PAGE FOUR THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. BUSINESS DIRECTORY Convenient Reference To Firms Serving Community ® AUTO REPAIR — STALEY'S GARAGE General Repairs Used Cars - Inspections MOUNT JOY 653-5951 ® BEAUTY SHOP Ed Barr's Beauty Shop 169 Center Square | MARIETTA ! PHONE 426-1246 (Closed Mondays) ® DAIRY PRODUCTS ® OIL SERVICE HOLLINGER OIL SERVICE MOUNT JOY, PA. 653-3483 If no answer call 653-4938 ATLANTIC PETROLEUM PRODUCTS Oil Burner Sales & Service ® PAINT & BODY WORK Carriger Paini & Body Shop Cars painted, Wrecks re-built Wheel Alignment Services Rheems 367-6450 ELWOOD MARTIN PENSUPREME PRODUCTS MILK & ICE CREAM R.D.2, Ph. Mt. Joy 653-8191 ® DRUG STORES PRESCRIPTIONS WHEEL CHAIRS - WALKERS Sale or Rent Kreamer Pharmacy Elizabethtown 367-1262 ® EXCAVATING ® PLUMBING H. S. MECKLEY & SON PLUMBING — HEATING OIL BURNERS Sales and Service 15 W. Main St., Ph. 653-5981 Leo Kob, Inc. Heating — Plumbing Air Conditioning “Since 1904” 24 South Market Street Elizabethtown, Pa. C. ROBERT FRY GENERAL EXCAVATING ® Residential ® Industrial R.D. 2, MANHEIM, PA. Phone Mount Joy 653-1253 ® FURNITURE Eberly Furniture & Floor Covering ELIZABETHTOWN R.D. 3 1¥2 Mi. East along Manheim Road Call 367-5468 ® HOME IMPROVEMENT Br ROOFING — SIDING SPOUTING RALPH F. KLINE Mount Joy 653-5771 Lititz 626-7474 Ephrata 733-1224 We're particular about our work. ® LOANS Instalment Loan Service Inc. (LOANS TO $600) Instalment Consumer Discount Co. (LOANS TO $3500) 23 Cent. Sqr., Elizabethtown PHONE 367-1185 ® MASONRY LESTER P. ESHELMAN MASONRY Brick - Block - Stone New and Repair Jobs Donegal Springs Road 653-0291 ARTHRITIS-RHEUMATISM Do claims and double talk make you doubt you can get any relief from arthritic and rheumatic pains? Get 100 STANBACK tablets or 50 STANBACK powders, use as direct- ed. If you do not get relief, return the unused part and your purchase price will be refunded. Stanback Company, Salisbury, N. C. ® SEPTIC TANKS & CESSPOOL CLEANING OLIVER SAGER & SON, INC. SEPTIC TANK AND CESSPOOL CLEANINC Phone 367-1256 11 Sager Rd., Elizabethtown ® SERVICE STATION NEY'S CITIES SERVICE Phone 653-1104 Florin Ward MOUNT JOY Post Office Aids Livestock Study Farmers in the Mount Joy area are being asked to sup- ply pertinent informoaion a- bout livestock in a survey, starting May 20, Postmaster Elmer A, Zerphey hss an- nounced. Cards will be delivered to farm mail boxes, selected at random on rural routes serv- el by the Mount Joy post of- fice. These semi-annual surveys are conducted cooperatively each year by the Post Office and Agriculture Departments and serve as a basis for esti- mating numbers of livestock on farms; livestock prodyc-- tion; the size of the pig, calf, lamb and wool crops; and the number of chickens rais- ed. This information is of considerable importance to farmers, the livestock indus- try, industries serving agri- culture, public agencies and the general public. Farmers receiving survey cards have been urged to fill them out and return them promptly to mail carriers, Postmaster Zerphey said. Ping-pong or table tennis, was first played at the end of the 19th century, and was originated by a sporting goods dealer in London, Eng- land. DON'T WASTE MONEY ON IMITATION e Deaths Elizabethtown Longenecker Mrs. Elizabeth R. Longe- necker, 56, widow of Samuel Z. Longenecker, Elizabeth- town R1, died Monday, May 9, at 10:40 p.m. at the home of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John L. Drescher, Columbia R1, after an illness of several months. Her husband died in 1947. Born in Mount Joy Twp., a daughter of the late Abram and Mary Reist Mumma, she was a member of the Eliza- bethtown Mennonite church. Surviving are a daughter, Faye, wife of Philip Harris, Jefferson, N. Y.; and these brothers and sisters, Verna R., wife of Norman W. Grove and Reist R. Mummau, both of Mount Joy R2; Mrs. Mary R. Rohrer, and Abram R. Mummau, both of Manheim; Jacob R. Mummau, Florida; ‘Anna R., wife of John L. Drescher, Columbia R1; Levi R. Mumma, Utah; Paul R. Mummau, both of Elizabeth- town R1; and a number of nieces and nephews, Funeral services were held Thursday, May 12, from the Elizabethtown Mennonite church and burial was made in the Elizabethtown Men- nonite cemetery. EARL F. LEEDOM Earl F. Leedom, 61, New Oxford, York County, died Thursday, May 12, while vis- iting a daughter in Elizabeth- town. He formerly was a resident of this area. Born in Rapho Township, he was the son of the late Harry G. and Emma Leedom. He was employed as a truck driver. Survivors include his wife, Marie Leedom, and four chil- dren: Doris une, wife of James Jackson; and H. Earl, both of Elizabethtown: Don- ald E., Mount Joy, and Shir- ley A. Leedom, Elizabeth- town. Also surviving are nine grandchildren and two bro- thers: Leroy, Elizabethtown and Harvey, Camp Hill. DAVID G. MILLER David G. Miller, 67, Man- heim R2, died Tuesday, May 10, at 8:15 p.m. at Lancaster General Hospital following a short illness. He was a farmer in Rapho Twp., throughout his lifetime, except for one year when he farmed in East Donegal Twp. He was born in Manheim, a son of the late Jacob and Fianna Ginder Miller. He was a member of the West Green- tree Church or the Brethren. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Mary Enterline Miller and the following children: Richard E. and Wilbur E., of Manheim R4; Ray E. and Kenneth E., Manheim R2; Mary Louise, and Lois Irene, at home; 18 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Also surviving are a bro- ther, Paul G. Miller, Man- heim R3, and a sister, Sara, wife of Roy Nye, Manheim R3. Funeral services were held Saturday, May 14 from the Nissley funeral home and from the West Green Tree Church of The Brethren. Bur- ial was made in the cemetery adjoining the church. ORLO E. PROCTOR Orlo E. Proctor, 74, of 728 South Market St., Eliza- bethtown, died at 3:15 p.m. Saturday ,May 14 at the St. Joseph’s hospital after an ill- ness of six weeks. Born in Cardiff, Md., he was a son of the late J. B. and Mary Whiteside Proctor. He was a member of the First Presbyterian church, Mount Joy, and an elder of the church. He was treasurer & assistant secretary-director of the Farmers Mutual Insur- ance Co., of Elizabethtown: a member of the Abraham C. Treichler Lodge, No. 682, F &AM, Elizabethtown; Lancas- ter Lodge of Perfection; the Harrisburg Consistory, and the Zembo Shrine, Harris- burg. He also was a member of Elizabethtown Rotary Club and the board of managers of the Mount Tunnel Cemetery Assn. of Elizabethtown. He is survived by his wife, Lina Proctor; two sons, Orlo E. Proctor Jr., New Kensing- ton; and Jere D., Lancaster; six grandchildren and one sister, Mrs. Harvey Sidwell, Delta. Funeral services were held Tuesday afternoon from the Miller funeral home in Eliza- bethtown and burial was made in the Mount Tunnel cemetery. MARY P. SINGER Mrs. Mary P. Singer, 92, died Saturday, May 14 at 5:30 p.m. at the Evangelical Congregational church Home, Myerstown, after an illness of two weeks. A former resident of Rheems, she was the widow of John L. Singer, who died Sept. 6, 1949. Born at Chestnut Hill, she was the daughter of the late Samuel and Elizabeth Pefler Sumpman. Mrs. Singer was a member of Reich’s Evangelical and Congregational church. Surviving are three child- ren: Mabel, wife of Howard M. Sipling ,Rheems; John L. Singer, Lancaster; and Sam- uel S, Singer, Elizabethtown. Also surviving are three grandchildren, three great grandchildren and one broth- er, the Rev. S.'P. Sumpman of the E. C. Church Home, Myerstown. Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon from Miller’s funeral home, Eliza- bethtown, and burial was made in the East Donegal cemetery. Over The Back Fence by Max Smiih IF YOU have any early vegetable or flower plants left in your garden, since the freezing weather of last week you might be on the alert for flea beetles; they are a very tiny, black insect that eats small, pinsized holes in the leaves; they will attack most any Kind of a plant; the leaves will look like they were shot fyll of small holes; sometimes as much as one- half of the leaf surface will be damaged; this will retard growth and may reduce yields. I'd suggest the use of the insecticide, Sevin; two treatments several days apart should eliminate the problem. THE FEEDING of sufficient amounts of salt to all types of livestock is very impor- tant; many producers are of the opinion that 1 to 2 per cent in the ration will be adequate, byt this is not true in most cases. Some animals require more salt than others just as among human beings: therefore, we should make an attempt to provide free choice of salt at all times. Many leading livestock auth- orities also insist that loose salt is much better than block salt for farm animals: it is easier for them to get the a- mount needed. I am inclined to agree with them because when some animals require larger amounts of salt, their tongues will get sore from licking the block salt long before their appetite has been satisfied; as a result, they do not get enough salt. The val- ue of salt in the ration is an appetizer that makes the ani- WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1966 mal eat better and drink more water; also, adequate supplies of both salt and min- erals in the ration stimulates the action of the digestive juices in the body. Provide times. STRAWBERRY growers who have made a new planting this spring should not only keep the weeds under con- trol by frequent hand hoeing or cultivation, but pinch off the fruit buds before any blossoms appear. This is diffi- cult to do in view of the fact that strawberries are being eliminated, but for the good of the plant and next year’s crop, this should be done. If the new plants are permitted to bear fruit, the strength of the plant will go toward the fruit and as a resylt, there will be fewer and weaker runner plants develope early this summer. For the best yield next spring, the plant should be allowed to get strong runner plants early in the season. The sacri- fice of a few berries this spring will result in a much better crop next year. WE ARE often confronted with the problem of dairy- men who get a different but- terfat test from their D.H.I. A. milk tester than they do from their milk plant.. This has been occurring for years and no doubt will continue. in the future. There are many factors that contrribute {to the difference; changes in temperature and humidity, milking practices, the amount of exercise, the kind of grain and roughage, and the physical condition of the cow that particular day, are some of the common causes. Also, dairymen should realize that the time covered by the tests are not the same; DHIA tests are based ypon one day’s samples, while the milk plant tests are a composite of samples taken throughout the month. A. variation of 1 to 2 percentage points is not un- usual and should be accept- able. P.T.A. Festival At East Pete The East Petersburg Par- ent-Teacher Association will hold its annual festival at the East Petersburg Civic As- sociation grounds on Friday, May 20, at 5 p.m. In case of rain, it will be held on Satur- day. The festival will feature pony rides, hay rides, and other rides for children. Chairmen are: William Zerby, general chairman; Mrs. Richard Myers, publici- ty; Donald Herr, games; Gene Rowe and Mrs. Alfred Pink- erton, large kitchen; Jed Harshman and Bob Watson, small kitchen. Mrs. George Fry, novelties; Mrs. Jere Barto, fish pond; Mrs. Clyde Hartenstine and Mrs. Donald Parsons, milk & ice cream; Mrs. Gene Weiks- ner and Mrs. Norman Miller, chicken corn soup. Mrs. Jay Hollinger, wiches; and Mrs. Quinn, macaroni salad. sand- Wilbur EGGS ARE STILL A GOOD BUY Eggs for breakfast are bet- ter quality and less expen- sive now than they were 30 years ago, says Herbert Jor- dan, extension poultry spec- ialist at Penn State universi- ty. Eggs have actyally been on a general - price decline during this time. This is due to a good supply and efficien- cies of the industry as well as a slight decrease in de- mand. If egg prices had gone up the same as the cost of living, then we would pay considerably more for eggs than we do. Do not resent growing old —a great many are denied the privilege. free access to loose salt at all: ~~