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  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Jan 6, 2022

    Storyteller, Edward Carey reimagines the classic fairytale, Pinocchio, in this narrative about a carpenter who one day realized he didn’t want to be alone. In “The Swallowed Man,” we meet Joseph Lorenzini. We follow the story through Giuseppe’s eyes, after he’s been swallowed by a monstrous fish. Readers may remember him as Geppetto, from the original novel or Disney film. He longed for a son, and in a frenzy of workmanship, he created one. Out of wood. The book reads as a diary. Joseph fo...

  • Survival of the American Newspaper Critical to Democracy

    RICK BOSTON, Staff Writer|Jan 6, 2022

    “Where the press is free and every man able to read, all is safe.”—Thomas Jefferson. For more than 300 years, countless words have been printed and delivered to communities across North America. Whether daily or weekly, the American newspaper not only keeps people informed about of their community and country, but also serves as a community watchdog of local and national governments. If not for a free press, governments at all levels could operate with no accountability to the public. Fortunately, the founding fathers recognized that for a dem...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Dec 30, 2021

    Many may remember Highlights for Children, a favorite magazine from our youth that contained various interesting activities to do - like word searches, mazes, and of course the picture finds in which everyday items were hidden into a larger picture for all to find. The “Highlights Book of Things to Do” includes many activities similar to those found in the magazine, and so much more, such as recipes, art projects, and science experiments. The book is broken down into things to do inside, outside, in the kitchen, with recycled materials, and man...

  • Collaboration Key to Success of New USDA Climate-Smart Agriculture Initiative

    KAYLA BERGMAN, The Center for Rural Affairs|Dec 30, 2021

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently announced plans for the Climate-Smart Agriculture and Forestry Partnership Initiative. As they move forward with development, it’s crucial USDA works with existing private sector markets. However, the support should not duplicate efforts, nor should a federal program facilitate transactions of carbon sequestration payments to producers. Instead, leaders of this proposed program should consult farmer participants and private sector leaders to identify needs and barriers to scaling up these e...

  • RS Borough Has 'Disgruntled' Looking for Answers

    Dec 30, 2021

    To the Editor: So I attended my second Roaring Spring Borough meeting, with not much more to say other than the people should be able to vote, yes Rodney Green has stated that this is not an item that should be put on a referendum simply because it is voted by elected officials. More like because he is the one who wants to prohibit people from enjoying this property. LIABILITY is his cry, well Mr. Green prove it. We want to see your data. I feel the Spring Dam is more of a Liability issue than mountain ground. If you truly are looking out for t...

  • Data Shows Vehicle Crashes Down in 2020

    Dec 30, 2021

    Fewer vehicles were on the road during much of 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. And fewer vehicles on the road equals fewer crashes. According to 2019 and 2020 data from the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT), vehicle crashes in rural counties decreased from 33,078 in 2019 to 28,048 in 2020, a 15 percent decline. In urban counties there was a 17 decline during this period. Despite the decrease in overall crashes, there was an increase in statewide fatal crashes from 2019 t...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Dec 23, 2021

    The world of dreams is fascinating. Charlie Crabtree was so enamored by it he wanted to live there. He would do anything to escape the real world to live in the dream world. No price was too high. Sacrifice. Murder. And, because of his dark imagination and what others believe he may achieve, grisly murders continue to happen so others can join him. Paul Adams knew Charlie as part of his outcast friend group. We meet Paul as a teenager, being taken in for the murder of a friend. We meet him...

  • "Ho Ho Ho"

    GEORGE DEMPSIE, For the Herald|Dec 23, 2021

    Note: The author of this editorial would like to alert readers that this is for parents only. It should not be read by or to little ones. My mind was made up. Being a mature second grader, I decided that I no longer believed in Santa Claus. The conversations amongst my classmates in the cafeteria had swayed me and I had finally given in to rational thought. There was simply no way Santa Claus could be both at J.C. Penney’s AND Mason’s department store at the same time! There would be no more cookies and milk left on the kitchen table for fut...

  • Newcomers to the Cove: Harvest Time

    JOSEPH WALK, For the Herald|Dec 23, 2021

    Corn. Sweet corn! How Nancy and I love to eat corn on the cob grown here in the Cove! From July until early October, we enjoy delicious kernels of sweet goodness. We buy from several local establishments, trying to determine which we like best – yellow, white, or bicolor. Last fall Nancy and I watched with fascination as local farmers used giant machines to harvest cornfields near our home. The driver of the John Deere corn harvester methodically completed many rows at a time. As the machine went to and fro, trucks drove alongside collecting t...

  • Bill Cramer was a Gifted Historian

    JAMES WENTZ, For the Herald|Dec 16, 2021

    Commendable civic efforts are underway in Williamsburg to organize a historical society to document and preserve the celebrated history of the town and surrounding area. Roane Lytle was elected president of this fledgling organization. Other officers are Cathy Over, Peggy Mingle and Lugene Shelly. The group hopes to acquire space to exhibit the town’s memorabilia and highlight its illustrious history. According to Lytle, one of the projects being considered is a William Cramer Room that the society would fill with some of his historic a...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Dec 16, 2021

    Born into slavery, by age eight Mary knew the plantation rules well. “Never stop working” was number one and it didn’t matter what the reason. She never stopped working. Slaves were also not allowed to learn to read or write, so for the time being, she did not learn to read or writer, either. She dreamed of the day she’d be as free as the birds she saw flying over the Union Springs, Alabama plantation she lived on. One day, she would learn to read. Mary was 15 years old when the Abraham Lincoln...

  • Williamsburg Bank's Closure Will Have 'Serious Repercussions' for Community

    LUGENE SHELLY, For the Herald|Dec 16, 2021

    It looks like Williamsburg is losing another institution. In a letter sent to customers dated Dec. 3. 2021, Mid Penn Bank, a Millersburg, Pa., based bankcorp that now controls Riverview Bank’s assets, announced the closing of the Williamsburg branch effective March 4, 2021 [sic]. In June when Mid Penn Bank announced the merger, Mid Penn said the acquisition of Riverview was a chance for their corporation to get a foothold in the State College area market. The press release touted the merger as creating a “premier Pennsylvania community ban...

  • Season's Greetings from Morrisons Cove Memorial Park

    Dec 16, 2021

    To the Editor: In our annual Christmas letter to the Cove, we would like to take a moment to look back at our accomplishments this past year and let our community know our plans going forward for the “Hidden Treasure of the Cove.” There is no doubt that 2021 was a challenge to operate for many small businesses in our area due to COVID. With assistance from our community, we were able to keep our doors yet again for another year. The Park has made a conscious decision to reinvest revenues from programs and donations from our patrons back into pr...

  • Salvation Army Thanks M-burg Boosters for Volunteering

    Dec 16, 2021

    To the Editor: Thank you to the six Martinsburg Booters who volunteered to ring the Salvation Army bell at C&S Market. Those volunteering were Luanne Eckenrode, Ken Ake, John Knepp, Homer Shriner, Connie Brumbaugh and Richard Bice. Martinsburg Salvation Army director, Suzanne McNally, thanked the Boosters for their help. Pictured is Connie Brumbaugh, who along with her husband Jeff, are the newest Booster members. Connie is the daughter of fellow Booster Janet Dick and the late Booster Sherm...

  • The Meal Is Right There

    Allan J. Bassler, Publisher|Dec 16, 2021

    I am once again amazed at the volume of text that flows through online social media sites about issues in the Cove, yet so little of it ends up in the pages of the Herald. With a community so interested in writing and expressing opinions, you’d think there would be more submitted to the local newspaper. After all, part of the local paper’s job is to present the opinions of its readers. The Herald does so. And any accusations that we will reject submissions we disagree with or edit them into meaninglessness is just not true. Also not true is...

  • Entrepreneurs Deserve Our Support This Holiday Season

    KIM PRESTON, Center for Rural Affairs|Dec 9, 2021

    The holiday season is upon us, and for many people that means making purchases for gift exchanges and planning the menu for family and work gatherings. But, for our nation’s small business owners, preparing for the biggest and busiest time of the year can take months of hard work, and involves more than just inventory on the shelves. While consumers make their lists and check them twice, entrepreneurs have been working behind the scenes to prepare. They’ve spent nights and weekends learning how to market their business and getting familiar wit...

  • Common Sense: Taxes

    DARWIN STAPLETON, For the Herald|Dec 9, 2021

    “Nothing is certain except death and taxes” is an old expression that expresses the expectation that each person’s taxes are one of the foreseeable but unavoidable aspects of life. However, without taxes, which support all levels of government, we would not have much of what we use and depend on every day: roads, bridges, schools, the military, police and the judiciary, and assurance of quality of food and medicine. The question of the level of taxation that is required to maintain these facets of government is for many of us the primary reaso...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Dec 9, 2021

    Tiny Tales is a collection of anecdotes about a wide array of characters. Mccall Smith includes mere snippets of his characters' lives. Many stories may be only a few moments of an individual's lifetime. Just like in real life, they may seem unimportant to one person, but to the individual experiencing them they can be epic and have immense impact. The stories are about love, kindness, nostalgia, strangeness, and friendship. Read about a progressive Viking, an opera singer who couldn't sing,...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Dec 2, 2021

    We begin and end in the same time frame, with an entire lifetime in between. “Island Queen” is an extraordinary historical novel based on the amazing real-life Dorothy, a free woman of color who bought her freedom from slavery, rose above the abuse she’d faced, and became one of the wealthiest, most powerful landowners in the colonial West Indies. Miss Dolly, as Dorothy was known, was always a force to be reckoned with. Facing oppression not just because of the color of her skin, but also as a...

  • A Curryville Christmas

    Dec 2, 2021

    Christmas in Curryville was special. Every home put up decorations inside and out. Dad took us kids with him to the woods and we gathered beautiful, dark green moss. We put the moss under the tree as the setting for the train track. We also gathered trailing pine which was the setting for the lights around our front porch. Each year we went to Gables in Altoona. We were given money to buy gifts for each other. One year I saw a huge display of beautiful wreaths. If I bought one, I would not have enough money for other presents. I felt very...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER HOFFMAN|Nov 24, 2021

    Ever wonder what happens to the sole survivor, the final girl, once the movie is over and the credits roll? In horror movies, the final girl emerges victorious, the lone heroine in what is usually a senseless bloodbath. But, after the endorphin rush wears off, the sirens fade, the audience goes home, and the trauma sets in… then what? This is why Lynnette Tarkington is part of the Final Girl Support Group, a private therapy group specifically for, well, final girls. Lynnette survived a massacre...

  • Buggies in the Cove

    JOSEPH WALK, For the Herald|Nov 24, 2021

    As new Covites, Nancy and I regularly observe things that were uncommon at our previous dwelling locations. For example, we see the ubiquitous horse-drawn black buggy and plain people wearing simple yet consistent clothing. In late summer we traveled to Kishacoquillas Valley (known locally as either Kish Valley or Big Valley) where PA Route 655 runs from Mill Creek to Reedsville. We were amazed at the number of buggies on that highway. There were buggies with black tops, yellow tops, and white tops, apparently identifying with particular Amish...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Nov 24, 2021

    To the Editor: The Plum Creek Mountain ground was not Roaring Spring Borough Council’s to sell and/or restrict the people from using. The ground was given to the people of Roaring Spring 125 years ago by past generations for recreational use, as stated in the original agreement. I feel sure that only two of the members of council have been to the property in the last year, that being stated, your letter to the Altoona Mirror was misleading the public to fit someone’s agenda on your board. The gates you speak of in the letter, that you state hav...

  • Spring Cove School Board Could Send Message by Appointing Write-In Candidate to Open Seat

    RICK BOSTON, Staff Writer|Nov 18, 2021

    The 2021 general election was unlike any in recent memory as disenchantment with the state mandate for mask wearing in schools gave rise to a hard-fought, grassroots effort by write-in candidates to win seats on the board of directors in two local school districts. In Spring Cove, write-in candidates Brenda Frederick, Travis Ott and Kevin Smith, running as a team under the banner of the Spring Cove Educational Integrity Alliance, each garnered more than 1,000 votes, with Frederick accumulating an unofficial tally of 1,279 write-in votes, just...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Nov 18, 2021

    To the Editor: On Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2021, Eva Mae Eshelman left her earthly home to be with the Lord. While Eva’s entire family is saddened by her departure, we are all comforted by the memories of her life. Eva Eshelman was a pillar of the Cove community. She loved this area and the life that a rural, small town in Pennsylvania could offer her. In her life, she raised ten children while co-managing the Eshelman family farm with her husband. This life may appear simple to many; however, Eva’s self-sacrificing love for her family created a l...

  • Thanksgiving–Facts and Frustration

    JAMES WENTZ, For the Herald|Nov 18, 2021

    The Thanksgiving holiday is once again with us. No one truly knows when the first Thanksgiving took place. Some academics say it was in 1621, when the Pilgrims celebrated their harvest with a three day turkey feast in Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts. Others say the first Thanksgiving took place in Virginia in 1619. Whatever, President George Washington called for a national day of thanksgiving in 1789, but it fell to Abraham Lincoln in 1863 to mandate that the holiday would take place at the end of November. Here, thanks to Google, are some...

  • Cook's Illustrated: Meat Illustrated by America's Test Kitchen

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Nov 18, 2021

    “Meat Illustrated” contains over 350 recipes for beef, pork, lamb, and veal, covering how to cook different meats and describing the different cuts and which part of what animal they came from, as well as the best ways to cook that particular piece of meat. Providing protein and essential nutrients, meat is an important staple in the diets of many. From pork loin roasts, ground beef, and short ribs to porter house, flank, or rib steaks, Cook’s Illustrated provides delightful recipes to tempt...

  • From the Bookkeeper

    MARTIN BAKNER, Bookkeeper|Nov 10, 2021

    In my previous column (Oct. 14, 2021), I spent a little time explaining how the staff of the Herald goes through the process of delivering each week’s edition to thousands of readers throughout The Cove and in almost every state in the nation. (And, yes, I will answer the question on your mind: what states don’t currently have Herald subscribers?) I pointed out how important it is for you to provide an accurate mailing address to make sure that both we and your local mail carrier can get eac...

  • Books to Borrow Williamsburg Public Library Recommends

    JENNIFER R. HOFFMAN|Nov 10, 2021

    Nathan grew up in a house in the country with his abusive father. In the same hometown, Maddie made things as early as she could remember, even if she couldn’t remember everything that happened while making them. Set in rural Pennsylvania, their hometown is also home to tunnels, mountains, and coal mines where many accidents have occurred. So many, one might ask if they were really accidents. Something sinister lurks there in the shadows and it preys on fears and regrets. Author Chuck Wendig lives in Pennsylvania. Some things in this book will...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Nov 10, 2021

    To the Editor: Donald Greenleaf, 87, passed away last week. He and I were classmates in the Morrison Cove High School class of 1952 and kept in touch through the years. He was elected mayor of Martinsburg on two occasions, once as a Republican and later as a Democrat. In 1998, when then Mayor Dick Moore announced he would not be a candidate for reelection, Greenleaf wondered if he could win the office. But he waited too long to get his name on the regular ballot, so a write-in sticker campaign was his only hope. “My wife Janet went to one p...

  • C-burg Salvation Army Asks for Assistance

    THE CLAYSBURG SALVATION ARMY UNIT BOARD MEMBERS|Nov 10, 2021

    It is time again to kick off the 2021 Claysburg Salvation Army Service Unit Campaign. Unfortunately we are still faced with Covid-19 problems. Any bell ringing this year will be limited, and that has been the main source of our income. Let us get to the point. We need everyone’s help. The newest and easiest is on-line donating if you have access. Simply click this link and make your donation from $1 up to any amount. It is safe and secure: https://give.salvationarmy.org/campaign/use-wpa-kettle-2020-claysburg-service-unit/c314339 You can mail a...

  • Correction to Herald Article in Oct. 28 Edition

    Nov 4, 2021

    By DR. BETSY BAKER For the Herald In the October 28, 2021, edition of the Herald, an article was published which called into question “the board’s decision [on October 18] to add three more online programs to the curriculum”, the rationale behind them, security/accessibility concerns, the selection process, etc. To clarify, the Board did not approve any new online programs or courses on October 18. The Spring Cove School District does offer a cyber education program, called Spring Cove Cyber, for families who elect to enroll in a full-...

  • Books to Borrow Claysburg Public Library Recommends

    Nov 4, 2021

    J.D. Barker has teamed up with James Patterson in this most deranged of murder plots. You think you have it figured out and then another twist is introduced. In Los Angeles, long-haul truck driver, Michael, comes home to find a dead woman lying in his bathtub. He immediately calls 911. LAPD Detective Garrett Hobbs and FBI Special Agent Jessica Gimble, appear to have a solid case with a suspect who has a weak alibi. Michael insists he is innocent but there is evidence that links him to the victim. Also, his clothes are in the home of the dead...

  • The Singing Room

    Grace Hamilton|Nov 4, 2021

    We had a room off our living room that we called the music room. In that special room was a pump organ which mother had played in the Smithfield Church of the Brethren when she was young. I often wondered who purchased that organ when mom and dad had a sale before they moved to Harrisburg. I was in Arizona at my Brethren Volunteer Service project. Mother played the most beautiful pieces on the organ and our piano. Dad loved to sing while she played. It was to be that in their later years when...

  • 25 Years Ago

    Nov 4, 2021

    Herald of Oct. 31, 1996 Cove residents, along with the rest of the country, were preparing to vote in the presidential election on Nov. 5. The Republican Candidates were Bob Dole and Jack Kemp. The Democratic Candidates were Bill Clinton and Al Gore. Ross Perot was running on the Reform ballot. The Blair County Airport Authority dedicated the new $5 million dollar terminal. Many local dignitaries, including Representative Bud Shuster and Senator Robert Jubelirer attended. Harold “Howdy” Ellenberger, a former member of the airport aut...

  • Veterans Day in the Cove

    JOSEPH WALK, For the Herald|Oct 28, 2021

    As I was scanning the “Club News” section in a recent Shoppers Guide, I noticed the Bedford County Veterans Association was meeting to discuss the Veterans Day parade. In the Sept. 16 Morrisons Cove Herald, there was an article entitled “Cove Veterans Wrapped in Quilts of Valor.” Veterans Day is two weeks away. As a newcomer to the Cove, I wondered how Covites celebrate Veterans Day. I discovered that several local restaurants and convenience stores offer free meals to Veterans on Nov. 11. Of course, federal employees have the day off and ban...

  • Do We Have An Innate Love Of Nature?

    CARLY STAROBIN, Bay Journal News Service|Oct 28, 2021

    Have you ever wondered why so many people have responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by turning to the great outdoors — hiking, biking, gardening, fishing, etc.? To be sure, it’s partly a matter of common sense: Being out in the open air, away from other people, is safer during a pandemic. But could it also be a matter of innate human behavior? Could it be that we are instinctively drawn to nature, or are at least somehow instinctively more at ease when surrounded by it? I think so, and I think that fits neatly into what is known as the “bi...

  • Books to Borrow Claysburg Public Library Recommends

    Oct 28, 2021

    Jessica Chamberlain is beginning a new job. She worked as a detective with the Fairfax Police but chose to start her own business. She works with lawyers, learning about their divorce cases. She finds out if the spouse was unfaithful. Her father was a NYPD policeman and died on 9-11. Her mother had remarried and Jess has a half-sister. She recently adopted a partially trained German shepherd by the name of Luke. Jessica and Luke begin volunteering with a Virginia K-9 search–and-rescue group. There she meets Nathan Tanner, a former military w...

  • Supporting Local Journalism Supports Our Community

    ALLAN J. BASSLER, Publisher|Oct 21, 2021

    Last week’s Herald contained an article asking readers who support local business and local news to support the Local Journalism Sustainability Act (LJSA). The LJSA is focused on delivering benefits to local communities across the U.S. by sustaining local news organizations, including this newspaper, the Morrisons Cove Herald. Newspapers are facing significant challenges due to technological disruption, including Google’s and Facebook’s use of newspapers’ content without compensation. The legislation provides an important but temporary means o...

  • Books to Borrow Claysburg Public Library Recommends

    Oct 21, 2021

    Adelaide (Addie) Cowherd is called into the dean’s office at the University of Kentucky in 1936. There she is told that her parents had not paid her tuition for three months. She will not be able to take the finals and finish her junior year. At first, Addie thinks it is a mistake until she finally picks up her mail and reads her mother’s letter. She learns that her father has lost his job and their home. Addie is persuaded to attend the end of year bonfire before she leaves. There she meets Emmett Tharp. Too bad he’s a senior and gradu...

  • Hoenstine Family Athletic Legacy

    JAMES WENTZ, For the Herald|Oct 21, 2021

    Since the 1950s, the Hoenstine family of Claysburg and East Freedom has produced a line of outstanding athletes who have enriched the playing fields of our area with sterling performances. And it all started with patriarch Dick Hoenstine at Claysburg. Dick and I were teammates on the Roaring Spring Blair League baseball team in 1953. He normally played for his hometown team at Claysburg, but that team folded after the previous year and, still wanting to compete in the Saturday afternoon games...

  • Please read this story if you care about local journalism

    Allan J. Bassler, Publisher|Oct 21, 2021

    Dear Herald Readers: If you enjoy reading the Herald, and are aware of the importance of independent journalism to democracy, please follow this link and read this story. Thank you. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2021/11/alden-global-capital-killing-americas-newspapers/620171/ -- Publisher Allan Bassler... Full story

  • Where's My Herald?

    Martin Bakner, Bookkeeper|Oct 14, 2021

    Each week, the small but determined staff of the Morrisons Cove Herald works to provide a fresh, new edition to thousands of readers. We reach all parts of The Cove, sure, but our subscribers can be found in 44 states plus the District of Columbia. (Which six states are we missing? More on that later.) Every subscriber to the print edition of the Herald receives the newspaper in the mail, and that's where things can get tricky. You may have heard that the U.S. Postal Service has implemented the...

  • Books to Borrow Claysburg Public Library Recommends

    Oct 14, 2021

    Kim Ji-hae was born in January 1980 in Hyesan, North Korea. Her mother had married a man that her grandmother had picked for her. Unfortunately, she was in love with another man, so the marriage ended in divorce. Her mother’s husband took her as his own daughter and her name was changed to Min-young. This secret was kept from her for many years when her grandmother told her, Min-young resented her stepfather. She had a younger brother named Min-Ho. There were three classes, or “sungbun,” in North Korea. They were classified as loyal, waver...

  • Top Tips for Keeping Records

    Kenny Nearhoff, AgChoice Accounting Officer|Oct 14, 2021

    Farm records provide data that will help you monitor the business over time. Your records tell your farm story and help your accountant complete your tax return, make financial decisions with you and plan for your business’ future. Records are any informational documents that will help you understand where you’re spending your money by tracking items that are directly involved with your business. To follow are a few of our top farm record keeping tips. Top Tips Know what a farm-related expense is and is not. • All items that directly pertain...

  • Supporting Local Journalism Supports Our Community

    DEAN RIDINGS, Americas Newspapers|Oct 14, 2021

    The Local Journalism Sustainability Act (LJSA) was recently introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives and has now been introduced in the U.S. Senate – and if passed, will benefit every member of our community. Unlike many issues in Washington, D.C., this legislation has bipartisan support and is focused on delivering benefits to local communities across the U.S. by sustaining local news organizations, including this newspaper, the Morrisons Cove Herald. Newspapers are facing significant challenges due to technological disruption, i...

  • The Music of Curryville

    Oct 7, 2021

    Music resounded in Curryville. I knew most of the brethren hymns because I heard them beginning when I was a baby. Mother played the piano in church. My Aunt Shirley played the organ. Helen Metzler was the music leader and I sang in choirs directed by her. Mother and I sang many duets for church services. A piano teacher came to our house and I took lessons from him so I got pretty good at reading music. I became the song leader for the church. We actually thought the congregation would not be...

  • Books to Borrow Claysburg Public Library Recommends

    Oct 7, 2021

    Jemima Graber is thankful that her husband, Roy, and daughter, Laura, are healing from the buggy accident. A car had hit them and left Roy in so much pain. Laura is still struggling to walk. Jemima is busy with Carolyn, Nevin and little Simeon. Even with all the little ones, Jemima feels she could find time to work a food truck during the tourist season. Jemima and Abigail, her sister-in-law, have a dream of owning a food truck. They have saved for a long time and now seems the time to buy it....

  • Reid Ritchey Saved the Dairy

    JAMES WENTZ, For the Herald|Oct 7, 2021

    Reid Earl Ritchey, Sr., 87, passed away last Sunday. He was the third owner of the dairy in Martinsburg that carries his family name. In an unlikely pairing, he became my best friend in high school. Reid and I were both freshmen in 1949–he at Martinsburg High School and me at Morrison Cove. We were both athletes and competed against each other in basketball and baseball. We knew each other from those competitions and were fierce rivals. When Martinsburg High combined with Morrison Cove in 1950, we became teammates and formed a lifelong c...

  • Farm To School Culture Has Arrived

    JUSTIN CARTER, Center for Rural Affairs|Sep 30, 2021

    Not often do we consider the possibilities that emerge from a school cafeteria. Most of the time, they’re places where students enjoy a break, eat a meal, and socialize with friends. The cafeteria is, absolutely, all of these things, but it’s also much more as many groups are realizing. Our school cafeterias can be transformed into both the largest classrooms and restaurants in the nation. From the farmer to the teacher to the school food service director, farm to school programs are a network of stakeholders with each offering unique exp...

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