hearsal. Thursday 6:30 p.m. Youth Choir Re- hearsal. 7:30 p.m. Busy Beacons Class Meeting Friday 7:15 p.m. Christian Explor- ers S. S. Class meeting. Saturday 9:00 a.m. Trinity Bible Class Bake Sale. St. Luke's Episcopal Church Mount Joy, Pa, The Rev. Donald H. Feick Rector Saturday 9:30 a.m. Junior Confirma- tion Class. Sunday ‘St. Michael and All Angels’ 8:00 a.m. The Holy Com- munion. 9:30 a.m. Matins and Church School 110:00 a.m. Morning Pray- er and Sermon. 7:3C p.m. Adult Inquirer’s Class. Tuesday 7:00 p.m. Jr. Choir Re- hearsal. 7:30 p.m. Sr. Choir Re- hearsal. Church ot the Brethren Salunga, Pa. Robert Turner, Pastor Kenneth Brubaker, S.S. Supt. Sunday 9:00 a.m. Sunday Jrha9) 10:00 a. m. Morning Wor- ship Service 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic Ser- vice. Tuesday Women’s Fellowship. Thursday 7:00 p.m. Junior Choir practice. 7:30 p.m. Senior Choir Practice Cross Hoads Brethren In Christ Churth S. Angle & Donegal Springs Road Mount Joy, Pa. B. E. Thuma, Pastor Lloyd S. Myers, Supt. Sunday 9:15 a.m. Sunday School Adults and Juniors. 10:30 a. m. Morning Wor- ship. Message by the pastor. 7:00 p. m. The Holy Com- munion. Guest speaker, Rev. | Dale Singer, York. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting and Bible Study, Youth Prayer Meeting at the same time. Calvary Bible Church New Haven & Henry Sis. Mount Joy, Pa. Pastor, Donald A. Urey Saturday 7:00 pm. Youth activity at the home of James Fouse, Youth Leader. Sunday 9:15 a.m. Bible School. 10:30 a. m. Morning Wor- ship Service. Message in the Book of Job. 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship Service. Studies on the Book of The Revelation, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting. and Bible Study. Mt. Pleasant Brethren In Christ Church J. Earl Martin, Jr., Pastor 9:00 a.m. Sunday School William P. Neyer, Supt. Sunday School awards will be presented. Message /‘Her- alds of the Word” Pastor. Dedication of Sunday School teachers. 7:00 p.m. Joint Youth Con- ference, at the Mastersonvilie Church. Speaker James Har- ris. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting. Trinity Lutheran Church .Mount Joy, Pa. The Rev. W. L. Koder Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday School Promotion Day 10:45 a.m. Morning Wor- ship. Installation of Sunday School officers, teachers and helpers. 12:00, Noon: Service for, the Baptism of children. Assumption of The Blessed Virgin Mary Church Mount Joy, Pa. New Haven Street Rev. Francis X. Butler Pastor Rev. William Sullivan, Asst. Sunday 8:00 a.m. Mass. Donegal Presbyterian Church Richard A. Todd, Pastor Hector Wardrop, S. S. Supt. Thursday 7:45 p. m. Donegal Circle meeting at the home of Mrs. Robert Bowers. Sunday 9:15 a.m. Morning Worship Service. 10:25 a.m. Church School. 2:30 p.m. Donegal Presby- tery Youth Rally at Memori- al Presbyterian Church in Lancaster. Wednesday 8:00 p.m. Hour of Power Thursday 7:30 p.m. Donegal Commit- tee meeting. 9:00 p. m. Bowling Night at Clearview Lanes for the church. First Presbyterian Church Mount Joy, Pa. Richard A. Todd, Pastor Ted Godshall, Supt. Sunday 9:30 a.m. Church School. 10:45 a. m. Morning Wor- ship Service. 12:00 noon, Mount Joy Deacon's meeting. 2:30 p.m. Donegal Presby- tery Youth Rally at Memor- | ial Presbyterian Church in| Lancaster. Wednesday 8:00 p.m. Hour of Power. Thursday 7:00 p.m. Junior Choir practice. 8:00 p.m. Senior Choir practice. 9:00 p.m. Bowling night at Clearview Lanes for the church. Rally Day Planned At Church of God The Mount Joy Church of God will observe Rally Day on Sunday, October 6, in the Sunday School. Joseph D. Moore, a resi- dent of Paoli, will be the speaker. He is a former reso- dent of Mount Joy, the son {of John G. Moore, 230 Mari- | etta Avenue. Mr. Moore is presently di- rector of Secondary Educa- tion in the Paoli Area School District. He is a member of the Paoli Presbyterian church and a member of the church | session. He teaches a mixed | class of senior high school [students in Sunday School and is active in Scouting for a Troop of blind scouts. There will be special mus- ic and recognition for mem- | bers who attained perfect at- tendance. All are cordially invited. HYMN SING The Mount Joy Church of God is having a Hymn Sing Saturday evening, October 12, at 7:30. The Homebuild- ers’ Class wants to invite ev- eryone of the community to join with Lloyd Weidman, Jr. who will be the leader. for an evening of fellowship in song with most of the evening be- ing spent singing your favor- ite gospel song, hymn, or spiritual. The public is invit- ed. ® Main Street (From page 1) ey. The borough fathers — meaning the Borough Coun- cil—retain the meters simply because they collect money. ® ® ® “The borough needs 'the money to pay . its bills,” is the only argument given. ® [ J @ In effect, what is being done is to charge motorists a toll charge for using a pub- lic street so that there will be suflicient money in the Presbyterian - Home News - On Tuesday evening last week we had a delightful time when the Rev. and Mrs. C. E. Ulrich of the United Brethren church, showed us pictures of the places they visited this summer. The pic- tures were beautiful and the information given was most interesting. Some of the countries visited were «Ire- land, (South and North), Scotland, England, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, West Germany, Italy, France and Amsterdam (Nether- lands). Then Rev. Ulrich, by pictures, took us on their trip to Palestine in 1960 which included W. Germany, Italy, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, King- dom of Jordan and Israeli. Refreshments were served and all had a happy time of fellowship. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Dur- no, Lebanon, and Mrs. L. D. Raisley, Butler, visited Miss|came to the Bulletin editor's | Mabel Walmer. Mrs. George S. Mann of Millersville, Mrs. R. Shina- barger, Lancaster, and Mrs. Pyfer rie Kauthold. Mrs. Irene B. Moore, Dor- rothy Herr, Fred Geiter and] John C. Howett, Lancaster, for Miss Laura Deremer. The Misses Dorothy Miller and Sarah Hoke, Mrs. Nellie Butts and Mrs. Schaeberle, Mrs. Clara Wallick and daughter Mary, and Ralph Nonemaker of York, for Miss Sarah Emswiler. Margy and Steve Ramsay, West Chester, for Mrs. Retta Ramsay. Mr. and Mrs. George En- terline, Harrisburg, for Miss Ethel Henry. There was an unusual oc- currence at the Schock Home on Saturday afterncon when their oldest resident, ninety years, Miss Laura Deremer, attended her first football game and came back and vowed it would not be her last. Her enthus’asm has con tinued especially from the fact that she was a Lancaster resident. Miss Pearl Powell spent a week visiting Miss Beth Stearns and Miss Clara Greenwood in Camp Hill. borough treasury to pay the bills for coliecting garbage. ® ° ® If not for paying the gar- bage bill, then for mowing grass in the park or for any of the many many expenses necessary to provide borough services. . ® ee eo It looks morally wrong for the Mount Joy Borough to put its hand into the pockets of the motorists for nickles and dimes to finance services which should be paid by ev- eryone. ® ee eo Is it ethical to ask an out- of-towner who comes into Mount Joy to do business to help pay our own bills? ® ee © From a purely moral stand- point, the collection of mon- ey under the cloak of park- ing meters is wrong. ® ® © The Borough does not ev- en earmark the funds collect- ed for such logical and auto- mobile—connected items as street improvement, street maintenance, street sweeping, police patroling or meter maintenance. ®e Oo eo The several thousand dol- lars collected annually simp- ly seep into the general fund and may just as well be spent for repairs to a mow- ing machine as for repairs to the parking meters. ®e oO oo From a purely logical point of view, if not legal, it would make just as much sense to put a toll gate across Main street and charge every mo- torist who passes through Mt. Joy as to ask those who stop to feed a parking meter. ® oo Parking meters in Mount Joy are not parking meters at all. They are only an easy, although unethical, way to raise money. ® ®e oo With all this hubbub about teresting to notice one day last week that a piece of mail posted in Lancaster had been cancelled by the post office with these words, @ w ® Pray for Peace.” ® o o “The congressional news up to this date possesses not the slightest interest. Cong [ress seems determined to frit- | ter away its time, instead of rendering it profitable to the nation—shame on such tardy | legislation.” Is the foregoing ‘quotation from some recent | publication which is fed up | with Washington? e eo Oh, no. It comes from an | 1836 copy of the Philadel- | phia ‘Public Ledger,” which |desk via Eric Olson, who re- [ceived it from. his sister. The | paper, preserved in an old (book, was Vol. 1 No. 1, |saying that it was the first {issue of the publication. | Doubtless that is the reason it was preserved. | ®e © o A four-page, hand-set pa- [per, it is priced at one cent per copy. ® ® ® A paragraph says that four stage lines operated daily between Philadelphia and | Pittsburgh but that so busy | were the transportation com- panies that booking needed {to be made one to two weeks in advance. ® ® ® Last Thursday's “hearing” [at Hempfield high school con- cerning the limited access highway plans on Rte. 230 | between Little Chiques creck and the Manheim road prov- (ed two things. ® ® ® First thing is that the state intends to make the stretch of highway limited access (and that the hearing was a matter only for the record. ®e ee ee We sat through an hour of {the proceedings and that was long enough to discover that it made little difference what was said or done at that ga- thering. ®e o ® The plan is made and that is that. ® ee eo One interesting statement was made which we have not | seen elsewhere. One of the state men said that is is esti- I mated that traffic on Rt. 230 j will be 13,700 vehicles daily | by 1980. ® e® ® An automatic traffic count- er located at Clearview, be- tween Mount Joy and Eliza- bethtown, showed a 1959 av- erage daily count of 10,329. In 1955, the figure was 8,798. ® o @ Although individuals may feel the sting of making the highway limited access, there seems no doubt but that giv- ing traffic entrance and eg- iress only at certain places will be the best for the most over the longest period of time. And—that, in the last analysis, is the final' measur- ing stick. Patronize our Advertisers. JOHNSON BUS SERVICE BUSES FOR ALL OCCASIONS FLORIN, PA. Phone 653-0321 prayer in school, it was in-| i ——— ® MAYTOWN Miss Grace Henderson —— The Maytown Civic A:soc. met Thursday evening at the | American Legion home. Pro- jects for earning money were (discussed as well as civie projects for spending money. The meeting was well attend- ed. Paul Beshler and his bro- ther Crist, were honored with a turkey dinner last Sunday at Coatesville. The occasion was their birthday anniversary which was on { Monday, Sept. 16. The other guests were: Mrs. Eiizabeth Beshler, Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond Newcomer and daugh- (ter, Miss Josephine Beshler; John R. Roath, Mrs. Hackbar, Washingtonboro, Wm. Dice singer, Columbia and Mrs. Crist Beshler, Coatesville Ray Fryberger celebrated his birthdy anniversary on Wednesday. Miss Carol Gratch left last week for Northwestern Uni- versity. Michael Gratch, Jr. is ate [tending Hill School at Potts. Rheems. for Miss Car.| Which is newspaper way of |lown, this year. | Larry Scott left Saturday [ for Chamberlain Junior Col- | lege at Mass. Mrs. Minnie Haines was feted with a birthday dinner last "Monday evening. The other guests were: Mrs. An- nie Hicks; Mrs. Edna Miller; Mrs. Alan Slewman, News Castle and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Haines. Capt. and Mrs. Wayne Warner and children are vis- iting Mrs. Myrtle Warner and son. Wayne expects to serve a tour of duty in Viet Nam in the near future. Mrs. Ray Fryberger, Miss Jane Fryberger and Miss Anna Allbright visited Mrs. Ciair Cochran at Quarryville last Saturday. William Earhart has joins ed the faculty of Middle- [town Jr. High School. Mrs. Helen Hostetter, Pal- { merton, spent the weekend {with her sister, Miss Marie Harter. Miss Grace Henderson and friend visited friends in Men onah, N. J. last Wednesday. A short meeting of -the { American Auxiliary Legion { was held at the Legion Home on Monday evening. After [ this meeting the ladies atten- ded the special meeting at the Elizabethtown American Legion Home where the new officers of Maytown and Eli- zabethtown were installed. Mr. and Mrs. R.F. Gladfel- ter, New Cumberland and Walter Fickes, Lancaster, called on Mr. and Mrs. Hen- ry Haines Sunday. Mrs. Ronald Peirson visit. ed in New York last week. Mrs. Sallie Van Patten, Eugene, Oregon is visiting Mrs. Emma Hollenbaugh and Mrs. Anna Hollenbaugh. Mrs. Edgar Mayers is a patient in St. Joseph's hospit- al. Mrs. Harry P. Frank is a patient in St. Joseph’s hospit- al. Organ Concert At Columbia The Columbia Rotary club is sponsoring another one of its musical highlights of the year, when they present WFIL-TV’s “Master of the Organ”, Larry Ferrari in a concert on Wednesday even- ing, October 23rd at 8 pp. m. in the Columbia high school auditorium. Organist Ferrari, will cele- brate his 10th season at WFIL-TV during the coming year. As. one of Philadel- phia’s most successful televis- ion entertainers, Ferrari has been performing for thous- ands of Delaware Valley fam- ilies since his debut on WFIL in 1954. Patronize Our Advertisers