Page 12 - SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Circus! The circus is coming to town! Step right up, ladies and gentlemen, young and old, for the Roberts Bros. Three-Ring Circus, at Mar- ietta’s Memorial Park to- morrow night, Thursday the 21st, at either 6:00 or 8:00 p.m. The circus is being sponsored by the Pioneer Fire Co. #1. Chicken! The ladies of the May- town Fire Co. Auxiliary have a good suggestion for vour Saturday dinner on July 30. They're planning a chicken barbeque to start at 3 p.m. on the 30th. The barbeque will be held at the Maytown Fire Hall. Bonanza! by J. Alan Szymanski A Wholesale Bonanza will be held on Saturday, July 23 from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., at St. Mary’s Church 349 E. Market St., Mari- etta. This project is spon- sored by Assumption B.V.M. Church, Mount Joy, in conjunction with an yutdoor sale. It is part of the local church’s special services series. I'he committee gratefully acknowledges the assis- tance provided by Steh- man’s 1.G.A., Market Kart, Acme Markets, and sever- al distributors and whole- salers. The sale is open to the public. Hindus! The Hindu American Re- ligious Institute (HARI) will be sponsoring ‘‘India Nite’ at Penn State-Capitol Campus on Saturday, July 30 at 8:p.m. in the campus auditorium. ‘‘India Nite’’ is an even- ing of Indian classical and popular music and dance. Donation is $3.00 per person and will benefit the HARI building fund for a temple in Harrisburg. For information and tick- ets contact: C.N. Rao, 717-545-5891. Cops and Robbers! The semi-annual Mariet- ta police report is out. It compares as follows with the same period last year: ““Incidents’’ counted 642, down from 675 last year; offenses were down to 180 from 220; criminal arrests declined to 64 from 81; juvenile arrests went to 145 from 165; traffic arrests were up to 132 from 100; and ordiance violations shot up from 42 last year to 84 this year. There was one more accident this year than last—27. Marietta Boro Council postpones curbs, refuses bids Marietta Borough Coun- cil again rejected all bids on reconstruction and re- pairing of Front Street (between Perry Street and Waterford Avenue) at the Thursday night meeting. Council now plans to post- pone the project until Spring. A bid for curbing installation was also reject- ed. The deadline for resi- dents on the north side of Front Street to install curbing will be set back. A committee of residents has been formed, with Jack Frey as chairman, which will submit suggestions tc Council. Monies intended for the Front Street repaving pro- ject will be partially divert- ed to other street projects. The deficit will be made up by the time the project gets moving, according to Coun- cil. Two bids were recieved for resurfacing Longeneck- er Avenue and Mulberry Street. Domenic Paving, York, was awarded the contract to be labeled #77-2, as low bidder at $4,357.75. This bid will be submitted to Penn DOT for approval. Harold Kulman, with a committee from Borough Council, (Ken Ross, Dave White and J. Robert Flan- agan), will investigate the possibilities of compiling applications for Community funds from Manpower Con- sortium. Council adopted a reso- lution accepting sewage facilities . for the Fairfax Development at Essex St. and Colebrook Rd. Fifteen Supervisors The Supervisor’s meeting last Thursday was attended by nine residents of Long Lane in RD Mount Jjoy. The residents had come to request some form of traffic control along their stretch of the road, where 7-year-old Michael Car- baugh was killed by a truck several weeks ago. Gary and Lois Carbaugh, the boy's parents, were with the group of residents. The residents were hop- ing for a lower speed limit in front of their homes and additional warning signs (signs warning of danger- ous conditions were put up two davs after the acci- dent). The present speed limit is SS m.p.h. The Supervisors told the group that they had been in Harrisburg earlier that day but had not reached a solution yet. They hope to do something soon. Super- visor Lloyd Fuhrman stated that ‘‘if one thing doesn’t work we'll try another.” The Susquehanna Times visited Long Lane and sewer accounts were rated as delinquent. A request from Council for funds for two additional CETA employees have been approved. Margaret Gable, Colum- bia R.D. #1, was appointed Deputy Housing Officer. = Of the four buildings which were declared public nuisances at the last meet- ing, one (at Clay and Front) is being demolished and will be reconstructed. A permit has been issued for this. The other three buildings are the subject of negotiation between the Borough Solicitor and the owners. The Pioneer Fire Com- pany requested the use of Memorial Park for a Flea Market on August 27 with the rain date for September 3. The Fire Co, will sponsor a Circus on July 21. Four way stop signs will be erected at Mulberry St. and Prospect Alley. Roger Grimes, a representative of the Department of Com- munity Affairs, will explain opportunities available for Federal funding as a ses- sion on Tuesday night, July 19, in the Council Cham- bers. The meeting is open to the public. Residents in the 600 block of W. Market St. are requesting an additional Street light. A proposed exit from Clabell Inc. onto route # 441 has been rejected by Lanc. Co. Planning Com- mission as well as E. Donegal Twp. and Marietta Planning Commissions. meet —residents ask for speed limit made a rough estimate of the stopping distance at the point of the accident. A car driver coming over the crest of the hill from the north (i.e., heading from Rte. 141 toward Rte. 23) would not see the head of a four-foot-tall child until he was about 115 feet away from the child. (This dis- tance was paced off). The speed limit of SS m.p.h. at that point translates to 80.7 feet per second. Braking distance for an average car is at this speed roughly 300 feet, according to State Police. In other business at the meeting, fire chief Charles Johns told the Supervisors that Maytown-East Donegal Ambulance, Inc., has sep- arated from the Fire Company and is now inde- pendent. The Fire Company had 14 calls in June with 7 public service calls. S2 men responded. Some members were occupied in helping carry water to Rheems during the shortage. pp 5 i Fed savsxERIRIRERERES | A new transportation phenomenon has arrived in Pennsylvania=‘mopeds’’. Basically a bicycle with a small gasoline engine at- tached, mopeds can be either pedaled, or driven. or both. The motor and your legs work together to give extra power. Mechani- cally, mopeds are simple things. Legally is another story. The door was swung open to mopeds by the new motor code which went into effect last July 1st, but the new laws contain several vague areas and quirks which legislators are in the process of ironing out. Calls to various police barracks and State agencies are likely, at this point, to turn up different answers at each number. The Times finally got the real low- i Kathy Guyton on a moped (courtesy of Miller’s Mobil) Mopeds are here down from Representative Ken Brandt. ‘‘There’s a conflict between intention and interpretation in some parts of the new motor code,”’ he said. Here's an example: The new code requires registration of mopeds, but mopeds are defined in such a way that a lawn mower is a moped. Don’t rush out to get plates for your grass shears, though; the new law will be straightened out soon. If you buy a moped, you will have to register it, at a cost of six dollars per year. Other points which hopefully will be clarified soon concern special oper- ating licenses, insurance, and helmets. Mr. Brandt expects that none of these will be required. You won’t be allowed to drive a is in front of the Carbaugh residence. July 20, 1977 3 Harrisburg confuses them with lawn mowers moped on either a four-lane or limited-access highway. You will need a valid driver’s license, with or without the ‘‘Y restriction” which permits motorcycle operation. You can use your moped for just about anything else. Mopeds get up to 200 miles per gallon, go up to 2S m.p.h. on level ground, and cost roughly $300 to $600. Mopeds must be equipp- ed with certain lights and reflectors, but factory mop- eds should meet these qualifications. Mopeds can be pur- chased locally at Miller's Mobil in Marietta, and at Strickler Imports or at Rutt’s Appliances in Mount Joy. The scene of the accident on Long Lane, looking from the South. The foremost car MOI PN be bed NOC ee AN MOAN ee Ai a Cat a a= ra rm CF. Ms i AL bead MN