Page 2 - Mount Joy Bulletin Aug. 21, 1974 WEDDINGS PENWELL — GROVE The marriage of Miss Nadine Yvonne Grove to Scott Carter Penwell took place Saturday, Aug. 10, at 2:30 p.m. at the Church of God with the Rev. Ralph Warner officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester M. Grove, Mount Joy R2. She was graduated from Donegal high school and Lock Haven State college, with a B.S. in health and physical education. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.Richard F. Penwell, 416 E. Market St., Marietta. He was graduated from Donegal high school and Rutgers university,with a B.A. in English. He is employed by Villanova university. Miss Jackie Crowell, West Grove, was maid of honor. Mrs. Jacquie McCurdy of Mount Joy was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were: Mrs. Judy Maxwell, sister of the bride; Miss Susan Shirey, Coudersport, and Miss Gail Simpson, Chalfont. Flower girl was Miss Stephanie Ann Maxwell, Mount Joy. Shawn Newton Maxwell, Mount Joy, was ringbearer. Serving as best man was John Carlucci of Larchmont, N.Y. Ushers were: Harold McCurdy, Mount Joy; Kenneth Grove, brother of the bride, Mount Joy; Stanley Tenerowicz, Wilbraham, Mass., and ~ David Landsidle, Scranton. The couple will live in Conshohocken. HOSSLER — SHOEMAKER The marriage of Miss Rebecca Lynn Shoemaker, 124 David St., to Phillip Howard Hossler, took place Saturday, Aug. 10, at 11 a.m. at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran church with the Rev. Dennis Hall officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shoemaker, Mount Joy. She was graduated from Donegal high school and West Chester State college. She is em- ployed by Madison Twp. Public Schools, Matawan, N.J. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hossler, Maytown. He was graduated from Donegal high school and West Chester 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 |, Editor J and Publisher = Advertising rates upon reques:. Entered at the post office at Mount Joy, Penna., as second class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879. 2) State college, and Indiana State university, Terre Haute, Ind. He is employed by Madison Twp. Public Schools, Matawan, N.J. and the Physical Fitness Institute of America. Mrs. Judy Gobrecht, sister of the bride, Elizabethtown was matron of honor. Miss Susan Schneps, Altamonte Springs, Fla., was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Portia Hossler, sister of the bridegroom, Maytown; Mrs. Christine Rosser, Elizabethtown, and Mrs. Susan Keithline, Willow Grove. Flower girl was Leigh Ann D’Amico, West Chester. Michael Gobrecht, Elizabethtown, was ring bearer. : Serving as best men were Paul Hossler Jr. of Manhatten Beach, Calif., and Palmer Hossler, Maytown, both brothers of the bridegroom. Ushers were: Duane Risberg, Mount Joy; Gregory Gobrecht, Elizabethtown, and David Mapes, Somerset. The couple will live in Freehold, N.J. HEISEY — ESPENSHADE The marriage of Miss Peggy J. Espenshade to Kenneth E. Heisey took place Saturday, Aug. 17, at 1:30 p.m. at the Mount Calvary Church with the Rev. John Fleck officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar E. Espenshade, 838 Clay Alley. She was graduated from Donegal high school and is employed by Continental Press, Inc., Elizabethtown. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester G. Heisey, 110 Anchor Road, ~-Elizabethtown. He was graduated from Elizabethtown high school and serves in the U.S. Army National Guard. He is em- ployed by Armstrong Cork Co., Marietta. Mrs. Cynthia Collins of Rheems was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Miss Debbie Espenshade, sister of the bride, Mount Joy, and Miss Betsy Barto, Mount Joy, Miniature bride was Miss Tina Carter, Lancaster. Frank Heistand, Elizabethtown, was miniature bridegroom. Serving as best man was Warren Mueller Jr. of Eliabethtown. Ushers were Carson Heistand, York; Dennis Carter, Lancaster; Edward Stum , Elizabethtown, and Carl Weber, Lancaster. The couple will live in Elizabethtown. Summer TRAVELERS Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Shaeffer, Park Avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Williams, Terrace Avenue, returned last week from a 17- day trip to Alaska. They flew to Vancouver, British Columbia, and took a 5-day boat trip via the Inland Passage. They went still farther north on a narrow- gauge railroad on which it took them eight hours to go 110 miles, so steep were the inclines and so precarious was the territory. They visited Fairbanks, Dawson City, Anchorage, Mt. Addresses National Meat Convention John Henry Brubaker, Mount Joy R1, addressed the 35th National Convention of the American Association of Meat Processors this week in Las Vegas, on the topic ‘‘Hit the Sales Jackpot with Retail Frozen Meats.” Brubaker, who is owner- operator of Stonebridge Farm Butcher Shop, was selected for participation in the Convention program based on his extensive ex- perience and background in this area. AAMP is a 1,300-member trade association representing meat processors, food service operators, locker and freezer provisioners, hotel, restaurant and institution suppliers, packers, retailers, slaughterers, butchers, curers and their equipment and service suppliers. McKinley state park, and took side trips to pan for gold and to see glaciers and icebergs. In Dawson City, famous in the Gold Rush era, but now a ghost town in the process of being restored, they ex- perienced the ‘‘midnight sun’ and attended an old- time stage show complete with can-can dancers. Joe was called on stage and partcipated in a brief routine with the singing star of the show. The travelers reported that prices are ‘‘sky high” for everything from sweet rolls to real estate in Alaska, and that the building of the oil pipeline is bringing people into the Far North by the thousands. The local people flew home from Seattle, Wash. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas O’Connor and their daughter and her family, Mr. and Mrs. John Tomlinson and children of Bucks County, vacationed last week at Avalon, N.J. Rev. and Mrs. Robert D. Kettering have just returned from a six-week vacation trip through the New England states and eastern Canada. They also visited with friends and relatives in northern and southern Indiana. They will be moving Aug. 27 to Harrisonburg, Va. where Rev. Kettering will be associate = pastor and minister of music at the First Church of the Brethren. DIG Needs $4,000; Plan Auction Aug. 28 Although only $4,000 short of the goal, Donegal high school still is digging for funds for a new, auxiliary gymnasium, now being constructed adjacent to the D.H.S. building. The project, called DIG (Donegal Indians gym- nasium), already has banked $16,106.13 since Spring. Next fund-raising project is an auction scheduled for Rev. Wayne Peck Is Guest Minister A United Church of Christ minister who presently is serving as director of the 17- 76 Achievement Fund for the Penn-Central Conference will be the preacher of the day at St. Mark's U.M. Church on Sunday, Aug. 25. The Rev. Wayne Peck, who resides at the Schock Presbyterian Home, will give the message at the 10:15 a.m. worship hour. Rev. Peck is a minister’s son. He received his junior and senior high school education in Louisville, Kentucky. His theological education was gained at. Eden Seminary, Webster Groves, Groves, Mo., and he served posts as director of religious education and youth director in North Carolina and Philadelphia. In his present job, Rev. Peck is working with 258 churches of the Penn-Central conference of the United Church of Christ in the promotion of the 17-76 Achievement Fund — a fund- raising project the goal of which is $17,000,000 for black colleges. The community is invited to hear Rev. Peck. Guest soloist for the day will be Miss Marcia Strominger. Wednesday evening, Aug. 28, at the storage shed, east of the school. With Auctioneer Abe Schaffner in charge, numerous surplus school items will be sold and the money will go to DIG. There will be old school desks, chairs, tables and many other items, some of which came out of the old Marietta elementary school, Principal Donald Drenner, who is one of the main movers of DIG, said this week. Any other items anyone may want to donate will be added to the sale. They may be left at the back of the school at the storage shed. Or, for heavy pieces (like old refrigerators), a call to Principal Drenner could arrange hauling. To date, construction of the gymnasium, designed to take the pressure of use off the big D.H.S. gymnasium and provide added facilities, is moving along well, schoolmen said. One of the last things to be done will be laying of the exterior bricks. Cost of that part is expected to be about $2,500. FOOTBALL (Continued from Page 1) varsity squad — 10-11-12 grades. Ten lettermen are ex- pected to be suited for '74 season, including two ex- perienced quarterbacks — Randy Richards and Allan Brooks. Also, there are a couple of challengers too. In the backfield will be Jeff Sheetz, who moved into the ball-handling department late last season. Probably, the team will be somewhat heavier. The coaches expect the line to average about 160 pounds and the backs to average four pounds above ’73. In some spots, tenth graders may be worked into the lineup. Ninth grade football hopefuls will report on Sept. 3, at 3 p.m., for equipment and practice. Frank Steller and Ken Strine will handle the junior high’s and Tom Konas the 10th graders. Marshall Lytle will be trainer. To raise funds for meals, the team members are selling pens (50c) with the ’74 schedule imprinted and later will have football yearbooks. Donegal Musicians At Band Camp Donegal high school bandsmen are attending annual Band Camp this week (Aug. 19-24) at Gettysburg college. The band has been con- firmed as a participant in the Gimbels Thanksgiving Day parade in Philadelphia on Nov. 28. Some people believed that gold was begotten by the sun and that the heat of under- ground veins wholly burned everything they came into contact with, turning those substances into gold. GRANT CITY WALL-TO-WALL CARPETING AN'T COME TO GRANTS? RANTS WILL COME One of our decorator-trained salesmen will come to your home at no extra charge. "YORK, PENNA. ELIZABETHTOWN COLLEGE EVENING SESSION Why? You can continue to work and still earn baccalaureate degrees in business administration, accounting, health care management and social work. You can develop your interests in the fine arts or increase your understanding of today’s world and its problems by taking courses in history, economics and sociology, among others. You can beat the high cost of higher education. Courses — there are 26 of them —cost only $45 per credit hour. Registration — Monday and Tuesday, Aug. 26 & 27, 6-8 p.m. For more information: Director of Evening Session Elizabethtown College 1899-1974 Elizabethtown, Pa. 17022 Tel: 1-117-367-1151, Ext. 248
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