Page 8 - SUSQUEHANNA TIMES ardi Gras The Columbia Jaycees are holding a Halloween Mardi Gras this year, starting Wednesday, Octo- ber 26th and ending Satur- day, October 29th. The high point of the Mardi Gras will be the 30th anniversary parade on Thursday, starting at 7:00 PM rain or shine. 11 marching bands will play, and Miss PA, Lynn Grote, will appear. $400 in prizes will be won by some lucky persons. dd dd ddd dd td ddd ddd id dd ddd ld 1973 MG GBT ll dll APP rr 1973 Mercury Montego Coupe 1967 Pontiac Convertible Ask us about THE WORKS our 12 month—20,000 mile used car guarantee. PONTIAC 4 OLDSMOBILE BE PL Edd ddd ddl ddd ddd ddd ddd dd dl dd ddd diddbddil dd idddiddlddidddddddddl iin Other activities of the week will be a market house, a haunted house, and store window decora- tion by local students. Solar energy The engineers at Capitol Campus are holding an energy workshop, dealing with solar heat, on Nov. 2nd. It costs $45 and lasts all day. Call 787-7753. SAIS IIISLS STILTS SSS SSIS SSS SIS TS SSS ARNOLD mwavtown, pa 1975 Olds Toronado 1975 Ford Pinto Coupe 1974 Pontiac Grand Prix 1974 Datsun Pick-up Nationwide “live wire” claim service. Anytime, any place, 24 hours a day. When a Nationwide policyholder has an auto insurance claim, a call on the nearest phone, anytime day or night, gets action started. And in most cases, within 48 hours after proof of loss, the claim Is settled. That's what Nationwide's “live wire” claims service can do. And when your car's been put out of commission, that kind of speed can make a big difference. Call a Nationwide agent. Ask about our “live wire" claims service. It's an important part of Nationwide's blanket protection for your family or your business. JACK TYNDALL 805 Church Street Mount Joy, Pa. PHONE 653-5970 NATIONWIDE- INSURANCE ® Nationwide is on your side Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company Home Office. Columbus. Ohio VAAL Ld RRR RL PELL N P0000 (LEA EAR Elle dL? ..more on clocks [continued ] curator of the museum. (Mr. Wood had been kind enough to send us a copy of a book he recently co- authored, Clockmakers af Lancaster County and their Clocks, and thus aroused our editorial interest in local horology.) Mr. Wood took us around the museum and pointed out some of the many interesting pieces in the Association collection of 540 clocks and watches. In addition to standard types of grandfather and wall clocks, there are a variety of water clocks, rolling ball clocks, hickory -dickory-dock clocks, Cuckoo clocks, Mickey Mouse clocks, plastic and wood clocks, an atomic clock, a tower clock, and an organ clock that plays Polka music on the hour. There's a clock for everyone in the museum, even a wrist watch design- ed for racing drivers: it has case extensions which lodge it on the narrow part of the wrist, near the thumb. The driver doesn’t have to turn his hand to read it. One especially strange pendulum clock is hidden behind a reproduction of American Gothic. The eyes of the farmer and his wife roll back and forth with the swing of the bob. Even if you aren't inter- ested in clock cases and movements, you'll enjoy this collection: There's a clock for every taste in the museum. If you like high precision, they have an atomic clock that loses less than one second every 3200 years. (Strangely enough, it doesn’t have a second hand!) Are you kinky? Several ‘‘Master and Slave’’ clocks are exhibited. Trivia freak? A Mickey Mouse wristwatch might amuse you. The museum is open the public, free of charge, every weekday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM, and on Saturdays from noon to 5:00. There are no steps, so handicapped persons in wheelchairs can enter easily. On your way in, take a peek at the IBM System 3 computer in the front room. It keeps track of all records for the N.A.W.C.C. and runs continously. Joe Balt On this side of Chiques Hill, in Maytown, is Joe Balt’s clock shop. It’s not a museum, but it could qualify as one. Joe Balt isn’t just a clock repairman: he’s also a photographer, author, and historian. Joe is working on a book now which he hopes will tell the public how to iden- tify genuine antique clocks. ‘“Many people put out good money for an ‘an- tique’ clock,’”’ Joe told us, ‘‘and years later learn it was a fake.” To illustrate his book, Joe takes photos of clock movements in a tiny table -top studio set up in the back of his shop. The set-up creates just the right diffuse lighting need- ed to shoot clock works with their shiny surfaces. Along a shelf in the darkroom is a row of old cameras, another of Joe's many interests. Many of them are made of wood. When the Times visited him, Joe spoke at length about early clockmakers in Donegal. There were sever- al in Maytown and one in Mount Joy in the first decades of the 19th Century. “The introduction of mass production equipment killed off hand-made clocks,’ he explained. By 1850 grandfather clocks were crowded out of the market by factory-made New England shelf clocks. Hand-made clocks had been a luxury available to the wealthy, but shelf clocks were cheap enough to be bought by anyone. “Joe Balt in his shop One manufacturer of this period decided to make clocks even cheaper by using wood for the works as well as the cases. Joe Balt owns one of these. Joe showed us another clock with a globe instead of a face, and told us that the inventor of this type thought he had made the ordinary clock face with hands ‘‘obsolete.”” Only a few were ever made. While hand-made clocks are long gone in most places, they live on in Joe's shop. Besides repairs, Joe occasionally makes a com- plete set of works for someone. ‘‘Some people are willing to pay the price to have an American-made clock works in their antique case,”’ he says. It takes about one month to make a clock works (which does not include the dial). Joe proceeds in much the manner of the early makers, first calculating and making oversize draw- ings on a drawing board, BR ERPRET RRR Fp SRB ERBAL J BER RRS EIEN Ronn s SARL ou Ry SRE oe 2 EE 3 X ®e : x ; a ee Piel pind gan Rie x FEHR Jane Reisinger with ju.i a few of her clocks in Pendulum 1776 October 26, 1977 then cutting all the gears on a special machine, and finally finishing and assem- bling. His equipment is faster, but not different in principle from the old machines. After learning how much some of the pieces in his shop are worth, we asked Joe if he isn’t afraid of being robbed. ‘See that TV camera up there on the wall?’’ he as’ =d. ‘*That’s a motion detector. If you moved your finger it would set off an alarm and automatically call the police, if it was switched on.” Pendulum 1776 A good place to browse for old clocks in at Pendulum 1776 on Locust Street in Columbia. Pro- prietor Jane Reisinger told us that about 25% of her merchandise consists of old clocks (the rest is antiques and collectibles). Jane’s husband, Clar- ence, repairs clocks. He taught himself this skill because he wanted to save money. Jane has so many clocks, she doesn’t even know how many are in the store. “‘I'd guess between 100 and 200,’’ she told us. Hostetter wins flower show Lester Hostetter, of 315 N. Barbara St., Mount Joy, took the top prize at the Fall Flower Show, sponsor- ed by the Men's Graden Club of Lancaster, last Sunday. Mr. Hostetter’s crysan- themum, Enchantment, won him the award. Enchantment is an orchid -pink spider variety. Pe its tea ge! kne nex an anc the wil sta; the Pio firs L-S hay nun onl this