The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 04, 1945, Image 4

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d—The Bulletin, Mt. Joy, Pa, Thursday,
v
October 4, 1945

OWL LAFFS

WISE OWL
Well, folks, have you picked out
your prize pumpkin and
cherries to enter in our farm show!
next week? Don’t fail to do it
cause they're giving away real good
American dollars.
jar of
Helen Dillinger (You know, the
gal at the PP&L) is now an author-:
ized rcofer.—That is until the union
finds out about it.
one big trouble. After
finished on the roof, she has to call
out the Fire Company's Hook and
she's
Lzdder Department to get her
down.-==-- I'll bet you didn’t think
we'd hear about that, did you
Dinah??
Our good neighbor, Harry, must
have gotten up too early on Tues-
day morning. He was out in front
of the store cust-
omary task of swatting flies and,
there seemed to be an unusual lot,
discovered he was
performing his
until someone
swatting nail heads in the building
and not flies.

A lady in our block (to the north
of our office) was down at Hess’
store last Friday and when I passed,
her she was gozing puzzled at the
contents of a cellophane
Finally she asked: “What's in here?’
chips,” I replied. And then
she started to laugh and said: “My
bag.
gosh, I thought it was dried corn,”
and then very hastily she added
“Now don’t put this in the Owl
that
Lafls.”----But you know me,
was entirely too good to keep.
One of the best excuses for
striking your dentist was recently
aired in court, when the defendant
said he hit him because “the dentist
got on his nerves.”

Would you like a short tale about
our Indan friends? Well, what
difference whether
you would or not, here it is———
does it make
Once upon a time there was an
Indian named Big Smoke, employed
missionary to his fellow
A white man encounter-
ed him what he
as a
Emckes.
ing Big Smoke, a:
did for a living, ““Umph,” Big
Smoke , “Me preach.” “That so?”
queried the gent, “and what do you
“Me get ten
replied the

 
get for preaching?”
dollars a year,”
Ard the gent exclaimed: “Well, that
But the
poor
make
Indian.
is pretty d - - - poor pay.”
Indian explained: “Me d----
pre --- Doesn't
things even?



er.” that
When a proud new papa appcar-
ed at the First National Bank and
said:“I want to see about opening
an account for the new arrival at
How shall we distin-
guish it from mine?” Without
hezitating, Warren suggested: “Sup-

our “ouse.
pose we call it the “Fresh Heir
Fund?”
A smart alec male customer
went into Horner's Shoe Stere and
askcd: “How much are your four
dollar shoes?” Dorothy looked at
him square in the and
smi.ingly replied: “Two dollars a
foot.”’----He was so flabbergasted
unexpected that he
eye un-
by her retort
bought a pair.
I know a fellow in Harrisburg who
took h's No. 3 ration down-
icwn to buy a fifth and on the way
home saw a pair of shoes he lked
£5 went in and bought them. But
when he paid for them he told the
clerk she'd have to keep them at
the store ’til he went home and got
his raticn stamp and then he'd pick
then up. So he went home and
asked his daughter for the ration
book and she said: “Where's the
book ycu used to buy the fifth?”
“Right here in my shirt pocket,” he
answered. “Well”, she explained.
“your shoe stamp is right in there
100.”----- Boy, did he feel foolish!!
Robert.
book

One of our returned GI's told me
this
oe?

Br Ane
| AAA and the other
The Low Down
From Hickory Grove
Everywhere you look, it is the
alphabet. If you do not know the
outfits all the
way down to “and so forth,” and
join one of em, you are just a tax-
payer--and maybe none too bright.
It used to be the Greek letters
that counted. Nobody knew what
the letters meant, except it was a-
nother sorority or something to join
and have a skookum time at papa’s
expense. dif -
use the
run at Uncle
But it is not much
ferent now, the way
English for outfits
we
Sambo’s expense versus papa's ex-
pense under the Greeks.
There is one outfit we don’t hear
about, His ZZ. ZZ
zagging, which a
lota Bureau Boys are doing, trying
to cover their tracks they
stay a little longer on the pay roll,
and keep their Exempt car. They
ride free and the
taxpayer walks and mops his brow,
and pays the bill.
To identify who is a ZZ we
much
stands for zig
SO can
exempt, whilst
need
bigger signs on Exempt cars. We
furnish them with free gas--we

BOWLING
TOWN LEAGUE
Bennelt's FG SG TG Tis
Seopy 0... 175 127 243 545
Germer ........ 162 161 137 460
Yozel .......... 163 147 136 446
Shonk ......... 170 174 178 522
Bennett ........ 151 148 176 475
Total ......... 821 757 870 2448
Spangler’s FG SG TG Tis
Muteer ......... 179 158 179 516
Cassell ......... 189 172 164 52
Kunkle ........ 162 157 119 438
Grove .......... 193 140 206 539
Spangler ....... 1713 172 1711 516
Tots ......... 896 799 938 2534
Tronio’s FG SG TG Tis
Mumma ....... 160 182 171 513
Herr ........... 162 152 142 456
Penmell ........ 155 181 178 514
Rahn .......... 177 178 194 549
Fronio .......... 155 152 213 520
Total ......... 809 845 898 2552
Kreider's FG SG TG Tis
R. Schneider 176 179 171 526
Telekey ........ 207 164 165 536
Buek 130. 177 158 465
Boozer '......... 198 171 167 536
Kreider ........ 170 193 155 518
Total ......... 881 884 816 2581
Alwine's FG SG TG Tis
........ 139 157 179 475
Peiffer ......... 162 141 160 463
Hostetter ....... 187 138 170 495
Heck .......... 191 210 193 594
Alwine ......... 203 194 155 552
Total ......... 882 840 857 2579
Lewis’ FG SG TG Tis
jewis 166 190 171 527
Brown ......... 185 166 149 500
Kramer ........ 169 144 180 493
Good ........... 180 189 164 533
Haas ........... 206 192 184 582
Total ......... 906 881 848 2635
Dougherty’s FG SG TG Tis
M Good ....... 137 180 178 495
Tripple 160 166 166 492
Engle .......... 41 137 131 409
D. Garman ..... 157 167 170 494
Dougherty ..... 184 159 204 547
Total -......... 779 809 849 2437
Stuckey's FG SG TG Tis
Barnhart ...... . 152 152 167 471
13 159 162 451
Schneider ...... 174 158 197 529
CG. Garman ..... 177 127 200 504
Stuckey ........ 225 184 199 608
Total 858 780 925 2563
H. S. Scopy, 243; H. T. Stucky
665; H. T. S. Stuckey’s, 975; H.T.T.
Stuckey’s, 2804.
atl rier
COMMUNITY EXHIBIT
PREMIUM LIST THIS WEEK
On pages 5, 6 and 7 of this week's
Bulletin we publish the entire pre-
mium list of Mt. Joy's Farm Show.
Exhibitors will find this an ad-
vintage if they do not receive a
catalog.
tl
Everybody in this locality reads
The Bulletin—that's why its adver-
tisers get such excellent results.
tl Qe
Stimulate your business by adver-
tising in the Bulletin.

pcunds at once; I lost another leg in
a stiff engagement and am in the
hosp’tal without means.” He re-
ceived the following reply: My
Dear Son: As this is the fourth leg
you have (according to your
letters), you ought to be accustom-
lost
littlg, bit as he reccived#itiin ed to it by this time. Try and
England—A young officer at the wobble along on any other you may
front wrote! home to his father: have left."----Who said those boys NOT everybody reads circular ad-
“Dear father: Kindly send me 30
have no sense of humor?

!
No Coddling of
German Chiefs
Former NaziBigwigs Today
Little Resemble Super
Men of Yesterday.
MONDORF, LUXEMBOURG.
“We stand for no coddling. These
men are in jail,” Col. B. C. Andrus,
commanding officer of the battalion
that guards the enclosure where the
Nazi war criminals are kept, told
the Associated Press.
Stripped of their plumage and
surrounded by barb wire and ma-
chine guns, Goering, Von Ribben-
trop, Doenitz and 49 other high-
ranking Nazis now bear little re-
semblance to super men.
A tour of the decrepit Palace ho-
tel disclosed how one-time mighty
Nazis now live.
Machine Gun on Guard,
Ribbentrop, who was the Nazi for-
eign minister, occupied a bare room
on the fourth floor. When he gazes
out his barred window his view is
of a guard on a raised platform with
mounted machine gun.
He sleeps on a folding canvas cot
with straw mattress. There are no
mirrors and no electricity. When
he shaves, a blade is issued to him
But she has' should see what the gents look like, 8nd it is taken away after it has
been used.
All panes have been removed
from the windows and replaced with
unbreakable substitutes, in keeping
with anti-suicide precautions.
Ribbentrop has one extra suit. His
room is furnished with a small
chair, a toothbrush and an alumi-
num drinking cup.
Ribbentrop makes his own bed.
““He is sometimes lackadaisical in
this respect,” said Capt. Hubert H.
Biddle, prison officer, ‘‘and I have
had him on the carpet for it several
times.”
Ribbentrop wore a loose fitting |
lumberman’s shirt, without coat or
tie. His graying hair was shaggy.
He was waiting with Field Marshal
Gen. Albert Kesselring for a turn
in the barber shop, where a pris-
oner of war from a German labor |
battalion was the barber. He stood
and bowed and waited to be given
“at ease” by Colonel Andrus, who
| waved his hand.
Cut Goering’s Dope.
Goering has a larger room across
the hall from Ribbentrop. He has
a larger chair, too. ‘He is so heavy
he broke one chair,” Captain Biddle
said. .
Goering, who is suffering from an
attack of bronchitis, is being given
a gradually reduced diet of paraco-
deine. When he arrived, said Colo-
nel Andrus, he was taking 20 times
the normal dosage of the drug.
Sgt. Robert Bock, Milwaukee,
Wis., described Goering’s reaction
to the cut in drug rations:
“Yesterday he scowled. He held
the pills in his hand, counted them,
threw them into his mouth, washed
them down with a glass of water
and, still scowling, said. ‘Every day
they get less and less.’ ”’
Goering is reported shunned by
almost everybody despite his fat-
man bearing and his bowing and
scraping.
When Julius Streicher, the Nazis
arch anti-Semite, arrived here Ad-
miral Doenitz and several other
— Germans refused to eat with him,
saying they considered him Ger-
many’s worst criminal.
“I told them they would eat with
anybody I chose to place at their
table,” Colonel Andrus said.
The routine at the Palace hotel
is almost identical with that of peni-
tentiaries in the United States, with
the exception that the only movies
are atrocity films and the only
amusements walking in the sunlight
and conversation,

New Rochelle Corrects
Old Wrong to Tom Paine
NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y.—Thomas
Paine, English-born writer and
— arch-patriot of the American Revo-
lution, has been restored to the U. S.
citizenship which this community
denied him 139 years ago. >
Before Paine’s state, Mayor Stan-
ley W. Church in a July 4th cere-
mony proclaimed that Mew Ro-
chelle’s action in forbidding the
author of “Common Sense” and
“The Crisis” to vote in a local elec-
tion was “‘a grave injustice.”
He was not permitted to vote on
the grounds that he was not a citi-
zen.
Paine became unpopular after
the Revolution because of his forth-
right political and religious views.
Congress granted him a farm in
New Rochelle where he retired, but
attempts were made on his life and
the children of New Rochelle pelted
him with mud.
The crowning indignity came
when Paine—automatically a citi-
zen because he had fought in the
war—was turned away from the
polling place. He died here in 1809,
shunned and hated.

British Shipyards Get
Leave to Resume Work
LONDON.—The Daily Mail said
that the principal British shipyards*
have received government permis-
sion to resume building ships for pri-
vate owners and that they have
enough orders on hand to keep them
busy for years. The biggest con-
tract, which will be placed withi a
few weeks, calls for a sis-
ter ship to the Mauretania fur the
Cunard White Star line.
A
Everybody reads newspapers but
vertising left on their door step.

By GENE BYRNES



, THREE TIMES EIGHT,
1S TWENNY-FOUR. AN’
TWO IS TWENNY =S|X!
FOUR TIMES FOUR. 1S"
| SIXTEEN AN' ONE IS
SEVENTEEN!

PHOOEY!
THESE EXAMPLES
ARE. GETTIN' HARDER AN
HARDER. EVERY DAY!



IRONVILLE [Mortuary
The Merry Maids class of «Record In
| United Brethern Sunday School met
recently at the home of Mrs. Gor-
Mummaw. The
Haverstick, led the
During the business ses-
elected for the
don
Bertha
votions.
sion, officers
de-
were
ensung year:
bright; Vice President, Ida Kliener;
Secretary, Loraine Rettew; Treas., | enty-five, died at the home of her
Grace Harry; Collector, Dorothy pbyother, Isaiah R. Sumpman, 111 E.
com- St., this boro, Saturday, at
Flower- 8.10 a. m.
Ruth Musser and Janet Arnold and | She was the daughter of the late
and Barney and Laura Resh Sumpman,
and a member
Presbyterian Church, of Lancaster,
Surviving are two brothers, Amos,
of Sporting Hill, and Isaiah, with
whom she resided.
Rudisill; and the following
mittees were appointed:
Gift - Thelma Montgomery
Bertha Haverstick. The
served refreshments to the follow-
ling: Miriam Snyder, Grace Harry,
Reba Roberts, Thelma Montgomery,
hostess
Ida Kleiner, Loraine Rettew,
Frances Mowrer, Helen Kauffman,
Ruth Albright, Hazel Moore,
Miriam McCune, Mary Jane Sulli-
van, Dorothy Rudisill and Bertha
Haverstick.
On Monday evening ai 7:45 p. m.,
| the teachers and officers of the U.B.
Sunday School will meet in the
church and plan a program for the
conference year.
he children of the Ironville sec-
ondary school, grades fifth, sixth,
seventh and eighth, have formed a
school club. The President is
| Richard Humbert; Vice President,
| Raymond Frey; Secretary, Mildred
and Treasurer, John
The children have de-
purchase a world globe.
decided to aside a
sympathy cards to
A meeting is
weeks. If
may be
The
Mummaw;
| Rhoads.
| cided to
They also
fund to buy
| send to sick friends.
three
set
i held once every
necessary special meetings
called by the President.
teacher iz Frances Kramer.
| John Kauffman, A/S, U.S.
stationed at Bainbridge, Md. is en-
joying a furlough with his wife and
Navy,
son, Ray.
Promotion day was held in the
Ironville U. B. Sunday School on
Sunday when the following scholars
Bible and
intermediate
with a
the
young
Anna Wagner, Eve-
Kemm>ch, Robert
Kenneth Fid-
The two
were presented
premoted from
department to the peoples
department.
lyn Eby, Cletus
Fornofl, Lee Singer,
dler and Robert Siegrist.
girls will enter the class taught by
Lorraine Rettew and the five boys,
the class taught by Albert Kleiner.
eG

PENNA. ELECTRIC ASSO.
SAFETY CONTEST AWARDS
Fhiladelphia, Pa., September 27—
Presentations of awards to the win-
| . .
ners of the annual Pennsylvania | wife of Albert B. Faus, died at her |
. : ~ ! : . |
Assoc ation Safety Contest | home in Rapho Twp. R2,
Electric /
: . . I .
took place at this mornings session | afternoon after an illness of one |
of the Associations 38th Annual
Meeting and Industry Conference.
George E. Whitwell Vice
dent of the Philadelphia Flectric Christ Church. Besides her
Company, Philadelphia, and Presi- | band she is survived by these chil-
President,
|
|

President, Ruth Al- [Miss Anna M. Sumpman
{
I
i

| Mrs. Albert B. Faus
y
erle cemetery.
Sheetz funeral home here Wednes-
day afternoon with interment in the
Eberle cemetery.
Kate S. Garber
at 12:45 p. m. Monday at the home
of her niece and nephew, Miss Ada
E. and Tillman E. Garber, Elizabeth-
town, after several
Born in West
her parents were the late John S.
and Susan Erb Garber.
member of the Mennonite Church.
A brother, Rev. Simon E. Garber,
and several nieces and nephews sur-
vive.
noon in the Elizabethtown Menno-
nite Charch with interment in Bos-
sler’s cemetery.
{ P. Frank,
F. Peck, Maytown.
This Section
(From Page 1)
Miss Anna Mary Sumpman, sev-
of the Memorial
The funeral was held from the
Kate E. Garber, eighty-five, died
years’ illness.
Donegal Township,
She was a
The funeral was held this after-
Mrs, Reberta K. Frank
Mrs. Reberta K. Frank, 72, May-
town, died at 12:30 p. m. Tuesday
at her home after a illness.
A lifelong resident of Maytown, she
was a member of St. John’s Luth-
eran Church for the past 60 years,
the Aid Society of the church, and
the Ladies Auxiliary of the May-
tcwn Fire Company. She was a
daughter of the Nicholas Li. |
and Malinda Martin Peck of May- |
town. Besides her husband, she is
survived by a daughter, Mrs. Pen-
‘ose M. Gilbert, York; a son, Harry |
Maytown; two
grandchildren and a sister, Miss V.
year's
also
The funeral will be held from her |
late home on Friday afternoon with
nterment in the Union Cemetery
at Maytown,
Mrs. Annie B. Faus, sixty-seven,
rear.
She was born in Rapho Twp. and


Presi- | was a member of the Brethren in |
|
hus- |
3 . a |
dent of the Association, presented jdren Ann G. Faus, at home; Henry |
trophies to the winners in
esch of | Manheim R2;
Mrs. Wayne Peters,
three groups, and certificates of { Manheim R2; David, Palmyra; Mrs. |
merit to companies taking second { Henry Becker, Mount Joy Rl, Ab- |
and third places.
was entered by 17 members; 6 com-
averaged
panies in Group I who
200,000 or more man hours monthly;
The competition |
|
iS
ram,
home;
1 R1; Mrs.
Manheim R2;
Mrs. Charles
Esther
ionary in Kentucky; Florence Faus,
Nora Faus, at |
|
Myers, Lititz |
Greenawalt, mis |
4 in Group II who averaged from |at home; and Mrs. Paul Wolgemuth, |
60,001 to 200,000 man hours monthly
and 7 in Group III averaging less
than 60,000 man hours monthly.
Metropolitan Ed’son Co., Reading,
took first award in Group I, with an
accident frequency rate of 3.751 and
a total cf 2666093 man hours
worked. Pennsylvania Power &
Light Co., Allentown, was second
with a frequency rate of 6.026 and
Philadelphia Electric Co., Phila,
third with a frequency rate of 6.315.
The trophy for Group II com-
panies went to Pennsylvania Water
& Power Co., Baltimore, Md. Pa.
Edison Co., Altoona and Pa. Power
Co, New Castle, placed second
and third respectively. The win-
sn accident frequency. rate
ner had
and
of 3.455; the runners-up, 5.205
8.013.
The contest just ended is the 15th
consecutive Annual Safey Contest
sponsored by P. E. A.
A se sme
Being able to swim lke a fish is
probably due to our limited type
of diet.
© CWI er
Stimulate your business by adver-

o |
; Using in the Bulletin. A
Shenk, Mt. Joy; Mrs. Herman Gin-
Manheim R2; Mrs. Amos Ginder, |
missionary in Africa; also these |
brothers and sisters, Mrs. David ,

HOW ARE YOUR SHOES 1
DON'T WAIT TOO LONG.
BRING THEM IN.
City Shoe Repairing Co.
30 SOUTH QUEEN STREET
LANCASTER, PENNA.

Accessories & Parts
STORE HOURS: 8 a. m. to 8 p. m,
KRALL'S Meat Market
Randler’s
Bicycle Shop
ELMER S. RANDLER, Prop.
12 N. MARKET ST. MOUNT JOY.
(Opposite the Fire House)
Bicycle Repairing

Baby Cab Tiring

WE HAVE.....
QUALITY
MEATS
®
West Main St., Mt. Joy


Dr.H.C.Killheffer
Optometrist
MANHEIM
163 S. Charlotte
Telephone 137-R
Mon. & Wednes. 9-5:30
Tues. Fri, Sat. 7.9 P, M,
St.
ELIZABETHTOWN
15 E. High St.
Telephone 24-R
Tues Fri. Sat,
9:30-1:00.2-5 P. M.




Crushed & Building
Res.
WEEN IN NEED OF
STONE
CEMENT, SAND,
CONCRETE BLOCKS,
SILLS, LINTELS,
STEEL SASH,
OVERHEAD GARAGE

DOORS,
ASPHALT PAVING,
MASONRY and
CONCRETE WORK
For Prompt and Courteous Service
SAMUEL N. STAUFFER
MT. JOY, PA.
903-R-14 Offices 903-R-12



Tuna.
EVERYONE hy NE IN;
LISTENING TO...


RADIO'S ACE
ADVENTURE-
DETECTIVE STORY
LET ME SEE.
IT, PINBEAD,
MAYBE. | CAN
HELP YoU!

| CAN HARDLY
DQ IT
PAYSELE !
 











WARE
EERE >

cOPPORTUNITY KNOCKS




Eyes Examined
~DR. 8.
OPTOMETRIST
TIO IRS
Moose Bldg. Dail
Elizabethtown

Hours s
EVENINGS
0 to 8



PHONE 334)


TET CTY oats xm
EVENINGS J Oo Y MATINER
SHOWS SATURDAYS
7 AND 9:00 P. M. AND
SATURDAYS T } ! E- T R HOLIDAYS
6-8-10 P.M. 2:00 P. M.
Mount Joy, Pa. A IN
FRIDAY—SATURDAY, OCTOBER §-5
-in-
HERE”
FRED ¥ACMURRAY — JOAN
“WHERE DO WE GO FROM
co
MONDAY—TUESDAY, OCTCBER 3-9
GEORGE SANDERS — DONNA RITD -in-
“PICTURE OF DORIAN
2799
GRAY’

WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13-11
RYAN -n-
DONALD O'CONNOR — PEGGY
“PATRICK THE GREAZL”
4-10
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, OCTUBER |
EDDIE BRACKEN — VERONICA LAXE -in- |
“OUT
bid
OF THIS WORLD




“I know how much | can carry convenienily,
and that's one reason why | arranged my
mortgage af the bank. It's a light
load now and it will grow lighter
§
nm»
every year until it is paid in full.

Come in and arrange your morigage wilh us.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK & TRUST COMPARY






der, Landisville; Phares Gibble, WGAL — Sunday Mount Joy
Palmyra. 6:30 p. m.
The funeral will be held from her | HANNA COAL MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
late home Saturday afternoon at Sold by |
1:30 with further services in the |
Mastersonville Brethren in Christ HARRY LEEDOM
Church. Interment in the cemetery Phone 114 MOUNT JOY
adjoining. “ {

REDDY KILOWATT
«... March of Time....
Pennsylvania Power & Light Company




rd
| LEARNED HOW TO TELL
TIME IN SCHOOL THIS
WEEK , REDDY .-




IT WHEN THE
WILLE,
WHAT TIME IS
CLOCK STRIKES
EE

 

| GUESS! 5 <
A TIME TO GET Yorn: Rais a
IT FIXED , DID YOU KNOW



IEE ARE J ELECTRIC
OOK E :
OEE ME OCHS RUN CON-
? \ Pussy CLAT JUSLY — NO WIND-
: rm ( NO BOTH:
Or NY [AND WiLL RUN ©
===" J 3 DAYS FOR ABOUT
| THE COST OF ONE
CIGARETTE"
 




—THE ANCIE
ROMANS KE
8 TIME WITH
J SUN DIALS
A GORD JO

MAN WOULD

Sa
dif



FOR A LAzy
BE KEEPING A A
SUN DIAL OLED
= eal |
rt

PLUG #4...



4 RECO 2) N
—AND THEY SAY THE CHINESE ’ oe eect}
( CAN TELL TIME FAIRLY WELL iB
4 |BY LOCKING AT A CATS EVES; Nl
THE PUPILS DILATE (Gu 242022) toma


GRADUALLY AC DAY \WEARS ON Copyright 1745 by Reddy Kilswam


| CI
Rates
line ea
advance
FOR 8:
sell. A
12 N. 1

WANTE
Bicycles
N. Mar
FOR S.
Apply |
next to
FOR
canaries
William
Mount .
SHEET
lar nun
Waltzes
$50.00 a
Sat. or
Shoppe,

FOR S
motor.
egal Sti
PROPE]
Florin v
home ir
ground.
Donegal
FOR S!
slightly
cabinet,
ville 287
HELP
ligent v
locally 1
casily e
portunit
type. §
Station

PAPER]
Frederic
Ave, M

SPECIA
leather,
lease 17!
and hig
JACK FE
FOR SA
Weed, cl
yield 35
Manhein
23.
HOUSE
ric light
garden,
month,
town, 8
cast of I
zabethto
Willis G
or phon
WANTE
Paul A.

WANT
section t
ever the
tc buy «
WANTEI
sold. Ang
be purck
Paul H.
Manheim

REPORT
paper in
experienc
preferred
elderly 1
H. Kroes
Lancaster
I'OR
properties
Donegal |
PHOTO
eight ex]
printed |
(coin). F
order 25
vice, Box

FOR «SA
Kraut, $1.
Phone 10:
tin.
WANTEL
classified
articles :
cash by a
umn. Tr
Notice
Monday,
ficate wil
tious Nar
1945 in tl
tary of L
- nd
retary cf
Pennsylva
Dorothy 1
lar Street
only pers
a busines
operation
name, sty
which sai
conducted
KITCHEN
said busin
47 East M


When i
thing) kir
Patroniz