The Menu D.H.S. & JH. HIGH SCHOOL Friday, Sept. 15 Fish or Meat sandwich French fries Creamed slaw Watermelon Milk %* %* # Monday, Ser/. 18 Barbecue sandwich Corn in butter sauce Lettuce salad with French dressing Chilled peaches Milk * He * Tuesday: Sept. 19 Whipped potatoes & gravy Candied carrots Roll and butter Fie h fruit Milk * * fe Wednesday, Sept. 20 Shifter sandwich (lettuce, tomato, cheese) Celery and carrot stix Peas in butter sauce Spice cake Milk meat and * * * Thursday, Sept. 21 School-made Pizza Pie Tossed salad with French dressing Roll and butter Chilled fruit Milk ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS Friday, Sept. 15 Fish or meat sandwich French fries Creamed slaw Watermelon Milk * * * Monday, Sept. 18 Barbecue sandwich Corn in butter sauce Lettuce and cream dressing Chilled peaches Milk * * If You Would Write - - Would you like to write to your state or federal repre- sentatives in Harrisburg or Washington? Here are their addresses: FEDERAL Sen. Hugh D. Scott, Room 260, Senate Office Building, Washington, D. C.. 20515, Sen. Richard S. Schweiker, Room 4317, Senate Office Building, Washington, D. C., 20515. Rep. Edwin D. Eshleman, 416 Cannon House Office Bldg, Washington, D. C., 20515. STATE Senator Richard A. Snyder, Box 21, State Senate, Harris- burg, Pa. 17120. Rep. Jack B. Horner, 23-A S Market St., Elizabethtown 17022. NATIONAL BROADCASTING CO. «Julian Goodman, President 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York, N. Y. 10022 COLUMBIA BROADCASTING CO. Charles Ireland, President 51 W. 52nd Street New York, N. Y. 10022 AMERICAN BROADCASTING CO. Elton Rule, President 1330 Avenue of the Americas New York, N. Y. 10022 The Mount Joy BULLETIN 11 EAST MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY. PA. 17552 Published Weekly on Wednesdays Except Fourth of July Week and Christmas Week (50 Issues Per Year) Richard A. Rainbolt . Editor ¢ ~ and » log Publisher =e Advertising rates upon request. Entered at the post office at Mount Joy, Penna., as second class mail under the Act of March 3, 1878. at School Tuesday: Sept. 19 Donegal meat loaf Whipped potatoes & gravy Candied carrots Roll and butter Fresh fruit Milk * * * Wednesday, Sept. 20 Cream tomato soup Meat sandwich Celery and carrot stix Applesauce Milk * * # Thursday, Sept, 21 Baked macaroni & cheese Peas in butter sauce Sliced tomato and lettuce Spice cake with peanut butter icing Milk % Council Studies (From page 1) property owners in the bor- ough who still are not con- nected to the public sewer system. Two have taken per- mits to do the work but have not connected. All are to be given notices by the borough attorney. —A request for additional street lights on Union School Road was delayed for study at the time of budget making. — proposal was made to remove the one 12-minute parking meter at the west side of the post office— on the grounds that parking there poses a traffic problem to trucks. Any action was lost for want of a second to the motion, —Three members of the Friendship Fire company ap- peared to hear determina- tion of a bill for installing lights at the fire house. Pre- viously, a request for ‘“con- sideration” of the bill by the firemen was tapled by council pending receipt of further in- formation. Council said Mon- day, “We now think the lights are fine”. The bill for $76.43 was ordered paid. —Borough Council was in- formed by its lawyer tBat, as the case was presented to him, the borough is prohibit- ed from making a contribu- tion to the proposed medical building. —The attorney further re- ported that a proposal to use the relatively inactive “poor coal funds” for proposes of donations to other causes isn’t permissable. —Approval was given to a subdivision project along Sas- safrass alley between Jacob & High streets, A proposal to erect a 43’x64’ steel building on land previously owned by the Penn Central railroad was given, pending investigation of water and sewer requirements. The building would be an annex to the Leaman Tire company & located immediatedy south of the present business. —Approval of a second sub division matter was delayed at the east edge of the boro where Patrick Industries pro- poses to establish a manufac- turing plant along Eby Chiq- ues road. —Council approved a “dou- ble” payment of yearly dues to the state borough’s associa- tion. During the flood, serious damage was done to the or- ganization’s headquarters in Harrisburg. Annual dues are $155. The association asked for a second similar amount to help pull itself out of an esti- mated $75,000 damage situa- tion. —Police Chief J. Bruce Kline, in the absence of Clark Berrier, gave the mayor’s monthly report, STEAM LOCOMOTIVE On Aug. 9, 1831, the first locomotive made a run be- tween Albany and Schenect- ady, N. Y. EARTH ORBITER On May 15, 1963, Maj. Gor- don Cooper orbited the earth 22 times. : Offer Free Adult Classes Free adult education cours- ese for those people who may have dropped out of high school or failed to get their high school diploma are to be offered this fall, sponsored by the Intermediate Unit 13. Even those people who may want to improve their read- ing, arithmetic, science, social studies or English skills are eligible. ; Classes will be held even- ings from 6:30 until 10 p.m. it is announced by Gene New- comer. Those interested who live in the Manheim area may at- tend classes at Raybestos-Man- hattan, Inc, 123 Stiegel St., Manheim on Tuesdays, begin- ning Sept. 19, In the Mount Joy and Eliz- abethtown areas, those inter- ested may attend at the Mt. Joy Vo-Tech school Mt. Joy R2, on Mondays and Wednes- days beginning Sept. 18. Classes are different from traditional high school, Cours- es are operated on an individ- ual basis and students are competing only with them- selves and not with anyone else in the class, There are special classes for those who can not read and for those who can not speak or understand English. Registration may be made by reporting to one of the classes or by calling Newcom- er 653-5701, for additional in- meeting of the American As- CONTROL Every man who drives a race car is aware of what the slightest little slip can mean when he is speeding toward victory at over 100 miles an hour. Our everyday emotions pose a similar threat. When the emotions of anger or frus- tration cause us to act haphazardly instead of using the necessary control learned from experience, we may go into a spin from which we cannot recover, and we may lose that particular race. We need strength to participate in the race of life, but with- ourselves enormously. 1970, a 90- in the On August 7, day cease fire began Mid-east. Congress created the U. S. War Department on Aug. 7, 1789. On August 7, 1942, United States Marines landed on Guadalcanal. On June 30, 1862, Gen Mec- Clellan defeated Stonewall Jackson at Oak Swamp, to MOUNT JOY § Take one phone call (or coupom below), add hostess with baskets of gifts and information about the city, stir in genuine hospitality, and you'll have a generous and delightful welcome, Just phone $ ~, 1 wi * A RTOs So or rvmationad oF Louise Mumper 367-7728 WELCOME NEWCOMERS! i Use this counon to let us know you're § here. i % Name. ee a Address} § City i i% [J Please have the Welcome Wagon | Hostess cali on me [J 1 would like ta subscribe te the i #8 [1 | already subscribe to the FH out coupon and mall te Circulation i % ept., RE RR SER RES SF RS Ta Sh ¥ Weaver of 72 South Henn WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1972 EDITORIALS Factories Help Tax Probjem As huge, yellow mechanical caterpillars roll slowly back and forth across a field at the east edge of Mount Joy borough, trailing plumes of brown Lancaster county earth, the community can see the beginning of another phase in the continuing devel- opment of this community. The mechanical monsters ground for Mount Joy's Thie one will belong to are preparing the newest industrial plant, Parkwood Homes, Inc., an Indiana firm which is taking its first expansion step into the Eastern market. Where corn, wheat and tobacco have grown for many years—in recent times under the ownership of J. Roy Breneman—now will be located a big manu- facturing building which will “grow” mobile housing units for a wide area of this part of the nation. When ground was broken, it was hoped by the management that manufacturing would begin by November 1. But, at present that target looks very optimistic, What impact the new industry will have upon the community is still unpredictable. Development of the area will make a very size- able increase in the value of the property and that change will be reflected on the tax rolls of the bor- ough and the school district. For example, despite steeply increasing costs on all sides and a public financial pressure never before experienced in this community, Mount Joy Borough has had minimum real estate tax increases. Why? One reason is that in recent years the community has had a sizable growth of industrial property. These plants located in the borough and in the school district have added greatly to the area’s eval- uation and have helped to soften the already too- heavy tax burden upon property owners. How previous industrial development has affect- ed and how it will continue to affect the community still is in the making. But, one thing is certain. These new plants have helped greatly to lighten the tax bite upon the loc- al community and school district. The Parkwood Homes development and the pro- posed further expansion on the same site will have the same effect as the Indiana firm pours thousands and thousands and hundreds of hundreds of thous- ands of dollars into the project—raising the valua- tion and upping the tax contribution to the local municipalities. DISSOLVE Do you sometimes feel that your life is a continual out self-control we handicap process of problem solving? When you find the solution to one problem, another immediately presents itself. In the field of human dynamics, ‘it is often more im- portant to find the cause than to try to solve each prob- lem separately. It is true that we are often our own worst enemy. If you have an ideal or goal you wish to achieve, look to see if you are throwing up your own roadblock. Your shortcut of success is to dissolve self-defeat! OPTIMISM pine There are some persons who are optimistic simply because they choose to be that way. The cynic may ask, “Why should I be optimistic? What is there to be optimistic about?” The answer is we must choose to be optimist because any other path may lead to quiet desperation. It is possible ao be aware of the seriousness of personal or world problems, but at the same time express optimism about the outcome. Good anwers come with the blending of awareness and opti- mism. MOVEMENT ; A lover of nature invariably draws comparisons be- tween what he beholds in nature, and what he finds in the nature of man. While walking the banks of a rap- idly flowing brook, he can observe places where the water rushes. tumbling noisily, or places where it is flowing easily into deep pools filled with quiet serenity which nevertheless are still moving. Isn’t this the way our lives move? Sometimes we rush or tumble along in confusion, perhaps enjoying the flow and move- ment. But we should also seek times of quietness in the certainty that nothing stagnates where there is movement. WCTU CONVENTION The 88th Annual Conven- tion of the Lancaster County Women’s Christian Temper- ance Union will be held in the Church of the Brethren, Clay and Hoover streets, Mount- ville on Wednesday, Sept. 13. There will be a morning and afternoon session with a box lunch at noon. David Grimm from the Pa. Council on Alcohol Problems will be the speaker, Mrs. Dun- dore, state president; also will attend. Anybody needing transpor: tation may contact Mrs. C. Be man street, of the Manheim area. Registration will start at 9 a.m, UNION VICTORY On July 5, 1861, Union Brig. Gen. Nathaniel Lyon stopped Confederate Coy Franz Sieg- el’s advance near Carthage Missouri. The design for the White House was a contest sponsor- ed by the federal government and won by James Hoben, who was awarded a $500.00, , prize.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers