The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, December 16, 1970, Image 3

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THRE MA lO
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1970
FRED V. LORAW
Fred V. Loraw, 41, of 127
N. Market Ave., died Tuesday
Dec. 15 at 2 a.m. in the Lan-
caster Osteopathic hospital.
He had been under the care
of a physician.
Loraw was a veteran of
World War II and was a
painter by occupation.
Born in Mount Joy, he was
a son of Mrs. Minnie Gantz
Loraw and the late Darwin
G. Loraw.
Surviving are four child-
ren, Fred, Anita, Judith and
David, all of Columbia; also
his mother, a sister, Mrs. Hel-
en Lieberher, and a brother,
Jay D. Loraw, all of Mt. Joy.
Services will be held Fri-
day afternoon at 2 o'clock
from the Sheetz funeral home
and burial will be made in
the Mount Joy cemetery.
Friends may call at the fune-
ral home Thursday evening
between 7 and 9 p.m.
MARY D. SIMONS
Mrs. Mary D. Simons, 81,
formerly of Mount Pleasant
Foad, Marietta, died Satur-
day, Dec. 12, at 2:45 a.m. at
the Lehman Nursing Home,
Rheems.
Mrs. Simons, the widow of
the late Dr. John S. Simons
of Marietta, had been a
guest at the nursing home for
the past year and a half.
A resident of the Marietta
area for the past 40 years, she
was born in Highspire, the
adopted daughter of the late
John A. and Alice Blessing
Dehoff.
(From page 2)
Once the lights are
An active member of the
English United Presbyterian
Church of Marietta, she was
a one-time elder of the church
a former director of the choir FAMILY ESPRIT
and a former teacher in the Dr. Margaret Mead spoke
Sunday School. She was also at a Boston symposium on
a member of the Order of Youth and family this week.
the Eastern Star, Marietta. She said much of the isola-
: tion young folk feel today,
Mrs. Simons attended Mil- and the trouble this causes,
lersville State college and stems from the breakup of
taught in the elementary the traditional family since
schools of the Maytown area World War II. It is a familiar
for a number of years before theme of the anthropologist,
her marriage. who has repeatedly warned
The last of her immediate that what she calls the new
family, she is survived only “nuclear” family — of par-
by nieces and nephews by ents and children, living in a
marriage. “barricaded’ piece of space
Services were held Tuesday in city or suburb — is abnor-
at 2 pum. from the English mal. She urges a substitute
Presbyterian church, Mariet- be found for the old “extend-
ta and burial was made in the ed” family of relatives and
Mount Joy cemetery. neighbors.
Some students of social
patterns are now going a step
BENTON G. HIPPLE beyond Dr. Mead and saying
Benton G. Hipple Jr. 74, of that even the nuclear famly
356 E. Market St. Marietta, iS breaking up. The desire
was pronounced dead about 2nd necessity for women to
1:15 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 10, work, changing attitudes to-
at the Marietta Post Office, Ward child-having by both
where he had collapsed. men and women, greater pre-
Hipple was the husband of 0ccupation with job and pas-
the late Deborah Light Hip- times, even a leap in social
ple, and the son of the late Compassion beyond one’s own
Benton G. and Ella B. Koeh- Kin to an abstract society-at-
ler Hipple Sr. large — these and other influ-
He was born in Marietta €nces are loosening the bonds
and was a sales representa- Of care and affection and
tive of the Hock Paint and identity of the family.
Chemical Co. of Phoenixville, To the degree that the
until his retirement. withering of family ties may
Hipple was a graduate of reflect a growing sense of the
the University of Maryland universal brotherhood of
and taught geometry in high Man, the trend may reflect a
schools in New Jersey and freeing from genetic inclus-
Vermont. y q iveness. This would be to the
(Turn to page 5 good. But there are clearly
page 5) dangers, too, of the kind Dr.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Convenient Reference To
Mead warns about. Educators
say the children who do best
and are happiest in school
are those whose family talk
together, encourage one an-
other, pull together. A right
sense of family is an esprit,
Firms Servimg Community
rer
== a confirmation of one’s worth,
rab ine
aad
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i ——
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MILK & ICE CREAM
R.D.2, Ph. Mt. Joy 653-4891
® EXCAVATING
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C. ROBERT FRY
GENERAL EXCAVATING
® Residential
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R.D.2, MANHEIM, PA.
Phone Mount Joy 653-1253
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Covering
ELIZABETHTOWN R.D. 3
1% Mi. East along Manheun
Road
Call 367-5468
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SPOUTING — AWNINGS
RALPH F..KLINE
Over 20 yrs. experience
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
=== —— a feeling that barriers can be
® MASONRY overcome. In the midst of
changing social patterns, this
must be held to.
—Chrstian Science Monitor
LESTER P. ESHELMAN
MASONRY
Brick - Block - Stone
Silicone Masonry CHRISTMAS CAROLS
Waterproofing
Donegal Springs Road The custom of singing
653-5325 Christmas carols on -the eve
* of Christmas came to us from
England, though for a time it
—and other Christmas obser-
vances — were banned in
Puritan New England. As
® OIL SERVICE
HOLLINGER Puritan pressure relaxed, a
custom began in Boston of
OIL SERVICE placing lighted candles in the
MOUNT JOY 653-4484 home in Boston and spread
to various parts of the coun-
try.
And the English caroling
custom, which had long been
accepted in the South, pene-
trated into more conservative
ATLANTIC PETROLEUM
PRODUCTS
Oil Burner Sales & Service
® PAINT & BODY WORK New England. For many
years it was the custom of
Carriger night watchmen to gather to-
z gether and sing carols and,
Paint & Body Shop in the South, students took
Cars painted. Wrecks rebuilt up the custom.
Wheel Alignment Service Church choirs also contin-
ued the custom, though in
RHEEMS 367-6450 ,odern America the com-
mercial rush and shuffle of
Christman eve is now such
that carolers risk being run
over in the streets, if indeed
® PLUMBING
15 W. Main St.
they can make themselves
heard over television inside!
And so the custom has ebbed
in most parts of the nation,
which is a shame.
Few sounds were more
beautiful, either on Christmas
H. S. MECKLEY & SON
PLUMBING - HEATING
OIL: BURNERS
Sales & Service
Ph. 653-5981
Eve night or early morning,
LEO KOB, INC. ght or early ng
Heating — Plumbing
Air Conditioning
“Since 1904”
24 South Market Etreet
Elizabethtown. Pa.
NO STORY HOUR
Story Hour at the Mount
Joy Library will not be held
Tuesday morning, Dec. 29.
soap,
with oil, after which the dirt
was scraped off.
The pygmy shark is only 2
Cleopatra, who never knew feet long!
had her body rubbed eee
Today’s whales are larger
than dinosaurs!
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
e EDITORIAL
a few sports fans but by the board of
education, the school administrators,
the taxpayers and the general public.
Others are saying ---
PAGE THREE
school is committed to night football
—a program which in 1970 and 1971
needs to be thoroughly studied and
thoroughly investigated by everyone
erected, the
than carolers on the lawn
outside — earning their fruit
cake and coffee from an ap-
preciative household.
—Ephrata Review
Choir to Give
Yule Cantata
On Sunday evening, Dec.
20, the Adult Choir of Cal-
vary Independent Church,
Lancaster, will present a
Christmas cantata by Paul
Liljestrand entitled, “O Come
To My Heart.” Published this
year the composition presents
fresh settings of orgiinal mu-
sic to some classic tests. Lil-
jestrand, who serves as Min-
ister of Music at Calvary
Baptist Church in New York
City, was in Lancaster last
May to give a recital on - the
new organ installed by Cal-
vary Independent church.
Young Dem
Teens Meet
The “Young Dem Teens”
held a combination victory
and Christmas party on Fri-
day, Dec. 11, at the Florin
Fire Hall.
Those attending were Dar-
yl Houseal, Larry Waltz, Rick
Germer, Tom Hamill, Scott
Whalen, Ann Houseal, Robin
Wilkinson, Kim Whalen, Don-
na Gebhart, Robert Waltz,
Jeff Gallagher, ' Mark Hal-
stead, Gary Heisey, Robert
Arndt, Chuck Grimsey from
Mount Joy; Craig Schwartz,
Yanc Casale, Val Schwartz of
Lancaster and Roger Sayres
from Witmer.
Games, dancing and re-
freshments were enjoyed by
all. Prizes were awarded.
The party was chaperoned
by their adult advisor, Jack
Matoney, assisted by Mrs. Al-
bert Whalen.
EBELING
APPOINTED
Charles Ebeling, manager
of National Standard Com-
pany, has been appointed to
the advisory committee of
the Industrial Relations Insti-
tute of Elizabethtown College
by the board of directors of
the Lancaster County Manu-
facturers Assn.
concerned. This is not 1950. This is a
different age and the community
should be doubly sure that it wants
night football—even as a gift!
2 02
I fw
ARN IN
UNIFORM
COMPLETED TRAINING
Coast Guard Seaman Ap-
prentice Galen B. Longenec-
ker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ira
|
F. Longenecker, Jr. ofDone-
gal Springs Road, completed
recruit training at the Coast
Guard Training Center, Cape
May, N. J.
Longenecker, is a '68 grad-
uate of Pequea Valley H. S.
* * *
ON OKINAWA
Marine Cpl. David E. Flow-
ers, husband of the former
Vicki L. Pearson of 202 West
Donegal St. is now serving
with Battalion Landing Team
3/9 of the Third Marine Div-
ision on Okinawa.
Comprised of infantry, ar-
tillery, medical and ether
support units, the battalion
landing team operates as a
major element of the United
States force-in-readiness in
the Western Pacific.
The Chinese invented pa-
per money in the 7th century?
Toyko began as a fishing
village about 500 years ago!!
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