Page ~ . {Want an experience? On your way to the shore, have # 2 breakdown with your auto! 8 Service or tow call!?!? { Repairs?!?! 4 WHY BE CARELESS OR TAKE CHANCES??? ® STOP NOW & PREPARE FOR THOSE TRIPS!!! MILLERS Mobil SERVICE 271 WEST MARKET STREET, MARIETTA Au -wr { ES, {uw Sat.—9 a.m.-12 noon Closed Sun. & Holidays SENIOR CITIZEN MOUNT JOY LEGION {2 mi. E. of Mt. Joy off Rt. 230 By-Pass) August 20 GLEN GARBER SSL EN 6, SLE NE Sunday Dinners 12 Noon to 9 P.M. Reservations—898-8451 SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Time?!?! autohaus MANHEIM PIKE.EAST PETERSBURG OPPOSITE ERB'S MARKET —569-5353 Where Our Customers Send Their Friends IBBERSON’S CARPET FOR HOME AND CAR 1660 SOUTH MARKET STREET ELIZABETHTOWN, PA 17022 Hours: Mon., Tues., & Wed.—9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Thurs. & Fri.—9 a.m.-9 p.m. S FOR REAL ESTATE 2 * CARDS HONORED Jack Johnson & Associates 684-7700 Sandy Shoemaker 426-3655 John Groff 426-3264 LeRoy Appley (52 issues 426-2212 or 653-8383 Publisher—Nancy H. Bromer Editor— Nick Bromer Advertising Manager—Kathie Guyton Business Manager—Jody Bass Society Editor—Hazel Baker Staff —Patty Flowers Vol. 77 No. 31 August 17, 1977 Advertising Rates 8 Entered at the Post Office in Marietta, PA as second : g class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879 S Subscription Rate: Susquehanna Times & The Mount Joy Bulletin Box 75-A, R.D. #1, Marietta, PA 17547 Published weekly on Wednesday 426-1420 ¢ % per year) Upon Request $6.00 per year (50 issues per year) for: Lancaster County——1 year—$6.00 (outside Lancaster County)——1 year—$6.50 Mail to: SUSQUEHANNA #1, Marietta, PA 17547. Please send me the SUSQUEHANNA TIMES weekly 0 TIMES, Box 75-A, R.D. S00TNEENINENOENOPEINRESRRRORRIERRRSTS Sononiensssesasesessssesesessenssscenssedd] Honored at the Legion banquet were, standing in front, back are, left to right, Bill Dommel, Mitch Drace, and Eric Steinhart. Debbie is from Lancaster, Eric from Milton Debbie Choi on the left and Stacy Miller on the right. IN Grove, and Bill, Mitch, and Stacy from Mount Joy. “That government is best said Thomas Jefferson, and that means the mock government sponsored by the American Legion was excellent Last Thursday the Mount Joy American Legion held a banquet for their baseball team and some other young people who attended con- ferences across the state. Trophies were awarded the baseball players. Most Valuable Player trophy went to Randy Velez, as did the batting award. Melvin Hay was named the Most Improved Player, and Pete Splain was declared to be the Best Defensive Player. The other young people honored that night were those who had attended model governments or taken police training for the previous week. Bill Dom- mel and Mitch Drace had gone, courtesy of the Le- gion, to Hershey Police Academy, chalking up 49 hours of training (which will be valid if they actually become State Cops in the future). “You know that driveway there, the one that’s about a mile long?’’ asked Mitch Drace. ‘Well, we had to run all the way up that way every morning at 6:30.” Besides calisthenics, the two fellows also studied police work while sitting at desks. About 120 young men from all over the state shared their experience. Stacy Miller of Mount Joy and Debbie Choi of Lancaster both spent their week at ‘‘Keystone Girls’ State,”’ an exercise in mock government held at Ship- pensburg State College. Debbie was elected the most outstanding citizen of the 250 girls who attended. which governs least” The Legion baseball team. In the front row are, left to right, manager Doug Avers, Randy Velez, Dean Zimmerman, and business manager Jim Buehler. In the back are Brian Long, George Root, Pete Splain, Teet Gohn, and Tom Weber. ‘First we had to set up a local government, then a county (including a court system), and finally a state government,’’ said Stacy Miller. The two girls agreed that it was a big job to accomplish in only one week. Stacy also recounted receiving a delegate from the Keystone Boys’ State —who had a shaved head. She doesn’t know why he had shaved it. The Keystone Boys’ State was where Eric Stein- hart confronted the political system as the clerk of the House of Representatives. “You couldn’t get anything done...they’d just argue and argue and argue, about the smallest details,”’ Eric noted. The Boys’ State also experienced the formation of a new party, the ‘““Independents,’”” who re- fused to be part of either of the two official parties (the ‘*Nationalists’’ and the ‘‘Federalists’’). Despite the EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES Available Day & Night COLUMBIA HOSPITAL 7th & Poplar (Emergency Entrance) political turmoil, the Boys’ State managed to hammer’ out two bills, which were sent to the real governor (Shapp) as suggestions for actual laws. ‘“I learned a lot about how our government works, and about how any govern- ment works,’ noted Eric. MEDICAL CALLS Saturday Afternoon and Sunday Norianco Health Center (Mount Joy Area Orly)