Hershey News 1959-03-19 |
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Mrs. Edwin B. Hershey, a member of the board of direc- -...„1.4-a- of the Harrisburg Chap- - ter, American Red Cross, has announced that a Red Cross Mobile Unit.(trailer) from the • Harrisburg Chapter will be on exhibit in front of the Com-munity Building from 10 *An. to 4 p.m: on Monday, March 23. Volunteers from Hershey will be on duty to tell the Red Cross Story and recruit volun-teers. • 'Volunteers from Hershey have always played an impor- HERSHEY NEWS Vol. 7 HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA, MARCH 19, 1959 EASTIOR WILL HAVE AN EXTRA MEANING this year for the James Rhone family, at Union Deposit. On Easter Sunday, both of Mr. and Mrs. 'Rhone's sons will celebrate their birthdays —..Jimmy, at right, his thirteenth, and Danny his ninth. They are shown here with their mother. Their mother and father are houseparents at Milton Hershey School farm -home Union at Union ,Deposit, and both Easter birthday celebrants attend the South Hanover Township School. Red Cross Mobile Unit To Be Displayed Here • tant role with the Harrisburg "Information on all of the Red Cross," Mrs. Hershey I services will be available at said. ••New-volunteers-tv-rep-Unit,on Marc,h 23 resent our community are This is Hershey s opportunity needed at this time. No. 12 "If you are interested in serving your community, here is a diversified program which can use your individual skills and interests. First aid, water safety, nursing services, dis-aster services, veteran ser-vices and'conimunity services are just a few of the Red Cross programs. to join and serve." March is Red Cross Month. For many of the chapters throughout the country this means fundraising time. How-ever, since the Harrisburg Chapter is a participant in the Tr -County United Fund, it is devoting-the time during the month to telling the Red Cross Story and to • building its volunteer strength. Community Services To Be Highlights Of Easter Season The community's annual Goad Friday, worship service, sponsored by the Hershey Ministerial Association, will be held at the First Evangeli-cal United Brethren Church from noon until three p.m. Worshippers attending were urged to feel free to come and leave the services as their time will permit, the Minis-terial Association announced. In the service the following ministers' will lead the medita-tion on The Words From The Cross: Forgiveness at the Cross, the Rev. Thomas W. Guini-van ; Authority at the Cross, the Rev. Robert M. Lezenby; • Remembrance at the Cross, •the Rev. Glenn J. Rader; Sub-mission at the Cross, the Rev. George I. Evans Jr. Suffering at the Cross, the Rev. J. R. MacDonald; Vic-tory at the Cross, the Rey. J. Herbert Miller; Confidence at the Cross, the Rev. Kermit J. Lloyd. The Call to Worship, by the Rev. B. Richard Templeton, will open the senvice. Prof. Robert W. Smith will be organist, and soloists dur-ing the choral selections will be Miss Pauline Copp, Cyril Little and William Nixon. The Community Easter Sunrise Service sponsored by the Hershey. Ministerial Association will be held in the Hershey Rose Garden at 5:53 a.m. on Easter Sunday. However, a Ministerial As-sociation spokesman said, if it should be raining the service will be conducted in the First Evangelical United Brethren Church. , The event will have the Rev. Thomas W. Guinivan, pastor of the First E.U.B. Church, as the speaker, bringing "The Message of Easter Morning." The preparation for wor-ship in music will be played by the Hershey High School Brass Ensemble, and the Productivity And The Dollar The President warned recently, in his Economic Mes-sage to Congress, of the possibility of price controls unless the line is held on-prices. - - In the coming months the main source of this price in-flation push will come from uneconomic wage increases— increases that exceed the nationwide gains in productivity or power of producing. You will hear it said by some that when a company or industry grants.its employees wage increases equal to their gains in production, nobody is harmed. The fact is, when businesses grant wage increases that exceed the overall gain in national power to produce, every-one suffers. The national standard of living is dragged down in order to benefit those whose wage increases out-run the average gain across the country. An economist once-deScribed the problem in this man-ner: During a certain period- of history there was a great arndunt of technical progress, in'the production of wheat, limited advances in house building, "and no technical pro-gress in the saving of Souls." In the same period, the relative incomes of farmers, bricklayers and clergymen did not change. Thus, the bricklayers and the clergymen both bene-fited along with the farmers, -from the new relative cheap-ness _of bread. Had the farmers collared all the benefits, the others would have remained on a medieval standard of living. Remember this when you hear someone say that a com-pany's increased productivity justifies wage demands. 'Bear in mind that there are many other wage earners, necessary to our way of life, whose productivity cannot be increased, and who are also entitled to share in our nation's economic progress. They .can only enjoy these benefits if a line is drawn on uneconomic wage increases, and only if those industries with gains in productivity are able to pass the benefits along to everybody in the form of lower prices. Only through this broad point of view can we protect the value of our dollar. Easter Greeting will be given by Seminarian Richard G. Miller -of'Holy Trinity Luth-eran Church., The Rev. B. Richard Tem-pleton, assistant pastor of the First E.U.B. Church, will give the invocation. Responsive reading will be led by the Rev. Robert M. Lezenby, pastor of Holy Trin-ity Lutheran Church, and the Rev. Glenn J. Rader, pastor of Redeemer United' Church of Christ, will read the Scrip-hire. The Easter morning prayer will be offered by the Rev. Kermit L. Lloyd, vicar of All Saints Episcopal Church, and the benediction will be pronounced by the Rev. J. R. MacDonald, pastor of Fishburn Evangelical United Brethren Church. The choral response will be sung by the Hershey High School Chorus, under the di-rection of Elwyn Spangler, and the postlude will be played by the Brass Ensemble. Eleven From Hershey In County Band The-Hershey- Band will be represented by eleven members at the Dau-phin. County Band Festival on S,aturday evening, March 21, in the• new Upper Dauphin Grade School Concert One hundred and thirty young musicians will perform at the annual Elementary In-strumental Music Concert of the. Derry Township Schools on Friday evening, March 20, in the Hershey High School auditorium. The concert will begin at seven-thirty. Taking part in the program will be the Intermediate String Ensemble, Elementary Band, Intermediate Band and the Cadet Band. The youngsters, represent-ing Grades Five through Nine, are directed by the members of the school's music depart-ment — Miss Jane Einel, El-wyn Spangler and Paul G. Fisther. Joint School located at Eliza-bethville. The concert is scheduled to begin at eight o'clock, with approximately two hundred instrumentalists from four-teen schools taking part. Hershey High School mem-bers of the County Band are Nancy Kegerreis, Barbara Geesey, Marena Tighe, Gary Grimm, Barry Free, Arno Bosley, Richard Rissmiller, Lynn Grimm, William Swen-ey, Roy Lingle and Jeff Kreamer. The Hershey group has al-ready participated in several informal rehearsals and on Saturday will meet with the entire band for a period of practice prior to the concert. . The public is invited to the free concert, which is sponsor-ed by the Dauphin County Music Educators Association. Guest conductor will be Paul Carson, band director of West Chester State Teachers College. Hershey News Comm. Bldg. Hershey, Pa. BULK NATI U. S. POSTAGE PAID HERSHEY, PA. Permit No. 13 3547 REQUESTED IF UNDELIVERABLE
Object Description
Title | Hershey News 1959-03-19 |
Subject | Hershey (Pa.)--Newspapers |
Description | Hershey News, published from 1953 until 1964, reported news and events throughout the Township of Derry, Pennsylvania (informally known as Hershey). |
Date | 1959-03-19 |
Location Covered | Hershey (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Rights | https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?language=en |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact Hershey Community Archives at contact@hersheyarchives.org. |
Contributing Institution | Milton Hershey School |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Hershey News 1959-03-19 |
Subject | Hershey (Pa.)--Newspapers |
Description | Hershey News, published from 1953 until 1964, reported news and events throughout the Township of Derry, Pennsylvania (informally known as Hershey). |
Date | 1959-03-19 |
Location Covered | Hershey (Pa.) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Rights | https://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/?language=en |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact Hershey Community Archives at contact@hersheyarchives.org. |
Contributing Institution | Milton Hershey School |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | Mrs. Edwin B. Hershey, a member of the board of direc- -...„1.4-a- of the Harrisburg Chap- - ter, American Red Cross, has announced that a Red Cross Mobile Unit.(trailer) from the • Harrisburg Chapter will be on exhibit in front of the Com-munity Building from 10 *An. to 4 p.m: on Monday, March 23. Volunteers from Hershey will be on duty to tell the Red Cross Story and recruit volun-teers. • 'Volunteers from Hershey have always played an impor- HERSHEY NEWS Vol. 7 HERSHEY, PENNSYLVANIA, MARCH 19, 1959 EASTIOR WILL HAVE AN EXTRA MEANING this year for the James Rhone family, at Union Deposit. On Easter Sunday, both of Mr. and Mrs. 'Rhone's sons will celebrate their birthdays —..Jimmy, at right, his thirteenth, and Danny his ninth. They are shown here with their mother. Their mother and father are houseparents at Milton Hershey School farm -home Union at Union ,Deposit, and both Easter birthday celebrants attend the South Hanover Township School. Red Cross Mobile Unit To Be Displayed Here • tant role with the Harrisburg "Information on all of the Red Cross," Mrs. Hershey I services will be available at said. ••New-volunteers-tv-rep-Unit,on Marc,h 23 resent our community are This is Hershey s opportunity needed at this time. No. 12 "If you are interested in serving your community, here is a diversified program which can use your individual skills and interests. First aid, water safety, nursing services, dis-aster services, veteran ser-vices and'conimunity services are just a few of the Red Cross programs. to join and serve." March is Red Cross Month. For many of the chapters throughout the country this means fundraising time. How-ever, since the Harrisburg Chapter is a participant in the Tr -County United Fund, it is devoting-the time during the month to telling the Red Cross Story and to • building its volunteer strength. Community Services To Be Highlights Of Easter Season The community's annual Goad Friday, worship service, sponsored by the Hershey Ministerial Association, will be held at the First Evangeli-cal United Brethren Church from noon until three p.m. Worshippers attending were urged to feel free to come and leave the services as their time will permit, the Minis-terial Association announced. In the service the following ministers' will lead the medita-tion on The Words From The Cross: Forgiveness at the Cross, the Rev. Thomas W. Guini-van ; Authority at the Cross, the Rev. Robert M. Lezenby; • Remembrance at the Cross, •the Rev. Glenn J. Rader; Sub-mission at the Cross, the Rev. George I. Evans Jr. Suffering at the Cross, the Rev. J. R. MacDonald; Vic-tory at the Cross, the Rey. J. Herbert Miller; Confidence at the Cross, the Rev. Kermit J. Lloyd. The Call to Worship, by the Rev. B. Richard Templeton, will open the senvice. Prof. Robert W. Smith will be organist, and soloists dur-ing the choral selections will be Miss Pauline Copp, Cyril Little and William Nixon. The Community Easter Sunrise Service sponsored by the Hershey. Ministerial Association will be held in the Hershey Rose Garden at 5:53 a.m. on Easter Sunday. However, a Ministerial As-sociation spokesman said, if it should be raining the service will be conducted in the First Evangelical United Brethren Church. , The event will have the Rev. Thomas W. Guinivan, pastor of the First E.U.B. Church, as the speaker, bringing "The Message of Easter Morning." The preparation for wor-ship in music will be played by the Hershey High School Brass Ensemble, and the Productivity And The Dollar The President warned recently, in his Economic Mes-sage to Congress, of the possibility of price controls unless the line is held on-prices. - - In the coming months the main source of this price in-flation push will come from uneconomic wage increases— increases that exceed the nationwide gains in productivity or power of producing. You will hear it said by some that when a company or industry grants.its employees wage increases equal to their gains in production, nobody is harmed. The fact is, when businesses grant wage increases that exceed the overall gain in national power to produce, every-one suffers. The national standard of living is dragged down in order to benefit those whose wage increases out-run the average gain across the country. An economist once-deScribed the problem in this man-ner: During a certain period- of history there was a great arndunt of technical progress, in'the production of wheat, limited advances in house building, "and no technical pro-gress in the saving of Souls." In the same period, the relative incomes of farmers, bricklayers and clergymen did not change. Thus, the bricklayers and the clergymen both bene-fited along with the farmers, -from the new relative cheap-ness _of bread. Had the farmers collared all the benefits, the others would have remained on a medieval standard of living. Remember this when you hear someone say that a com-pany's increased productivity justifies wage demands. 'Bear in mind that there are many other wage earners, necessary to our way of life, whose productivity cannot be increased, and who are also entitled to share in our nation's economic progress. They .can only enjoy these benefits if a line is drawn on uneconomic wage increases, and only if those industries with gains in productivity are able to pass the benefits along to everybody in the form of lower prices. Only through this broad point of view can we protect the value of our dollar. Easter Greeting will be given by Seminarian Richard G. Miller -of'Holy Trinity Luth-eran Church., The Rev. B. Richard Tem-pleton, assistant pastor of the First E.U.B. Church, will give the invocation. Responsive reading will be led by the Rev. Robert M. Lezenby, pastor of Holy Trin-ity Lutheran Church, and the Rev. Glenn J. Rader, pastor of Redeemer United' Church of Christ, will read the Scrip-hire. The Easter morning prayer will be offered by the Rev. Kermit L. Lloyd, vicar of All Saints Episcopal Church, and the benediction will be pronounced by the Rev. J. R. MacDonald, pastor of Fishburn Evangelical United Brethren Church. The choral response will be sung by the Hershey High School Chorus, under the di-rection of Elwyn Spangler, and the postlude will be played by the Brass Ensemble. Eleven From Hershey In County Band The-Hershey- Band will be represented by eleven members at the Dau-phin. County Band Festival on S,aturday evening, March 21, in the• new Upper Dauphin Grade School Concert One hundred and thirty young musicians will perform at the annual Elementary In-strumental Music Concert of the. Derry Township Schools on Friday evening, March 20, in the Hershey High School auditorium. The concert will begin at seven-thirty. Taking part in the program will be the Intermediate String Ensemble, Elementary Band, Intermediate Band and the Cadet Band. The youngsters, represent-ing Grades Five through Nine, are directed by the members of the school's music depart-ment — Miss Jane Einel, El-wyn Spangler and Paul G. Fisther. Joint School located at Eliza-bethville. The concert is scheduled to begin at eight o'clock, with approximately two hundred instrumentalists from four-teen schools taking part. Hershey High School mem-bers of the County Band are Nancy Kegerreis, Barbara Geesey, Marena Tighe, Gary Grimm, Barry Free, Arno Bosley, Richard Rissmiller, Lynn Grimm, William Swen-ey, Roy Lingle and Jeff Kreamer. The Hershey group has al-ready participated in several informal rehearsals and on Saturday will meet with the entire band for a period of practice prior to the concert. . The public is invited to the free concert, which is sponsor-ed by the Dauphin County Music Educators Association. Guest conductor will be Paul Carson, band director of West Chester State Teachers College. Hershey News Comm. Bldg. Hershey, Pa. BULK NATI U. S. POSTAGE PAID HERSHEY, PA. Permit No. 13 3547 REQUESTED IF UNDELIVERABLE |
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