PAGE FOUR THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. NEW BOOKS AT MOUNT JOY LIBRARY FICTION Heartsblood No nudes is good nudes The pretenders The amazing Mrs. Pollifax Temptation in a private zoo Wax apple Marttin Wodehouse Davis Gilman Decker Coe NON FICTION Young people and driving Ag I live and breathe At sixes and sevens My life with Edgar Cayce Information please, 1970 The reluctant taxpayer Purdy Boyd Pedersen Kahn Raby WM. C. EDYE III A two-year-old Mount Joy boy died in St. Joseph’s hos- pital Thursday night, Feb. 26, shortly after he was admit- ted. An autopsy was ordered to determine the cause of death of William C. Edye II, son of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Edye Jr. of 246 Marietta Avenue. A physician said that the child might have injured himself somehow on Wednes- day and it went undetected by the parents During the day Thursday, the boy’s con- dition became worse. The mother, Donna, took the child to the hospital Thursday night. Funeral services were held from the Sheetz funeral home Saturday afternoon, Feb. 28, and burial was made in the Laurel Hill Memorial ceme- tery, Columbia. DAISY M. KLEIN Miss Daisy M. Klein, 76, of 616 S. Market St.,. Elizabeth- town, died Tuesday, Feb. 24, at 4:14 pm. in the General hospital after an illness of several months. ; Before her recent retire- ment, she was owner and op- erator of The Dress Shop in Center Square, Elizabeth- town, for 35 years. Born in Lancaster, a daugh- ter of the late Godfrey and Veronica Schwartz Klein, she was a member of Christ Lu- theran church, Elizabeth- town; the Elizabethtown Chamber of Commerce; char- (9 the best recipe for to MOUNT JOY Take one phone call (or coupon below), add hostess with baskets of gifts and information about the city, stir in genuine hospitality, end you'll have a generous and delightful welcome. Just phone Lx Ann Hetrick 653.4147 WELCOME NEWCOMERS! i Yss this coupon to let us know you're ere. Name. LL City. [J Please have the Welcome Wagon J Hostess call on ms [J 1 would like to subscribe to the i [3 | already subscribe to the I Fill out coupon and mall to Circulation 1 Dept., ter member and secretary of Chapter 407, Order of East- ern Star; and past president and secretary of the Business and Professional Women's Club, Elizabethtown. Surviving are three sisters and a brother, Anna, wife of Andrew G. Kuhn, Rheems; Paul Klein, Millersville; Mrs. Martha Cresswell and Miss Henrietta Klein, with whom she resided. SUSAN W. JOHNSTON Susan W. Johnston, 94, of 240 S. Queen St., Lancaster, died Saturday, Feb. 28, at Baileys Nursing Home, Eliz- abethtown, after a long ill- ness. Born in Lancasttr County, she was the daughter of the late Adam and Susan Wissler Gamber and the wife of Hav- ard F. Johnston. Her first husband, Frederick M. Kem- merly and her second hus- band, William Fralich, pre- ceded her in death. She was a member of St. Peters Unit- ed Church of Christ, Lancas- ter. Besides her husband, she is survived by a daughter, Iona, wife of the Rev. Raymond H. Arndt, of Millersville; two granddaughters; eight great-grandchildren and one great-greatgrandson She is the last of her immediate family. Services were held Wed- nesday, Mar. 4, from Nissley funeral home and burial was made in the Newtown ceme- tery. Democrat Club Hclds Meeting An organizational meeting of the Mount Joy Teen Dem- ocrats, was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Waltz, Pinkerton Rd. John Matoney, Democrat committeeman from Florin ward, and John Urban, pres- ident of the Mt. Joy Young Democrats, addressed the group. Politics on the local, state and national levels were dis- cussed. Organizational policies re- ceived were: campaigning, goals, respect. The election of officers was delayed until all interested parties may have the oppor- tunity to stand up and pre- sent themselves and their programs to the membership. Attending the meeting were Bob Waltz, Larry Waltz, Tom Hammil, Chuck Grim- zey and Scott Whalen. LEISURE CLUB TO MEET The Mount Joy Leisure Club will hold their regular meeting March 9 at the Mt. Joy Sports Farm at 1 p.m. All are urged to attend. Patronize Our Advertisers Regional Chorus Jackie Wein will represent Donegal high school next weekend, March 12, 13 and 14, in the regional chorus festival. “The musical event will be held at Coatesville. WORLD PRAYER DAY MCH. 6 Church Women United of the Mount Joy area will join millions of people on Friday, Mar.6, in a bond of prayer spanning six Continents. Prayers will be offered in 75 languages and a thousand dialects. World Day of Pray- er is sponsored in the United States by Church Women United and will be celebrat- ed in 25,000 communities. Here in our community everyone is invited to join this Worldwide fellowship at Chiques United Methodist Church on Friday, March 6 at 7:30 p.m. Participating in the celebration will be repre- sentatives from eight of our local churches. The Theme of the program is “Take Courage!” Miss Maude Par- sons, a retired Missionary will be the speaker. Miss Parsons spent 20 years in China and 18 years in Japan. She is now living at Corn- wall Manor. Mrs. Troy Mark will be the soloist for the service. This annual chain of pray- er links the first voice at dawn in the tropical Tongas just west of the International Date Line, with millions of others as it passes throubh cut the Day across oceans and continents. By nightfall, its message of hope will have followed the sun’s arc until the last prayers are said in Hawaii and the islands of Alaska. The theme “Take Courage” was chosen and made rele- vant by an International Committee headed by Miss Girdon Diestel of Germany. The program was developed as a housewife from Egypt, a social worker from Guya- na, a church worker from the Philippines, and a wom- an from the United States discovered a common band of worship and witness. World Day of Prayer pro- vides an occasion for parti- cipation in a nationwide of- fering committed to helping others to “take courage’. This years emphases are: New religious educational materials for Latin Americ- ans and Spanish speaking families in this country, support of a Secretary of Women’s Work of the Near East Christian Council; the dispossessed Spanish migrant and Indian American Com- munities. These are part of an Intercontinental Mission, a fund throubh which the Church Women United ex- presses its concerns for oth- ers in concrete terms includ- ing grants for Christian lit- erature on six continents and grants to Christian Colleges in Asia and Africa. TE CABINET: BEEF EN BROCHETTE 12 pounds beef fillet or sirloin Salt Pepper 4 strips bacon . Cut beef in 1l%-inch cubes, trimming off excess fat Sprinkle meat with salt and pepper. Thread on skewers, weaving bacon strips around beef. Broil about 3 inches from heat, turning to brown on all sides, to desired de- gree of doneness. Makes four servings. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1970 Donegal Wrestler Wins Way into Final Bout ¥ * » X ONLY SECOND LOSS OF SEASON Jeff Duke of Manheim Twp., it appears, is the only schoolboy wrestler around these parts who can handle Donegal’s Ken Piersol. And, unfortunately for the 120-pound Indian ace, he has done it twice this season. During the regular season, Piersol lost only one match and that was to Duke. In the sectional at Eliza- bethtown college Feb, 27-28, he went through the tourney with flying colors and won a county co-chompionship with Duke. Last weekend at the Farm Show building in Harrisburg, Piersol was going great guns, straight to the finals, where he and Duke met again. Piersol led 4-0 in the third period. The Manheim Town- ship wrestler, however, re- versed and got a predicament to send the bout into over- time. Duke rode out the first ov- ertime period and reversed in the second for a 2-0 vic- tory. The Donegal finalist won a 11-10 decision over his quarter-final opponent anda 5:59 fall in the semi-finals. He and Duke were 4-4 at the end of the regulation per- iod. Duke, likewise, had won a decision in the quarterfin- als and followed with anoth- er in the semi-finals, squeez- ing by with an overtime. Rotary Entertains Farmers Farmer friends of Mount Joy Rotarians were guests Tuesday noon, March 3, at the club’s weekly luncheon meeting, held at Hostetters. Speaker for the day was Jay: W. Irwin, associate county agricultural agent of Lancaster county, who spoke on ‘Outlook on Agriculture in the 1970’s.” “If the space program had made as.much progress in the past 20 years as agricul- ture, we would now have shuttle service between earth and the moon,” he declared as he spoke of the giant steps the farmers have made in recent years. He sees agriculture in Lan- caster county as big business — $124 million per year — as progressive. And, he sees it getting big- ger. Use of computers has begun, he said, and they will increasingly become part of the decision making in farm management. Size of farms will increase, he predicted, and automation will increase. He expects in- creased hybrid vigor in cat- tle by cross breeding and in- creased control of poultry disease. However, because tobacco is a crop not easily mechan- ized and labor becomes an important factor, he does not forsee an increase in that area of local farming. The speaker was introduc- ed by R. F. Hallgren. Two Nabbed Several days ago someone stole some copper wire off the utility poles along the Penn Central railroad in Mt. Joy and were not caught. Monday night, however, two men were arrested as they were alleged to have been doing the same thing. Railroad police and Mount Joy officers nabbed two York Haven men — Richard Lee Troup and Kenneth Schurtz — about 5 a.m. after ‘a stakeout which began about four hours earlier. They were charged in the court of Ray- mand Knorr, justice of the peace, with larceny, receiv- in Wire Theft ing stolen goods and conspir- acy. Failing to post $1,000 bail, they were committed to Lancaster County Prison. Officers grabbed a pair of rugged bolt cutters and an auto. The car had lengths of cable in the trunk and on the floor between the seats. The heavy copper cable is strung atop railroad commu- nication lines. The men ar- rested are alleged to have been working along Sassafras alley, climbing up the poles and cutting the lengths of 98” cable from their fasten- ings. ; The car was impounded in the borough garage. SWEETIE PIE - « “Every time there's a baby around, everybody forgets howto speak English} -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers