The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 21, 1966, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    
PAGE EIGHT
Emergency Medical
Calls
Sunday
Dr. David Schlosser
will be available on
Emergency calls only, it
family physician can nol
be contacted.
will Attend
Library Conclave
Marjorie Aurick, Donegal
high school senior, accompan-
jed by Mrs. Mary Emma
Llewellyn, high school librar-
jan, will go to the Penn State
campus Sept. 24, to attend
the Pennsylvania State Li-
brary Asstistants Association
conference. :
She is a member of the
state organization’s executive
committee. She serves as the
ireasurer.
The Donegal contingent
will be accompanied by two
representatives from Hemp-
field Union School District.
Marbeth King, a senior at
the state library association.
She will represent her school
and will be accompanied by
Miss Emily Carrigan, Hemp-
field librarian.
The fall conference will be
devoted entirely to a business
meeting. One of the projects
of the state organization has
been the provision of a $200
scholarship which is made
available to a deserving high
school graduate who plans to
enter the field of library sci-
ence. It was awarded last
year to a student from Wash-
ington County who will en-
roll this fall at Mansfield
State College.
Braggart: one who leaps to
his feats.
‘HE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
Hold Flower Show at Seiler
Fourth grade pupils at the
Seiler elementary school
held a Flower Show Friday
morning, Sept. 16, of ar-
rangements which they had
made themselves. They were
Farm Women 8
Meet at Park
Farm Women Society #8
met Saturday afternoon at
Chiques Park, Mount Joy. A
covered dish dinner was en-
joyed by all present. Mrs.
John Keener, president, was
in charge of devotions. The
group will go to Embreeville
Sept. 30 by bus. A program
is planned for the patients,
and refreshments will be ser-
ved. The bus will leave John-
son bus station at 5:30 p.m.
The group will serve Oct.
18 at the General hospital,
and will fold seals the week
of Nov. 17.
New officers elected are

Mrs. Harold Frey, president,
Ms. Harold Ney, vice presi-
dent; Miss Ruth Eby, treasur-
er.
The next meeting will be
held Oct. 22 at the home of
Mrs. John Warfel. Mrs. War-
fel will speak on “My Hob-
bies.”
® Main Street
(From page 1)
approximately $15,000.
® @® ®
Old Market street was the
first section of the work to be
begun.
® oo ©o
Others will be on the list
as the fall season unfolds.
Junior Executive: smile
turned on at half pressure—

while letting off steam.
Se ———
NOW
7 8th Series
of
Installment Shares
Mount Joy Building & Loan Association
Vemma

* After
x 5 Days a Week
APPLY IN PERSON
AT
Mount Joy Bulletin
' MOUNT JOY, PA.
BOY WANTED
MOUNT JOY
i
i
1
§
OPEN |
|
i
i
.


School

given instruction previously
in the art by Mrs. Harold
‘Krall. Teachers of the two
rooms are Mrs. Irene Heisey
and Mrs. Emma Good, and
the juages for the show weie
Charles Heaps, building prin-
cipal, and Mrs. Beryl Hahn,
elementary art instructor.
First place winner in Mrs.
Good’s room was Selisa Staul-
fer. Second place went to
James Gerberich and third to
Judith Morton. Honorable
mention was awarded Rose
Groff, Elizabeth Godshall,
and Pamela Drace.
In Miss Heisey’s room
Charles Groff won first prize,

David Schlosser, sccoud; and
third, Thomas Edwards. Hon-
orable mentions went to Ab-
ram Koser, Mildred Valle
and Pamela Horst.


'To Love -- And
Also To Share’
The age-old marriage Vow
“to love, honor, and obey” is
undergoing an important re-
vision in the minds of thought
ful young college-age couples
on the threshhold of marriage
As they see it, the vow might
better pledge both bride and
groom ‘to love, honor, and
share.” This is one of the
striking changes noted by
Mrs. Ethel Nash, assistant
professor of preventive medi-
cine at the Bowman Gray
School of Medicine, Winston-
Salem, N. C. Mrs. Nash, who
is also president of the Am-
erican Association of Mar-
riage Counselors, has for the
past 10 years led a three-day
seminar for engaged couples
at Duke University in Dur-
ham, N. C.
“Over the years,” Mrs. Nash
says ‘there has been a dis-
tinet trend toward the ‘col-
league’ marriage.” Both men
and women, she explained,
no longer see the woman's
role solely as wife, mother,
housekeeper. Nor do they
consider the woman solely as
helpmeet during that short
period when she works to
help put her husband through
graduate school or through
the first years of his career.
Instead, both men and wo-
men increasingly recognize
that some women have tal-
ents and skills which can
best be fulfilled in work out-
side the home. “The most
striking change in this area,”
says Mrs. Nash, “is among the
men. +
They take enormous pride
in their future wives’ attain-
ments in college and are in-
creasingly encouraging them
to develop themselves further
after marriage.”
the role of the woman
plies a somewhat different
role for the man, as well,
Mrs. Nash noted. If wives
and husbands both assume ec-
onomic responsibilities out-
side the home-—with the wife
working full time—both must
expect to share responsibili-
ties in the home, as well.
The husband must be wil-
ling to take on such previous-
ly all-female chores as help-
ing with the dishes or sort-
ing laundry without consider-
ing it an affront to his mas-
culinity. The wife must genu-
inely consider her household
responsibilities as important
as her job and perform them
with as much grace and skill.
| When this happens, both will
be fulfilled and:the marriage
is likely to be a successful
one. When both or either as-



sume roles they don’t really
i want, the marriage is headed
| for trouble, Mrs. Nash ob-
| served.
The largest islands in the

| world are Greenland, 840,000
square miles; New Guinea,
32,232 Borneo 282.418; Baffin
Island, 231.000; Madagascar,
223,707 and Sumatra, 164,165
square miles.
| Patronize Our Advertisers
-


|
Naturally such a change in g
im- ®
|
i


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1963
* DONEGAL FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
September 24 -
October 1 — Solanco
October 8 — Warwick ..
October 15 — Cocalico ........
October 22 — Conestoga Valley
Hempfield
Away
Home
Away
Home
Homecoming
October 29 — Columbia
November 5
— Manheim Central
November 19 — Manheim Township
or 4 ayia . Away
.. Home
Away
* — Night Game at 8 p.m.
All other games begin at 2 p.m.
DONEGAL BRAVES’ SCHEDULE
September 25 — St. Anne's
October 2 — Elks
October 9 — Presidents
Oltober 16 — Hempfield
October 23 — Ephrata ..
October 30 — Bye
November 6 — Elizabethtown
All games at 1:30 p.m.
Tribe Wins Moral Victory
Donegal Indians climbed
the Mountain Friday night,
Sept. 16, at Ephrata and
planted a moral victory flag.
The ‘“victory’” was actually
a tie game—12 - 12—but it
represented a big gain over
the shutout the Tribe suffer-
ed a week earlier in the seas-
on’s opener.
The Ephrata Mountaineers
were hard put to stay in a
tie, obliged to come from be-
hind twice to remain even.
And—there is no one to dis-
pute the possibility that a
couple more minutes might
have spelled another touch-
down.
Donegal was on the move
and Indian fans were better
pleased than a week earlier.
The tie game sends Done-
gal Saturday afternoon at
two o’clock against the invad-
ing Hempfield eleven in one
of the chief rivalry games of
the season.
The Tribe’s first touchdown
came in the first period with
the game not very old when
an intercepted pass by Ken
Weber took the ball 60 yards
to the three. On last down,
quarterback May pushed the
ball over.
In the third, after Ephrata
had evened the count at 6-6
in the second, Donegal moved
methodically down field and
Wagner then hit Weber with
a touchdown pass.
The Mounts evened the
count in the fourth period.
COIN CLUB
The Mount Joy-Florin Coin
club will hold its next meet-
ing on Thursday, Sept. 22, at
the Mount Joy restaurant be-
ginning at 8 p.m.
When in need or printing
remember The Bulletin.


Apple Pickers Wanted


BARTLETT PEARS & PRUNE PLUMS
HOME GROWN SWEET CORN
‘CANTALOUPES AND IRISH COBBLER POTATOES
FRESH SUPPLY OF BACHMAN CHOCOLATES
Including Chips For Baking
EGGS DIRECT FROM OUR FARM
HOME GROWN CELERY AND TOMATOES
WOLGEMUTH FRUIT MARKET
a MILE WEST OF FLORIN
Store Hours—8-8; Except Wed & Sat., 8-6 Closed Sun.

PHONE 653-5661


NESE IESE EN ESN AEN ENSAE ANNE EAN ENE a
Large Enough To
AENEENENEEEN I ENNNEEE EEE GENAEEE
MOUNT JOY
NENEEEN
COIN & STAMP COLLECTORS :
—~NOTICE —
WE HAVE JUST INSTALLED
63 NEW
Safety Deposit Boxes
and Plastic Coin and Stamp Folders
STOP IN AND SECURE YOURS TODAY!
UNION NATIONAL
MOUNT JOY BANK
AND
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Accomodate Blue
MAYTOWN
ANENNENENENE SEEN NNENEE ANNENGNEEEEE HENENNEEREER NENENEE
25-2¢

IS
bud od OY IN bed ed hd
Noe IO yt