TT EERE RE WWW TV vvvUvVV rv Vv VW WW Rr a wr we ws WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, Engagements BERRIER — HOFFMAN Mr, and Mrs, Millard S. Hoffman, Mount Joy R1, an. nounce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Bonita Kay Hoffman, to Dale Jay Berrier. The bride-elect was gradu- ated from Donegal H. S. and Harrisburg Business School, Harrisburg. She is employed by Armstrong Ceiling Plant, Marietta. as a secretary. Mr. Berrier is the son of Mr, and" Mrs. Dale J. Berrier of Elizabethtown R3. He was graduated from Eli- zabethtown high school and served in the U. S. Marine Corps for four years. He is employed by PP&L, Holt- wood Power Plant. MARQUART — BOSTIAN _ Mr, and Mrs, Charles Bos- tian, Mount Joy R1, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Elsie Bostian, to Jesse Marquart Jr. She is employed by Kerr Glass Mfg. Corp. Mr. Marquart is the son of J. Marquart of Lancaster. He is also the son of the late Mrs. Grace Marquart. He is employed by Kerr Glass Mfg. Corp. Peter Paul Votes Dividend The Board of Directors of Peter Paul, Inc., at its meet- ing last week declared the regular quarterly dividend of $.30 per share, payable March 1, to stockholders of record at the close of business Feb. 11. Preliminary consolidated net sales for the year ended, Dec. 31, were $67,321,000 as compared to $66,751,000 for the year ended Dec. 31, 1970. Preliminary consolidated net income of the company for the year ended Dec. 31, was $3,738,000 or $1.81 per share. Consolidated income for the year ended Dec. 31, 1970, was $3,450,000 or 1.61 per share before provisions for losses and write off of invest- ment in unconsolidated for- eign subsidiaries. Consolidated net income for the year ended Dec. 31 was $55,000 or .03 per share after these extraordinary charges. CHESTER CHOIR IN FIRST LENTEN SERVICE The Chester, Pa. Communi- ty Church Choir will give a sacred concert in the Florin Church of the Brethren Wed- nesday evening, Feb. 16, at the best for mn to MOUNT JOY Take one phone call (or coupom & below), add hostess with baskets 8 of gifts and information about the city, stir in genuine hospitality, and you'll have a generous and me, Just phone IY delightful welco 3 bi Lo wnalionad Louise Mumper 367-7728 WELCOME NEWCOMERS! Uses this couson ta let us know you're hers. Name. Address City. [J Pleass have the Welcome Wagon | Hostess call on me Th SENNA Bi gl eC A at ag [3 1 slready subscribe to the Fili out coupon and mail te Circulation i Dept., Ps recipe | else’s head; depending, presu- ' mably, on who has the cold. 1972 8 p.m, This is the first of a series of cooperative Lenten servic- es sponsored by the Gloss- brenner Usited Methodist, and St. Mark's United Methodist and the Florin church, The busload of singers, ac- companied by their pastor, Rev, Ron Clark, will give a full concert, singing fromgthe classics, folk and spiritual traditions. This black inter- city church group has thrilled many with its singing and with the program that it car- ries out in the heart of a met ropolitan area. The public is invited. Boy and Girl C. JOAN LITTLE Joan Little is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Lit- tle, 215 Park Avenue. She is a senior in the college pre- paratory course at Donegal high school. Her high school activities include: Booster Club 9, 10, 11, 12; Rifle Club 9; Dramat- ics Club 11; Svanish Club 11, 12; Junior Class Play 11: Senior Class Play Committee 12; Chorus 9, 10, 11; Band 9, 10, 11, 12; Yearbook Staff 11, 12; Student Council 10, 11; Library Assistant 11, 12; Sci- ence Fair Winner 9, 10; Na- tional Education Development Test Certificate of Achieve. ment 10; DAR Girl 12; Na- tional Honor Society 11, 12; Hispanic Honor Society 12; Yearbook (Associate Editor); Spanish Club (Treasurer). She is a member of Trinity Lutheran church of Mt. Joy, where she is a member of the choir. Following graduation from Donegal, Joani will enter the College of Human Develop- ment of the Penn State uni- versity to major in consumer related studies. When in need of printing remember The Bulletin. of the Month DREW HOSTETTER Drew Hostetter is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A. Hostetter, 68 West Donegal street, He is a senior in the Academic course at Donegal high school. His high school activities include: Soccer 9, 10, 11, 12; Basketball 9, 10, 11, 12; Ten- nis,. -9, 10, 11, 12: ' Charles Heaps Memorial Tennis A- ward, 9, 10, 11; Lancaster Co. Tennis Singles Champ, 11; Varsity Club 10, 11, 12; Jun- ior Play Committee; Honor Banquet 9, 10, 11, 12; Nation- al Honor -Society 11, 12; Sen- ior Executive Committee; Bridge Club President 11, 12; Lancaster New Era Teen of the Week. Out of School Activities: Mount Joy-Florin Coin club; Manheim Tennis Club, Inter- county league. St. Mark’s Un- ited Methodist Church and Sunday School. Tennis rank- ing Central Penn 16 and un der No. 1; Tennis ranking Middle States 16 and under, No. 10; He has woked two summers as assistant tennis pro at the Lancaster Country Club. He has been accepted at Ship- pensburg State college, to ma- jor in accounting. A CURE FOR? The Common Cold? A few months ago, the big toe — a part of the anatomy which usually gets little at- tention in headlines—became news in medical circles. What made it an anatomic- al celebrity was the fact that two Israeli researchers re- ported that they have found a cure for the head cold by chilling big toes with a refrig- erant chemical. According to the doctors, the sudden chill- ing dries up nostrils and ‘cures a cold.” Unorthodix as the new “cure” may sound, and it has not been tested here, the fact is that cold remedies through- out the ages have frequently been on the offbeat side. They have included, reports the Health Insurance Institute, such ‘“therapies’” as wearing garlic around the neck, snif- fing smelling salts, and stand ing on one’s head. The last remedy, according to one compiler of cold facts, Richard Armour, is optional and could either mean stand- ing on your own or somebody This particular therapy sup- posedly responds to the theo- ry that blood rushing from the body into the head goes to work on the cold lodged in the nose and throat. Among other venerable pre- ventives is the keeping-away- from-crowds theory. This too, is subject to variations, de- pending on individual life style. For example, while some people stay away from crowded stores, subways and crowded cocktail parties, oth- ers just stay away from crow- ded stores and subways. While new cold cures crop up periodically, newly minted deterents against the common cold are also frequent—and widely publicized. One of the most controversial ones in re- cent years is the claim by No- bel Laureate Dr. Linus Paul- ing that large doses of vita- min C can prevent and cure the common cold. Other stu- dies have found Dr. Pauling’s theory debatable and have questioned the preventive of therapeutic efftctiveness of vitamin C. The debate rages on—and so does the common cold. However, even if there are few sure fire cures for a cold here is a number of medical- ly recommended precautions that a cold sufferer should be aware of, points ‘out the Health Insurance Institute: 1. Get more bed rest than usual. 2 A hot shower or bath be fore going to bed may help decongest respiratory passag es. 3. Judicious use of aspirin The Prayer of the Week The prayer this week is by Christina G. Rossetti: “O Christ, our God, remember Thy strong and Thy weak ones, great and’small, men and women, for good. Remember the righteous who worship Thee by faith, and bestow on them the blessing of those who not hav- ing seen, believed. Remember and bless all who worsh- trcome Newcomers: Y ip Thee by prayer and reveal Thy gracious Presence unto them. Remember any overthrown through fraility, raise them up and perfect Thy Strength in their weak- ness. Remember the bereaved in their anguish, and make their latter end better than their beginning. Fur- nish the fallen with love, and accept their love. Grant unto sufferers faith, and reward their faith. Remember 0 1 would like to subscribe to the | the despised, the overlooked, the misunderstood, re- serving mercy for them in the day of Thy justice. Re- member munificent hands to refill them, and generous hearts to spiritualize them. «2 for good; for the sake of Thy Holy Name. Amen.’ Remember us all, O God. and nasal decongestants may lessen the stress of cold symp. toms. 4, Lots of fluids are advis- able, Also forget about keeping late hours, smoking and run- ning around to discotheques and such, If you've never been much of a run-around, just slow down on whatever it is that you're doing, any- way. The Institute also points out that not all cold-appear- ing symptoms necessarily in dicate a cold. Runny noses, watery eyes, sore throats, cough and muscle aches, for example, may also be due to allergies, or, in some cases, influenza, which means home care is out and a visit to the doctor is advisable. The same precautions apply if one’s temperature rises above 101 degrees or if a shaking chill, deep cough, ear, chest or throat pains develop. Another thing to remember notes the Institute, is the fact that should the “cold” turn out to be serious enough to require medical attention, health insurance help pay the doctor and hospital bills for a majority of Americans. An estimated 187 million persons are now protected through group coverage where they work or health policies indi- vidually obtained. MANHEIM Sporismen’s Meeting The regular meeting of the Manheim Sportsmen’s associ- ation will be held Thursday evening, Feb. 10 at 8 p.m. at the junior high school rifle range. ® » ® Central America Movie The Manheim Sportsmen’s association will sponsor a col- ored movie Saturday evening, February 12 in senior high school auditorium beginning at 8 p.m. Title of the movie will be “Central America, it will be narrated by Dwight Nichols. It will show scenes in Guate- mala, Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Costa Rica and the isthmus country, Panama, along the Inter-American Highway. The public is invited to at- tend. sk * 5k Aboard Stores Ship Navy Seaman Robert L. Cooper, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Cooper of 629 Park- hill Drive, Manheim, is a crewman aboard the stores ship USS Rigel, homeported at Norfolk, Va., which was named by “Our Navy” Maga- zine as the ‘Ship of the Year’ for 1971. : The Rigel was noted for its battle readiness, excellence in engineering, surply, and re- ceiving the Edward F. Ney Award for the best small gal- ley afloat. The rigors of listening to the usual speech are exceed- ed only by having to make a speech. OPPORTUNITY . There sometimes wants on- ly a stroke of fortune to dis- cover numberless latent good and bad qualities, which would otherwise have been eternally concealed; as words written with a certain liquor appear only when applied to the fire. —Greville The Mount Joy BULLETIN 11 EAST MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY. PA, 17552 Published Weekly on Wednesdays xcept Fourth of July Week and Christmas Week (50 Issues Per Year) Richard A. Rainbolt 4: Editor fy and > [gee = Publisher “Ret Advertising rates upon request. Entered at the post office at Mount Joy, Penna., as second class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879. Over The Back Fence By Max Smith WITH ONLY one weekend in snow cover so far this win- ter, we have gotten several requests concerning the own. ers of snowmobiles running over private land without permission. I am sure that a good many people are aware of the increase in popularity of the snowmobiles and the larger numbers around each winter; I have seen many hill- sides and slopes well marked by this thrilling vehicle: How- ever, I would like to point out that unless the owner of the snowmobile gets permis- sion frem the landowner, he is trespassing on private pro- perty. Even though we are not certain of the exact am- ount of damage done to a winter crop, or to a sod field with these machines, it does not remove the need of the landowner’s permission, All snowmobile owners please note.. Unless the rights of oth- ers are recognized, no doubt more rigid regulations will be made and enforced. , THE SPRING growing sea- son is coming rapidly, and a time when all pieces of farm machinery should be in good working order. I'd like to sug- gest to farmers that if any of their machinery needs servie- ing. it might be an advantage to get this work done before spring weather arrives. Some machinery dealers might give some special discounts in or- der to get the work done dur- ing the off-season and avoid the spring rush. Machinery is very expensive and needs attention in order to give the best returns. Repairs and ser- vicing now may avoid a cost- ly delay during the growing season. THE PRUNING of fruit trees need not be delayed until warm . spring weather. Prun- ing before February or March might increase the hazards from winter injury, but in large operations the work must be started early in ord- er to get done before the buds open. Apple and pear trees are the hardiest of the fruits and should be pruned first; plums and sour cherries are next, and peach and sweet cherries are the most tender and should be pruned later in the spring. Many home-own- ers mav want to do some pru- ning of their several trees and should keep the above time schedule in mind. Pruning is necessary to control the size and shape of the tree, remove damaged wood, and open up the tree for better color in the fruit, THE CAREFUL use of all drugs and antibiotics around livestock is again called to our attention. When these ma- terials are used carefully and sparingly, no doubt they will contribute to herd or flock health and increase produc- tion. However, the frequent use of many antbiiotics may result in a resistance being ing developed in the bacteria or organism and end with poor results. Also, most all materials list the length of time milk is to be withheld or days before slaughter; pro- ducers are urged to recognize these regulations and follow them carefully. he use of chemicals and antibiotics has not caused any trouble with food officials; it’s the mis-use of these materials that get too many people into trouble. Keep record of materials ad- ministered for self protection. PRAYER He prayeth best who loveth best All thingh, both great and small —~Coleridge When in need of printing remember The Bulletin.