Page 10—SUSQUEHANNA TIMES rr You can enjoy life just a little more with No Service Charge personal checking. Relax. We've taken away one of your worries. You can forget about maintaining a specific balance in your checking account each month. And you can save money, because there's never any service charge for personal checking at National Central. You save time, too, because we send you an easy-to-read monthly statement. It lists your checks in the order you wrote them, your deposits in the order you made them. When you add Banking-By-Telephone, you can save effort. Just call to transfer money between your Statement Savings and checking accounts. Or pay your National Central mortgage, Master Charge, installment loan or Simple Interest loan. And all Banking-By-Telephone activity is reported on your monthly statement, too. With No Service Charge personal checking you save worry, time and money. You can enjoy life just a little more. NATIONAL CENTRAL BANK Member FDIC/Federal Reserve System December 14, 1977 Mount Joy Boro Council meeting Mount Joy Borough Council last Monday ap- proved the new budget. Tax millage will not go up. Bruce Brown was appoin- ted to the position on Borough Authority vacated by the retirement of Frank Zink. Mr. Brown works at Sears, where he has been a manager for the last 20 years (he has worked for Sears for 30 years). Mr. Brown lives on Richland Lane. The engineering study of the So. Barbara Street rail bridge is finished at a cost of $2700. The study says that the only problem with the bridge is in the roadway. It needs resur- facing. Estimated cost of repair is $25,000. The study results will now be sent to the P.U.C., which will make a decision about what to do with the bridge, and who will pay for whatever action strikes their fancy. The borough, at this point, has little idea what they will do. The situ- ation is complex because the bridge goes over AMTRACK rails. Borough Manager Joe Bateman reported that the water plant will be opera- tional by June 1978. He also said that Charles spring is producing ade- quate water now, probably due to the recent rains. Bateman asked the public last summer to conserve water because of Charles spring’s low level. It was reported that Rapho Township has sign- ed the sewer agreement with the borough [see Borough Authority meeting article -ed.]. On December 21st at 7:00 PM, the Borough Council will meet again. At that time they hope to adopt Ordinance 392, which will hold taxes at 13 mils and impose a per capita tax of $5 for those over 18 years of age. Tax payments made before May 1st would be discounted 2%. Payments coming in later than June 30th will have an additional 10% penalty added. The 10% penalty is aimed at local businesses that used to hold their tax money till the end of the year, making 7%2% on it in a bank, and paying only a 5% tax penalty. A group of teenagers asked the Council to change the curfew hours for people under 18 to 11:00 PM on weekdays and 12:00 PM on weekends, one hour later than it stands now. The group expressed the opinion that they were mature enough to be outside that late. Simeon Horton retired after 24 years on the Borough Council. The subdivision of Hess -Ulrich was approved, and Warren Rutt got the go ahead to relocate Rutt’s Appliances in Hess-Ulrich’s § old garage building. Pp 8a "8 o 4 § ned . & 48 3 v $e rE A PUR AARAAN rh teas RRR Fut &¥ 4 A484 ca - + ¥8 ss _ $Y vy 3 @. 78> wv 7 fr Pv : 3 CE SSRN SSS Ra AEE STA . Fi
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