league) ated East | to 4. JAY ENNA. I} CE RR a hl —2 : 1 > | Dont Know erybody reads newspapers but ad- ising left on their door step. Anybody who says that girls are | wrapped up in clothes should take ( a second look. I" everybody reads circular husband is a working model. The average girl wants a moles but she should be sure he A ff We Are Not Offering i “Big Prices on Cars” No, we are thinking of safeguarding that precious car you have with sound ins@irance. Before you buy a new car let us tell you about a new and econom- ical plan of financing your purchase. It's a local service, a personal service on both financing and insurance. FINANCE and INSURE YOUR NEW CAR LOCALLY PHONE 2921 Wm. Young, Marietta about those IN THE SERVICE NEWS United States to Europe, carvying high priority passengers and cargo and many tons of soldiers’ mail. A araduate of Mercersburg Academy, | Major Brandt owned and operated a Flying School at the Detroit City | Airport before entering the Army in May 1942, At present he is am | Operation Officer at this base. His wife, Mrs. Evelyn G. Brandt, | resides at 7492 Lake St, Reno, | Nevada. Rucker, Ala., is home on a ten-day | furlough. S 2/c¢ L. Harold Myers, is station- the Red Cross. kN 12+-144="> I, | What You ~~ IWILL Hurt Yo iH | | A A financing. Some misleed themselves | | | | | | | | use the SECURITY plan of monthly payments. |} | | reduces the amount of interest 11 Nancing 0 The Mt. Joy Building & Loan Asso. Under Supervision State Banking Dept. reat many people still are confused about the cost of home into thinking that it is cheaper to make only one or two payments on their home each Each payment that must be paid. Stop in some- lime soon and let us show how the figures apply to your home Cpl. Beamenderfer to headquarters detachment of regiment. He entered the May 18, 1941 and went ov- | erseas in March, 1942. { tured in North Africa. an infantry service He was cap- Joined Marine Guard Marine Pfc. Joseph E. | lin, whose wife | Main St., Marine | resides at 62 West Guard at the ! Station at Jacksonville, Fla., follow-" | ing 28 months of “Jap and Jungle” fighting in the South Pacific. | | bo: atfit ster and Peleliu | He attached to the special wea- i pons section of the First Division. | For his three Pacific the twenty-five-year-old wears First Marine Division citation, the Pacific | ribbon with four stars and his Pur- Glouces campaigns. was | operations, Marine the u Presidential | ple Heart. | Mortar | Peleliu. Pfc. McLauglin entercd the Corps August, 1938. He High School where letters shrapnel on Bloody Ridge, | on [ Joy he won various in soccor. year. Others who have taken the trouble to figure it out have | Now A Majo Recently promotec to Major, discovered that the most economical way to pay for a home is to [||| Charles O. Brandt son of Ms. Es- tella Brandt, of Mount, Joy, Pa. | Air | States ed by Hoag. Paris important Transport Command, Army Air Forces, command- Brigadier General He is now serving Airport air which is the most transportation termi- nus in Europe. As the trans-Atlantic aerial sup- ply line between the United States and Europe, ATC's European Div- ision operates hundred of cargo and pi monthly. Among the wounded to the ssenger planes its assignment are air evacu- ation of American United States, the flying of whole and IN A U. S. ASBESTOS JOB ' blood blood plasma from the from the War Department through was attached McLaugh- , this boro has joined the Naval Air] He was wounded by Jap attended Mt. is September 13, a member of the European Division, United Earl S. at ATC’s ed at Newport, R. I. Three combat casualties, includ- ing a soldier killed in Germany five days before the Nazis surrender, were reported Monday as other Lancaster county soldiers were list- ed as liberated from prison camps. Pfc. Jay Dyer, twenty-one, a member of a Tank Destroyer bat- was killed in action in Ger- May 3, the War Department "notified his sister, Dorothy Dyer, of | Elizabethtown. The soldier was a son of Harry Dyer, Florin, and has been reared by Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Shoop, of | \Imouth. He was employed on the Pfc. Samuel K. Nissley was trans- Captured In Africa ferred from Texas to APO 14208, Cpl. James S. Beamenderfer, 33, San Francisco, Calif. I son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beamen- John Arndt, S 2/c, is stationed at derfer, Mount Joy, a prisoner since | Pensacola, Fla, W | February, 1943, was liberated from! Pfc. Chas. W. Bailey from Fort a German prison camp, according [Sill, Okla, to APO 14208, San Fran- to word received by his parents |cisco, Calif. ) talion, many, A veteran member of the First Shoop farm prior to entering the Marine Division, serving with the | service. during his overseas tours,! He was inducted in February, | Leatherneck McLaughlin partici- 1943, and {trained at Camp Hood, | pated in the Guadualcanal, Cape Tex., and Camp Shenango, Pa., be- fore going overseas in February, 1943. He was a graduate of Bain- bridge High school. Besides his father and sister, brother, Harry, serving with the Army Air Forces overseas he leaves a | Hears Son Was Freed Staff Sgt. Kenneth W. Wolgemuth, twenty, captured February 24, 1944, when the plane on which he was flight engineer was shot down has been liberated from a German pris- on camp, Aaron Wolgemuth, Florin, notified by the Red Cross. Sgt. Wolgemuth, sixth bombing raid when shot down, is now in England, according to the He entered 1940 and went over- 1943. was who was on his message. the service seas in December, FO Piersol Liberated Flight Officer James Piersol, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Piersol, of Mount Joy, was liberated from a of war prisoner camp in Germany according to a cablegram received by his parents from him. He on a and is in good health, was B-17 mission when he was reported mis- serving as a bombardier | and was on his tenth sing in action over Regensburg, Germany, on Dec. 28. He was later | . | reported held prisoner at Camp | Barth, along the Baltic. In a letter You'll Get The Breaks- BECAUSE -We'll Get The Brakes | | who is stationed at Norfolk, Va Brake linings, clutch facings and other essential products of the U. S. Asbestos Division at Manheim are urgently needed now to finish the war. After V-] Day, these same products will be in tre- mendous demand for both present and post-war cars, trucks and buses. | Men and women are needed NOW for CONTINUING JOBS in the U. S. Asbestos plant. These are interesting, easy-to-learn jobs. Our job posting system means steady advancement, too. U. S. ASBESTOS DIVISION OF RAYBESTOS — MANHATTAN. INC. MANHEIM 3 Plant Personnel Office, daily (or call Manheim APPLY: or Sunday appointment.) S.E.S. office, 228 E. Orange St. In Mount Joy. see P. Manheim. 7 A. M. - 5 P. M. 155-] for Saturday alieraoon In Lancaster, apply to U. P. Sweigart, 31 Detwiler Ave. (Phone: 227-W) Mon- | days. Wednesdays. and Thursdays. 7 to 9 P. M. i | the late Mr. | solo, | Accordian | Piersol; | Hoffman { Lester | Arthur from him, he stated that he has been slightly’ wounded” in action when he was captured. East Donegal Sailor Lost Life Off Jap Coast " An East Donegal youth was a- mong the hundreds of Navy men who lost their lives March 19 when Jap bombing planes made a sham- bles of the U. S. Aircraft Carrier Franklin, just off the coast of Japan, lit was revealed Thursday. Pvt. Clarence B. Grissinger, Cad) He was Christian Goss Shireman, Jr., seaman second class, a son of and Mrs. Christian G. Shireman, Marietta RD, who made his home with an uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. George C. Rhoads, Bainbridge. Mr. and Mrs. Rhoads closely guarded the identity of the ship on which their nephew was killed un- til the Navy Department the epic story of the flat-top. They were notified of the death of the eighteen-year-old early in April and the Navy Depart- ment said that he was buried at sea with full military honors. He entered the Navy in October, 1944 and received his training at the Great Lakes, Ill, Naval Training released sailor Station. He left Dec. 26, 1944 for California and shortly sailed for combat duty in the South Pacific. Seaman Shireman was graduated in the spring of 1944 from the Her- shey Industrial School. Lt. Bender [Reported Freed From Nazis Lt. Samuel H. Bender, of the Germans 1943, troops, a prisoner November, U.S. since has been liberated by the Red Cross ville. The was the first word Mrs. concerning her husband since Nov- ember, 1944, when she was held at Stalag 1. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bender, also of Landisville, he en- tered the service in July, 1941. LANDISVILLE Mr. and Mrs. Martin Frey enter- message received yesterday and Mrs. Ralph Lutz, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lemon Lutz spent Saturday evening with Paul Rissers and Mrs. Ralph Lutz. Rev. and Mrs. Wm. Ziegenfus, spent several days with Mr. Mrs. John Swarr. Lion’s Banquet Lion's Club, evening at Hostetter's Banquet Hall, with seventy-five members and guests present. | An address by Mr. Arthur Eshle- man, Deputy District Governor Sec- tion 14D, a talk by Mr. Ted Weidler, President of Mt. Joy Lions Club, | and special features with Trombone | Mildred Stehman, Vocal solos, Lion George Robinson; by Charles Lion Faust Salunga; selections Toastmaster Election of officers were president, Hug, 1st vice R L.. Hausman, 2nd president, Hackman; 3rd Baer; secretary, Dombach; treasurer, Geo. J. Miller; Lion Tamer, Charles Long; Tail Twister, Melvin Newcomer. Direct- ors: Verne Hiestand and Benjamin Grider. EWTOWN | of Mr. were president, vice vice presi- dent, Norman Jay , Mrs Mrs. Fre d Raymond Shu- Miss Louisa Sunday guests ane Gamber Mr. and Mrs ing of Lancaster, and Rhoads, of Marietta. Abram Hahn, Mrs. Charles Gable and Mrs. May G’'bson, of Kinderhock. visited Mrs Ralph Supplee on Sunday. Mrs. Irvin Witmer Jr. is spend- ing ten days with her husband Se min Second Class Irvin Witmer J Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Witme Sunday with Mr Mrs. Landis at Lititz. spent and Ruiu Mrs. Clayton Geltmacher and Gilbert, visited Mr. and Mrs. Clar- ence Brady at Columbia Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Violet Shenabrook, of Co- lumbia, Mr. and Mrs. Jordan She abrock of Camp Blanding, Florid were Sunday visitors of Mr el Mrs. Daniel Moore. Miss Mabel Myers, Mr. and Mrs Ray Gibble and daughters Verna | ! and Jeannette were week-end vis- itors of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Witmet Sr. 0 Some folks who think they could get a lot of fun paper, might have to do some fast running when the irate readers got by running a news- after them. I, F Stimulate your business by adver ‘ tising in the Bulletin. notified his | wife, Mrs. Jane Bender, of Landis- | tained Mr. and Mrs. Paul Risser, | Mrs. Roy Collins, Mrs. Dorothy Zeller and children, Mary Derr, | and Mrs. McNutie, of Camden, N. J. | and | The third annual banquet of the | was held on Tuesday | afterwands | | | Bender had learned he | The Bulletin, Mt, Joy, Pa., Thursday, May 24, 1945-5 i Kix or Cheerioats FLOUR 10: BEANS Extra Fancy Home Grown ASPARAGUS You'll like Asco Orange-Pekoe : Choice Pea Beans : White Corn Meal Van Camp's Beans 2'°% {3¢ Peanut Butter Lummis 16-0225¢ i Speed-Up Ammonia Up Cleaner i L L #33” Bleach The Best Value in Town-- Buy nother ME Bond! 1CWTY MARKETS Owned and Operated by The American Stores Co. Acme Markets will be Closed Memorial Day, Wed., May 30 Open Late Tuesday Evening Pabst-ett Cheese (regular) pkg in. 18° Crax 19° 10 bas 55¢ 32-0z bot 28¢ 46-0z can 45¢ 46-0z can 241¢ Gold Seal ENRICHED 5 ibs 24c¢ America's Prize-Winner Sweet Cream BUTTER 4 Be b> Ge 240. Pillsbury or Gold Medal Flour Sunsweet Prune Juice Fla. Orange Juice 19c¢ Rob-Ford Tomato Juice 2°" Glenwood Grapefruit Juice 0p: 460zcan 29¢ Glenwood Apple Sauce 2 20-0z cans 2Q¢ Standard Quality Tomatoes 30: 2 20-0zcans 19¢ Tender Cut Wax Beans 10p:-for 2 190zcans 19¢ Lord Mott Chopped Beets 2 20-ozcans {9c Lord Mott Chopped Carrots 2 '9°zcans 25¢ Asco Pork and Beans "°" 3 16-0z cans 25¢ Farmdale Evap. Milk 3p. for D talicans Qe | Glandin Zsoh Vegetables U. S. No. 1 GRADE WHITE New Potatoes 10-49 Round Valentine Green | Local Spinach 2s Fresh Calif. Peas 2 = 29° full bch 3 Q- 1-1b pkg 2-23 Much Better Flavor That's just one of 6 reasons 3 out of 4 of our customers preferg “heat-flo” roasted Ld ASCO COFFEE - ML 2 Cc 2!'bs “on J O Ih 47c TIN aN Oy Save the Coupons | 14 1b pka wo 39 Ib pkg {2g 19¢ WHEATENA 'arge pkg 22¢ Box top accepted as 15¢ toward purchase of 1 1b. of coffee Gur Mother's Cocoa '° 10¢ C & E Grape Jelly 5°z20¢ King Syrup 32-0z jar | Gg Tomato Puree Asco 10i0z Tp 16-0z jar 28¢ qt jar 23¢c 2 'bs {2¢ rka {2¢ Majestic Sour Onions Dill or Sour Pickles Maiestic Salad Dressing Fresh Hom-de-Lite pt jar 22¢ Hire's Root Beer Extract 3-0z bot 4c Sunshine Bakers Cheezit Crackers i"Pk9 12¢ at {0c 2 ats 25¢ 32-0z 39¢ Gosman’s or High Rock BEVERAGES 3. cin 59°C Rob-Roy Cola or Ginger Ale éb 12-0z bots 25¢ plus dep. em-0-Pine Soap 2:.23° Enriched Supreme 2 Jorge 17° “FRESH! ENRICHED VICTOR BREAD 2 'vs 11c Cracked or Whole Wheat, Rye or Vienna Bread '°f Delicious Iced Layer Cakes 25st? 35c¢--50c¢ L— IN OUR MEAT AND SEAFOOD DEPART STANDING RIB ROAST OF BEEF: 3§e Boneless Rolled RIB ROAST rr J2e Boneless CHUCK ROAST s; a2z@ SHORT RIBS OF BEEF > 19e Breast of Lamb : 19- SHOULDER LAMB ROAST > 31¢ 27. Ib 43¢ Ih 25¢ WINDEX For cleaning glass so: JC Quantity Rights Reserved MENTS FANCY, FRESH BAY BUCK ROE SHAD including the FRESH TROUT or CROAKERS Wiibert’'s No-Rub 10¢€ Penn-Rad. Penna. SHOE WHITE | MOTOR OIL soz 1 10 - can 1-9 Prices Effective May 2 . 6, "45. Your Dollar B vs More at the ®