Page 2--5USQUEHANNS TIMES fed To our Hunters! - Ya Are you ready for A iP kA" those trips? Mv iw i Sak A <. Are you driving more & enjoying it less? Snow Tires — Oil Changes — Tune-ups Winterize PITTOT Miller’s Tire & Service Maytown, PA Phone 426-3430 TERT, Maytown Fire Company Game Nights GAMES EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT 6:45PM FEATURING U-PICK-EM GAME, BIRTHDAY NIGHTS, JACKPOT SPECIALS, AND WEEKLY DOOR PRIZES Given Every Week FREE PARKING. Come Early for Lots of Good Food & Refreshments by Ladies Auxiliary of Maytown Fire Co. Spice Ropes, $4 Handmade mats, $10, $14 Silk Flowers, $.99, $1.89 Handpainted Slates, $5, $9 Dried Flowers, $.59 and up Handmade Wooden Sconces, $9.95 a pair Macrame Hangers, $5 and up Fall Arrangements Special! Burlap Wreaths, Reg. $25, now $18.95 Come in and see our many other items. That Personal Touch Phone 426-3692 Shop 12 to 9 Tues. thru Sat. Just off the Square Maytown, PA EMERGENCY MEDICAL CALLS Saturday Afternoon EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES Available Day & Night COLUMBIA HOSPITAL 7th & Poplar (Emergency Entrance) Susquekanna 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 and Sunday Norlanco Health Center (Mount Joy Area Only) Editor—Diane L. Krantz Advertising Manager—Kay Kauffman Marietta Editor—Hazel Baker Mount Joy Editor— Cherie Dillow Vol. 80, No. 44, November 5, 1980 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] 2% Patricia Ann Sheetz weds Galen Spickler The marriage of Miss Patricia Ann Sheetz to Galen Eugene Spickler took place Saturday, Nov. 1, at 11 am at the Glossbrenner Metho- dist Church, Mount Joy, with the Rev. Michael Rockafellow officiating and the Rev. Willard Grace assisting. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sheetz, Mount Joy RD1. She is a graduate of Donegal High School and is em- ployed by The Sico Com- pany, Mount Joy, as a secretary in the accounting department. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Galen Spickler, Elizabethtown R3. He graduated from Eliza- bethtown Area High School and Mount Joy Vo-Tech School. He is employed by his father at Galen Spickler Trucking and Garage. Miss Pam Sheetz, sister of the bride, Mount Joy, was maid of honor. Brides- maids were Mrs. Shirl Ruhl, sister of the bridegroom, Elizabethtown, and Miss Debbie Sheetz, Lancaster. Flower girl was Bethann Heistand, Maytown. Timmy Jones, Bel Air, Md., was ringbearer. Serving as best man was Carl Spickler, brother of the bridegroom, Elizabethtown. Groomsmen were Rick Sheetz, brother of the bride, and Curt Spickler, brother of the bridegroom. Ushers were Jeff Ruhl, Elizabeth- town, and Brian Hess, Leola. The couple will live at Elizabethtown RD3. S50 years of marriage for the Raffenspergers Mr. and Mrs. Max Raffensperger, 219 Birch- land Ave., Mount Joy, celebrated their SO0th an- niversary on Saturday, Octo- ber 18. They were married in Hagerstown, Md., by the Rev. R.L. Mowbray on October 22, 1930. Mrs. Raffensperger is the former Vera Hartman, daughter of the late William and Emma Hartman of Millerstown. Mr. Raffens- perger is the son of the late A.G.C. and Margaret Raf- fensperger of New Bloom- field. A dinner party was held in their honor at Mount Joy American Legion on October 18 by their children. Rela- tives and friends also attended. Mr. Raffensperger retired from Raybestos-Manhattan, Manheim, in 1972 after having served 37 years. Mrs. -Raffensperger retired from AMP, Inc., in 1972 after 22 years of service. The Raffenspergers are members of the Glossbren- ner United Methodist Church, Mount Joy. They have two daughters, Karleen and Betty, Mount Joy, five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Obituaries MRS. SARAH SEITZ Sarah Seitz, 33 West Market St., Marietta, died last week at the Harrisburg Hospital following an illness of several months. Mrs. Seitz was retired from the Wyeth Laborator- ies in 1971. She was the widow of Horace M. Seitz. Born in Births BARRETT, Mr. and Mrs. James (Dava Miller), 607 Water St., Mount Joy, a son at the General Hospital last week. BUTZER, Mr. and Mrs. Michael (Diane Hess), 930 Farmdale Road, Mount Joy, a son at the General Hospital last week. FORRY, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Marietta, she was the daughter of the late Armor and Christine Wilhelm Mc- Kain. She lived in the area all of her life. She belonged to the Zion Lutheran Church, Marietta. Surviving are a son, Dr. H. Michael Seitz, Rose- mont, and three grand- daughters. (Susan Meyers), Mount Joy RD3, a daughter at the General Hospital last week. MACK, Mr. and Mrs. Arlen (Rose Weaver), Bainbridge RD1, a daughter at the General Hospital last week. SAWYER, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas (Frances Barton), 213 E. Main St., Mount Joy, a son at St. Joseph Hospital last week. November 5, 1980 Hugo Fiora, professor of Industrial Arts at Millersville State College, will be demonstrating and selling his work at the annual fall craft show and sale at the Guernsey Pavilion on November 7, 8 and 9. Hugo is a juried member of the Conestoga Valley Chapter, P.G.C. Craft Show and Sale at Guernsey Pavilion More than seventy-five craftsmen will be display- ing, demonstrating and selling their work on Friday, Saturday and Sunday; No- vember 7, 8 and 9 at the intersection of Route 896. This Eighth Annual Fall Craft Show and Sale is sponsored by the Conestoga Valley Chapter of the Pennsylvania Guild of Craftsmen. Show hours are 10:00 am to 9:00 pm on Friday, and 10:00 am to 6:00 pm on Saturday and Sun- day. Pavilion visitors will be able to see and buy many unique handcrafted items on display. Weaving, pottery, woodworking, jewelry, mac- rame, fraktur, tole and theorem painting, briar pipe making and stained glass are a few of the crafts that will be available. All participating crafts- persons are highly skilled and have met the standards of The Pennsylvania Guild. Shoppers and visitors will be able to watch many of the craftspeople at work, talk to them about their crafts and examine individual, one-of- a-kind examples of their work. This year, as an added attraction, one area of the Pavilion is being set aside for the showing of movies on various colonial crafts. The films will be shown during regular craft show hours. Area residents sought for heart disease study One-time heart attack victims between the ages of 28 and 64 are urgently needed to participate in a study which addresses the number one killer in Amer- ica today—heart disease. With heart disease claim- ing 800,000 lives annually, the National Institute of Health is sponsoring a $21 million research effort con- ducted at four centers across the country to explore the role of lowered cholesterol in the treatment of heart attack victims. In a new procedure which cholesterol to an un- precendented level, re- lowers - searches hope to find conclusive evidence that maximal reduction of this fatty substance will signif- icantly reduce the risk of heart disease. The newest center, which brings the study to the East Coast, is located at The Lankenau Hospital in Phil- adelphia. Transportation from the Donegal area and hotel lodging are provided at no cost. Persons 28 through 64 who have suffered only ome heart attack, withing the last five years, are urged to contact the Hyperlipidemia Study for more information. Call, toll free, 1-800-326-5244.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers