M 4. 1“ . 8:00 A. M: fo 5:00 P. M 5/6 2t NOTICE To Elizabeth Stauffer, her Beirs assigns and legal representatives os, any other person interested therein, Notice is hereby given that on 30th day of Apel 1943, a Radon was presented by Harry H. Noll and Florence M. Noll to the Court Machine, also Columbian 2-horse Commen Fleas of Lancaster County Pa., praying that a lien of mortgagev| dated April 2, 1846 and recorded in. the Recorder of Deeds Office, Lan- caster, Pa., same Township, Lancaster County, Pa.» containing 37 acres, neat measure, av part thereof being now owned by. said petitioners, said land adjoining, land now or late of John Abrakam Harnish, John Sehner andj David Gerlach. All parties interested te, in Mortgage. Book 10, page to Elizabeth] Stauffer in of $1,250.00, be~ satisfied, rel and discharged, so far as it may be a lien upon a tract of te along a pub lic road leadin the Lancaster— Marietta state ay to the Lin-J coln highway, t Hempfield Manny N in saidy mortgage are notified to appear in said Court, June 18, 1943, at 9:30 Ax M., eastern war time, to show cause why a decree should not be entered forever releasing and discharging the above mentioned premises front * the lien cf the mortgage above set” forth. WILLIAM D. LEED: James N. Lightner, Atty. Sheriff Bl6l4t HELP WANTED ® Marietta I Hollow-Ware & Endmeling 100% War Production Standard wages paid to learners and skill- ed workers. APPLY AT OFFICE MARIETTA, PA. 5(6[1t[p FOR SALE: 1939 70 Olds- mobile Club Coupe. llent econ- dition, good tires, large trunk John G. I enecker, Mt. | Joy. 5/6tf | LOST: Ration Book No. 595429. Finder please return to 204 Mt. Joy Street, Mount Joy, Pa. 5/6/1tp FOR SALE: Used s, Victrolas, Pianos, Piano Rolls, fs, Guitars, Mandolins, Violins, jos, Recerd Albums, Needles. ply Saturday only 10 to 10. HessMMusic Shoppe, 21 E. High St. Elizabethtown. FOR SALE — Second-hand Wash wagon, low-down. Elam R. Bru- baker, Mount Joy, Phone 914R21. 5/6(1tlp FOR SALE — Savoir 5-burner oil stove with oven, used one year. Ap- ply Christ Nolt, near Newtown, Co- lumbia, RI. 5(6|1tp FOR RENT: A house, one- half mile east of , along old Harrisburg Pike. ults only. Call Ralph C. Gable, t. Joy phene 137J6 4°29(2¢ FOR SALE: fold style large plain black coal , recondition- ed, $35.00. Call ce of Florin Foundry Mfg. Co., Florin. 4224t WANT TO RENT- vellings in Mount Joy and vici for our em- ployes. Musser Bros) Mount Joy. 2-25-f PAUL A. , GENERAL CONTRACTO ount Joy, Pa. Phone 145. F: uilding Repairs and Alterations. w structures of any type or size. 2/4)tf NOTICE is hereby given that the officers of Brethren’s Mutual Fired Insurance Company (a dissolved] corporation) have filed their final account in the Court of Commond Pleas of Lancaster County, Pa. (Equity Docket No. 9, page 175)~ Said account Will be confirmed nisi 5/6/4t 4 MEN molding. Excellent chinists work need not apply. Avenue. Uompany | CLOSURE PLANT WOMEN L Men wanted to learn plastic oppor- tunity for a good paying job 1 vacancies for administrative First andi Segond Class Ma- Those now engaged in war Apply at Employment Office 500 Block of New Holland Armstrong Cork + West on May 21, 143. If no exceptions are filed on before May 31, 1943; said accoufyt fmay be finally con— firmed. Thgfaccount will be called for audit, 1 confirmation and dis] tribution in the said court in the_ Court House at Lancaster, Pa., at. 9:30 o'clock A. M. on June 4, 1943. ARNOLD & BRICKER,~- Solicitors.) 4/29(3t ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Estate of Wm. Kauffman, late of [empfield Township, deceased. Letters testamentary on said es- tate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, re- siding in Mount Joy, Pa. MAHLON C. FOREMAN, David St., Mt. Joy, Pa. Arnold & Bricker, Attys. 4{8/6t ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE! Estate of John G. Erb, late of East Donegal Township, deceased. Letters of administration on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- mediate payment, and those hav- ing claims or demands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the under- signed, residing in Mount Joy, Pa. HOWARD G. ERB JACOB G. ERB FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TRUST CO. Administrators Bernard J. Myers, Atty. 4/8/6t EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Estate of Mary H. Kolp, late of Mount Joy Boro, Lancaster Coun- ty, Pa., deceased. Letters testamentary on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, re- siding on Chocolate Avenue, R.D.1, Mount Joy, Penna. WORMAN B. KOLP/ Executor H. Clay Burkholder, Atty. 4/]16t EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Myra J. Booth, late of Mount Joy Township, deceased. Letters testamentary on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same, will present them without delay for settlement to the under- signed, residing in Mount Joy, Pa. JOEN M. BOOTH Executor. M. E. Musser, Attorney 4156t Good Health is Needed! work, or other war work, protect your health with an Individually Designed Spencer Support. MRS. MARY W. FREY — : -»- Mortuary Record In (From page 1) and one brother William, New Holland RD. - The funeral was held from the Nissley funeral home here on Sun- day afternoon with interment in the Manheim Fairview cemetery. both of Murs. Harmon Ishler Mrs. Amanda Ishler, eighty-five, widow of Harmon Ishler, of Eliza- ‘bethtown, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Joseph Landis, Ob- erlin, Pa. Besides the daughter, at whose home she died, she is sur- vived by these other children: Mrs. Mrs. Harry Neidich, Steelton; Mrs. Herman Hauer, Hummelstown; Mil- ton, Columbia; Walter, Palmyra; Claude, Elizabethtown, and George, Palmyra, and a brother, Christian Sanders, Annville. Twenty-two grand children and 15 great grand- children also survive, Deceased is very well known in this locality, the family having re- sided at Florin for many years prior to moving to Elizabethtown. The fumeral was held at Eliza- bethtown Monday afternoon with interment in the cemetery. Mus. Alice Y. Heisey Mrs. Alice Y. Heisey, seventy- nine, widow of Amos Heisey, died this merning at the home of her daughter,: Mrs. Enos Hoffer, Man- heim R2, of a complication of dis- leases after an illness of ten days. She was a member of the Church ‘of the Brethren. She was born May 7, 1963, a daughter of the late Henry and Elizabeth Young Becker. She is survived by their daughters, Mrs. Lizzie Stauffer, of Elizabethtown R1; Mrs. Titus White, of Manheim Rl; Mrs. Enos Hoffer, of Manheim RI. Also one sister, Maria Heagy, of Lancaster RD. The funeral will be held from her late home on Saturday afternoon at 1:30 with further services in the Manheim Church of the Brethren. Interment in Hernley’s cemetery. Mrs. Daniel Geltmacher Mrs. Anna May Geltmacher, six- ty-nine, wife of Daniel R. macher, Newtown, Columbia “RI, died at 8:20 p. m. Thursday in St. Joseph’s Hospital. Mrs. Geltmacher, who was a member of the Newtown United Brethren Church, was a daughter of the late Samuel and Anna Mary Mickey Shaffer. Besides her husband, she is survived by the following children: Harry, Colum- bia; Lillian, wife of Irvin Witmer, Jacob S., and Daniel S., all of New- town; Pearl, wife of Hathaway Breneman, and May, wife of Marvin Gainer, both of Mount Joy Rl, and Lester, U. S. Army, stationed at Camp Siebert, Alabama. A brother Amos Stauffer, 16 grandchildren and eight great grandchildren also sur- vive, Private funeral services, were held from her late home on Sun- day at 1:30 P. M. with public ser- vices in the Newtown U. B. Church at 2 P. M. Interment in the Newtown cemetery. Great Plans Projected For Eritrea Now Doomed Asmara, capital of Eritrea, was notably Italian in appearance and mode of life. Italians accounted for more than half of its 98,000 people. Its churches and dwellings, coffee shops and sidewalk cafes were Italian in design. In dress, furni- ture, and customs it was a true copy of the mother country. The city was well served by Eritrea’'s net- work of motor highways and rail- roads. From its airport planes flew to the Libyan port of Bengasi, to Rome, to Assab, to Ethiopian towns. For Assab, long a center for the export of native salt, the Italians had made great plans. It was in- tended to become the sea port for the internal produce of Italian East Africa. Communication was estab- lished with Addis Ababa, capital ef Ethiopia. Ten miles outside the city, at Macaca, a spacious airport was built. Large-scale harbor improve- ments—new piers, landing places. and an outer mole—supplanted the primitive wharves serviceable only for small native craft. The city’s old Arab streets were brought up to date. Other novelties included refrigerator and power plants, and an air-cooled hotel. New offices, shops, restaurants, and amusement places accented the modern note. ———— Ee Subscribe for the Bulletin. section to use these columns when- ever they have anything they want lo buy or sell. tf WANTED—More People to use our classified columns and turn useless articles around their homes into 434 S. Market St. Phone 243-E ETOWN, PA. umn, Try it, rash by advertising them in this col- 24th William Leibfried, Garrett Hill, Pa.; | Elizabethtown WANTED — Rverybody in "this |: To Or Bo oad Works 24 Hours a Day The oyster drinks all day, swal- | lowing up to 4% gallons of water an hour through a slight gap be- tween the two valves of its shell. | From this liquid diet it strains the nourishing minerals washed away from the soil into the sea. Calcium is spread in a pearly layer over | the inside of the shell, enlarging its diameter about an inch a year. Foreseeing that nature’s bounty would end, the founding fathers of Connecticut began protecting their ‘oyster fisheries in 1784. Despite pro- tective measures, the oyster has be- come scarcer. At the beginning of this century the annual yield of oy- sters from the continent’s coastal ‘waters was half again as large as the present “‘take.’” The gradual depletion of the na- tion's “wild” oyster beds is typi- fied by the Chesapeake fisheries, which 60 years ago yielded from 25 to 30 million bushels annually. Now the yearly crop may be less than one-seventh of the old fotals. Ef- forts about the 1880s to protect the natural oyster beds in Chesapeake waters started ‘oyster wars” be- tween government boats and an oy- ster-pirate fleet armed with eannon. Now the seafood patrol enforces conservation laws protecting oysters under a prescribed size. Since the wild oyster has become scarce, the bivalve now served on the half-shell | in most parts of the country is as domesticated as the strawberry or the tomato, a product of planting, transplanting, cultivating, and har- | vesting. | | U. S. Is Attacking From | Center of Aleutian Isles Occupation of the Andreanof is-| lands by navy-supported U. S. army troops puts the Americans ‘‘in the middle” of the Aleutian war thea- ter. The central island of the An dreanofs is just about halfway be- | tween the Alaska mainland and, un- til recently, Japanese-held Atta, | westernmost of the Aleutians. Tana- | ga, nearest of the main Andreanof | islands fo Kiska, is only about 175 air miles (little over half an hour’s aver- age bombing time) from that much- | attacked Japanese base. | The Andreanof group offers a pos- | sible selection of half a dozen sites | for Uncle Sam’s reportedly large | occupational forces. Atka is the! largest. Situated near the eastern] end of the chain, it is, however, | more than 300 air miles from Kiska. | Atka has an area of roughly 600 square miles. It is curiously shaped, with a headlike formation in the | northeast tapering to a slim tail's point in the southwest. Like the rest| of the Aleutians, Atka is generally | mountainous, with rocky, precipi-| tous shores, although there are a| number of harbors, beaches and in- land open spaces suitable for! air fields. Its active volcano, Korovin, in the northeast, is nearly 5,000 feet high. or Oil on Bahrein Island Bahreih island, in the Persian gulf, | greatly overshadowing the other islets of the small archipelago, runs 26 miles north to south and is 10 miles wide. The petroleum wells and refinery are near the center, where there are hills up to 400 feet. Along the north coast is a small fertile area where herds graze and figs, dates, wheat and barley are grown. On the northeast coast the Sheikh’s palace overlooks Ma- nama, the island's port town of 35,- 000 people. Northward is the har- bor, lying between protecting reefs. In recent years a causeway has been built from Manama to Mubharraq| town on Muharraq island, because the latter was chosen as the site for a commercial airline port. In the protected water east of Manama and south of Muharraq is a British naval anchorage. Army’s New Plastic If it is any solace to the soldier, the notes of reveille which awaken | him in the morning soon will have a better tone, the war department an-{ nounced today. Designed primarily to save brass, | an essential metal, a new plastic trumpet has been adopted and will be issued. Not only will the new instrument save approximately 20 ounces of brass for each trumpet, but the tone is better, it is reported. Made of cellulose acetate, the trumpet is olive drab, blending well with uniforms and other army equipment without benefit of paint or polish. The trumpet needs no ‘‘warming up” period as is required in brass instruments, and musicians who have tested the plastic trumpet say | it does not ‘‘choke up.” Penalties for Careless Hunters The Michigan law providing for denial of hunting licenses to big game hunters accidentally shooting humans, has been extended to apply also to small game hunters, the! Michigan department of conserva- tion announces. However, while the court may order revocation of a deer hunting license for the current year | and the three years following, small | game licenses may be revoked only for the current and first ensuing year. The small game. provision has been on ‘the books since January 10, but last season's hunting was nearly over at that time, so few small game hunters are now barred. Two hundred and ten i appear | on the 1943 deer liceffse blacklist. Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. | Natives of ag Africa Join Allies Hereros of Former German Colony Seek Revenge. LONDON.—Deep hatred of their former German masters has never ceased to rankle in the hearts of some native tribes of Seuthwest Af- rica since the German-Herero war there in the 1880s when the com- mandant of the colony, General von Trothe, furious at the tribe's fierce resistance, ordered his soldiers to exterminate every Herero — man, woman and child. A call by the government of the Union of South Africa for recruits for the Native Military corps has caused them to flock eagerly to the colors. The Hereros, descendants of the remnants of that tribe who escaped extermination, are training with grim determination, according to the Johannesburg Sunday Times. Ovambos, whose contact with the Germans was less, but who never- theless know by repute the charac- ter of the previous rulers of South- west Africa, are coming forward in large numbers to help in the strug- gle. Damaras, too, Hottentots and even a few Bushmen are joining up. From the mountains of Basuto- land, the sandy wastes of Bechu- analand and the wild mountains of Swaziland, which compose the Brit- ish High Commission territories, na- tives in large numbers have joined | the Armed Auxiliary Pioneer corps | set up in these British High Com- mission territories a year ago. The population of these territories num- bers 1,000,000, in round figures. Be- tween 70,000 and 100,000 natives are | regularly employed South Africa industries, mainly in | the gold mines. Yet 20,000 of them have been doing fine service in the Middle East’ and 15,000 mere will soon follow them, Rights of French Women Increased by Government VICHY.—The detention of many heads of French families as war prisoners in Germany is having the | effect of increasing the legal rights and responsibilities of women. A law being drafted by the Petain government will give women the | status of heads of households if their husbands are absent. Within cer- tain limitations, they will be able to administer and dispose of their own | property, and that of ‘their house- holds, without the approval of hus- bands. Only men vote, but with so many men absent, the practical effect is that very few have the right of suf- frage. Under existing statutes, women may not be elected to of- fices, but the Petain government | has been appointing women to mu- nicipal councils. In the absence of | mayors, women may perform eivil marriage ceremonies. Navy Discloses Bases In Fijis and Hebrides WASHINGTON.—The existence of American bases in the New Hebri- des and the Fiji Islands became of- ficially known tonight with mention | of these island groups in a navy communique on the sinking of the | cruisers Quincy, Vincennes and As- toria near Guadalcanal island on August 9. No information about the size or type of these bases was vouch- safed, but the communique named them as among the points threat- ened by the enemy if development of Japanese bases in the Solomons was not checked. Too Many Dogs Around; Fears to Enter Home STEUBENVILLE, OHIO.—Sheriff Robert D. Bales received a frantic telephone call. It sounded some- thing like the old lady who lived in a shoe, but it did not concern “‘so | many children . . .” It was Fred Wonnacott, from nearby Adena, who complained that there were so many unlicensed dogs | around his home that he was afraid to enter the domicile. They had | menacing attitudes, too. Two dog wardens were dispatched to the scene and it was soon possi- ble for Wonnacott to enter his house safely. Californian Has Bird to Prove Bird of a Shiner WEISER, IDAHO.—A. D. Roda- baugh of San Francisco has a new | story about how he got that shiner. And he has the eagle to prove it. Rodabaugh and his wife were drive ing through Winnemucca, Nev., when the large, golden bird attacked the automobile and crashed through the windshield—into Rodabaugh’s face. The Rodabaughs brought the bird along. The casualties—Rodabaugh, black eye. wing. one The eagle, one broken Six Service Stars in Ohio Family’s Window UPPER SANDUSKY, OHIO.— Wyandot county boasts one household with six service stars in its window. It is the home of Mr.' and Mrs. (Charles. Hunter, R.F:D. | Sycamore. ' The stars represent one son of Hunter's first wife; two of the present Mrs. Hunter's sons by a previous mar. riage, and three of the Hunters’ own children. eee Subseribe for: the Bulletin. May 6, 1943 in Union of | from South America, now must do to make industrial belting, boot and self-sealing fuel tanks for airplanes ‘Great Lakes Ships Being Moved Bosalniand Rivers Ships formerly operated on. the Great Lakes are now being con- verted for wartime use as ocean shipping at yards in New Orleans, Mobile, Ala., and Galveston, Texas, closes. The vessels, all built. in the early 1900s, averaged about 4,000 gross tons and are between 350 and 400 feet long. They were moved down the Illinois waterway and.the Mis- tures. had been stripped down to . permit passage under numerous bridges. The boats are among dozens which have been-moved from Great Lakes routes for wartime ocean transport duty. Government author- ities declined to reveal the number. In additien to the inland route to the Gulf, a number of ships have been taken down the St. Lawrence waterway and the New York State Barge canal. Practically any boat now eperat- ing on the lakes, one government “official said, could. be moved over the inland route to the Gulf, pro- vided there is proper ballasting and, in some cases, removal of super- structure and machinery. By such procedure the boats may be held within the maximum draft of eight feet. A $2,000,000 navy project, in which machinery for moving or lifting 17 bridges on the Chicago sanitary and ship canal is being provided, will reduce difficulties with moving the larger boats. Rubber-Like Material in Golf Balls Is Not Rubber Maybe it was just so much hard rubber to you. The tough golf ball cover that took the full force of your hook or slice before you gave your clubs to the salvage drive was not rubber, however. In most cases it was gutta ‘percha; in some, ‘it was balata. Dimple or mesh, there will be no more of these useful gums for golf balls for the duration. Gutta percha came largely from Borneo, Sumatra and Java. Balata, its first cousin, double duty. The War Production board recently issued strict regula- tions governing uses of the limited balata supply. Balata, like gutta percha, is flex- ible but hardly -elastic, says a Na- tional Geographic society bulletin. Neither can qualify as a versatile rubber substitute, but both have well-established uses that ease the critical demand for rubber. Strong, tough, water-resistant, noncondue- tors, they are invaluable as ocean cable coverings. Also, they are used shoe soles, dental packing and plates. One of balata’s military as- signments is in the manufacture ot and other modern war vehicles. Qattara Depression The Qattara depression is situated between Libya and the Nile delta, its northern rim lying about 40 miles south of the Mediterranean sea and its extreme eastern tip ex- tending to within 130 miles of Cairo. About one-half of its total area of 6,950 square miles is over 160 feet below the level of the Mediterranean and at one point in the south is 440 feet below sea level. This region of sand dunes, alkali flats and salt plains and marshes, narrows from a broad base in the southwest to a tip in the northeast, with concave edges on the east and south. Caravan tracks eross it from south to north- east and from east to west but no good roads reach the depression. There are small settlements around the few springs and oases along the northern and western fringes. Valley Forge Chapel Washington Memorial chapel at Valley Forge is under the auspices of the Episcopal church. All wed- ding arrangements must be made directly with the chapel office. Ac- cording to the requirements of the Episcopal church, at least three days’ notice of the date of the wed- ding is required before the rector can officiate. Dr. John Robbins Hart is rector of the chapel. If the wedding ceremony is to take place between 8 a. m. and 5 p. m. the fee for use of the chapel is $10, and after 5 p. m. the fee is $15. Those arranging the wedding can bring their own organist and there will be no charge for use of the organ. If they wish to obtain the services of the chapel organist there will be a $10 fee. Checking Electric Refrigerator An electric refrigerator less than five years old rarely runs more than one-third the time at average room temperatures, If the machine runs more than this, it's time to investi- gate. Leakage of ‘air around the rubber gasket at the door may be checked by putting a slip of paper on the rubber, closing the door and then trying to remove the paper. If the paper comes out readily, the war shipping administration dis- sissippi river after their superstruc- | ET] 4 4 ed and Operated b The American Sto PURE LARD 2 Ibs 3 Be 5 Pts. Ib Blue Bonnet Oleo 2 seis. Gold Seal Flour 12 49° Gold Medal Flour 12 :.65¢ Economy is just another good reason why so many people prefer "heat-flo"” roasted Asco Coffee Folks want FLA- VOR in coffee - - and in Asco Coffee flavor you haven ever known. It's§ ilk WS slowly roasted by our heat-flo meth- od, ground when purchased ~ - and yet costs Pe Ib jar With he Stamp - Rm 1b jor 24 ba 68¢ = Acme Coffee 'b 28¢ 6 pts. Get Your Vitamins .With Neon-Rationed Fresh Vegetables and Fruit | FRESH CRISPY 5 § 2 Ibs 19¢ CARROTS New Southern White Squash Solid Slicing Tomatoes New Spring Radishes 2 behs Qc Crisp Florida Celery stalk 15¢ New Texas Onions 3 bs 23¢ Large Florida Valencia Oranges doz 37¢ Fresh Full Pod CAL. PEAS FRESH LOCAL Ib 15¢ SPINACH 219° 3 cans 22¢ can 10c 4 Cond. Tomato Soup Asco’ tall can 22¢c 7 full bch Points Ea. 3 Cond. Vegetable Soup Asco Fancy Alaska Pink Salmon Asco Fancy Peas Blue Label No2can §1§¢ 16 Phillip’s Veg.-Beef Soup 11-0zcan 4 Kraft’s Macaroni Dinner _ Gozpkg Qc 1 Choice Navy Beans ©r Red Kidney Beans 1b Qc 4 Glenwood Grapefruit Juice bigNoScan 29¢ + Get the Prize-Winner ; ie Sweet Cream It costs no more in points Enriched Supreme BREAD 2:17" loaves to get the best. Enriched Victor- ctor 9) vs 11 Cc BREAD BIC. \ Points Have Been Removed From Packaged Soup Mixes Ideal Vegetable-Noodle Soup Mix Lipton’s Noodle Mix Betty Crocker Vegetable Soup Mix ‘Tetley’s Veg., Pea, Potato or Beef Soup’ Mix Minute Man Veg.-Noodle and Beef Soup Mix 3.25 . Farmdale Evap. Milk Blackeyed Peas Large, aty Calif. Prunes Nola Peaput Batter Fancy Blue Rgse Rice Buckwheat of Pancake Flour Bisquick 20-0zpkg 7c Your Choice . No Stamps & tall cans 55¢ Ib pkg 10¢c io 14¢ 1b jar 25c¢ 2 1s 19¢ 20-0z pkg 6c 40-0z pkg 31c { ¢ 4 ¢ { 1 { ¢ 1 { { { 4 { 1 { 1 { { 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4! warm air is entering the box. In- cidentally, .grgasé. drops, no matter how insignificant they may seem, | are harmful to rubber. Further | check on door catch and hinges may | prevent air seepage. If, however, | the refrigerator still runs more than | one-third of the-time, a service man | should be called in. | DS | - Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. - | q TENDER, JUICY FRANKS Get The GOOD Out Of Every Cut Of Meat 8 39e Pts. 29c 3 21c 37c 8 Bis qs Frees Sanghi Bar BUCK Shad 2 » 23 FRESH ROE, SHAD (including roe) 1b 25e PALMOLIVE SOAP 13¢ Meaty Shoulder LAMB ROAST ’ LEAN BREAST OF LAMB 7 pts pound LOIN ROAST Center Cu"PORK CHOPS Official Fat Collection Station Bring Us Your , Waste Fats For = ; Explosives Whe i We Poy Tou qn Hudson Paper NAPKINS 2:13 (80 ea) LYDIA GRAY STATLER TISSUES | TOWELS cakes Octagon Cleanser 3 sane 14e Oct. Soap Powder 2 Pke® 9¢ Oct. Toilet Soap 3 °° {3p Cctago LAUNDRY [x 15° bars &€ : DETHOL | Soap Flakes oe 5a 15¢ Sg roan 2%: 24¢| DAZZLE 10¢ 5. 18° Hershey's 3 Soap SUPER SUDS | Tole via GC phy 22° Hershey's Granules 21¢ 20- pkg 20-0z Prices Effective Until Closing, Sat., May 8, 1943. Quantiiy Rights Reserved. pkg eg hE “EERE EE I ee > nerve. 3 Some | 1 | “John’s” lapped u = of the gu his turn fact, now the only drinks b § years ag a beer 1 He's re he’s savi But th smart. H anything by. I was Garden promisin, nice as t ‘cause th but they ly. I tried radish ¢ of dropp stuff. I seeds in right up buy ‘em lem to f a way when I bunches Met a just ma vorcee. able eve they we: there we would asked. answeres going. El so often in the d She’s : to husba You ki idea is a ed I use my Spou give he just ask can’t cor patriotic. Our p often ce: knives k had plen was all If it is and star lunga st what ha rationing Well t you've u ccld, go The fe his run to avail it does c Spring time but been scr can sure used to Mussol vincible armies a boot to ] A ver; West Ma the othe dust, a 1 him up A Mar that the done mo than any Englan when it have a fi town wi their live