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The Evening Sun from Hanover, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Publication:
The Evening Suni
Location:
Hanover, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE EVENING SUN Published Daily Except Sunday By Penn-Mar Publishing Co. Page 4 Wednesday, January 4, 1961 High Price Of Saving Gold In one of its roundups of is a real impact on tion on current topics, The Wall'economy, this may have to be Street Journal has reported in depth on what it will cost the United States to carry out its gold- consevration policy in Japan. The question is, as one U.S. of cushioned by the United States, which cannot afford to hurt the Japanese as long as it depends on their good will. But the report in The Wall Street Journal points to flcial sums it up, hpw much the! the prooability there will be no real government is willing to pay to impact on private eco- kecp its dollars at home.

In a larger sense, the question is how much the American people are willing to pay to conserve the nomy. When Japanese goods are barred from post exchanges, they will be sold at higher prices off the post; U.S. gold supply. The policy of that will be simple. When military keeping the families of military personnel at home is going to come high for the people involved.

When Japanese products are barred from post exchanges, the U.S. products that take their place will have to be shipped from home and personnel must live alone and like it, they will spend more money on entertainment. There will be more turnover of officers and troops. Newcomers will buy more than old- timers. Whatever the United States saves Today In National Affairs By David Lawrence WASHINGTON Many people back again to where it was be- are asking whal the imnact of the fore the remedies were applied, new administration is going to be TODAY FOR INSTANCE, there on business.

This is the season js much talk about unused plant! when economists, businessmen and capacity. But only a few years market analysts are making fore- back New Dealers were crying casts of the outlook for the new out that industry was not expand-. year. Predictions and forecasts often unwittingly the result Rev. Claude W.

Jones, Bel Air, is conducting special revival services nightly at Trinity Church years after the end of hos- Nazarene. Middle and Fulton Streets, through next Sunday. ing fast enough. Many of the pre- are sently idle plants would be used if of natural laws were allowed to wishful thinking. The tendency is ate and if artificial measures were to see the brighter side of things not constantly interjected into the and not to be too grim in looking economic situation by the politicians.

The enactment of lower and lower tariffs by this country, moreover, has resulted in great fit.1 to foreign countries but. on the other hand, it has also caused American companies to put up plants abroad where they can produce more cheaply than they at the facts of life BUT THE FACTS of international as weil as national economics are staring the world in the face. History tells us that after every major war there is a readjustment. Sometimes it comes within a and sometimes it takes a Purelv Personal By Tniman Twill Comes now the season of the, water out of a well when the elec- common cold and the mystery that engages my attention each winter. What accounts for the fact I have not had a cold for many years, trical gadget goes on the fritz, it would be a superb idea to furnish a thing called a crank, in case an automobile cannot be Believe it or not, all automobiles once were started with manpower and cranks continued to be stand- the self- ENGAGED sold at correspondingly high prices in gold may be more than offset by to the servicemen who patronize1 what Americans are likely to lose the posts.

Goods that the United States can buy more cheaply in Japan for use in its military installations, such as wiping cloths, will have to be taken I by ships and planes across the Pacific, at fantastic extra expense to the U.S. Treasury. Moreover, to the extent that in purchasing power in Japan and what U.S. taxpayers will have to pay for higher costs of maintaining military installations in Japan. No one ever claimed that gold conservation would be easy, but it is only belatedly that people arc beginning to understand it will be exnensive.

Be Patient With Snowbanks The is still beautiful in many spots unsullied by traffic and such, but in much of Hanover and other communities The streets and highways were cleared as well as they could cleared so that traffic could proceed in orderly fashion. Great ef that which remains from Decem- fort and much money were ex- storms has turned into a dirty eyesore. Cinders and other matter used to relieve the slippery conditions resulting from snow and ice have coated the piled-up leftovers of the storms to create a not-so-pretty pended in clearing the routes. By throwing ice and snow onto the cleared portions, residents merely undo the work of the snow-removal crews. State and borough officials are hopeful residents will be patient and refrain from spreading the snow and ice on traveled portions The natural inclination of many of the streets and highways.

If a people is to get rid of the pdled-up space for parking must be cleared, stuff, and some have proceeded to it is suggested the snow and ice spread it across traffic paths. be piled up at the edge of the side- where trouble begins. 'walk. New Approach To Investigation The U.S. Supreme de- its protection could be used incision upholding the discriminately against the section of the 1956 narcotics law which was one of the rea- represents a milestone in the rocky sons for its existence in the first road toward effective criminal in- place.

vestigation with simultaneous pro- The law now upheld by the Su- World Today Plain John Leads Senate decade or more. It was 10 years can this country. Indeed, there after World War I before the 1929 are many instances in which goods and the ensuing Repression produced abroad by both Ameri- affected country after country. It can and foreign companies are un- was not until the Second Worldiderselling in this country products War broke out that a substantial manufactured on this side of the after being susceptible during the started with the electrical gadget earlier years of my life? This will shock my Republican friends, but in a dream I had about going on a trip with the ard equipment after Kennedy boys. Jack and Bob.

I starter was invented, found both of them companion- Two kinds of people have worn able, full of fun and fond of josh- out their welcomes on my per- ing each other. My New Year's eve memory is of the firebell in the small town where I grew up tolling out the death of the old year at midnight while I lay snug abed thinking of the resolutions I intended to Due to getting in my bid early. I was able to replace my stock of old-fashioned neckties with a Mr. and Mrs. J.

Louis Shultz, 508 Carlisle Street, have announced the engagement of their daughter. Sue Ann, to Gene Edwin Bowser, son of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph A. Bowser, 205 jnew selection this Christmas, in- Willow Street. Miss Shultz is a sonal doormat: Southerners who argue it is constitutional to violate the Constituion and creeps from anywhere who argue it is American to undermine the vital part of Americanism set forth in the Bill of Rights.

If television had invented a game for its special purposes, it have done better than football, where most action is at close quarters and which uses a recovery developed. Now the readjustment of eco nomic conditions growing out of only one of many factors 1958 graduate of Eichelberger Senior High School and is a junior at Shippensburg State Col- BUT THE TARIffr situation is jege fjancei a 1957 graduate that wartime expansion is under way brings about adverse business con- By JAMES MARLOW again. These changes are some- ditions. Perhaps the most serious Associated Press News Analyst times referred to as or single factor is the arbitrary way depending upon the ex- in which labor-management disput- tent of the unemployment or the es are handled. WASHINGTON (API be less razzle-dazzle in the Senate which has just substituted a plain John for a glamor boy.

But the question puzzling Washington is whether the glamor boy will still be boss. The Senate Democrats Tuesday picked Mike Mansfield, 57, of Montana, thin of face and plainly dressed, as their leader to succeed the spectacular Lyndon Johnson. 52, who on Jan. 20 becomes vice president. decline in profits.

THE FIGURES do show, however, that, while recession in the last two years has affected adversely a number of businesses, the country as a whole has taken the readjustment in its stride. It is because of this over-all capacity of the nation to absorb declines in particular industries that much encouragement is derived for the future. But the basic fact which cannot of the local high school is a senior at Siiippensburg. Hal Boyle: The labor-union leaders demand the maximum in wage increases irrespective of the capacity of industry to absorb these in a given year or even over A. a period of several years.

Whenever labor chiefs overplay their hand, they bring about such a maladjustment as inevitably re- people, suits in a recession. The country As 0 today is still suffering from the complex, more and more "people stead of having to pretend to be ball large enough to show up on overjoyed with gifts of socks and a TV screen. pajamas and other haberdashery 1 didn't want. Nothing stirs my admiration like old men and women who have quit being afraid of public opinion. My government makes me think of a greenhorn runner who keeps looking back over his shoulder to see who's coming up from behind, instead of concentrating on This explains my feeling about picking up and laying Cyrus Eaton and Harry Truman, down out front, which is the secret I rarely agree with either of of winning races, them, but I feel good about both' my theory about deaths that of them for speaking their minds, seem to have been caused by over- I have been listening for years exertion in cold so- to ideas about fool-proofing society: called shovel against drunken drivers and so exertion has very little to do with far have heard no solution to I think the trouble is suffoca- NEW YORK problem.

Neither have I heard a tion from too much cold air, pie know a kinship rare to day solution for the problem caused' causing constriction of the throat 6 by drivers who overload on seda- and lungs. oui civilization grows anti-histamines, stimulants New York City has hit the silli- Manslield had been be glossed over is the extent to chief assist ant and gets his full which both the national and blessing. He will be responsible national situations are influenced effects of the steel strike of 1959. have to work odd hours to keep The new administration will 1 it operating have a number of top economic ad- To the sailor at sea, the pilot visers, some from the and in the air. the lifeguard at the some from the But the new beach.

the professional athlete in president will have to make a bas- the stadium, the lion tamer and or steering President-elect Johnny artificiality. The theory that a ic decision as to whether he the clown in the circus Saturday Kennedy programs through free market exists in America, will go in for a lot of experiments and Sunday are iust two more the Senate. Johnson, as vice instance, is widely held, but that could produce an even great-days the week. 1 ent. will over Senate has to be conceded that govern- er dislocation in the economy, And to about one-sixth of Amer.

sessions. Mansfield said he will mental intervention again and just as happened in New Deal laboring dutv be- invite Johnson at times to pre- again prevents the natural law of days. The new administration gjns side over party caucuses and pol- supply and demand from operat- must of necessity try to cure the iev rnmmittoo iney gins after the sun goes down. tection of individual liberty. The court has put its stamp of approval on a method of getting around the barrier of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, which protects an individual from preme Court presents the other side of the Fifth Amendment coin.

It provides that an individual may be compelled to testify before a icy committee meetings. Usually a vice president ing at THUS WHEN the government of recession and bring an early re- dark. earn their paychecks in the like coffee and benzedrine, or drivers who fall asleep, cannot see properly, or have no judgment. Something about the Belgians makes it hard for me to believe they are capable of milling around like excitable people elsewhere, and I suspect it was my childhood notion that Flemish were ness skids with a decision to eliminate race and color on future birth certificates. In this zany line of reasoning, the next step will be to eliminate sex.

too, lest that too lead to discrimination. For the record. like to predict that among those who be with us a year from now will phlegmatic. I thought Flemish; be all the bearded Cubans, all people would be full of plegm. the African leaders whose names Okay.

let it go. we know, six top Russians and Along with some way to pump one U.S. astronaut. covery, or else face an adverse verdict in the congressional elections of 1962. who stays in the background.

Thejment largely for unproductive PERHAPS THE BIGGEST floor leader, in this case, Mans- is obvious that any single improvement that could be least so far as his work in the the United States is spending more Senate a shadowy figure than $40 billion a year for arma- field, is the boss. change in the war or peace in the whole business situa- It remains to be seen whether ture a direct or indirect influ- tion would be to find a way to en- Johnson, for whom Kennedy will ence on business conditions, find plenty of outside work, will remain subdued in the vice chair or try to pull the strings to make Mansfield dance. Mansfield. one-time Marine, one-time college professor of his-j jtory and political science, is the courage the replacement or reno- Although this country has exper- vation of old plants. This could be ienced many a recession, nobody brought about by a revision of has come forward with any an swer as to how to prevent such a disruption.

Plenty of remedies are suggested as to what might be done when a recession does come tax laws on depreciation allowances. Higher allowances of this type over a short period of time now would tend to bring in more tax revenue in the long run. They clean the offices, guard, the streets, collect the keep the home fires burning while1 most of us sleep. They prepare 1 our day for living while we slumber. If you have never worked at you have always worked1 a a.m.

to 5:30 p.m. you have missed a adventure in living Assignment: Washington By Ed Koterba FORT MYERS BEACH, Fla. Celita Pike, who insists she lives a millionaire on $143 a month in her house trailer by the sea, 1 learned that others are attracted to i her way of life. Myers Beach. Florida.

(Copyright, 1961. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.) THE WEATHER The advantage is comradeship instance, after I told about York-Adams Area on the job. You get the feeling last year, she received five cloudiness and colder tonight, Amity a platoon enjoys in of marriage. 15-22; partly cloudy and federal grand jury if assured of man y0U mjght overlook SUCh aS federal appropriations! The American economy is bas- quite exist on a day job.

good-looking grass widow of 72 munity either f6d6rsl i Iat mnm imncmii nrmopfc rtr iaqHw ofrnn unll oKIa i i 00 being forced to give testimony that state prosecution on the basis of might make him subject to crim- his testimony. in a crowd. inai prosecution. The decision of which approach well-groomed he seems jthe trouble with all these devic- for more housing projects or oth- ically strong and will be able to; in the newspaper world the ov- ei ways of stimulating growth weather the current storm. The ernight tour of duty is known as big question is: Can it also lobster No one knows 'Hiere is a freemasonry that But Mrs.

Pike, an ebullient, little warmer Thursday, high 34-38. Carroll, Baltimore, Frederick The bustling Johnson, who is federal expenditures. But A route around the Fifth Amend- to use is left to the investigating body and will be determined by the aim of the investigation. If the probers want to seek the convic to shine, sometimes sitemed toF run the Senate by sleight-of-hand. in the 1960s? ment has been sought because no one who supports the constitutional of the United States has been in favor of knocking down ronPH nn the Fifth Amendment.

It Is an for suspected criminal activities. he needed them part of the Bill of Rightsjthey will have to forego the grant- lhem- li 1 A rtssl 1 es is that they last only a little while and, when -hey have ex- Johnson, considered by many hausted themselves, the country is aid Tribune, Inc.) the ablest Senate leader of the fy itself against a series of storms for sure how the term originated. theory is that it was coined (Copyright, 1961, New York Her-jby a forgotten ironic newsman in' prowess the ion and punishment of a senat(irf CHURCH AND SUNDAY SCHOOL ACTIVITIES BURIALS the Gay Nineties who nad to ar rive at his desk at midnight when turned down every one of those Counties Fair and cold tonight, I suspect, on low 18-24 in the north and 23-28 in the grounds that the swain were south portion; fair and somewhat all lousy pinochle players. warmer Thursday afternoon. Five-Day Forecast Extended outlook tor period Thursday through Monday for quality, of course.

Any man who wins an from Celita the playboys of that era were have' a Powerfully i Eastern Pennsylvania, Maryland, ting down to their lobster outlook on life LESSER H. LEGORE champagne. Virginia, Delaware, New Jersey Celita not a rich woman, mone- and Eastern New York: Tempera- and the reasons for its existence.ing of immunity and permit him to Or get things done by A preparatory service and com- Funeral services for Lester But whoever works the lobster tarily speaking, but of all the will average three to 10 de go far back in the development of cite the Fifth Amendment if he working out agreements behind munion will be held at Bethel husband of Pauline New- Mck knoWs a joy foreign t0 the Uonaires 1 have met 1 have found.grees below normal with only chooses. If, on the other hand, the punishment of the witness himself is less important to the investigators than the information he may give them on a bigger problem, they can in-substantial legislationlay in individual liberty in England and this A serious problem arose around 1950 when a long list of suspected Communists and criminals were told by their lawyers to rely on the Fifth Amendment to block congressional and grand jury investigations of activities considered hazardous to the national welfare. then bringing him to trial with the senators who range from liberal While there was general regreVtestimoTly he has which js tQ reactionary but are mostly that the guilty could hide behind what the Fifth Amendment is middle-road conservatives who, the scenes before voting time.

church of Christ, COmer Legore. 75 Bond Street. I Peasants Prisoned by the sunbeam! none happier than Celita. She livesjminor day-to-day changes; precipi. But the real reason for Friday at 7:45 p.m success there are some who question how successful he Ccngef was in getting through any really oo sist that he testify but forego the this: He was a middle-roader and right to prosecute him.

The investigators still are pro-: a compromiser This fitted in nicely with the department was the speaker last i night at the monthly meeting of the Guild of Grace United Church of Christ. Her sub- Thornton O. Black. since have, This is, roughly, the monthly Church of the Brethren, Balti- sense budget of the ex-school teacher and more, officiated. Burial was in brings a mystic union tojone-time farm woman of r--, tv 1 w.c.

r). tj Throueh Evergrcen Memorial Gardens, 0 wnr through it togeth-ilanderj on her beach- jhibited from forcing him to mood of the other 99 Mr, Raymond Ruhl- Finksburg- Pallbearers were ifront lot, electricity. food, Westminster, who died Friday of a heart attack, were held Monday morning at the Myers funeral hours. For three years long ago worked from midnight until comfortably on her income of $143 a $110 monthly check ta tion tenth may inch total less than one- with snow flurriei home. Westminster.

The Rev. morning, and never: $33 Social Security. from a long-ago investment and! mostly in the north portion through- the Fifth Amendment, there was general concern that abolition of I esteryears In The Evening Sun meant to prohibit. The case presently by experience, learned they involved have everything their way and man, assisted by Mrs. Donald Stahl, had charge of the Christian social action meeting.

Mrs. N. H. brothers, Ivan Elmer. Harry, are separate Everything else is miscellan----- Mervin, Ray and Orville Legore.

1e reSt mankind, especially since she does her None out the period. LOCAL WEATHEB REPORT At 1 State Of Wind Precipitation previous 24 hours- deals only with narcotics law en- accept compromise. Andres led in Scriptural responsive; reading. During the business meets ing GLENN H. DODRER Funeral services for Glenn H.

They are superior. They are alive i and awake. They belong to each! other. And they know it jTemperature (8 a.m.)—24 chnrWpr Lf)W 24 UCi rvuu L11CY RUUW It. 1 3 fr There is small tension and little t0 her Pocketbook.

Last Septemv own sewing. But sometimes there's a lie, uurniK int uusmcas mew- uicie is Milan itnsiun anu mue tr on mg conducted by Mrs. Donald Dodrer. of Apple Valley Calif, a hurry Thp job there tQ do gnd ber, Hurricane Donna wrecked her forcement, because it arose out Mansfield is a middle-roader. Reshi members made plans to hold former resident of Carroll County, there to do it well mobile home.

She needed $1,100 be- of a provision of a specific nar- too. Otherwise, doubtful annual Valentine covered dish who died December 25 as the re- No one leans over your shoulder.1 sides the insurance money to buy a yCdI cotics law s- i- be man for the Tuesday Feb. 7, at the of an automobile accident in a 1. i tit? Pa Unlnn DAnb that the new immunity approach broadest level. 15 YEARS AGO TODAY Mrs.

Marian Kintzing Wheeler was chosen president of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Hanover General Hospital, succeeding Mrs. Miller. Births: A daughter to Mr. and -------------------Mrs. Lloyd Wolf, Hanover R.

D. a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Dennis IMIctI II Reichart. 227 Poplar Street.

Deaths: Daniel Thomas Forry, 80, of 612 East Middle Street; John Franklin Teal, 49. Hanover R. D. 4. Temperature range: 32-49.

But now that the Supreme Court But he has one advantage over chu'rcn with their husbands and ip it it rtnn nrrn i i has upheld it. it can be assumed; Johnson starting out. guests invited. Mrs. Paul Forsythe was named chairman of the arrangements committee assisted by Johnson was leader in a Senate will be extended to other fields.

It where Democrats were in a ma- should Prove a boon to people jority but had to deal with a Re- wimam 'Bechtel "and Mrs. charged with fighting crime on the publican president. Dwight D. Ei- A1Jen Presseli. The entertainment senhower, who always held theicommiUee includes Mrs.

Donald threat of veto. Yealy chairman assisted by Mrs. Mansfield leads a Senate where wjijiarn Dulling and Mrs. James which his wife. Helen Beck Dodr er was killed instantly, were held Friday at the Myers funeral home, Westminster.

The Rev. Alen M- You are on your own. The big boss is at home adrift in drowze. The straw boss is just one of the boys. He has to be.

Otherwise he would be impossibly lonely. No 10f $100 each to 11 friends and rela handsome 35-foot replacement. But Celita is resourceful in business rj tomor ways. MINIATURE ALMANAC a.m. Sun sets p.m.

To get the $1,100 she sold shares Moon rises 7:42 p.m.; sets 8:58 Officers Chosen (Continued From Page 1) the Democrats still are a major- Leedy Last night-s hostesses were ity but will have a Democratic Mrs. William Miller, chairman. if Mrs. E. Nelson Mason, Mrs.

Democratic programs but anx- Thelma Morrisoni Mrs, James piesident not only pushing for 25 YEARS AGO TODAY Four members 31 an East Berlin ious to sign them into law Mansfield a patsy and may Mr. Forney. HarryN. G.tt 2nd. Johnson the Buriai in the Quarter.

Jan. 9. Cemetery, near Westminster. even when he is working. lita Pike trailer house must wait New Moon, Jan.

16. The night worker feels the pity until Celita saves enough from her Pallbearers were William Byers, iof a king to a serf as he hands i Oscar Black. Ralph Bonsack. the soverelmv the office gar Burall Paul Bonsack and Nev sovereignty ol the office they may take it out in trade fn Bonsack and Nev to the haggard, sleepy-eyed day vacati0ning in her trailer. in Dutrow.

MARSHALL A. MYERS Funeral services for Marshall A. worker who replaces him. the serf whose duty is just beginning. The night worker has quelled one of oldest Wentz and Mrs.

Lloyd husband of Bessie ytehtadWm liamW Hater and Rov McClar The Church Myers, Umontown Md who died washes his face and hands, puls ham W. Hafer and K. Koy McLlar ter trips tQ cUmb jnto hjs pasture. Women of St. York Street, Sunday, were held this morning Mon his hat and coat and steps into family were made seriously ill when coal gas from a heater entered their bedrooms.

Those overcome were R. M. Zeigler, his sons Harley and Galen, and his mother, Mrs. Virginia Zeigler. Marriages: George J.

Reaver. Hanover R. D. 4, and Mildred Zepp, Hanover R. D.

Nelson L. Weaver and Florence Trostle, both of East Berlin; Joseph Sanders. R. and Mary K. Hinkle, Gettysburg.

Mrs. Lillie Swartz Rebert, 27 York Street, died. The Evening Sun 130 Carlisle Hanover, Pa. Phone MElrose 7-3736 Founded In 1915 by H. D.

Sheppard and C. N. Mvers Woodrow W. Stetter was reap pointed superintendent and Mrs Esther W. Stetter was named cashier and office secretary.

The Mt. Olivet Cemetery Association a non-profit organization was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly March 3, 1859. Now in its 102nd year, it is one of the oldest cemetery associations in the state. The burial ground covers an area of approximately 70 acres and contains the graves of Richard McAllister, the founder of Hanover, and many other early settlers and notabfts. The first board of managers and officers included Daniel Q.

Albright, president; L. F. Melsheimer, secretary; Horatio W. Emmert, treasurer; William Wirt, J. Naille, Harry Kurtz, F.

M. And, even though hold a dinner meeting at 6:30 at St. Lutheran sunshine of the new leader, Mansfield could stilllp.m. today, sponsored by the Men Uniontown. The Rev.

Seth S. Hestergs grTcj proucj as a S. ci Rnrial wac in rhnri'hi balk at some Kennedy programs. Two Firemen Get Life Memberships of St. Paul's.

The teen-age choir officiated. Burial was in the hpaven will rehearse tomorrow at 6:30 cemetery. Pallbearers were six p.m. followed by senior choir Luther, Richard, James; anH TTnnnot ht He is diiferent from other peo- tice at 7:30. Robert Teal and Donald Martz.

John L. Bair, president, announced nominations will be made Monday, Subscription rates: Delivered by Baughman, George W7. Welsh the election will be carrier in Hanover and in communi- Wonh ciowio conducted Monday, March 6. in VnrW Arfams and Parrnll Ohepn Oldgie. The original plot of 15 acres of The Methodist Men will meet to- Charles B.

Donsen and Harold day at 6:15 p.m. in the auditorium of the First Methodist Church. The adult choir of Memorial EUB Church will rehearse land Kenneth Myers, Chester and Franklin Mort. CHARLES T. HUMBERT J.

Rife were presented life memberships in the Friendship Fire Pennville, at a meeting Monday evening. They were recognized for at p.m. today. Boys and girls outstanding services in behaif of fellowship will be held tomorrow the company. iat 6:30 p.m.

The junior choir will ties in York, Adams and Carroll Counties, 20c per week. By motor jland was purchased from Adam Mayland, $10.00 per year; $6.00 for Forney and was laid out in lots six months: $3.50 for three months. by Joseph S. Gitt. Mr.

Forney In all other areas by mail $1100 a year; $7.00 for six months; S4.00 Mr. Gitt are ancestors of Har- for three months. Special rate N. Gitt 2nd and Philip N. Forn- itudents, $5.00 school year; $3.00 lor six montt.

$2.00 for three ey months. Special for servicemen, by mail, $5.50 a year; $3.00 for Six months; $2.00 for three months. Member of Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclu- to the use for republication of all the local news Dublished in this newspaper as as all AP news dispatches. Second Class postaga paid at Hanover. Pa.

Daily Bible Verse COLOSSIANS 3:4 Christ, who is our Ufe, shall appear, then shall ye also appear wtih Him in A nominating committee to pre- rehearse at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow, pare a slate of officers for the an-; nual election was named, includ-1 Circ'e 2 of the United Lutheran ing Donald Cluck, Earl Anthony, Church Women of St. will meet tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Ralph Gobrecht, 9 Oak Street.

Circle 5 will meet at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the lower room. The Golden Rule Sunday School Class wiil meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the youth room. Engagement Announced Paul Sipling, 379 Poplar Street.

intermediate department staff has announced the engagement of meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow in his daughter, Nancy, to Pfc. Kenneth E. Grim, son ot Mr. and Mrs.

Richard H. Grim. 363 Poplar Street. Miss Sipling attended Delone High Catholic High School and is employed at Middleburg Manu- factoring Co. Her fiance is a member of the U.

S. Marine Corps and Women of the Church, the lower room. The youth choir of Grace United Church of Christ will rehearse tomorrow at 6:15 p.m. The chancel choir will rehearse at 7:30 p.m The executive committee of the is stationed at Camp LeJuene, N.C. He recently completed 17 months duty in Okinawa.

Lutheran Church, will meet in the church parlor at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Serves As Supply Pastor The Rev. Dr. Paul Levi Foulk.

Funeral services for Charles former pastor of St. Lutheran Church, York Street, is serving as supply pastor of the Lutheran Church of Our Saviour, Vero Beach, pending appointment of a regular pastor. Dr. and Mrs. Foulk reside at 306 Riverdale Drive, Eau Gaille, Fla.

Thomas Humbert, Taneytown, who died Sunday, were held this afternoon at the Fuss funeral home, Taneytown. The Rev. Morgan R. Andreas, pastor of Grace United Church of Christ, Taneytown, officiated. Burial was in Grace Church Cemetery.

Pallbearers were Delmont Koons, George Motter. Murray Baumgardner, Bemie Staley, Paul Sell and J. Thomas Albaugh. MRS. H.

CLINTON SHIPLEY imeet at 7:45 walk 50 steps across the sloping Funeral services for Mrs. Ada. Members of the Joan of Arc t0 Eea not boarding she said, they can room out part of their Through it all Celita's the happiest gray-haired gal in these parts. the key to that happiness? forgetting about trying to get that extra she said. People who quite get the long end of everything, she said, often worry themselves to death.

Not Celita. She nas a philosophy that shrugs it off. Being happy, she reasons, is the best way to get even with the you happen to be mad at it for any reason. But, of course, Mrs. Pike is lucky, too, for at 72 probably far healthier than the average 50- year-old.

Her environment is conducive to good health. Her new, airy trailer, full of windows and skylights, sits in the Red Coconut Trailer Park under four high, wide Australian WEATHER ELSEWHERE (By The Press) YWCA Activities The Business Girls Club pines. She has her gorgeous sun-j Phoenix, cloudy Shipley, wife of H. Clinton'Club held an orange social during Shipley, a former resident of Gam-1their meeting last night. Oranges ber and Westminster, who died were distributed to the 11 persons Saturday at the Mill rest attending and a fee was claimed home, Gist, were held yesterday afternoon at the Myers funeral home, Westminster.

The Rev. Errol G. Smith, pastor of Calvary Methodist Church, Gamber, officiated. Burial was in Providence Cemetery. Pallbearers were Theodore Poole, Carroll Stoeksdale, Melvin Spencer, Eugene Dell, Horace Brauning and Carroll Slas- man.

for each seed found. Alice Leppo led devotions. Hostesses for the evening were the retiring officers, Anna Shanabrook, president; Kathryn Karichuf, vice president; Goldie Gobrecht, secretary', and Annie Albright, treasurer. New officers will be installed Jan. 17.

The Teen and Twenty Club will meet tomorrow at 7:20 p.m. And then she has her occasional pinochle foursomes in the evenings. High Low Albany, cloudy 27 15 Albuquerque, clear 38 18 Atlanta, clear 4226 Bismarck, cloudy 3718 Boston, clear 3020 Buffalo, cloudy 25 13 Chicago, clear 2610 Cleveland, clear 28 7 Denver, clear 38 11 DesMoines, clear 2716 Detroit, clear 30 11 Fort Worth, clear 51 26 Helena, clear 31 5 Indianapolis, clear 3114 Juneau, cloudy 40 35 Kansas City, clear 49 29 Los Angeles, clear 7050 Louisville, 33 23 Memphis, clear 4234 Miami, cloudy 73 49 Milwaukee, cloudy 23-2 Minneapolis, clear 9 3 New Orleans, clear 5438 New York, cloudy 3527 Oklahoma City, clear 48 30 Omaha, cloudy 3417 Philadelphia, cloudy 35 24 Phoenix, cloudy 6837 Pittsburgh, snow 2814 Portland, clear 26 15 Portland, clear Rapid City, clear 17 Richmond, cloudy 4326 St. Loui.s, clear 4427 Salt Lake City, clear 3513 San Diego, clear 6946 San Francisco, clear 48 40 Seattle, cloudy 3936 Tampa, cloudy 6337 Washington, snow 4127 .28 .02 .01 .18 .01 .06 to some handsome pinochle playeri (T Trace) and male. (--------------------------But you never Toiiay.s rate, Colita address is: Care of medium 41.

pullet 36ii, peewee 31; Red Coconut Trailer Park, peewee 31..

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