, 1980 pais 0 Goa date Tg ah sad a ea EI GRR i . a fli . A ct pon a } n EE RE eR i kr Le ont IEE rs a HE PR SE I ae A oc chi LI co 2 WEEE A i dR a a i ie RP Sl ST Si i Sa, 0 is ART September 10, 1980 FOR SALE Metal Double Bed with spring. $10.00. Phone 653- 1763. 917) Complete beauty shop equipment, used ' two months. Two dryers. Must see to price. Call 426-1475. Set of steps with hand rail. Good for mobile home. $10. Call anytime, 426-1061. (910) 14 karat mini diamond size eight lady’s ring. Asking $50.00. Can be seen at 347 South Third Street, Columbia. 917) 1 pair White Majorette Boots, size 8, good condi- tion. Call 426-1496 anytime. (917) ESTATE NOTICE Estate of Robert H. Smith, late of the Borough of Mount Joy, Lancaster County, PA. Letters testamentary on said estate having been granted to the undersigned all persons indebted hereto are requested to make immediate payment and those having claims of demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned. Edna L. Smith, c/o Henry F. Gingrich, Esquire, 133 Electric typewriter. Ex- cellent condition. $35. Call 426-1475 after 5:00 pm. 917) Typing table. $25. Call 426-1475 after Spm. (917) Car Rack. Call after 3:00. 653-1551. (924), Surplus Jeeps, Cars, and Trucks. Available thru Gov- ernment Agencies. Many sell under $200. Call 312-742-1143, Ext. 3511 for information on how to purchase. j [917] Sears Craftsman Electric Lawn Mower with grass catcher, in excellent condi- tion. $115.00. Call 426-2187. (910) WANTED Used child Carrier for bicycle. Good condition. Phone 426-3008. (917) One Bedroom Apartment in private home. $200 a month, heat included. Older couple or adult. 426-2363. 917) BUSINESS FOR SALE Coin operated laundro- mat. Good business, choice location, extra equipment. 426-2225. NOTICE Wholesale. Columbia To- bacco Company, Inc., 684- East High Street, Elizabeth- 2710 — Party Supplies, town, PA 17022. Cigarettes, Tobacco, Candy, Henry F. Gingrich, Esquire = Paper Goods. 509 South Attorney ~~ 16th Street, Columbia, PA. New Address? j WELCOME WAGON® gifts. And it’s all free. : Marietta. CAN HELP YOU FEEL AT HOME. i Greeting new neighbors is a tradition with Welcome ' Wagon—*‘America’s Neighborhood tradition. I’ld like to visit you. To say ‘‘Hi’’ and present gifts and greetings from community-minded businesses. I'll also present invitations you can redeem for more A WELCOME WAGON visit is a special treat to help you get settled and feeling more ‘‘at home.” A friendly get-together is easy to arrange. Just Call. My basket holds lots of free gifts to welcome the newcomer, new baby, or newly engaged girl. Please call Cherie Dillow 653-1609, or Sue Binkle 653-2368 in the Mount Joy area; or Hazel Baker 426-3643 in Meme gon I NM TER NAT I ONAL, CHURCH SPONSORED YARD SALE: Assumption BVM Catholic Church, Union School Road, Mount Joy, will hold a YARD SALE in the parking lot of the church on Saturday, September 13, from 9:00 am until 3:00 pm. Food will be available. Do you like to read or do you have any old or used books you'd like to trade or sell on consignment? Then visit us at ‘‘The Study,’’ 146 W. Front Street, Marietta. Looking for these topics: Trains, Small town life, “The River,” local history, Women, Ethnic Groups, Children’s books, Water- gate,’ The Avant Garde in literature, politics and art. “The Study”’’ is open every weekend. DON PICKLE, JR. MASONRY WORK Brick, block and chimney cleaning. Call 426-21 Bus Trip to Vanity Fair and Berkshire Mall, October 18. For further information call 426-3644 or 426-1368 after 4:30. eameritherm THERMALLY ACTUATED VENT DAMPER PAYS FOR ITSELF Consider the many cold winter days ahead. Con- sider the cost of heating your home. And it’s going to continue to go up and up. Now consider the amount of heat you lose through that hole in your roof. You can quickly see that the Ameri-Therm Vent Damper can pay for itself in just a matter of months. Use on Gas-fired Furnaces and Water Heaters! R.V. Richards “ssCall us to do your work’ COLUMBIAR.D. 1 Phone 426-1836 VISA M/C SUSQUEHANNA TIMES—Page 11 susquehanna exchange Buy - Sell - Trade - FREE!! Send your classified ads to Susquehanna Times, Box 75A, R.D. 1, Marietta, PA 17547. No charge for individuals. Businesses pay 10° per word, minimum $2.00. Mount Joy Council (cont.) [continued from front page] Street complained about | patrons of a bar congregat- ing on the street in early morning hours and behav- ing boisterously and disord- erly. Council and borough police agreed to investigate both complaints and take appropriate action to reme- dy both disagreeable condi- tions. Council approved, with some provisos, subdivision plans for: John C. Nissley at 142-144 N. High St., Perry L. and Linda Reesor at 313 Chocolate Avenue, Joanne Brown Zink at 307-309 E. Main St. Peifer Brothers request for a subdivision at 125-127 Mount Joy Street was rejected because the request would result in too high a concentration of units per acre. A decision on John E. Melhorn’s request for a subdivision on W. Main Street was postponed until the October meeting of council. Melhorn wants to erect a building for cleaning trucks used in hauling chickens. Council wants to investigate the possibility of noxious odors in nearby resdidential areas before approving Melhorn’s re- quest. A public hearing will be held at 7 p.m. in the borough hall on October 13 on possible ways to spend federal revenue sharing in 1981. The unnamed alley going off W. Donegal Street in an easterly direction was offici- ally abandoned by the borough. No parking signs for Saturday and Sunday on the east side of the Mount Joy Mennonite Church were approved. Action on a dog control ordinance was postponed for a month to allow study of the ordinance by council mem- bers. A number of minor changes were made in the ordinances governing curb and sidewalk construction to facilitate obtaining official approval for construction. Donegal football game (cont.) [continued from front page] Campbell’s discomfort by sacking him twice, and recovered a fumble. The defense was particu- larly effective in the second half, holding the Bears to 11 yards and two first downs. Indian quarterback Darrel Risberg had few opportun- ities to demonstrate his passing prowess, which had proved so effective in the previous week’s 21-6 upset of Columbia. The Bears set up an anti-pass defense, and used it throughout the game. This defense, how- ever, could not contain Donegal’s running attack. Indian running backs Rick Funk and Steve Bowman danced over, around and through the Elizabethtown line. Funk chalked up 107 yards on 14 carries and scored a touchdown. Bow- man garnered 68 years on 11 carries and also scored a touchdown. The only obvious weak spot in the Indian game was the punt and kickoff return teams. Their problem seemed to be over-eager- ness: they tended to leap offsides on punt returns and to rush downfield too recklessly on kickoff re- turns. Experience, rein- forced by a few choice words from head coach Gayne Deshler, should solve this problem in time for next week’s very tough contest with Manheim Central. The Manheim Central game, to be played this Friday night at Donegal, will be a real test for the Indians. Mount Joy’s own Doktor Predicto is forecasting a defeat for the green war- riors. Predicto, recall, readers will is a mad mathe- matical genius who thinks that the game of football can be reduced to a set of number hopping around inside some computer, or withing Predicto’s own over- heated brain. He may be an ‘“‘expert,”” but the experts have a habit of under- estimating Donegal. (See predicto’s forecasts on the back page.) Two weeks ago, the sportswriters for the Lan- caster newspapers were confidently predicting that Columbia would ‘‘chase the Indians back up Route 441.” Our sportswriter, who lives within earshot of Rt. 441, heard the shriek of scream- ing tires on that roadway two Fridays ago, and imagined that it must be some football expert per- forming a high-speed 180 degree editorial about-face. This newspaper confi- dently predicts that the Indians will confound Dr. Predicto and any other so-called experts who pick Manheim Central. Donegal will have the home-field advantage, and the stands should be packed (Last week’s game with E-town drew 3,000 paying fans). When those fans start to holler, they will give the Indians a subtle psycholog- ical advantage which will enable them to blow Man- heim Central off the field. aH BNW 2K The Norman Sprechers married fifty years Mr. and Mrs. Norman H. Sprecher celebrated their S0th wedding anniversary with a drop-in party at Landis Home West on Saturday, Sept. 6. The couple was married Sept. 6, 1930. Mr. Sprecher retired from the Union Nation Mount Joy Bank, Mount Joy, after SO years of service. He served as Sunday school treasurer of St. Mark's United Methodist Church. He was also assistant treasurer of the church’s Building Fund for many years. Mr. and Mrs. Sprecher are still members of the church. Mrs. Sprecher was a Sunday school teacher for 40 years. She also taught an interdenominational Bible Class (of which she is still serving as coordinator) for 17 years. The couple enjoys travel- ling and Mr. Sprecher still enjoys fishing while Mrs. Sprecher spends time with vegetable and flower gar- dening. The couple has resided in cottage S3, Dogwood Lane, at the Landis Homes Retirement Community for the past two years. Over 200 relatives and friends attended their an- niversary celebration.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers