SUSQUEHANNA TIMES—Page 11 susquehanna exchange Buy - Sell - Trade - FREE!! Send your classified ads to Susquehanna Times, Box 75A, R.D. 1, Marietta, PA 17547. | No charge for individuals . Businesses pay 10c per word, minimum $2.00. January 10, 1979 ...return of Ophion (cont.) [continued from front page] If you have been thinking : (110) about installing a wood Will BABYSIT preschool heater now is the time to children most hours. Mount do it while the supply lasts. Joy. Call 653-2723 anytime. ‘We have many models and’ prices to choose from. 426-3286. Hiestand Distri- butors, R.D. #1 Marietta. ESTATE NOTICE Estate of David H. Eby, late of Mount Joy Borough, Lancaster County, PA: Letters testamentary on Olympus before the king of the gods, Zeus. Asked what the name of his cat was on into the air any way you please—but it will always eyes, they can see as well in the dark as in light...They have a special tongue which land on its feet. Monday, Dr. Wittell at first is as rough as a file for “Don’t despise the alley . - said the cat did not have a killing their prey...They cat.” said estate having been | name but then suddenly have specialized teeth... Dr. Wittell went on to granted to the undersigned | o4iq “‘Come to think of it, I Whiskers for getting praise a creature universalls all persons indebted hereto | (hink 1'[] call the cat ‘Ophi- through narrow openings... despised by human beings: are requested to make ’ as ) £ 8 on. the cockroach, which, he immediate payment and all said, *‘sits triumphant at the hase pang Jains of apex of Siastion. hens : J 1 as mastered thc most will present them without difficult of arts—how to let (110) lament to the men build houses for him.” Ruth N. Eby, 630 Don- egal Springs Road, Mount Joy, PA 17552 and Union National Mount Joy Bank, Mount Joy, PA 17552. Custodian, full-time, ex- cellent fringe benefits & working conditions. Apply in person, 8:00 to 12:00 noon, 1:00 to 4:00 PM, Monday through Friday, Donegal Mutual Insurance Company, Rte. 441 by-pass Marietta, PA 17547. Wholesale. Columbia To- bacco Company, Inc., 684- 2710— Party Supplies, Cigarettes, Tobacco, Candy, Paper Goods. 509 South 16th Street, Colum- bia. Pa. LOANS & GRANTS Interest free Loans & Grants for home improvements are available to eligible Lan- A long tail that acts as a balance pole in making a Dr. Wittell went on to |eap.. Specially padded ‘praise cats as a species. “‘Biologists,’’ he said, ‘‘say that cats are so fully devel- oped from an evolutionary point of view that they can be developed no further. claws, so that you can’t hear it walking two feet away. Those pads conceal deadly weapons...And over and above all, a set of reflexes unsurpassed by any living thing. You can throw a cat During Dr. Wittell’s com- mendatory remarks about his own species and that of cockroaches, Ophion slept soundly. LET FX BACTERIA help clean your Septic Tank the Easy Way—$6.98. Tree 1 limits. Lines. Sinks opened. Morgan, Hallgren ¢ For more information Hostetter Hardware & Heinly, Attorneys : a CONTACT: Mount Joy PUBLICNOT : 0: TRE ) A THE LANCASTER CO. Just moved to our area? +The Mount 0 Ie h f 2 REDEVELOPMENT Recently engaged? Had a , .. .. oy h if i AUTHORITY baby? To have the most TE on Wear S ” Phone 394-0793 famous basket in the wu January 17, 1979, at 8:00 y ¥ at your cooisiep, pease py , the Borough Of § call—Pat Burton, 653-1963 Building, 21 Each Main 2 2 Old furniture, glassware, or Cherie Dillow, 653-1609 y J: f Street, Mount Joy. The « @ guns, coins, split rail fence, [Mount Joy area]; or Hazel purpose of this meeting will k pool tables, and old mis- Baker, 426-3643 [Marietta be to discoss th By i cellaneous wanted to buy. area). sewerbon ri upcoming 3 . Call : : 3 a good prices WELCOME WAGON : All interested parties are 3 * I am interested in obtain- jpvited to attend. 4 ing articles of old Mount Paris H. Sweigart 1 NOTICE Joy, photos, manufactured Secretary a items, advertising cards, & for my Mount Joy museum. FREE to good home: Ger- Joe Shaeffer, phone man shepherd/collie pups. 653-4604. REAR Call 426-2642. (13) 0 3 i 1 t 3 1 NY TY "WY. wl caster County residents living outside Lancaster City Roots Removed from Sewer Carl R. Hallgren for With a vertical slit in their Alligator Floating quietly at the river’s edge, eyes and nostrils barely visible ‘above water, the reptile zeroes in on the unsuspecting muskrat. Sud- denly, what appeared to be a harmless log comes to life and the muskrat is dragged into deep water by smashing jaws and thrashing tail. . Was that an alligator or crocodile? Both reptiles are ‘““croco- dilians” and they do look very much alike, according to the current (November) issue of Ranger Rick’s Nature Mag- azine, the children’s monthly published by the National Wildlife Federation. But there are ways to tell crocs from gators. An alligator’s snout is wide and rounded, while a croco- dile’s is longer, thinner, and more pointed. Those sharp teeth also are a clue — with its mouth closed, a crocodile has a big tooth protruding on each side, fitting into grooves or crocodile? on the outside of his upper jaw. But in alligators, those two lower teeth slip into a pocket inside his upper jaw, hidden from view. Crocodilians live in very warm, wet parts of North and South America, Africa, Asia and Australia, in swamps, marshes, lakes, rivers, or bays. Although they can stand on all fours and run rapidly for short distances on land, crocs and gators are much more at home in the water, says Rang- er Rick. The unfortunate muskrat is a typical meal for adult gators and crocs. Adults will eat anything they can catch and hold onto — fish, wading birds, turtles, snakes, ducks, raccoons, and. other mam- mals. Both species also swal- low rocks as ‘“‘ballast’ to help them maintain their balance in the water. Even animals the size of deer or pigs may be pulled down into the water and drowned. What about people? Are crocs and gators ‘‘man-eat- ers”? Seldom, if ever, says Ranger Rick. “Unless cor- nered and not allowed to escape, they would much rather hide or run from humans.” However, there are two kinds of crocodiles that have attacked people many times — the Nile crocodile of Africa and the saltwater crocodile of southern Asia. Today’s crocs and gators grow to be from four feet to 25 feet long. Fossils have been found which reveal that "in ‘prehistoric . times some crocodiles were as much as fifty feet long. Baby crocs and gators have many enemies — raccoons, otters, wading birds, and other larger animals. But adult crocodilians have no enemies other than man. Great numbers of baby alli- gators have been captured and sold as pets, although this is now illegal. And of, course, millions of larger gators have been killed for their leathery skins, which are used to make shoes, handbags, luggage, and belts. As a result, the American alligator was once nearly wiped out and was put on the U.S. endangered species list. They’ve made a great come- | | back in many areas, and in | 1977 about 75 percent of | U.S. alligators were reclassi- fied from “endangered” to threatened.” Today the U.S. alligator population is esti- mated to total about 800,000. In contrast, the American crocodile is still in very grave danger. They. exist in the U.S. only in Florida where there are about a dozen breeding females. With care, these mighty reptiles’ may escape the fate of the dinosaurs with whom taey once shared the earth. Donald C. Snyder, Il