976 he on )st SUSQUEHAND* ™-- Ratph M, 3 4 Vol. 76 No. 33 August 18, 1976 Susquehanna Times & The Mount J R, LU. MARIETTA & MOUNT JOY, . . .. Marietta to get medical building St. Joseph Hospital plans to build a new satellite clinic building for the Marietta and Maytown area. Authorities at the hospi- tal have said that the new building will be located at the corner of Route 441. and Joe Balt’s darkroom is a time machine ne | Joe Balt in his darkroom. Most people in Maytown know about Joe Balt’s expertise as a watchmaker. His brilliant restorations of complex antique clocks have been written up in big Philadelphia magazines. What a lot of people don’t know is that Joe is also skilled at restoring antique photographs. Joe began restoring old photos when a friend gave him some old glass neg- atives that had been lying around in an attic. After reading a few books on how to restore old pictures, joe managed to produce some sharp, clear prints of local scenes and people. Joe’s darkroom had turned into a time machine. Soon he was collecting all the old negatives and prints he could get his hands on. What he can’t buy, he tries to borrow long enough to salvage. There are several hun- dred prints in his files today. They show Civil War soldiers parading near Col- umbia, the flood of 1898 in Marietta, the vanished canal, and people in strange costumes posing in front of houses that haven’t changed a bit. “I like to bring back a little history by preserving these things,‘ Joe says. He adds, ‘It’s time consuming, and you have to handle each photograph with extreme care in order to save it.” Sometimes, Joe’s chemicals, filters, and tender care work seeming miracles on prints that have faded into yellow blobs. He has also become skilled at soaking apart old glass plates which time and mildew have cemented together. Two of photographs Joe salvaged are reproduced on the back page of this newspaper. Bank Street and will cost about $295,000. Final acquisition of the lot at Route 441 and Bank Street cannot be made by the hospital until it is approved by the Health Resources Planning and Development, Inc. of South Central Pennsylvania. The agency plans to study the project immediately. People in the Marietta-Maytown area served by the propos- ed clinic may submit com- ments within 10 days. The clinic should be in operation by March, 1977. The current Marietta- Maytown clinic is located in the former Dr. Michael Gratch offices in Maytown. It is open Monday, Wed- nesday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Tuesday and Thrusday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and is staffed by 12 doctors under the direc- tion of Dr. Dale Boyd. A the town picnic. Landisville man wins 200 ‘‘Joy Bucks” [See “Mt.” page 2] Mou} Al TIT 9] William Breckline(left) and Dennis Shumaker (right) stand besi e a sig IVALEL A HH? Joy, PA | 7542 cored Bicariben Covidien) LES FIFTEEN CENTS uncing Marietta-Maytown area picnic will feature races & talent show A community picnic, sponsored by the Marietta, Maytown, and East Done- gal Bicentennial committee will be held Saturday, August 21 from 1 to S p.m., at Marietta War Memorial Park. Rain date for the event will be Sunday at 1 p.m. Tickets may be purchased at Spangler’s Appliance Store for the chicken bar-b-que dinner to be served at S p.m. Jaycees want Marietta to star in Almost Anything Goes TV show Marietta Jaycees are sponsoring the Great Ad- venture Fun Olympics featuring the nationally popular ‘‘Almost Anything Goes’’ roadshow. A team will be chosen to partici- pate in a preliminary con- test in Jackson, New Jer- sey. If the Marieta team wins, it will compete on the ‘““Almost Anything Goes’ national TV show. Anyone between the ages of 18 and 45 in good physical health has a chance to participate by obtaining a ticket. At a drawing at the JC center on August 27, a team of three men and three wo- men, a coach, and two alternates will be named. Beginning September 7, the festivities will begin in Great Adventures Arena, Jackson, New Jersey. Marietta will receive recognition thru the contest and was the only town chosen in Central PA to be eligible. Communities are catalogued according to population and are eligible for money prizes. [continued on page 12] Jaycees Taise a banner announcing Marietta’s pa in TV fun olymptes. cipation The old fashioned picnic will include pie throwing, bag races, three leg races, calliope music, hand dip- ped ice-cream, and a talent show at 4 p.m. Prizes for the talent contest are $25-first; $15-second; and $10-third. The judge will be Mrs. Isabell Russell. The community chorus wili present a special bi- centennial program at 5:45. The chorus, under the direction of Mrs. Gerald Libhart and accompanied by Mrs. Margaret Miller, will sing the following numbers: Southern Con- fort, Give Me Your Tired- Your Poor, Lilli Marlene. Patriotic Fantasy by George M. Cohan, Battle Hymn of the Republic, This is Our Land, ‘‘America’’, Songs of the American Revolution, God Bless America and This is My County. Donald Kugle will serve as a narrator for the program. Five drawings for free dinners will be awarded and bingo will be super- vised by the American Legion. [Each person attending is requested to bring a lawn chair. Mrs. Robert Demmey is chair- person of the community activity. Dennis Shumacher is chairman of the bicenten- nial committee, Mrs. Hazel Crankshaw is vice presi- dent, Mrs. Robert Lombard secretary, and John Heis- tand, treasurer. Bar-B-Que tickets may be bought in the park for $2.50, but only a limited number are available.