The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 24, 1971, Image 3

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1971
FRED SNOOK
Fred Snook, 89, of 632
Square St., died Tuesday,
Feb, 16, at 10:45 p.m, in the
General hospital.
He was last employed at
Stauffer’s Stone Quarry, Mt.
Joy.
Born in Newberry, a son
of the late Jonathan and
Catherine Nushkern Snook,
he was a member of Cross
Roads Brethren in Christ
church, Mount Joy. °
Surviving are his widow,
Kathryn Troutwine Snook;
and five children, Mrs. Sara
Riggs; Lottie, wife of Norman
Martin, both of Lancaster;
Emma, wife of Kirk Richter,
Denver R2; Joseph, Selins-
grove; and Charles F., Fram-
ingham, Mass.
Services were held Friday
afternoon, Feb. 19, from the
Sheetz funeral home and bur-
ial was made in the Cross
Roads cemetery.
JOHN L. ZERPHEY
John L. Zerphey, 75, of 339
Marietta Ave., died unexpect-
elly Tuesday, Feb. 23 at 5:15
am. at his home. He had
been under the care of a phy-
sician,
Before his retirement he
had been a shoe stitcher. at
the A. S. Kreider Shoe Com-
pany, Elizabethtown, for 30
years, He and his wife, Edna
Dommel Zerphey, observed
their 54th wedding anniver-
sary last July.
Born in Lancaster County,
a son of the late Peter and
e Deaths
he re-
Katie Loraw Zerphey,
sided in Mount Joy most of
his life, and was a member
of Trinity Evangelical Con-
gregational church, Mt. Joy;
the Mount Joy Leisure Club;
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY,
and a life member of the Mt,
Joy Sportsmen’s Assn,
In addition to his wife, he
is survived by three daugh-
ters, Elizabeth K., wife of
Merle Herr, Mount Joy Rl;
Gladys 1., wife of Dale Grah-
am, Columbia; and Marcelene
wife of Paul McKinney, Man.
heim R2; four grandchildren;
and a brother, Winfield L., of
Mount Joy.
Services will be held from
the Trinity Evangelical Con-
gregational church on Friday
afternoon at 2 o'clock and
burial will be made in the Eb-
erle cemetery.
. SCHOOL
Miss Susan Thome's fourth
grade pupils have been writ-
ing some pollution rhymes as
part of their class work,
Some are as follows:
Little Miss Muffet sat on a
tuffet
Watching the cars go by
She said, “Oh what a shame!
The cars are to blame,
For some of this smog in my
eye.”
—James_Shue
Mrs. Jack Horner
Put Jack in the corner
And gave him some DDT
He sprayed and sprayed and
sprayed and sprayed so
much
The birds couldn’t see to flee.
—Greg Zimmerman
Little Miss Muffet sat on her
tuffet
Eating her curds and whey,
She went for a drink,
And, boy, did it stink,
That really frightened her
away!
—Brian Ney
Hey diddle, diddle,
The cat and the fiddle
The cow jumped over the
moon.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Convenient Reference To Firms Serving Community
ne
® DAIRY PRODUCTS
® MASONRY
ELWOOD MARTIN
PENSUPREME . PRODUCTS
MILK & ICE CREAM
R.D.2, Ph. Mt. Joy 653-4891
® EXCAVATING
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
115 Mi. East along Manheim
Road
Call 367-5468
® HOME IMPROVEMENT
ROOFING — SIDING
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
LESTER P. ESHELMAN
MASONRY
Brick - Block - Stone
Silicone Masonry
Waterproofing
Donegal Springs Road
653-5325
® OIL SERVICE
rma
Steno
HOLLINGER
OIL SERVICE
MOUNT JOY 653-4484
ATLANTIC PETROLEUM
PRODUCTS
Oil Burner Sales & Service
® PAINT & BODY WORK
Carriger
Paint & Body Shop
Cars painted. Wrecks rebuilt
Wheel Alignment Service
RHEEMS 367-6450
® PLUMBING
15 W. Main St.
H. S. MECKLEY & SON
PLUMBING - HEATING
OIL BURNERS
Sales & Service
Ph. 653-5981
LEO KOB, INC.
Heating — Plumbing
Air Conditioning
“Since 1904”
24 South Market Etreet
Elizabethtown. Pa,
The onion is a member of |
the lily family!
Patronize our Advertisers
NOTES -
She sniffed the smog,
Came down stiff as a log
And died when she hit the
lagoon
—Scott Adams
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall
Humpty Dumpty had a great
fall
All the king's soldiers and all
the kings men
Came to dump Humpty in the
trash can,
—Jeff Crotsley
Old King Cole was a merry
old soul,
A merry old soul was he,
He called for his drugs and
he called for his trash
And he called for his oil cans
three,
He ate the drugs, he kept the
trash and threw away the
oil cans three.
—Clyde Bitner
To Represent
DHS At Parley
Nancy Jo Greenawalt and
Heather Mumma have been
selected to represent Donegal
high school at the Pennsylva-
nia Future Teachers of Am-
erica Convention, The conven-
tion will be held at the Penn
Harris Hotel in Harrisburg
on Friday and Saturday, Mar.
5 and 6.
On Feb. 12 the club will
sponsor a bake sale. Stands
will be set up at Weis Market
in Mount Joy, and at the
First National Bank in Mari-
etta.
Again this year, the mem-
bers of FTA will be making
Easter baskets for one of the
nursing homes in the Donegal
area.
® Main Street
(From page 1)
at night by loosing big, speci-
ally-trained dogs which prowl
the property, looking for in-
{euders.
® ® ©
Such arrangements have
been made in schools, too, ap-
parently. Donegal district has
been contacted by protective
dog agencies as guards against
vandalism and also as pos-
sible drug detectors.
® © 9
Last week we mentioned
that we once had a chance
brief meeting and conversa-
tion with the late J. C. Pen-
ney."
® © o
This week we learned that
Harold Endslow, Donegal
neighborhood, a few years
ago visited a big farm in Mis-
souri where Penny and a
partner had some fancy An-
gus breeding cattle — includ-
. ing a $100,000 bull.
© © o
Endslow recalls that Penny
was a fine, gracious man,
highly knowledgeable about
the cattle and eager to show
them to anyone interested.
And Endslow was very in-
terested.
"PAINFUL CORNS?/
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L
PA.
NewsManto Talk
At St. Marks
Hod Priest, Lancaster tele-
vision newscaster, will be the
guest speaker Sunday even-
ing, Feb, 28, at St. Mark’s
Evening Evangelistic Service.
The program will begin at 7
p.m. in the church sanctuary.
Accompanying Priest to Mt.
Joy and providing the Music-
al portion of the service will
be “The Victory Voices” —
Beverly McCauley and Arlene
Sload.
The service will be of spec-
ial interest to the young peo-
ple of the community, but all
age groups are welcome,
@® Others are Saying
(From page 2)
beat out boys for a place on
the team in the several non-
contact sports, and if she
wants to, there is little reas-
on not to let her play.
Actually, of course, the
real issue is much broader.
This is the widespread stereo-
type of the female as non-
athletic. The larger depriva-
tion therefore is not so much
denying a girl a place on a
boys’ team, as the lack of en-
ough recognition or provision
for her athletic energies.
Any man who has tried to
keep up with a strong wom-
an swimmer, or has tried to
equal the gymnastic skill or
stamina of a trained woman
dancer, should realize that
physical movement is as na-
tural to the female as to the
male,
It is wrong for society to
disregard girls’ impulse for
athleticism and to allow
school athletic programs for
girls to atrophy.
—Christian Science Monitor
HARD ACT TO FOLLOW
An “older generation”
speaker during a Commence-
ment Address recalled the an-
ecdote about the young per-
son who asked, “. . . what's
polio?” Speaking to a college
graduating class, he said.
“Yes. What's polio? What's a
typhoid epidemic? Or diph-
theria, small pox, scarlet fev-
er? This might be news to
some of today’s new gradu-
ates—but those scourges used
to be very much with us. As
one representative of the ov-
er-30 contingent. I discreetly
remind our new graduates
that it is, after all, this older
generation — which includes
your parents, grandparents,
aunts and uncles — perhaps
square at times and certain-
ly often critized these days—
that has had something, some-
how, to do with the fact that
your life expectancy today
has increased by about thirty
When in need of printing
remember The Bulletin.
PAGE THREE
over the last 50
»”
percent
years . . .
—Lititz Record
SOLUTION TO FIT THE
PROBLEM
Another example of the
way inflation can undermine
basic principles and national
integrity can be seem in the
proposal that business firms—
employers—be forced to pay
a special tax if they grant
wage increases beyond an ap-
proved guideline level. Com-
ments The Wall Street Jour-
nal of this latest improvisa-
tion to control inflation: “Use
of the tax system to exact
penalties as part of an effort
at economic manipulation is
always a dubious practice.
The fundamental purpose of
any tax system should be to
raise revenues, not to punish
or reward people for their
economic behavior. Punish-
ment through taxation, par-
ticularly for something that
is difficult to control, creates
resentments that are the first
step toward a breakdown in
public acceptance of taxa-
tion.” :
As The Journal concludes,
inflation is a hard problem,
and “. . . often the only an-
swer to a hard problem is a
hard solution.” The country
seems to be drifting farther
away from recognition of
this truth.
% Washington
(From page 2)
Moreover, the Office of Ed-
ucation programs are only
one portion of the total Fed-
eral spending for education
programs. The total 1971 Nix-
on education budget was $10-
7 billion, or a $900 million
increase over President John-
son’s 1969 request. This total
for 1971 meant that Federal
money for education was five
times as much as it was in
1960 and twice as much as in
1965.
Whether or not one agrees
or disagrees with this trend
toward increased Federal ex-
penditures for education, it
is best seen in the context of
overall spending for schools.
Approximately $65 billion
will be spent this school
year at all levels of education
public and private, Even if
the dollars are adjusted’ for
inflation, that figure is still
nearly double the amount
spent 10 years ago.
This is a fantastic accomp-
lishment in one decade: With
six percent of the world’s
population and less than one-
third of its developed resourc-
es, the United States spends
over one-half of all funds
spent on education in the
world. We do so because the
American people know and
believe in the value of educa-
tion. It’s a commitment that
cannot be and is not being
reversed.
SWEETIE PIE
“All right, all right! Vil buy the dog a valentine—now
“please open the door!”