The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 15, 1952, Image 3

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the earth's atmosphere
moon's rays, the moon is
appears to ke
ground,
Because
bends the
| not actually
when looked at from the
Electric
and Gas Welding
Also Specialize On
FARM MACHINE WELDING
AND EQUIPMENT
Automobile emd Truck Welding |
LAWN MOWER SHARPENING
Cover's Welding Shop,
MT. JOY, PA. Phone 3-5931 |
Delta and Marietta Streets |
whe
WHITE - WASHING
AND
DISINFECTING | Quality Meats
HESS BROS.
ALSO A FULL LINE OF
FLORIN, PENNA.
Phone Mt. Joy 3-4930
. 3-4 Fruits & Yori
—————
re it



PUBLIC “SALE KRU Heat Mare
| WEST MAIN ST. MOUNT JOY
GK. Wagner’ 'sChickery
| | BABY CHICKS - DUCKLINGS
| TURKEY POQULTS
Friday, May 23, 1952 EVERY WEEK
i ri North | P. 0. Box 226
i cated in the Village of Florin on
On ew i ELIZABETHTOWN
Market Street near school house. |
ed thereon a

OF VALUABLE
Real Estate and Personal Property

+ PA,
write for Price List
18-tf
Phone or
of 80x200 ft., more or less. ere
Lot of ground consisting
215 Story Frame Dwelling
heater.
LET US...

+ heat: G. E. hot water
. POULTRY HOUSE
containing seven rooms and bath; hot ai
ALSO FRAME BARN 18x20 ft. equipped for two cars
Phone 442-1.2/

dealers and Farmers Bring in your}
rar equiv & od sate | THE FARM
Near Elizabethtown, R. D. 2, Pa.
Phone 442-J-2, Saturday, May 2a QUESTION
- | 1952, at 11 a, m. (DST) 37 NEW |
BOX
by BILL GIVENS
| and USED TRACTORS, all makes; |
300 Pieces of All Kinds of Machin-
ery—10 Bales, 45T, Case, New
Holland, THC, 15 Hay Loaders, KYW Farm Director
| Combines, Side Rakes, New Stauf-| prom-—Mr. F. B., Swedesboro, N. J.
| fer Transple inters, 1,000 Locust 0 My apple trees don't bear very
| Posts, 2%0 Hogs, Forage Harvester,| well, What could be the matter with
| Bale Flevators, 2 Tons Baler Twine, |
Truckload Hardware & Tools, Corn Ans. trees need fertilizer, 1
vou try 65-10-56,
one pound of
Pickers, C and Super C and other
Corn Planters, G. K. Wagner, Sale| 5-12-56 to each
Manager, Next Sale Saturday, June | inch of trunk
Apply it
der the outer
branches of the
| eT f as that is
| OP I where the feeding
foots are Your
DONT wees also may
need pruning, be-
if they are 8
7, 1952.





couse

GET YOu DOWN . ete
i OZ Freme Mr. W. B., McAdoo, Pa
| /\ | Q.—-Are there any steps 1 can take
BS. DVE Is to get strawberis. plants tw produce
ger berries?
Yes. I don't know How much
Rn gecomplish at this stage
after ycu'te
| too large they d
BUSINESS won't produce
| frag
|
“oy
Sane
"ry WONDERFUL

Ans,
OCG you ca
— | ¢f the season but in June
earnest for next year. Apply a heavy
| application of complete fertilizer .
-10-5 will do the trick,
pounds to every 10 feet of row. Then,
loosen the soll, push back and fertil-

12x25 it. All buildings equipped with electricity.
A'so at the same time and place the following ‘person: al property will
be offered:
ated chairs: 2 radios:

Take Care of. Your
CHICK ORDERS
ize well, and I think you'll find you'{l
get bigger berries,
step to that, about five pounds to»
every 10 feeg of row might even help
now,
suite: ng and mattress; six cane=se 4
pedroon Juste: Seine kitchen cabinet; couch; combination coal and “ae
9x12 rum. 2 lees From —Mrs. M. K., R. D. No. 3, Per-
le ras Original Rance; Sie Eo
i Old bureau; small chest; rocker; wood chest; quilts. | WITH OUR NEW STRAIN hare soy wey 10 get lof
; i . cooking mtensils; Preadv Garden | hornets in the house?
quilts: linen: dishes; coo } Ite tos < hoole rneis
in good condition: rubber-tire wheel Ans.—First, let's get to the source
Tractor with scorer and cultivator, Rien
barr~w with metal tray; ga den tools:
of other articles tco numerous to me
Sal» to con#nence at 6:00 P. M. D5T, when conditic
AE MRS. JOHN SHELL
Walter Dunes, Auctioneer
19-3
other tools: lawn mower;

ns will be made |
Landis & Garman, Clerks
PUBLIC SALE fro tos ven
wn Off
SCHOOL HOUSES i A. C.

Mt. Hope Leghorns
ALSO WHITE ROCKS
WHICH MAKE EXCELLENT LAYERS OR BROILERS
aced high
of the trouble. To begin with, the
hornet’s nest is in the walls of the
house. They come in from small open-
ings In the outside wall, get lost and
then appear in cracks in the wall
around the window frames. Then
they follow the light. There isn't too
much you can actually do about this
situation othér than try to observe
the exact area from which the hornets
appear and see where they come from.
After you have done this, plaster up
the hole and also temporarily plug
windows (frames), etc. Then wait for

in the Chick-of-Tomorrow





 



Jess
Horr, o., Pa.
C







tle brucellosis caused by the same
germs?

MA Y ER (§| them to die. This is really not as
Wat Bt bi + aqlo on the premises | tedious as it sounds in writing since
The ui nders signed will sell a 1b di (1 PHONE MT. JOY 3-9826 |}! you can usually see where they come
hoo! Hous e Propertie | . | | from and that's half the battle.
YWIOWINC Se hd
the fc SATURDAY. MAY 17. 1 P. M DST. = ki | fear 8 Sirens dey bi Fi
: arhool house bt! arm Hour" 5:30-6: M.
om. frome, sl | house |
(1) McKinley School—!. I ine o cod firme far]
This building is wired tri ty, comeuns a nerd x
nace and is located on a 7 ? ih und ‘in t ts Mount armer S
acre have of lees on the roan Ie Si 1 | a
Cn Rupho Term. Lancaster Co. Pa | | Question
"SATURDAY. MAY 17 3 21 P. M. D.S.T. GL | |
(2) Fairview School 1-1 room, bri he it I td Corner C
ing is wire ad for « tricity, contains Tr Wy | et, ne a
lot of ground containing one hall acre, more or 7 V1 |
on c nliot of g . . ; Meslarsonyilia Repho Twop., | PREPARED BY
road leading from Mt. Hope to Mastersonvil : : his American Foundation
omncacster Co., Pa. | For Animal Health
SATURDAY, MAY 24, 1:00 P. M. DST. rh yal
room. brick school house. This tl
3) Chestnut Grove School—I-roc ie a | y
hd ing is wirad for electricity om heater and id 7 | WHAT ABOUT
on a plot of around contain perches, more cr BRUCELLOSIS?
Jocated on a o : Biv)
n road leading from W hite Oa aquare, Rapno | Q: Are swine brucellosis and cat-
|
|
|








SATURDAY, MAY 24, 3 :30 P. M. DS.T. es 0s Put Up Your Hay The Day It ls Difference Almost Unbeliev y | A: No, though the germs are
(4) Chiques School—1-room ime school he This build-| cut, ondition hay at same time. able. Retains the Carotene (Vitamin! closely related. ;
Vin wired for electricity, cont room heater, i is located Stems dry rapidly es leaves. Beat A) and Protein in stems and leaves Q: Can swine brucellosis appear
ngs ; ol one half act or I m | weather hazards. — retains color — stems and leaves | in human beings, too?
So lot of grour nctil I A
on plot of grounc Mc il t Mi] vv Rer 0 Puts more milk ia your pail -— more say soft and pliskle tion, sti 1 | A: Yes, in humans it is called
A ; flesh on your beef — brings more rake — requires less time (0 Dale | undulant fever. Farmers can get
jancaster Co., Pa. ITA Tlie v5 home money — saves time and labor. and less space to store. the discase when handling infected
All these buildings are e lier Te a 3 ar a | animals at farrowing time or by
summer homes or business properties : See Ie On Display Here | contact with infected meat at
ard io BH: C. Buicrd, Supern y Principal, | | butchering time.
For inspection avply to H. C. Burt : & oO g
Marie i Central School District. | N. G. HERSHEY S N f By Q: How 2004
ware? | M ANHEIM, PENNA. 18-4 swine brucellosis
MANHEIM CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT | eo PENN. | swin

By IVAN M. WITTEL, Secretary.
S. FRANK, Auctioneer
RICHARD M. MARTIN, Solicitor of
PUBLIC SALE
jo |



  
NOTICE
sam Bn ~The 37th Keystone Sale
WILL BE HELD
A: It may cause

Q: How can the owner be sure
the trouble is brucellosis and not
=9 | some other breeding disease?
O oO 1 H oO uU S E S T RDAY MAY 31 t 1952 | A: The only way is to have a
S C H i ’ A S 9 veterinarian check the herd and
[he undersiaon ead will s¢ at pub the premises | 12:30 P. M. | take blood samples for laboratory
in 4 urd meer . | tests.
the {ollowing School House Properties (THE DAY AFTER MEMORIAL DAY) | Q: If brucellosis is found, what
SATURDAY, JUNE 7. 1952 — 1:00 P. M. DST. DO NOT FORGET THIS, CHANGE OF DATE cc
} rith coal | : If the infected herd is a
1. Fairland School l-room. frame ‘hoo house vi with cox | AT THE KEYSTONE SALES BARN ON ROUTE 230 JUST | Wo goin Ean
fired in basement. This building is wired lor elecirk ny | EAST OF MOUNT JOY. PENNA. | stock should be finished and sent
1 of ground ntaining ¥2 acre ot ground, | slaughter, In cases where the
and is ted on a 1 f ground containing 2 acre in . . RE | to slaughter. ases the
more or s on road leading from the Fruitville Pixe to Fair-| WE WILL HAVE | owner wants to preserve breeding
Hiv ol 7 >, 1881 |
and. Pann Tx Lan st Co.. P | lines, the pigs should be segre-
me, ? wrk Sign Pe 35 HEAD GOOD gated at weaning time. Pigs from
SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1352 — 3:30 P. M. D.S.T. | infected sows can be kept on
yuse. This {es ih wil riot
cus l-room, stone school hot FAIS | { clean ground and given perioc
%1e + Grove Schoo) “tv. and contains a room healer | HH O LS T I ; N | blood tests to weed out diseased
building is wired for electricity, ana rnd | animals.
and is located on a plot of ground containing “2 acre o: around, | |
more or less, on road leading from Penryn lo the Mountain |

|
Penn Twp., Lancaster Co., Pa. |
SATURDAY. JUNE 14, 1952 — 1:00 P. M. D.S.T.
3. Sporting Hill-
brick
m | ing adjoining. The 2-room buil
fired SW 3 oe vent ‘and is wired for electricity. The If you need one cow or a
adjoining building contains a room heater and is wired for | glad to serve you.
electricity. These buildings are ted on a plot of ground |
containing in front on the north of the road leading from ]
Road,
house and small one-| to add to their herds.
3 a coal-|
school

2-room,

jing contain
loc
| modtly he kind of purebreds that good holstein breeder's like
Also a few gaod grades.
We always have a nice group af heifer calves.
BUY AT KEYSTONE! |.
disease out
their herds?
| A: Breeding
| stock should be
nougint only from
herds known to be free of brucel-
osis, If in doubt, owners should
isolate newly purchased animals
and have them blood tested.
Q: Can brucellosis be cured? '
| Q: How can pig
C Oo WwW S | raisers keep this
| 5 of

whole herd KEYSTONE will be |

Manheim to Mt. Joy, in the El of Sporting Hill, Raph 4 If you have cows to sell, one godd cow, or a whole herd, A: No known drug or combina.
Twp., Lancaster Co., 150 feet, and extending in depth of that t| KEYSTONE does more for the money it costs you than any | ton of drugs will cure brucellosis
width northwardly 216 feet, more or less, to a 16 feet wide | other sale. | "NOTE. Due to s imitati
> space limitations,
common alley. SELL AT KEYSTONE! | general questions cannot be han-
— 3:30 P. M. D.S.T. | dled by this column,
SATURDAY. JONE 1, 19st 34 ol house. This but FUTURE DATES AT KEYSTONE ln —
4. Lincoln Behl eg tor vie] 17h XTYSTONE SALE, SATURDAY, MAY Gl oN
ing contains a furnace in the basement and is wirad 1or elec 28th KEYSTONE SALE. FRIDAY, JUNE 13th Largest reptile in the United
tricity, and is located on a plot of groun d
more or less, adjoining Erisman’s Church, on the road leading
from Manheim to Mt. Joy, Rapho Twp., Lancaster Co., Pa.
All thesa buildings are excellent for remodeling into homes,
summer homes or business properties.
For inspection apply to H. C. Burgard, Supe Princip- |
al. Manheim Central School District.
MANHEIM CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT |
By IVAN M. WITTEL, Secretary
Elmer V. Spahr, Auctioneer
Richard M. Martin, Solicitor
containing 1 ccre,
vising
 

CERTIFIED

20-4 ' Phone Mt, Joy 3-4354
39th KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, JUNE 27th
40th KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, JULY: 11th |
41st KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, JULY 25th
42nd KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 8th
43rd KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 29th
44th KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12th A
45th KEYSTONE SALE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26th
CONESTOGA FALL CLASSIC, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10th |
Keystone Holstein Sales, Inc.
MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA
| States is the alligator.

Want
ADS
OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKS HERE
ACCREDITED

{ brood sows to
/ farrow stillborn
“rs” or weak pigs. The |
| germ may also cause damage to |
| boars.
|
| B. Way,
about 10 |
As a preliminary |


|
|
|
|

| Those In Service
Pvt. Fern ay Assigned
Fern L. Way, daughter of J.
of Salunga,
assigned to the new WAC detach-
alt the Army's Transportation |
Fort Eustis, Va.
Pvt,
was recently
ment
Center,
gchool at Fort Knox, Ky.
Lee Ranck Graduated
Recently
Machinist's
the U. S. Naval
Training Center,
was Lee A. Ranck, airman
tice, USN, son of Rev. and
Ezra H. Ranck, of 25 East Main St,
Mount Joy.
Ranck,
June 26,
Mate
Air
Memphis,
School, at
Technical
Tenn.
iation
appren =
who enterd the Naval
service 1951,
recruit training at the
Training Center, Bainbridge,
Students at the

Md.
train-
school are
dene your picking you can start in | ed to maintain and repair jet pow=-
addition to functional
They
aircraft sys- |
| er plants, in
| type aircraft
are familiarized with
and
engines, also
} terns, controls instruments,
They learn
| engines,
instal] power plants and service as
well as inspect the entire
| mechanical systems.
| Ceres
| Kaesong's Name May Join
Yorktown, Compiegne, Reims
Great cities and small crossroads
towns in the most varied and im-
| probable parts of the world have
| flown the flags of truce
Kaesong, ancient Korean walled city
near the 38th parallel,
to join that list.
England, France and Spain sat
down in Paris in 1763 to close the
French and Indian War. Since then,
marble palaces and solemn chan-
cellories, private homes, dusty
tents, a school house, a railroad car
and the deck of a battleship have
seen armistices bring cease-fire to
other wars in which Americans took
part,
In the Yorktown, Virginia, home
of a merchant named Augustine
Moore, Lord Cornwallis accepted
the surrender terms laid down by
George Washington, the Marquis de
Lafayette and French Admiral
Comte de Grasse. The American
Revolution ended the next day,
| 19, 1781,
The War of 1812 might have been
| settled in Moscow, but for England's
refusal of an offer of mediation by
| Tsar Alexander I of Russia, As it
was, peace commissioners met in
Ghent, Belgium, in August, 1814,
and signed a peace treaty on Christ-
{ mas Eve,
The old walled city of Kaesong,
now reported in ruins, has
been described as medieval. Con-
servative in character, it clung to
ancient customs, to the
dress of billowing white,
ously shaped and colored hats, in-
cluding yellow ones for
grooms.
to inspect. and clean
change or remove


The people of Kaesong were well |
known for their anti-Japanese senti-
ments, and the city contained fewer | 11
5

Underséa Grand Canyon
Mindanao Trench stretches some |
600 miles along the eastern flank
of the Philippines. Four times the
size of Grand Canyon, it is but
one of a series of great gashes
scarring the ocean floor for thous- |
the Pacific.
measured
ands of miles across
Vast holes have been
along an arc of trenches
sweeps from Japan southward to|
Midway be- |
the Caroline Islands.
tween Tokyo and Iwo Jima is
Ramapo Deep, its 34,038-foot meas-
urement the second deepest
verified. A hole in the sea of Guam,
Mansyu Deep,
Nearby is 31,614-foot Nero Deep,
discovered in 1899 while a Pacific |
being charted. |
greater than 25,000 |
cable route
Other depths
was
feet include Aldrich Deep northeast |
of New Zealand, 30,930 feet; Mil-
waukee Depth north of Hispaniola
in the West Indies, 30,246 feet;
Planet Deep across the Equator
frem Christmas Island, 29,988 feet;
Byrd Deep, discovered by Admiral
Byrd's 1928-1930 expedition to Ant.
arctica, 28,152 feet; Meteor Deep |
in the south Atlantic, 26,574 feet;
and Richards Deep off Chile, 25,050
feet.

Closer Than You Think
South America’s Iguassu Falls,
usually bracketed with Niagara
and Africa's Victoria Falls as the
world's cataract giants, is closer
than you think. Air travel has
brought Brazil and Argentina days
closer to U.S. centers of popula-
tion in recent years. The two Latin
Republics, sharing opposite banks
of Iguassu's wide,
The unit is the first of is kind to |
be established at Fort Eustis on a
permanent basis, Pvt. Way 5 a
graduate of the Army's clerical
graduated from the Av= |
Mrs. | at the first camp to be held for six-| 5
received his |
U. S. Naval |
engines, |
aircraft |
makers. |
is the latest |
Oct. |
often |
national |
and curi- |
boy bride- Ie: S. Frank, Auct. Sale 7 p. m. DST.
| Japanese residents than any other [ Story frame dwelling on
| Hope swell street by the First Na-
important Korean settlement. One | tional Bank & Trust Co. of Mount
result of the hostility was the isola- | Joy, Guardian of Charles Cunning-
tion of the Japanese section of | ham, et al. C. S. Frank. Auct. Sale
town that grew up around the sub- vat 7 p. m. DST.
| urban railroad station. It will be | reer renee |
remembered, however, principally | Saturday, May 17. at 1 p. m. DST,
for the Korean truce talks, | a 1-room frame, slate roof school
| house known as McKinley School |
located on the road leading from
that |
yet |
is third at 32,208. |
double-horseshoe |
ing better paths for tourists from |
their own big coastal cities to this
majestic natural wonder in their
wilderness. So far, Argentina has
had the better of the competition.
For decades it has maintained a
good, small hotel in the national
park on its side, west of the falls.
{
|
|
|
brink, are slowly and steadily beat- |
|
|
|
|




{ The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa.
——— ——————
Week's Activities
At East Donegal
School, Maytown
will be |
Thursday May 15, 1952-=3
(BU LL PROV EN FAVORABLY
ON PRODUCTION BASIS
Through a comparison of official
production records between daugh=
tors and dams, Weejoe Sanar, reg-
istered Holstein bull owned by
| Joseph A. Hoak & Herman Ginder,
Jr, Mt, Joy, has been proven fav-"
orably on a production basis. Pub
Holstein-Friesian As-















































Pre-school examinations
given in both the Florin Washing- [ lished by The
ton and Maytown Elementary |. i ion of figures indi-
" owe | -
[ schools, Thursday, May 22. All stu-| . ta that this bull raised the pro-
| dents must be registered before duction of his daughters over ‘that
next September. Examinations will| their dams by 22 pounds of but=
bon and 1,050 pounds of milk.
Statistics are available on 8 pairs
of daughters and dams which show
| that the daughters of this bull av-
camp | eraged 527 pounds of butterfat and
14,850 pounds of milk, as against
505 pounds of butterfat and 13,800
pounds of milk for the dams.
All records used in making these
comparisons are adjusted to a ma=
milking, 305-day
be given from 9-12 and 1-3:3(
Thursday.
Camp Program Completed
Stanley Dotterer, high
science instructor, will be
school
manager and instructor of nature
| th grade pupils of the Florin and
Maytown Elementary
June 2-6. The
Swatara,
students on |
camp will be held at
Bethel,
40 pu- | hasis
Camp nean at | ture, twice-daily
which time approximately
| pils will live together one week | —————— EY
with their teachers | NEW JERSEY FARMERS
| Miss Irene Sloat, home economics | OPPOSE AIR BASE
| teacher, will be camp dietitian; | Many farmers in the vicinity of
|
| Miss Phyllis Morrison girls’ physic- | Fort Dix, N. J., are bitterly oppos=
| al education teacher, recreation: | ing the Government acquiring 700
ltrs. Addie Parker, school nurse, | acres of productive farm land to
base
having the same troub-
camp nurse; and Kenneth Depoe, | enlarge the
industrial arts teacher, crafts” The They are

| first two days, the sixth grade|le East Donegal farmers experienc-
teachers, Mrs. Ralph Ioleman and |ed quite recently.
| Miss Sara Mischelich will assist | eS 5513
| and the last three days, high school| Everybody reads newspapers buf
NOT everybody reads circular ade
vertising left on their door step.
Alva Bender, H
Edward Richter,
I. D. Miller
assist.
Morrell
Eugene
| teachers
| Shields,
Saylor,

and Miss Grace |
ta
| beh ¥
| Henderson will
the pro- §
held |
Fri- |
will |
In order. to help finance

will be
Market
ject a food-soup sale
at the Elizabethtown
May 23. Mrs. Irvin Ginder
| be general chairman. Mrs. Edward |
{ Charles will be chairman of the so- |
Mrs. |
Hof- |
John
| day,
liciting committee assisted by
Maurice Sweitzer, M:s. Paul
fmen, Mrs. Alvin Koser, Mrs.
| Zeller and Mrs. Albert
| Mrs. Ray Frye will be
| the soup committee
Mrs. Mrs.
Mrs. Lester Shepler
will be used to
Kleiner
chairman of
assisted by |
Watts
The proceeds
Lancaster, and | §
defray the camp
expenses. Transportation will be
provided by the township school
busses
ell A eee, se
Sale Register |
If you want a notice of your eale
| inserted in this register weekly |
from now until day of sale, ABSO- | §
| LUTELY FREE, send or phone us |§
your sale date and when you are
readv let us vrint your bills. That's |
the BEST advertising you can get.
|
Fridav. May 16—At the Bulletin
Office, Mt. Joy, a tract of land lo- |
cated on Hopewell street with a 115
fory frame dwelling by the First
Noa il Bank & Trust Co., Guar-
dian of Charles Cunningham, et al
Friday, May 16—At the Bulletin
Office on East Main street, Mt. Joy,
| M2nheim to Mount Gretna in Rahpo
township. Frank, auct
Saturday, Mav 17, at 3:30 p. m
DST, 1-room brick school house on
“e road leading from Mt. Hove to
Masterscnville, in Ravho townshino,
the Fairview School. C
auct.
| known as
| S. Frank,
LA
Saturday. May 24. at 1 p. m. DST
1-room hrick school house on the With d li
| read leading from White Oak to i a QIZ Ing
{ Union Square. in Rapho township,
lncwn as the Chestnut Grove
| School. Frank, auct.
| Saturday, Mav 24, at 3:30 np. m.,
| DST, 1-room frame school house
en road leading from Mastersonville
| to Milton Grove. in Rapho town-
chip, known as Chiques School. C
S. Frank, auct.
| All the above school buildings
| will be sold by Manheim Central
School District.
Friday, May 23—On North
Mar- |
{ket street near school house, 80x200
(ft. lot with 2% story frame
» dwell -
jing, harm, pouliry house and house- | NOW
John Shell
on the Dd


|
| Walter Dupes, FW t,
1
|
-At 191 North
household
Sale at |
Saturday, Mav 31
Main St., in Manheim,
bv Peter H. Snavely
1 p. m. Frank Aldinger, Auct

|
Saturday, May 31—On Groff Ave. |
in E-town. Personal property and |
many antiques by Raymond R. Ris- |
Sale at |
Auct.
ser. Walter
12: 30 DST.
Dupes,




OUR WANT
ADS ARE
1 SMALL
but they get
Stehman Bros.
Salunga, Pa.