbia, Md. Her
grandparents are the late
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H.
Hutchison of Laurel, Md.,
and the late Representative
and Mrs. Patrick J. Boland
of Scranton, Pa.
Representative Boland was
Majority Whip of the House
of Representatives from 1937
until his death in 1942. The
bride’s father is a senior
partner of the New York law
firm Winthrop, Stimson,
Putnam and Roberts.
Mr. Mumma was
graduated from Albright
college in Reading, Pa, and
attended the University of
Pennsylvania. He is em-
ployed by the Rouse Com-
pany, in Columbia,
Maryland, as vice-president
of Rouse Insurance, Inc.
He is a member of the
Mortgage Bankers
Association of America, and
the Advertisers Club of
Baltimore. His grandparents
are the late Mr. and Mrs.
Christian N. Mumma of
Mount Joy, and the late Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Faas of
Manheim.
ESTOCK—TYNDALL
The marriage of Miss
Debra Kay Tyndall to
Douglas Lee Estock took
place Friday, June 14, at 6
p.m. at the Trinity Lutheran
Church, with the Rev. W.
Lester Koder officiating.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Tyndall, 805 Church St. She
was graduated from Donegal
high school and is a senior at
Elizabethtown college.
The bridegroom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Steven K.
Estock, 25 Columbia Ave. He
was graduated from Donegal
high school and
Elizabethtown college and is
employed by the Lancaster
General hospital.
Mrs. Michael Walmer of
Mount Joy was matron of
honor. Bridesmaids were
Miss Jill Tyndall, sister of
the bride, Mount Joy, and
Miss Marianne Koser, Mount
Joy. Flower girl was Miss
Carly Walmer, Mount Joy.
Serving as best man was
Gerald Estock, brother of
the bridegroom, Hockessin,
Del. Ushers were Abram
Koser Jr., Mount Joy and
Gerald Grove, Mount Joy.
The couple will live in
Mount Joy.
ALCORN—GERMER
The marriage of Miss
Greer Germer to John
Alcorn took place Saturday,
June 15, at 2 p.m. at the St.
Mark’s United Methodist
Church with the Rev. W.
Richard Kohler and the Rev.
Mr. Kofchock officiating.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John R.
Germer, 325 Marietta Ave.
She was graduated from
Donegal high school and has
been accepted at the Willow
Street Vo-Tech School's
practical nursing program.
She is employed by Masonic
Homes Hospital as a nurse’s
aide.
The bridegroom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Alcorn
of Chesapeake City, Md. He
attended Bohemia Manor
high school and is employed
by Schaffer’s Canal House as
a cook.
Mrs. Donna Mullen of
Elizabethtown was matron
of honor. Bridesmaids were
Mrs. Jean Germer, Mount
Joy, and Miss Darlene
Pierce, Elizabethtown.
Flower girl was Miss Stacey
-Germer, Mount Joy. Doug
Germer, Mount Joy, was
ringbearer.
Serving as best man was
Mark Alcorn, brother of the
bridegroom, Wilmington,
Del. Ushers were Jan
Germer, brother of the
bride, Mount Joy, and
Anthony Tereszcuk,
Philadelphia.
The couple will live in
Mount Joy.
WAGNER—VALLE
The marriage of Miss
Mildred Mary Valle to
Stephen Charles Wagner
took place Saturday, June 15,
at 2 p.m. at the Christ
Lutheran Church,
Elizabethtown, with the Rev.
Raymond Fetter officiating.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Valle, 219 Mount Joy St.,
Mount Joy. She attended
Donegal high school.
The bridegroom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Wagner, 715 Wood St. He was
graduated from Donegal
high school and is employed
by National-Standard.
Mrs. Bonnie Frey of
Elizabethtown was matron
of honor. Bridesmaids were:
Mrs. Marica Valle and Mrs.
Susan English, sister of the
bridegroom. Junior
bridesmaid was Miss Linda
Valle, sister of the bride.
Flower girl was Laura
Wagner. Craig Valle was
ringbearer.
Serving as best man was
Rodney Arndt of Mount Joy.
Ushers were Gerald Wagner
and Ronald Wagner, both
brothers of the bridegroom.
Junior usher was Jeffrey
Wagner.
The couple will live in
Mount Joy.
* ENGAGEMENTS
HOFFMAN—BRYANT :
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E.
Bryant Jr., 378 E. Front St.,
Marietta, announce the
engagement of their
daughter, Jean M., to Wayne
E. Hoffman Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne E. Hoffman
Sr. He is also the son of the
late Anna M. Saunders
Hoffman.
Miss Bryant is a graduate
of Donegal high school.
Mr. Hoffman, a graduate
of Donegal high, is employed
by the Coca-Cola Bottling
Co., Lancaster.