The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 03, 1965, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT

LEGAL NOTICES

‘NOTICE
TO WALTER G. ENGLE,
HIS HEIRS, LEGAL KEPRE-
SENTATIVES AND AS-
SIGNS. :
YOU, AND EACH OF
YOU, are hereby notifiea
that on. February 5, 190695,
Lester “Milton Stauffer and
Doris J. Stauffer, his wife, as
plaintiffs, filed a complaint
in an Action to Quiet Title
against you and each of you
as defendants in the Court of
Common Pleas of Lancaster
County, Pa., therein Socks!
ed to February Term,
No. 20, setting forth the fol-
lowing: That they are the
owners of certain real estate
fronting on Second Street in
the Village of Bainbridge,
Conoy Township, Lancaster
County, Pa., consisting of
lots Numbers 260, 261, 262
and 263 on the plan for said
village, ‘and which real es-
tate is more fully described
in said complaint; that a
mortgage dated May 14, 1913,
given by Elias McNelly and
Ella M McNelly, his wife, to
Walter G. Engle, and record-
ed in the Office of the Lan-
caster County, Pa. Recorder
of Deeds in Mortgage Book
158, Page 92, in the principal
sum of $690.00, covers the
above-mentioned real estate;
that said mortgage remains
unsatisfied of record; that
plaintiffs aver that said mort-
gage and all indebtedness and
interest thereon have been
paid in full, that no promise
to pay or acknowledgement
of said indebtedness has been
made since January 1, 1920,
and that no demand for pay-
ment has been made by you
since January 1, 1920; that
more than 21 years have el-
apsed since said mortgage
became due and payable;
and that said mortgage has
been paid by virtue of the
presumption arising from the
lapse of 21 years.
YOU, AND EACH OF YOU,
are hereby notified that on
April 9, 1965, at 9:30 A. M.,
plaintiffs will ask the court
of Common Pleas of Lancast-;
er County, Pa., at the Court
House in Lancaster, Pa., to
determine that said mortgage
has been paid by virtue of
the presumption arising from
the lapse of 21 years and to
order the Recorder of
of Lancaster County, Pa., to
mark said mortgage satisfied
of record, unless you file an
answer to said complaint be-
fore April 9, 1965 or appear
in said court on April 9,
1965.
Henry J. Rutherford
Attorney for plaintiffs
45-4c

SEALED PROPOSALS
Sealed proposals will be
received and publicly open-
ed and read by the Supervis-
ors Mount Joy Township,
Lancaster County at Town-
ship Office, until 9:00 A. M.
ES.T. March 13, 1965, for
the following:
Season's requirements of
Bituminous material and
crushed limestone. HE Top
& Base Concrete, F.O0.B.
Plant.
Proposal forms, Specifica-
tions, Form of Contract and
Instruction to Bidders may
be obtained from Galen S.
Spickler, Secretary, R. D. 3,
Elizabethtown, Penna.
The materials specified
herein. shall meet the Stand-
ard Specifications of the
Pennsylvania Department of
Highways.
‘ “The successful bidder,
when awarded the contract,
shall “furnish a bond with
suitable; reasonable require-
ments, guaranteeing perfor-
mance of the contract or (de-
livery to be made) with suf-
ficient surety” in the amount
of 50° per centum of the a-
mouit of the contract.
All “proposals must be up-
onthe’ form furnished by the
undarsigned.
The ' supervisors reserve
the right to reject any or
all proposals.
GALEN S. SPICKLER
'‘Sccretary 47-2¢

NOTICE:
THE BOARD OF SUPER-
VISORS of Mount Joy Town-
ship have approved the ten-
tative budget for 1965 and
it can be examined by the
public at the home of the
secretary. This budget is to
be formally adooted at the
March 13 meeting of the
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
List Top Science Projects
Ten seventh grade and
ten eighth grade projects
exhibited in the Donegal
Annex Science Fair, held on
Thursday and Friday, Feb.
25 and 26, are to be shown
at the Donegal high school
Science Fair on March 12 &
13.
Those picked from the
hundreds shown were not
ranked but were selected as
worthy of a second showing.
They included:
Seventh Grade
Rose Flowers, ‘Cake Bak-
ing”, Jon Holmes, ‘“‘Simultat-
ed Gravitational Fields";
Sue O'Connor, ‘What Food
Contain Starch; Scott Gem:
berling, “Algae”;
Craig Gainer, “Water Puri-
fication Plant”; Robert Sentz,
“Crystal Radio”; Deborah
Roberts, ‘Crystals’; Kend-
ace Borry, “Coal and Its
Products”; and Barry Gem-
berling, “The Wind Tunnels”.
Eighth Grade
Melrose Rauser, “Soil Con-

Board.
Tax on real estate assess-
ment has been set at 8 mills,
same as last yeor. ®
Street light tax $.12 per
foot will remain the same as
last year.
The date, time, and place
of the regular monthly meet-
ings of the Board of Super-
visors is the second Saturday
of each month at 8 AM, at
the Township Office.
GALEN S. SPICKLER

47-2¢ Secretary
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Estate of Samuel C. F
Gillums, dec’d, late of Mount
Joy, Penna.
Letters. testamentary on
said estate having been gran-
ted to the undersigned, all
persons indebted thereto are
requested to make immedi-
ate payment and those hav-
ing claims or demands a-
gainst the same will present
them without delay for set-
tlement to the undersigned.
BEULAH M. GILLUMS
310 East Main Street,
Mount Joy, Penna.
Alspach & Ryder,
Attorneys 47-3c
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
According to the School
Laws of the State of Pennsyl-
vania, unpaid 1964 school
taxes were delinquent No-
vember 1964. The Donegal
Union School Board has rul-
ed that 1964 taxes remaining
unpaid on April 1, 1965 shall
be turned over to the delin-
quent tax collection agencies
for action; local tax collectors
will not be authorized to col-
lect these delinquent accounts
after March 31, 1965.
DONEGAL UNION
SCHOOL BOARD
By Dorothy J. Engle,
Secretary 46-3c


servation’; Gary Johns, “Soil
erosion and Conservation”;
Robert Graybill, “How a
Transmitter Works”; Kathy
Hean, “Cup Cakes";
Jane Rider, “Cup Cakes’;
Phil Wade, “Dinosaurs’’;
Bruce Ryder, “Talking on a
Light Beam”; David Lippiatt
“Cry-Atom’; Donald Snyder,
“Electric Sign”, and Robert
Waters, “What is a Harmo-
gram?”
G. C. Murphy
Earnings are Up
G. C. Murphy Company's
net earnings for 1964 were
$7,429,440, or $1.77 a share,
according to J. S. Mack,
Chairman of the Board and
President. This is an increase
of 256% over 1963 earn-
ings.
Sales for the year increas-
ed 5.1% to set another all-
time record for the company.
Average sales per store in-
creased from $525,170 to
$549,677.
Eight stores were closed
and 10 were opened, with 3
of these replacing units pre-
viously destroyed by fire.
Stores in operation in 1964
were 512.
AMP Elects
New President
On Feb. 24, S. S. Auchin-
closs was elected President
of AMP. For the past sever-
al years he has served AMP
as a member of the Board of
Directors and as a consult-
ant. He brings with him a
wealth of technical know-
ledge and executive experi-
ence. Auchincloss has been
president of Tracerlab, Inc.,
Cleveland Welding Co., and
DeWalt Inc.
G. A. Ingalls, former Pres-
dent, was elected vice-chair-
man of the Board of Direct-
ors and in this position will
continue active service as an
officer of the Company.
both years are on a new bas-
is of financial consolidation
which now embddies all
AMP subsidiaries including,
for the first time, the three
subsidiaries in Japan, Mexi-
co, and Australia.

REGISTERED NAME
Clair M. Hollinger, Mount
Joy, will have the exclusive
use of the prefix “Cl-Erm”
in naming all Registered Hol-
stein dairy animals bred in
that herd from now on.
Use of this prefix name
has been granted by Hol
stein - Friesian Association
of America; it also becomes
a part of official breed rec
ords at the national head-
quarters in Brattleboro, Vt.
Nearly 1,500 prefixes are
reserved for Registered Hol-
stein breeders each year.
More than 38,000 are now on
file for use in giving distinc-
tive names to home-bred
cattle. Reservation and use
of these prefix names be-
came an active membership
requirement in 1965.

Factory Heads
ToSpeakatCofC
Heads of two Mount Joy
industrial plants will speak
and directors for next year
will be elected at the annual
Chamber of Commerce din-
ner and meeting, to be held
Tuesday night, March 9th, at
Hostetters.
George Ecclessine, presi-
dent of Gerberich - Payne
Shoe company, and Leonard
Bernstein, president of Law-
rence Children’s Underwear
company of which Donegal
Industries is a division, will
be the speakers.
New directors will be el-
ected during the business
session.
ARTHRITIS-RHEUMATISM
Do claims and double talk make
you doubt you can get any relief
from arthritic and rheumatic pains?
Get 100 STANBACK tablets or 50
STANBACK powders, use as direct-
ed. If you do not get relief, return the
unused part and your purchase price
will be refunded. Stanback Company,
Salisbury, N. C.



WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1965
e TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY @
FOR RENT: 3 rooms & bath
apartment, Main St in Flor-
in. Call 653-2081 after 4 p.
m. 48-3¢
FOR RENT: 4 rms. & bath,
14 of Heisey farm house
with needed conveniences
furnished. 1 mi. S. Landis-
ville on Church St. Call 898-
at noon hour. or after 6 p.m.
48-1d
FOR RENT: Apartment with
6 rms." & bath, garage, elect.
stove, refrigerator, laundry
facilities, heat & water furn-
ished. $100. Call 898-6193.
48-2¢



mt—
CARD OF THANKS


1 wish to thank all those
who so kindly and thought-
fully remembered me with
cards, visits, flowers and
prayers during my stay in
the hospital and since my re-
turn home. Lester Hostetter.



Auctions
Two-day dispersal (Tioga
County’s Largest) Locust
Knoll Farm, Westfield, Pa.
Tuesday and Wednesday,
March 9-10. Selling 153 top
purebred . ‘interstate tested
Holsteins, 8 tractors (6 farm
and 2 bulldozers), 2 balers,
2 crushers, 4 chopper wag-
ons, 2 drills, 4 trucks, world
of small tools, Write Rum-
sey’'s at Westfield, Pa., or
Whitesville, N. Y. to have
sale list mailed to you at
once. 47-2¢
I chanced to talk to a
Gallup pollster in town last
week and after some discus-
sion, down his alley of

course, I asked - him a lead-
ing question. He didn't care
to go out on a limb—it was
too cold. :
JOHN W. ANDERSON
For Tax Collector
On : Republican” Primary
=» =r Pieltet

AMP's sales and earnings | SESSSRRNEISIIIEENRIES
reached record highs in ’64.
Estimated combined sales
rose 11% to $91,600,000 com-
pared to $82:834,872 in 1963.
Estimated Combined Net In-
come increased 14% to $9,-
700,000 or $1.60 per Endors-
ed Share compared to $8,-
541,623 or $1.41 per Endors-
ed Share in 1963. The com-
bining backlog of unfilled or-
ders at year-end 1964 was at
a new high of $18,900,000
compared to $15,700,000 one
year ago. The results for

1964 AUDITORS REPORT MOUNT JOY TOWNSHIP
LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
From Frrst Monday in January 1964 to First Monday
in January, 1965 i
Cash in Bank (general account)
Special Account ....
Light and Hydrant R0COUNE «a
Total
RECEIPTS:
Taxes Collected during year .......... ......
Taxes Collected prior years .....
ee ae ae ar ee ee NY eRe ae te
. $ 2282.61
11,664.20
515.08
$14,461.89
27,065.12
1,762 52
Amount received from other source
From (4) to {7 8) Form 905 rev. 9-64
State Liquid fuels highway aid
Non Revenue receipts
Light account
Total
7,947.73
23,255.66
8,305.59
9273.10
fund sooo
68,609.72
Total receip’s and balance $83,071.61
EXPENDITURES
General Government
Tax collection
Townshrp Buildings... on. Sas
Police protection
Fire protection
Planning and zoning .......
Highways
Miscellaneous
Interest
Light
Total
4.102.94
1,299.62
563.27
1.242.81
1.495.75
1.576 30
51,130.46
1.124.03
104.28


Cash balance at en
RESOURCES : doen
Cach. Securities and reserves cami YO 848 95
Value of township machinery and buildings .. 29.100.00
7 $48,948.95
Assessed Valuation of the township $3,307,870.
AUDITORS:
ROY. G HESS
PAUL M. HESS

EDWARD HOFFMAN
583 20 |.
ciel fro dn ss Cnty $63,222 66 ||
Total Expenditures and balance $83,071.61 5
19,848.95 |:

47-2¢ Hi

cial service.
Every dollar you save, every dollar you bor-
row and repay on time adds another star in
your crown, Because a full-service bank such
as ours is prepared to help you in so many
ways, it is the best. place to go for any finan-
During the month we get many inquiries re-
garding credit information. When a man or
woman has a solid regard for thrift and pays
an obligation promptly we are happy to pass
along a favorable report.



“American Bankers Magazine”,
lished March 11, in its year-end roll call of 3,500
largest banks in the United States, will show
Union Mount Joy National has made a spectac-
ular gain of 136 places in rank since a year ago
and now occupies 3,465th position.
.to be pub-

MOUNT JOY, PA.


Union National Mount Joy Bank
Member F.D.I.C.
REGULAR HOURS
8 am. - 2 p.m. Monday through Friday
5 p.m. to 8 p.m. - Friday
EXTRA DRIVE-IN AND WALK-UP WINDOWS i
Daily Until 3:30 p.m. — Saturday - 8 am. until 11 a.m. ;

" MAYTOWN, PA.