on 2 Jl Re Ma ww ww TW. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1965 @® Church News (From page 6) Church of God Mount Joy. Penna. Ralph C. Warner, Pastor Sunday 9:30 am. Rally Day Ser- vice. Professor Elmer Hoover from Elizabethtown College will be our Guest speaker. 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship Service. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Bible Study Classes. Thursday 7:00 p.m. Senior Choir Re- hearsal. Trinity Lutheran Church The Rev. W. L. Koder Pastor Sunday 9:15 am. Sunday School 10:45 a.m. Morning Wor- ship. Monday 7:30 p.m. Group 3, L.C.W, will meet in the parish house Tuesday 7:30 pm. Group 2. L.C.W, will meet in the parish house ‘Wednesday 1.30 p.m. Group 1, L.C.W, will meet at the home of Mrs. Franklin Greiner. Thursday, Oct. 14 7 00 p.m. Confirmation Clsss will meet in the parish house. Saint Mary's Roman Catholic Church Rev. Francis J. Hudak Pastor Sunday 8:00 am. Mass Glossbrenner Church Evangelical United Brethren Charles W. Wolfe, Pastor Sunday 9:30 am. Divine Worship (Harvest Home) and Christian Instruction. 5:45 p.m. Youth Fellowship 7:15 p.m. Hymn Sing. Monday 7:30 p.m. Shining Stars’ Class Meeting. ‘Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Mldweek Service 8:00 p.m. D.R.D. Commit- tee Thursday 7:30 pm. .Senior Choir Re hearsal. Friday 7:00 p.m. Boy and Girl Fellowship. LEGAL NOTICES AN ORDINANCE ANNEXING TERRITORY TO THE BOROUGH OF MOUNT I OUN It is hereby ordained by the Borough Council of the Borough of Mount Joy, Lan- caster County, Pennsylvania, as follows: WHEREAS, a petition has been presented to the Bor- ough Council of the Borough of Mount Joy by National- Standard Company, request- Ing the Borough to annex to itself and make part of the Borough, certain land herein- after described, situated in Rapho Township, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, which 1s a second class township. And it is represented to Coun- cil by said petition .that the said petitioner constitutes a majority in number of the freeholders of the said terri- tory and it has been certified by the petitioner that a copy of the petition was duly filed with the Supervisors of Ra- pho Township, therefore: SECTION 1. The Borough Council hereby approves the said petition and the Borough of Mount Joy hereby annexes to the Borough the following described lard situated in said Rapho Township, and 2djoining the Borough, to BEGINNING at a point in the center line of Lancaster and Harrisburg State High- way, (Pa. Legislative Route 129), a corner of land of John Haines: thence extending a- long the center line of said Highway, the following two courses and distances: (1) North 88 degrees 49 minutes East, 1594.48 feet to a point, and (2), in a line curving to TH the right having a radius of 5729.70 feet, an arc distance of 188.50 feet, the chord of said arc being, North 89 de- grees 45 minutes 30 seconds East, a distance of 188 50 feet to a point in line of land of Joseph B. Hostetter; thence along said Hostetter land South 2 degrees 27 minutes East, 803.81 feet to an iron pin in the North right of way line of land of Pennsylvania Railroad Co. (said last men- tioned course in 100 feet west of the middle of a 9 feet wide dirt lane; thence along said Harner land, North 3 degrees 09 minutes West, 599.34 feet to the place of beginning. CONTAINING 28.696 acres. SECTION 2. This annex- ation shall not be deemed to constitute an acceptance as a Borough street, of any street or alley in the territory an- nexed, except such, if any, as now constitute public town- ship roads in Rapho Town- ship. SECTION 3. This annexa- tion shall become effective at the time and in the manner prescribed by law, and when it so becomes effective, the annexed territory shall be part of the East Ward of the Borough. Ordained by Council Oc- tober 4, 1965. GEORGE D. GROFF President of Council Attest: Frank Walter, Jr. Secretary of Council October 5, 1965, 1 hereby approve the above ordinance FRANK B. WALTER 28-1c Mayor EXECUTORS’ NOTICE Estate of Jeannette T. Brown, dec’d. late of Mount Joy Borough, 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 undercigned, ELMER E. BROWN Pinkerton Road, Mount Joy, Penna. Carl R. Hallgren, Attorney 28-3¢ Presbyterian - Home News - Visitors for the week: Elizabeth C. Landis, Clare Brenneman, Lancaster, Mrs. Dorothy Craun, E-town, and Marion H. Park, of Carlisle Presbyterian Home, for Mrs. Mary Sales. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Den- linger, Millersville, for Miss Laura Deremer. Mrs. Jap Heisey, for our Supervisor, Blanche M. Speer. Mr. E. M. Gregg, of Peach Bottom, Mrs. Harold Aument and Melissa of Greene, Pa., for Miss Mary Gregg. Miss Ruth Miller, Lebanon, for Miss Mabel Walmer. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mil- ler and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thompson, Coatesville, for Mrs. Evelyn Hershey. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mar- tin, Joan and Carol, for Mrs. Mabel Myers. Mrs. Sara Waite had two days’ visit with her sister in Lancaster and attended the monthly Happy Hour meeting which is a branch of the Rec- reation Association for retir- ed citizens. Rheems, Miss eee VISITS Reuben Shellenberger of Mount Joy spent Monday as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kuhn in Lancaster. JOHNSON BUS SERVICE BUSES FOR ALL OCCASIONS FLORIN, PA. Phone 653-0321 E BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, EVANGELISTIC SERVICES The Rev. Murray L. Wag- ner of Quarrybville, recently returned from a tour in the Holy Land, will be the evan- gelist for a week's series of services at the Florin Church of the Brethren. Services will be held each evening at 7:30 o'clock, be- ginning Oct. 10 and continu- ing through the 17th. YOUR LeGASLATOR'S 4m REPORT xy . pits Jack B. Horner State Representative The committee system is; very important in our State Government. All bills intro- duced into the House are re- ferred to a particular com- mittee whose function is to determine if the bill should come before the entire House - for a vote. A definite need ex- | ists for some kind of screen- ing to determine which bilis are worthy of consideration by the entire House. As of this writing over 2000 bills have been introduced in the House and it is absolutely im- possible for each Legislator to be familiar with every one Bills of varying degrees of importance are introduced and for all kinds of reasons. Much to my surprise I have discovered that some Legisla- tors will introduce bills that they themselves feel are bad, but because of some pressure back home they go through the motions of solidly sup- porting a certain measure. I feel this to be a complete waste of time and money, and I refuse to become a party to it. However, my point is that somewhere along the line a method to separate the wheat from the chaff must be set up and the committee system supposedly performs that function. Unfortunately however, this system can be abused and frequently is. The chair- man is always a member of the majority party and se- cures his position through seniority. ‘This makes sense even though it doesn’t mean that the chairman is always the most able. member of the committee. Each chairman runs his committee as he sees fit. Some of them operate in the proper fashion and the bills are studied and discus- sed, and the fate of each bill is decided by action of the members. On the other hand, some chairmen run the com- mittee with complete auton- omy. A chairman can refuse to allow the committee to dis- cuss a bill, and, in cases such as this, one man can decide the disposition of everything which comes before his com- mittee. A certain procedure can be used to bring a bill before the entire House when it is PA. PAGE SEVEN The Hempfield 4-H Commu- nity club has voted to hold monthly meetings through- out the year rather than on a May-November basis. The club is the first in the coun- ty to switch to a 12-month schedule. The club meets every third Wednesday of the month at Entertained awalt, Holmes Beach, Florida entertained the following at Fran & Al's restaurant last Tuesday: Mrs. Agnes Bender, Camp Hill; Mrs. Lillie Lewis and Mrs. Miley Sheaffer, of Harrisburg; Mrs. Louis Bor- ges, Royalton; Mrs. Vernon Coldren, Mount Joy; Mrs. Aaron Palmer, Mrs. Christian Luft and Miss Anna Luft, of Middletown; Mrs. Robt. Leib, Camp Hill; Mrs. G. Rendel- man, California; Miss Grace Henderson, Maytown; Mrs. Martin Strickler and Mrs. Gertrude Givens, Mount Joy and Vincent Reiff, Holmes Beach, Florida. This group was originally the Green Leaf Card Club. The oldest guest was Mrs. Christian Luft, who is 98 years of age. Mr. and Mrs. Greenawalt were formerly from this area. Record Power Equrpment Set Pennsylvania Power and Light company has announc- ed the results of a survey whieh shows that a record 62.9 million kilowatts of new generating capacity is now scheduled to be placed in ser- vice by United States electric power systems during the period ’65 through 1969. The survey was conducted by the Edison Electric Institute (EEI). The added generating ca- pacity will be more than the total generating capability of the U. S. in 1950. PP&L also reports that the nation’s investor-owned elec- tric power companies are in- vesting $4.1 billion in new electric plants and equipment this year. In 1964, they in- vested $3.6 billion. With a total investment in electric plant and equipment of about $57 billion, the in- vestor-owned electric com- panies comprise the largest single industry in the United States. The companies’ annual expenditures for new con- struction are about 8 percent of that of all U. S. busineses combined. SOPHOMORE Sharon Rehkugler, daugh- bottled up in committee and that is a “Discharge Resolu- tion”. In effect the entire House discharges the commit- | tee from further considera- tion of the bill so that it can be considered by the entire body. This resolution must be passed by the same majoi- ity as is required to pass a bill and the vote is not on the merits of the bill but rather on whether or not it should come to the floor of the House. We have voted on several of the reso- lutions lately but none has passed. I am told we must go back many years to find a case where one did pass. There is a reluctance, parti- cularly among the older members in years of service, to vote in favor of such a resolution because it repudi- ates the entire committee system. We all recognize that there is value in the system even though it can work in- justices at times, and, until someone comes up with a new approach, I'm sure. the committee system will re- ter of Mrs. Esther Rehkugler and the late Josie Rehkugler of Columbia R2, has entered Calvary Bible college in Kan- sas City, Mo., as a sophomore this fall. America is the only coun- try where it takes more brains to make out the in- come tax return than it does to make the income. The straight and narrow path has not yet developed enough traffic to require a 4- lane highway. If you are not big enough to stand criticism, you are too small to be praised. about the only The best thing future is that it comes one day at a time. main. I am not one to absol- utely refuse to vote for a dis- charge resolution, but I do feel it should be used very judiciously and only on bills of a most important nature. 1ing ordinance on paper Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Green- | when challenged with gen- LANDISVILLE - SALUNGA NEWS Mrs. William K. Risser the Farmdale Eelmentary School, Mount Joy RI. * * * East Hempfield Township met recently and criticized the handling of the Town- ship’s new zoning ordinance. John R. Hussar, chairman of the township's Democratic committee, issued a statement in which he questioned “the value of what appears to be a rather comprehensive Zon- and uine functions, appears to yield {0 out-of-town pressure. WH * * The Revival Services of the Salunga Church of the Brethren, 28 Holland Avenue came to a close on Sunday evening, October 3 with Love Feast and Communion ai 6:30 p.m. The Rev. Harold Jones was the guest speaker. - * * The Rev. Gerald A. Xrum, Stewartstown, will assume his duties as new pastor of Zion Lutheran Church, Lan- disville, on November 1. He is currently serving the two-church Stewartstown Lu- theran Parish, and succeeds the Rev. G. Martin Ruoss. A native of Bloomsburg he was graduated from Gettys- burg college in 1960 and Gettysburg Lutheran Theo- logical Seminary in 13863. The Rev. Mr. Krum is mar- ried to the former Jean Stradtsman, a graduate of Millersville State College. They have two children. Mat- thew Harrison served as chairman of the church's pul- pit committee. * * * The Salunga Fire Com- pany held a chicken barbe- que on Saturday, Oct. 2 at the Salunga Fire Company park. * * * The Mount Joy Legion Post 185 Ladies’ Auxiliary will meet on Thursday, Oct. 7 at 8 p.m. at the Post Home Mrs. Lyman T. Gilbert will be. hostess. * * * The Hempfield Sertoma Club met Wednesday even- ing, September 29 at 6:30 p. m. at the Mount Joy Legion Post Home. Speaker for the evening was John Silknettee, of Lan- caster, whose topic was "The Amish.” * * * 5 The Salunga Womans club held its annual banque! on Monday evening, Oct. 4 at Kegel’'s Restaurant, Lancast- er. * ® * Elizabethtown College hon- ored two area residents at a luncheon on Saturday, Oct. 2 following a ceremony unveil- ing a bronze plaque to recog- nize participants in the col- lege’s first capital gifts cam- paign. Henry Koser, 91-year-old insurance company and bank executive of Landisville was one of the two honored. He was recognized for outsiand- ing community service. % Worry Clinic (From page 3) Fainting is due primarily to oxygen deficiency in the brain and this may result from mechanical inertia, as shown by Fanny's case, or from various psychological causes, to be explained more fully tomorrow. So make a scrapbook of these daily cases, for they will furnish a textbook of practical psychology and also medicine. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, en-- closing a long stamped, ad- dressed envelope and 20c to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)