WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1967 BUSINESS DIRECTORY Convenient Reference To Firms Serving Community AUTO REPAIR Il of ® FURNITURE STALEY'S GARAGE General Repairs Used Cars - Inspections MOUNT JOY 653-5951 CHARLEY'S PAINT & BODY SHOP COMPLETE AUTO & TRUCK PAINTING GLASS INSTALLED 234 S. Market Ave. 653-5828 MOUNT JOY. PA. DAIRY PRODUCTS N ELWOOD MARTIN PENSUPREME PRODUCTS MILK & ICE CREAM R.D. 2, Ph. Mt. Joy 653-4891 ® DRUG STORES PRESCRIPTIONS WHEEL CHAIRS - WALKERS Sale or Rent Kreamer Pharmacy Elizabethtown 367-1262 ® EXCAVATING C. ROBERT FRY GENERAL EXCAVATING ® Residential ® Industrial R.D. 2, MANHEIM, PA. Phone Mount Joy 653-1253 SUPER-SATURATES YOUR BEARD! Eberly Furniture & Floor Covering ELIZABETHTOWN R.D. 3 lY2 Mi. East along Manheim Road Call 367-5468 ® HOME IMPROVEMENT ROOFING — SIDING SPOUTING — AWNINGS RALPH F. KLINE Over 20 yrs. experience Mount Joy 653-5771 Lititz 626-7474 Ephrata 733-1224 We're particular about our work. ® LOANS [nstalment Loan Service Inc. (LOANS TO $600) Instalment Consumer Discount Co. (LOANS TO $3500) 23 Cent. Sqr.. Elizabethtown PHONE 367-1185 ® MASONRY LESTER P. ESHELMAN MASONRY Brick - Block - Stone Silicone Masonry Waterproofing Donegal Springs Road 653-5325 ® OIL SERVICE HOLLINGER OIL SERVICE MOUNT JOY, PA. 653-4484 ATLANTIC PETROLEUM PRODUTS Qil Burner Sales & Service ® PAINT & BODY WORK ITCHING - LIKE MAD? Get this doctor's formula! Zemo speedily stops torment of externally caused itching... of eczema, minor skin irritations, non- poisonous insect bites. Desensitizes nerve endings. Kills millions of sur- face ‘germs, *‘De-iteh” skin with Zemo-=l iquid or Ointment. REASONS WHY MAIL FOR JAMESTOWN, ALA. CAN BE MISSENT. . . & Jamestown, Ark. # Jamestown, Califs % Jamestown, Colo. 2% Jamestown, Ind. % Jamestown, Kange % Jamestown, Ky. & Jamestown, La» '% Jamestown, Miche } % Jamestown, Mo. { | % Jamestown, N. Y, | % Jamestown, N.C. . | 3% Jamestown, N. Daks) | 8 Jamestown, Ohio { % Jamestown, Pa. J &% Jomestown, R. l.! * % Jamestown, S. C. | &% Jamestown, Tenms | . % Jamestown, Ya. \ : When you use ZIP Code In your address, your corres spondence is more likely to wind up in the right James. town. ZIP Code adds ace curacy to your mail, Carriger Paini & Body Shop Cars painted, Wrecks re-built Wheel Alignment Services Rheems 367-6450 ® PLUMBING H. S. MECKLEY & SON PLUMBING — HEATING OIL BURNERS Sales and Service 15 W. Main St., Ph. 653-5981 Leo Kob, Inc. Heating — Plumbing Air Conditioning “Since 1904” 24 South Market Street Elizabethtown, Pa. ® SEPTIC TANKS & CESSPOOL CLEANING OLIVER SAGER & SON, INC. SEPTIC TANK AND CESSPOOL. CLEANING Phone 367-1256 11 Sager Rd.. Elizabethtown ® SERVICE STATION NEY'S CITIES SERVICE Phone 653-1104 Florin Ward MOUNT JOY CLASSIFIED yam l= “Readly work I Donegal Schools Menus High School & Junior High Elementary Schools Over Friday, Dec. 15 Fish Sandwich with Tartar Sauce OR Egg & Olive Sandwich Scalloped Potatoes Tomato Sauce Fruit Gelatin with Diced Pears Milk * * * - Monday, Dec. 18 Bar-B Que Frank on Buttered heated roll Peas in Butter Sauce Celery & Carrot Strips Pineapple upside down cake Milk *® * * Tuesday, Dec. 19 Orange Juice Pizza Pie Mixed Veg. Butter Sauce Spice Cake Milk * * * Wednesday, Dec. 20 Ham Green Beans Steamed butter potato Cornbread & Butter Milk Ty * ® . Thursday, Dec. 21 Oven Fried Chicken Mashed Potatoes Pepper Slaw Roll & Butter Chilled Fruit Cup Milk * © » Friday, Dec. 22 Turkey Sandwich Potato Chips Vegetable in Butter Sauce Choice of Fruit Peanut butter cookie Milk Friday, Dec. 15 Oven Baked Fish Sticks Mashed Potatoes Tomato Sauce Jello with Diced Pears Milk * » » - Monday, Dec. 18 Frank on buttered heated roll Peas in buttered sauce Celery & Carrot strips Pineapple upside down cake Milk * * * Tuesday, Dec. 19 Ham & Green Beans Steamed buttered potato Cornbread & butter Rosy applesauce Milk % w * Wednesday, Dec. 20 Orange Juice Hamburg on buttered heated roll Mixed vegetables in butter sauce Spice cake Milk %w w ® Thursday, Dec. 21 Oven Fried Chicken Mashed Potatoes Carrots in butter sauce Roll & butter Chilled Fruit cup Milk 3; , XX ® ® Friday, Dec. 22 Turkey Hoagie with Potato Chips Vegetable in Butter Sauce Choice of Fruit Cookie Milk Fas LEGAL NOTICE EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Estate of Millie R. Cron- rath, dec’d, late of Mount Joy Borough, Pa. Letters testamentary on said estate having been grant ed 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 MARY ELLEN DAVIS 6 Chelsea Lane Harrisburg, Pa. 17109 and THE UNION NATIONAL MOUNT JOY BANK Clarence C. Newcomer, Attorney 118 E. King St., Lancaster, Pa. 17602 38-3c NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of the stockholders of the Marietta Gravity Water Company will be held in the office of the company, Route #441 By- Pass, Marietta, Pa. 17547, on Tuesday, January 9, 1968, from 10:00 to 11:00 o'clock A.M., at which meeting there shall be elected by ballot three directors, each for a term of three years or until their successors are elected and qualified, and there shall be transacted such other business as may properly come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof. GEORGE R. MILLER, President Attest: J. Edw. Charles Secretary-Treasurer 38-3¢ ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Estate of William Boyd Strayer, dec’d., late of Mount Joy Borough, Pa. 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 EMILY P. FORNEY 205 Campus Avenue Davidsville, Penna. Henry F. Gingrich, Esq. Attorney 38-3¢ ‘Night of Miracles’ Will Be Presented The Senior Choir of the Chiques Church of the Breth- ren will present the cantata “Night of Miracles” by John Peterson on Sunday, Dec. 17 at 7:30 p.m. Featured in the cantata solo parts are: Robert M. Hess, Bass; Mrs. Galen Hoff- man, Soprano; David Shenk, Tenor; Mrs. Glen Faus, Sop- rano; Henry Faus, Bass. Nar- rator will be Paul Hosler Jr.; Pianist, Patricia Metzler; As- sistant, Glenn Hosler; Choir Director, Mrs. Robert O. Hess. The public is invited to attend this worship service at the Chiques church, locat- ed on the Manheim - Eliza- bethtown Road. E.U.B. Choirs To Give Program The Chancel and Celestial choirs of St. Mark’s E. U. B. church, Mount Joy will pre- sent a sacred cantata, ‘The Christmas Story” by Everett Titcomb, Sunday, Dec. 17, 10:15 a.m. at St. Mark's church. The work is based on text taken from the Aprocrypha and from the Gospel of St. Luke, and also includes some traditional carols and hymns. Soloists will be Mrs. Don- ald Martin, Manheim R1, and David Hostetter, 315 North Barbara St., Mount Joy. Or- ganist is Gerald L. Miller, Rheems. The choirs are under the direction of Mrs. David F. Nicholas, Lancaster. Mr. Miller wil play “Noel Basque” by Benoit for the Organ prelude and “Shep- herds Came, Praising” by Walcha for the Offertory. The public is invited attend. to 3-IN-ONE OIL Oils Everythin Prevents Rust | REGULAR — OIL SPRAY — ELECTRIC MOTOR The Back Fence By Max Smith STRAWBERRY growers may continue to improve their 1968 crop by some attention with mulching at this time of the year. The mulch should be applied after several hard freezes so the plants are com- pletely dormant, Two or three inches of clean straw makes a good mulch: sawdust, crushed corn cobs, or peat moss also are suitable mul- ches, but these latter mater- ials use only 2 inches be- tween the rows and one inch over the plants. Leaves do not make a good mulch ma- terial because they tend to mat down and smother the plants. Mulching the plants protects them against severe winter temperatures and helps alternate freezing and thawing. Some of the mulch may be left between the rows next spring which will con- trol weeds, conserve mois: ture, and help keep the ber- ries cleaner, THE PURCHASE of a Christ- mas tree should be guided by these four major points: (1) Needle holding capacity with the pines and. firs holding longer as compared to the spruce; (2) firmness of the branches to support the orna- ments; (3) the fragrance of the pitch with the firs being most pleasant to most people; (4) the tree’s resistance to flame is important to reduce fire hazards; get a fresh tree and keep the trunk inserted in water or moist sand, soil or peat moss. Trees should be kept away from fireplaces or any other type of open flame. A natural Christmas tree will be a holiday decora- tion of beauty and show ap- preciation of our natural re- sources. THE WINTER season is a good time to apply the dor- mant spray for the control of brush, undesirable trees, and old stumps. The use of a special brush killer herbi- cide such as a mixture of 2. 4-D, 2, 4, 5-T, and oil on the lower 18 inches of a tree or sprayed on brush will do a good job of eradication. Larger trees should be notch- ed with an axe before being sprayed in order to get good penetration. The tree or stump and the soil around the trunk should be well soaked with the above potent mixture. When this applica- tion is made during the dor- mant season there is very little danger of drifting or fumes that will kill valuable shrubbery or crops. IN RECENT years we have noted some press articles questioning the value of barnyard manure; we are of the opinion that it is an im- portant source of plant nu- trients and that it should be utilized to the fullest extent. If to be stored until spring, it should be proteeted from the weather; leaching will take place and the resulting loss of most fertilizer nutri- ents if permitted outside in a pile. A timely use for ma- nure is to topdress winter wheat fields; this should be done by the first of the year in order to get full benefits. Manure will supply needed plant nutrients in spring as well as conserve moisture & reduce heaving out of small plants. Six to 8 tons per acre is the recommended applica- tion for average soils; on sand or gravel this amount may be increased for great- est yield increases. Wheal fields that have been manurs ed early in the winter have) responded with about 5 bush- el more per acre.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers