The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 21, 1968, Image 7

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    WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21
Convenient Reference To
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Firms Servimg Community
e AUTO REPAIR
® PLUMBING
STALEY'S GARAGE
General Repairs
Used Cars - Inspections
MOUNT JOY 653-5951
Bon
CHARLEY'S
PAINT & BODY SHOP
COMPLETE
AUTO & TRUCK PAINTING
GLASS INSTALLED
234 S. Market Ave. 653-5828
* MOUNT JOY, PA.
H. S. MECKLEY & SON
PLUMBING - HEATING
OIL BURNERS
Sales & Service
15 W. Main St. Ph. 653-5981
LEO KOB, INC.
Heating — Plumbing
Air Conditioning
“Since 1904”
24 South Market Etreet
Elizabethtown, Pa.
© DAIRY PRODUCTS
ELWOOD MARTIN
PENSUPREME PRODUCTS
MILK & ICE CREAM
R.D.2, Ph. Mt. Joy 653-4891
e¢ DRUG STORES
" PRESCRIPTIONS
WHEEL CHAIRS -WALKERS
Sale or Rent
Kreamer Pharmacy
Elizabethtown 367-1262
e EXCAVATING
C. ROBERT FRY
GENERAL EXCAVATING
® Residential
® Industrial
R.D.2, MANHEIM, PA.
Phone Mount Joy 653-1253
I.
e FURNITURE
Eberly
Furniture & Floor
Covering
ELIZABETHTOWN R.D.3
1% Mi. East along Manheln
Road
Call 367-5468
e HOMEIMPROVEMENT
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
e LOANS
Instalment Loan Service Inc.
(LOANS TO $600)
Instalment Consumer
Discount Co.
(LOANS TO $3500)
23 Cent. Sqr., Elizabethtown
PHONE 367-1185
®e MASONRY
LESTER P. ESHELMAN
MASONRY
Brick - Block - Stone
Silicone Masonry
Waterproofing
Donegal Springs Road
653-5325
e OIL SERVICE
HOLLINGER
OIL SERVICE |
MOUNT JOY 653-4484
ATLANTIC 7" TROLEUM
PRODUCTS
Qil Burner Sales & Service
e PAINT & BODY WORK
Carriger
Paint & Body Shop
Cars painted. Wrecks rebuilt
® SEPTIC TANKS and
CESSPOOL CLEANING
SAGER & SON
INC.
SEPTIC TANK and
CESSPOOL CLEANING
Phone 367-1256
11 Sager Rd., Elizabethtown
OLIVER
LEGAL NOTICES
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
Estate of Charles E. Dunk-
elberger, dec’d., late of Mt.
Joy Borough, Lancaster
County, Penna.
Letters testamentary on
said estate having been grant-
ted to the undersigned, all
persons indebted thereto are
requested to make immedi-
ate payment and those hav-
ing claims or demands a-
zainst the same will present
them without delay for set-
tlement to the undersigned.
FLORENCE R. JONES
c/o Henry J. Rutherford
190 Longenecker Ave.,
Marietta, Penna.
Henry J. Rutherford
Attorney 21-3c
EXECUTOR NOTICE
Estate of Magdalena Yake,
dec’d., late of Manor Town-
ship, Lancaster County, Pa.
Letters testamentary on
said estate having been grant-
ad 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,
c/o May, Grove & Rubin
AARON YAKE
49 N. Duke Street
Lancaster, Pa.
May. Grove, Stork &
Rubin, Attorneys 21-3c
+ THERE ARE
REASONS WHY ‘MAIL
FOR JAMESTOWN, ALA.
CAN BE MISSENT. . .
& Jamestown, Ark,
& Jamestown, Calife
% Jamestown, Colas
% Jamestown, Ind,
% Jamestown, Kans .
% Jamestown, Kye. |
¥* Jamestown, La. |
3% Jamestown, Michs
*% Jamestown, Mo.
& Jamestown, N. Y,
2% Jamestown, N. C, .
&% Jamestown, N. Daks
2% Jamestown, Ohio {
% Jamestown, Pa. | i
2% Jamestown, R. lI.
Jamestown, S. C.!
% Jamestown, Tenn
<% Jamestown, Va.
When you use ZIP Code In
your address, your corres 1
spondence is more likely to
wind up in the right Jamese
town. ZIP Code adds ace
Wheel Alignment Service
RHEEMS
367-6450 |
curacy to your mail.
® Sabbatical
(From page 1)
gal) for a year's service fol-
lowing the leave.
Donegal school tound that
it had no policy to cover
the situation.
The matter was considered
at length by the board and
finally advice and legal op-
inion was taken from the
district solicitor.
His opinion, which Thurs-
day night was voted into
policy, is that any teacher
who is granted a salbatical,
shall either fulfill the re-
quirements of returning or
shall reimburse the district
for all benefits - salary, tax-
Swimmers Eighth
In City-Co. Meet
Mount Joy swimmers pad-
dled to an eighth place in a
field of 15 in the big City-
County Swimming champion-
ships, held last weekend al
Millersville.
The local boys and girls
facked up 67% points ana
two of the swimmers claimed
double championships.
Winners of the meet was
Golden Meadows.
Gary Coleman and his old-
er brother, Steve, sons of Dr.
and Mrs. Hugh Coleman,
both came in winners twice.
Gary, swimming in the 8
and under class, took top
honors in the 25-meter free-
style and 25-meter back-
stroke while Steve had wins
in the 12 years and under
class. His were in the 50-me-
ter freestyle and the 25-me-
ter butterfiy.
Chris McCue, son of Mr.
and Mrs. George McCue, was
eighth in the 8 and under 25-
meter free style and a sev-
enth in the 25-meter back-
stroke; Dave Presto, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Presto,
claimed an eighth in the 25-
meter, 10 and under free-
style, © and Deb Meckley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Rob=rt Meckley, won a sixth
in the 25-meter butterfy for
girls 12 and under.
COMPLETES
DEPLOYMENT
Joeman First Class Clar-
ence E. Wagner, Jr, USN,
35, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence E. Wagner of 71%
E. Wood St., and husband of
the former Miss Minerva J.
Buller of Square St., has
just completed a six-month
deployment in the Gulf of
Tonkin off the coast of North
Vietnam aboard the attack
carrier USS Ticonderoga.
As a crewmember, he help-
ed to provide air support to
U. S. and Allied ground for-
ces ashore in South Vietnam
He also helped to provide
the necessary support to the
squadron of Air Wing 19 so
that they could fly combat
missions against the enemy.
When Ticonderoga com-
pleted her latest deployment
she became the first carrier
to have completed four tours
of duty on Yankee Station.
The Ticonderoga is home-
ported in San Diego.
IN VIETNAM
Marine Staff Sergeant Les-
ter M. Huber, 33, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Cyrus L. Huber of
133 Stoney Battery Road,
Salunga., is helping to pro-
provide aviation support to
Marine units while serving
with the First Marine Air-
craft Wing at Danang, Viet-
nam.
His unit is a part of the
Third Marine Amphibious
Force. As a member of the
wing he also helps to sup-
port other U. S. and Alied
ground forces operating in
the republic.
His unit is also engaged in
a civic action program de-
signed to assist the Viet-
namese people in completing
self-help projects, such as
the building of wells, cul-
verts, small bridges and
schools. Equipment and ma-
terials are made available
through the Marine Corps
Reserve Civic Action Fund.
which
the
etc —-
during
insurance,
been paid
es,
have
leave.
Thursday night Mrs.
wellyn did resign and the
resignation was accepted,
subject to the above pelicy.
During the same meoeeting,
Emerson Stehman, science
teacher who also was on
sabbatical last year, made
overtures to the board to
learn whether or not he
could continue his leave to
accept a second year of
graduate work at the Univ-
ersity of Maryland.
The board granted him
the option of taking the
leave, if he so desires (bul
with no compensation during
the second year from Don-
Lle-
PAGE SEVEN
egal) but with the provision
that he still owes Donegal a
year of service as part oi
the obligation of the sabbati-
cal during the 1967-68 school
year.
Teachers in the Donegal
district are eligible for sab-
baticals if:
1. — They have been a
teacher for 10 years and
2. Have taught in the
Donegal District five years.
They receive 50 per cent
of their normal pay and
have an obligation to return
to the district as a teacher
for at least a year. Sabbatic-
als are granted for study,
travel or sickness. A second
sabbatical may be granted
after a seven-year interval.
In Washi
ton
Rural, Urban Jobs
Aim of Scott Bill
By US. SENATOR HUGH SCOTT
The Prouty-Scott Job Op-
portunities Act of 1968, which
I introdueed in
the Senate,
would provide
jobs in rural
areas and
cities where
unemployment
Is high.
My bill would
encourage pri-
vate employers
to train the Sen. Scoft
hard-core unemployed and help
States and local communities
create public service jobs for
those still unable to get work
in private business.
Progress Aerospace Enter-
prises, Inc., of Philadelphia is
one good example of how pri-
vate enterprise and Govern-
ment are currently working
together to ease hard-core
unemployment and severe pov-
erty. This is a new, private
firm established with the help
of Rev. Leon Sullivan, Board
Chairman of Opportunities In-
dustrialization Center, Ine., to
provide jobs in ghetto areas
and train the unemployed
people there to fill them. The
company manufactures highly
complicated parts for satel-
lites. Rev. Sullivan wrote a
very nice letter to me this
month about my efforts to help
him get a Federal grant of
$522,462 to help Progress
Aerospace train 100 ghetto
residents in the needed techni-
cal skills for permanent jobs
there.
Similar job opportunities
have been opened in other
ghetto areas in Philadelphia
by Mullin and Lonergan As-
sociates, Inc.; James G. Biddle
Co.; and the R.E.D.M. Corp.;
and in Pittsburgh by Con-
structors Jobs, Inec.; Zell
Brothers Inc.; and Elliott Co.
" Made In U.S.A.
Last month we won a viec-
tory for American products,
and for Pennsylvania in par-
ticular. I have been working
for many vears, with a fairly
good batting average, to get
Uncle Sam to spend more
Government money here at
home rather than buying
goods abroad.
The Federal Government
buys goods and services that
represent more than 10 per-
cent of our gross national
product, and I contend that
our money should be put to
use to help our own producers
and workers.
Back in July, 1962, I was
successful in having President
Kennedy intervene in a Gov-
ernment purchase of steel for
American vessels. Following
my request, the President di-
rected that a steel contract
be awarded to the lowest
American bidder rather than
to a foreign producer. A
month later, the Government
changed its interpretation of
the Buy American Act to re-
quire that more U.S. Govern-
ment contracts go to domestic
producers.
Recently I wrote to Presi-
dent Johnson urging a change
in Navy procurement policies
under which ships’ propellers,
which had previously been
purchased in the U.S. were
now being bought from Yor
eign suppliers.
I was concerned that con-
tinued buying of such items
abroad would lead to an ero-
sion of domestic sources and
put the Defense Department
at the mercy of foreign sup-
pliers. Then last month I got
a letter from the Navy telling
me it was changing its policy
and would purchase these
propellers from the Baldwin-
Lima-Hamilton Corp. of Phila-
delphia. i
Supreme Court
In the Senate Judiciary
Committee, on which I serve,
there was a good deal of con-
troversy over the nomination
of Justice Abe Fortas to be
Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court. Nothing that came up
during those turbulent hear-
ings caused me to doubt Justice
Fortas’ qualifications, or the
President's right to make the
appointment. Therefore, I an- |
nounced my support. 3
pers rep ism parm cnt A An sn
an mri
New Laws
The President this month
signed into law two bills which
I co-sponsored.
One would improve prison
systems. Inadequate correc-
tional systems sometimes re- |
turn to society criminals who |
are more hardened than they
were before they went to pris-
on. This law authorizes the
Federal Bureau of Prisons te
assist state and local govern-
ments in improving conditions
and rehabilitation programs in
their prisons.
The other would allow the
money which the Government
gets from the leasing of oil
and gas rights on the Outer
Continental Shelf to be used
for land and water conserva-
tion. This money will also help
finance the kind of park and
recreation projects which are
so important to Pennsylvania, :
It is fitting that Federal funds
obtained through one natural
resource can now be used to
conserve others.
Jets for Israel
Maj. Gen. Yitzhak Rabin,
Israel’s Ambassador to the
United States, was a guest on
my television and radio pro-
gram. We discussed Israel's
achievements and military
needs. Since the Six-Day War
of last year, the Soviet Union ;
has completely rearmed the !
Arab nations with highly !
sophisticated weapons and ad- |
vanced Russian jet fighters. |
Last month I asked the Presi-
dent to authorize the sale of
supersonic Phantom jets to
Israel to match the perform-
ance of Russian jets in Nas-
ser’s arsenal.
Drug Costs
I cosponsored a bill which
would require each state to
list by generic and brand
names the most frequently
prescribed drugs paid for un- :
der Federal-state medical and |
welfare programs. It would |
enable physicians to prescribe
the highest-quality, lowest-cost
drug available, and should
help to ease the financial bur-
dens of medical care, particu-
larly upon elderly citizens who
live on a fixed income. ,
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