Susquehanna times & the Mount Joy bulletin. (Marietta, Pa.) 1975-1975, May 07, 1975, Image 2

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Page 2 — SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN
SPRING-TIME TUNE-UP
Time For A
SPRINGTIME TUNE-UP
SERVICE
MILLER’S
Mobil SERVICE
271 WEST MARKET STREET, MARIETTA
426-3430

[ TOM McCOY )
CUSTOM BUTCHERING
MILTON GROVE
R.D.3
Elizabethtown
653-5335
TD J


Complete Butchering
Service on Beef, Pork,
& Sheep
Slaughtering, Cut, Wrap,
Freezing

Sugar Cure Hams & Bacon,

MOOSE
...]HEATRE.....
Elizabethtown
Starts Thursday
James Bond's
MAN WITH THE
GOLDEN GUN

Thurs. & Sun. - 7 only
Fri. &Sat.-7 &9
®eo000crcsevedoves
00000000000 0Q0OCROIOIOGIOIOGOIOOS

w
PHONE 653-4087


<TONEBRIDGE FARpy
Visit our New Retail Store
1% mi. S. of Mount Joy on Pinkerton Rd. .-
Where we feature our own A
LOCAL BEEF, PORK, VEAL & LAMB
Complete Line of FROZEN FOODS VY *#¥i
Full Line of SEAFOOD ITEMS
CUSTOM BUTCHERING
Mon. - Thurs., 8 -5:30 — Fri. 8-8 —Sat., 8-5
MARIETTA CITGO
CITGO GAS — GROCERIES
OPEN 5:30 A.M. - 8:30 P.M. DAILY
SUNDAY 8:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.
Ed Reeves, Prop.
East End — Route 441 - Marietta

EMERGENCY
MEDICAL CALLS
SATURDAY
AFTERNOON
and
SUNDAY
Dr. Ephraim Awad
(Mount Joy Area Only)




Susquehanna Times
Advertising Mgr.
News Editor
Circulation Mgr.
SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN
& The Mount Joy Bulletin
Box 75A, R. D. 1, Marietta, Pa. 17547
Published weekly on Wednesday except 4th of July and
Christmas week (50 issues per year)
Publisher - Nancy H. Bromer. 426-2212 or 426-1707
Nancy Bromer, 426-2212
Hazel Baker, 426-3643
Judy Swab, 426-3159
Advertising Rates Upon Request
Entered at the post office in Marietta, Pa., as second class
mail under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Subscription Rate: $4 per year
Vol. 75 No: 18 May 7, 1975



 
&
A
John H. Brubaker
Phone 426-3863

EMERGENCY
MEDICAL SERVICES
Available Day & Night
COLUMBIA HOSPITAL
7th & Poplar
(Emergency Entrance)



 
 
 


 
 

 
 
 

 
 
 
Ken Depoe
(Continued from page 1)
short while using flies he
had tied himself, but threw
them all back in.
The biggest trout don’t
make the best eating, but
they do make the most
young trout. In his work,
Ken’s respect for conserva-
tion and the importance of
keeping all forms of life on
earth has grown.
Helen Pennell
(continued from page 1)
going to and from school.
She not only protects
them. She gets to know
them and know them well.
During those seconds while
they are waiting to cross the
street she gets to know the
names and then the thoughts
and wishes of each child.
She has a collection of
thousands of school pic-
tures of “her” children.
There are no names written
on the backs of the pictures;
yet, Mrs. Pennell can iden-
tify each one.
She recalls experiences
she had with children years
ago, and tears moisten her
eyes as she remembers them.
A lot of her “children”
now have children of their
own. Her grown-up child
ren come back to see her,
often at her station on Bar-
bara and Main.
She also has “children”
at St. Mark’s United Metho-
dist Church, where she is
‘Sunday School teacher for
children aged two to four.
She buys presents for her
many children, sometimes
going to rummage sales and
buying clothes for those
who need them. She tells
the parents someone gave
her the clothes.
The Bulletin wondered
what made Helen Pennell
such a motherly person. It
isn’t that she just likes child-
ren. She likes all people of
all ages. Several years ago
when her husband Bruce
was seriously injured at work
and was hospitalized for a
long period, Mrs. Pennell
visited other people too
from Mount Joy who were
patients in the same hospi-
tal with her husband.
The Bulletin decided that
a good mother is no differ-
ent from a good person, a
person who likes all people,
including little people.
FARMERS FIRST
ANNOUNCES DIVIDEND
The Board of Directors
of Farmers First Bank,
of Lititz, has announced a
$.20 per share dividend pay-
able June 16th to stock-
holders of record May 28th.
Bank officers are pleased
with year to date earnings.
The above dividend repre-
sents an 11% increase over
the second quarter dividend
of 1974.

May 7, 1975
Donegal COG meets
The Donegal Council of
Government (COG) met last
Wednesday night.
Members of the Donegal
School Board and of the
municipal governments of
Marietta, Mount Joy, and
East Donegal Township at-
tended.
The purpose of the COG
meetings is to discuss com-
mon problems of the area
that cut across political
boundaries.
At last week’s meeting
there was discussion of the
possibility of the schools’
sharing in revenue collected
in occupational taxes by
the municipalities.
Alumni
banquets
ALUMNI BANQUETS
The Alumni Banquet for
the former Marietta High
School, which will observe
100 years since the first
class graduation, will be held
at Mr. Lacy’s Lounge, Mari-
etta, on Saturday, June 7,
at 7 p.m.
Speaker for the dinner
meeting will be Clark
“Bunk” Miller, class of ‘47.
Guests of honor will be the
classes of 1925 and 1950.
Reservations may be placed
with Mrs. H. L. Shireman,
1144 Mill-Mar Road, Lan-
caster, Pa., if an invitation
is not received.
The Annual Alumni Ban-
quet for the former May-
town High School will be
held at the Rheems Fire
Hall on Saturday, June 21,
at 7 p.m. Honored guests
will be members of the
class of 1925.
{
BWR CNS x
\
Cactus, the reluctant mule, just doesn’t
Uncle Zeke, her trainer, is just as stubb
twice a day, to the delight of all the chil
circus appears in Mount Joy
Playground Funds.
Sept
HIATT
All groups in attendance
seemed to be agreed that
property in the area should
be reassessed for taxes.
At the end of the meet-
ing, representatives of East
Donegal Township and Mari-
etta Borough expressed
their disappointment that
the Borough of Mount Joy
had acted unilaterally in
claiming an additional one-
quarter of the one per cent
earned income tax. By tak-
ing this additional revenue,
to which it was legally en-
titled, Mount Joy forced
other municipalities in the
Donegal School area also to
take an additional share
The moneys taken by the
municipalities had previous.
ly gone to the schoo] dis-
trict, which will now have
to derive additional income
from other sources to meet
its expenses.
Representatives of East
Donegal and Marietta main-
tained that there had been
general agreement at the
COG meeting last fal] by
all groups, including Mount
Joy, not to change the
existing distribution of in-
come from the earned in-
come tax.
Blood pressure check
The State Health Depart-
ment and the Visiting Nur-
ses Association are cooper-
ating with the Lancaster
Chapter of the American
Heart Association during
May with a month long
effort to educate the public
about hypertension.
The following sites will
be available for area resi-
dents who wish to have their
blood pressure checked as a
preventive measure. The
blood pressure check itself
takes only a few minutes,
and no prior appointment
is necessary. May 13, Mari-
etta Community House; May
15, Marietta Community
House; May 17, from 2 to
4 p.m. Sloan’s Pharmacy,
Mount Joy.
The program is primarily
one of detection. Persons
screened and found to be
at risk from high blood
pressure will be referred to
their doctor for further test-
ing and treatment.
Year round free blood
pressure screenings are held
Circus day in Mt. Joy
PHOTO- Courtesy of THE RECORD, Hackensack, N. J.
STUBBORN AS A CLOWN
at 246 West Orange St. from
2 -4 p.m. every Friday ex-
cept holidays.
The Heart Association’s
blood pressure screenings
and educational programs
will continue throughout
the year. For more informa-
tion about the screenings
on high blood pressure, con-
tact the American Heart
Association, Lancaster Penn-
sylvania Chapter, Inc. 393-
4781.
NORLANCO APPOINTS
TWO TO BOARD
At the recent Board of
Director’s meeting of the
Norlanco Family Health
Center the following were
appointed to serve on the
Board of Directors: Mrs.
Dorothy Baker, retired
School Nurse of the Eliza-
bethtown Area School Dis-
trict and Mrs. Jeanette Ger-
mer, School Nurse of Seiler
Elementary and Grandview
Elementary of the Donegal
School District.

seem to want to be a circus performer. But
orn and insists that she go through her routine
dren attending the Royal Wild West Circus. The
on May 7 at Kunkle Field for the benefit of the Library and