The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 01, 1969, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
Subject:
Miss Nancy Schlosser,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
David E. Schlosser, and her
college roommate, Miss Cyn-
thia Powell, from Boston,
Mass., are currently touring
Europe on a long-dreamed-of
two months vacation. They
flew to Iceland and on to
Luxemburg, where they
rented a car for the duration
of the trip. By avoiding the
large cities and staying in
the small towns, they have
enjoyed the true beauty of
each country. Their itinerary
has included Paris, France,
the Meditteranean; the Rivi-
era; Florence and Milan,
Italy; the Alps in Switzer-
land; Austria; Munich. The
Gctober Fest, which com-
pares to our farm fairs here
in the U. S., was particularly
enioyed by the girls. Copen-
hagen, Denmark, the Nether-
lands, and London, England,
concluded their journey.
Nancy will be starting her
third year of teaching at St.
Margaret's in Tappahannock,
Va., which is an Episcopal
Girls School.
®
Miss Debbie Wolgemuth,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Wolgemuth, is teach-
ing and studying at Vander-
bilt University in Nashville,
Tenn., where she is majoring
in Biology with a specializa-
tion in genetics and evolu-
tion. Debbie graduated last
June from Gettysburg college
and was awarded a teaching
fellowship at Vanderbilt.
She also lectures and directs
laboratory study at the
University.
* * *
Dr. Robert F. Eshleman,
Mount Joy R2, professor of
sociology on sabbatical leave
from Franklin and Marshall
College, has just returned
from Scotland where he was
a Visiting Research Associate
at the University of Glasgow.
He participatedin a prelim-
inary cross-cultural study of
social change, social mobili-
ty, and health in the Depart-
ment of Preventive Medicine
in the Medical College of the
University. Dr. Eshleman al-
so visited the University of
Zurich in Switzerland, and
the Worldd Health Organiza-
tion in Geneva in his work.
= w» #
The two fourth grade clas-
ses at Seiler, with teachers
Miss Irene Heisey and Mrs.
Emma Good, held a break-
fast in their room last Thurs-
day morning. The well plan-
ned nutritional breakfast in-
cluded orange juice, fruit, a
variety of breads (white rai-
BY NANCY NEWCOMER
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
PEOPLE!
|
sin, and whole wheat), milk
and 7 dozen eggs.
* * w
Eight local men spent a
three day weekend hunting
for deer with bow and arrow
last week end in Centre
County. No hits, but near
misses were reported by the
following: Dave Martin, Tim
Moran, Bill Grove, Pat Mor-
an, Gene Newcomer, William
Bitzer, Don Yingst, and Jeil
Robinson.
* * *
Miss Dorothy Weiser, 588
Wood Street, arrived home
Sunday from a 16-day tour
of Alaska.
* * *
Harry F. Brooks, sergeant
in the USAF security service
and the son of Mrs. Thelma
M. Bowman, 739 West Main
street, has been spending a
few days in Mount Joy be-
fore going to his new assign-
ment with the 6917 Security
Group at Brindisi, Italy
Harry served for the past
two years in northern Japan
in the town of Misawa and
while there visited the Phil-
ippines, Vietnam, Thialand,
Malaysia, Cambodia, Austria-
lia, New Zealand, American
Samao (Pago Pago), Hawaii
and Wake Island.
While in Japan Harry also
visited with Jeff Brown of
Mount Joy, who was station-
ed with the Navy in the
Philippines and Tom Tripple,
who was recovering from
wounds suffered while in ac-
tion in Vietnam. He also
spent some time with Wil-
liam Leggett, a college friend,
who is teaching English at
the Lutheran Boys school in
Kumamoto in Kyushu. While
in the U. S., he also visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Lally in
Detroit and other friends in
South Carolina and Washing-
ton, D.C., and planned to vis-
it Oct. 2-5 in Paris, France,
with a pen pal of college
days, Miss Maria Lucchi
Claude.
TO MAKE ORNAMENTS
Women of the Trinity Lu-
theran church will have a
session for making Christmas
tree ornaments at 1 p.m. on
Monday, Oct. 6 at the church.
ALL PURPOSE
3-IN-ONE OIL
Oils Everything
Prevents Rust
REGULAR — OIL SPRAY — ELECTRIC MOTOR
Roros (ry Soc...
[ Here LIFE EASIER
by Barbara Bee
Women’s Home Consultant
Bruner division of Calgon Corporation
If it took you all summer to slim down to a comfortable “at
the pool” figure, plan this year to keep in shape all year long.
Start a fall program of keeping away those excess inches that
seem to accumulate during the
winter. Continue to take walks
{not rides) to
the grocery
store. Put on
an extra sweat-
er and keep
up the bike
trips to see the
leaves change
into a lovely
new season.
Work off spe-
cial meals by
swimming at indoor pools at
local Ys or health centers. Not
only won't you have to crash
diet next summer, but you will
maintain a trimmer and health-
ier all-around look.
¢
If you have ever had the
problem of removing the first
piece of brownies or sheet cake
after baking, line one edge of
the pan with a strip of alum-
inum foil leaving a little extra
4
Barbara Bee
to hang out as a tab. Lifts out
in seconds!
®
Would you like to save 100
or more hours of housework a
year? (You're right, it is a
silly question.) Well, you can
save just that and use less
soaps and detergents. The se-
cret is conditioned water. It
leaves clothes and dishes clean-
er with less soap and leaves no
soapy film or water spots.
Think of it—no awful bathtub
ring! Now that alone is surely
worth it!
Removing chewing gum from
clothing is no longer a sticky
problem. One of our readers
suggests freezing the gum with
an ice cube and then crumbling
the gum away. For small cloth-
ing articles, just put it into
vour freezer compartment for
a half hour and then break the
gum away.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1969
Emergency Medical MEMO - Mount Joy - 1969
Calls
Sunday
Dr. Thomas O'Connor
NEW ARRIVALS
Thomas E. and Yvonne
(Culhane) Watson, 927 West
Main Street, a son, Wednes-
day, September 24 , at the
Lancaster St. Joseph’s hos-
pital.
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Richard
Dillinger, Riyadh, Saudi, Ar-
abia, announce the birth of
a son on Sept. 7. The grand-
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
J. Richard Dillinger, of 325
West Donegal Street, Mount
Joy. Their son and family
will be returning to U. S. A.
in 1970, after completing an
overseas assignment for Ray-
theon Co., Burlington, Mass.
Richard A. and Sharon
(Stoner) Brown, 31314 East
Main street, a daughter, on
Monday, Sept. 29, at the St.
Joseph’s hospital.
Tommy and Virginia
(Bing) Clapsadle, Mount Joy
Rl, a daughter, Tuesday,
Sept. 30, at Columbia hospit-
al.
TT Sg
@ FOOTBALL ©
ao.a
Friday, October 3
Hempfield at E-town N
Manheim (Cent. at Ephrata N
Saturday, October 4
Cocalico at Donegal
Columbia at Manheim Twp.
W L T
Cones. Valley 3
Manheim Central .. 3
Columbia .:..".. 3
East Hempfield .... 2
Warwick... ..... 2
Fphrata .... . ..'8
Elizabethtown ..... 2
Donegal .......... 1
Manheim Twp 1
Solanco 0
Cocalico ..+... .... 0
ine winnie
HH WWNNN OO
COCO OO HOO
Friday's Results
Manheim Cent 6, Warwick 6
Saturday’s Results
Columbia 53, Cocalico 12
Conestoga Val. 8, Donegal 6
Hempfield 29, Ephrata 26
E.town 16, Manheim Twp. 8
de IN
UNIFORM
a
IN VIETNAM
Radio Seaman Apprentice
Wayne M. Kolbeck, USN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John C.
Kolbeck of Mount Joy is
serving at the U. S. Naval
Support Activity in Danang,
Vietnam.
The Danang support activi-
ty is the Navy's largest over-
seas shore command. It pro-
vides logistic support to
more than 190,000 Free
World forces in the five nor-
thernmost provinces of Viet-
nam.
NSA sailors move thous-
ands of tons of cargo each
month to fighting men from
the Demilitarized Zone to
Sa Huynh, 120 miles south
to Danang. This includes ev-
erything from mortar shells
and amphibious tractors to
aviation gasoline and dog
food for sentry dogs.
The meeting of the Auxil-
iary to the Manheim Sports-
men will be held on Thurs-
day evening, Oct. 2, at the
Rifle Range at 7:30 p.m.
SAFETY
PAYS
1—Seriously
consider the installation of curs
on West Main street through the Florin ward.
y Continue improvements of Wood Street, re-
constructing one or two of the sections re-
maining after the 1968 project.
3—Buy and regularly use a borough-owned
street sweeper.
4. —Press for
borough ordinances.
completion of the
codification of
5.—Enlarge the “Music in the Park” project.
6.— Start now to provide more water for our
community,
cooperating
and participating
with any agency which is interested in such
a project.
7.—Improve the quality of water supplied by the
municipal water system.
8.— Press for improvement on Manheim street
between Mount Joy and the site of the new
230 Bypass interchange, including the drain-
age problems in the area of the Little Chiques
creek bridge.
9—Take steps to insure
that property within the
borough has fire plugs located within reason-
able protection ranges.
10.—Encourage public and/or private capital to
launch a tourist
attraction which will put
Mount Joy “on the map.”
Eight Girls in
Eight Donegal high school
senior girls have been nomi-
nated for Donegal Home-
coming Queen.
One of the eight will be
crowned prior to the Donegal
- Solanco football game Sat-
urday afternoon at D.H.S.
The girls include:
Claudia Brady, Rebecca
Reinhold, Rebecca Shoemak-
er, Patricia Longenecker,
Carol Greider, Terry Ginder,
Suzanne O’Connor and Shar-
GeoBroske Wins
Scholarship
George F. Broske, II a
senior at the University of
Delaware, has been awarded
a merit scholarship from the
Presser Foundation. The sel-
ection was made by the fac-
ulty of the music department
at the university.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. F. Broske, Mount Joy,
he is a piano major, and is
a member of the Symphonic
Band and the accompanist
for the Concert Choir. He
will also be working as a
teaching assistant in theory,
involving clerical assistance,
tutoring, and -classroom
teaching, and plans to do
graduate work in this field
next year.
Queen Race
on Arnold.
Crowning of the new
Homecoming Queen will be
done by Sherry Drager, who
was 1968 Queen.
Other activities Saturday
will include Alumni hockey
and soccer matches Saturday
morning at 10 o'clock, An
alumni dance at the Beahm
junior high school and a
Homecoming dance at the
Donegal high school gym.
Donegal Grid Card
Oct. 4—Cocalico, Home
(Homecoming)
Oct. 11—Columbia, Home
Oct. 18—Solanco, Away
Oct. 25—Warwick, Home
Nov. 1—Manheim Central
Away*
Nov. 8-—E-town, Home
Nov. 15—Manheim Twp.
Away
* _ 8:00 p.m. game
All other games are at 2
Donegal Braves
Oct. 4—Elizabethtown at
Elizabethtown H. S.
Oct. 12—Elks (Home)
Oct. 19—Ephrata at Ephrata
High School
Oct. 26—Manheim Twp.
(Home)
Nov. 2—St. Anthony (Home)
p.m.
MOUNT JOY AREA
FARM FOR SALE
] You will pardon us for being a little proud. We
think we are offering the best value in Farm Property
that is being offered for sale in Lancaster County.
This 96 acre farm consists of 86 acres of highly
productive crop land and 10 acres
of excellent pas-
ture with a spring and stream. The barn has 39 stan-
chions, several box stalls,
five ton Steel Grain Bin, two Silos, a
an Acorn Barn Cleaner, a
12x18 Milk
House and a 39'x52’ Pole Barn.
TWO BRICK HOUSES
with modern facilities,
one with 9 rooms and bath, the other with 7 rooms
and bath.
AS AN INVESTMENT PROPERTY
The boro water line runs the full length of the
farm. The boro sewer line reaches to within 200 ft.
of the property and adjacent property is being devel-
oped.
Its new owner will surely be richly rewarded
for his foresight in purchasing this farm.
For More Information Call
CLARENCE LYONS
OFFICE: 397-7741
GARDEN SPOT
250 North Duke Street
AT HOME: 569-9675
REAL ESTATE
Lancaster, Pa.
28-1c¢
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