Page 4—SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Golden Goats -aluminum ones with a If you ever find yourself by Doris Thomas in an Arizona shopping magnet, crushes them, and If you're buying new bed center with a lot of pays $.13 a pound for the ,jjows, there are certain aluminum cans, you can good, re-cycleable alumin- {5g you'll want to keep in um cans. Each week the aluminum and steel cans are carried away. The first goat was installed m June; there are make money by feeding the cans to a ‘‘Golden Goat." These ‘‘goats’’ are actually machines that can eat up to 7000 cans per in a wide range of fillings and sizes so you should consider how you want to sleep and what size bed hour. The customer dumps now 20 operating in you have. his cans into the device, Arizona. Some 400 more There is no perfect bed which separates the all are planned for nation-wide pillow for everyone. A installation this year. pillow that will give you - many years of comfortable sleep may keep someong else tossing and turning. | Ideally, everyone should select his own pillow, but if you're buying pillows for your family you should check with them to find out their preferences. Ask if they like a soft, medium or firm pillow and what size pillow they prefer. =~, IBBERSON’S i ~# CARPET FOR HOME AND CAR {lu "1660 SOUTH MARKET STREET ELIZABETHTOWN, PA 17022 Hours: Mon., Tues., & Wed.—9 a.m.<5:30 p.m», Thurs. & Fri.—9 a.m.-9 p.m. : Sat.—9 a.m.-12 noon Closed Sun. & Holidays : SENIOR CITIZEN CARDS HONORED. you should test it. Pick it up and feel it with your hand to see if it is LOT LT 3 (3 EAH Shop 136 West Market Street JETS TaiT 426-2510 SHOP HOURS: Mon., Tue., Thu. & Fri. 1—6 \Y 1H 10—6 Wed. & Sun.—CLOSED MARIETTA CITGO CITGO GAS—GROCERIES OPEN 5:30 A.M. — 8:30 P.M. DAILY SUNDAY 8:00 A.M.—6:00 P.M. Ed Reeves, Prop. Phone 426-3863 East End—Route 441 — Marietta INA JAM? Share a ride with a friend. Start carpooling. All across the country, folks are finding that carpooling pays. It puts fewer cars on the road. It saves effort, fuel and sure saves money, too. So carpooi America! Share a ride with a friend. J 4 5 - Ad A Public Service of This Newspaper, the U.S. Department of Transportation & The Advertising Council mind. Pillows are available Before you buy a pillow, - comfortable. If you're buying a pillow for some- one else, ask the salesper- son if it is soft, medium or firm. A good pillow should be resilient and free of lumps and odors, regard- less of its filling. Check the label on the pillow to see what filling it contains. The softest and most luxurious pillows are filled entirely with down, the soft shaftless fluffs from the breasts of geese and ducks. For people who prefer their pillows firmer, select a pillow filled with a blend of down and feathers. The more feathers in the blend, the firmer the pillow. All feather pillows are the firmest of the natural fills. They are less expensive then all down or blended feather and down pillows, and will also provide years of comfortable sleep. Pillows are also made of How to buy a pillow polyester or foam rubber," and these tend to be firm. In addition to selecting the = filling and firmness, you can also choose one of three basic sizes--standard, queen and king. A twin size bed- usually uses a standard pillow; but it can also use a queen or king size one. = A queen size bed will use two queen or standard size pillows. A king size bed requires two king or three standard size pillows. What you select will depend on the size of the bed, the size pillow you or your family are comfort- able sleeping on, and how many pillows you like on the bed when it is made up. Caring For Your Pillows To keep newly purchased pillows in top condition, fluff them daily and push the corners towards the McCurdy promoted by Commonwealth Bank Commonwealth National Bank announces the pro- motions of Richard L. McCurdy, Elizabethtown, from assistant vice presi- dent and manager of the Elizabethtown Office, to vice president and manager of the Elizabethtown Off- ice. McCurdy has also been named to the Eliza- bethtown Area Advisory Board. A graduate of the Pennsylvania Bankers As- sociation’s School of Bank- ing at Bucknell University, McCurdy has earned three academic certificated by completing studies spon- sored by the American Institute of Banking. A past president of the Elizabethtown Credjt Bu- reau, McCurdy is treasurer of the Elizabethtown ‘Busi- ness Promotion Corpora- tion. He is a member of: Elizabethtown Lions Club, Abram C. Treichler Lodge No. 682 F. & A.M. Lancaster Lodge of Profes- Obituary ‘HARDEN T. FOLEY, JR. Harden T. Foley Jr., 64, of 20 Essex Street, Mari- etta, died January 10 at Lancaster Osteopathic Hos- pital after an illness of five weeks. He was the husband of Rena C. Marshall Foley. He was last employed as a grinder at ITT-Grinnell in Columbia. He was sion, Harrisburg Consis- tory, Zembo Shrine A.A:O. N.M.S., and Lancaster County Shrine. He is treasurer of St. Paul's United Methodist Church, Elizabethtown, auditor for the Borough of Elizabeth- town, and a member of the January 17, 1979 center so that the crown stays high. This will keep them plump. One tip that will help keep your feather and down pillows fresh is to pop them into the dryer occasionally on low heat for ten minutes. This will take out the humidity and keep the pillows resilient. To launder pillows, check the care label for the correct washing and drying instructions and follow them carefully. Laundering pillows will renew their freshness and restore their original qualities. If you care for pillows properly, you’ll have them for many years. It makes good sense to select carefully and to buy good quality pillows. They will actually cost you less over the years because they will last longer than the less expensive ones. Liaison Committee of Greater Harrisburg Cham- ber of Commerce, and a member of the board of directors of Elizabethtown Chamber of Commerce. A native of Bainbridge, McCurdy and his wife, Nancy, have one son. Phone bill taxes to go down this year United Telephone cus- tomers will save over $703,000 in 1979 because of the reduction in the federal excise tax from four per cent to three per cent. This savings to customers will begin with bills sent this - year. United Tel gets none of this tax. In fact, telephones are the only utility burdened by this tax, which was first baptized in the Methodist faith and was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, having served in the European Theater. Born in Mt. Crawford, Va., he was a son of the late Harden T. Sr. and Lillie Snow Foley Sr. Surviving, in addition to his wife, are a daughter, Sharon Kay, wife of Gary L. Benedick, Lancaster; .a imposed as an ‘‘Emergen- cy’’ tax during World War II. Both the phone industry and customers have long sought to eliminate this tax; their efforts contributed to the Excise, Estate and Gift Adjustment Tax Act of 1970. Under this law, the tax is reduced one percent a year over a ten year period. It will vanish in 1982. step-daughter, Barbara A., wife of Lawrence Rhoads, Mount Joy; a step-son, Shirley F. Marshall, Mount Joy; two grandchildren and six step-grandchildren, and five brothers and sisters: Walter, Fort Royal, Va.; Thomas, Alexandria, Va. Myron Diehl,” Mt. Craw- ford; Beulah Monger, Mabjack, Va., and Ferol Isom, Clifton, Va.