A pictorial history of Conoy Township : from colonial days to 1976, Part 4

Author: Smith, Carl
Publication date:
Publisher: [Lancaster, Pennsylvania] : Conoy Township Bicentennial Committee, [1976]
Number of Pages: 54


USA > Pennsylvania > Lancaster County > Conoy > A pictorial history of Conoy Township : from colonial days to 1976 > Part 4


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5


Township meetings are held in the township building on Second and Arch streets on the 2nd Thursday of each month at 7 P.M. Taxes levied include a $5 per capita tax, a $10 school tax, a 9 mills property tax, and a school tax of 54 mills on real estate.


Conoy Township is a part of the 98th district of the General Assembly in Harrisburg. At present our repre- sentative is a resident of Falmouth, and local business- man, Kenneth Brandt.


In 1959 members of the Bainbridge-Maytown Rotary Club took the initiative on surveying public opinion for get- ting a public water system for Bainbridge. Of the ninety-five people polled, sixty-five said they were in favor of the idea. A ninc member citizens committee took over the plans following the Rotary survey. An engineer was hired to survey costs for a proposed establishment of a water system. The cost was $600, paid by the township with the understanding that the residents of Bainbridge would eventually pay for it. The survey indicated that twenty per cent of the wells in Bainbridge were polluted and the estimated cost of the water system would be about $262,000. State studies showed pollution as a result of sewage draining through layers of limestone to the source of well water. In 1962 the township supervisors created a water authority. The original members of the water authority were: Wilbert E. Mohr, Ben Myers, John Charles, Jack Miller, Edwin Smith, Harrison Gingrich, Ben Earhart. Bernard Myers, legal representative for the authority, assured the township that the proposal would be financed by bond issue paid off by revenues obtained from front-foot assessments and fees by those using the public system only. The Bainbridge Water Authority pointed out certain advantages for getting the system. It would encourage community growth, aid in fire fighting, and eliminate a possible health hazard due to water pollution.


By 1963 about 170 out of a possible 200 users had been signed up and agreed to buy town water. Bids were opened for construction in 1964 and five contracts were let for various phases of the operation, including a water dis- tribution system, well fields, control house, 200,000 gallon reservoir, electrical work, and meter installation.


Since the installation of fire hydrants would also aid the entire township, a tax of 6 mills was proposed to fi- nance the installation of eighteen fire hydrants at $150 each. After much discussion it was decided to tax only the users of the town water system for the hydrants. However the entire program was a success as over 80% of the community hooked up to the water system. At present the members of the Bainbridge Water Authority are:


John Charles - Pres., Clement Squires - Sec., John Lokey - Treas., Thomas Campbell, and Joann Gutshall. Members are appointed by the supervisors for terms rang- ing from 1-5 years. Offices are located on Chestnut St.


Floods of 1904, 1936, 1972


One of the most notable events, which some people still remember, was the Bainbridge ice and flood of 1904. A souvenir book was printed and published by Brinser and Brandt of Bainbridge in that year containing maný amazing photographs and accounts of this natural spec- tacle. The flooding and massive ice jam was caused by an extremely cold winter and a sudden thaw in the spring. Houses, barns, and tobacco sheds sailed majestically down the river. The canal wall was the salvation of Front Street, but the water forced the ice over the railroad. At the highest point, water rose into Finn's hotel and a stump


1936 Flood-Lynn's Hotel - same location as 1904 picture


1936 Flood - 2 scenes at Billmeyer


22


1904 Ice & Flood - Finn's Hotel - Bainbridge


floated right in the front door. Huge chunks of ice knocked over the pillars of the porch. The flood made destruction from Middletown to Safe Harbor. Chunks of ice 15-20 feet thick were carried through the railroad cut. It took over four thousand men a week to repair and clean the ice- gorged tracks and get the trains running again. The average depth of the ice was 12 feet. It was the biggest job of its kind to be tackled by the Pennsylvania Railroad. It was a mammoth job involved in just feeding the laborers. Brinser and Brandt well-expressed a summary of the disaster: "What nature did in a very short time, it took thousands of men one week to undo, and cost between $200,000 and $300,000."


1972 Flood - submerged bridge at entrance to three-mile island


Bainbridge Cemetery


There was no community cemetery in Bainbridge until 1874. Prior to this interments were made within the town limits, but when the town was laid out, some of the streets were made to pass through this burial place. Another graveyard was on a hill about 1/4 mile north of town, near the present water company grounds, but this has ceased to be used. After the town was laid out the Lutheran Church yard was used as a place of burial. In 1874 the Bainbridge Cemetery Assoc. was formed. Offi- cials were Israel Groff, Henry Fals, John Hykes, John Markley, Thomas Haden. Samuel Hackenberger, George Hackenberger, Harrison Hipple, Peter Sides, and George Beane. A lot was purchased just south of town, of five acres, and enclosed and laid out. The remains of many who were buried elsewhere have been removed to this at- tractive and well-kept location which is still in use today. .


Hawthorn's Furniture & Interiors, Inc.


156 years ago (1820) in Bainbridge the establishments presently known as Hawthorn's Furniture and Interiors and the J. Hawthorn Miller Funeral Home began in a log cabin (located just north of the present business). George Hawthorn, and his son Jimmy, as he was popularly known, were skilled cabinetmakers who immigrated here from Ireland, making their first home near Donegal Springs in 1799.


Jimmy (1814-1898), who took over the business from his father around 1845, began the business of "under- taker." People of the community came to his shop to have custom furniture made or upholstered. By hand and by crude footpower machinery he turned out quality pieces of


23


1


PENNA. STATE ROUTE 441


26 2


17


THIRD STREET


SPRUCE STREET


WALNUT STREET


CHESTNUT STREET


MARKET STREET "B"


10


STREET


STREET


98


SECOND


STREET


23


15


14


20


7


3


20


6


22


28


1


1


4


16


5


FRONT STREET


BAINBRIDGE BUSINESSES AND IMPORTANT BUILDINGS IN 1976


1. service station


2. restaurant


3. fire house


4. band hall


5. hotel


6. Methodist Church


7. hotel


8. restored smith shop


9. plumbing shop


10. antique shop


11. cemetery


12. furniture store and funeral parlor


13. Church of God


14. barber shop


15. Lutheran Church 16. American Legion


17. outlet clothing


18. post office


19. food market


20. beautician


21. service station


22. Bain. Water Authority


23. school


24. Al. siding contractor


25. shoe repair shop


26. car wash


27. lawn mower repair


28. auto repair


24


ARCH


20


25


RACE


MARKET STREET "C"


24


12


19


10


21 18


13


LOCUST STREET


27


furniture which today are sought after by antique collec- tors throughout the country. From Jimmy Hawthorn's cabinet shop also came the coffins in which were buried the remains of many Bainbridge and Conoy Twp. pioneers. His pious nature and sympathetic understanding were qualities which made his services as undertaker much in demand. He retired from the business in 1889.


George W. Hawthorn (1842-1925) followed in the footsteps of his father Jimmy. In 1895 he attended the Oriental School of Embalming and, two years later, gradu- ated from the Clark School of Embalming in Harrisburg. He was a member of the Bainbridge I.O.O.F. and the G.A.R. and was quite prominent in Bainbridge.


The late Harry J. Hawthorn (1866-1938) became as- sociated with the "undertaking" and "furniture" busi- ness of his father George in 1905 and assumed the respon- sibilities of the firm in 1917 at his father's retirement. He also continued the family tradition of making much furniture by hand for sale. It was he who brought to Bain- bridge the most modern methods of embalming and most up-to-date funeral equipment available at the time. The little shop in which he worked was dismantled shortly after his death. This brought to an end the era of custom-made furniture in the family shops.


The fifth generation period, headed by Harry J. Hawthorn's daughter, Mary Hawthorn Miller (1904- ) and her husband Ervin F. Miller (1901- ), was one of building expansion, customer growth, and personalized


service. In their 36 years of leadership they succeeded in increasing and upholding the quality name of Hawthorn.


In 1960, Jack Hawthorn Miller (1934- ), assumed responsibilities in his parent's business. As the 6th gen- eration, the firm entered into the interior design field. With the retirement of Mary Hawthorn Miller and Ervin F. Miller in 1974, the family of Hawthorn, under the lead- ership of Jack Hawthorn Miller, will continue to bring the different and unusual decor to the homes and businesses of the area. Hawthorn's Furniture, growing in scope and field, intends to maintain the personalized service of the previous five generations of historic community service. The future of the furniture and funeral business is assured as three sons of Jack H. Miller are growing up, possibly to fulfill their destiny in an old family business.


REFERENCES


"History of the J.E. Baker Company", William E. Baker, 1964


"Bainbridge Ice and Flood", H.S. Brinser and H.H. Brandt, 1904


"History of Lancaster County, Penna.", Franklin Ellis and Samuel Evans, 1883


"Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, A History", H.M.J. Klein, 1924 Journals of the Lancaster County Historical Society Bainbridge Fire Company Dedication Program, 1965 Elizabethtown Chronicle Intelligencer Journal


Lancaster New Era


"Canals Along the Lower Susquehanna", Gerald Smeltzer, 1963


"History of Conoy Township", Emma Lou Brosey, 1966


Reports submitted by the various organizations within Conoy Twp.


25


Scenes from 1972 flood - Bainbridge


26


Do you Know? Corner Rose Alley and Arch Street.


Bert L. Hamor, Bainbridge 1951 photo Lt. Hamor entered the Aviation Service of the Signal Corps July 8, 1917. He attended the University of Illi- nois, The University of Texas, then completed flying training at Payne Field at West Point, Miss. He was Instructor in stunt flying for seven months before being sent to Wright-Patterson Field. Later he was sent to Mitchel Field and with 100 other Pursuit pilots was as- signed overseas. The ship turned back when several days out at sea upon learning that the Armstice was signed. Lt. Hamor died in 1960.


Fire in Bainbridge in early forties. Four buildings razed. Help- ing to move belongings from buildings threatened are left to right: Miss Margaretta Moore, Mrs. Florence Wilhelm, Mrs. Gertrude Breneman and Mrs. Ray Haslett.


First military plane to land at Olmsted Air Force Base was this old Curtice biplane. Pilot was Bert L. Hamor, Bain- bridge. There were three planes assigned to the field at the time, which was shortly after World War I.


Hamor became the first pilot to land a military plane at Olmsted through an accident. He relieved Lt. William Warren, the first supply officer at the field, and later helped assemble the first plane assigned to the base. This plane was damaged in the take-off, hitting an embankment. Hamor was ordered to take up another plane, which was assembled a few days later, and did the job without accident.


The first planes were kept in a canvas hanger.


Lt. Hamor was discharged from military service in 1920 and received a civil service appointment as a spare-parts expert. He left civil service in 1923 but was permitted to use a mili- tary plane to continue flying on a reserve basis. Later he or- ganized the Hamor Aviation Corp. with offices in Middle- town and Altoona. Then came three months with the Ricken- backer Circus doing stunt flying. In 1925 he helped fly mail from Baltimore to Buffalo. On one of these trips he was forced to land in Philadelphia because of a heavy snowstorm.


27


B


B | B


B


E


B


B


B


1933 BASEBALL TEAM


CENTER FRONT: Mart Camp


FRONT ROW:


BACK ROW:


Norman (Chub) Raber, Patsy Sechrist, George Smith, Luther Wagner, Elwood Smith, Charlie Reisinger Harrison (Butch) Camp, Steve Kopecki, Clarence Garman, Elmer (Tom) Lynn, Mrs. Ann Vogel, Wilbert (Bud) Mohr, Harrison Gingrich


1944 BASEBALL TEAM


FRONT ROW: Elwood (Bub) Raber, Harold Mohr, Mart Camp, Wilbert (Bud) Mohr, Henry Weidman, Gene Mohr, John Smith


BACK ROW: Vince O'Connor, Jim Mohr, Dave Shoemaker, Dave Walters, Art Trostle, Jim Rider, Walt Urich


B


B


B


B


B


B


N


F.


1


B


B


B


B


4


B


28


NE RID


BA


BAND COR


ET


BAINBRIDGE BAND ABOUT 1922


BOTTOM ROW: Chester Gingrich, Wilbert Mohr, Samuel Ely, Harry Bachman, John McCarthy, Curtis Smith, Roscoe Flowers, Harry Hackenberger, Warren Libhart


MIDDLE ROW:


Frank Libhart, Raymond Raber, Lee McNelly, Paul Raber, David Heisey, William Morganthal, Palmer McNelly, John Lynn, Harlan Meckley


TOP ROW:


Frank Meckley, Lawrence Smith, Calvin Raber, William Bryan, Monroe Morganthal, Clarence Bryan, Luther Lynn, John Shue


Backdrop - Bainbridge Band Hall Movie Theatre showing advertisements of local merchants.


1.022


THE PEOPLES MARBLE GRANITE WORKS J.H. T ** KEENER THE BEST PLACE FORFIT MONUMENTAL ·WORK."


F. B. SMITH : BAINBRIDGE E~ CIGAR M'F'GR ESTABLISHED 1686.


****- PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY WITH -+ THE DOMEGAL & CONOY MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. MARIETTA PA.


M.MORGENTHAL CASH+ ++ MEAT MARKET FISH & OYSTERS.


L UCHERBILL


MIDDLETOWN


REALLY FINE


M.H.BRANDT wELIZABETHTOWN E LUMBER CONTRACTOR & BUILDER


S.H.LANDIS -¿ ELIZABETHTOWNT- BATTERIES CHARGED & REPAIRED.


SEE BEFORE YOU BUY:É


A.E.RUNKLE THE " MILKMAN


W.H.SULTZBACH -+- MARIETTA 61 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES.


PAILY DELIVERY


KIRK JOHNSON& CO -LANCASTER == SPECIALISTS IN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS #FOR 35 YEARS


b.S.BEINHAUER -BAINBRIDGE &+- CARPENTER ‹ - & JOINER.


JOHN P.MUELLER "MARIETTA: ALL KINDS FRE


MECLOSKEY : DRUG STORE 1-MARIETTA


B.B.BILLMEYER ZMARIETTAS WATCHES *


JEWELERY ¡CLOCKS FINE REPAIRING'


* STOVES PAINTS OILS TA ROOFING * PLUMBING ETC. PRICES & QUALITY RIGHT


THE REXALL STORE PRESCRIPTIONS Y ----- # PHOTO SUPPLIES AGENCY WHITMAN'S CHOCOLATE


EDGAR R. VILLEE - MARIETTA * JOB PRINTING TELEPHONE OR MAIL ITEMS FØR NEWSPAPER CORRESPONDEMLE


-


HARDWARE


DRESS UP GENTS FURNISHINGS JOHN PECK MARIETTA


CONOY TEMPLE : NO 156 LADIES OF THE GOLDEN EAGLE MELT TUES AFTERNOON


ADJUSTMENT MADE


LOSSES PAID.


..


29


RAINE HOGY


2


--


Old Post Office, Bainbridge 1929 2nd Street


5


THE NEW HUBER


MARION,


Huber Threshing Machine 1922 last model made. Mr. A.F. Brandt was a thresher for 45 years. Machine donated to Smithsonian Museum by the family 1973.


Old Haldeman Mansion, near Billmeyer, no longer standing.


U.S. Post Office, Bainbridge 1976 2nd Street and Market Street "B".


POST OFFICE


Centennial of Pony Express, Maytown to Bainbridge 1860- 1960 Picture taken 1966


Old Tannery, standing at corner of Market Street "C" and Pa. Route 441


30


Dou Remember ?


Mr. Hummel in the railroad station? What a treat to go down there and see the trains arrive, the people coming to town to visit friends and relatives.


George Nein's ice cream parlor? The marble soda fountain (the first in Lancaster Coun- ty), marble tables and bent wire chairs.


Thad Groff's general store? You could buy anything there - horse and cow feed to beau- tiful pictures painted on glass. There are still some of these in the homes in Bainbridge.


Charlie Fah's bake shop? Fresh bread and buns everyday and samples for kids.


Fred Smith's cigar making shop?


Mrs. Boreman's "Larkin" store in her home? We called her "Sallie Larkin". You bought a certain amount and got a premium. One was a beautiful glass kerosene light. We now call them "Gone With the Wind Lights", and the lucky people who still have theirs are holding on to them.


The old band hall movie theater? Mr. William Hackenberger ran the projector and Jane Hawthorne Bryan played the piano. We also held minstrel shows and high school plays there.


Mr. Kuntzleman at the post office? If too many people got in at one time or the kids made too much noise he would lock everyone out until the mail was sorted. :


Andy Boreman's blacksmith shop? This was quite an interesting place. You could watch him shoe horses and hear him tell tall tales about the good old days.


Claude Bachman's barber shop? It was one of the oldest businesses in Bainbridge. He and Omar, his brother, had a shop in the bank building and after Omar's death he moved it to Second Street across from the post office and tailor shop.


Mr. Curtis S. Smith also had a barber shop in town. First on Race Street and then later he moved it to Second Street in the drug store building.


Mr. Harry Cover's restaurant? Selling seafood in the basement. Later John McCarthy took it over and also sold home-made ice cream. In 1920 G. Wilbert Mohr bought the building and moved his tinning and plumbing business and hardware store from down the street. This business was started in 1913.


The I. Scott general store? This was the largest one in town and was originally started by Winfield S. Smith. You could buy almost anything there. Do you remember the big long candy case, crackers in a barrel, sugar in a bin and the big pot belly stove? Coal was deliv- ered in a wagon drawn by two horses and later a Model T Ford truck.


Who could forget Hen Kauffman's restaurant? The big Purity ice cream sign (now Pennsupreme). A great hangout for the young men.


Olive's tea room? The meeting place for teenagers.


The Jungle restaurant and a dance hall on the second floor run by Mr. Heisey and later Harry Birch? The Fire Company purchased the building in 1933.


Did you know Bainbridge had a bottling works? The names on the bottles that have been dug up are John H. Myers, Doyle and Myers and Bainbridge Bottling Company. Who knows what they bottled?


To the residents who spent all their lives in this town, Bainbridge had everything.


31


5


Nissley's Mill Bridge over Conowego Creek


Famous Pot Holes in Susquehanna River at Falmouth


32


ENCLOSURE OF A CEMETERY LOT


MONUMENT TO THE MEMORY OF THADDEL'S STEVENS


19


John Keller's Falmouth Quarry Insets show 2 examples of work. At left: example of cemetery lot. At right: memorial for Thaddeus Stevens


Left: Mural of old stone bridge at Lobato (Stackstown) Painted by Linnaeus Longenecker for Union National Bank, Maytown. Right: Present bridge at same location."


33


Bainbridge, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Established on March 6, 1826.


Postmasters


Appointment Dates thru September 30, 1971


John Hoffman


March 6, 1826


Robert Currey


April 23, 1829


John C. Klein


February 20, 1828


George Blattenberger


June 23, 1830


Thomas Rees


February 16, 1831


Stephen Atherton


June 16, 1841


George H. Horning


October 20, 1831


Jacob B. Hamilton


November 10, 1843


Samuel Steinmetz


March 7, 1839


John Filbert


October 5, 1848


George H. Horning


July 2, 1841


Robert H. Jones


May 4, 1849


Abraham Collins


June 7, 1847


Mrs. Eliza F. Galbraith


January 7, 1853


Christian Neff


June 15, 1849


John Filbert


July 22, 1853


Abraham Collins


July 15, 1853


Eliza F. Gailbraith


October 24, 1854


Alfred W. Moore


December 5, 1864


Frederick M. Gamm


February 15, 1868


Miss Jane Minnich


Mrs. Margaret Ellis


December 17, 1868


October 17, 1867


Lydia Louden


February 25, 1876


William Grimes


March 10, 1871


Elizabeth Galbraith


January 15, 1877


James S. Grimes


February 22, 1877


Joseph R. Wetzler


April 25, 1881


George W. Zimmerman


April 4, 1883


Jacob R. Brenner


August 21, 1885


George W. Walton


January 8, 1886


John H. Finley


July 26, 1889


Samuel J. Bierly


March 16, 1912


George S. Sides


January 4, 1894


John Horst


July 7, 1915


Jacob R. Brenner


May 23, 1895


George W. Rutherford


August 30, 1927


Mrs. Mary E. Handiboe


September 7, 1927


Billmeyer, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Established on August 27, 1902.


Discontinued on April 30, 1941 (mail to Bainbridge).


Appointment Dates Thru April 30, 1941


December 31, 1953 (asumed charge)


February 1, 1954 (acting)


George R. Shenberger


August 27, 1902


Bernard E. O'Conner


March 16, 1955 (confirmed)


Abraham L. Erb


January 6, 1903


March 21, 1906


June 22, 1907


March 18, 1918


January 21, 1941 (assumed charge)


February 7, 1941 (acting)


U.S. Postal Service Map of Conoy Township mail routes - 1938


1


Dimler


Hernessey


Lodge


EL


Anchor


Arthur


Dupler


Gish


Sche


EL


Gruber


Brinser


Freeman


a & Rutherford Store


(schenk


Meeting House,


Boly


Heisy


Land


Ebersole


Brubaker


LOber


Wed


Epler


Rutherford Hisstey


Schenk


Reichen- bach


P.E. Landis


Wisser


Garber


Bless


Landis Quarry


Wills


MJ


Mennonite


Ebersole


1


AMartin


Hiller


Gingerich


Herter


Hoffmah Form


Cottage


kreybill


Hoffman


Brubaker


LOBATA


Toil


Conoy


Spangler


Sheak


Engle


Groll


B


& Billmeyer


Treatty


BILA


ME ER


Kaylor


Grove,


Toll House


ROWENNA:


Alb


PENNA.


Engle


SUSQUEHANNA


34


Schmuck


Areybil


HOUSE


Earhart Yeagle


Hoffman


MA


Creek


CA. to


Garber


EL


Gish


PENNA.


Rineer


Langeneg +


RNissley


Gish


YORK CO.


&FALMOUTH


·Eber-


Meeting House


Brink


Isaiah Kuntzelman


May 5, 1899 - 1927


Miss Jane Hawthorne


October 8, 1927


(Name changed by marriage to Mrs. Jane F. Mackley on Sep- tember 25, 1937)


(Name changed by marriage to Mrs. Jane F. Bryan on March 21, 1949)


Kathryn Kauffhold


March 15, 1971 (acting)


Marian E. Smith


April 15, 1972 (acting)


Ira J. Long


February 17, 1973 (assumed charge)


Frank Doll


Falmouth, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Established on February 20, 1828. Discontinued on September 30, 1929 (mail to Bainbridge).


Postmasters


Appointment Dates Thru September 30, 1929


Hershey


W


Union


Postmasters


Mrs. Ruth R. O'Connor


May 16, 1955 (assumed charge)


William C. Mason


William S. Longenecker


B


June 20, 1866


Abraham Collins


Grove


ane


SPONSORS


Mr. and Mrs. John E. Herchelroth Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Lighty


Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mohr and Family


Mr. and Mrs. Ben Herchelroth


Mr. and Mrs. Ken Brandt


Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brenner


Mr. and Mrs. David Gerber


Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rank


Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bartles


Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brooks


Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bryan


Mrs. Alta Hesslet


Mr. and Mrs. Welby Sine


A Friend


The Rev. and Mrs. Charles Snyder, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Smith


Mr. and Mrs. Harry Zink


Mr. and Mrs. Bernard O'Connor


Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kline


Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Gingrich


Margie and Paul Kline Mrs. Earl Myers and Bob


Mr. and Mrs. Scott Sargen


Mr. and Mrs. John Biesecker


Mr. and Mrs. John L. Lokey


Mr. and Mrs. John Lehman and Grace


PATRONS


Linda R. Koser


Mr. and Mrs. Ira E. Koser, Jr.


Mr. and Mrs. Ira E. Koser, Sr.


Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kern


Mr. and Mrs. Richard Andrews


Mr. and Mrs. Richard McNaughton, Sr.


Mr. and Mrs. Richard McNaughton, Jr.


Mr. and Mrs. Steven Mohr


Sherry Camp Martin L. Camp Dennis Camp Betty Keck


Mr. and Mrs. Clark Gutshall Tania and Keith Rapp


Mr. and Mrs. John Trout


Mr. and Mrs. Ken Brosey


Mrs. H. Palmer McNelly


Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Gallo


Mrs. Alice Zellner


Mr. and Mrs. Ben Myers Marlene Lighty


Mr. and Mrs. John Zimmerman Ed Mohr


Mr. and Mrs. Russell Haldeman John Witter


Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Reider Mr. and Mrs. Ben Earhart Miss Minnie Demmy


Mr. and Mrs. Moses Kauffman


Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gutshall, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gutshall, Jr.


Mr. and Mrs. Richard Prescott and Family Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barbour Mrs. Ada Geistweite


Mr. and Mrs. Charles Drescher Mr. and Mrs. Don Horton Mr. and Mrs. Fuller Morley Mr. and Mrs. Richard Price Mary Bush Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Wagner, Jr.


Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Youst Brenda and Brenda Jo Keim Fay Gingrich


Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lyter


Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Trotta


Mr. and Mrs. William Boyd


Mr. and Mrs. William Smith and Son


Mr. and Mrs. Clement Squires


Mr. and Mrs. Paul Loucks


Mr. and Mrs. William Hawk


Mr. and Mrs. Howard McCowin Elmer Shepler


Mr. and Mrs. George Emswiler


Mr. and Mrs. John Schlotthauer


Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goodling


Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Kauffman


Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Swope


Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fogie Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gable Miss Pauline Garber Mr. and Mrs. David Gerber


Mrs. Hazel Gingrich Mrs. Esther Guiles


Mr. and Mrs. H. Wilson Gutshall


Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Gutshall


Mr. and Mrs. James W. Gutshall


Mr. and Mrs. Harry Halbleib


Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Rentzell


Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Kadysewski Mrs. Virgel Lighty Mr. and Mrs. Claude J. McCarty


Mr. and Mrs. John Lynn


Mr. and Mrs. Edward Barnhart Mr. and Mrs. Martin Camp


Mr. and Mrs. Richard Myers


Mr. and Mrs. George Weigle


Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hammaker


Kathryn Hoffman


Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Ortity


Mr. and Mrs. James Smith


Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Snyder


Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoffman


Mr. and Mrs. Jay Swope


Sherman Bair


Ted Flowers


Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hoffman


Mr. and Mrs. George Burkett


Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fisher


Mr. and Mrs. James Zeigler


Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mulhollem


Mr. and Mrs. Robert Zorger


Mr. and Mrs. Norman Snyder


Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Simione


Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Stern


Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Krieser


Mr. and Mrs. Terry Sager


Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hoerner


Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hipple and Family


Mr. and Mrs. Christ Warner


Mr. and Mrs. John Schellenberg


Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stout Mrs. Katherine Schatz


Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Pickel


Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bailey Mr. and Mrs. Russel Funck John Hemperly


Mr. and Mrs. Robert Campbell and Family


Mr. and Mrs. George Hemperly and Lorraine


Mr. and Mrs. James W. Smith, Jr.


Roy Youst, Jr.


Mr. and Mrs. McCracken




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