Page 10 — SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN Girl Scout news The fourteenth annual meeting of the Penn Laurel Girl Scout Council was held on Tuesday, April 15 at the Sheraton Harrisburg Inn, New Cumberland. Regis- tration began at 6 p.m.; dinner was served at 6:30 p.m. The meeting was open to every adult and Senior Girl Scout member of the six-county council. Guest speaker for the meeting was Dr. Frederick D. Holliday, Superintendent of York City School Dis- trict since July 1974. Pre- viously, Dr. Holliday had served as Deputy Superin- tendent of Schools in Ann Arbor, Michigan, as Assist- ant to the Superintendent of Schools in Philadelphia, and as Principal of both Gratz Senior High School and Gideon School. He re- ceived his Doeteorate from Harvard University, his Mas- ter’s and Baccalaureate De- grees from Temple Univer- sity. Dr. Holliday’s topic was “How We Can Help Girls To Grow - For What?” Mrs. Kenneth Pryor of Waynesboro, council vice president, presided at the business meeting which in- cluded election of officers, members of the board of directors and nominating committee, and delegates to the National Council Meet- ing to be held in Washington, D.C. in October, 1975. Mrs. Pryor and Mr. Tom L. Wolf of Lancaster, Treasurer, gave the Stewardship Re- port of the Board of Direc- tors; and Mrs. Pryor and Mrs. John D. Hesselbein, Executive Director reported on council plans for 1976. The meeting opened with a Pageant of Flags pre- sented by Senior Girl Scouts and showing the history of the American Flag. The Reverend Charles W. Keller, Jr. of Fayetteville offered the invocation. The closing was a pre- view of the Opera “Daisy” presented by the Lancaster Opera Workshop, Frederick Robinson, director. The Penn Laurel Girl Scout Council and the Lancaster Opera Workshop will pre- sent the opera in the spring of 1976 at the Fulton Opera House in Lancaster. “Daisy” iS a contemporary opera based on the life of Juliette Gordon Low, founder of Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. Participants in the preview of the opera were: Yvonne A. Robinson as ‘‘Daisy,” Michael Widlake as Sir Ro- bert Baden-Powell; Joan Betty as Lady Warwick; with Helen Buss as piano accompanist. LANNE IEP RSET PR OIRIOD Mrs. Fred Joost, 840 Hill- aire Road, Lancaster, has been appointed District Campaign Chairman for the Penn Laurel Girl Scout Fam- ily Campaign in the council’s Witness Tree District. Mr. John A. Synodinos, Lancaster County Chairman for the campaign announces that Mrs. Joost will chair the campaign in the north- western area of Lancaster County which includes the communities of Manheim, Mount Joy, Elizabethtown, Landisville and Columbia. The Girl Scout Family Campaign gives parents and friends of Girl Scouts an opportunity to provide fin- ancial support so that Girl Scout programs can con- tinue to grow and to reach more girls. Saturday, May 3rd will be Girl Scout Fam- ily Day when campaign workers will be visiting all Girl Scout families. Assisting Mrs. Joost in the selection of campaign workers are: For Stiegel Rose Neighborhood - Mrs. Guy Muth, 222 E. High St., Manheim; For Donegal Neighborhood - Mr. Robert Kline, 567 N. Angle St., Mount Joy; For Elizabeth- town Neighborhood - Mrs. R. W. Saunderson, Jr., Box 411, R. D. 4, Elizabethtown; For Hempfield Neighbor- hood - Mr. William Grove, 175 Farm Lane, Landisville; For Riverview Neighbor- hood - Mr. Gary Peters, c/o National Central Bank 345 Locust St., Columbia. A meeting of the Witness Tree Campaign committee will be held Monday, April 28 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Mark’s United Methodist Church, 27 E. Main St., Mount Joy, to kick-off the campaign and prepare for the May 3rd Girl Scout Family Day. Pioneer Aux. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Pioneer Fire Company of Marietta, will be selling chicken corn soup at the Fire Hall on Saturday, April 26, starting at 11 in the morning. Customers are asked to bring their own containers. PARSE TO MEET A meeting of PARSE (Pennsylvania Association of Retired State Employees) will be held at 2 p.m. Thurs- day, April 17 at St. Matt- hew Lutheran Church, 700 Pleasure Road, Grandview Heights, Lancaster, Pa. Pleasure Road may be reached from Route 23, at end of RCA parking lot or from intersection of Routes 222-501 going to or com- ing from the Lancaster Shopping Center, at two Gas Stations. Interested persons are in- vited to the meeting and bring along a Retired friend or more. (Continued from page 1) Some local businessmen expressed the opinion that the proposed ordinance was too restrictive in requiring merchants to provide park- ing space in the rear of their stores. "The effect of the new restrictions, they said, would be to force stores to move outside of town. An exodus of stores from Give yo |’ 2 sha NN Wa Feeds 5,000 5q Iron added for Zoning ordinance downtown Mount Joy to the outskirts would spell the end of the business dis- trict in Mount Joy, similar to the end of downtown Lancaster. So, the general outcome of the Bulletin’s survey was that most people in Mount Joy didn’t know or didn’t care about the proposed new zoning ordinance. Of eener Lawng the small number who did know and who did care, the majority were opposed to the proposed ordinance. DEATHS Mrs. Edward E. Forry, 24, R. D. 1, Mount Joy, at Her- shey Medical Center, April 8. AGWA ur lawn nothing but the best. Greenlawn Plus and other fine =4 lawn products from Agway. Professionally formulated GREENLAWN PLUS e lightweight, easy to handle, easy to store e easy to apply e nonburning when used as directed e extra iron for a rich, green lawn (86-4266, 67, 68) 23 Ibs. covers 5,000 sq. ft. 46 Ibs covers 10,000 sq. ft. $14.45 69 Ibs covers 15,000 sq. ft. $19.45 GREENLAWN PLUS WITH BROADLEAF WEED KILLER e controls chickweed, other broadleaf weeds (86-4336, 7) 23 Ibs covers 5,000 sq. ft. $9.45 46 Ibs covers 10,000 sq. ft. $18.45 7.45 April 16, 1975 BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ben- der, (Claire Thome) R. D. 2, Mount Joy, a son at Osteo- pathic Hospital, April 6. 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