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Lebanon Daily News from Lebanon, Pennsylvania • Page 6

Location:
Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Co. Men Page 6 Lebanon Daily Lebanon, FHday, February 4,1968 Fisher, Reich Honored For 40 Years Of Service 1 Forty years of a man's life Is a long time, and when he spends forty years with the firm well, he deserves kind of recognition. Such was the case Thursday night when two employes of the Lebanon Bell Telephone Co. cited for forty years of continuous service at 'a dinner in the Pushnik's Restaurant. Receiving the honor were Harvey W.

Fisher, 1005 S. Third South Lebanon Township and Sylvester Reich, 11 David Drive, Lebanon. Both Fisher and Reich began their telephone careers with The Pennsylvania state Telephone Co. prior to Its acquisition by the Bell Co. of Pennsylvania.

When the latter began operations In Lebanon, both Fisher and Reich became employes. Ths two men are currently engaged in the telephone company's Installation department iA Lebanon. Fisher Is the father of a married son and daughter and Reich is the father of five grown children. dinner was attended by 24 fellow-employes of the Bell Telephone Co. who joined in honoring Fisher and Reich.

Doily NEWS Photo. 40 YEARS OF Morse, left, plant wire department chief of the Lebanon Bell Telephone presents pins to Sylvester Reich center, 11 David Drive, Lebanon and Harvey W. Fisher, 1005 -S. Third South Lebanon Township, in recognition of their .40 years of active service with the Lebanon Bell Co. Twenty-four fellow employes of the two men attended a dinner in Pushnick's Restaurant Thursday night in honor of the occasion.

To Note Youth Sunday In Hershey Churches Annville Rotary Hears Of Snowy Experience ANNVILLE, Feb. 4 Annville Rotary Club held its regular dinner meeting at the Green Terrace restaurant Thursday evening. Because of the weather conditions there was no regular program, but Carl Gacono filled in' for a speaker by relating some of his experiences while stranded for 48 hours on the Pennsylvania Turnpike during the snow-storm. James Karsnitz will be in charge of next week's program. The highlight will be the talk on Medicare by the director in charge of the Neffville Home.

Twenty four members attended last night's meeting along with guest Rotarian Walter Swanger- of Lebanon, and Frank Willman who was the guest of member John McClure. Hower presided, Adam M.iller Jed the singing and Ir vin Meyer gave the invocation, HERSHEY, Feb. 4 Youth unday will be observed in the Evangelical United Brethren Church this Sunday at the morning service. Eight young people will pre- ent sermonetts on eight differ- nt topics. Jerry Kling will be charge of the service.

Linda jecthaler will read the Scrip- ure and Bryan Dupler will offer he prayer. Sermonetts will include "Youth At Missions" by Luanne lurry; "Church Home," Connie 'reeland; "If Jesus Were Here Cassel Addresses Newmanstown Group NEWMANSTOWN, Feb. 4 Lawrence W. Cassel, director practical research for Witmoy er Laboratories, addressed the Newmanstown Lions Club at its Wednesday night meeting at the fire hall. Cassel spoke on the egg, its contents, and how to produce and market it.

The club had as its guests a number of farmers from the Newmanstown area, among whom were Ralph McCrone Richard McCrone, Curtis Phil lippy and Eugene Hoffman. The Rev. park Ranck also attended with ten visiting Lions. Elias UCC had election of con sjstory officers recently. Elect e4 were Leon Wartluft, presi dent; Harry Harper, vice pres iderit; Mrs.

Allison Strohm, sec retary; Lester Wise, financia secretary and Robert Shultz treasurer. Mrs. Gerald Swope is a pa tjent at the Reading Hospital. fouthTo Participate Wary Boy Of Month Named By Palmyra Club Steven Jeffrey Sharkey PALMYRA, Feb. 4 Steven Jeffrey Sharkey, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Allen J. Sharkey, 638 N. Chestnut Street, Palmyra has been Palmyra Rotary Club Boy of the Month, for February. -Steven, is a senior at the Pal myra Area High School where he has honor student for approximately five years.

He is a member of the student council and youth forum; big honor roll and football is also captain of the wrestling team. Steve was the 1965 Optimist Club's Boy of the Year He attends the Church of The Holy Spirit, Palmyra, and is a first class scout. in Person," George Baker "Parable of the Talents," Steve Nelson; "Ye are the Salt of the Earth," David Hart; "Parable of Two Builder Roxanne Showman; "The Meaning of Prayer," Greg Robinson; "Christian Love," Connie Campbell. 1st EUB Church The First Evangelical United Brethren Church will also ov- serve Youth Sunday at their Sunday morning worship services. Harry Eberly, student assistant pastor will be in charge bf the services.

Eberly will deliver the sermon at both morning worship services. At the 10:30 a.m. services Steve Coulter will giver the ser- monette to the children. Participating in the services will be Linda Lugar, Bonnie Brunner, Michael Hamilton Anita Meiser, Susan Dunkle Suzanne Hetrick, Neil Gearhart Tim Mark, Clifford Myers and Fasnacht. New Library Books Additions to the Hershey Pub ic Library received recently lave been released by Mrs Paul Heaps, Librarian, as: FICTION: "The Fifteenth Pel 'Mountain Man," "A Crack In The Sidewalk," "A Man From The "The Lockwood Con cern." NON FICTION: "Your Child and School," "Once More The Beginning," 'Enameling On Metal," "Th Age of Voltaire," "Best Plays of 1964 1965," "The Making 0 The American Theatre," "Th Making of A Mind," "Compu lonestown RD 2 Trailer Gutted By Fire ters," "Anatomy Of A Pheno menon," "Give Joy To Ms Youth." JUVENILE: "Mission To Mer cury," "John F.

Kennedy And The Young People of 'The Mouse and The Motor cycle," "The Ugly and "A Certain Small Shep herd." Kaigh's Booterie SHOE SALE Save up to Women's Flats Oxfords NOW Flats OO ww to 5.95 Women's Shoes $.99 FRENCH MODERNS VINERS COBBIES RED CROSS Were to 15.95 TO 8.99 OPEN TUESDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 9 P.M. Kaigh's Booterie 31 South Eighth Street Home Calendar Timely Reminders From The Pennsylvania State University College of Agriculture Water born Stains Abou 75 per cent of all spots an stains on fabrics are watei borne, according to a Nationa Institute of Dry- cleaning study This means such stains are di solved or suspended in water Water borne stains includ coffee, tea, soft drinks, alcoholi beverages, fruit and vegetabl juices, clear soups and mud. Underload Washer Whe clothes are crowded into a wash er water and detergent canno circulate freely through them point out Penn State extensio home management specialists. I the clothes don't have room move freely, some soil will loosened, but it won't have room to float away from them. A geri eral rule is to follow the manu facturer's recommendations fo loading the washer.

Underload ing will always give a clean'e wash than overloading. Cooking for One of Two I may be more economical to bu foods in smaller units than yo once did if you're cooking for one or two, reminds Louise Hamilton, Pcnn Slate extension nutrition specialist. An economy size box of cereal is- no bargain if half of it goes to waste before you can use it. Special recipes for one or two often give the amounts of ingredients to buy. And for good nutrition pay special attention to vitamins, and protein, and develop a meal plan that's easy for you to 'follow.

Budget is Personal A model budget doesn't exist; a budget is as personal as a toothbrush. A budget cannot prbduce miracles, but it can help a family manage its money before it is spent, says Mrs. Magdalene R. Foster, Pcnn State extension home management specialist. After handing a 11 a to a salesperson, the possibilities for managing it are limited.

tove Explodes JONESTOWN, Feb. 4 A ire set off by an exploding asoline stove, gutted one par of a double house trailer thre miles northwest of here abou :40 this morning. The trailer was occupied he family of Victor Nornhold ilvertown Road, Jonestown RD Firemen said the trailer used as a laundry and play area and was located adjacent another trailer in which th 'arnily lives. The living quarters were un damaged. Claude Wagner, assistant en iijeer of the Perseverance Fir lompany estimated damages a 53,000.

No injuries were report cd, however Nornhold, who wa home at the time, had his hai singed. Wagner said the pumper anker and squad truck from the Jonestown Fire Compan responded along with 25 me and junior firemen who wer out of school. Firemen were at the seen about an hour and a half befor returning to service at 11:0 a.m. Junker Hill Area Still Feels Effect )f Recent Snow BUNKER HILL, Feb. bout the hardest part of last weekend's snow storm was that he Lebanon Daily £Iews did not rrive in the Bunker Hill area ntil Tuesday evening.

One lady summed it up pretty well when she said "I just did lot know what to do Monday evening without the newspaper." There were no mail deliveries until Wednesday and only along main rqads thaT were open. Some people who forgot shovel away the mountains of snow at their mall boxes were passed by. The Bunker Hiil to Water Works road was opened to one ane traffic late Tuesday night, fifteen foot drifts estimated completely blocked this road ust a few feet west of Route in lome. The people from Mountville their cars around the Bunker Hill Church area so they were able to get out for work Late Wednesday night the equipment moved in and opened up the road leading to Mountville. There was some irony con nected with this particular road A call had been made to the late highway department and they promised to open the Mountville roads by Thursday A snow shoveling brigade wa formed consisting of Mr.

anc Mrs. Nick Vasil and their 1 year-old son, Mr. and Mrs. Rus sell D.emler, Bill Bender, Pau Rhen and three of his sons, Ron aid, Dennis and Thomas. The group worked non' sto; to free themselves from thei snow bound homes.

At 7:3 p.m. the weary snow shoveler broke through and had made path wide enough for a car pass. Just three hours later fiv pieces of heavy equipment open ed up the road. Folks who didn't get thei cars out by Saturday nigh were unable to get them ou afterward because of the hug drifts on all side roads. Ca pools were formed.

The extend ed school vacation was just fin for the school children, but the are anxious to go back becaus they realize this time must made up atthe end of the schoo term. Hear Milk Marketing Problems Of Dairymen By JOSEPH R. COYNE WASHINGTON (AP)' The Agriculture Department is earchirfg for an answer still xwsibly weeks or months away to a perplexing, milk mark- ting problem which is generat- ng heat among dairymen and awmakers in four states. At stake immediate is a con- inued milk marketing order for iroducers'who supply the Delaware Valley Southern New ersey, southeastern Pennsylvania and northern Delaware. But the ultimate decision could affect dairymen not only that area but also In Northern Sew Jersey and throughout Stew York State.

Ask For More Grains RAWALPINDI, a i a (AP) The Pakistani govern ment has asked the Unite States to supply an additiona 1.2 million tons of food grains offset the effects of the curren drought in West Pakistan, th Morning News reported today. Hold Htoringi (Home On Leave After 'WAVE Training Course based on the use made of the milk. Milk sent to market for fluid consumption, for example, commands a higher price so- called excess milk which is used ice cream, cheese and other dairy products. The New York-New Jersey order, on the other hand, is a marketwide pool. This means that all farmers sending milk nto the area, are paid a uniform price for their milk, regardless of use.

Since milk used' for fluid consumption commands a higher price than manufacturing milk, he price actually received by dairymen under the New York- Thus far, the department has gathered testimony which fills more than 4,500 pages and has received 84 exhibits. It held a public hearing in Philadelphia ate last year. Rased on that hearing, the mmediate decision by the department will affect directly only ths Delaware Valley Milk Marketing Order. But some pro ducers in New York and northern New Jersey are pressing for merger of the Delaware Valley order into the New York-New Jersey Order. The department, however, would have to schedule a new learing even to consider a merger of the two orders.

The current maneuvering be gan last May when the department announced it was consid ering ending the milk marketing order for Delaware Valley be cause of enforcement difficul ties. The order sets minimum pi-ices to farmers for milk dis tributed in the area. The next month, however, the department said it had received almost unanimous support in the area for continuing a federa milk marketing order and latei scheduled hearings on proposals to change it. As it now stands the Delaware Valley order is based on an indi vidual handler pool. This means that dairymen are paid for theii milk by the dealer they supply ONE MAN TURTLE David Bushnell built a crude one-man submarine in 1776 called the "Turtle." SPUD LOVERS The greatest eaters of pota toes are the people of the Re public of Ireland.

They consume 317 pounds per person pdr year CHURCH AND STATE The clergy in Spain are pai by the state. Jersey order represents a blend or average price between luid and manufacturing milk. And that's where the current criticism from New York and northern New Jersey arises. Producers there contend that some handlers in the Delaware Valley accept only enough milk to meet their fluid demands and refuse to accept excess production. They say this excess is then sent by the dairymen into the New York northern New Jersey area and lowers the blend price.

At present, Delaware Valley Producers receive between 4( cents and $1 more per hundred weight (46 quarts) than producers feeding the New York' New Jersey Market. The Interstate Milk Producer; Cooperative, which represents most Delaware Valley produc ers and is opposed to merger said union of the orders would reduce the price paid its dairy men by 50 cents per hundred weight and would increase the blend price under the New York-New Jersey order by onlj 6 cents. There have been reports the Delaware Valley dairymen would accept a marketwide po oling arrangement in their own area if they can't retain the present individual handler sys tern. A marketwide pool for Del aware Valley is one alternative under consideration by the Agri culture Department. Twelve House members from northern Pennsylvania, north ern New Jersey and New York in a Better to the department called' the present system "grossly unfair" and said the only solution is for a mark etwide pool, meaning merger.

Among those who have urge enforcement of the present Del aware Valley order- are Sens Joseph S. Clark, Hugh J. Caleb Boggs, and Rep. Thomas C. Me Grath, Nancy L.

Clay Seaman Nancy L. Clay, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin F. Clay, Mt.

Aetna, is home on a 14-day leave after completing 10 weeks of basic WAVE training at Bainbridge, Md. A 1965 graduate of Tulpchockcn High School, Bethel, she will report to the Naval Air Station at Glynco, to attend air controlman school. She enlisted through the local recruiting office for a three-year period. She Retired To Making Godey Dolls LAKEWOOD, N.Y. (UPI) Retired" is the same thing as re-treading a tire to Mrs.

Isabella Bugman, 67. She retired to Leisure Village here last year and turned to work bringing the famed Godey fashion prints of the ISOO's back to life in three dimentional reconstructions in materials of clothing of that day. Her shadow-boxed collector's items sell in such shops as Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman- Marcus. The price: well over $100 a set. The Godey dolls, as they are called, date back to Louis Antoine Godey, an American publisher of the 1800's, whose publications were the outstanding observers and reporters of the fashions of his time.

The Godey illustrations today serve as the authority on fine dress for the period. Mrs. Bugman starts her reconstructions with an original Godey print to which she pastes padding, fabrics and styles. The first patent for teeth in this country was' Issued in 1822 to C. M.

Graham. 170 Persons Attend Red Gross Chapter Has Safety Service Dinner HERSHEY, Feb. 4 About 170 persons attended the seventh annual Safety Services Recognition Dinner of the'' Harrisburg Area Chapter of American Red Cross held in Hummelstown Thursday evening. Dr. John Hershey, director of public affairs of the Hershey Estates and president of'the Milton Hershey School, received a certificate' of recognition as the representative of the Hershey Interests.

The certificate was awarded to thank the Hershey Interests for opening the Hershey pools for life saving and first aid training and for making the community center pool available for RESCHEDULE MEETING The Business and Professional Women's Club of Hershey, postponed its dinner-meeting scheduled for Wednesday to Tuesday evening at the Green Room of the Cocoa Inn. the use of disabled persons. Mrs. James Bogar, chairman of the Learn To Swim program of the Harrisburg area, presented the award. Also honored was Miss Barbara Eisenhauer, 15, daQghter of Mr.

and Mrs. 'Richard Eisenhauer, 371 Middletown Hershey. Barbara received a special recognition certificate for passing a lifesaving e's from Miss. Edna a teacher sponsor from M. S.

Hershey High School. Receiving other awards were the Hummelstown Ambulance the Pennsylvania State Police, and the American Can Co. Attending from Lebanon were Alice J. Herncan, David Lehman and Mrs. LcRoy Evans.

Mrs. Welch England and Mrs! Wilson Cake attended from Hershey. Mrs. Clyde Smith, chairman of records and awards, office of volunteers, was in charge of the awards presentation. For Personal See Daniel E.

Waiter SERVICE AWARD Dr. John Hershey, left, representative "of" Hershey interests, receives a service recognition certificate from Mrs. James Bogar, right, chairman of the Harrisburg area Chapter of the American Red Cross Learn To Swim program. Looking on is Miss Barbara Eisenhauer, 15, who received a special recognition certificate. The awards were presented at the Seventh Annual Safety Services Recognition Dinner in Hummelstown Thursday night.

A total of 170 persons attended the meeting. Contact An Independent Insurance Agent For COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE Is Your Insurance Agent Always Close-By? If you were involved in a crash at night in a strange town would your insurance agent be able to help you? He would be, if he's an independent agent. That's because an independent agent has 160,000 associates coast to coast who are ready to cooperate with him to give his clients help, at any time. An independent agent displays this seal. Better find out now if your insurance man does.

To make sure you have i i personal attention The Big Difference in insurance see us when you insure your car, home or business. As your local independent insurance agents, we're ready to give you service beyond the call of duty. Look for our Big Seal. Only an independent agent can display it. LEBANON ASSOCIATION of INDEPENDENT INSURANCE AGENTS Paul T.

Gingrich Samuel G. Kurtz Inc. Samuel F. Light Agency Daniel E. Walter Eugene Hoaster Inc.

Strickler Insurance Agency.

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About Lebanon Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
391,576
Years Available:
1872-1977