D
ARDEN COURTS OFFERS
COMPLIMENTARY HOME VISITS
Our specially trained Arden Courts memory care advisors would like to help you with your
memory care needs. Our staff who have been regularly tested for COVID-19 and follow all
CDC protocols and can either meet at your home or at another location of your choice to
discuss: • Planning for a crisis
• Safety home assessment
• Planning for a future with dementia • Memory assessment
• How to place in a memory care community during COVID-19
Help is just a phone call away. Call today to schedule your personalized home visit.

To arrange for your home visit, contact:
Arden Courts of Warminster
215.957.5182 Arden Courts of Yardley
215.321.6166 © 2021 ProMedica Health System, Inc., or its affiliates
YOU DESERVE
THE VERY BEST!
Nationally Recognized for our Long-Term
Care and Short-Term Rehabilitation
by U.S. News and World Report and Medicare
with a Five-Star Rating.

For more information contact
Kellie, Clinical Liaison by calling
215-934-3021 or by email at
Kelliea@paulsrun.org PaulsRun.org/Save
WE ARE
VA C C IN A T E D !
Retirement Community
9896 Bustleton Avenue • Philadelphia, PA 19115
8 MAY 6, 2021
THE GOOD LIFE
r. Donald Stoltz, 85, is used to the
thrill of seeing his name in print.

Th e retired doctor and former
president of the Curtis Center Museum
of Norman Rockwell Art in Philadelphia
is also a prolifi c author who has published
22 books for children and adults over the
course of his life.

Th e Northeast Philadelphia resident
self-published his latest book, “It Could
Be Verse,” in April. Th e volume is a collec-
tion of poems written in the rhyming
style he used for many of the children’s
books he wrote and illustrated in his
younger years. Th e cover is illustrated
with a painting of his wife, Phyllis Stoltz.

Th e poems in the collection range
from lighthearted rhymes about birds
fl ying into museums to fi nal goodbyes
for a dying friend. Th ere are also poems
about Jewish holidays, from helping an
old man in need on Chanukah to staff at
a Catholic hospital celebrating Passover
with a patient while he recovers from
surgery. Stoltz grew up in Northeast Philadelphia,
and his parents were founding members of
what was then called Congregation Shaare
Shamayim. He knew he wanted to be a
doctor from a young age and attended
Central High School, Temple University
and the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic
Medicine. Aft er he graduated from PCOM in
1961, he married and opened a family
medicine practice in his parents’ base-
ment. His initial base of patients was a
group of 50 or 60 families in the neighbor-
hood who invited him to their weddings
and bar mitzvahs.

When many young parents who went
to him for health care told him that their
children were struggling with toilet train-
ing, he started looking for a children’s
book that might help them.

“I looked all over, and I couldn’t fi nd
one about toilet training. So I decided to
write it, and I wrote ‘Th e Story of Tommy
Toilet,’” he said.

Th e book sold in local bookstores and
pharmacies, and Stoltz said it wasn’t long
before every house in the neighborhood
had a copy.

He discovered that he enjoyed writing
to help children learn about challenging
topics, so he decided to write more. Next
came a book about Nelson Needle, which
was written to help children scared of
getting shots. Th en came “Peter Th e Very
Poor Eater,” about picky eating.

One of his favorites was “How Dad
and Mother Made My Brother,” which
covered early sex education.

JEWISHEXPONENT.COM