68 ship ting >CU- dist jice YA rph ind rch le ch ion ing or- ET « Ary ers aye« ir ir ip \n) ice 1 20- ill n- ng ol 2C d- the Hempfield Singers. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1968 LANDISVILLE - SALUNGA. NEWS Miss Grace Henderson Hempfield high school, a school whose athletic teams failed to win a single county championship during the ’'67- 68’ school year, is the winner of the First Annual Intelli- gencer Journal All-Sports trophy for compiling the best overall record in varsity ath- letics. Hempfield won 101 ,con- tests over the year while losing just 37 and tying two, for a winning percentage of 132. Ties were not included in figuring the percentage. * * * The East Hempfield Guild of Lancaster Osteopathic hos- pital met recently following a covered dish picnic at the Landisville Fire Company park. iw ¥ . John Hershman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hersh- man, Alexandria, Va., has been elected president oi the junior class at Evangel Col- lege, Springfield, Mo. [Ie is a graduate of Hempfield Un- ion high school, Landisville. * * * Society of Farm Women 4, at a recent meeting gave an award to Miss Susan Nolt of East Petersburg, a Hemp- field® high school graduate who excelled in general homemaking. The next meeting will be held July 26 at the Salunga Pavilion at 6 p.m. Each fami- ly will provide its own cov- ered dishes, sandwiches, and place settings. Beverages will be supplied. Program chair- man will be Mrs. Cylus Gom ble. * * * Mountville Lions Club held a ladies night program re- cently at Meadow Hills Din- ing House, with 102 members and guests in attendance. The affair was presided over by club president E. Kenneth Manning. Ladies received corsages and gifts, and en- tertainment was provided by The next regular meeting will be held Tuesday, July 23 as the annual family picnic, *® *» Seventy-five persons at- tended a pool party sponsor- ed by the Landisville-Salun- ga branch of the auxiliary to Lancaster General hospital recently at Honeysuckle pool near Landisville. Proceeds will benefit the hospital. Featured were swim ming, playing of cards and luncheon. Mrs. Hershey Groft Jr. and Mrs. Donald Vogt- man, co-chairmen of the ways and means committee, were in charge Mrs. Richard God- frey is president of the or- ganization. The event is an annual one. . . ® fa Miss Sandra Louise Myers of 1775 Stevens St., East Patersburg became the bride of Edward Irwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Beniamin Irwin, of 907 Forest Road, recently in Emmanuel Lutheran church, with the Rev. John Stam- baugh officiating. After a reception at Media Heights Country Club the couple left on a trip to Ber- muda. The bride is a gradu- ate of Hempfield high school and of Millersville State Col- lege. She ‘is employed as a teacher at Stevens elecentary school. " The bridegroom is a graa- uate of Hempfield high school and of Pennsylvania Military college. * * * Although the camp meet ings have been modified, ofTi- ® CHURCH NEWS (From page 6) ed Sessions for children through Grade 5. 10:00 a.m. Morning Worsh- ip Service; sermon, “The Burning Furnace”, by Pastor Zuck., cials of the Landisville Camp Meeting Association has a field program of activities scheduled for the camp grounds this summer. The schedule booked to date includes July 20, Meeting of E. Hempfield Guild of the Osteopathic hos- pital; July 21, Penn Gospel Band; July 27, Lot Helders meeting; July 27, Program by the Singing Simpsons; July 28, Landisville-Salunga Min- isterium Vespers Service; Aug. 3, Youth for Christ; Au- gust 4, Vespers Service; Aug. 11 and 18, Programs by the Couriers Quartet; Sept. 1, of .eventsLebanon Valley Gospel Band. The Worry Clinic by Dr. Geo. W. Crane Ken Hawthorne deserves a special salute. For he shows what the creative salesman’s imagination can do to improve our American standard of living. With all due credit to cloistered scientists like Edison, Marconi, et al, it is salesmen who put their products inte our homes as standard equipment! CASE C-537: Ken Hawthorne was formerly a traveiing salesman. Now he is the head of one of Cleveland's lcad- ing hotels. When I checked in about 11 p.m., his desk clerk hand- ed me a long pink ticket? “What's this for?” I inquired, puzzled. “Oh, that’s your free tic- ket for breakfast tomorrow,” he added. And when I looked close- ly, I saw that a complete breakfast menu was listed thereon, including two eggs, orange juice, melon, cereal, toast and coffee. During the past 35 years of my professional public speaking, I probably have patronized at least 1,000 ho- tels and motels. Occasionally a motel has offered free coffee and dough- nuts to its guests, espgcially when there was no restaur- ant in the neighborhood. But this was my first ex- perience with a complete, delicious breakfast, courtesy of the hotel. The various airlines orig- inally used this ‘free meal” strategy to superb advan- tage. In those early years, pa- trons would indulge in talk- up about the delicious ‘free’ meals served aloft by the airlines. But the railroads never caught on to such modern- ized forms of public relations which is one reason they have” just about closed out their passenger service. A few heads of railroads, such as Wakne Johnston, of the Illinois Central, had the salesman’s viewpoint. Alas, most of the railroad management had the engin- eering or introvertive out- look. Luckily, the airlines start- ed out with the extrovert's sales and advertising con- cept, so they zoomed ahead of the railroads fast. And salesmen like Ken Hawthorne will adapt the same advertising genius to the downtown hotels, thus restoring them to the fore- front. Dr. Glenn Frank, former head of the University of Wisconsin, said: “The Salesman is nol the high priest of a sordid com- mercialism; the salesman is the spark plug of civiliza- tion.” For salesmen have a vivid imagination of the creative type. They also exude enthus- iasm‘ They use words fluent- ly and effectively. America has been main sales nation of the the world, which is why we still have higher wages, more comforts and greater liber- ty than in Russian Commun- ism and British Socialism. Salesmen also have an- other trait that has been vital to our marvelous “flee enter- prise’ system, namely ‘guts.’ They are not afraid to pit their ability against an un- known future! Alas, most of our college students today lack the sales- man’s courage so they refuse to take. legitimate business risks. Instead, they prefer se- cure jobs at a guaranteed salary, with steady promo- tion - based on seniority. -in- stead of output! College professors, too, may try to pontificate about economics but they usually chickened out when they had a chance to venture upon the real firing line of life, so they accepted fellowships leading to their Ph. D. de- grees and faculty “tenure.” So salute all good sales- men! Theyre still spark- plugging our American sys- tem and putting the products of cloistered scientiists into the average home, thus rais- ing our standard of living. Send for my booklet “The New Psychology of Advertis- ing and Selling,” enclosing a long stamped, return envel- ope, plus 20Cc. (Always write to DI. 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 one of his booklets.) Induct Pastor At E'town The Harrisburg-York Area Christian and Missionary Al- liance Ministerium conduct- ed an installation service, on Tuesday evening, July 23, at 7:30 pom. in the Alliance church, 153 East High street, Elizabethtown. The Reverend Ernest S. Grames was installed as pas- tor. The Rev. Mr. Grames was called to the pastorate by the local church executive committee under the leader- ship of Dr. John R. Kensel, Vice - chairman. Appointment to the charge was made by the Superintendent of the Eastern District of the Chris- tian and Missionary Alliance, the Rev. Joel W. McGarvey. The new pastor comes to Eli- zabethtown from Willow Grove, Pa., where he had served the Woodlawn Alli- ance Church since 1960. Six pastors of nearby Al- liance churches participated. The challenge was brought to the pastor relative to his care of the congregation and also the congregation was challenged and instructed in ways of assisting the pastor to an effective ministry. Churchmen Quartet to Sing The Churehmen Quartet, a vocal group from Virginia wil present a concert at the Florin Church of the Breth- ren on Sunday evening, Aug. 4, beginning at 7 o'clock. The program will be pre- sented under the sponsorship of the Men's Fellowship of the church. Everyone is welcome. The letter “A’’ progably started in ancient Egyptian writing as a picture sign of an oxhead! - THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Over The Fence By Max Smith THE CONTROL of aphids is a summertime chore for every farmer or gardener; dry weather seems to favor more rapid infestation. Aph- ids, also often called plant lice, vary in color but are us- ually green or light brown; they feed by inserting their sharp beaks into plant tis- sues and sucking out the sap. This feeding results in the curling of the leaves or discolored areas on the leaves. Heavy infestation has alleady been reported on the shrubs such as Japanese quince and the new growth of crabapples. Weekly spray- ing with malathion should give good control. MANY OF the chewing in- sects on plants and shrubs may be controlled by the use of DDT; however, I'd like to point out one word of cau- tion and that is to refrain from feeding any plants to livestock on which DDT has been applied. In the case of sweet corn where ‘this insecti- cipe has been used to con- trol corn borer or earworm, the fodder should not be fed to any livestock. WE CONTINUE to notice the yellow leaves on some trees and shrubs and especially on pin oak trees; in many cases this discoloring is due to the lack of iron in the plant, which may be caused by the soil being too alkaline; most oak trees will do better in acid soils rather than sweet soil. . This yellowing condi- tion may be controlled: by the application of iron cho- late or some inorganic com- pound containing soluble iron these materials may be pur- chased as mentioned at many garden centers or fertilizer companies will include them in a special tree and shrub mixture. THE MARKET value of wheat this summer causes me to remind livestock pro- ducers of the feeding value of this small grain. Several inquiries about the feeding of wheat instead of selling at the current low prices have been received and I'd like to point out that the use of wheat as a feed might be the most profitable way to use it this year. Compared with corn, wheat carries slightly more carbohydrates in the form of starch, mere crude protein, but less fat. Because kernels are small and hard. wheat should be ground or cracked for most farm animals. When fed a- lone wheat forms a pasty mass in the animal's mouth that is not desirable; also, when fed alone digestive dis- turbances may result except in the feeding of hogs. Wheat should be fed only as a part of the grain ration and gen- erally we’d recommend that the amount would not ex- ceed 25% of the mixture. PAGE SEVEN Fed in properly balanced rations wheat is about equal to corn for milk production and for fattening animals. Ground or cracked wheat may be fed in the dry form as a part of the grain ration, or it may be used in the silo as high moisture grain, or as a preservative for grass sil- age cdops. UGI Acquires New Company UGI Corp. (formerly the United Gas Improvement Co. has aequired majority own- ership of Capital Industries, Inc, of Avis, Pa., manufact- urer of sectional-engineered homes, UGI president Edw. H. Smoker has announced. The acquisition of the closely-held company is an- other move by UGI toward diversification, and the first under a revised and less re- strictive charter ‘adopted by the company July 1. UGI is primarily a utility company with both natural gas and electric power dis- tribution operations in east- ern Pennsylvania. In addi- tion, it markets LP-gas and industrial gases through Ug- ite Gas Inc, a wholly-owned subsidiary. “Capital Industries gives UGI an entry with excellent growth prospects in the low- cost housing field,” Smoker said. “As a member of the UGI family, the company is in a position to expand its operations and capitalize on opportunities in the vast mar- ket for low-cost homes and the rising demand for section- al -engineered housing with- in this market.” One hundred years ago, there were 23 million people in the U.S. Now there are more than 200 million — and there. will be elose to 400 million in 2000. : (ROCHETED SQUARES Leaves and blossoms are cro- cheted in 5-inch squares ard 4nd to make a handsome ti- slecloth, scarf or bedspread. Pattern No. 850 gives the in- structions. Send 30¢ plus 6¢ postage in coins for this pattern to MAR- THA MADISON (care of this newspaper), Morris Plains, N.J. 07950. Add 15¢ for first-class mail. For New Needlework Bock send 50 cents. Contains free stole pattern and embroidery and a coupon for free pattern of your choice, SESREEUERRRARNEERT, BIG 11in. x » aA Saad aad aA addi Ala 30 iY 3 FOR SALE No Trespassing Signs MOUNT JOY BULLETIN RARER FCA EEE ENE EIEN EEN ONE ENE 14 in. SIZE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers