resent on and Sat- 5 in the ning at nier, Mi and son, we Sune [rs, Wal- oper ol fow days d broth- . week for re they Mr. to a me. um er and in street s. Frank wr, Mrs vi Peiler r Show vidends. 9) 1m y s OUR of Equipment | mn & Annual Community Sale | All Day Sale near Elizabethtown | Acres Tractors Farm | . . R. D. 2, Pa, Phone 442-J)-2, Satur- | Good Friday, April Th) gv Anil 5 1952. at 10:30 a. m 1G I ’ C : i ia doy, ave mz wios | GK, Wagner’sChickery At the borough limits, Vit. Joy | 10 Never U ed 300 pes. Heavy Breed Special Matings. on te ysl leading to the Mt Joy | oo 0. coe Trucks, 1000 Posts; 200 | Hamp Crosses, Red Rocks (sex link) | (0, gale date SLC! | Hogs, 10 New Holland, (ise 45T i 200 HEAD OF LIVE STOCK |50T and IHC Balers, 25 Hay Load- | Cross. TS, HOUSEHOLD |¢'s and Combines, Spreaders, Plows 14.00 PER 100 IMPLEMENTS Drills. Farmers and Dealers bring | All the above breeds are hatched GOODS. FRUIT, MERCHAN- our New and Used Tractors and from bloodtested high quality DISE £TC | Machinery | this sale. Good de= | breeders. ' . imand. G. K Vagner, Manage? It vou have any implements |Next Sale Saturday, April 19, 1952 | TURKEY POULTS & DUCKLINGS houschold goods, poultry, we will | 13-2 | —————————————————————————————— gell it for you on commission. Let us . — men sean Penna, U.S. Approved Pollorum hear from you and we will adver- Passed Leghorn Chicks, tise same | | Mated Leghorn Chicks, Large Type | We are in the market for all kind | | Enolish White Leghorn, | NONSEXED 11.00 | COCKERELS 2.00 PER 100 of cows, heifers, bulls, shoats, etc Will buy your entire dairy if you | | | Utility | Borough limits of | plements PULLETS 26.00 at BABY CHICKS | Sale Register If you want a notice of your sale inserted in this register weekly from now until day of sale, ABSO- new and Barred Rocks, White Rocks, Rock | 1 UTRELY FREE, send or phone us and when you are Cross, New Hampshires, and White | Lo. let us print your bills. That's the BEST advertising you can get. Saturday, April 5 — At 222 West Donegal Street, Mount Joy, real estate and household goods by the Annie Nauman Estate, Sale at 1:00 m. C. S. Frank, Auct. Good Friday, April 11 — At the Mount Joy, 200 head of live stock, all kinds of im= and household goods by C. S. Frank and Leo P Frank. Sale 12 M want to sell them. Phone 3-5521. | PRINTING | R.O.P. Sired Super Mated Leghorn | Saturday, April 12 At 117 Rast IS RIGHT IN The Best For Your Money. |High street, Maytown, LEO P. FRANK Yi THE GROOVE NONSEXED 1450 PULLETS 29.00 | goods and kitchen utensils by C. S. FRANK ease COCKERELS 3.00 PER 100 |Christ S. Brandt. Lloyd Landvater, . | Write for Price List & Information | Auct. OR Saturday, April 19—-A 21: story | PHONE #4232 ELIZABETHTOWN | frame house at New Haven and LSTEIN KEYSTONE HO |G.K.Wagner’sChicker 1952 Spring Heifer Sale == fatter 226, PUBLIC SALE Of Valuable Real Estate And Personal Property SATURDAY, APRIL 5th, 1952 FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1952 12:30 P. M. AT THE KEYSTONE SALES BARN ON ROUTE 230 JUST EAST OF MOUNT JOY. PENNA. 60 Selected Holstein Heifers From Pennsylvania's outstanding sires. From Adam Fernsler, Lebanon, Pa: A daughter of Miller Acres King Kay, ( 1952 Penna. Farm Show. From Edgar Hock, Carlisle, Pa.: Two doughters of Penstate Marksman Josie Lad. One from a cow with 726.8 lbs fort, 1 40.8 ro he other from «a cow 681.8 fat, 20,525 Milk at 9 years. Ti lic sale on the premises at 222 West Donegal Street, in the Borough of Mount Joy A DOUBLE 2: STORY FRAME DWELLING containing 8 rooms & bath, Fronting 53 feet on the South side of West Donegal Street and ex- tending 203 ft. in depth of that width to David Street. Frame Barn for Three Cars Large Yard, Excellent Apartment Possibilities. Also at the same time and place the following Personal Property: 17 534 milk at 5 years 10 ft. extension table, 1 wing tab= a = oe le, old fashioned sofa, 1%» doz. cane . . . | le, ole 1 d sofa, 1» doz. ca From George McCormick, Allenwood. Pa.: Two heifers | chairs, 3-piece living room bred to the Great “Autocrat”. O from a 457 1b. daughter of} suite, 2 small tables, rockers, 4 tab- Kina Lakefield of Elmbrook ~ 510 1b. demach- | le lamps, 1 floor lamp, antique cup- hoard, chest of drawers, 2 chests & pl : Champion with ne end the other from + of” acrot'’ tor ¢ Autocrat”. 1 trunk, desk & bookcase, sink From Niesley Vale Dairy Farm, Mechanicsburg, Pa. A | combination, mirrors, clothes tree, daughter of Zimmerman Star Piebe, [rom 514.9 lbs. ''Very|l single bed with mattress and springs, pillows, bed clothing, fea- Good” dam. And many others sired by “Lucifer”, “Bondsman”, “Em- peror Star’, Minster Segis Pluto, Lochiel Autocrat Oliie, Murlyn Montvic Chieftain. TWO OUTSTANDING HERD SIRE PROSPECTS From Paul G. Longenecker, Strasburg, Pa.: A son of Bond- haven Sovereign Masterpiece out of a "Very Good" daughter of Winterthur Pilot Dad Boast Rex, 724 1bs. of fat, Ibs. of milk at 4 years on 2x. From H. M. & Paul Z. Hess, Mt. Joy. Pa.: A son of Lifloc |. ill 1 Signet Tahari who is a " a three times 900 lbs. | Terms cow. His own dam is G. with 8 cone | ther tick, old buttons, 1 wardrobe, White sewing machine, sewing table 2 clocks, 1 old: General Electric Refrigerator, Kitchen cabinet, iron and ironing 9xi2 rug, rag carpet, old pictures & frames. | cocking utensils, and 20 9237 | other small hat boxes. offered at 3 P. M. and conditions will be made known at the time of sale by CATHERINE son of Mata Hari 3. Letha Belle Segis King secutive records over 500 lbs. of fat, and «a lifetime total in 12 ¢ 1 1 a 1 LLA H WEIDMAN lactations of 181,841 lbs. milk and 6317.8 lbs. of iat. Eecutrices of the Estate MANY VACCINATED of Annie Nauman, dec'd. Chas S. Frank, Auct Wilmer Kraybill, Clerk Clarence C. Newcomer, CERTIFIED All animals wil Lil 11 ACCREDITED ] be tested reads to ahir cnywhere. Keystone Holstein Sales, Inc. MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA Larse All-Day Public Sale Located in Lancaster County, 3 miles Northwest of Mastersonville, 2 mile West of the Lawn-Mastersonville road, € miles East of Elizabethtown. Monday, April 7th = 10:30 Sharp 133 ACRE MODERN FARM This is a fertile sandy loam suil. 90 acres under cultivation, 22 acres in permanent pasture with never failing stream, balance in wood land, 15 acres in wheat, 10 acres seeded to barley, 25 sores in mixed hay. Land lays on both sides of hard suriace road. Macadam driveway to build- ings. Running water to all buildings from spring, also electric pressure water system. 8 ROOM HOUSE—LARGE BANK BARN 12-3 Att'y Patronize Bulletin Advertisers Phone 23-4354 Automatic oil hot air heat with 1.000-gal. tank, modern kitchen, inlaid linoleum, modern bathroom. House is insulated, batement under entire house. Storm doors and windows. slhte voof. Large barn with cornshed attached. Scaffold for 7 acres tobacco, chain ties for 30 cows, large steer stable with concrete feed trouchs, water bowls, large double doors, two maternity sens. feed room above, 10x60 concrete silo with concrete roef. Buildings all rodded for lightning. Garage and implement shed 110 {t. by 22 ft. Two ‘arge 2-story chicken houses, One—50x24 cem- ent bleck, also 25x15 ft. This farm can be seen anyiime between now and sale day. Terms: 109 de vn. balance in 30 days. Iminediate possession cin be had. Real estate will sell at noon. 17 — HEAD OF DAIRY CATTLE —17 Consisting of 15 Holstein cows, 2 Guernseys, 5 fresh, 2 close springers. Big cows and ex- cellent producers. Also selling are 20 Herford Steers—400 Leghorn Hens—11 Shoats Steers weigh around 1.000 lbs. [Ilens are puliets frem last fall. Shoats weigh 150 to 200 Also selling farm machinery. 1951 John Deere A — 1949 John Deere B Both tractors are like new. A has mounted Templeton. John Deere B has cultivator, also fertilizer attachment. Jehn Deere No. 5 tractor mower, John Deere 4-bar side rake, John Deere 13 disc tractor drill, John Deere No. 101 corn picker, John Deere 3-bottom semi-mounted disc plew, John Deere 2 14" bottom power trol plow, John Deere corn planter Rubber tired wagons, snow plow blade, new Idea tractor spreader, hammer mill, Ford w eeder, 5) ft. endiess belt, Stauf- fer twin row tobacco planter, double tobacco hoers, new grass seeder, land rolier, spring harrew. tractor steps, hillside hitch, ground scoop. disc harrow, air compressor, Steward clip- pers, 1 heavy duty springteoth harrow, 30 ft. extensicn, 2 hog lawn rolier, bag wagon, air pressure grease gun, one feed building, 2 brooder hcuses, 6 range shelters, 2 infra red brooders, 4 electric brooders, drums, chains, 4,00) tobacco lath, metal nest, let of small tools. Delaval Milker, Milk Cooler, Milk Cans: also several items of Household Goods, Bendix Washer, Roll Top Desk, etc. Sale will start at 10:30 sharp. Come early. Free lunch tickets when the sale starts. is a complete closeout sale. Everything selling regavdless of price. Sale Managed by the SANGER SALES SERVICE MYERSTOWN, PENNA. PAUL E. SANGER, Auctioneer in charge. Sanger & Miller, Clerks Phane 5-4171 Manheim ROY B. KEENER, Owner Ibs. This 2 ad: BT Reed TaN David streets and personal proper- | ty by Hemy B Klugh, Anna E. Klugh, Union National Mt. Joy The undersicned will sell at pub- | Sale at 1:00 P. M. Sharp. Real Es- | | 11. STONER | | cupboard, extension table, jars, 89-piece dinner set, thiee rugs, Piano, {| and many other articles. board, electric sweep= | or & attachments, 2 hand sweepers, | stair carpet, | dishes and | articles, wash-bowl and pitcher set, | Bank, Admps., c.t.a. of Estate of B. Frank Watson, dec’d Walter Dupes, Auct. Saturday, April 26—At 35 Mount Joy Street, Mount Joy, lot of household goods and kitchen fur- niture by William Hetrick. C. S. Frank, Auct. — i A By an audit it has been learned that the shortage at Lebanon Val- ley College is $26,000. "NOTICE! In order to collect damages on our Foultry Ranges caused by dogs or other predatory animals, we have to notify the proper State authority. This same authority will then check the immediate neighborhood for stray dogs and other dogs with which they come in contact. This notice is given so that you — Tobacco Farmers (From page 1) crop “way below cost of produec- tion,” Mr, Sloat pointed out, citing numerous farm sales of tobacco at 13 cents “through,” and reports of other sales at even less money to the grower “It cost pound of wrapper 25.1 cents to grow one under Mr Sloat reported, on the basis of ac- tobacco Lancaster County conditions,” tual farm cost records summarized at the local Agricultural Extension Service office. The situation is serious and dras- tic action is needed, he said. Farm= ers who feel they cannot go along with a sharp reduction in acreage should “quit growing tobacco and switch such land to production of more corn, vegetables, grassland or other crops.” Mr. Sloat suggested, With 1951 tobacco selling, when a grower does get a buyer, at 15 and 5, or 13 cents through, or even low= the farmer's return is “way be- the er, low cost of production, and hardest hit are the who bear half of the cost of pro- share farmers duction. His labor costs are espec- ially heavy.” Mr. Sloat's statement on the sit- 1ation continued: “The past two years growers of Lancaster County have voted a- gainst government acreage control and price support”. There is every indication that there will be a decided reduction in acreage thruout the county this year rm MOTORISTS, 'WE WARN YOU! The Bulletin, Mount Jov, Pa. News From Florin (From page 1) Mortuary Record! (From Page 1. and had resided in Middletown the | past 60 years. : nan. There survive _ children: Mr. and Mrs. Paul Arndt Mrs. Edna Campbell, Middletown; | Saturday at Philadelphia. They at- | Mrs. Ralph Sellers, Paxtonia; Har-| ded the Flower Show and also | ry Garber, Harrisburg; Alfred, Er-| these spent visited Rev. and Mrs. Lester Bru- win Melvin Wellman, all of | Waker. Middletown: also these sisters and | Mr. and Mrs. Paul Martin Jr. en- a brother; Mrs. Elmer Heisey and] tertained the latters barents to din- Mrs. Benjamin Hawthorne, of this | ner on Sunday, Rev. and Mrs. Hen- boro; Mrs. Daniel Martin, Landis- | ry Becker and family. ville: Mrs. Harry Haldeman, Eliza- | "Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Vogel enter- bethtown; and William Way, Lan-1 5,04 the following on Saturday in caster; 16 grandchildren, 15| honor of the latters mother’s birth | great grandchildren and five 40. Mp and Mrs. William Lawton | great grandchildren. | gr. and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hauer | | and family of Lancaster, Mr. and | | Mrs. Lloyd Vogel and family. Mrs. | lovely | and also Mrs. Nathan S. Zug Irs. Kate K. Zug, 89, died at the | Lawton home of her son-in-law and daugh- | birthday. ter, Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Shearer,| Mrs, Annie Shell spent Thursday | Manheim R3, near Mastersonville. | at Lebanon. She had been ill for five months, | Mrs. Anna Harro of Lancaster | Her husband, Nathan S. Zug, pre- | visited Mrs. Sarah Schlegeimilch | ceded her in death 10 years ago. on Sunday. Born in Mt. Joy Twp. Mrs. Zug | Mr. Samuel Shelley visited Mr. celebrated a very and Mrs. Jacob N. Eshelman shower at | There are also five grandchildren. Mr. ow a their home on Wednesday evening | Mrs. Martha Ann Hetrich, 74, of | in honor of Miss Violet Garmen | Mount Joy St., wife of William M. | and Mr. Earl Haldeman, who will | Heé'trich, died at home after an 11 | be wed in the near future. week’s illness. | Miss Violet Garmen and Mr. Farl Haldeman; Misses, Verdella miscellaneous Mrs. Martha Hetrich She was born in Rapho Twp., al ! weather. The elder | er Scotch features than his | Mr. and Mrs. Oliver 19523 Thursday, April 3, ical career, he held numerous di~ rectorships in industries, especially the iron and coal industries. Donald conservative was more [and less aggressive than his father tended to earn him fewer enemies. Both Simon and Donald loved nature and the Donegal coun- tryside. Their of maple trees at Donegal is a thing of real in the sunny Cameron was very tall and lean. Donald had few father. Donald had a son, James McCor- mick Cameron who followed in his father's and grandfather's footsteps as an industrialist. Simon was ninety years old at his death: Donald was eighty-five; and his son died in 1949, aged eighty- four. Members of Donald's family still own and occupy the family es= tates. which avenue heauty and comfort Recent portraits of Simon and Donald Cameron painted by Jack W. Loose, secretary of the historie- al society, will be displayed during {he meeting. The public is cordially was a daughter of the late Isaac L. and Mrs. Benjamin Ulmer near |i vited to attend. and Maria Keyser Eshelman. She | Elizabethtown Sunday. a was a member of Chiques Church| Mrs. David Mumper of Camp Hill of the Brethren. Surviving are three | spent Thursday in town visiting NEWTOWN children: Fanny, wift of Henry B.| relatives. { Shearer, with whom she resided; Mr. and Mrs. Leon Brinser of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Landis, Lititz Mrs. Kathryn Z. Snyder, Florin; | Middletown were Sunday guests of [ nq Mr. and Mrs. Ray Marks of and Paul E. Zug, Elizabethtown | Mr. and Mrs. George Mumper. Fphrata, were Sunday visitors of Witmer and family. Mrs. Cora Myers, Columbia R. D. visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weaver, on Saturday. Mr. Benjamin Weaver of Marietta was a Sunday dinner guest of the Weavers. Mr. Wally Bergentine, who is a i a85C i th : genecker v r ap | atin SE If vou don’t have your new li- daughter of the late David and Longenecker, Jean Eshelman, Bai | patient at the Veterans’ Hospital, for unlicensed dogs. Sense ‘on. that wns its just too Kathryn Kauffman Gerlach, and bara Shelley, Mary Gantz, Anna | Lebanon, was a Sunday visitor of ian a ye as 2 amber of the Brethr Ruth Hollinger, Esther Shearer, yg Ai i Musser Leghorn Farms bad. The old one expired at mid- was a memper of the Brethren. Loretta. Ki Marion Elite NB. | Mr. and Mus. William Witmer. | night Monday Myr. and Mrs. Hetrich celebrated | Loretta ine, Marion ine, Nan-| Mrs. L. C. Rees, Millersville and Pou their golden wedding anniversary | ©Y Groff, Joyce Eshelman, Lois | Susie Fralich, Lancaster, visited at a last April. Gibble, Orpha Hawthorne, Kathryn A i E In addition to her husband, she |Ober, Ruth Brownsberger, Edith | ic survived by three sons and two Brownsberger, Elsie Brownsberger, | daughters: Mary, wife of Henry Naomi Brownsberger, Phyllis Hol- Nauman, and David, both of Eliza- | linger, Fleanor Hostetter, - ’ ) { April 12, 195212 0 clock bethtown; William, Marietta; Beu- | Gainer, Betty Breneman, Betty | Jane Haldeman, Abram Browns- In Rapho Township on the Phares Moyer farm formerly knowr. as the Clayton Hershey farm on the road from Man- heim to the Mt. Hope Church of the Brethren. 9 HEAD OF COWS Some are fresh ONE HEIFER ROOD SOWS, 9 PIGS, 300 CHICKENS 1946 JOHN DEERE B TRACTOR with cultivator, manure loader, power lift and chains, with wheel weighs and hill side hitch, No. 52 John Deere Tractor Plow, Farmall 20 Tractor, [avid Bradley tractor mower, 2-row. tobacco planter, 1-row New Idea to- bacco planter, Ontario 8 hoe drill, Mountville corn planter with fertilizer attachment, 2-wheel trailer, rubber, tire wagon with bed. David Bradley manure spreader, David Bradley 24-disc, 3-section spring harrow, Mas- sev Harris side rake. McDleering pick up baler, with 4 wheels, could be used with horses, rubber tire wheelbarrow, feed chest, Kreider tobacco izing boxes, corn sheller, stripping room stove, 2 sets tobacco lad- ets tobacco hoers, 350 tomato baskets. POULTRY EQUIPMENT Two coal and one electric brooder, 500 capacity; feeders & fountains, Brooder House 10x12, One range shelter, DAIRY EQUIPMENT Surge Milking Machine, complete with 2-unit pump, used three years; NieDeering 4-can milk cooler, electric hot water heater, 8 milk cans, buckets and strainer, any and everything used on a farm. HOUSEHOLD GOODS Bottle Gas Stove, two coal ranges, one oil range, one coal chest of living room suite, Waterfall dining room suite, and Arthur, Manheim. Also surviv- Lebanon, and a brother, Aaron Ger- lach, Hershey; and four great-grandchildren. with interment Green Tree cemetery. day afternoon Amos W. Ebersole Amos W. Ebersole, 57, Elizabeth~ town Rl, died at the Lancaster Co. Hospital. He was a Elizabethtown RI, he is survived by brothers and Jonas Ebersole, Lancaster; Walter Eber- sole, Elizabethtown R1; Mrs. Walter Zeager, Mt. Joy R1; and Mrs. Mary Dick, Manheim. el A eee press, S sisters ders, 2 s these GIBBONS WILL CELEBRATE 50tk WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gibboas, will celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniversary on Thursday, April 10. 4-Burnerx haatrola, They reside wi heir daughte HAROLD H. LEFEVER, Owner [und onto. ir. and are. chs. 14-2 Etsell on North Barbara street. Henry Shreiner, Audtioneer omplete Dispersal Sale 70 Head Registered Holstein Cattle Bangs Certified, T.B. Accredited & Caifhood Vaccinated, Never a Reactor SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1932 AT 12:30 Location:- On the Walter S. Schell Farm located in Dauphin County, 1% miles south of Route 22, turn south at the Blue Star Restaurant on the Shellsville-Sandbeach Road, or 3 miles north of Hershey on the Sand- beach-Shellsville Road at Gingrich School House. 25 Cows and Heifers Fresh or Close 12 Head Bred Heifers 15 Head Yearlings BULLS FIVE Of Service Age Balance Heifers from 2 to 12 months old, Selling Herd Sire, Ted Renown Pontiac Cows and Heifers are carrying his service. This is a very nice lot of cattle, two animals over 3 years old, A real lot of first calf heifers, sired by outstanding sires, used in Artificial Units, including Lucifer, Emperor Star, Houchhohn Duke Alexander, Glenafton Montvic Marksman, and others equally as good. SPECIAL MENTION of 15 Heifers, 1 year old, «ll vaccinated. A beautiful lot of heifers by outstanding sires from good dams, and Very Well Grown. Sale to start at 12:30 o'clock. For Catalog write to Harvey Rettew, Manheim, Pa. R2, Sale Mar. Walter S. Schell, Owner Auets tess, Dupes & Rioats Chas. L. Gibson, Mgr. lah, wife of Charles Sheetz, Florin, | ing is a sister, Mrs. Fannie Mease, 14 grandchildren, Funeral services were held from | the Nissley funeral home here Sun- in member of | Good's Mennonite Church. In addi- | tion to his father, Amos R. Ebersole, | berger, Leroy Buffenmyer, James Kreider, Glenn Stauffer, Paul Wer- ner, Martin Witman, Louis Becker, Kenneth Crills, John Witmer, Eu- gene Witmer, Stanley Ober, James Phyllis | on Sunday. | Mr. | son, of Manheim, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ober, Glenn Becker, Harold Hol- | linger, Leroy Hess, Warren Spick-| Mr, and Mrs. George Reigle, Mt. | the homte of Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Arndt, during the past week. Mrs. Matilda Derr visited Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hoke, West Fairview Mrs. Cora Myers, Columbia R. D. | visited Mrs. Katie Moore, Saturday. Visitors during the past week of Mr. and Mrs. Abram Gamber were, and Mrs. Ray Gamber and Gamber and children, Columbia R. D., Mr. and Mrs. Isaiah Sumpman, { ler, Henry Becker, Mr. and Mrs. Joy and Mrs. Iona Arndt of town. | Linneaus Longenecker, Mr. and | Mrs. John A. Eshelman and chil- | | dren. They received many useful and lovely gifts. | neti) CR The Camerons (From page 1) [time become an expert in politics. Miss Darl Nentwig, Florin, spent the weekend with her grandparents, | Mr. and Mrs. William Haines. Thursday visitors of Mr. and Mrs William: Haines were Mrs. Henry Rollman, Mrs. Sam Fry, of Lititz and Mrs. Harry Witmer, Manheim. Mrs. Dorothy Sload and children cf Marietta visited Mrs. Serena Fo- gie, Sunday. [By 1845 he was the U. S. senator > 2 : | Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. from Pennsylvania, and he was the | .,. to : . | Victor Snyder were Mr. Amos | first Republican senator from this | | state. By 1856, Cameron was re- garded as a serious choice for the | | vice-presidency, and in 1860 he de- | [livered Pennsylvania's delegates to | Cameron was appointed Lincoln, and | When he | { Lincoln. | secretary of war by | later, minister to Russia. returned to his senate post, he re- | { mained there until 1877 when he | James | served | resigned in favor of his son, | Donald | senate until 1897. | Tt was said by Colonel Alexander | | McClure that from 1845 until his | fous in 1889, Cameron held some | | Cameron, who as [degree of control over every politi- | | cal move and decision in Pennsyl- | vania. By many he is regarded as [the “father of the Republican or- | ganization in Pennsylvania”, while | [it is certain the | founders of the national Republican | Party. His favored | protective tariffs, keeping American he was among policies high discourag- | ing cheap He also | : {saw great harm in government in- | workmen employed by foreign goods. | terference in private business en-| Cameron and his son a= | massed a large fortune but they : sa | were known to be honest in their | | terprise. | pursuits. Their enemies frequently | | accused them of political corruption | and graft but the documentary oie} | dence shows they put more in the | sovernment than they took out. The | | elder Cameron was a quiet speaker | who displayed thrift of words. His { speeches were few, but strong and | full of conviction. His writings were i . leven more pointed and brief. Simon Cameron was known to | never forget a face or a name, | which proved very handy in cam- | paigning! | Scotch features, he was genial and {quite generous with his charities. His eldest son, J. Donald, was | born in 1833 at Middletown. After | graduating from Princeton, he went |into his father’s bank and later be- | came president. He also was presi- | dent of the Northern Central Rail- | road which later formed the Penn- | sylvania Railroad. Donald was ap- pointed secretary of war by Presi- | dent Grant in 1876; the fellowing | year he took his father’s place in the U. S. Senate where he served until 1897. In addition to his polit- Despite his cold, stern, | | and Waltz, Mr. Amos Bruckhart, Man- heim R. D. and Mrs. John Wittle, Florin. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Isler and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Theo- dore Salter, E'town R. D. Saturday. Mr. Roy Barton, Columbia, visit- ed Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fogie and | family, Saturday Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Geltmacher Sunday were: Mr. Har- old Stoppard, and sons, Mrs. Ber- tha Stoppard, Mrs. Minnie Gelt- macher and son Ray, all of Colum- bia R. D. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Erb visited Misses Minnie and Ella Erb, Mount Joy R. D. Saturday. Mrs. Eeb visit- ied Mr. and Mrs. Levern Lucas, Mt. Joy R. D. on Sunday. Visitors during the past week of Mr. and Mrs. Aristice Wittle were, Mr. and Mrs. Ragner Hallgren Jr. daughters, Millersburg, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wittle and daugh- Mr. and Mrs. Rag- ter, Columbia, | ner Hallgren Sr. Mt. Joy, Mr. Char- les Wittle and daughters Nancy and Carol Columbia R. D. and Cpl. Linn Hallgren. Mr. and Mrs. George Reigle Jr., of Mt. Joy visited the former's fa- ther, Mr. George Reigle on Sunday. Visitors during the past week of My. and Mrs. Jacob Erb, were Mrs. Mary Lucas, Mt. Joy R. D., Miss Gladys Oleweiler, Wrightsville, Mr. Paul Witmer, Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Brosey and children, Jimmy and Linda Lee of Silver Spring and Mr. George Witmer, of Marietta rm DQ Ce. The Barber's Union at Philadel- phia upped the price of haircuts to $1.25 and shaves 75c¢. Each was 25 cents lower. Jewerly - Silverware Watches - Gifts Watch Attachmemts (WATCH REPAIRING) Complete Ronson Lighter Repair Service Koser’s Watch Shop Dial Mt. Joy 3-4015 Chocolate Ave, FLORIN, PA.