WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1964 ® Sewer Plans (From Page 1) Plans also indicate that one line will go in Main street from Green alley westward to about Keller's Auction Gallery. Thus, properties on the north side of the highway will be served from the front. However, indications are that most properties on the south side will catch a sewer line which will follow along the alley between Main and Square. There will be one or two other spots along Main street which will be involved for short distances. A line will start at the west end of Bruce avenue, g0 eastward along the top of the hill and then south on Orch- ard road to Birchland, where it will tie in with existing sewers. A contemplated design calls for 32,450 feet of eight-inch sewers and 6,700 feet of ser- vice lines, which will be six inch. The latter will extend from the main line to the property curbs. To finance the project, it is proposed that a 40-year bond issue be sold. Part would be a short-term financing and part short-term of about 3 years. Although definite figures can not be pin pointed until actual bids are let—probably in May or June—the feasibil- ity report studied Tuesday night indicates a front foot assessment of $5.70. The con- THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. nection fees would be $200 and the use charges would be the same as whatever scale prevails for the already sew- ered areas of Mount Joy bor- ough. One footnote in the re- port dealt with corner prop- erties. It rules that charges will be on “short side front- ages of all property abutting assessable sewers, plus %; of all other property frontages abutting assessable sewers.” The preliminary engineer- ing report with the feasibili- ty study, now goes to the state sanitary engineers for study. Shortly thereafter, as outlined for the Authority on Tuesday, meeting of representatives of the Authority, engineers, at- torneys and finance counsel to approve the project. From there, a major piece of work is the detailed de- sign work by the engineers. By spring, it is estimated, plans should be ready for fin- al approval, for bidding and making ready for actual be- ginning of construction. During the Tuesday night meeting, which was postpon- ed from January 7, the Auth- ority reorganized for 1964. The following officers were elected: B Titus Rutt, chairman; Bernard Grissinger, vice- chairman; Franklin Zink, treasurer; Daniel Wolgemuth, secretary, and Frank Germer assistant secretary and treas- urer. Ford Wins Motor Trend's “Car of the Year” Award January 8: Motor Trend magazine’s ‘““Car of the Year’ Award goes to an engineering breakthrough! It honors all the ’64s from Ford ‘For engineering advancement in the concept of Total Performance, proven in open competition.’’ Here's what the Motor Trend Award means to you... The editors of Motor Trend, America’s largest general automotive magazine, watched Ford's total performance in open competition . . . saw competition-modified Fords win every 500-mile stock carrace in the last year, saw Ford-built engines end an era at Indianapolis and sweep the sports car circuits. Then they drove the 1964 Fords, Falcons, Fairlanes and Thunderbirds and discovered how the lessons of open compe- tition have helped breed into them a new kind of total performance for the open road, for your kind of driving. And then they made their award! The “Car of the Year” Award is an im- pressive testimonial, but see for yourself — take the wheel of a ’64 from Ford. These cars speak for themselves with their ease of handling in a supermarket parking lot or their greater stability on a rain- slick blacktop. Before you buy any new car this year, test-drive {fofal performance in a Solid, Silent Super Torque Ford, now hundreds of pounds more car than anything in its field. Try America’s only total performance compact, the Falcon V-8, totally new, totally changed. Or, any of the '64 Cars of the Year from Ford! TRY TOTAL PERFORMANCE FOR A CHANGE! FORD FALCON » FAIRLANE = FORD « THUNDERBIRD That's Total Performance! Jr sl, MN of at ] 600 Bright, delightful, informative Radio for the ENTIRE family On the RIGHT side of your dial Thunderbird, Falcon, Super Torque Ford, Fairlane (reading counterclockwise): winners of Motor Yond’ “Car of the Year” Award PH. 653-9701 WOLF FORD SALES, Inc. MOUNT JOY, PA. Ford presents “Arrest and Trial”—JABC-TV Network Check your local listings for time and channel ammmestsmm—— there should be a, PAGE € Band Parents Hold Meeting Monday night, January 6, the Donegal Band Parents Club held its regular month- ly meeting in the Band Room of the Donegal High School. The meeting was called to order by the Club president Charles Heaps. The minutes were read by Mrs. Roy Lon- genecker and accepted by the members. Twenty-seven bers were accepted into Club. H. Morrell Shields, Band director, reported the near completion of the candy sale. Prizes for the highest sales went to the following: 1st prize - $10.00 went to Kath- leen Lease; 2nd prize - $5.00 went to Margo Buller; 3rd, 4th, and 5th - 5 lb. candy bars went to Kay Bell, Susan Wagner and David Brubaker. Twelve additional prizes were awarded to the follow- ing: those receiving the 1b. candy bars: Debbie Latch- ford, Susan Flick, Susan Stark, Janet Smith, Linda Ney, Marilyn Baker, Larry Shultz, David Myers, Barret Barrey, Gary Weber, Carl Houseal and Carl Haas. A discussion was held on new mem- the 15. the purchase oi additional new band uniforms. The next regular meeting on the club will be held on Monday, Feb. 3, at 7:30 p. m. in the Band Room at the Donegal Annex, Mount Joy. A musical group, known as “The Bottlers’” will pre- sent a special Musical inter- lude at the February meet- ing. The Bottlers are a group of Donegal Union School Dis- trict students. ‘Write Murder' AtFultonTheatre “Write Me a Murder”, a mystery written by Frederick Knott, the outhor of the Broadway hit “Dial M for Murder”, is being presented by the Lancaster Theatre Arts Association as the first play for the benefit of the Fulton Foundation. The play opens January 29 and runs through February 1. All proceeds will be turn- ed over to the Foundation for restoring the 112-year-old historic Fulton Opera House. The play is being spon- sared by the Lancaster Coun- ty Federation of Women's Clubs. Mrs. Paul A. Miller of Highlawn Ave. Elizabeth- town of the Elizabeth Hugh- es Society is the representa- tive in the Mount Joy area, and is handling ticket distri- bution and sales in the Mount Joy area. ABOARD DESTROYER Harry WwW. Eisenhauer, boilerman fireman, USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Eisenhauer of Mount Joy Rl, returned to Newport, R. I, a- board the destroyer USS Warrington Dec. 20 after 3 months deployment in the Mediterranean and Middle East. Warrington participated in operations with units of the British Pakistani Navies, and aircraft from Iran and Turk- ey in a CENTO exercise cal- led MIDLINK VI. This exer- cise was designed to increase military cooperation and ef- ficiency among allied nations. Patronize our Advercisers. List ZIP Code Numbers of Area Bainbridge 17502 Elizabethtown 17022 East Petersburg 17520 Florin 17526 Landisville 17538 Manheim 17545 Marietta 17547 Maytown 17550 Rheems 17570 Mount Joy 17552