Page 10 — SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Bob Kline promoted to assistant vice president National Central Bank has promoted Robert E. Kline, manager of the Mount Joy office of the bank, to assistant vice president. Kline i: a Mount Joy native and graduate of Donegal High School. He joined the bank in 1954 as a bookkeeper, and worked as a teller and assistant cashier before becoming manager of the Mount Joy office. Active in a number of civic activities, Kline is a member and former presi- dent of the Mount Joy Rotary, the Mount Joy Chamber of Commerce, and the Mount Joy Community Council, where he serves as president and treasurer. He also serves as treasurer of the Donegal School Authority. Kline has attended the Pennsylvania Bankers Association School of Bank- ing at Bucknell University. The Origin of Civiliza- tion, a free lecture by Dr. C.C. Lamberg-Karlovsky of Harvard, will be presented at 8 PM in Hensel Hall at F&M tonight, March 29. SCHOLARSHIPS Scholarships from the Lancaster County Farm and Home Assoc. are available. See your guidance coun- selor. V.A. benefits booklet The Veterans’ Adminis- tration has a booklet covering all the benefits available to vets and their dependents. It also lists toll -free VA phone numbers. You can get it from the Superintendent of Docu- ments, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washing- ton, DC 20402. Send $1 and ask for the IS-1 Fact Sheet. Auxiliary meets The Ladies Auxiliary of the Friendship Fire Co. held their meeting on Thursday, March 16th. The Mother and Daugh- ter Banquet will be held on Thursday, May 18th at the Lancaster County Farm Diner. Any member wish- ing to come to the banquet and have an evening of fun should call Edith Etsell at 653-5682 before May 1st. Officers for 1978 are: president, Dorothy Hed- rick; vice president, Dolly Maxwell; secretary, Edith Etsell; treasurer, Bonnie Coover; corresponding ‘sec- retary, Carrie Smith; and chaplain, Harriet Raebuck. Committees were picked by the president: members are—kitchen, Carrie Smith, Kathryn Geltmacher, Reba Hartsough, and June Way; entertainment, Edith Et- sell, Geraldine Williams, Carrie Smith, and Bonnie Coover; memorial, Carrie Smith and Amanda Darren- kamp; publicity, Edith Etsell and Geraldine Wil- liams. Trustees are Carrie Smith, Amanda Darren- kamp, and Dolly Maxwell. The meetings are held on the 3rd Thursday of each month. All members are welcome to come out and help support the firemen. We've cut our bill consolidation loan rates this spring. For a fee, the tourists will get the use of a moped and maps, and will be turned loose. ’ Save at least 50” over permitted finance company rates. Instead of paying a lot of bills and a lot of high interest charges every month, make one lower, more affordable monthly payment, with a National Central bill consolidation loan. Save headaches. Save a lot of money. This opportunity is good for a limited time only. So act now. You can usually get approval, in person or by phone, within 24 hours. For your National Central bill consolidation loan, contact: NATIONAL CENTRAL BANK Member FDIC/Federal Reserve System MOUNT JOY + 1 West Main Street—653-1421—Robert E. Kline March 29, 1978 on newsstands now Susquehanna Magazine only 60° Columbia Little Theater The Columbia Little Theater will present But- terflies Are Free, a play about a blind young man, his first apartment, and his next door neighbor, a How to wash it Want to save energy —and money— by washing in cold water? Don’t use water below 60 degrees Fahrenheit if you do, because all detergents perform poorly at that heat level. 60 to 80 degree water is 0.K. for lightly soiled clothes, fabrics such as wool that shrink, or dark colors that bleed. Presoak- ing, pretreating, or more detergent may be needed in water this cold. Water at 100 or 110 degrees is needed for durable press, synthetics, young woman and ex- “Flower Child,’’ at 8:00 PM this Thursday through Saturday. Admission is $3 for adults, $2 for students, $1 for kids. and dirtier clothes. Hot water at 130 or 140 is neccesary for heavy soiling, sturdy whites, colorfast, durable press, and diapers. Always use hot water if someone in the family is sick. Temperature doesn’t af- fect rinsing, so use cold water for this. Washing machine ex- perts can’t seem to agree on whether a timer or dryness sensor is best for clothes dryers. They all agree, though, that in warm weather air drying on a line is the cheapest. Errata The Elizabethtown and Mount Joy Forest Fire Crew had a big surprise at their banquet last week when Auxiliary treasurer Doris Oberdorff presented at check to Blaine Gantz which paid off the land on which the new Forest Fire Station stands. Attendance certificates were presented by warden H. Eugene Altland, who also donated ten-year pins for presentation. The E-town/Mount Joy Forest Fire Crew covers Columbia, Mountville, Washington Boro, Mari- etta, Maytown, Bainbridge, Falmouth, Elizabethtown, Rheems, Mount Joy, Mil- ton Grove, Silver Spring, Landisville, Salunga, Mount Joy Township, and surrounding townships. The final paragraph of the story about Esther Hockenberry’s 80th birth- day party should have read: ‘‘Members of the Sunday School class that Mrs. Hockenberry attends at Glossbrenner Church attended her birthday party.”’ The Times last week mis- takenly referred to the Schock Home as the ‘“Schock Center’’ in a caption last week. We apologise for the error. _. all ml Sl Av mE ENE Ci RANE
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