79 Lo PCS Ss ae ee SOE May 9, 1979 WANTED TO BUY Old furniture, glassware, guns, coins, split rail fence, pool tables, and old mis- cellaneous wanted to buy. Will pay good prices. Call 653-8474. WANTED—CLEAN FILL . MAYTOWN 426-3845 FOR SALE John Deere fertilizer spreader, 10 ft. $475.00. Oliver wheel disc, 9% ft., $675.00. Call 1-687-6220. (=x 'SS Pontiac, body & engine good, interior needs work. Asking $300. Call 653-1965. (39) 77 Thunder Precision bass, lacquered maple finish and deluxe Fender case with military cord. In very good shape. Call 426-3458. Price $250, negotiable. (613) 1967 Chevrolet-Sedan for $300. Call 426-1333. (516). Clothes trees, marble games, doll cradles, book racks & bird houses. Call 653-1711. (516) For Sale—antique cabinet with flour bin, bread box, etc. Good condition. $60. Also small camel-back trunk in good condition, $60. Call 367-4565 after S PM. (59) 2 white electric cook stoves. Good condition. Call 426-2270 1973 175 Yamaha $100. Call 653-1258, after 3:15 EM. (516) FOR RENT Riverview Park Apartments for rent See ad in this issue HELP WANTED WANTL Part time kitchen help. dishwish- ing and prep work. Must be 18 or older. Call 426-9811, The Railroad House. LOST Lost: bright blue cover for boat and motor. Lost on Rte. 441 and Rte. 23 area. Call 426-1333, Robert Hilbrun. NOTICE If you have been thinking about installing a wood heater now is the time to do it while the supply lasts. We have many models and prices to choose from. 426-3286. Hiestand Distri- butors, R.D. #1 Marietta. There are openings on the following boards ‘in the Borough of Marietta: one position, Marietta Borough Planning Commission; one position, Marietta Borough Sewer Authority. Council would like all persons interested in serving on these boards to submit a written indication of their interest to M. Booth, Borough Secretary, P.0.Box 167, Marietta, Pa., 17547. Yard Sale, Saturday, May 12th, 10 AM to 3 PM. Some antiques. Mt. Pleasant Road Marietta. (39) YARD SALE—9 AM to S PM, Saturday, May 12, 412 W. Market Street, Marietta. Lots of toddler boy's clothing. (39) Wholesale. Columbia To- bacco Company, Inc., 684- 2710— Party Supplies, Cigarettes, Tobacco, Candy, Paper Goods. 509 South 16th Street, Colum- bia, Pa. Just moved to our area? Recently engaged? Had a baby? To have the most famous basket in the world at your doorstep, please call—Pat Burton, 653-1963 or Cherie Dillow, 653-1609 [Mount Joy area]; or Hazel Baker, 426-3643 [Marietta area). WELCOME WAGON Multi-family yard sales. Saturday May 12, 9-4. Rain date, Saturday May 19. Harold Ave., Donegal Heights, Mount Joy. Toys, clothing, lawn mower, old hand tools, electronic test- ing equipment, radios, small appliances, swing sets, bicycles, furniture, antiques, collectibles. (59) NOTICE The Donegal School District is soliciting bids to service typewriters and office ma- chines in the district. Lists of machines to be serviced are available at the District Office, 366 South Market Ave., Mount Joy, PA 17552. (Telephone 717-653-1447). Bids are due-at the above address no later than May 16, 1979 at 4:00 and will be awarded at the meeting of the Board of Directors May 17, 1979. Donegal School District Lillian K. Fry Secretary of the Board Little People Cooperative needs toys The Little People’s Co- operative Nursery School in Florin needs riding toys desperately for their 3 and 4 year-olds. If you have any that you can donate, they would be much appreciated, and they will be put to good use. The Nursery School’s vehicles have been through the mill with repairs on top of repairs. Any good riding toy for small children in good or repairable condition can be picked up. Call 665-9356 (Jackie Rice) or 684-7926 (Bonnie Papdan). . The Little People’s Co- operative Nursery is a parents’ cooperative, with certified teachers and 45 kids enrolled. It is located at the top on the hill on Bruce Avenue in the Church of the Brethren. The parents in the cooper- ative are involved in every- thing from sitting on the Board of Directors to mixing paint. Their policy is “71C.” The Nursery is now accepting applications for next. year. Tuition at the school works out to $.92 per hour. SUSQUEHANNA TIMES —page 11 susquehanna exchange Buy - Sell - Trade - FREE!! Send your classified ads to Susguehanna Times, Box 75A, R.D. 1, Marietta, PA 175417. No charge for individuals . Businesses pay 10c per word, minimum $2.00. ...urban experts impressed (cont.) [continued from front page] ity of the people, it makes this visit a wonderful exper- ience,”’ said Nancy Rubini, a representative of the National Trust. Louise Cantwell, from arid El Paso, Texas, enjoyed Marietta’s spring blossoms, green trees, gardens and grass as much as the town’s buildings, which she termed ‘‘a beautiful architectural heritage.”’ An architect from Mar- tinsburg, West Virginia, Mark Orling, was very admiring of Marietta’s bank and the downtown Victorian commercial buildings. He wondered about the possi- bilities for recycling vacant and semi-vacant buildings. Carol Brand of Monroe, Wisconsin, noted that in Marietta restoration is being done by ‘‘the natives—not professional planners,” ...Lew Hart (cont.) Relays which she finds very encour- - aging. ‘‘I. am from a small town like Marietta. Now, after seeing what the people of Marietta have accom- plished, I know that restora- tion can be done without professional planners. | know that we can do it at home, ourselves. The peo- ple of Marietta have been so encouraging—and so very, very friendly. They made us all feel at home.” [continued from front page] means that your number can be changed by typing instructions to the processor into a console. The processor also detects breakdowns in the system. In case the memory should be erased, duplicate tapes containing all the codes are kept in safes. The entire system could be re- programmed in twenty min- utes. Both the processor and the tape recorder have twin machines sitting next to them: if the one on line should go kaput, the other can be switched on in seconds. The processor typifies the incoming telephone tech- nology, which is all solid- state—silent, reliable, and quickly repaired. The Co- lumbia office has a constant background noise of relays clacking and clicking, rattles of connections superimpos- ed on the steady ticking of the relays that time your busy signals and rings. In a few years, the clicks may be gone as United Tel gradual- ly buys more solid-state gear. Lew told us that the relays sometimes cause trouble if they get dirty, and must be disconnected to be cleaned. (The incidence of trouble is kept down by a regular cleaning program.) Solid- state equipment, on the other. hand, is always “‘modular,”” with plug-in components. If a part goes bad, it can be replaced in seconds and repaired at the technician’s leisure. . Besides computer opera- tion, modern electronics makes it possible to ‘‘chop”’ phone calls and send scores of them over one wire at the same time. Lewis Hart lives at 119 South Harter Street, May- town, with his wife Kathryn, son Brian, and daughter Lynn. His parents, John G. and Margaret Hart, live near Donegal High.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers