The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 20, 1966, Image 8

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PAGE EIGHT
Emergency Medical
Calls
will be available on
Sunday
Dr. David Schlosser
Emergency calls only, if
family physician can not
be contacted.
Employ Summer
Student Corps
Pennsylvania Power and
Light Company has employ-
ed 107 students from 35 col-
leges and universities to work
for the summer in various de-
partments of its operation,
primarily in a cadet engineer
capacity. This special _sum-
mertime program is designed
to attract high calibre per-
sonnel with the qualifications
for eventual full-time em-
ployment with the Company.
The students, selected from
approximatelp 600 applicants, |
were screened by the per-|
sonnel administration depart-
ment on the same basis as
permanent employees with
preference given to electrical
and mechanical engineering
majors and specialists in other
fields related to PP&L work. !
Most of these students reside !
‘HE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
Vote To Merge Banks
July | receive 31; shares of County
Votes cast Tuesday,
12 by shareholders of the
Lancaster County Farmers
Bank were over 78 percent in
favor of a merger with the
First Columbia National Bank
of Columbia.
On July 7, The First-Col-
umbia shareholders voted ov-
er 90 per cent in favor of
the merger.
Final decision on the con-
solidation will come from
the office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, Washington,
D. C. This is expected within
the next few weeks, a bank
spokesman said.
If approved the merger
would bring the number of
branch offices of County Far-
mers Bank to 13. Under the
proposed plan, stockholders
of the Columbia bank would

Former Pastor
To Be Speaker
Rev. Donald A. Urey, for-
mer pastor of Calvary Bible
Church, Donegal Heights,
Mount Joy, will be speaking
at Calvary Bible, both morn-
ing and evening worship ser-
vices. Sunday, July 24.
Mr. Urey resigned as pas-
tor in June of 1965 and they
are now missionary appoint-
ees to Spain with Mission to
Europe’s Millions, an Evan-
gelical, international, faith
mission. Mr. Urey spent two

in the PP&L service area.
Encouraged to return be-
cause of their superior past
performance and high poten |
tial, some 25 percent of the
group are this year spending |
a second or third summer ny
this program, each time con-|
centrating on a different area
of the Company's work. This
long-term exposure, in addi-
tion to molding more versa-
tile future PP&L employees,
enables the students to ex-
amine carefully the electric
utility industry and the car-
eer opportuniteis it holds for
them. At the same time the
Company is able to evaluate
the students in terms of later
full-time employment.
The program also helps to
provide additional manpower
to meet the seasonable peaks
largely the result of heavy
summertime vacation sched-
ules.

Stadium Show
Tops Auto Picnic
‘A big evening show in Her-
shey Stadium will be the out-
standing feature of the 44th
annual picnic of the Lancast-
er Automobile Club to be
held at Hershey Park Thurs-
day, July 28.
Again this year the picnic
will be an afternoon and ev-
ening event. The afternoon
program will include a con-
cert by the Pottstown Band
and Glee Club from 2 to 4
o'clock at the Park band
shell.
Hershey Stadium gates
will be open at 6 p.m. for the
evening show, which will
start at 6:30 with a concert
by the Pottstown Band and
Glee Club. A special feature
event will be staged from
8:15 to 9:15 in the stadium.
Admission is free.
A spectacular fireworks
dihplay will be the closing
feature, beginning at 9:15 p
m.
Advertising Doesn’t Cost —

IT PAYS!
weeks preaching in Spain in
Sept., 1964.
Rev. and Mrs. Urey receiv-
ed their B.A. in Biblical Edu-
cation, Washington Bible Coi-
lege. Washington, D. C. Rev.
Urey received also the M.A.
in Biblical Education, Colum-
bia Bible college, Columbia,
S. C. Mr. and Mrs. Urey have
one child, Karen Sue age 3%2.

Hope to Form
Home Ec Assn.
An exploration to deter-
mine whether or not it is
feasible to attempt to organ-
ize a Lancaster County Home
Economics association is be-
ing explored this summer.
At a preliminary meeting
of a few interested persons, a
committee was formed to
contact as many people con-
nected with home economics
as possible.
The group is interested in
hearing from as many gradu-
ates in any phase of home
economics as possible.
It is hoped that a meeting
for September can be arrang-
ed.
Anyone interested may con-
tact Mrs. Bernard O. Brad-
ley, 1821 Anne avenue, Lan-
caster, or Mrs. Jean Prysbyl-
kowski, 108 Race ave. Lan-
caster.
COMPLETES LINEMAN
SCHOOL
Army Pvt. Barry L. Miller,
19, whose wife, Mary, lives
at 344 East Jackson St., New
Holland, Pa., completed a
six-week lineman’s course at
the Army Southeastern Sig-
nal School, Fort Gordon, Ga.,
July 8.
Miller entered the Army
in February 1966 and com-
pleted basic training at Fort
Gordon, Ga.
He is a 1964 graduate of
Donegal high school, Mt. Joy,
Pa.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald D. Miller, live at 1076
W. Wood St., Mount Joy.

LAST WEEK FOR MONTMORENCY CHERRIES
Pick Your Own or We Pick!
50 POUNDS NEW
NOT CLASSIFIED ..
CRACKED ........
3 JUMBO ... ... .. ...+.
POTATOES $2.00
2 dozen 85c
3 dozen $1.00
60c dozen
CELERY AND WASHINGTON BORO TOMATOES
WATERMELONS AND CANTALOUPES
PENNSYLVANIA PEAT 300 lbs. $4.30
WOLGEMUTH FRUIT MARKET
1 MILE WEST OF FLORIN
PHONE 553-5661
Store Hours—=8-8; Except Wed & Sat., 8-6 Closed Sun.

Farmers Bank stock, which
carries a $10 par listing, for
one share of First-Columbia,
listed at $50 par.
Lancaster County Farmers
National Bank lists 253,632
shares of stock, held by 2,574
shareholders, while First Co-
lumbia has 4,500 outstanding
shares in the hands of 190
shareholders.

Artist of the Month
Louise Schock Kahn, form-
erly of this community, is be-
ing featured during July as
the “Artist of the Month” at
the Marimac Bank in Pitts-
burgh.
The daughter of Mrs. Clara
Schock; Frank street, Mrs.
Kahn, wife of Robert Kahn,
works in all media.
She is a graduate of Mount
Joy high school.
Open Camp
Hazel Bowman, Jenkin-
town, daughter of Mrs. Hazel
Crankshaw, Maytown, recent-
Over
The
Back
Fence
by Max Smith
LATE SUMMER continues
to be the very best time to
seed, or re-seed, turf grass
mixtures, lawns seeded during
late August or the first half
of September have the best
chance to etstablish a good
turf before winter arrives and
have a stronger root system
for next summer’s dry, hot
weather. Since it is very dif-
ficult to repair a poor job of
lawn seeding after the failure
is realized, I'd suggest that
special effort be used to do
the very best job in the first
place. A complete soil test
will reveal the needs of the
soil and these recommenda-
tions should be followed. A
lawn soil without sufficient
topsoil and organic matter,
and without the proper lime
and fertilizer elements wil

ly left for Mexico City to]
prepare for
an international camp to be
director of the
ternational
eleven couitries. She is
first member of CISV - U.S.A.
to serve abroad in this capa-
city.
understanding among
young people of
Fifty-seven nations have par-
lticipated in the summer pro-
gram, and recently the organ-
UNESCO.
The annual Herndon Camp
Rev. David Heil, pastor of
the
Other local pastors will
Meals are available in the;
Camp Dining Hall and rooms |
may be rented for the season:
or overnight. All are wel-,
come.
CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN
As children grow from one
stage to the next, their
clothes must allow for this
growth. When you shop for
their clothing, look for health
and comfort features along
with appearance and price,
advises Ruth Ann Nine, Penn
State extension clothing
specialist. Take time in your
selection, for an uncomfort-
able garment may only end
up being discarded.
TOLL OF HEART DISEASES
Elimination of all heart di-
seases would add six years to
life expectancy at birth, it
would add about five years to
expectancy at age 60.
LIFE EXPECTANCY
It is possible today to begin
with a life expectancy of 78
years, the latest estimate of
the Metropolitan Life Insur-
ance Co.

< BORNIN JULY ?
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held near Cuernavaca.
Mrs. Bowman will serve as}
camp being |
sponsored by Children’s In-| contracting for new construc-
Summer Villages |tion should -~have
for delegations coming from quirements written into
the “spec” sheet.
CISV is an organization de-|that damage many trees
voted to furthering peace and |
the
the world. |
ization has been accepted as]
a member - organization of areas should also be treated
of the Evangelical Congrega-|
tional church will be held in’
the Camp Grove located forty | county, many dairymen
miles north of Harrisburg in
Northumberland County. The
Rev. Orion Rhodes of Lancas-'
ter will be preaching nightly,
July 22 - 31. Song leaders for | ers are either greetn-chopping
the Camp meeting will be the |or grazing the forage after it
SEEN EENEEES CANES NNNS NEES EARNER RENE ER EEE



THIS KORTH!;
not be satisfactory and con-
the opening of siderable more time and mon-
ey will be needed in future
years to make it the way it
should have been in the first
place. Homeowners who are
these re-
the
THUNDER GUSTS often in-
clude violent wind storms
and
shrubs; the one that hit many
parts of the county last week
left its mark on many trees.
Broken branches and limbs
should be cut off and the cut
treated with a tree paint to
prevent rotting. Damaged
in order to prevent decay or
fungus infection. The sooner
CAMP MEETING SERVICES these injuries are treated, the
better it will be for the tree.
DUE TO the recent dry wea-
ther in most parts of the
are
utilizing their crop of sudan
grass or one of the sudan-sor-
ghum hybrids; growth has
been slow but many produc-
has reached the required
Grace Church Lancahter and growth stage. And now with
Rev. R. W. Garthwaite, | improved moisture conditions
pastor of Reich's E.C. church. |in many fields the re-growth
pe Will be quite lush and rapid;
participating in the services.|We urge dairymen to delay
harvesting the second growth
until it has reached the desir-
ed 18 inches for sudan grass,
and 30 inches for the sudan-
sorghum hybrids. To utilize
the crop at a shorter or
younger stage will increase

WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1966
THIS WOULD be a good
"time of the season to discuss
the water rights of farmers
or other land - owners. I am
aware of considerable activi-
ty in irrigation in recent
weeks and no doubt for the
balance of the summer. Any
land owner is entitled to “his
share” of the water from a
stream or river that runs thru
his property; he does not own
or have any right to all of
the water, even though the

source of the supply may or-
iginate on his property. A
person may not diminish the
‘quantity or the quality of the
water running from his prop-
erty at the expense of his
neighbors downstream. Since
the size of the stream or body
of water, and the number of
neighbors depending upon
this same source of water,
ers are either green-chopping
will determine a ‘share’,
it it difficult to de-
termine just how much water
one person may use. In many
cases legal counsel might be
utilized to determine this a-
mount. A special Extension
Circular, “Water Rights and
The Farmer” is available up-
on request.
St.Mark's Sunday
School Picnic
The annual Sunday School
picnic of the St. Mark's EUB
Sunday School will be held
on Wednesday, July 27, at
Hostetter’s, rain or shine.
Family groups will bring
and eat their lunch in the
hall. Following the lunch
teachers and assistants of the
various children’s depart-
ments will have games. There
will be softball games for the
youth. Cake walks for all
will follow the games. When
these are over the group will
return to the hall for enter-
tainment in the form of a
colored sound movie of spiri-
tual-science nature and a per-
iod o fellowship and refresh-
ments.

Good toys are a preschool
child’s tools of play. It’s thru
play that he learns, practices
new skills, experiments, de-
velops his imagination, and
works out his problems,
points out Mrs. Marguerite
Duvall, Penn State extension
child development specialist.
In learning while playing
and having fun, the pre-
schooler develops mentally,
physically, emotionally, and
creatively.

SNEEEENEENENENNERR EVA
Harold Shaffner =
Auctioneer .
On Vacation Z
S-OR SALE INFORMATION®
=
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MOUNT JOY
NHEm
OUR BUSINESS
IS MONEY!
We'll Loan You Ours
You Loan Us Yours
OR BOTH!
Either way you'll find the transaction will be profitable
UNION NATIONAL
MOUNT JOY BANK
AND
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
MAYTOWN
FAMEEN SEEKER RNEASNAENENEEEEEENEERENGEN RENEE EAANEANEEE