The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 14, 1974, Image 1

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    THE
MOUNT
JOY
VOL. 73 NO. 49
alph M.Snyder
« De 3
Mount Joy,
Ln .
BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY'S ONLY NEWSPAPER
Songfest
The combined Senior
choirs of the East Fairview
and Chiques Churches of the
Brethren will present a
program of music for praise
and prayer Sunday, May 19,
7:30 p.m. at the Chiques
Church, located on the
Elizabethtown and Sun-
nyside roads.
The choir . of ap-
proximately 60 voices will
sing hymns and anthems.
The public is invited.
Art Students Plan
“Wizard Of 02"
With Hand Puppets
“The Wizard of Oz,” as
portrayed by hand puppets
by eight art students of Mrs.
James Phillips, will be given
on Saturday, June 1.
The students, ranging in
age from 9 to 17, have made
all their puppets and done all
the scenery.
The show is scheduled for
10 a.m. at the Phillips Studio
on Concord alley. In case of
rain, the performance will be
given in the basement of
nearby St. Mark’s United
church basement.
Auction May 23
Thursday, May 23,
Friendship Fire company
will stage its first annual
auction, beginning at 6 p.m.,
Ronald L. Alleman has
announced.
The company is in need of
merchandise — almost
anything from attics,
basements, garages — for
the sale. Items may be taken
to the fire house, where the
sale will be held, any evening
or Saturday.
HENRY G. CARPENTER,
5 Delta street, has been
given the highest award
Rotary International can
bestow upon one of its
members. Tuesday, May 8,
at the weekly luncheon
meeting of the Mount Joy
club, held at Hostetters,
Carpenter was presented a
citation making him a
Rotary Fellow. The award
was presented by Dr. David
E. Schlosser, local president.
May Queen
Victoria -Eichler
named May Queen
Donegal high' school last
week to reign over the
Olympic activities held that
day.
She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Eichler,
Mount Joy R1.
Patricia Greiner
Wins Prose Award
At Delaware U.
Patricia Greiner, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Greiner, Park Avenue, has
just been named winner of
the Diamond State Branch of
the national League of
American Pen Women’s
creative prose award for
1974.
was
at
The honor came for
Patricia’s short story,
‘Tomorrow and
Tomorrow,”’ which appeared
in the University of
Delaware Grover Magazine
for Spring, 1974. Patricia is a
junior at the college,
majoring in English and
drama.
Princess Pageant Voting
Opens At Three Locations
Voting for the Memorial
Day Princess Pageant,
which the Mount Joy Joycee-
ettes are sponsoring, began
May 10 and will continue
through and including May
27th.
Each penny contributed
will count one vote for the
contestant. Money collected
will be used to help finance
the summer playground
New Gym Construction
At Donegal High Begun
Construction of a new
auxiliary gymnasium for
Donegal high school has
begun!
The site was laid out last
week immediately east of
the present gymnasium and
trenches for footers have"
been dug.
To be a one-story struc-
ture, 50° x 150’ feet, it is
located apart from the
present building but within
about six feet of the present
wall. It will cover the outside
door from the boys’ locker
room.
Completion of the building
— of concrete block and
brick — is expected by the
end of the summer.
In the meantime, a
community-wide financial
drive is under way to raise
approximately $20,000.
Labor and materials also are
needed. Letters seeking help
have been issued throughout
the community and the
student body of D.H.S. is
being involved. ‘‘Shares’’ of
15 cents and 50 cents are
being issued. A 15-cent share
buys a brick, 50 cents a
block. The shares are ex-
pected to raise about $3,000.
The School Board ap-
proved committee
responsible for coordinating
the project — called DIG —
includes: Dr. William B.
Landis, president of the
organization; Dr. Harold H.
Fellenbaum, vice-president;
Donald W. Drenner,
‘secretary-treasurer; Walter
Price, coordinator of work
and materials, and John N.
Weidman, publicity.
Interested citizens who
want to become part of the
project may contact any of
the committeemen.
- Linda
programs at Sieler and
Grandview schools.
The following are the
stores in which the pictures
of the contestants will ap-
pear:
IGA - Susan Murphy,
Laura Summers, Trudy
Lynn Kelley, Kim Gainer,
Cindy Lee Heagy, Deborah
Hess and Lori Jo Grubb.
Hostetters Hardware -
Pennell, Maxine
Maxwell, Beth Ann Gainer,
Lori Sagerer and Tammy
Eberly.
Hy Lo - Joyce Lynn
Newcomer, Gina Thompson,
Sharon Gehman, Lisa Freed
and Julie Barnhart.
‘The Abused Child’
To Be Subject
Of Talk Tuesday
Speaking on the subject of
“The Abused Child,”
Stephen E. Sohonyay,
executive director of the
Lancaster County Bureau of
Children’s Services, will talk
in Mount Joy Tuesday night,
May 21.
His appearance will be
sponsored by the Mount Joy
Joycee-ettes and the public
is invited.
The meeting will be held in
the Borough building,
beginning at 7:30 o'clock.
Following Sohonyay’s
presentation, there will be an
open discussion and a
guestion and answer period.
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
MAY 15, 1974
TEN CENTS
Boro To Charge Each Dwelling
$12 Garbage Collection Fee
OPEN HOUSE
To Honor Betty Groff
Betty Groff, whose fame as an expert with Pennsylvania
Dutch food has made her an author, will be honored by the
Mount Joy Library on Sunday afternoon, May 26 with an
Open House.
To be held from 2 until 4, the Open House will give local
people an opportunity to have Mrs. Groff autograph her new
book, ‘Good Earth and Country Cooking,” co-authored with
Jose Wilson.
Copies of the book will be available and cookies and punch
will be served.
Ist & 2nd Grade Parents
Report In School Survey
Parents of first and second
grade pupils in Donegal
School District are being
asked to report ‘how well
they think the district is
performing.”
The community survey
was mailed last week and
responses are anticipated
before the end of this week.
The effort is being conducted
to find out conditions that
individuals in the district
believe should exist in the
schools.
Pupils and staff, also, are
to be surveyed this month.
The project is being done
by a sub-committee of
Donegal’s Right to Read
Advisory Council. The group
(Continued on Page 8)
Lutheran Church To Honor
Noah Klauss Sunday Eve
The senior choir of Trinity
Lutheran Church will honor
Noah Klauss, composer and
arranger, Sunday, May 19, at
7:30 p.m. when “A Night of
Music with Noah Klauss”
will be held in the church.
Klauss, a member of
Trinity Lutheran Church and
a resident of Elizabethtown,
retired in 1969 from the
Elizabethtown Area School
District, where he was
director of instrumental
musie. He began his
teaching career at
Elizabethtown in 1936 and
organized the school band in
1945.
The Sunday program will
include anthems Klauss had
composed for the choir to
sing during church services
and a number of in-
strumental compositions he
has written.
Recognition also will be
given to Mrs. Klauss, the
former Sylvia Edris Kreider,
who has adapted the text
from the Scriptures and has
written the words to a
number of her husband’s
compositions.
Klauss’ music will be
presented by the church
choir, under the direction of
H. Morrell Shields, by the
Mount Joy Community
Chorus, under the direction
of Miss Dorothy Schock, and
by a string quartet composed
of Carolyn Black, viola;
Jeanette Barnes, cello, Edna
Barnes, violin, and Stanley
Dotterer, violin.
Instrumentalists will be,
Miss Gloria Louise
Longenecker, flute; Shields,
clarinet and tenor
saxophone; Gordon
Brightbill, French horn, and
Dotterer, piano.
Miss Beulah Smith,
organist, will accompany the
church choir and Mrs. Carl
Bubacz, pianist, will ac-
company the chorus.
The public is invited.
Annual Biiling
Begins June 1
Mount Joy has a new and
drastically different or-
dinance governing collection
of garbage and refuse within
the borough.
Passed Monday night,
May 13, at the monthly
meeting of Borough Council,
held in the borough building,
the ordinance establishes for
the first time a levy for the
The full text of the
new, Mount Joy
Borough garbage and
trash collection or-
dinance is published in
this issue of the Bulletin,
beginning on page five.
routine removal of garbage
and rubbish. :
Each dwelling unit in the
borough home and
apartment — will be charged
$12 per year.
First billing will be June 1,
covering the period Jan. 1,
1974 to Dec. 31, 1974. Bills go
to property owners.
Payments may be made at
the borough office or at any
of the local banks.
The new law was passed
eight votes to one, Coun-
cilman George Groff casting
the single opposing ballot.
Totally, the new ordinance
will raise an .estimated
$20,000 annually, which is
about half the entire cost of
the service, it was pointed
out by the council. The levy,
which becomes effective at
once, will ease the borough’s
financial pressure for
handling refuse and gar-
bage. Costs have been
building up over a long
period but to date have been
absorbed by the Borough and
extended to the public as a
free community service.
Council faced passing either
the garbage fee or raising
the tax rate four mills.
Although the new or-
dinance sets out that only
four 20-gallon cans may be
handled per household per
week, a council spokesman
said that the number is
expected to be a ‘‘flexible’’
matter.
A family which normally
does notreach the maximum
should have no fear of being
charged extra ‘‘the week he
cleans out the garage’’ and
has ‘‘extra’’ trash, the
spokesman said.
It was explained that out-
of-town, independent trash
collectors are not excluded
from operating within the
(Continued on Page 8)