Page 2—SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Yes - Snow Tires Oil - Lub - Filter Tune-up Winterize _ Now - is the Time! a Don’t neglect these important Pe, services before ..” NORTH WINDS GET You! iller’s Tire & Service Maytown, PA Phone 426-3430 (avo J MANHEIM PIKE, EAST PETERSBURG OPPOSITE ERB'S MARKET 569-5353 Where Our Customers Send Their Friends FOR SALE MARIETTA 282 West Market Street Attractive single home situated on large 54 ft X 216 ft lot with above ground pool. Home features L.R., D.R., kitchen, large family room, 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. Owner relocating and anxious to sell. Quick possession. Call today to see this fine home. Asking $53,900.00. JUST LISTED 362 East Market Street You must see this beautiful 2 story brick home. Its been completely modernized and offers large entrance foyer, spacious eat in kitchen with loads of oak cabinets, 1st floor laundry room and living room with Franklin stove. 3 nice size newly decorated bedrooms plusa gorgeous bath with marble vanity. New wiring and plumbing and heating system. Dont miss this one—there’s nothing to do but move in. Priced ASBA00 Rt. 441 - By Pass ZONED COMMERCIAL — IMMEDIATE POSSESSION This business property is ideal for many uses and offers a one story building situated on 150 ft X 400 ft lot fronts on Rt. 441—with heavy traffic count. Owner must sell and will help with financing for qualified buyer. Take a look and make an offer. NORWOOD ASSOCIATES, INC. Realtor 426-1163 or 653-4351 EMERGENCY MEDICAL CALLS Saturday Afternoon EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES Available Day & Night COLUMBIA HOSPITAL 7th & Poplar (Emergency Entrance) and Sunday Norlanco Health Center (Mount Joy Area Only) Susquehanna Tintes [USPS 055-530] Box 75-A, R.D.#1, Marietta, PA 17547 Published weekly on Wednesdays [52 issues per year] Telephone: [717] 426-2212 or 653-8383 Publisher—Nancy H. Bromer Editor—Diane Krantz Advertising Manager—Diane Krantz Marietta Editor—Hazel Baker Mount Joy Editor—Cherie Dillow Vol. 79, No. 45, November 14, 1979 Advertising Rates Upon Request Entered at the Post Office in Marietta, PA, as second class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879 Subscription Rate—$6.00/ year [Outside Lancaster County—$6.50/ year] idl dt tt ttt dtd td PP PII VIII III III Por III tL! (ddd WILLE PEPER EEL LEER III III OHI III III II III III III D fl Edd Addl RAE dd le dl ld ddd dl ddd dll ddl ddd edd ddl er Rll dll ll ddl LA ALLELE ALL EEL LEER REE RRPP Pd Parent of the Week (cont.) [continued from front page] In addition to her work she is a den mother in the Cub Scouts, to which Michael belongs. She is active in the girl scouts, to which Kim belongs. Every year Judy helps to raise money for the girl scouts, participating in the annua! telethon. She is superintendant of the Sunday School at St. Luke's and teaches a Sunday School class. She is also an active member of the Christian Women's Associ- ation at the the church. She is active in the PTA at Grandview School, although she no longer is an officer as she previously was. She belongs to a number of car pools, taking her own and other people’s children here and there to their various activities. ‘‘Every night I am dropping off or picking up kids,’’ she says. ‘I just like to do things,” she says. This year, as every year, she made her children’s Halloween costumes, al- though Kim, who is becom- ing a handy seamstress, helps her mother more with the sewing. Judy makes a lot of Kim's clothes for her, and some for herself too. In the summer she is an avid gardener, and her children are picking up this skill from her too. Michael raised a fine crop of marigolds this year. Even the Funks’ vacations are connected with their community activities. Judy is a counsellor at Kim's Girl Scout camp. Gene takes his family to Wildwood, N.J., every summer, where they can enjoy the ocean while he is attending a wrestling clinic. How can Judy Funk manage to do all that she does? She has a philosophy about work. She is skeptical when she hears other people say they don’t have time to engage in community activi- ties. “There is time, if you make it,”’ she says. How Judy gets time to engage in all her activities is part of her child-rearing. “Everybody has a job here,’’ she says. ‘One child has to set the table. The other has to clean it off. The kids wash the dishes. ‘“They have to keep their rooms clean. Kim cleans the bathroom too, although she doesn’t like to. Michael empties the waste baskets. ‘“They had to learn how to answer the phone, how to take messages. There are always a lot of calls for Daddy. They have to know where Daddy is, who is calling. ‘““The children learn to take responsibilities. With responsibilities come the privileges, like allowances or a new item like a football, when the dog bites a hole in the old football.”’ Actually, for the Funks, their very early breakfast is a more regular time for them to be together than supper. Since they have only one bathroom its use must be scheduled like a lot of their activities. Kim is first in the bathroom because she leaves first. Then, at breakfast there is usually time for family conversat- ion, before they must all take off. Judy is the last to leave and the first to return to their house on Wood Street in Mount Joy. She makes sure both in the morning and in the evening that everything is alright with her family. So Judy Funk manages to do everything. People are always calling her to help Mr. and Mrs. Clair L. Wagner November 14, 1979 with this and that: fund raising, cooking for a community supper, taking kids camping, manning a concession for the Pee Wee baseball league in which Michael plays, or selling at a cakes sale or bazaar. “You'd be amazed at how much time you have—if everyone helps.” Clair Wagners celebrate fiftieth wedding anniversary, Sat., Nov. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Clair L. Wagner, 35 West Main Street, Mount Joy, celebrat- ed their 50th wedding anniversary last Saturday a week ago at Glossbrenner United Methodist Church in Mount Joy. Their son, Rev. Clair Wagner, Jr., is pastor at Glossbrenner. The Wagners were mar- ried in Hagerstown, Md., November S, 1929 by the Rev. J.S. Simon. Marietta Ad Hoc Committee urges Since their marriage they have lived in Mount Joy. Mr. Wagner formerly man- aged the Joy Theater for 23 years. Then he worked at AMP for 20 years, retiring in 1976. Wagner is a charter member of the Florin Fire Company and also a mem- ber of Friendship Fire Co. He bowls and is active with AMP retirees. Before her marriage, Mrs. Wagner was Beatrice Lehman of Elizabethtown. The Wagners are mem- bers of St. Paul's United Methodist Church, Mount Joy and the Mount Joy Leisure Club. Besides their son, Rev. Wagner, they have a daughter, Jean, wife of Robert Rohrer, Manheim. They have four grandsons and two great-grandchild- ren. Jorming of human relations group At the last meeting of the Marietta Borough Council a group of concerned citizens appeared to testify on social conflict in the community. To look into their concerns, the mayor appointed an ad hoc committee. The ad hoc committee is recommending that that the borough council establish a human relations in the borough. Members of the ad hoc committee are: Patrick Ken- ney, Jr., Kenneth Ross, Rosemary Patterson, Debo- rah Zeislofte, and Jacklyn Madsen. The organization plans to operate independ- ently of the borough council acd eee ede and the police department. The group will be soliciting HNN NNN NNN NNN Make a deal with a FRIEND * Your local merchant in Marietta, Maytown, or Mount Joy is your neighbor and your friend, the owner of his business, who waits on you himself, someone you can trust. NNN NNN NNN ANIA NINE XE ideas and suggestions from the people of Marietta. 1 2 8.8 888888888688, xk A —
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers