Find me on Facebook at THANK YOU - Middleburg...
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4- Snyder County Times
Dining Guide
Reisinger FamilyPractice
Gene W. Reisinger, D.O.James Hornberger PA-C
14229 Rt. 35, Richfield, PA 17086
717-694-9909Toll Free: 855-694-9909www.reisingerfamilypractice.com
ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS
FLU SHOTSNOWNOWN AVAILABLE
Call for moCall for moCall for re informationMonday - Thursday 8am - 7pm,
Tuesday - Friday 8am - 5pm,Wednesday & Saturday 8 - NOON
Care for all ages, offering well and whole for all ages, offering well and whole forhealth in a faith-based environment
Find us on FACEBOOK
At the intersection of Rt. 35 & 104, in Mt. Pleasant Mills, PA
Cruiser’s Cafe
-NOVEMBER OVEMBER O B.O.B.O.B. M.- Barn Yard Burger
$4.30$4.30$4.3Hershey’Hershey’Hershey’s Ice Cream • Burgers s Ice Cream • Burgers s Ice Cream • Burgers
CLOSEDTHANKSGIVING DAY
570-539-0043www.cruisers-cafe.com
Hrs: Mon-Thurs 11am-8pmFri-Sat-Sun 11am-9pm
Directions: From Mt. Pleasant Mills take Rt.104 South, follow signs. Hours Monday - Friday 8 am - 5 pm | Saturday 8 am - Noon
NOTICE: We Will Be Closed November 27th - December 8th
Made in the U.S.A.
2 - Sided MattressesTrue Coil Box Spring
You Dream It, We Build It!We do M-T-O Mattresses!
MICHAEL’S MICHAEL’S FAMILY FAMILY
RESTAURANTRESTAURANT1 S Market St |Selinsgrove, PA.
570-374-7885HOURS
Mon 7 am - 2 pm | Tues-Thurs 7 am - 7 pmFri/Sat 7 am - 8 pm| Sun 7 am - 7 pm
Open Early for HuntersAt 5:00AM
During Bear & Deer Season
Open Black Friday at 5AM!
Friday • Nov 21Friday • Nov 21Fish Sandwich Mac & Cheese
& Stewed Tomatoesd Tomatoesd T $6.95Saturday • Nov 22Saturday • Nov 22
Roast Turkey w/ 2 Sides $8.95Sunday • Nov 23Sunday • Nov 23
w/ 2 SideSunday • Nov 23
w/ 2 Side
Hot Roast Beef Sandwiches w/ One Side $5.95Monday • Nov 24Monday • Nov 24
Cup of Soup & Sandwich $4.95Tuesday • Nov 25esday • Nov 25
Ham Pot Pie w/ One Side $5.95Wednesday • Nov 26dnesday • Nov 26
Ham & Green Bean w/ One Side $5.95
Thursday • Nov 27Thursday • Nov 27w/ One Side
Thursday • Nov 27w/ One Side
CLOSED - HAPPY THANKSGIVING
Daily Public Daily Public LUNCH SPECIALS
(570) 374-3912
Open to the public11 am -1 pm Smoke Free
Open to the public am -1 pm Smoke FreeOpen to the public
All include 16 oz. Soda or TeaEat in or Take-outEat in or Take-outEat in or T
TAKE-OUT PLEASE CALTAKE-OUT PLEASE CALT L IN BY 11 AMFOR PICK-UP BYFOR PICK-UP BYFOR PICK-UP 11:45
Monday am -1 pm Smoke Free
Monday am -1 pm Smoke Free
MondayMonday, November 24 am -1 pm Smoke Free
, November 24 am -1 pm Smoke Free
, November 24, November 24Tomato Soup & Tomato Soup & T
Grilled Cheese omato Soup &
Grilled Cheese omato Soup &
$5.00omato Soup &
$5.00omato Soup &
Tuesdayesday, November 25, November 25Chicken Finger Parmesan
w/ Onion Rings $6.00We
w/ Onion Rings We
w/ Onion Rings dnesdaydnesday
w/ Onion Rings dnesday
w/ Onion Rings , November 26, November 26
w/ Onion Rings , November 26
w/ Onion Rings $6.00, November 26
$6.00
Bacon Cheeseburgerw/ French Fries Bacon Cheeseburgerw/ French Fries Bacon Cheeseburger
$5.50Bacon Cheeseburger
$5.50Bacon Cheeseburger
ThursdayThursday, November 27, November 27Thursday, November 27ThursdayThursday, November 27ThursdayHAPPY THANKSGIVING
Opening at 3pmNO WINGS
FridayFriday, November 28, November 28Friday, November 28FridayFriday, November 28FridayFresh Fried Haddock
Sandwich $6.50Baked Haddock $6.50
Beer Battered Shrimp $6.50(All Include Fresh Cut Fries or Macaroni
Beer Battered Shrimp All Include Fresh Cut Fries or Macaroni
Beer Battered Shrimp (All Include Fresh Cut Fries or Macaroni (
& Cheese w/Stewed TomatoesTomatoesT )omatoes)omatoes
OCTOBER - MARCHEVERY THURS • 6PM
PINT & PRETZEL NIGHT5:30-8:30PM “WINGS”
NON-SMOKING SEATING AVAILABLEWE NOW ACCEPT CREDIT CARDS
NOV 29TH • 8PM - 11PMMEMORY LANE
$5.00 COVER CHARGE
(570) 374-3912(570) 374-3912
Selinsgrove Moose
40 West Spruce St. • 374-9012Breakfast 11/23
Menu subject to changeMenu subject to change
Every Thursday Bingo. Doors open at 5:00. Bonus Packages.
Doors open at 5:00. Bonus Packages.
Doors open at 5:00.
Sausage w/ French Toast or PancakesToast or PancakesT
LUNCH SPECIALS DAILY
No Bingo 11/27
DINNER SPECIALS • 4-7:30pm
TuesdaysesdaysPeanut Day
WednesdaydnesdaysOpen Pool • Beer Specials
November 21:Fantail Shrimp Dinner
November 28:No Dining
November 26 • 9pm:Two Man Band:
Scott & GregThanksgiving Day
Lodge Opens at 3pmThanksgiving Day
Lodge Opens at 3pmThanksgiving Day
SpecialsSpecialsWed.: Fried Haddock, Mac/Cheese,: Fried Haddock, Mac/Cheese,
Stewed Tomatoes & Bread Tomatoes & Bread TThurs.: Wing Night
Fri. & Sat.: 14 oz. Prime Rib w/ 2 Sides & Bread $19.95
Fri. & Sat. Special: 1Fri. & Sat. Special: 11/21 - 11/22Full Rack St. Louis Style
Barbecued Ribs w/ 2 Sides & Bread $18.95
Homemade Soup of the WHomemade Soup of the W$18.95
Homemade Soup of the W$18.95
eek:Ham & Bean
Entertainment:Fri. 11/21 • 7-9pm
Ricky & Harv1/21 • 7-9pm
Ricky & Harv1/21 • 7-9pm
Sat. 11/22 • 8-11pmEighty6
Rt. 104, Mt. Pleasant Mills570-539-8526
www.meiserville.com
Dining: Wed. - Sat. 11-9 Pub: Wed. & Thurs. 11-11
Fri. & Sat. 11-12 am
Black Friday 11-28-14 and Saturday 11-29-14
Kountry Krafts will be open Friday 7am to 8pm and Saturday 9am to 4pm
Find me on Facebook at Kountry KraftsThere will be a drawing for a Craft Item!
KOUNKOUNTRTRTRY KRY KRTRY KRTRTRY KRTR AFAFTSTS1800 Kissimmee Rd | Middleburg PA | 17842
570.765.2347
15% OFF EV15% OFF EVERYERYTHINGTHING
November 21November 21NovemberOpen Juke BoxNovember 26November 26NovemberHarry's Sound
9-1Harry's Sound
9-1Harry's SoundNovember 28November 28November
NemesisNemesisNBand 10-1
November 29November 29NovemberFrank Wicker BanWicker BanW d
Band 9-12
Rt. 45, Mifflinburg, PA 1784PA 1784PA 4Phone: (570) 966-9254
Mifflinburg VFW
PoPost 1964
Mon.-Thurs. 2-11; Fri. & Sat. 12 - ?; Sun. 1 -?November
1; Fri. & Sat. 12 - ?; Sun. 1 -?November 21
1; Fri. & Sat. 12 - ?; Sun. 1 -? 21November 21November
1; Fri. & Sat. 12 - ?; Sun. 1 -?November 21November
Every Mon. 5pm-8pmTacos
Every Tues. 5pm-8pm Burger Night
Every Thur. 5pm-8pm Wings Bar
Steak & SeafoodSteak & SeafoodRoute 104, Middleburg • 570-837-7501
Cou
nnttry Taavevev rn
Sunday BuffetNov 23rd
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.
KITCHEN CLOSED Thanksgiving & Sunday Nov 30
Ham, Beef, Chicken, Macaroni& Cheese, Noodles, Mashed Potatoes, StuffiPotatoes, StuffiPotatoes, Stuf ng, Veggies,
Fresh Fruit, Cakes, Ice Cream,Coffee and Soda
Middleburg VFW Post 5640
Paxtonville Road, Middleburg 570-837-9981
Smoke-Free Dining Room
SpecialsSpecialsFri., NovFri., Nov. 21:
T-Bone Steak or ShrimpT-Bone Steak or ShrimpTSat., NovSat., Nov. 22:Club SandwichWed., Nod., Nov. 26:CheesesteaksFri., NovFri., Nov. 28:
Breaded OystersSat., NovSat., Nov. 29:
Meatloaf
Hours: Mon. - Thurs. 3-11; Fri. 12-1; Sat. 12-12; Sun. 2 -11
Best Priced Haddock Every Friday
Gary DreeseSat Nov. 29th • 6-9pm
The McClure Revitalization Committeewould like to thank everyone who came out to support our First Annual Fall Festival.Special Thanks to businesses, crafters, and vendors for their generous contributions that helped make our festival a success. WE LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING EVERYONE IN OCTOBER 2015!
Thank You All, -McClure Revitalization Committee
THANK YOU
Dear Editor:You Can’t Fool Mother Nature
Boy, now I have heard it all “geo-engineering“. Honest, you really can’t fool mother nature. People have tried many times to fool her and only end up with pie in the sky. We have gypsy moths in Pennsylvania, pigs in Hawaii, rabbits in Australia, English sparrow, Norway rats and on and on. Each time we were either remiss or trying to improve on nature. Now, Geo-engineers are spending research dollars to modify the climate in order to lower the earth’s temperature. I say you can’t fool mother nature. They are talking about spraying sul-fates into the upper atmosphere to refl ect sunlight, spray a mist of sea water to brighten clouds and space refl ectors, orbiting disks to refl ect sunlight. Also, they want to extract CO2 from the air and store it in the ground or the sea bottom. And, be-lieve it or not they want to seed the oceans with iron to stimu-late plankton growth to extract more CO2 which will settle to the bottom. Each of the 5 schemes are likely to cause other problems, such as changing precipitation patterns and ocean acidifi cation. Also, they are all temporary and most result in storage of CO2. You can’t store forever and we need a forever solution. To try to lower the earth’s temperature is attacking the symptoms and not the cause. The cause is burning fossil fuel and deforestation. We need to concentrate our research dollars on alternate en-ergy and reducing CO2 production. In addition to solar, wind and ocean waves, there are a couple of ideas that could make an enormous difference. Leaf power, Lilac Amirav and 30 or so colleagues at Helios a joint project of U.C. Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory are working to cre-ate artifi cial photosynthesis, the process by which green plants take in sunlight and carbon dioxide and produce sugar, energy and oxygen. The ultimate goal is to transform carbon dioxide into oxygen and alcohol. It has been done in the laboratory. They are now working to fi nd a way to scale it up to industrial dimensions. This would not only remove CO2, but create a relatively clean fuel. Another ideal energy source is Micro Nukes(no CO2). Jose Reyes, Chairman of Oregon State University’s Nuclear Engi-neering Dept. explains that miniaturized nuclear plants are small enough to be mass-produced, driving costs down, and can be shipped to just about anywhere by truck or boat. He claims they can be designed to run for years without mainte-nance or refueling. Again, let’s put our research dollar’s into attacking the cause of global warming not the symptoms.
Carlyle W. Westlund, Middleburg
Dear Editor:Crissy
Crissy is the mother of a teenage daughter, and she works part-time jobs as a waitress, mostly on weekends. During the week, she is a full-time student at the Luzerne County Com-munity College where she is studying to become a registered nurse. She is in the second year of a four-year program. She commutes four days a week from Sunbury to Nanticoke, where the college is located, because Northumberland County,
like Snyder and Union Counties, doesn’t have a community college. Unfortunately, our elected leaders are more interested in serving the fi nancial interests of the business community than they are in serving the real needs of their constituents for bet-ter jobs that require further education that is available to them conveniently in their community at a reasonable cost. Until the time comes when the populace recognizes the im-portance of a good education and the necessity of a skilled work force and then demands action from their leaders, things won’t really change; and the gap between the rich and the poor will only widen, and the middle class will continue to disap-pear. Crissy is doing the right thing for herself and setting a good example for her daughter at the same time.
David L. Faust, Selinsgrove
Dear Editor:The Victims Pay Again
Thomas Duncan a Liberian national, not a US citizen, trav-eled to this country after dealing with Ebola patients who ap-parently died. How he got here is questionable and perhaps he was less than forthcoming when making his plane reserva-tions. In any case he ended up in Dallas, Texas. He went to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas for treatment but he apparently did not mention he had direct contact with Ebola in another Country. Never having treated Ebola and not being on alert the emergency room personnel gave him some medi-cation and sent him home. Days later Thomas again showed up in the emergency room and was then treated for Ebola. I do not know if the hospital diagnosed Ebola at that time or if Thomas fi nally admitted that he had been in contact with Ebola patients in another country. At that point he was isolated and treated. The Government sent out confusing reports that Ebola would be contained and there was no immediate dan-ger to the public. Remember there is no proven treatment or cure for Ebola. Apparently you push fl uids that need replacing, isolate and hope for the best. The poor man dies. Two nurses are infected with Ebola. Entire neighborhoods in Dallas are at risk. Due to mobility of the nurses the aviation industry and much of the country becomes at risk for Ebola. The credibility of the Presbyterian Hospital comes in question. Millions are spent treating neighborhoods, the nurses infected, Mr. Dun-can, and other areas that were potentially infected. Procedures for treating Ebola and appropriate equipment to protect work-ers are developed or revised. Still no cure. Fear and specu-lation is rampant. Fortunately the two nurses survive and no outside infections are at this point identifi ed. Enter the lawyers. I was thinking if Mr. Duncan survived he should be sued for the millions in damages and potential threat he posed to our country, individuals, and our health care sys-tem. Obviously fuzzy thinking on my part. The Presbyterian Hospital settled for an undisclosed amount that will take care of Mr. Duncan’s family and create a charitable foundation in his name. Wow! It is understandable why the hospital settled to get rid of the bad publicity but surely they too were victims. The nurses were victims, citizens of Dallas were victims, the taxpayers and our country in general were all victims. Mr. Duncan was apparently willing to risk it all to live and that too is understandable. He was a victim of Ebola for which there is no proven cure and it is too bad the lawyers could not fi gure a way to sue for that!
Just One Man’s Opinion!Joseph R. Koons, Danville
Dear Editor:Well Done!
A “Well Done” staunch republicans on the victories in the mid-term elections! May your fondest conservative fantasies come true! Here is part of the legacy you have bequeathed to your great-grandchildren..... The Keystone XL pipeline .. hooray for cheap gas! ... too bad the kids can’t breathe the air. The spurious 40K jobs is propaganda. The actual number is less then 3K ... mostly maintenance; after completion. The cost of gas is destined for overseas markets ... and, by the way, tae sand oil is the most carbon intensive fuel to ever by proposed as an energy source. The newly elected nine republican senators are all “Climate Deniers” ... Well Done! The “Trans-Pacifi c-Partnership”, (TPP) ... haven’t heard of
it? That’s because the TPP is the most secretive trade deal ever proposed by corporations ... that’s right, corporations, NOT governments! Of the 29 capts., only 2 deal with trade .... the other 27 chatpers are legal parameters which allow corpora-tions to sue sovereign governments for “lost profi ts”. Exam-ple: Royal Dutch Shell or BP want to “frack” Snyder/Union Counties ... land owners sat “NO” ... Shell/BP sue PA. and the counties for billions of dollars in “Lost Profi ts”. Either the great grandkids cough-ups the money for the lawsuit, (it’ll be part of their income taxes) or the “fracking” begins. While the kids are hacking or coughing from the by-products of K-XL, perhaps they can quell the cough with poisoned water from the fracking industry. The Republican Congress has been advocating passage of TPP for years ... it seems their fantasy is about to come true ... Well Done! “Obamacare,” Medicare ... ever wonder why the Affordable Care Act and Medicare are so complex and confusing? Let’s begin with “out-sourcing”, a republican favorite! The website & the program were designed by a Canadian fi rm (don’t we have program designers here?) Why “out-source” ANY part of either health care program to universities or “think-tanks” ... do we not have competent people in the F.D.A. or H.E.W.? The answer is simple ... “Profi ts before people”! The “Af-fordable Care Act” is over 900 pages long and is riddled with holes, gaps in coverage, co-pays, deductibles and the most ex-pensive prescription drug plan on earth. This is probably the fi fth time I’ve written this part ... We’re the only developed nation ... out of 11 ... that has FOR PROFIT health care! The corporate-loving-republicans made sure that any health care plan would be confusing and expensive .. Well Done! (The Canadian UNiv. Health Care Act is 13 pages in length and has worked splendidly since the 60s.) One fi nal comment on healthcare ... United Health (AARP) former CEO, Bill McGuire, took over $1 Billion in salary/bo-nuses .... wonder why your premiums are so expensive? “Profi t before People”. These are only a few items on the Republican agenda for the coming years ... think of the fun the next generations will have with this legacies! Years from now the grandkids may pause in coughing and grandpap may say; “See, that well water really helped you and have a fl owing complexion.” (That’s the radioactivity in the water from leaking gracking sites.) Well Done!
Thanks & Be Well,Peter Mazurkiewicz, Beaver Springs
Buck Contest Winner
Wayne Sechrist was the winner of the senior archery division and the biggest buck taken in the senior di-vision with a bow in the Snyder County Buck Con-test presented by Zach Knepp Outdoors. The winning buck earned the archer a gift certifi cate from Weaver’s Archery in Kreamer and a custom stabilizer from Dead Center Archery in Beaver Springs.