aaa AR WELL DRILLING (Continued from Page 1) does not include permission to build whatever pump house may be necessary if a suitable well is brought in. For borough pur- poses, a well short of 100 gallons per minute is not regarded as large enough to justify har- nessing. Determination of the capacity of the well to be drilled is the first objective of the Authority. When and if a satisfactory well is driven, then the matter of har- nessing will be explored. However, officials of East Donegal township have, Borough Manager George Ulrich said last week, agreed to clarify township zoning regulations which finally caused the drilling to be aban- doned on Union School road. It has been agreed that actual drilling of water wells in the township is not prohibited by zoning. However, erecting a pump building and installing ““‘rotating power equipment” is a matter in question. The quoted phrase above has been one of the principal stum- bling blocks in finding a way through the legal and emotional tangle which has surrounded the drilling attempt on Union School road. The Authority has now aban- doned all efforts on the first site, which belonged to Mrs. Nelson Sentz. The drilling and purchase options have expired and agreements with the drilling FAT OVERWEIGHT The Odrinex Plan can help you become the slim trim person that you would like to be. Odrinex has been used successfully by thousands all over the country for 14 years. Get rid of excess fat and live longer. Odrinex is a tiny tablet and easily swallowed. Contains no dangerous drugs. No starving. No special exercises. Odrinex Plan costs $3.25 and the large economy size $5.25. You must lose ugly fat or your money will be refunded. No question asked. Accept no substitutes. Sold with this guarantee at leading drug stores. 43-5 Dept. Store. EE ———————-— MRS. MAY Indian Reader and Advisor If you‘ve been praying for help, now you have found it. Mrs. May can help the sick and the ailing to remove all hard luck from your life. She will call friends and enemies by name and tell you who to keep away from. She will give you advice on love, marriage, business and health personal problems. Don’t compare her with any other reader you have ever consulted before. You may have heard of her in your local newspaper, radio or TV. She is known throughout the world as one of the foremost psychic readers of our time. 45 Years of experience in this kind of work. Palm, Card, Pow Wow Readings. You may come in person or call for appt. 273-4673. 9 A.M. to 10:30 P.M. Daily 576 E. Cumberland St., Lebanon, on Rt. 422, west around the corner of Hill’s company have been made to change the location of the motorized drilling rig. SCIENCE FAIR (Continued from Page 1) in physics — Jay Kopp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kopp, Mount Joy R2, was division champ with a study concerned with the fuel crisis. Jim Gerberich placed second, using mice in an underwater experiment, and Linda Stoltzfus claimed an honorable mention with a study of the efficiency of a light bulb. Kopp also won an engineering award from the U.S. Army and Gerberich received second honors from the Naval Institute and from the U.S. Navy. Dean Buchenauer, entered in the biology division, placed third for Donegal with a project in- vestigating the voices of frogs. Ramon Sell and Dennis Heller received both honorable men- tions in the division. Buchenauer also had a third award from the Medical Society and another in zoology from the U.S. Army. Other honors included: Larry Gilham won a U.S. Army award in the Behavioral divison; Kevin Earhart, an award in the U.S. Army botany competition; a math sciences award from the U.S. Air Forces by Deborah Bernhisel; an engineering sciences award from the Air Force by Michael Sweeney; William Hayman a sixth in General Science; Brenda Longenecker, a second place Civil Defense award; John Frey, a second place honor from the Chemical Society, and John Hayman, an honorable mention in general science. HONORED FOR SAFETY Daniel Sigman and Harry Thompson were among the employes for Pennfield Cor- poration who were honored recently at a company dinner, held at the Willow Valley restaurant. They were cited for outstanding safety records as truck drivers. 43-4p —- To make certain that your home is truly your castle. All you need is the money. Arrange a home repair loan now. EQUAL HOUSING LENDER MOUNT JOY, PA. April 4, 1973 SICO Foundation Names Four New Officers Dr. D.L. Biemesderfer, president of the SICO Foundation has announced four new ap- pointments, following a recent board of directors meeting. Dr. Harry K. Gerlach, deputy commissioner of Basic Education for the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania, and a director of the SICO Foundation, was elected vice president of the foundation. He will replace the late Dr. William E. Nitrauer. Arthur A. Hackman, director of the SICO Foundation; Raymond T. Rinehart, assistant manager of the oil burner division at SICO; and Edward W. Zercher, Jr., manager of retail marketing, were all appointed directors of the company. Dr. Gerlach has served as principal at Fulton Township, East Lampeter Township and Solanco Area Schools in Lan- caster county; and Spring City Schools in Chester county. He was assistant superintendent and superintendent of Lancaster county schools for 13 years. Before being named to his present post with the Penn- sylvania Department of Education last year, he served as Executive Director of Lancaster- Lebanon Intermediate Unit 13, GOLDEN WEDDING and as Assistant Commissioner for Basic Education and School Administration for the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania. Hackman joined the Board of the SICO Foundation in July, 1970. He had served as super- vising principal of the East Hempfield school district from 1937 to 1952, and retired as superintendent of the Hempfield school district in Landisville. Rinehart joined the company in 1941 as a clerk in the Mount Joy Office. After service in the U.S. Army during World War II, he rejoined the company as dispatcher. He was named assistant manager of the oil burner division in 1954, and service manager in 1970. He also serves as a director and secretary of the Rollman Manufacturing company. Zercher joined SICO in 1956. He has sérved in the data processing, burner, and sales departments. He has been retail sales manager and assistant general sales manager. He also is a director of the Modern Heat Council, as well as director, assistant treasurer and assistant secretary of the Rollman Manufacturing company. Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Brubaker The 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Jonas E. Brubaker, Mount Joy R1, was observed with a “drop-in” party at the home of Martin Brubaker on March 25. The party was planned by their five children. Mrs. Brubaker was the former Naomi S. Brubaker, daughter of Anna and Henry L. Brubaker of Neffsville. G.0.P. WOMEN’S COFFEE Ralph W. Hess, State Senator from the 28th District, will be the speaker at a coffee sponsored by the Women’s Republican Club of Lancaster County on Thursday, April 12, at 10:30 a.m. The event will be held at First English Lutheran Church, Columbia, Pa. and coffee, juice and homemade coffeecake will be served. The meeting is open to the public and reservations are requested by April 9 by calling the club at 29 North Prince Street, Lancaster, between9 a.m. and 1 p.m weekdays. Baby sitting will be available at no charge. They were married March 22, 1923 by Bishop Noah L.. Landis at the home of the bride. They are the parents of three sons and three daughters: Elizabeth (deceased); Jonas B. of Mount Joy RI1; Martin, of Mount Joy R1; Ruth, wife of William Yovanovich, Steelton; Naomi, wife of Robert Rowe, Guilford Road, Md.; and Ben of Manheim R4. The Brubakers have 20 grandchildren. TO SHOW NATURE FILM” Elizabethtown College is presenting the National Audubon Society film-lecture, ‘‘Com- municating with the Wild” on Thursday, April 5, at 8 p.m., in the Esbenshade Auditorium. Narrator for the presentation is the photographer, Tom Reed, who works in the Learning Research Center at West Chester State College. A graduate of West Chester, Reed is a former elementary teacher. UNION NATIONAL MOUNT JOY BANK MAYTOWN, PA. Mount Joy Bulletin - Page 9 Registration Dates Set for Kindergarten In Donegal District Registration and testing for children entering kindergarten in the Donegal School district the fall of 1973 will be held on April 24, 25, 26 and 27. Children must be five years of age on or before the first day of school (September 5, 1973) to enter kindergarten. Registration is by ap- pointment. Each parent will be notified by letter by April 10,11, or 12 of the appointment for his child. Parents not receiving an appointment should contact the nearest one of the following schools: Washington 653-1447 or Riverview 426-1561. Appoint- ments are approximately forty- five minutes. Each child will be given an entrance test by per- sonnel trained in administering the Gesell test. Parents should take with them the following: (1) a birth cer- tificate or notification from the state; and (2) a list of the child’s immunization shots. Parents of children entering grade one who have not attended kindergarten should contact the nearest school for an ap- pointment to register their child for testing and placement. These children must be six years of age on or before the first day of school (September 5, 1973) to enter grade one. Lancaster Catholic Hi To Give ‘L'il Abner’ Friday evening, April 6, when the curtain rings up on Lancaster Catholic high school’s production of ‘Lil Abnor,’ the audience may have to contend with a limping Daisy Mae. Monday morning, while per- forming show excerpts for the school, Daisy, played by Chris Glah, tripped in the dark during a scene change. Continuing in the tradition of ‘‘the show must go on,” Chris finished the program and was, afterwords, taken to the hospital where she was found to have sustained an undisplaced fracture of her left foot. Chris hobbled from the left to stage right, with crutches, during rehearsals this week but refused to carry the crutches on stage. She is determined that all must "continue as planned. The foot-stompin’ hilbilly musical is due to hee-haw its way onto the L.C.H.S. stage Friday and Saturday evenings at 8:00 p.m. and Sunday afternoon at 2:00 p.m. The show is under the direction of Miss Patricia Wallace with musical director _Romayne Bridgett, choreographer Sehila Audet, orchestration: Joseph McCaskey, and student directors Patti Glick and Ann Warfel. Balance in Snow Bank’ Mount Joy has, what you might say, a balance of $706.84 in the “snow bank.” That is how much money stands in the Mount Joy Snow Removal fund, now that it ap- pears the ‘‘snow season’’ for the past winter is safely behind. What has happened is that not one dollar was spent for snow removal during the winter season of 1972-73 and all moneys collected have been added to the balance from the year before to make the $706.84. George Ulrich, borough manager, who is treasurer of the fund, noted this week that $96.84 was in the fund as of January 1, 1973 and that $610 was received from businesses, individuals, the Chamber of Commerce and the Merchants Association. The hummingbird can beat its wings 80 times each second.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers