The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 23, 1963, Image 3

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    WWLWINLOIIN LL, Uv av olan “uy, Love
® Welceme
(From page 1)
Pennsylvania
Forney, who also introduc-
ed the speaker, said that the
key is for unlocking doors of
community as friendship in Mount Joy.
ANE DUMBMBELIIN, MVUNL Ju,
ed the key to the secretary,
Forney pointed out that the
key is for the company, its
personnel and representatives
FA.
Joy.
To greet Hussey and to
take part in the welcome
were several who played im-
portant roles in the arrange-
the plant site.
ORDER YOUR
1964 Proof Coin Sets Today
While he actually present-! as they work and live in Mt.
— =e | ment-making for National-
Standard. A delegation of
Pennsylvania Power & Light
company officials and of the
Columbia Telephone company
{ were included.
[ With Hussey to participate
[in the acceptance of congra-
tulations and best wishes for
|a long and prosperous opera-
[tion in Mount Joy was Char-
[les Eberling, who is manager
Proof coins are highly polished mirror-like finished coins made for the lof the new plant, and John
—
Coin Collector. Each set consists of five coins; the half-dollar, the quarter,
the dime, the nickel and the cent,
PRICE $2.10 per Sei tn. a
SECURE YOUR APPLICATION BLAN KS FOR
ORDERING 1964 PROOF SETS
The Union National Mount Joy Bank
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Member, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Kolbeck, maintenance super-
visor.
Eberling, who has had a
varied and successful career
with National - Standard,
has been manager. He succes-
fully directed the company’s
Mrs. MAY
Reader and Advisor
On All Affairs of Life, Love,
Marriage, Business, Health
All Readings Private and
Confidential. If you are in
need or in trouble, pay Mrs.
May a visit. She will take
the worry and cares away
from you and give you peace
of mind.
MAYTOWN., PA. Hoare 9 am. to 10:30 p.m.
. 576 E. CUMBERLAND ST.
LEBANON, PA.
Phone CR 3-4673

20-4p
°
“For 1964 we Ford Dealers are
putting our showroom on the road.
We're inviting you to
Try Total Performance 64...
because until you test-drive one of
our totally new Fords you just
cant know how changed they are.
Test-drive our ’64 Fairlane, Thrilling new
middleweight that pampers you with
family-size room-=pleases you with
sports-car action! 8 new models—choice
of 6 transmissions—optional V-8's all
the way up to 271 hp.
Test-drive our Super Torque ’64 Ford.
Solid, silent. Bred in open competition.
Hundreds of pounds heavier, it's
stronger, smoother and steadier than
any other car in its field. So changed you
will feel the difference when you drive it.
Test-drive our '64 Falcon. You'll be driv-
ing America’s all-new compact! And what
fun! It's got more convenience, more
comfort, the plushest ride ever built into
a compact. Same old Falcon economy
and easy-to-take prices.
The key to a great deal more...at your
Ford Dealers Store
WOLF FORD SALES, Inc.
MOUNT JOY, PA.
PH. 653-9701


PAGE 3»
operation there during a
critical period of operation,
and comes to Mount Joy for
the direction of opening the
new plant.
He has temporary office
space on the plant site but
will be moving into his own
office within the near future.
Taking well-deserved bows
with the National-Standard
was Al Zett, construction
foreman for the Austin com-
pany, which surveyed the
site and has built the new
plant.
Earl Koser, president of
the Chamber of Commerce,
was in charge of the meeting.
In explaining why Nation-
al-Standard picked Mount
Joy, Hussey said that one of
the chief factors was the co-
operation and friendliness
which was shown the com-
pany and its officials.
He explained that one of
the first considerations of his
company is favorab'e loca-
tion for railroad handling of
raw materials and of ship-
ping finished products. Mount
Joy has this facility, plus
good highway connections,
available public utilities and
a satisfactory tax structure.
Equal'y as important, his
company was impressed with
the kind of people who live
in and make up southeastern
Pennsylvania. He referred to
the traditional Pennsylvania
Dutch virtue of good work-
manship by conscientious
workmen.
His company will employ
approximately 100 peop'e, of
which five or six will be
moved here from outside the
community.
Hussey described his come
pany as ‘‘an engineering-ori-
ented, medium-sized manu-
facturer of specialty wire
and metal products.”
The Mount Joy plant, he
said, principally will make
high grade carbon wire. How-
ever the company makes
many kinds of wire for hun-
dreds of purposes.
" National-Standard has an
active research division and
a number of different pro-
ducts—some not made of
wire—have been and are be-
ing developed. Product sales
in 1962 amounted to more
than $60 million and were
made throughout the world
from plants scattered. not on-
ly in this country but in
Europe.
The company originated in
1907 and has had an out-
standing financial record,
paying dividends without a
single exception since 1915.
Net worth of the company
has grown and grown as a
huge amount of capital has
been plowed back into the
organization for expansion.
Since 1922 the company
has been pub’icly owned and
at present not more than 3%
of the stock is held by any
person or family. The home
office is in Niles, Mich.
which also is Hussey’s home.
The range of products
which National-Standard pro-
duces is fantastically long —
from wire for bobby pins and
staples to huge and intricate-
ly woven wire blankets.
A'though the name Na-
tional-Standard has not been
known to many people local-
ly, parts and pieces - vital
parts - of hundreds of pro-
ducts are supplied by N-S.
Even missles carry National-
Standard made parts.
When the company was
young, one of the .chief pro-
ducts—and still &n important
part of the sa'es volume —
was bead wire which streng-
thens the inside edges of
straight-wall automobile
tires.
PLEDGES SORORITY
Miss Carol Gratch, daugh-
ter of Dr. Michael Gratch of
1 Eleanor Drive, Maytown,
pledged Lambda chapter of
Kappa Delta at Northwestern
University Sept. 29.
Miss Gratch is a junior at
Northwestern and is major-
ing in speech therapy.
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