THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT - KLN Digital Collections

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PEOPLE AND SPOTS IN THE LATE NEWS THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT

VOL. LXXI KUTZTOWN, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1945 NO. 1

___*" -f.^iSrm-M_____t-MlMeS:. «*_TT.*:^ir.___^...„s:^j*js__^^^ 7TH WAR LOAN T H E M E is J o e R o s e n t h a l ' s f a m o u s p i c t u r e of t h e flag raising at Iwo J i iha . T h e d r i v e s t a r t s M a y 14 a n d e n d s J u n e 30. Goal is 14 billion dol la rs , f.

Annual Exhibit of Kutztown Schools

Thursday, May 24

F r o m 7 : 0 0 t o 1 0 : 3 0 P . M . ;

T o S t a g e F a s h i o n S h o w

9 : 0 0 t o 9 : 3 0 P . M .

Put a red circle around May 24th, and do not fail to attend the annual exhibit of the Kutztown schools, from 7:00 to 10:30 p . m.

Take your purse with you, for choco­late milk, soft drinks, potato chips, candy, peanuts and ice cream will be on sale in. the cafeteria, a t a modest price.

Take your notebook and pencil, also, for you are certain to jot down exhibits that strike your fancy; and you may want to secure thc names of the Home Economics girls who can bathe a baby, plan well-balanced meals, and who know how to can vegetables and pre­pare them for freezing.

You may want the names also, of typists who know office routine, how to make a stencil, and how to ."book-keep;" and perhaps you can inveigle an Arts and Crafts pupil to duplicate a lapel pin for your best suit. And those of you who live on farms will be glad to record thc names of FFA youth who mend tractors, raise broilers and know

v to butcher. grousing through thc six Exhibit

reasons for " W h y a Library?" you may want to jot down the titles of books that will better your profession. And what with thc shortage of carpenters you might be able to book the vacation time of a Mechanical Arts pupil to

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I N S O U T H P A C I F I C

George Harvey Seidel, S 1/C, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Seidel, Mertz­town R. 1, celebrated his 20th birth-

No Apparent Settlement Of Bus Strike In Sight

The strike by thirty bus drivers and mechanics against trie Allentown & Rcading Transit Company has tied up much-needed transportation facilities for hundreds of men and women em­ployed in essential war industries, school children and homc makers for thc past five days, and there is no apparent settlement sight.

The strike was announced Saturday by Norman P. Fernon, Jr., president of the company, who said that thirty em

section.'

Continuing, Mr. Fernon read an­other portion of thc contract: "Should any difference arise between the parties, as to the true intents and mpaning of any provisions of this agreement or any other question aris-ing between thc two parties which

immediate j cannot bc mutually adjusted, the same shall bc submitted at the request of either party to a Board of Arbitration, to be selected in the following manner, one arbitrator to be chosen by the

2 9 M A T 1 1 T H

S/Sgt. Chester L. Eck, who has been in the Philippines since 1943, celebrated his 29th birthday, May

ployces had failed to report for work j Company and onc by the Association,

George Harvey Seidel, S /1C

day, May 12th, somewhere in the South Pacific.

Inducted March 1, 1944, hc trained at Bainbridge. Md.; Newport, R. I., and Honda . His last furlough was April I , 1944.

He is a number of St. John's Re­formed Church, and prior to induction was a truck driver for Clayton Conrad.

This photograph was taken in Pearl Harbor.

His brother. T / S John C. Seidel, is an engineer on a Flying Fortress, with the Sth Air Force.

and buses wcre not running According to Mr. Fernon, a con­

tract between the company and the Amalgamated Association of Street Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees of America and Division 1184, was signed December 15, 1944,

and the two arbitrators then selected shall endeavor to reach an agreement; failing to do so within ten days, a third arbitrator shall bc chosen by thc two. Should they not be able to agree on a third arbitrator within ten days, then thc Secretary of Labor for the State

and was to remain in full-force to j 0 f Pennsvlvania shall appoint the third and including October 15th, 1945. | member for the Board of Arbitration, M Ous contract," Mr. Fernon said, j t h e Board so constituted shall weigh

specifically statcs, in black and white, | a n evidence and arguments of the that It is understood that thc company \ p o i n t s i n dispute, and thc written de-shall not lock out its employees, and | c i s i o n 0 f a m a j o n t v of the said Board that the employees shall not strike, | 0f Arbitration shall be final and bind-and that the association shall not au- j i n g u p o n t h c p a r t l c s thereof. In event t h o m e a strike unless and until the 10f f a i i u r e of either partv to appoint parties have arbitrated their difference | l t s arbitrator within six days, exclusive pursuant to the provisions of this • (Continued on page sighs—column five)

Kutztown Grange Host b Pomona At KHS June 2nd

John Da^is, Secretary of

The Reading Chamber of

Commerce Will Speak

John Davis, secretary of the Rcad-j ing Chamber ol Commerce, will be

the speaker at' the June second mcet-I ing of Pomona Grange at KHS, with I Kutztown Grange as host.

T h e theme for both morning and j afternoon sessions will be "Our debt to

those who served for us." Dr. James I Grim will give the address of wel-I come, to which Constant Zimmer-I man, Topton Grange, will respond; I Wor thy Master W . John Blatt will j preside at thc 9:30 a. m. business ses-j sion, and County Agent Charles Adams j will be on han<?} with a wealth of in-I formation for a^ert farmcrs.

D u n n g ttic 'afternoon a Quartet J Contest will be held, with the follow­ing members o£ thc Music Division of the Kutztown Woman ' s Club as judges: Mrs. (5, L. Heckman. Mrs. Raymond ConjM and Marie Shank­weiler.

The play, "Husband Hunters ," is

Muhlenberg College to Go Co-education; Decision Reached at 198th Convention Of Lutheran Ministerium of Pennsylvania

Dr. Thomas A. Bock to Retire May 31, Served Public School System 51 Years

An expert on rural education, former director of the Bureau of Field Serv­ice of the Stale Department of Public Instruction, and head of thc Depart­

ment of Education at KSTC, from ! winch hc was graduated half a century

. i..o. Dr. Thomas A Rock retires Mav dst.

Ik lias sened the pnblic school sys­tem of Pennsylvania as teacher, prin- I opal, county superintendent and direc- ; for for 51 vears and four months. Of j this total 34 years and four months I were devoted to teaching, his subjects I at thc local institution being education, ethics and social science; 17 years to j •school administration; anel two terms as j superintendent of thc Chester county j schools.

Rural Education Expert

Dr. Bock's introduction to rural cdu-cation took place on enrollment in j

boyhood, in a village school at Mc-Keansburg, near Orwigsburg, his birth­place, located on ground donated in 1813 by his great-grandfather; and at thc age of 17, hc taught in a similar school near Orwigsburg. It is not strange, therefore, that his most signifi­cant contribution to his native statc was made in the interest of rural children.

W^iilc in service as Chester County Superintendent, he wrote thc bill, en­acted in 1919, which obligated the Commonwealth of Pcnnsyivania to pay half thc cost of transporting rural chil­dren to consolidated schools. At that time, only Wisconsin and North Caro­lina provided Statc aid for this purpose. Thc 1919 law carried an appropriation of S350.000 for the biennium, and thc subsequent growth of this movement is indicated by thc fact that the current legislature has appropriated more than S9.000.000 for its share of local school transportation.

Armed with this law. Superintend­ent Bock led the movement which es­tablished at Unionvillc, Chester Coun­ty, what was then the largest rural con­solidated school in America—a school which closcd 18 onc-tcachcr elementary schools and a onc-teachcr High school. I o r seven years he shared with other members of thc Statcfichool department in activities which led in 15 years, to thc closing of approximately 6,000 onc-tcacher schools in Pennsylvania. Hc and his assistants also successfully campaign­ed for the establishment of vocational agricultural High schools at Honey Brook, Avondalc and Shadds Ford, Chester county, where hc enlisted thc aid of Pierre S. Dupont , who has since then contributed approximately Sl,-000,000 toward thc erection of school houses in said county. From 1914-20 more than 100 Parent-Teacher Associa­tions wcre organized in thc county and

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C O M P L E T E A R R A N G E M E N T S FOR M E M O R I A L DAY, H E R E

Hoch-Balthaser Post No. 480 Amer­ican Legion will have charge of Mem- j orial Day observances, to be held at Hope Cemetery May 30th at 7:45 p. in., following a brief service at Fair-view Cemetery.

The Kutztown Hand, Ira Moyer, di­rector, will furnish the music.

Arrangements have also been made by the Post, for the decoration of the graves of veterans.

M E N N O N I T E B R E T H R E N N E W S The Children's Bible Club, spon­

sored by the Mennonite Brethren in Christ Chuich , will meet Friday at 7 p. tn. at the Town Hall. Bible Study it 7:45 P- iu.

ldstor A. G. Woodring will con­duct no services in Blandon and Fleet­wood, Sunday, due to thc third quar-terlv conference at Terre Hill, when Presiding Elder H. B. Musselman will speak at 10 a. m. and conduct Com­munion at 2 p . m.

No services will be held in Fleet­wood, Sunday evening, due to M I S Baccalaureate in Emmanuel Church, when Pastor Woodring will speak.

Three Local Couples Celebrate 45th Wedding Anni. at Dinner

ITvrcc Kut/town couples bcar the I distinction of having been married 45 } 5*ars ago, May l .. 1900. in town.! Where they have lived ever since. T h e j anuvenary was celebrated at a dinncr at Mosclcm Springs Hotel, followed bv j ;i surprise partv at thc home of Mr. ind Mrs. Scott Ri t /man, Whi te Oak Rtreet. son-in-law and daughter of the fegleys. at which attendance totaled W. MUSK was furnished on a record-ing machine, equipped with amplifier, operated hy Fred Scidcl, Hamburg. Hoe-downing was also enjoyed

Hie three couples arc Charles and •Salhe (Heck) Fcglcv. Raldv street; ' Cyrus and Came (Heffner) Rahn, | white Oak street; and Horace and

*oua (Fenstermacher. Schmehl. .East "a lnut street.

. ] l ic Fcglcvs and Ralins were mar- ' "cd by the Rev. Elmer Leinbach, and \ rhe Sehmehls bv Dr. Svdncv 1 Harkcv.

Their combined ages total 414. or -Jn average of 69.

Sallie Heck chose an olive green dress for thc marriage ceremony, Car­rie Heffner a crcam-colorcd Gloriosa with broad, lace frills, and /.cnia Fen­stermacher was in white.

Mr. Fegley is a stone cutter and car­penter and continues his cemetery work, cutting and carving bases and foot-stones. T h e Feglcys have two children, Mrs. Scott Ritzman, Kutz­town, and Mrs. Arthur Funk, Allen­town.

Mr. and Mrs. Rahn, who have re­tired from the restaurant business at the Dutch Maid Kitchen, live in the Melot residence. W h i t e Oak street. Their children are Ensign Gcorgc Rahn, whose address, is in care of thc Meet Post Officc, San Francisco; John, Minersville; Mrs. Jgck Rickards and Ravmond. Kutztown.

Mr. Sclnhchl is a foreman at the Kutztown Foundry. Thcy have one son, John, Shillington. A daughter Car­rie died in infancy. Mrs. Schmchl's

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IN FASHION S H O W A T PHILA. S C H O O L

Jan is Fryer, KHS, '44. a Freshman at the Moore School of Design, Phila­delphia, was a model in thc institu­tion's Fashion Show. Among the many in attendance were Mrs. William Fryer, hcr mothcr. and Mrs. Harvey Schlenker. Kutztown.

l h e future stylist modelled a "Cac­tus W h i t e " ensemble comprising a dress, coat and hat.

Shc lives at 1922 Race street.

600 A T T E N D C O N C E R T O F A L L E N T O W N B A N D

AT L U T H E R A N H O M E Nearly 600 attended thc concert by

the Allcntown Band in thc auditorium of thc Lutheran Homc at Topton , for the benefit of thc Servicemen's Home­coming and Memorial Fund.

During intermission Gcorge Schofer played thc accordion; Mary Croll sang a solo; and Mrs. S. Kramer played a cornet number.

A basket of flowers was presented to Mrs. J. O. Henry, of the Home.

DR. Q. A. W . R O H R B A C H C H I E F SPEAKER AT KHS

C O M M E N C E M E N T , MAY 2 9 T H Dr. Q. A. W. Rohrbach, president of

KSTC, will be the chief speaker at KHS Commencement, May 29th and the following Seniors will also speak: Roy Hamme, college preparatory, "Roger Bacon;" Doris Silsdorf, gen­eral course, "Charles de C.aulle; ' ' June Boyer, commercial, "John Wanamak-er," and Wayne Dietrich, vocational agriculture, "Henry A. Wal lace ."

The Rev. W. K. Cassel will preach the Baccalaureate sermon May 27th.

Both events will be held in the High School auditorium.

37th Graduation Of Longswamp High!

Thursday, May 31

" Y o u t h ' s R e s p o n s i b i l i t y i n a .

N e w W o r l d " S y m p o s i u m

T o b e P r e s e n t e d

The 57th annual commencement of j i Longswamp High school will bc he ld ; I Thursday evening. May 51st, at eight, ; I when a symposium on "You ths Re- ; sponsibility in a New Wor ld" will bc i presented, and the address will be

1 given by Warren K. Hess, first As­sistant District Attorney of Berks county.

Symposium speakers will be Vivian ! i Miller, who will discuss the social as­

pects of the question; Gloria Werst , ; j economies; James Reinhard, politics;; ; and Grace Grim, education.

Musk will bc furnished by the 11th ; Grade Chorus, accompanied bv Ann

, Boyer, of 10th Grade.

The Seniors include: Paul DeLong, j president; Joan Schaeffer. vice presi-dent; Earl Romig. secretary; Gloria Werst , treasurer; J e a n Listchkc. j Rachel Reifinger, Connne Good,

I Continued on page four—column five)

P l a n t o O p e n D o o r s t o W o m e n S t u d e n t s i n 1 9 4 8 ; R e v .

R i c h a r d K l i c k t o H e a d D r e x e l H o m e a n d H o m e

o f D e a c o n e s s e s ; L o c a l M e n o n B o a r d s

S/Sgt. Chester L. Eck

J 11th, which is also thc birthday of his | 18-ycar-old brothcr, Gcorgc. caddy ! mastcr at thc Kutztown Country Club.

Inducted June, 1940 hc trained at I Id. Bragg. N . C ; Ft . Bliss, Texas; I Camp Hale. Colo.; Ft . Haylc, and ! Edgcwood Arsenal. Md. His last fur- j also scheduled, the cast including lec-| lough was in December, 1943. j hirers of the county Granges, among

He attended KSTC junior High them, Mrs. Howard Baldwin, Kutz-i and Mic college, and prior to induction [ town; Esther Schaeffer, Fleetwood; | was employed at the Kutztown Foun- Fhzabcth Millard, Virginvillc, and

I dry. The Cavalryman is a son of thc

late Mr. and Mrs. Peter Eck, Noble street, and his sisters are Mrs. Helen i Sterner, Kutztown R. 2; Dorothy, Al-lentown; and Eva, Alburtis. Hc also | has two half brothers, Kutztown.

Hc lias sent home Japanese govern­ment paper money, anel among his

The Lutheran Ministerium of Penn­sylvania met at their 198th annual convention on Monday. Tucsday and Wednesday in Trinity Lutheran Church, Reading, Pa.

the Ministerium was directed to pre­sent the appeal particularly to thc wom­en of the church and authorization was given to begin designating funds

Thc President. Dr. Emil E. Fischer, j "for the education of women at Muh-in his Communion Sermon, which I lenberg college." opened the convention, told thc more j Attention was called to the fact that than 600 lay and clerical delegates | 194S- thc year in which thc Minis-that the Church must not stand aside | terium will observe its 200th annivcr-as a mere spectator in the unfolding sary and the college its cen tenn ia l -drama of a world intent on finding the • might be an appropriate timc to in­road to a lasting peace, but must share I augurate the new policy through which actively in the task. T h e foundation i the Lutheran Church will offer to for peace, he said, must be laid in the young women the same opportunities human heart. ' for a higher education that if has

The program of the Convention was ' offered to men. carefully planned and important com- j ' Ihc convention also adopted a defi-mittcc reports kept the delegates busy nite and concise policy of higher edu-every minute of the day and evening, cation; authorized thc development

rate thc program. T h c president 0f | photographs is a pjeture of a pig the natives roasted for thc soldiers; also onc of himself taken while leaning on a water buffalo. During his early days in thc Philippines, his sister, Mrs. Sterner, reports, hc ate no less than 10 cocoanuts a dav.

Mrs. Rhea Moll, Topton . A record attendance is anticipated.

Ten from Kutztown Will Get Diplomas

At KSTC Graduation

C O M M U N I T Y A M B U L A N C E P R O V E S INDISPENSABLE

The Kutztown Lions havc had a , busy time lately, in service with the ; Community Ambulance.

l o r the first time thev conveved

D r . B e s s G p o d y k o o n t z W i l l

S p e a k a t E x e r c i s e s M a y

2 6 t h a t 2 : 3 0 P . M .

Among the Ti to receive diplomas at thc 78th annual KSTC Commence­ment , May 26th, at 2:30 p . m., arc 10 from Kutztown and vicinity.

They are: Elizabeth Bordner, Mary Reigner, Kutztown; Gladys Kays, Jean

no less than five to the Allcntown hos- j Stoudt, Fleetwood; Mary Ellen Her-pital at one t ime -v i c t ims of an acci- j bein and Luther Herbein, Top ton ; dent near Maxatawny,-youth from i Catherine Wassgr, Lyons; Gene Kol-Brciiugsville, Macungie. R. D- and ! ler, Eleanor Mofer, Blandon; and Iva Trexlcrtown; took Mrs. Rose Ang- j Hilbert, Mertztown. stadt, Kutztown R. 3, to thc Allcntown | The speaker wall bc Dt . Bess Goody-

A , : , , 1 1 nn \ ' I ' r , . U L % c , u t " " L m hospital; and brought Mrs. John Bortz, I koontz, assistant commissioner of edu-k d f e 1 I I K S ' 1 new leadership t ra,n,ng camp ' J h o m c

J f r o m the cation of thc United States.

ixrgs doors to women students—prob- along thc shores of the Delaware bc- r. . r-. i v _____ ' TU- _._._-__« I-.~^I.~- . .h i \__ m.„,i_.«. ihlv ,„ 104<- ._•__ „„•,.,. K„ „^-,Lr,„. d V x .• i I Communi ty General hospital. I h c Alumni Speaker w.ll be Charles able in IV48—was given by unanimous tween its present recreational camps .... / . , „ \ . , J I C ^ J U I -no , J „ --.*i-~n.r_. . „ ; „ i - - t x-mte and also to a s s u r e thc financial d o r bovs and 3 i r ! , Camp Miller a n d - , . I h , 7 a l s

t" t f ; o k ?_f°_ * £ * ? and , Scidcl, 0 o a d n , n u s t i a t i v e assistant to

responsibilities for thc establishment Clamp I lagan. ! F a n Hess Hamburg R 3 who figured , lhe supenntenc%nt of schools in Al-,A fi„. ,.r,„,r,.„ ,s( ., ,..i„. , .„ . , . a. i x\ xx i • i I m a co hsion near Wil t rout s res- lentown. and president of the Alumni ot tnc program ot co-education it In another important aetion which . . _ _ • - . i • i . i recommended at the meeting of Synod is of special interest m this section t a u n m t » to * ' J ° > c P h s h o ^ M m Allcntown two vears ago. ' was the approval of a six-point agree- L _ A l l MT C\rw\r-\

Through the action the rcprcscnta-; incut defining some of the relationships j | Q A Q U r 6 S S K . S 1 \J tivcs of 602 congregations authorized ; between Lutheran and Rcformed con- ' thc officers of Synod to begin gather- j grcgations in union churches. T h e j _f___m_mA o f i r i r r i^tnoc ing thc $400,000 fund college officials | agreement was drawn up several weeks \ VfraQUaiing VjiaSS estimate Will be nCCCSsarv to.inaUgU-| , Continued on page four— column fonr)

To Head K.S.T.C. Speech Department President Q. A. W . Rohrbach an­

nounced today the appointment of Dr. Guv R. Savior, of Elizabcthtown, as

O P E N H O U S E F O R F I R S T G R A D E R S

As has been the custom for a num­ber of years, Open House for pros­pective First Graders will be held Fri­day. May 25th, at 12:30 p . m.. in First Grade, according to annouhec-

S E R V I C E M O T H E R S T O R E M E M B E R P R I S O N E R S O F W A * A N D W O U N D E D Y O U T H l'ac.i Kutztown youth who is

awarded a Purple Heart or is a prisoner of war is to receive a gift of $23 from the Kut/ town Service Mothers. This

ment by Mrs. Clarence Smith, teacher, jeactioo was taken at a recent meeting

Children, whose 6th birthdav takes, o f ^ , h c g r o u p -place before February 1. 1946, will be 1 ' l a ™ j f * . m a d e ^ Y " ^ ^ ! gucsts, and they may bc brought b y f 1 ^ ; ^ t h f L . ^ T " ^ J ™ ! ^ . ? ! older brothers and sistcrs First Graders.

T h c enrollment this year reached thc 48 mark.

T h e Rcv. Paul J. Hoh, D.D. , presi­dent-elect and professor at the Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, i " '

or present \' P i is expected

m., at which a large attendance

These ncw member-, were wel- j I coined: Mrs. Anna Kroninger, Mrs. : j Edna Leiby, Mrs. Ruth Esser and) j Mrs. Edna Kendall.

T h c next meeting will be hcld i June 4th.

F L E E T W O O D Y O U T H SERIOUSLY W O U N D E D ,

Pfc Robert D. Lcshcr was seriously' wounded in Germany April 26 1945,1 R O H R B A C H F A R M S O L D according to a telegram received by his ; D r Q A . W Rohrbach, president mother, Mrs. Hazel Lcshcr, Fleetwood; o f K S T C > s o ] d h i s 1 6 0 . a c r c f a r m

. This is the third time he has ; f o r m c r l v k n o w n a s t h e historic Bieber

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Harvey Heffner Celebrate 50th Wedding Anniversary

S E N A T O R R U T H A T T O P T O N H I G H C O M M E N C E M E N T W E D .

Senator Frank VV. Ruth, pastor of the Bernville charge of the Reformed Church, will deliver the Commence­ment address at Topton Junior High School May 23rd at 7:45 p. m. in Henry Hall at the Lutheran Home, when diplomas will be presented to 27.

Baccalaureate service will be held Sunday at 10:30 a. m. in Trinity Luth­eran Church, with sermon by the Rev. W. H. Kline.

lhe 30th wedding anniversarv of Jjmuel Harvxy and Anna Louise (Sell) "etfner was quietlv celebrated at their «ome on Greenwich street, their chief

\\Tl h a v i n g b c e n t h e i r son-in-law fnd daughter, John and Mabel Schaef-P C h ano t t e , N . C , who are spend-•ng some time here.

"^ey were married Ma 14. 1895, , of St.

s Lutheran Church, at the home

•» '• "^x_ in<ur_ea rviav i t , I J> the RCV. J. j . Cressman, of S JOhn s Lutheran rrh.m-.. •_• fl.-. w

of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Sell, and the bride was at­tired in a gown of steel gray. " T h e snow was so deep," Mr. Heffner re­members, " tha t it was above our shoes." O n their brief wedding journey the bridegroom drove his favorite trot­ter, "Maggie." A later nuptial trip was to Pittsburgh, where the bridegroom was a delegate to the fint national

(Cemtimmei am page eight—column sit)

D R . C L E L SILVEY ADDRESSES R O T A R Y

"Things Wise and Otherwise," was the subject of a humorous talk by Dr. Clel Silvey, head of the K.S.T.C. Mu­sic Department, when he addressed members of the Kutztown Rotary Club, last night, at the Bruce-Orth Tea House.

Sidney D. Kline, president of the Berks County Trus t Company, will speak at next week's meeting of the local club.

F A T H E R - S O N B A N Q U E T

A Father-Son dinner will be held by the Men of St. Paul's, in the Church basement, Wednesday, May 23rd, at 6:30 p . m., at which the speaker will be L. V . Huntzberger, Scout Executive, Daniel Boone Coun­cil, Reading. A large attendance is ex­pected.

Dr . Guy R. Saylor

professor of romance languages and speech. Dr. Saylor, who is a graduate of the State Teachers College, Millers-villc, holds a bachelor's degree and the degree of doctor of philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1939 he completed additional graduate studies at the University of Paris, and at vari­ous times hc has been enrolled in the graduate school of the University of Iowa.

Dr. Savior began his teaching career as instructor in languages in the Nor th Coventry High School, Pottstown. H e has served as principal of the Lititz High School, and since 1929 has been professor of languages at Elizabethtown College.

D A V I D K E R N T O P R E S E N T AN I L L U S T R A T E D L E C T U R E

A T W O M A N ' S C L U B , M A Y 31 David Kern, Fleetwood, will pre­

sent an illustrated lecture on Latin America at the May 31st meeting of the Kutztown Woman 's Club. Gir l Scouts will be guests, and Mrs. Wi l ­lard DeTurk will head the hostess committee.

T h e Club was represented at the reciprocity luncheon of the Wyomiss­ing Club by Mrs . W . Theodore Miller. Fleetwood representatives were Mrs . J. Eugene Loos and Mrs . Will iam Seaman.

A T T E N T I O N , G R O C E R S !

T h e O P A price list on fresh fruits and vegetables, sent recently, is incor­rectly dated. T h e date should be May 17th instead of May 10th.

been wounded. , f a n n t o E l l Wiesner, Stine's Corner, In his letters hc makes no mention j a Lehigh county business man for 35

of his wounds, othcr than in one j years. dated January 15th when he wrote, j Other farm sales, as reported by "I was hit by a mine sometime ago." j William E. Fenstermacher, include: He cautioned his mother not to worry; the Snyder and Hummel farm, 160 and told her to be on the lookout for j acres, the formcr Elmer Wil t rout his Purple Heart, which she has since I farm, to Joseph Mallory. Philadelphia; received. N o details of this third time-1 the Fred Rahn farm of 100 acres, to out have come through. j Warren Herbert, Red Hill; Arthur

I Quinn farm of 93 acres, the former F I N A L KHS S E N I O R D A N C E ! Grim farm, near Topton , to Dr. Har-T h e KHS Seniors will hold the last! old DuBois, Philadelphia; and the Ed-

dance of the season, May 18th, in the win Epting 20-acre farm, also near gymnasium. Music will be furnished by ! Topton , to Frank Hendrickson, Long Joe Weber and his orchestra. Island. N . Y.

Association. T h e invocation will be pronounced

by the Rev. M. F. Walper , '35, pastor of Zion's Rcformed, Asbland.

Faculty Changes Dr. Roscoc Schaup, director of li­

brary education dncc 1941, has re­signed, to beconio librarian at Eastern Illinois State Tcachcrs college, Charles-

Ill. H c will: leave May 31st. Lt. James McGovern is expected to

be released from the Navy in time to return in September to the faculty as coach of men's; athletics.

25th Anniversary of Kutztown Grange Celebrated at Banquet at Legion Hall

"Four hundred million in Europe haven't had a square meal in five years, and it will take two or three years for European agriculture to supply the necessary food," warned the Rev. Frank W . Ruth , Bernville Grange member and Pennsylvania Senator, last night, at the banquet at Legion Hall, in celebration of the 25th anniver­sary of Kutztown Grange.

Attendance, including the speaker, Judge Paul N . Schaeffer, Pomona Mas­ter and Mrs. John Blatt, Ontelaunee Grange, representatives of Fleetwood, Topton , Trexlertown and Gouglersville Granges, members and guests, totalled 138. Paul C. Dunkelberger, chairman of the committee on arrangements, was master of ceremonies; Wor thy Master George J. Schaeffer announced the program, and Mrs. Schaeffer read a comprehensive history of the organ­ization.

W o r t h y Mastcr Honored

W o r t h y Master Schaeffer, who holds

the distinction of being the only Mas­

ter in Pennsylvania who has served his Grange a quarter of a century, was given a gold watch bearing thc words, "Kutztown Grange 25 Years' Service," by Paul C. Dunkelberger, in behalf of tbe Grange. Mrs. Schaeffer vvas pre­sented with a corsage of white carna­tions.

Many were the felicitations received by Master Schaeffer not only from the speaker, and guest Grange Masters but by the charter members and others.

In his " thank you" speech he praised the Grange for its loyal sup­port and cooperation.

Silver Star Certificates

Pomona Master John Blatt present­ed Silver Star certificates to the follow­ing 10 of the original 55 charter mem­bers: W o r t h y Master Schaeffer, Mr . and Mrs. John Kemp, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Fink, Horace Deisher, Alvin F . Kline, Wil l iam Wartzenluft , Dr . James S. Grim, and Peter Hilbert, in absentia. H e also urged the Grangers to "talk Grange" and to keep up its

(Continued am Pate eight—column elm)

Rev. Paul J. Hoh , D . D .

will preach the baccalaureate sermon to the graduating class of 1945 on Sunday, May 20, at 8 p . m., in the Schaeffer Auditorium. Dr. Hoh will be assisted by Rev. Milton F. Klingaman, of the class of 1902, pastor of Dubbs Me­morial Reformed Church, Allentown.

A native of Reading, Dr. H o h is a graduate of the University of Pennsyl­vania and the Philadelphia Seminary After serving as pastor in several par

New Phone Books Out Next Tuesday

Distribution of ncw telephone di­rectories will start here next Tuesday, May 22, and is.expected to be com­pleted by May 19, it was announced today by Alton P. Gery, manager of thc Bell Telephone Company.

Approximately 2,150 copies of the new books will be distributed, Mr . Gery said. Old books will bc collected for salvage during the distribution.

T h e new grey-covered books con­tain approximately 43,350 alphabetical listings, an increase of about 1,160 over last year's directory.

Pointing out that unnecessary calls to "information.'' use valuable tele­phone facilities jind take the time of skilled operators needed now to handle the large volumes of wartime calls, Mr . Gcry asked that local telephone users refer to thc ncw directories before call­ing "information." Subrcribers can also help avoid wrong numbers by checking with the directory rather than trusting to memory, he added.

T h e directories list subscribers in the following exchanges: Bally, Bern­ville, Birdsboro, Boyertown, Fleetwood, Hamburg, Kemp-ton, Krumsville, Kutz­town, Laureldale, Leesport, Morgan-

ishes, he became a seminary professor, t o w n ; N c w T r i p 0 ^ R e a d - n g > Sassa-and is now dean, and teacher of homi lctics and practical theology. In June of this year he will become seminary president.

T h e college choir, directed by Dr. Clel T . Silvey, will sing "Lovely Ap­peal" from "Redempt ion" by Gounod and " T h e Heavens Resounding" by Beethoven. A girls' octette, all members of the Junior Class, will sing Lohr's " W h e r e My Caravan Has Rested."

K U T Z T O W N PARK O P E N S SAT. War ren Weidner , manager for the

past seven years, announced that Kutz­town Park will be opened Saturday. H e anticipates a busy, season.

U N D E R T A K E R S C H A E F F E R I N A L L E N T O W N H O S P I T A L

Undertaker* George Schaeffer was taken to the Allentown Hospital in the Kutztown ambulance.

C A N C E L S E R V I C E T h e service scheduled for St. Pet­

er's Reformed Church, Topton, Sun­day morning at 10:30 a. m., has been cancelled. •

O n May 20th Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fritz will celebrate their 45 th wed­ding anniversary.

mansvillc, Schwenkville, S i n k i n g Spring, Tcrrc Hill, Topton , Womels­dorf and Yellow House.

G E O R G E W E A V E R G E T S P R O M O T I O N

George Weaver, somewhere in the South Pacific, has been promoted to Major, according to a telephone con­versation with Capt . Jacob Esser.

Capt . Esser, who recently made a special 4,000-mfle trip by plane to Sidney, Australia, as navigator of the crew, is still sweating it out, and writes that his chance of returning home this summer, is slim,

P A T I E N C E , PLEASE! T h e Patriot U eager also, as are

the parents, to receive the photo­graphs of Kutztown, Fleetwood and Top ton children, promised for this mon th , ba t the delay is probably caused by the shortage of photo­graphic paper, and a shortage of labor.

Just as soon as the cuts are re­ceived, they will be printed in t h e newspaper.

T h e firm i. reliable, a n d t h e Patriot is backing it 100 per cent .

Patience, please!

TWO The Kutztown Patriot, Kutztown, Pa., Thursday, May 17, 1945

CHAS. H. ESSER Publisher

THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT Published Weekly By

THE KUTZTOWN PUBLISHING CO., ING CmtM. H. I a n , President I*A C. R. GULDIN, Treasurer

JACOB R. E M U , Secretary Absent on active service with the U. S. Army

MARTIN H. RITTER Editor and Business Manager

ALLIENE S. D E C H A N T , Feature Writer

The Katztown Patriot it tent to aobacribero by mail, postage free, in tbe United States.

One Year, $2.50; Six Months, $1.25; Single Copies, 7c Classified Adver t ing Rates, Per Line, 12c; Legal Notices, if published 3

MM Bore times, 12c per line; if published one time, additional composition charge of 10c per line.

Member of the Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers' Association, the Ma-tioBal Editorial Association, and the P.N.P.A. Audit Bureau of Circulation. Exclusive National Advertising Representative, GREATER WEEKLIES, New York, Chicago, Detroit and Philadelphia.

Cash sent by mail will be at the sender's risk. Remittances siould be made by registered letter, post office or express money orders or checks, to the Kutstown Publishing Company, Inc., Kutztown, Pa.

Subscribers who send notice to this office to have their address changed, should state the name of the post office or rural route from which it is to be changed, as well aa the name of the post office or mail route to which it is to bt mm.

Entered at the post office at Kutxtown aa second-class mail matter.

PATRIOT SEVENTY TEARS OLD The Kutztown Patriot, with this issue, begins the 71st

year in its really wonderful career. Five years after Ulysses S. Grant took the oath of office as the 18th President of the United States of America, the Patriot was born.

This is a time when we of the Kutztown Patriot dedicate ourselves anew to service. Fully conscious of the burden of responsibility that we bear in searching out, interpreting and delivering to you, our subscribers, news of the community, the State, the Nation and the World. News is knowledge and knowledge makes men free!

No price is then too great to pay for freedom of the press. The cost to you is trifling but profoundly important. Paying pennies for a newspaper is one way of keeping bright the shining light of freedom . . . for without news told truth­fully, you too would live in darkness.

The true value of a newspaper is measured by the man­ner in which it helps to maintain the Democratic Way of Life. Never in the history of the Fourth Estate have this country's newspapers been as well equipped to bring the public all the news . . . and never before has a newspaper anything like as complete coverage of local news as does The Patriot.

It is the constant endeavor of The Patriot to serve this community sincerely, consistently and as impartially as it is humanly possible. To foster and encourage progress and ag­gressive service upon the part of all citizens as well as vig­orously to oppose those things which are unwholesome and detrimental.

At the present. The Patriot, along with all other citizens, is exerting all of its energies to assist in the war effort, each as their opportunities and capabilities may indicate. So far as The Patriot is concerned, it conceives it a duty to serve those agencies in this community who are directly responsible for the conduct of the various war efforts in the community and to furnish to them as efficiently as possible a medium for conveying necessary information to the public as well as information sent directly from the National Capitol.

To us these local agencies are equally as necessary and important to this community as are.similar agencies to the larger cities and they perform their duties as faithfully to this community as do the National agencies in Washington to the Nation at large.

For this reason The Patriot feels its greatest duty, from a publicity standpoint, is to these local agencies who are carrying the burden of the war effort in this community.

Therefore, during the coming year, The Patriot rededi-cates its services to the citizens of this community and seeks your cooperation in the furtherance of the best interests of our community.

I'M AN AMERICAN DAY Sunday many new Americans will celebrate "I'm an

American Day." A thrill that most of us will never know is theirs. For them the Stars and Stripes fly brighter . . . and engraved on their hearts are the thrilling promises of the Constitution . . . the guarantee of citizenship which as­sures them the liberties lost in many lands they left.

Being an American is more than q commonplace which we have learned to take for granted. Great truths take on new meaning.

In this beloved nation of ours every day is "I'm an American Day." We can make it really mean something. Take an extra tin of grease to the butcher. Take an extra pound of metal and paper to the scrap heap. Write another letter to someone overseas or in training. Put a new burst of energy into your wartime job and turn out extra material for the men at war. It means so much.

One thing everyone can do . . . Buy bigger bonds and more of them during the Seventh War Loan Drive!

f A U YOURS NOW NIPI - - - By Collier

Church Services Trinity Lutheran Church, Kutztown

Rev. Carlton Luther Heckman, S.T.M., Pastor

Church School at 9:00 A. M. Service at 10:00 A. M. Sermon: "The Bap­tism of The Spirit." Baccalaureate Service at K. S. T. C , 8:00 P. M., the Rev. Dr. Paul J. Hoh, preacher. Mondav, 7:45 P. M., Brotherhood Meeting. Wednesday, 6:30 P. M . Annual Pollyanna Dinncr and Social.

St. John's Lutheran Rev. J. W. Bittner, Pastor

Church School at 9:00 A. M. Services at 10:15 A. M.

St. Paul's Reformed Church Rev. Paul E. Schmoyer, Th. M., Pastor Church School at 9:00 A. M. Service

at 10:15 A. M. Monday, 7:00 P. M., Chapel Choir. Thursday, 6:30 P. M., Junior CJioir; 7:30 P. M., Senior Choir.

Grace Evangelical Congregational Church

Rev. W. K. Cassel, Pastor Church School at 9:00 A. M. Holy

Communion at 10:00 A. M. Ser­mon: "Jesus Gift of Peace and Power." No evening services.

St. Mary's Catholic Church Rev. Francis P. Adolf, Rector

Evansville—Sunday Mass at 8:00 A. M. Kutztown—Sunday Mass at 9:30 A. M.

Rev. B. Ellsworth Snoddy, Pastor Mrs. Aaron Machamer, Organist •

Church School at 9:15 A. M. Mrs. \ Reuel Merkel, Supt. Service at 10:15 ! A. M. High School Baccalaureate,! 7:30 P. M. Rev. A. G. Woodring, ; Minister. Youth Fellowship at 6:30 i P. ML Wednesday: Juniors, 3:45 P.! M.; Prayer, 7:30 P. M.; Sundav | School Board, 8:30 P. M. 1

SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON NOTES

REV. CARLTON L. HECKMAN Trinity Lutheran Quireb

Maxatawny Refonned Parish Rev. Franklin D. Slifer, Pastor

Maxatawny—Church School at 10.00 A. M. Service at 9:00 A. M.

Topton-Service at 10:30 A. M.

Rev. W. H. Kline, Luth. Pastor Fleetwood—Service at 7:30 P. M.

Luther League before Service. Topton-Service at 10:30 A. M.

Bowers-Longswamp Parish Dr. C. E. Keiser, Supply Pastor

New Jerusalem—Service at 9:00 A. M. Church School at 10:15 A. M.

Bovvers—Service at 10:30 A. M. Church School at 9:30 A. M.

Rev. Ira W. Klick, Luth. Pastor Dunkel's-Scrvice at 9:00 A. M. Zion Bethel-Service at 10:30 A. M.

Zion (Moselem) Lutheran Church Rev. Carlton L. Heckman,

S.T.M., Pastor Church School at 10:00 A. M. Service

at 11:15 A. M.

St. Paul's Reformed, Fleetwood Rev. J. Paul Kehm, Pastor

Service at 10:15 A. M.

Emmanuel Evangelical Fleetwood

Lyons-Bernville Lutheran Charge Rev. Ralph T. Baily, Pastor

St. Paul's, Lvons—Church School at 9:00 A. M. Service at 10:00 A. M.

St. Matthew's, Macungic — Church School at 9:00 A. M. Service at 7:15 P. M.

Maxatawny Lutheran Parish Rev. Luther Schlenker, Pastor

Becker's St. Peter's-Servicc at 10:00 A. M.

The Defeat of the Southeem Kingdom Scripture Lesson: 1 Kings 12:1-17; II

Kings 11-25; Jeremiah 18-39. Memory Selection—"Come, and let us

return unto the Lord." Hosea 6:1. The words of this week's memory

selection ought to be burned into the hearts and minds of millions of people in Europe today. Victory has come and peace once again, but for how long? Can there be any peace that will be lasting, any prosperity genuine, without true and proper worship of Almighty God. All man's sufferings and sorrows come because he forsakes God and God permits him to go his way alone. The prophets had one message—"Come and let us return unto the Lord" and the Lord's Word came back—"Return unto Me, and I will return unto you."

Jeremiah gives us a most vivid and striking illustration, when in the 18th chapter of his book he tells us how the Lord commanded him to go and visit the potter's house. He beholds the potter at work with his wheel and his material, the clay. He sees the vessel that is being made marred in the hands of tht worker. Then the potter crushes the clay together once more into a mass and begins all over again to make the article. Then the Lord says to the prophet: "O house of Israel can I not do with you even as this potter? Be­hold, as the clay is in the potter's hand, so are ye in mine hand, saith the Lord." After all, man tries his little schemes to control the world, but his plans come to naught. God has not vacated the throne of the Universe. He is still ruling and guiding the affairs of men and of nations.

There is hope for the nation that will repent and turn from evil. God will not destroy it utterly. He will return to that people and bless them again. Let us earnestly hopc that the nations of Idiropc, particularly the defeated ones, will return to true religion and abiding faith in God. This is their only hope for salvation and our only pledge of a better world.

But wc in America must also hear the words of the ancient prophet as he calls down through the centuries: "Return unto the Lord." We too, have been guilty of forsaking God and His righteous ways. We must not cast thc finger of scorn at other nations when wc do these things also. Let repentence begin at home. Wc ought to dedicate ourselves to make this nation in reality a Christian one, a noble people loving God and keeping His commandments.

The Northern Kingdom fell, the Southern Kingdom went down in de­feat. Thc two Kingdoms of the Hebrew people were lost to foreign rulers, they were carried away into captivity. Thc dark ages settled down with vengence upon the chosen nation. But the prophets continued to cry out—"Come and let us return unto the Lord."

WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS—

Extended Allied Control Faces German People; U. S. Shifts to One-FrontWar Against Japanese

Released by Western Newspaper Union. . _ _ _ _ Released by Western n c w - w H ^ — o | (EDITOR'S NOTE: W h e ^ Western Newspaper t n i o n • news a n a i y s " msx-

Numbered in the thousands, New Yorkers gathered in Times Square to joyously celebrate German capitulation to Allies.

the fleet will play in Pacific MM-

FARMERS HELPER

TEN Y E A R S A G O

TOU ALONE MUST PAY! Former War Mobilizer James F. Byrnes sums up the debt

and taxation picture of the Federal government in a chilling light. In his final report he stated that the Federal debt has reached $233,000,000,000—approximately $2,000 for every man, woman and child.

No nation, even if it has lost a war, has heretofore had saddled upon it a public debt as large as the debt we as victors must pay.

Annual interest alone is now $4,500,000,000. To appre­ciate what this means, recall that for the fiscal year 1939, the total of all internal revenue taxes was $5,063,000,000 (not including Social Security funds)) To put it another way, total income tax collected for the calendar year 1942 from all per­sons with incomes of $5,000 or less amounted to only $4,234,-000,000 not enough to pay the interest this year on our Federal debt.

This is one problem that the people can't toss in the lap of government. It is their problem. They alone must pay.

and Mrs. Charles Fritz thcir 35th wedding an

ccle-Mr. brated sary.

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hoch became the parents of a daughter, bom in St. Joseph's Hospital.

Postmaster Daniel M. Saul and Irwin Miller attended the Woodmen of the World Convention at the Wal­ton Hotel, Philadelphia.

Dr. Clark McClelland, acting Dean of Instruction, announced the honor students of the graduating class. Grace Yoder and Charles Revtyak were the two honored from Kutztown.

Mrs. Kate Christman was honored on" Mother's Day by her children with their families. She was showered with many gifts.

Mrs. Annie Shankweiler Drucken-miiler, owner of Shankweiler's dry goods store, and her husband, B. Frank Druckenmiller, superintendent of the Deisher Knitting Mills, were injured in an auto accident.

Kermit C. Oswald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman D. Oswald, was ap­pointed the assistant editor of the F. & M. annual yearbook.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Gomer Saul, Sara J. Kemp and Charles D. Saul motored to Trenton, N. J., to witness the Tren­ton dog show.

Members of the Library Club of State Teachers College were hostesses at a reception in honor of Miss Har­riet King Avery, who retired after 20 years as college librarian.

May Moyer received a life interest in the estate of her husband, Oscar E. Mover, Kutztown, valued at $11,200 in personal property and $2,850 in real estate.

Janet Mae Mintzer read the Scripture; Reba Ann Angstadt offered prayer; and a song was sung by the class. Members also lighted the altar candles and took up the offering. In the Adult depart­ment a brief talk was given by Mrs. Anson Bennicoff; Mrs. Arthur Rhoads sang a solo, accompanied by Lillian Zimmerman; Warren Fronheiser played "Mother Machree" on the organ; and Assistant Superintendent Henry Zim­merman retold the history of the found­ing of Mother's Day by Miss Jarv's, and a poem, by Mrs. Harvey Schlenker.

Mm • eeee eiei eee, • •• m m m m

_

L THREE MILE HOUSE

Helen Snyder Reporter

ATTEND MAY MEETING OF . . | formerly of Fleetwood, gave an illus-BERKS HISTORICAL SOCIETY j trated talk on "The Trees of Penn's

" Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence DeTurk and I Woods." Alliene DeChant, Kutztown; Mrs. George Kressley, Reading, formerly of Kutztown, and Edward Hill, Price-town, were among those who attended the May meeting of the Berks His­torical Society.

The Rev. W . H. Long, Norristown,

Let ns learn of the real and eternal, and prepare for the reign of Spirit, the kingdom of heaven,—the reign and rule of universal harmony, which can­not be lost nor remain forever un­seen.—Mary Baker Eddy.

ST. JOHN'S NOTES Children's Day will be celebrated at

9:30 a. m., June 10th, and at the eve­ning service YOUTH Day will be ob­served.

No evening service will be held May 27th due to KHS Baccalaureate.

The Aid Society began quilting at the home of Mrs. Charles Wagenhurst, Monday night.

Special services were held Sunday in celebration of Mother's Day in the Church School. In the Children's Divi­sion the program was in charge of the class taught by Mrs. Nevin Hensinger. Neal Zimmerman gave a recitation;

A family reunion was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Bartholo­mew, Lenhartsville, in celebration of family birthdays in the month of May. The following were present: Mr. and Mrs. James Bartholomew and children Ralph, Helen, Eugene and Edwin, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Frace and children Elaine, Roland and Karen, Bushkill Park; Mr. and Mrs. Mellis Stettler and children Mellis, Jr., Nelson and Glen-wood, of Newburg; Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Young and children Earl, Dale, Carl and Dolores, Bethlehem; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bartholomew and son Victor, Hilda Siegfried and Mrs. Catherine Metz and daughter Janet, Newburg; Mrs. George Herceg and son George, of Nazareth; Mr. and Mrs. Albert King and Mildred Bartholomew, Wil­son Borough.

Also Pvt. Ralph Bartholomew, Camp Wheeler, Ga., who is enjoying a ten-day furlough, at the conclusion of which he is to report to Camp Rucker, Alabama.

Mrs. Herbert Grim and daughter and Velma Heilman visited Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Christ.

Walter Quillman moved to the Ray Freed farm.

Peter Schlenker is ill. Mrs Emma Weber returned home

from the Allentown hospital. Mrs. Victor Arndt assisted Mrs.

Irwin Christ in house-cleaning. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kistler and daugh­

ter Shirley called on Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Kistler.

HERE AND THERE The residence of Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Arnold, Baldy street, is being shingled.

Farm Machinery Short—Because new farm machinery is short, farmers are urged by extension agricultural engi­neers of the Pennsylvania State College to care for, repair, and share existing implements. Often, machinery needs only adjustment to make it run satis­factorily and do the much needed job on the farm.

Fertilize Strawberry Plants—An ap­plication of a nitrogenous fertilizer is necessary three to five weeks after strawberry plants are set out, according to fruit extension specialists of the Pennsylvania State College. Such plant food material aids the formation of more and earlier runner plants, which means more berries next year.

Farmers Pool Wool—Thirty-one co­operative wool pools in Pennsylvania will handle about 600,000 pounds of fleeces produced on farms of the State this year, report livestock extension spe­cialists of the Pcnnsyivania State Col­lege. To get best returns farmers are urged to market clean fleeces tied with paper twine.

Control Red Mites—Before pullets are placed in range shelters the struc­tures should be cleaned and disinfected, say Penn State poultry extension spe­cialists. Perches and perch supports can be painted with old engine oil, carbo-lineum, or any commercial red mite paint. Usually one application is enough for the season.

Help With Farm Work-Boys and girls of high school age can help to solve the critical farm labor situation by working during the summer vacation on farms. Register with the local Emer­gency Farm Labor office.

.Save Containers—All used containers should be salvaged, repaired, and used again, remind Penn State Specialists.

Apple Spray Information Should This and Future Sprays Be

Applied?—Frost damage in the County has been spotty. We suggest that you apply this first cover spray because, as a rule, more apples survive freezing than one realizes. No further sprays after this one will be needed in those or­chards, or parts of orchards, that have been frozen out completely. Cover sprays are intended to protect the fruit primarily rather than the tree.

Purpose of Spray at This Time—To protect the fruit from codling moth and curculio injury and to prevent apple scab and Brook's spot.

When Should Spray Be Applied?— Beginning Monday, May 14, 1945.

What Materials Should Be Used?-(Per 100 gallons of water): Lead arsen­ate, 3 pounds; Manganese Sulphate, VA pound; Soybean Flour, V\ pound; Lime Sulphur to test 1.004 sp.gr. (approxi­mately IVi gallons).

Mixing—Mix according to directions given in your last (petal fall) spray letter.

Insect and Disease Conditions-There has been very little codling moth activity to date because of the recent cool weather. However, they can be ex­pected in numbers as soon as the tem­perature goes up. Curculio are out but likewise bave not been very active.

Scab is present in most orchards where pre-blossom sprays were missed or improperly applied. Some scab pores remain in the old leaves and these spores, as well as spores from new in-

V-E: Ends in Schoolhouse

Almost six years after the German army had struck Poland like light­ning, inflaming the world in the most destructive war in all history, two men met in a little red schoolhouse in Reims, France, to bring the Euro­pean phase of the conflict to an end.

With Germany's mighty whermacht ripped apart; with its cities lying in rubble, and with its railroad system a heap of twisted and scorched steel. Col. Gen. Gustav Jodl had come to offer his country's uncondi­tional surrender to the Allies on or­der of Fuehrer Karl Doenitz.

It was 2:41 o'clock in the morn­ing when Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith accepted the capitulation on behalf of the Supreme Allied com­mand. Later, the surrender was ratified by the Russians in Berlin, with Marshal Gregory Zhukov rep­resenting the Reds at his headquar­ters in the charred German capital.

No Delusions Having levelled western Europe

and run deep into Russia before be­ing compelled to recoil under the weight of the combined Allied jug­gernaut, the Germans suffered no delusions as to the severity of the terms to be imposed.

Addressing the German people after Fuehrer Karl Doenitz had ordered all the country's armed forces to cease firing, Foreign Minister Count Ludwig Schwerin von Krosigk said: "Nobody can be in any doubt that the future will be difficult for each one of ns and will exact sacrifices from us in every sphere of life." Declaring that Germany sought to

mobilize all of its human, moral and material resources to help heal the wounds of the war, Von Krosigk said that by following the simple path of justice in both domestic and foreign affairs the country could yet dispel the hatred against it and return to the family of nations.

Operating on their own power, without need of direct assistance of each other, the end of the war found the U. S., Britain and Rus­sia controlling the German territory it was originally planned for them to occupy. In the U. S. zone alone, 400,000 American troops will be re-

I tained to stand watch. From the development of Allied

policy, it appears likely that mili­tary occupation of the country will be extended to permit close supervision during the rehabilitation period, with control over all phases of German life.

In addition to dismantling war fac­tories and maintaining a watchful eye over other heavy industry, the

! Allies are expected to closely con­trol the press, radio and motion pic-

i tures. Because the country occupied \ a key spot in the European economy, ; Germany's civilian manufacturers

may be allowed to resume large scale production to assure the distri­bution of finished goods in surround­ing rural areas.

Japs Next For America, the end of hostilities

in Europe means no slackening of the war effort, though the army plans to cut its total strength down to 6,968,000 men from 8,300,000, and civilian production is scheduled to return to the prewar 1939 level with­in a year.

Though the army intends to release about 2,000,000 men in­cluding 1,300,000 vets with ex­tended battle service within one year of V-E Day, the navy intends to retain most of its per­sonnel because of the major role

erations. In undertaking the gigantic task of

moving men and material to the Pacific from the European theater, it is estimated that six months will be required for accomplishing the greater part of the shift. Because of the need of establishing bases and supply facilities in the east for the big push against the Japs, serv­ice forces will be among the first shipped through the Suez or Panama canals.

Shift of the war from Europe to Asia also will result in unavoid­able delays occasioned by the neces­sity of troops to await the arrival of heavy equipment on slow moving cargo ships and the need for re­adjustment to new weapons and ac­cessories for tropical warfare.

Though the army recently an­nounced that little retraining of combat troops from Europe would be required for war against the Japs, some specialized instruction will be needed.

Because the west coast fronts the Pacific theater, its ports and rail lines leading thereto will handle the bulk of shipments outward, with At­lantic and Gulf ports absorbing the excess. Because of the relatively undeveloped nature of the Pacific territories, unloading of and storage of supplies there will constitute a No. 1 problem.

Production Plans Although the conflict will be re­

duced to a single front, war pro­duction still will dominate TJ. S. industry with certain material and manpower controls retained, and ra­tioning will be maintained to con­tinue to equitably spread short sup­plies.

Nonetheless, cutbacks in war contracts will free sufficient re­sources to permit the gradual resumption of civilian produc­tion up to where many items like electrical appliances, wash­ing machines, radios and stoves will become available within six months. Other articles like shoes, clothing, lumber and chemicals will remain in tight supply, however, though the gov­ernment plans priority assist­ance to help these industries in­crease their output. Because of the need for extensive

retooling and readjustment of facili­ties, the automobile industry will re. quire almost half a year . to start civilian production, it was esti­mated, and rationing of cars will continue until manufacture reaches about 100,000 a month.

With the end of the European war relieving demands of fuel supplies, gasoline rations are scheduled to be increased, with "A" card holders' allotments raised from four to six miles daily. Although more tires will become available, rationing will ba retained since demand will far out­run supply.

Food Needed Meanwhile, heavy domestic de-e

mand and European relief require­ments will provide a big market for American food producers.

Europe alone will need 12,000,008 tons of imported food in the 13 months beginning in August to im­prove diets in liberated areas and prevent starvation in enemy terri­tory, the U. S. department of agri­culture reported.

Though the total could consist largely of wheat, of which this coun­try has an abundance, it should in­clude substantial quantities of fats, meats, eggs, dairy products and sug­ar, USDA said. However, supplies of these products are short in this country, too.

FARM DRAFT: Revision Vetoed

Declaring that "I do aox • t._ic<.; . . . that congress intended to (&, act legislation formulating the m-. tional policy that agricultural em­ployment was more essential thaa any other type of employment. . » Pres. Harry S. Truman vetoed ^ amendment to the Selective Serv­ice bill under which all essentia A farm workers would have been d*. W ferred regardless of their relative need by the services.

Cause of the effort to secure blanket deferment for essential farm workers because of loctf boards' interpretations of its provis­ions to mean that induction of such employees was permissible if their services were deemed of greater im-portance to the military forces, the Tydings amendment thus remains the guiding principle of the farm draft.

With Democrats and Republicans alike calling for repassage of the measure over the President's veto to safeguard 1S45 farm production, 185 congressmen voted to carry the bill over the chief executive's! head, 57 short of the two-thirds ma­jority necessary.

LABOR: New Rivalry

Rivals at home, the AFL and CIO are shaping as rivals in international labor affairs, with the AFL bucking* the CIO's backing of the world tr̂ dcj union congress, which timed its con. vention with the San Francisco s*. curity conference and sought to at­tain the latter's recognition as rtp-resentative of labor.

Claiming that the world tra* union congress was dominated .fejr communist elements "who are not free to determine their destiny," tie AFL declared "we have declined to identify ourselves with a movemint that is inspired by a political philos­ophy which is designed to subonS-nate and subjugate man and piisp. erty to the exclusive will of the state."

Declaring that the International Federation of Trade Unions was more representative of world labor, the AFL called for a convention at this body to shape future policy upon reorganization of the different mem­ber unions wrecked with the Nad occupation of European countries.

TO1

Marital Tangle

Mrs. McD.t™ and Lt. Go«4

Marines Root Out Japs on Peleliu

It's been more than six months since American troops first landed on Peleliu, but they're still killing Japs there, according to Marine Combat Correspondent David Stick.

Consider that Peleliu is only six miles long and less than three miles wride; about the size of one of those "little lakes" up in Wiscon­sin, or a farm in Kansas, or the city

of Miami Beach, Fla. The average marine stationed here thinks this is­land is just too small to hold com-fortably both American and Jap truops. yet the labyrinth of caves on "Bloody Nose Ridge," only 1,100 yards from the airstrip, provides

• a place of concealment for scores ot Japs who've been hiding there since last September.

To blond and petite 23-year-old IHn. Robert A. McDowell of Long Beach, Calif., came one of the war's most irom experiences, with the army's revelation that her first husband, who had been presumed dead, was found alive five months after she wedded again.

Married to Lt. Har­old W. Goad, 27, in April of 1942, Mrs. McDowell was of­ficially apprized of his supposed death last fall, one year after his bomber plummeted in flames near Burma. In ac­cordance with her first husband's wish that—"if anything should happen, to me, go ahead and get mar­ried and be taken care of — she then was wedded to En­sign Robert A. Mc­Dowell in December.

Declaring Lt. Goad "the man I've always loved," Mrs. M> Dowell decided to return to him. la seeking an annulment from Lt. McBom ell, she said T m sure he'll understani He's a grand person."

POSTWAR POLAND: No. 1 Problem

Big *n_ree negotiations for ths creation of a democratic postwar Polish government became further complicated with the Russian admis­sion that Moscow holding 16 repre­sentatives of the Polish governm«nt-in-exile in London on charges of sabotage behind Red army lines aft­er guaranteeing them safe conduct to discuss reorganization of the pres­ent Warsaw government.

Coming like a bombshell in the midst of the San Francisco postwar security conference, news of Mos­cow's action led U. S. Secretary of State Stettinius and British Foreign Minister Eden to demand an imme­diate explanation from Soviet For­eign Commissar Molotov. Said he: "You'll have to wait until their trial for their details. Anyway, the mat­ter is of little importance."

Presumably called to Moscow to confer on the inclusion of various democratic elements into the pro-communist Warsaw government in accordance with an agreement reached at Yalta by the Big Three, the 16 individuals were leaders of the London exiles' underground forces. Relations between Moscow and the London exiles have been strained ever since the latter a»ked fof an investigation of German charges that the Russians had slain 20,000 Polish army officers.

CREAMERY BUTTER Although its production of cream­

ery butter in 1944 had fallen 14 per cent Minnesota still produced 17 per cent of the U. S. supply, the Dairy Products Marketing association re­ported.

Immediately behind and down by only 11.5 per cent came Iowa (14.3 per cent of the nation's supply) and Wisconsin (8.4 per cent). Nebraska had accounted for 5.5 per cent, still 15 per cent less than it had pro­cured in ir'-3.

fections, can infect the young apples during wet weather. This is one of the most important sprays for Brook's spot control.

APPLICATION FOR CHARTER FILED AT BERKS COURTHOUSE

BY GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL An application for a charter has been

filed at the Berks courthouse by the Ghl Scout Council of Berks county, and included among the directors

named is Mrs. Edgar Krauss, Kutztown. "The purpose of the organization,"

the application states, "is to sponsor programs recommended by the Nation­al Council of Girl Scouts for girls from seven to 18 years of age.

"These programs are to help girls realize the ideals of womanhood in preparedness for their responsibilities in the home and community."

Sidney McDvain Kutz, 611 North Fifth street, heads the Council.

AT RURAL CARRIERS MEEf lNG Mr. and Mn. Byron Stein attended

the bi-monthly meeting of the Berks Rural Mail Carriers Association and Auxiliary, held at Reeser's restaurant.

MAY BAKE SALE NETS GIRL SCOUTS $27.16

The sum of $27.16 was earned by the Kutztown Girl Scouts at their May bake sale, and they wish to thank all who helped to make it a success.

Civilians at The Government n«

cities in the 180th' against Japan to: 1 Buy your oversea

• bond during the Drive, and tell hit so on a V-Mail gif tainable wherever sold.

, Stav on your war over Japan. If ma vour industry are] U S. Employmei. can tell you the vou are needed. Continue to buy] need. Reconversion America's factone sufficient civilian threat of inflation needs continue.

V-E Day Statement! Wickard, S-ecretary|

| Thc farm people with the rest of this ated people of Eurff loving people every-ing the coming of our hearts are made] good news, we all ref not an occasion for The European war r at a very heavy co health of many of ofl been sacrificed in f there is still a fulbi and we farmers ku continuing heavy de our fighting forces, ii and for our allies. Anl tarian nation we'll wai in helping to feed J suffering people of tl So the fighting on I not ovei, just as thl Jap front isn't ovcrj the farm people of tW pie whose productioj the great achievemd will pay tribute to VJ ing all-out productiJ complete victory is \< V-E Day Statement]

Jones, War Food American farmers I

to celebrate our \j They are devoudy phase of the war know that the need great as they evcrl know that their wi day and night unl

GET IN WITH Ml To all people| have their sprayed, trrij call on me. I a few days week Cr t\ro I will spra^ vines, as g| different sp| than trees.

RAYM< R A I

85 S. Whiteoak | Phor

Charles Vii

DEJ

LIVE

He

PROVED 260,1

PAI SOLVES YOUR

PARMAK f SAMS I

PRECIS 2 DRY W

FIERwl 3 FLUX

r M t n • 4 BATTRI

rant. S NBON ]

6 5-YEAR TEE.

HJUUT Route No

Dial

^H________^_____%_ft •- ' '

[do nox o^ueve .tended to en-lating the na-

icultural em-essential than ployment. . . .* tan vetoed an elective Serv-

all essential have been de-their relative

art to secure for essential

luse of local of its provis-

luction of such lissible if their

of greater im-iry forces, the thus remains

of the farm

Republicans issage of the -sident's veto

production, ited to carry

executive's ro-thirds ma-1

AFL and CIO international AFL bucking;

ie world t rade timed its con-, Francisco se-e sought to ob-lition as rep-world trade

| dominated by "who are not

destiny," the |ve declined to

a movement ulitical philos-

to subordi-lan and prop-

will of the

International Unions was world labor,

[convention of re policy upon Jifferent mem-

ith the Nazi countries.

igle

'.year-old Mrs. Long Beach,

r's most ironic

. . McDowen nd Let. Goad

_ Mrs. Mc-to him. In

i Lt McDow-! understand.

_ND:

Iras for the itic postwar ' ime further ssian admis-

_og 16 repre-[govemment-

fharges of ^ n y lines -ft-Isafe conduct

i of the pres­et,

hell in the sco postwar ws of Mos-

pec re t a ry of sh Foreign

_ an imme-Soviet For-

Said he: their trial

ay, the mat-ee." Moscow to of various

nto the pro­f-eminent in

agreement Big Three, leaders ot

uderground en Moscow have been

latter ask-sd tef German

as had slain

rER _ of cream-

.Bllen 14 per piuced 17 per

the Dairy jsociation re-

|nd down by Iowa (14.S

[supply) ttA I Nebraska i r cent, still [it had pro-

MEETTNG in attended

the Berks ition and

restaurant.

$27.16 earned br*

at their to thank

a success*;

The Kutztown Patriot, Kutztown, P.L, Thursday, May 17, 1945 T H R B 3

TOWN and FARM in WARTIME

*, ovmcrwAiMPOtMAiioN Civilians at Var ' won. All of us would do well to fol-

_-, rovemment needs and asks its low their example. „ the 1 SOth week of thc war Surplus Propeerty, When Available,

Assured to Farmcrs Farmers and rural areas generally are

assured equal opportunity to supply their needs out of surplus property as it becomes available, the Surplus Prop­erty Board said. The Board's Regula­tion No. 3, effective June 1, 1945,

_s-.inst Japan to: T Bnv vour overseas serviceman a

bond during the 7th War Loan Drive and tell him you have done so on a V-Mail gift certificate, ob-

whercver *var bonds are

2.

tamable sold. . . ... . . Stay on your war job until victory-over Japan. If manpower " Ur industry are changing, your equipment into agricultural uses. Farm-

000 nurses. Before July 1, 1946, there must be an increase in nursing strength in this country of nearly 14,000 nurses in the military and government serv­ices, and more than 35,000 for civilian needs, or a total of nearly 50,000 addi­tional nurses, according to the Public Health Service. It is expected, how­ever, that most of this need will be met by graduates from the U. S. Cadet Nurse Corps. It is anticipated that more than 30,000 student nurses will gradu­ate between July 1, 1945, and July 1, 1946. To help meet these needs fur­ther there is an immediate urgency for 10,000 new student nurses to fill Spring classes by June 30, and for an additional 60,000 new students during the period from July 1, 1945, to June

MAXATAWNY CL. RA A. RICHARDS, Reporter

sets up procedures for channeling needs in critically needed trucks, machinery, and j 30, 1946, OWI was told

Agricultural Information for Service-U" S "Employment Service' Office ers, however, should not expect a flood ! mea and Veterans

n tell you the nearest job where of surpluses at give-away prices, the I n order to provide agricultural in-vou are needed. b o a r c l warned. First and second pur- j formation to servicemen and veterans

. Continue to buv only what you chase priorities given by the Surplus \ 0f this war who are interested in agri-5 ced Reconversion has started, but | Property Act of 1944 to federal agen-1 culture, the U. S. Department of Agri-

\mcrica*s factories cannot produce j cies and State and local governments j culture will place kits containing sam-sufficicnt rivilian goods to end the •' will absorb many surplus items, but \ p]cs of available information in sepa-threat of inflation ivhile Pacific war trucks, machinery and equipment in \ ration centers, hospitals, libraries, and needs continue. critical short supply will be distributed j vocational guidance and retraining

v F Dav Statement by Claude R. o n t n c Das i s oi greatest need. Disposal j centers of the Army, Navy, Air Forces, \V-kard Secretary of Agriculture agencies designated by the board are a n d the Veterans Administration.

—Table for review aces in the

continental U. S. and overseas. Ac­companying each kit will be order blanks on wheib the veteran or service­man can order by a simple check mark any item or group of items he may want. Among the material offered are several general publications designed to

JV' t ' people of America join ! directed to cause appropriate quanti- These kits will bc available ri. the* rest of this nation, thc liber- j hes of surplus property to be sold or \__ approximately 1,000 pi;

Sales will be made to distributors, deal­ers, wholesalers, farmers' cooperative associations or retailers who customarily distribute in rural areas, and who ccrti-

*ilJ neoole of Europe and freedom- \ channeled into rural areas so that farm-Jm-ine people everywhere, in w e l c o m e s and farmers cooperative associa-ingtnc coming of' V-E Day. Though ' * our hearts are made happier by this zood news, we all realize that this is not an occasion for all-out rejoicing. The Furopcan war las been won only at a very heavy oat. Thc lives and r>'...tn.at t h e surpluses bang purchased help the agriculturally inclined service health of manv of our young men have been sacrificed in this struggle. Also there is still a full-scale war to finish and we farmcrs know that means a continuing heavy demand for food for our fighting forces, for thc homefront, and for our allies. And being a humani­tarian nation we'll want to do our share in helping to feed the starving and suffering people of the liberated areas. So the fighting on the farm front is not ovcr. just as the fighting on the Jap front isn't over. I am sure that the farm people of this nation-the peo- for nurses and will not affect thc urgent pie whose production record is onc of requirements for recruits to the U. S. the great achievements of this war— , Cadet Nurse Corps, thc Office of War will pay tribute to V-E Day by continu- j Information announced. According to mg all-out production until final and j the Surgeon General, U. S. Army, the j Washington, D. C. complete victory- is won. I Army Nurse Corps today is 9.000 j Willa Weaver spent thc week-end V-E Day Statement by Judge Marvin j nurses short of its June 7 goal of 60,- i with Mrs. John Wdgner, Emmaus.

Jones, War Food Administrator American farmers will not stop work

Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Miller and daughter, Naomi, Philadelphia, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Alvin N. Fegely.

Mr. and Mrs. Sterlin Biehl and sons Richard and Larry visited Mr. and Mrs. Pius Biehl, Kutztown.

Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Roshon, Read­ing, were guests of the latter's mother, Mrs. Keturah Metzger.

Mr. and Mrs. Warren Ziegler, Al­lentown, called on Mrs. Edith Mertz.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Muth, Allen­town, visited Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Leibensperger.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reichard and son, Kenneth, spent an evening with Mrs. Warren Mertz, Maple Grove.

Mrs. Stella M. Guldin visited her son, Ira, and family, Kutztown.

Mrs. Alvin N. Fegely and sons, Rich­ard and Carlton, made a trip to Leba­non.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kline and son, Gale, Allcntown, called on Mr. and Mrs. Sterlin Biehl.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Werley, Allcn­town, visitcd Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Hcintzclman.

Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Smith, Topton, spent an evening with Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Zwovcr.

township schools. Mn. Stella Morning, teacher of Stem's School, took the children to her home to hear President Harry Truman's radio proclamation.

The School and Road Boards met at Landis Store.

Francis DeLong is a candidate for school director.

The entire herd of cattle of Henry Weller was condemned following a T-B test.

Charles Hunter, Huff's Church, shoed horses and dehorned cattle, here.

Earl Moyer erected an electric fence. The Milton Trumbauer sale was well

attended. Henry H. Rohrbach attended a lodge

meeting at Landis Store. Harry Gery, Hereford, did carpenter

work for W. W. Kemp at the Daniel Bechtel house which he recently pur­chased.

Newton Tieichler is beautifying his lawn.

Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Peter, Wyomis­sing, spent several days at their sum­mer homc, here.

Warren Bechtel, Hill Church, was at Landis Store.

SEIPSTOWN Mrs. Emma Rupp Miller

Reporter

will be so distributed. The Officc of Wdr Mobilization and Reconversion has announced that surpluses will bc sold mainly through dealers and dis­tributors, not to individual consumers. An exception to that rule is pro­vision for direct sales to veterans who wish to buy surpluses to establish themselves in business, the professions or agriculture.

Increased Need for Nurses Seen Victory in Europe has increased,

rather than decreased the Armv's need

lan or veteran decide whether or not he really docs want to become a farmer. In iddition the kit contains 12 bulle­tins on subjects such as poultry raising, dairy farming, irrigation, farmhouse plans, and conservation farming.

AROUND Ti l l . TOWN Mrs. Waltcr Kohler and daughter

Ann Louise, Allcntown. spent the week-end with hcr brother, Archie Schearer. nicy also attended St. John's Reformed Church and Church school.

Mrs. Jacob Weidenhammer visitcd her daughter in New York City.

Mrs. John A. Schwoyer is visiting her daughtcr, Mrs. Gcorgc Ternll.

FREDERICKSVILLE Henry Hohrbach

Reporter

— • »

The Rev. James N. Blatt, Rcformed pastor, will conduct services at Huff's Church, Sunday, at 10 a. m. Church school, 9 a. m.

The entertainment at Huff's Church by thc Auxiliary of Memorial Park As­sociation, Macungie, was well attended, despite bad weather.

V-E Dav was observed in District

The Rev. John L. Herbster will conduct Reformed services at Ziegel's, Sunday, at 9 a. m. Church school, 10:15 a. m.

The service of prayer and thanks­giving for V-E Day held at Ziegel's were well attended, Pastors Herbster and Laubach sharing in thc observance. The Church was beautifully decorated with flowers.

The Literary Society presented a fine program, Saturday night, before a large audience. Lhe next program will be pre­sented June 9th, in charge of Mrs. Fred Bachman, Mrs. William Rupp, Robcrt Dalrymplc, Lila Hoffman and Mrs. Stanley Yorkcy.

The Welfare and Recreational com­mittee will present, May 26th, an eve­ning of games, and motion pictures, June second.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Bear announce the marriage of their daughter Betty Jean to Charles Edgar Breininger, which was solemnized by the Rev. John L. Herbster in Ziegel's Church, Sunday. A reception will be held at the home of thc bride, Saturday night. The bride­groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Breininger.

Stanley Herber, recently employed at Vultee, Allcntown, has secured work at Washington, D. C.

Douglass^Baker resumed work in Al­lentown, having recovered from a crush­ed foot, which took several months to heal.

Elmer Shoemaker is ill. Seipstown School, Mrs. Charles

Hciser, teacher, closes this week. Mamie Kehm returned home from

the Allentown hospital. Mrs. Warren Herber spent the week­

end with the M. A. Herber family. She lives with her parents at Shoenersvillc.

Mrs. William Smale is on the sick list.

KEMPTON

Reporter

OF SPECIAL INTEREST Paul Wenrich, Mertztown; Daniel

Bechtel, Fleetwood, and Anson Ben­nicoff, Gcorge Rahn, Charles Koch and Samuel Smith, Kutztown, wit­nessed thc rccent initiation of a class I

j of 111 candidates, Junior Order, I Unitcd American Mechanics, held at j the Odd Fellows Hall, Easton, by thc Eastern District of the Order.

The Degree work was done by thc Spring City Council.

The Rev. C. R. Rahn will conduct services at New Bethel Church, Sun­day, at 9 a. m. Church school, 8 a. m.

The Rev. Ira W. Klick conducted Victory Thanksgiving services at New Bethel, Sunday. He also baptized Ernest Conrad, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Denton Nester.

The Aid Society will hold an all-day public quilting party May 21st.

Milton Lenhart, Ralph Waidclieh, Raymond Riegel, Howard Lutz, Mr. and Mrs. George Kunkel and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Conrad went fishing at Long Branch, N. J., and report a good catch.

Stephen Golubics and family, who lived on a farm near Shartlesville, mov­ed into the tenant house of Mrs. Mary Dancnhower. (

The 7th War Loan of Albany town­ship will again be in charge of the teachers of the various districts, under Chairman Galen Howerter.

The State Highway section men built an addition to the storage house at the junction of Route 143 and Kempton Road.

Robert Rauch, who has been ill for

a month, is slowly improving. Mr. and Mrs. Anson Burkey, Weath-

erly, called on local friends. Mrs. Annie Hownter is spending

some time with her son, Galen Hower­ter.

Mr. and Mrs. William Kamp and children Vernon, Arlan, Marie, Wayne, Woodrow, Mark and David called on Mr. and Mrs. Claude Steigerwalt, Reading.

» • -

KRUMSVILLE Sylvester A. Qrhm

Reporter

The Rev. Ira W. Klick will con­duct Lutheran services at Grimvflle, Sunday, at 10 a. m. Church school, 9 a. m.

Norman Buck butchered three steers for Ezra Oldt, which weighed 450, 490 and 610 pounds, respeetively.

George Altendcrfer was the fint farmer in this section to plant corn.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kistler and daugh­ter visited Mr. Kistler's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Kistler.

Mrs. Minnie Seip is visiting her sis­ter, Mrs. Rosa Altcnderfer, who is ill.

The great standard of literature, as to purity and exactness of style, is the Bible.-Blair.

to celebrate our victory in Europe, j Thev are devoutly thankful that one ; phase of the war is over, but thcy know that the needs for food arc as great as thcy ever were. They also i know that their war job must go on | day and night until total victory is J

GET IN TOUCH WITH HE N O W To all people who want to have their grape vines sprayed, write, phone, or call on me. I will lay aside a few days within the next week or two at which time I will spray only g rape vines, as grapes require different spray material than trees.

RAYMOND H. RAHN

85 S. Whiteoak St.. Kutztown, Pa. Phone 4056

T H E DUTCH M A I D K I T C H E N KUTZTOWN, PA.

Open All Day Sunday Is it a snack . . . a tasty barbecue . . . a plat ter or

a dinner you want?

We Serve Them Daily 'till 1 a. m. (except Mondays)

37 VARIETIES TO CHOOSE FROM

W e S e r v e C h i l d r e n ' s P l a t t e r s

MARCEL AUVE, Prop.

The Telephone Has Served the Farmer Well

For more than half a century, the telephone has served the farmer w e l l . . . in business . . . in emergen­cies . . . in more pleasant living.

There was the farmer, for example, who wrote to say that his telephone enabled him to get better prices for his crops.

"It gets me to market in a few seconds," he said, "and at the best time."

After the war, when we get the green light on produc­tion for civilian needs, telephone service for farms will be even better than before. But until final Victory, farmers, like city folks, must wait No one would wish it any other way.

THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Of PENNSYLVANIA

FROM DAN TO YOUR PAN Complete Line Of

FRESH FISH . . . CLAMS . . .

SEAFOOD

(Please bring your own

container)

Ban's Fish Market Whiteoak Street Katztown, P a

\AI -1 c r\ mi VERTI-COIL AND ZERO-W I L 5 U N n o w MILK COOLERS

• Life Tested Construction • Factory Assembled

• Milk Checks Grow

e It Costs Less to Own

• Rapid Uniform Cooling

• Low Cost Operation

• EXCLUSIVE—"There a r e no other Milk Coolers in

the World like them"

TED S M I T H AUTHORIZED. SALES & SERVICE DEALER

1127 Buttonwood Street Reading. Pa.

H. L. SCHAEFFER. Mgr.

Charles K. Kaufman Virginville

DEALER in

LIVE POULTRY and

EGGS

+ Phone

Hamburg 3395

PROVED on more than 260,000 FARMS

SOIVES YOUR FENCING PROBLEMS

Folly weather-proofed port­able outdoor

model in heavy steel galvanized container hous­

ing unit and battery.

PARMAK A D V A N T A G E S f SAME HIGH QUALITY AND

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3 FLUX DIVERTER provide. greater efficiency.

4 BATTERY MIZER hoards a_t-rent

5 NEON FENCE TESTER

6 5-YEAR SERVICE QUARAlf.

HARRY L. ADAM Route No. 3, Box No. 97A

(Edenburg) HAMBURG. PA.

Dial Hamburg 2063

Grand Conveniences For Your Spring Housecleaning

Renuzit French Dry Cleaner 1 gal. 65c 2 gals 1.09

Simple and efficient—no offensive odors. Just dip and rinse. Also used for a household cleaner.

Mystic Zip IgaL 1.49 Vi gal. 1.00 1 qt. 60c All purpose household cleaner. New, easy way to clean all painted sur­faces without water and soap. No more streaking.

Mystic Foam 1 gal 1.49 Vz gal. 1.00 1 qt 65c Removes grease, d i r t , stains, restores lustre and brightens colors rapidly and safely . . . upholstery, r u g s . Non-inflammable, non-explosive.

Tavern Tavern Paste Wax O'Cedar Dnst Mop Liquid Wax l ib 69c 1 2 5 1 qt- 89c 3 lbs 1.69

i W L * . : : : : : : : : : : : : J S a ™ economical v ^ S ^ L _ T * _ f l 5 * „ ' .. T 7 . corners easily, fine twist

The all purpose wax for tion and polishes wood . ^ ^ dust E o -

d S i r e ' l ^ t 7 o u s a f i n f s h floors, furniture, linoleum. m o v a b l e pad is easy to which will not collect dust A l s o recommended for wash. Complete with 48-or show traffic marks. waxing automobiles. in. handle.

| HESS BROTHERS HOUSEWARES—FOURTH FLOOR

jM&utowiltMat JL\Mm_im$tOmt

'OvlSLkrs to Menand Beys' TO He-niltonSt.AHentonin.fa.

Exclusive Distributors

of

HAHT SCHAFFNER & MARX FAMOUS CLOTHES

OT ALLENTOWN

Will you hold a FAT-SALVAGE BEE

for your country -r-vr man tmvm% i '.'.".

J^^'-emm*' '• ie"*,./-*.

HERE IN AMERICA, when a neighbor needs help, it has always been the custom for all the folks to pitch in and give him a hand. Many a harvest would have been lost without the help of a husking bee.

YOUR COUNTRY NEEDS a fat-salvage bee right now! Millions of tons of fat have been used up to supply the thousand of battlefield and home-front needs ir^this r-ar And there's still a lot of war rHead!

A PLEA TO EVERY WOMAN! Our country is calling on you, the women in small cities and towns and on the farms, to save every drop of used fiat. Your used fats aire desperately needed to meet our country's requirements.

So scrape all pans and roasters. Skim soups and gravies. Keep your used fats » a tin can—any kind will do. Save meat trimmings and plate scrapings ia a bovd; melt them down and add the liquid fat to your can.

When the salvage can is full, take it to your butcher. Hell give you 2 ted pednts and up to four cents for every pound. If you have any difficulty turning in joor xmd fats, call your Home Demonstration or County Agent.

Needed this year: 100,000,000 more pounds i f used fats

Approved by WFA esmd OPA. Pasdjorhy hsdmstry

)UR T h e K u t z t o w n P a t r i o t , K u t z t o w n , P a . , T h u r s d a y , M a y 17, 1945

Who, What, When, Where and Why Walking hither and von on the

streets of Fleetwood, a-bodv cannot' help but pjck up news, wise and other­wise.

In a front window at Rauch's Drug store are copies of November 11, 1918, newspaper heralding the end of World War One; and inside the store is a new "Nut Shop," containing a heating unit that keeps the salted nuts crisp and fresh.

"Hoe-Down" Keller is on the job at the former Ralph Kline Sweet Shoppe, where he specializes in sea­food.

Mrs. William Dunkle. proprietor of

Ella's Variety Shop, is experimenting with the dyc-ing of lilies of the valley. On a swinging shelf in a window, are five miniature,bouquets, the tiny bells tinted orange, green, pink, blue and wine. "I just thought I'd try it," she explained, "and the coloring is vege­table dye, which shouldn't do any harm."

The Degree Team of Ontelaunee Grange gave the third and fourth de­gree to new members of Fleetwood Grange.

S/Sgt. Lester Hoch sent home a photograph taken at a market in Paris. He is holding the bridle of a market

horse, to which a two-wheeled cart is hitched. "The market reminds me of those in Reading and Lancaster," he reports.

John Spatz is m Germany. Lothair Dreibelbis, who suffered

malaria overseas, is enjoying a fur­lough. He reports that John Moyer, also of Fleetwood, was a mess sergeant aboard the boat that took no less than 8,000 to England. "And it took mc more than a day to find Lester Hoch."

The following members of a Bridge Club enjoyed dinner and cards at thc Six Mile House: Mrs. Leon Rother­mel, Mrs. Arthur Rauch, Mrs. James Rothermel, Mrs. W. W. Ebert, Mrs. William Seaman, Mrs. C. A. Wan­

ner, Mrs. J. Wallace Luckenbill and the Ministerium, compared with 505 Mrs. Frank Ritter. last year, and 601 congregations, com-

Without being coaxed, "Grandpa" pared with 602 last year. Sunday Charles I. Kutz is willing to talk at school enrollment dropped from 112,-length about his new granddaughter, I 398 to 110,164, but week day school Linda Margaret Erb, bom recently to ; enrollment increased from 11,653 to

j his daughter, Marv Alice, wife of Lt. j 12,917. I Herbert Erb, Camp Hood, Texas. \ ' .Service Flag Rededicated | "One of Mary Alice's former pupils I In a tribute to members of Minis-at Olev Consoiidated School, did over- j tcrium churches in thc armed forces.

' time dutv," he may tell you, "in order\ Synod rededicated its service flag which j to give the first bath to the new little j indicated 29,735 members of its I ladv." I churches in active military service, 763

Mrs. Samuel Hoch has just com- j who have died in thc services of their '' plcted a wine-colored comfort, filled \ country, 1,607 discharged veterans,

PANAMAS and BODY STRAWS

cool as tropical breeze!

It wiH take you jutt about twenty seconds to make up your

mind that our straw hats are the coolest thing a man can

wear. Every one is air conditioned for hot-weather com­

fort. Even on rip-snorting days your head will be as cool

as the clouds. See this great showing of 1945 Panamas

. . . first in fashion this season. Incidentally, they're just as

smart as they are comfortable.

$ 5 <o $15

LOAF. . . with leisure

LMMMML to mim- in tbe Crosby-

Square way! Slip into » pair of their famous and popular "Lounge-Abouts". Youll dis­cover a fuller measure of en­joyment from your off-duty hours than you've ever known. They're made with tbe new NBOLITE sole*.

*6*95

AMUHCA'S newest lie

...Spar-designed for Sportswear, Bwsioess Wear, 2-way Collars, Long-pointed Collars, and Windsor Knots. Handsomely patterned. ..hand -taiiare_L

$1.50

KOCH BROTHERS Allentown''s Leading Clothiers

CENTRE SQUARE N.E. CORNER

with sheep's wool. T/Sgt. Josephine Rothermel, who

spent the week-end at home, is await­ing a Camp assignment.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kleppinger and Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Kutz enjoyed dinner, recently, at the Bruce-Orth, Kutztown.

Mrs. Harrv Kummerer looks forward

and 972 women in the armed forces. There were special prayers for those in service and a brief memorial for those who have made the supreme sacrifice.

Dr. Emest F. Bachman, retiring as the head of the Mary J. Drexel Home and the Philadelphia Motherhouse of Deaconesses, told of the continuing

Henry Reppert visited Mr. and Mn. Lewis Reppert and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Reppert, Auburn, New York.

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Gackenbach and daughter Doris and Mrs. Paul Brunner, Kutztown, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Schwoyer at a ham and egg dinner.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schlenker and I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oswald and 1 daughter Doris and Mr. and Mrs. j Howard Oswald and daughters Lucy | and Nancy visited Mrs. Emma Oswald.

The following called on Mr. and : Mrs. Herbert Hertzog: Mr. and Mrs. i Lester Day and family, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keiffer, Mr. and Mrs. John Guinther, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Guinther and Mr. and Mrs. Emest Reinhart and family.

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Geisinger spent a day in Reading.

Ruth, Esther and Pauline called on Jerome Trexler.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dietrich visited Joseph Gilardone.

Herman Dancnhower spent the weekend with his family near here.

Hattie Sunday spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sundav.

to mail from her overseas son Donald, j need for young women to enter the who is most faithful about writing. I diaconate and told of some of the She also reports that the young man j new fields in which they may become who delivers her bread, was a formcr j active in the service of the Church. acrobat. The announcement was made of

the call given and accepted by Rev. i Richard Klick to the office now vacated | by Dr. Bachman. Pastor Klick is now i serving Immanuel Lutheran Church I in Philadelphia. Rcv. Klick is a son ! of Mr. and Mrs. Ira W. Klick, Kutz­town.

Among those elected to boards were: Dr. Q. A. W. Rohrbach, Kutztown, to thc Board of Home Missions, and Charles H. Esser, Kutztown j was re­elected to the Board of Mt. Airy Seminary.

NEW TRIPOLI E. W. Fisher

Reporter

Longswamp High

Luth. Ministerium (Coatiaaed fram Page I)

ago by pastors representing the Evan­gelical and Reformed denominations and several Lutheran Synods.

Under the plan each congregation j is to be incorporated separately and have its own administrative body; each to have its own treasury and treas­urer; each to make proper and neces­sary provision for gathering and dis­bursing its own funds; union Sunday schools arc to use the literature of each denomination in alternating years; and each Congregation is tO recognize | (Continued from page one) and develop its own authorized auxili- j Grace Grim, Vivian Miller, Betty Solt, aries for men, women and young peo-, Jean Schaeffer, James Reinhard, Rich-pie. Church councils of both congrega- ] ard Wcaknccht and Seamen Schlegel tions are to meet jointly at stated times \ and Mcck. to make necessary provisions for the j Baccalaureate services are scheduled care of property held jointly and the for Sunday, May 27th, at 10:30 a. m. expenses incurred by such joint use Dr. C. E. Keiser will officiate, are to be shared equally. Class Personalities

The Rcv. Earl S. Erb, secretary of j Class personalities include: Most ; benevolence, reported that the $450,-1 popular: Jean Schaeffer and Paul De-;311 contributed for thc benevolent j Long; most beautiful, Joan Schaeffer; i work of thc church at large indicated handsome-cst, Ratnold Schlegel; pret-that 83 per cent of the apportionment | ticst eyes, Corinnc Good, Richard —the highest amount and thc highest j Wcaknccht.

; percentage ever raised—and that 271 I ! of the 601 congregations had raised I i thcir apportionment in full or exceed-I cd it. Thc average gift last year, how-I ever, represented only SI 6.57 per member.

To April 30. he said. SI 29.989 of thc 1945 apportionment has been raised, a 10 per cent increase over the amount reported at the same time last year.

The individual congregations of thc Ministerium have reduced tlieir in­debtedness $504,265 during the past year and increased their contributions for current congregational expenses to $346,716, a jump of nine per cent.

The membership of thc Ministerium ilso increased during the year—1.2 per

L Y O N S

The Woman's Guild of Ebcnezer Church will meet Friday at 8 p. m. in the Church basement. On Sunday at 8 p. m. the book, "Indians Are People Too" will be reviewed, and the Lynn­ville Guild members will be guests.

The Rev. LeRoy Bond and Clayton Werley, delegate, of the Ncw Tripoli parish, attended the annual meeting of the Ministerium of Pennsylvania, at Trinity, Reading.

Mrs. Ralph Leiby, Pattenburg, N. J., is visiting her parcnts, Mr. and Mrs. James Sittlc'r.

Joyce Bittner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bittner, New Tripoli R. 2, and Robert Weaver, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robcrt Weaver, Jordan, are appendectomy patients at the Al­lcntown hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Francis Klingaman, New Tripoli R. 2, entertained Mr. and Mrs. Ncvin Arndt and children Ncvin, Jr., Robcrt and Arlene, Mrs. Hettie Arndt, Mrs. Alice Zimmerman and son Richard, Kutztown; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stoudt and daughtcr, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Stoudt and son Ronald, Rcading; Mr. and Mrs. Rus­sell Neff and son Russell, Jr., Kutz­town, and Lillian Klingaman. Jamaica, N. Y.

WINDSOR CASTLE Mrs. Pins Adam

Reporter

Many attended the Mother-Daugh­ter banquet at Zion's Church.

Mrs. John Sonnon spent a week in Atlantic City.

The T. B. test was given to the em­ployees of Burkey's Knitting Mill.

Earl Hess, who returned from the Reading hospital, is at work again.

The following visited Mrs. Morris Hoppes, who is ill: Mr. and Mrs. Al­fred Hoppes, Sallie Bower and Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Leiby.

Mr. and Mrs. Pius Adam enter­tained Mr. and Mrs. Milton Schappell,

] Mr. and Mrs. Milton Gehringer and daughtcr Carol, Mrs. John Adam and daughter Barbara, Mrs. Walter Schaef­fer and daughters Joanne and Elsie Mae, Mr. and Mrs. Arlan Seidel and children, and Mrs. Peter Schappell.

Mrs. Katie Kline, Edenberg, secured work at Burkey's Knitting Mill.

Mr. and Mrs. Allen Loeb and sons visited their daughter, Mrs. George Wessner, Reading.

VIRGINVILLE "red M. Dreibelbis

Reporter

*

!

-+

Penny Social On Saturday the Lyons Honor Roll

Committee will sponsor a penny social at the Fire Hall, starting at 4 o'clock. Lunch will bc on sale and also fancy work. Everyone is invited.

Seen and Heard Nan Schwoyer, who was ill, is im­

proving. Gucsts of Mr. and Mrs. Charlcs

Oswald were Harold Lorah and Har­old Haas, Lobachsville.

Mr. and Mrs. Charlcs Carl and chil­dren, Mrs. Gcorgc Keiser and daugh-

ccnt of the baptized membership to | ter, Mrs. Elmer Mory and daughter, reach 329,341; 1.7 per cent of the I and Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mover confirmed membership to reach 231,-iand daughter, Orevillc, visitcd Mr. 3"4; and 1.8 pcr cent of the com-j and Mrs. John Dclong.. miming membership to reach 164,314. Mrs. Abraham Bcnncr, Bovcrtown, There are 526 ordained ministers in visited Mr. and Mrs. Waltcr Geisinger.

DREIBELBIS Mrs. George A. Heinly

Reporter

Mrs. John Adam and Mrs. Walter Schaeffer and children attended the Mother-Daughter banquet at Zion's Church.

F. M. Dreibelbis visitcd Ira Smith at thc Reading hospital; Mrs. Angelina Seidel, Kutztown. who is also ill; and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Merkel, Fleet­wood.

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schappell and family, Hamburg, called on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dreibelbis.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dreibelbis and daughter Doris, Hamburg, were gucsts of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Drei­belbis.

ROBERT W. FRITCH DIES; SERVED AS ORGANIST OF

LONGSWAMP CHURCH Robert W. Fritch, 74, organist of

Longswamp Church ior 50 years prior to retirement two years ago, died May 12th at his home, VIertztown, R. 1. He also served for some years as Hu-Pa Church organist.

He was a son of the late Edwin and Elizabeth (Romig) Fritch, and was a

j member of the Lutheran congregation ' of Longswamp Church.

His wife, Mrs. Sarah Hertzog 1 Fritch, preceded him in death Febru-j ary 16th.

Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Liz-j zie Reinert,. Emmaus, and Mrs. Mary I Holtzman, Longswamp township; and | three brothers: John and Edwin, Long-j swamp township, and Lesher, Em­maus.

The funeral was held this afternoon j at his home. Further services were I conducted in Longswamp Church, Dr. C. E. Keiser and the Rev. John L.

! Herbster officiating. Burial was made | in the church cemetery, at the direction of J. J. Schofer Sc Son.

MARY REIGNER TO APPEAR IN JOINT RECITAL, SUNDAY,

AT WOMAN'S CLUB Mary Reigner, KSTC senior, and

dramatic soprano, will appear in a joint recital Sunday at 2:J0 p. m. at the Allentown Woman's Club, with Jane Edgar, coloraturo soprano, and Jeanne Marquardt, mezzo soprano, pupils of Ernestine Hohl Williams.

She will sing the following: "Have You Seen But a White Lily Grow,* Old English; "Mondnacht," Schu­mann; "She Never Told Her Love," Hayden; "The Vain Suit," Brahms; "Kennst du das Land," Wolf; and an aria from "Aida," Verdi.

All of them sang in a rerent State contest of the National Federation of Music Clubs, Philadelphia.

Miss Marquardt was graduated from KSTC last year and has been teaching in the Allentown schools, and Miss Edgar is an Allentown High School senior.

Miss Reigner, .daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reigner, is a graduate of KHS, and is a member of the choir of KSTC and of her church, Grace Evangelical. She will be graduated from the local institution this month, where she has specialized in Library Science.

New Jerusalem (Dunkel's) Church: the Rcv. Ira W. Klick will conduct Lutheran services at 9 a. m. Church school. 10 a. m.

Ruth and Pauline Heinly were in Rcading.

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Fink and daugh­ters Dorothy and Helen, Jerome Trex­ler and Helen Dictrich visited Mr. and Mrs. Gcorgc Heinly.

Mrs. Robert Dietrich, Mrs. Henry Schaeffer, Mrs. Lester Fink, Dorothy Fink and Pauline Heinly were gucsts of Mr. and Mrs. William Sunday.

Mrs. George Heinly and daughters

AMONG THE SICK Dale Keim,. 10, who was ^raised

on the right arm, shoulder and leg, when struck by a hit-and-run driver on thc Lyons-Kutztown road, near his homc, is able to be about. He W-S dis­covered by thc Kutztown Fenster-machcrs, who thought at first it was but a coat lying in the road.

SIGNS OF THE TIMES Peonies in bloom. Baltimore Orioles. Frost has nipped the leaves of mul­

berry trees and wistaria. Farmers are retarded in planting

corn. Potatoes planted several weeks ago

have not yet sprouted.

An Apology TO t h e m a n y h u n d r e d s of w o r k e r s in e s s e n t i a l w a r i n d u s t r i e s , schoo l c h i l d r e n a n d h o m e

m a k e r s w h o n a t u r a l l y h a v e b e e n g r e a t l y i n c o n v e n i e n c e d s i n c e l a s t S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g

w h e n ou r d r i v e r s , w i t h o u t d u e n o t i c e a n d in d i r ec t v i o l a t i o n of t h e n o - s t r i k e c l a u s e w r i t t e n

in to t h e c o n t r a c t s i g n e d l a s t S e p t e m b e r , w e n t out on s t r i k e — i n b e h a l f of t h e o t h e r officers

a n d t h e faithful e m p l o y e e s of t h e A l l e n t o w n & R e a d i n g T r a n s i t C o m p a n y , I g i v e y o u m y

h u m b l e a p o l o g y .

A l t h o u g h t h e r e a r e a n u m b e r of u n p l e a s a n t m a t t e r s w h i c h m a y h a v e i n d i r e c t l y c a u s e d th i s

w a l k - o u t , I d o no t a t t h i s t i m e w i s h to m a k e m e n t i o n of t h e m a n d e m b a r r a s s t h o s e b u s d r i v ­

e r s a n d e m p l o y e e s w h o a r e no t in s y m p a t h y w i t h t h e l e a d e r s a n d t r o u b l e m a k e r s . H o w e v e r ,

I d o w a n t to q u o t e a p a r a g r a p h or t w o of t h e c o n t r a c t a n d a s k y o u to b e t h e j u d g e .

" S h o u l d a n y d i f f e rence a r i s e b e t w e e n t h e p a r t i e s , a s to t h e t r u e i n t e n t s a n d m e a n i n g of a n y

p r o v i s i o n s of th i s a g r e e m e n t or a n y o t h e r q u e s t i o n a r i s i n g b e t w e e n t h e t w o p a r t i e s w h i c h

c a n n o t b e m u t u a l l y a d j u s t e d , t h e s a m e s h a l l b e s u b m i t t e d a t t h e r e q u e s t of e i t h e r p a r t y to a

B o a r d of A r b i t r a t i o n , to b e s e l e c t e d in t h e fo l l owing m a n n e r , o n e a r b i t r a t o r to b e c h o s e n b y e

t h e C o m p a n y a n d o n e b y t h e A s s o c i a t i o n (The A m a l g a m a t e d A s s o c i a t i o n of S t r ee t , E l ec t r i c

R a i l w a y a n d Motor C o a c h E m p l o y e e s of A m e r i c a a n d Div i s ion 1184) , a n d t h e t w o a r b i t r a t o r s

t h e n s e l e c t e d s h a l l e n d e a v o r t o r e a c h a n a g r e e m e n t ; f a i l i ng t o d o so w i t h i n t e n d a y s , a t h i r d

a r b i t r a t o r s h a l l b e c h o s e n b y t h e t w o . S h o u l d t h e y no t b e a b l e to a g r e e on a t h i r d a r b i t r a t o r

w i t h i n t e n d a y s , t h e n t h e S e c r e t a r y of L a b o r for t h e S t a t e of P e n n s y l v a n i a s h a l l a p p o i n t t h e

t h i r d m e m b e r for t h e B o a r d of A r b i t r a t i o n , t h e B o a r d so c o n s t i t u t e d s h a l l w e i g h a l l e v i d e n c e

a n d a r g u m e n t s of t h e p o i n t s in d i s p u t e , a n d t h e w r i t t e n d e c i s i o n of a m a j o r i t y of t h e s a i d

B o a r d of A r b i t r a t i o n s h a l l b e f ina l a n d b i n d i n g u p o n t h e p a r t i e s thereof . In e v e n t ' of fail­

u r e of e i t h e r p a r t y to a p p o i n t i t s a r b i t r a t o r w i t h i n s ix d a y s , e x c l u s i v e of S u n d a y s a n d H o l i d a y s ,

a f te r a r b i t r a t i o n is d e c i d e d u p o n , t h e p a r t y so fa i l ing s h a l l forfeit i t s c a s e . "

" IT I S UNDERSTOOD THAT THE C O M P A N Y SHALL N O T LOCK OUT ITS EM­

PLOYEES. AND THAT THE EMPLOYEES SHALL N O T STRIKE. AND THAT THE

A S S O C I A T I O N SHALL N O T AUTHORIZE A STRIKE UNLESS AND UNTIL THE

PARTIES HAVE ARBITRATED THEIR DIFFERENCE PURSUANT T O THE P R O ­

V I S I O N S O F THIS S E C T I O N . "

" T h i s a g r e e m e n t s h a l l b e in full force a n d effect from O c t o b e r 16th, 1944 to a n d i n c l u d i n g

O c t o b e r 15th , 1 9 4 5 . "

NORMAN P. FERNON. Ir., P r e s i d e n t

A L L E N T O W N & READING TRANSIT CO.

WEIDNER-STURDEVANT The marriage of Helen Ruth Sturde­

vant, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Sturdevant, Rockland township, and LeRoy Albcrt Weidner. Colebrook-dale, was solemnized by F. N. Benfield, Justice of the Peace, Huff's Church.

AMONG THE SICK Thc condition of Thomas LcVan, a

patient at the Allcntown hospital, is improved.

Sirs. Charles Reimert, who tore liga­ments of a leg, and was hospitalized in Allentown, is improved.

!Y«^ F'lose

i

Replac ing 1,861,871

cost Uncle Sam the

price of 5 5 0 jeeps

PUBLIC SALE SATURDAY. M A Y 26TH

1 o'clock

Schade's Radio Shop

1S6 W. Main Street (Sear) Katztown. Pa.

S e e i t e m s l i s t ed in P u b l i c S a l e C o l u m n on C l a s s i f i e d P a g e .

CUSTOM SPRAYING I want to apologize to my cus­tomers where I have been spray­ing trees; and to those whom I have not been able to visit as yet. Due to windy and rainy weather conditions, I have not been able to spray as often as necessary. I will gladly make any calls as soon as possible to those people who want me to apply one or several cover sprays.

RAYMOND H. RAHN

85 S. Whiteoak St., Katztown. Pa-

Phone 40S6

STABILIZED'7 C ° D U S T ROTENONE f J __-.

WILL K.EEP YOUR VEGETABLE GARDEN .FREE OF INSECTS __

Manufactured by the makers of the famous Slug Shot, STAB­ILIZED ROTENONE "75" DUST is an ail-purpoee dust or spray invaluable to gardeners and commercial growers. Con­trols pea weevil and aphid; the Mexican Bean Beetle; cater­pillars, turnip and spinach aphids on crops such as broccoli, brua-sels sprouts, cauliflower, kohl-

^rabi, mustard, turnips, etc.? and the European corn borer attack­ing sweet corn. Easy to use; effective; economical!

Lb. can $0-35 5 lbs. IM

Available at hardware, drug or seed stores, or write us.

FREE: Bulletin en InMct Control, f.

0

More Than

More than 230 puj 21st annual Field wood schools, under Supervising Principal and A. Dolores Au| Heckman, heads of rt Physical Education, faculty members.

Despite cold totalcd nearly a hunc

Seven Groups pari 11 and 12; nine an<] eight; five and six; two; and one.

Winners were: Gr<] with a score of 70 ten, 44; and Group 49. Other scores wercl Grade nine, 37; elev^

Wini GROUP ONE: G |

PETER NICODEMI PRESIDENT OF FISH AND G/ Peter Nicodemusl

formerly a farmer; Fleetwood Fish and and a fire warden for| combmanor townshi home, Poplar street,] 14th.

He was the son and Elizabeth (Kellel the last of his fam| number of nieces ant

He was a mem| Church; Fleetwood Reading Lodge, Loyaj Fleetwood Nest No. Castle, Knights of t\ and the Fleetwood

The funeral will 2 p. m. at the Stuml the Rev. Paul P. Burial will be made cemetery. •!•• • '•

CHURC1 Fern

Repor

:o

Guests of Mr. a| Wagner were: Mrs Hyde Park; Mr. al Strohm and childrel and Joseph, Jr., Wesj Mrs. Adam Fegley, and William Hoch,

Mr. and Mrs. Pj entertained Mr. ar Froelich and sons David Lee, Temple.

Mr. and Mrs. Led Carl, Pricetown, vij Buck.

Beau t i fu l ly

10K C BABY or

RinJ

$2 (tax incll

e n g r a v i n g ol

3 different!

Eutztl Furnitun

EDMUND COLLI. Next to Postoff icl

Depend.| 123 MAIN STREET

Dial 61

P

MO that t] uted

MO Prothoi

. C H D I E S ; I G A N I S T O F fAMP C H U R (

74, organist of I for 50 years pr ior irs ago, died May •rtztown, R. 1. H e

ie years as Huff*

je late Edwin and IFritch, and was a W a n congregation |rch.

Sarah Her tzog in death Febru-

sisters, Mrs . L_z~ is, and Mrs . M a r y

ip township ; and and Edwin, Long-

and Lesher, Em-

[held this afternoon ier services were .amp Church, Dr . the Rev. John L. Burial was made

try, at the direction [Son.

T O A P P E A R . AL, S U N D A Y , ROMAN'S C L U B _STC senior, and wili appear in a

at 2:30 p. m. a t Mnan's Club, with frturo soprano, and

mezzo soprano, Hohl Wil l iams. following: " H a v e

. hite Lily Grow,1* londnacht," Schu-

Told Her Love,'* lin Suit," B r a h m s ; |(nd," Wolf; and an

Verdi. in a recent State

Jonal Federation of idelphia. \t was gradua ted jrear and has been fntown schools, and

Allentown High

lughter of Mr. and fr, is a graduate of

iber of the choir ier church, Grace ill be graduated

Stution this month, tialized in Library

J R D F V A N T lelen Ruth Sturde-

and Mrs. John \d township, and idner, Colebrook-I b v F . N . Benfield,

Huffs Church .

HE SICK Thomas LcVan, a

Ifntown hospital, is

nert, who tore liga-was hospitalized in

wd.

8S&» %don't if lose

it ECAUSE placing 1,861,871

I c_rds last year

I Uncle Sam the

:e of 5 5 0 jeeps

SALE MAY 26TH

lock

ide's Shop

Street (Bear ) Pa.

led in Public |on Classified

iPRAYING pze to my c u s -rve been s p r a y -

those w h o m I ib le to visit a s i dy a n d r a i n y

»ns. I h a v e not r ay as often a s

J_e any ca l l s a s to those p e o p l e

| o a p p l y o n e or j y s .

IND H. N

It.. Kutztown. Pa .

40SG

^75°DUST

YOUR GARDEN

INSECTS _. the makers of Shot, STAB-.ONE " 7 5 "

1-purpoee dust or lie to gardeners

growers. Con-and aphid; the

, Beetle; cater-nd spinach aphids is broccoli brus-auliflower, kohl-

jipe, etc.} m-iA _ borer attack-Easy to use;

deal!

$035 . U S

Iware, drug or ite us.

NT&CHEMICAICO.

>l(.

The Kutztown Patriot, Kutztown, Pa., Thursday, May 17, 1945 FIVB

FLEETWOOD NEWS More Than 230 Pupils of F.H.S.

Share in 21st Annual Field Day More than 230 pupils shared in the I Boys: 100 Yard Dash: Richard Ho-1

21-rf annual Field Day at the Fleet- man, Harold Hehr, Harry Bingaman; j *ood schools, under the leadership of Shot Put: Carl Cronrath, Richard Supervising Principal M. J. A. Smith, and A. Dolores Austra and Arthur Heckman. heads of the Department of physical Education, assisted by other facultv members.

Despite cold weather, spectators totaled nearly a hundred.

Seven Groups participated: Grades 11 and 12; nine and ten; seven and eight; five and six; three and four;

efteyo; a n ^ o n c -Winners were: Group I, Grade 12,

with a score of 70 Group II: Grade ten, 44; a n d Group III: Grade seven, 49.0thcr scores were: Grade eight, 23; Grade nine, 37; eleven, 19.

Winners GROUP O N E : Grades 11 and 12:

Homan, Herman Burgert; Half-Mile j Run: Lcroy Weidner , Jack Knoll; High j Jump: Richard Homan, Frederick I Deisher, William Miller; Broad Jump: | Richard Homan, Frederick Deisher, ! Lloyd Olinger; Mile Relay: Clayton | Matthew, Richard Homan, Harold j Hehr, Will iam Strohm, 1st; Clarence j Moyer, Samuel Borrell, Jack Knoll, Harry Bingaman, second; Karl gaard, Frederick Deisher, Leroy Fred­erick, Carl Cronrath, third.

Girls: Baseball Throw: Deane Grace Ritter, Juanita Price, Anna Wanner ; 50 Yard Dash: Deane Grace Ritter, Esther Anderson, Mary Ellen Hum­mel; Basketball Throw: Josephine

(Continued on page eitht—column five)

F L E E T W O O D C A L E N D A R May 20—At 2 p . m. Boom Ses­

sion, Fleetwood Orioles. May 20 — Baccalureate Service

FHS—Emmanuel Evangelical; May 24-5, "Four Freedoms," Fire Hall; Commencement , May 25.

May 22—Twenty-Fifth Anniver­sary Fleetwood Grange B a n q u e t -Fire Hall.

May 30—Memorial Day Observ­ance.

June 9—Allentown Band—School Grounds.

Diplomas for 37 At FHS May 25th

Diplomas will bc awarded to 37 at the May 25 th Commencement of FHS at the Fire Hall, following the second presentation of "The Four Freedoms" bv the Seniors, at the di-! rcct.on of Mrs. Mildred Righthand. I G E N E F I S T E R T O ADDRESS

ough. Charles Mohn heads the com­mittee on arrangements.

T h e cooperating organizations will have separate booths, and the Fish Pond is to be in charge of the Junior Auxiliarv' of thc Legion, donations for which may bc brought to Ella's Variety Shop, or to any Junior.

A gala event is promised.

F L E E T W O O D C L U B W O M E N Gene Fister, of the Kutztown High

the hostess committee.

PETER M C O D E M U S K. N O L L , PRESIDENT O F F L E E T W O O D FISH AND G A M E ASSO., D I E S Peter Nicodcmus K. Noll, 66,

formerly a farmer; president of the Fleetwood Fish and Game Association;

Legion Auxiliary, will be held at 6:30 xi • j p . m., and the semi-formal dance, from

' 8:30 to 11:30 p . m., with music by Steve Baer's Orchestra.

T h e Rev. B. Ellsworth Snoddy, pastor of Emmanuel Evangelical Church, will be the banquet speaker.

T h e executive committee in charge comprises James P. Knoll, president; Mary Jane Schlegel, vice president; Mrs. Edward Deisher, recording sec­retary; Janet Ebert , financial secretary; Earl Trexler, treasurer; and Helen D O R O T H Y L O O S E L E C T E D

P L A Y G R O U N D D I R E C T O R 1 5 ^ " ^ t ^ Dorothy Loos, daughter of Mr. and

Mrs. J. Eugene Loos, who will be a j A N N U A L M U S I C A L E O F senior at East Stroudsburg State Teach- R E A D I N G H O S P AUX ers college next year is to be the T h c a n n u a l M u s i c a l e s p 0 nsored by

and a fire warden, for . 0 years in Rus- j Fleetwood playground director, June ; t h e R e a d i n g Hospital Auxiliarv was rnmbmanor towns 2-Aug is announcement is I h e l c ] a t t j i e ]l0mc oi M r s j w Stump,

before a large and appreciative audi-home, Poplar street, Fleetwood, May i made by M . J. A. Smith, who was re-14th. I elected president of the Fleetwood

He was the son of the late David ! Recreation Board. Miss Loos will also and Elizabeth (Keller) Noll, and was I a t t e n d t h e Instructors' Institute at the last of his family. He leaves a I Reading, June £ 8 . number of nieces and nephews. Other members of the sponsoring

He was a member of Shalter's | Board are: Quent in Mcsscrsmith, sec-Church; Flcctwooel T n b c of Red Men; I retary; Elmer Schaeffer, treasurer; Ed-Reading Lodge, Loyal Order of Moose; \ ward Rhoads, Frank Ritter, David Fleetwood Nest No. 23, Orioles; Oley I Kern and the Rev. J. Paul Kehm. Castle. Knights of the Golden Eagle; and the Fleetwood Fire Company.

The funeral will be hcld Friday at 2 p. m. at thc Stump Funcral Home, the Rev. Paul P. Haas officiating. Burial will bc madc in Shalter's Church cemeten'.

F H S A L U M N I ASSOCIATION A N N U A L S P R I N G B A N Q U E T

A T F I R E HALL T O N I G H T

Community Nurse Aids 74 in April

__. . . _ . . _,, ., Y i „ r i',ll<-> &st performance will bc held the During Apnl Mrs. B J ^ S * " " ' previous evening, which ,s open to

R.N., visiting nurse, travelled 354 the public, the "repeat" one for the miles, madc . 4 professional visits took | p a r c n t s a n d d o s c f n e n d s Q . ^ one patient to a clinic and another to a t e _ the hospital, Reading. rp. D _ _-, . ..

„ .rtTT^ r U -A i , h c R c v - A G - " o o a r m g , of the She spent 104 hours in field woA, Mennonke Brethren in Chns t Church,

24 at school; 22 in the office, and nine l w i ] 1 ^ ^ . ^ B a c c a l a u r e a t e $e

at the Baby Welfare Station, a total , S l i n d a y a t - ^ p m ^ E m m a n u c l

of 159 hours. | Evangelical Church. At the Baby Welfare Station she I

weighed 48 ' pre - school children, i S M I T H T O SPEAK A T brought by as many adults; and m i M E M O R I A L E X E R C I S E S visiting six classrooms she examined j A T F L E E T W ' D C E M E T E R Y 125 pupils, weighed 195; and also j \ j j A . Smith, supervising princi-visited 19 at their homes, and gave i p a l 0f t h e Fleetwood schools, will bc First Aid to 35. Pupils were absent; the speaker at Memorial Day exercises due to headache, poison, sore throat, | at Fleetwood cemetery, under the j pink eye and colds. j auspices of Horace M. Kieffer Post a n d several others were given honor-

T h e Nurse also distributed bedding, | No. 625, American Legion. a b l e mention, three girls' dresses, and a pair of I Music will be furnished by the j T h e Studio will be reopened next j shoes. Fleetwood School Band, Louise Boger, I September.

director. A parade from thc Fire Hall to St.

Paul's Union cemetery will precede thc program, and in thc evening an outing will bc staged on the school grounds.

George Eck, K, defeated Allison Krick, W , 3-0; Dick Fisher, W , de­feated Bob Boyer, K, lYi-Vi; Elton Weitzel , W , defeated Earl Boyer, K, 3-0; Mark Stump, K, defeated Bob Naftzingcr, W , 2-1; Adam Dries, K, defeated Bob Welder , W , 3-0. Eck i

E S T A T E A C T I O N S George W . Koller was granted let­

ters to administer the estate of his father, David W. R o l l e r / Maiden­creek Township, valued at $1,700 in personal property. The heirs are three children and two grandsons, George W. Koller, Edna Weihrer , May Her -

postcd an 82 for the best individual I r i n g , Clarence and Calvin Delp. score of the match.

M R S . H A R R Y T R U M A N H E A D S G I R L S C O U T S

Of great interest to the Kutztown Girl Scouts is thc election of Mrs.

A M O N G T H E SICK

Mrs. Jay Fairchild, wife of Capt t Fairchild, Mineral Wells , Texas, un

school faculty, will give a talk on j dcrwent an operation at the Read-1 Harry S. Truman, wife of the Presi Mexico at the June 4th meeting of the j j n g hospital. Formerly of town, the I dent of the Unitcd States, as honorary Fleetwood Woman ' s Club, under t h e , Eairchilds have been stationed in auspices of the Youth Hostel Divi-1 Texas ever since the dentist's enlist sion, Mrs. J. Paul Kehm, chairman. | ment.* Mrs. Frederick Luckenbill will head

AUSTRA D A N C E S T U D I O C L O S E D F O R S U M M E R

T h c students of the A. Dolores

I N C O L L E G E M U S I C A L E

Mary June Burr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. B u n , Seaside Heights, N . J., formeily of town, will take part

i in thc annual Georgian Cour t College Austra Dance Studio, Fleetwood, con- M . J s l c a l e , Sundav afternoon, in the eluded their dance routines yesterday, j C a s m o a u d i t o r i u m .

During thc Advanced Tap class a I J c s s i c a D r a t t e will be the fea-pnze was awarded Dolores Hammes, t u r c d s o ] 0 j s t

a private pupil, for perfect attendance _..•-_''' -. Miss Burr is a Freshman, and was

a fo rme pupil of Mrs. Ira Klick, of town.

president of the Girl Scouts of Amer­ica.

She succeeds Mrs. Franklir^ Delano Roosevelt, who has been made honor­ary vice president.

T h e post is traditionally held by the nation's First Lady.

H E R E A N D T H E R E Mrs. Andora Kemp spent Mothers '

Day with her son, Irwin Kemp, Al­lentown.

L I C E N S E D T O W E D

David Wagaman, Hamburg, and Rosa Hamm, Kempton.

T h e numbers included: organ selec­tions, Mrs. Russell Royer; recitations^ Carol Dawn Mover; piano solo, Sara Ann Agin; vocal trio, Darlene Del-linger, Margaret Rothermel and Wil­liam Hazen, accompanied by Richard Kline; musical reading, Jcan Heck­man, accompanied by Mrs. Harold Kurzweg; piano duct. Richard Kline and Ronald Noll; recitation, Jcan Yoder; and vocal trio, Mrs. B. Ells­worth S.ioddv. Dorothv Adams and

C O M I N G A T T R A C T I O N S A T F L E E T W O O D T H E A T R E

Coming attractions at the local mo­tion picture house include: May 18th: "Water loo Bridge," starring Robcrt Taylor and Vivien Leigh; May 19th: "The Mastcr Race," with Osa Masscn

and George Coulouris in thc lead, plus an Our Gang comedy ancl news; May 21st: "Sing Mc a Song of Texas" with Hal Mclntyre 's Orchestra; and "Storm Over Lisbon," "Dark Shadov s" a.id Fox News.

A L L E N T O W N B A N D O N S C H O O L G R O U N D S

E V E N I N G O F J U N E 9 T H Community organizations will com­

bine tlieir efforts in sponsoring a con­cert by thc Allentown Band, on the school grounds, on thc evening of June 9th. the proceeds to bc added to

A M O N G T H E SICK Ira Smith underwent an operation

at thc Rcading hospital.

K U T Z T O W N G O L F E R S U P S E T W I L S O N H I G H

Coach Harry Voder's Kutztown High golf team brought its season rec­ord to the dOO mark Tucsday after­noon at thc Bcrklcigh Country Club by defeating Wilson High's represen­tatives, 8V2-6V2. The Cougars drop­ped thcir opening match to Pottstown High, 8-7, on May 4. Summaries:

H E A R S E E

P E R C Y C R A W F O R D AND

HIS FAMOUS Y. P. C. A. QUARTET AMERICA'S YOUNG RADIO FREACHER

BROADCASTING WEEKLY AROUND THE WORLD 250 na t iona l a n d 10 shor t -wave s ta t ions

MAY 26—7:30 P. M. EMMANUEL EVANGELICAL CHURCH 28 W. Wash ing ton Street, Fleetwood, Penna .

MAY 26—7:30 P. M. Sponsored b y : Evange l ica l Youth Fe l lowship

Official U.S. Arm amJNaau Photo*

CHURCHTOWN Fem Kruppenbach

Reporter

l h e annual Spring banquet and ; Lillian Schadlcr, accompanied by Mrs. dance of the F H S Alumni Association [ Rover. will be held tonight at the Fire Hall, i Group singing was also enjoyed, ancl and a large attendance is expected, in- refreshments were served. eluding members of the Senior class, j and Alumni m uniform, who will bc j W e should not ask who is the most guests, learned, but who is the best learned.

T h e dinncr, to bc sened by thc ' —Montaigne.

• ••!•

I Ian cv Miller,

Gucsts of Mr. and Mrs. Wagner were: Mrv. Helen Hyde Park: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph i Strohm and children Audrey, Daisy and Joseph, Jr., West Lawn: Mr. and Mrs. Adam Fegley, Mosclcm Springs, and William Hoch. Allentown. '

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kruppenbach j entertained Mr. and Mrs. Chester Froclich and sons Chester, Jr., and David Lee, Temple.

Mr. and Mrs. Lcstcr Baer and son Carl, Pricctown. visitcd Mrs. Frank Buck.

Beau t i fu l ly D e c o r a t e d

10K GOLD BABY or CHILD'S

Rin<_

$2 75 1 tax included)

engraving of 1 initial 3 different designs

Kutztown Furniture Store

EDMUND COLLINS, JR., Prop. Next to Postoffice and Just as

Dependable 123 MAIN STREET KUTZTOWN

Dial 6161

ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW AT THE

AUDITORIUM THEATRE • FLEETWOOD ELMER SCHAEFFER, Manager

FRIDAY. MAY 18

W A T E R L O O BRIDGE with RORERT TAYLOR, VIVIEN LEIGH

Short Subject "Safe ty S leu th ," Fox News

SATURDAY, MAY 19

THE MASTER RACE with OSA MASSEN, GEORGE COULOURIS

Our G a n g Comedy "Radio Bugs ," Car toon, News < j

MONDAY. MAY 21 GAY MUSICAL

SING ME A SONG DF TEXAS with ROSEMARY LANE, TOM TYLER,

GUINN WILLIAMS. HAL McINTYRE ORCHESTRA

"Ra ide r s oi Ghost Ci ty , " Comedy "She Snoops to C o n q u e r "

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23

STORM O V E R LISBON with VERA RALSTON

"Dark S h a d o w s , " Fox News

Adm. Chester W.NiJBite Gen. Henry H. Arnold Gen. Douglas MacAi thw

These men can tell you why the 7TH WAR LOAN is the BIGGEST yet. 1

YOU ARE being asked to lend more money than ever before—in A e 7th War Loan.

These men can tell you why.

They can tell you of giant ships ready to slide down the ways this year.

They can tell you of a whole new air

force in the building—huge new bombers and fast new jet-propelled planes coming off the lines by thousands.

They could show you why it is cheaper and quicker to give our Pacific Forces en­tirely new equipment sometfines—instead of shipping tanks and guns from Europe.

They can, in short, show you 101 ways in which your dollars are needed more than ever to bring America's might to its full strength—so that we may crush our foe the faster, make an end of killing, and bring our men back home.

VOTE

SAMUEL N. MOYER for

PROTHONOTARY at the

PRIMARY ELECTION

on

TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1945

" O Y E R contends that the public office is a public trust,

that the responsibility and honor of office should be distrib­

uted among ambitious public citizens.

M O Y E R therefore feels that it is time to ELECT a NEW

Prothonotary.

Your VOTE and INFLUENCE will he greatly appreciated

Will you tell these menul can't afford to buy my share"?

THE GENERALS and admirals can show us why our money is needed—more

money than before.

But other men can show us something, too.

They're the m>en with twisted, crippled limbs...with clever iron hooks instead of hands. The blind men . . . the men with

scarred, seamed faces. And perhaps worst of all, the men with blasted, darkened minds.

They can show us, clearly, how small is any sacrifice we make in lending money.

If you have an income, whether from work, land, or capital, you have a quota in the 7th War Loan. Find out what that quota is—and make Ul

UND rout

IF YOUR AVERAGE

INCOME PER MONTH IS:

$250 225-250 210-225 200-210 180-200 140-180 100-140

Under $100

QUOTA . . . AND MAKE ITI

YOUR PERSONAL WAR BOND QUOTA IS:

(CASH VALUE)

$187.50 150.00 131.25

112.50 9375 75.00

37.50 18.75

MATURITY VALUE OP

7TH WAR LOAN BONDS BOUGHT

$250 300 175 150 125

100 50 25 M our FOR ma/my 7^mR COM

BE READY TO BUY MORE AND BIGGER BONDS WHEN THE VOLUNTEER CANVASSER CALLS AT YOUR HOME

BERKS COUNTY WAR SAVINGS STAFF

_** * m t_UU V. S. n-xm- -^-ih-mm-pr^-t _ _ * , __#,_, * ~-m-y D-Xs-m»m md WSr Ai-mU_t

SIX The Kutztown Patriot, Kutztown, Pa., Thursday, May 17, 1945

KNOW YOUB STATE apparel stores tend to be lower in com­munities which have fewer stores of that type per thousand people. This seems to indicate that for apparel peo­ple tend to travel much farther either in person or by mail to make their

Retail Trade in Pennsylvania Pennsylvania has more retail stores _

than all New England and more than I purchases than thev do to buv food, any other state but Ncw York. At thc ! and since the demand is not so con-time of the last Census Pennsylvania's j tinuous stores of that type are fewer rek"]'stores gave employment to nearly and the temptation to buv in larger 348,000 workers and paid out $339,-! cities helps to decrease local sales. 000,000 in wages. Thcy also supported j 125,532 active owners so that 473,000 i " were directly earning their livelihood by retail business. Retail trade is, there­fore, one of our most important sources of employment.

Birthday Greetings MAY 18: Mrs.

A recent analysis of sales of Pcnn- Cawthorp, Eleanor Mertz, Eva Mover, sylvania stores made by the State Plan- j l * c l e n Mover, George Ettele, Jr., Mrs. ning Board of the Department of Com- J a m c s R a u c n > Karl Frcy, Earl Scheidt, merce has brought out several interest-' C h " 1 " B u c k - Ard Miller. Ruth Hoch, ing facts in connection with retail busi- I I r c n e **aas- R u t n Fisher, Walter Arndt, ness. There is great variation in aver-j Elmer Kistlcr, Yale Delong. age sales volume per store among Penn-! MAY 19: Mrs. S. J. Seidel, May Hil-sylvania's communities. In towns of i bcrt, Virginia Beck, Carl Bieber, Lucille from five to ten thousand population | Deibert, Annabel Welder, Verna Weid

Kunkel, Mahlon Sechler, Mrs. W . W . F. Greenawald, Arthur Rauch, Mrs. Calvin Bonawitz, Mrs. Clara Gehris.

MAY 23: Mrs. Samuel Levine, Ruth Saul, Mrs. Charles Meitzler, Mrs. Vic­tor Walbert, Mrs. John Hammes, Al­bert Leiby, Jr., Gordon Konemann, Samuel Frey, Thelma Deisher, Mrs. George Stauffer, Melba Mae Geiger, Shirley Sarig, Mrs. Stanley Behm, Den­nis Mover.

MAY 24: Mrs. Kate Sittler, Madelyn Stoudt, Mrs. John Thomas, Mary Alice Behler, Mae Merkel, Paul Snyder, Mrs. H. W. Frey, Errol Schwoyer, Mrs. Loretta Stump, Ernest Angstadt, Len-

Ircnc Konemann j m e Angstadt, Mrs. Gorman Bedford, lohn Merkel, William Hoch, Harry Boyer, Thomas Lutz, Fred Reimert,

Dr. Thomas Bock

as assistant director of rural education and eventually became the Depart­ment's director of the Bureau of Field Service. For four summer sessions at

(Continued fram pate 1)

federated into the first county PTA in the State.

there are several in which the sales per I ner, Mamie Boyer, John Adams. George I _ , I n }?_?'j£ t h e ^ J ^ w ^ S ' store average less than $10,000 a vear Levan. Ivan Merkel, Gcorgc Wessner,; Thomas E. Fmegan, State Supenntend-and an equal or larger number m which Lucille Dictrich. ™t of Pennsylvania, Dr Bock entaed the sales average from $40,000 to $50,- j MAY 20: Betty Mae Acker, James! t h e D e P a r t m t n t o f P ? b l i c - I n S t r U C t l ° n

000 a year. The size of a city or town | P. Knoll, Rufus Mest, Ray Schappell, has little influence on the average sales {George Lytic, Mrs. Ralph Kays, Oran of its stores. In some very small towns j Spohn, Mrs. Samuel Hoch, Janet average sales per store are higher than ! Welder, Pearl Rauch, Harold Bailey, in the largest cities. Mrs. John Mertz, Mrs. Katie Schlegel,

The number of people per store in ! Mrs. Frank Gorski, Mae Wartzenluft, a community has a far greater effect on , & 'rs. Jacob DeLong. total sales than the size of the com-: MAY 21: Mrs. Amelia Bennicoff, munity itself In certain lines of trade, I Mrs. Cora Ycnser, Mrs. Edmund Col-11""fed to tie"discovery of three, well particularly food stores, sales arc sub- dins, Virginia Smoycr, Betty Ream,; Kril',nrl _rK nc t j l f >

stantially higher in counties or com- \ Geraldine Weber, Jeanne Luckcnbill, munities which have comparatively few j Phyllis Schlcgcl, Pearl and Prudence stores. With apparel stores, en thc j DeTurk. othcr hand, this tendency is reversed. I Among the counties of the Statc. and among its towns and cines, sales in

254 pages, on "The Evolution of the land has taken courses at Penn State Functions of the County Superintend ent of Schools in Pennsylvania."

When in 1897 State aid was pro­vided for township High schools, hc organized and developed such a school at Richboro, Bucks county, where hc

and Lebanon Valley college. In 1932 she was certificated as a public school librarian by KSTC. She is an active member of the Woman's Club; is in­terested in Church and civic affairs, and heads the Surgical Dressings depart-

visited friends in West Leesport. Mrs. Josephine Kline and son Nevin

and Charles Greenawald visited at the Greenawald home.

George Young, near Dreibelbis, was in town.

Jean Heiser, Roy Fenstermaker, Annie Romig, Max Bleiler, Jr., Mary Keim, Ernest Meck, Ray Pensinger, Jr., Hilda Mcck and the hostess, Janet Boyer.

James Schnabel and Henry Schnabel, i Jr., Mertztown, spent a day with their

was teaching an elementary school. I ment of the local Red Cross One When in 1909, State Superintendent j secret of my happy life of toil, Dr. Nathan C. Schaeffer inaugurated t h e ! B o c k *?*• * * e delightful corn-classification of Pennsylvania High panionship the unselfish devotion and schools on the basis of annual inspec- j a c t l v c helpfulness of a sympathetic and tion, Dr. Bock succeeded in having the ' ambitious life-partner. Her cheerful dis-Spnng Citv school, of which he was I position, her intelligent approach to supervising'principal, rated as a High problems and her sincerity brings us school of the first class. friends in every community m which

T- , ___—__. i we work together. She is a constant He served more than three years a___«. -* J J-, _ _ , i - i spur, a resilient supporter and a dis-as an elementary teacher, and 1? years | F „ .„_ • ,« _._, „_,j„_f 1, . . . . , 1 _ , J - - deeming mentor in all our undcrtak-

as High school teacher and principal' in Bucks and Chcstd^countics. In 1927 he was called to Sftware county as district superintendent of Haverford township schools, following which he

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Rothermel and parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schnabel. daughter Anna May and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dey and children Peggy, Larry and Carl, Kline's Corner, visited Wil­liam Greenawald.

Margaret Schlegel and Miles Wil-

Walter Dey and Helen AVeidner, Sally Ann Furnace, visited Mr. Dey's sister, Mrs. Lloyd Seheirer.

Thc following spent a day with Mr. 1A\T\A AT W and Mrs. Joseph Romig: Mr. and Mrs.

mms, Reading, and Mildred Kerchner , t ...„ _t_ZZTZ-_A A--.~u*~, Tnnmn. were guests of Sophie Greenawald.

» • - •

ings. No Future Plans

"I have no definite plans for thc immediate future," Dr. Bock says, "but

- ..,, .!_,. town. He points with pride to the fact the Umvcrs.ty of Pennsylvania he also £ depression year of 1938,

instructor in rural cdu'

came to Kutztown. In Haverford, where ' b c i n 8 i n sound health, I am hoping, he supervised the work of 143 teachers, | a f ter a period of recreation and victory Dr. Bock inaugurated a group of scien- gardening to contnbutc somewhat to-tific measures for improving the school j * * * overcoming thc manpower sh6rt-opportunities of those pupils whose 1 a6e-progress was not properly served by the I usual school experiences and facilities; and at Kutztown, in addition to his regular work he spent much time re­cruiting students especially in Allen-

LONGSWAMP-MERTZTOWN

Miss Veronica L. SchaeHer Reporter

Lewis Reinert and daughter, Topton; j Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Romig and chil-I dren, Laureldale; and Mrs. John Romig i and daughter, Fogelsville.

Henry Warmuth visited Mr. and ! Mrs. Paul Seheirer, and Paul Brausc.

Wedding Anni

served as an cation.

Educational History Dr. Bock's interest in educational his-

MAY 22: Robert J. Master, Betty Bordner, Mrs. Lcroy Rothermel, Ver­onica Schaeffer, Luther Silfies. Paul

bound sets of thc 66 volumes of thc Pennsylvania: School Journal, dating back to 1852. One of these was pur­chased at the request of Dr. Q. A. W. Rohrbach, by thc State, for the local college library; another Dr. Bock do­nated to Ursmus eollcge, and thc third is in his private library.

N. Y. U. Doctorate Graduated from KSTC, 50 years

Bock earned a Bachelor's degree at Ursinus college, a Master's degree at the Univcrsity of Pcnnsyivania, and in connection with his Doctorate at New York Universitv. hc wrote a thesis of

KSTC had a total of 98 students from I Allentown, not counting those enrolled j in Saturday and summer sessions. In former years Professor II. W. Sharadin ' and he united their efforts in recruiting I in Allcntown.

"Hard Work Gets Results" Dr. Bock's ambition has been to help

his students realize that education is the i result of self-activity and that hard \ work gets results; to inspire them to look forward to a career of leadership j in thcir chosen profession, while re

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Reppert, Mertztown R. D., called on Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Flicker.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keck, Longs-dale, visited Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Shoe­maker.

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Mcck and chil­dren visited Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Meck, Lower Longswamp.

Mr. and Mrs. George Rabenold, Al­lcntown, visitcd Mr. and Mrs. John Fritsch, Jr.

Mrs. Waltcr Drv called on her

ALUMNI DAY ACTIVITIES AT MILLERSVILLE CANCELLED

Commencement activities at Millers-villc State Teachers college have been drastically curtailed to comply with travel restricting regulations from the Office of Defense Transportation.

All Alumni Day activities have been cancelled with the exception of the reunion of the 50th anniversary class. The Seniors have voluntarily agreed to

1 limit gucsts from outside thc local area, i to a minimum.

Baccalaureate services will be hcld i May 27th at 10:30 a. m. and Com-! mencement, Monday, May 28th, at 10

CHILDREN'S CORNER

BY the Birthday Lady

numbering that leadership is thc nat-1 Gcorgc Christman, Jacob Rahn, Hilda ural outcome of intelligent effort to i Wagenhorst, Mr. and Mrs. Luther

(Coatiaaed fram page 1)

hobby is hcr garden and she takes just pi ide in her peonies, now beginning to bloom.

Ritzman Guests Those present at the celebration at | father, Marcus Warmkessel

thc Ritzman residence wcrc: Mr. and ! Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wagner visited j Mrs. Charlcs Fegley, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wagner, Ham-Horace Schmehl, Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus' burg. Rahn, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Ritzman, | Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bauer and son Jr., and daughter Marlcne, Mr. and j called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Fred Rahn, Mi .and Mrs How- James Bauer, Macungie. I D c c l a n n g t h a t « i t i s scrvice such as ard Lcshcr, Mr and Mrs. John Kemp, I Pearl Shoemaker visited Mr. and , t h c y h a v c r c n d e r c d t h a t h a s m a d e H

Mrs. George Bast Mr. and Mrs. j Mrs Benjamin Balthaser Hamburg, j f_A a n d C o m i n s t i t u t i o n » 1 0 7 em-Douglas Rothermel, Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Sam. Heffner Lyons, j ^ _ t o t a , o f 2,305 years of Elmer Berg, Mary Louise. Dona d and | spent an evening with Mr. and Mrs. , ^ r v i c c w i t h „ L e h a n d C o w e r e

Stanley Berg, Mrs. Harvey Schlenker,, Guy Schaeffer.

Honor 107 Employes Of H. Leh and Co.

• I - •

ago, when it was a Normal school. Dr. j k c c p abreast of developments in one's I Bloch, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Seltzer and

HESS First Assistant District Attorney Former Member Stati Legislature "EQUAL and EXACT

JUSTICE TO ALL"

Primaries—Tuesday, June 19. 1945

Political Adv.

PUBLIC SALE 15th Southeastern Pa. Consignment Sale

50 HOLSTEIN CATTLE (40 Registered—10 Grades)

T.B. Accredited. Bang Certified. Mastitis Tested

SATURDAY, MAY 19 at 12:30 P. M.

AT THE

HAROLD R. ZIEGLER FARM Located 10 m i l e s w e s t of A l l e n t o w n on R o u t e 222, one -ha l f m i l e

w e s t of BREINIGSVILLE, Pa., o n the R e a d i n g h i g h w a y . S a l e in a comfor t -

s a l e p a v i l i o n .

You c a n b u y a t t h i s s a l e 17 h e a d , a l l re lated a n d fresh o r s o o n due , direct from Q u e b e c , C a n a d a . A m o n g them are t w o c o w s w i t h 600 l b . a n d 657 l b . of fat, b o t h t e s t i n g 3 . 6 % a n d e a c h m i l k i n g over 17,700 l b s . o n 2

t i m e t h e h ighes t record p a i r e v e r so ld in t h i s s e r i e s . M a n y others w i t h

g o o d records.

A se l ec t offering of:

Early fall f reshening heifers

S o m e r e a d y for serv ice b u l l s

a n d s e v e r a l c h o i c e c a l v e s of bo th s e x

Fresh c o w s

C l o s e Spr ingers

You c a n b u y w i t h conf idence at this s a l e b e c a u s e a l l a n i m a l s are s o l d to b e e x a c t l y a s represented a n d y o u w i l l p a y r e a s o n a b l e pr ices a n d o b t a i n m a x i m u m producers that wi l l qu ick ly return y o u a s p l end i d profit.

N o w i s t h e t ime to b u y . Trucks a r r a n g e d for.

R. AUSTIN BACKUS, Sales Manager & Auctioneer, MEXICO, N. T.

HABOLD B. ZIEGLER. Local Bepresentative, Breinigsville, Pa-

field, and solving one's daily tasks as I daughter Laurena Justine, Mr. and thcy arise; to live a life of helpfulness j Mrs. Jack Rickards, Mr. and Mrs. and to have chief regard for the satis- i Walter Kroninger and children Clara-faction that comes from a feeling that I belle, Mario and Marcia, Kutztown. hc has done his best for those to whom i M r a n d M r s R o b c r t S c i d c l a n d

he is obligated. j M r a n d M r s F r c d S c i d c l > Hamburg;

GREENAWALT George Miller

Reporter

+

Community-Minded Community-minded, Dr. Bock has

always taken keen interest in the wel­fare of Kutztown; is a past-president of Rotary; and has served on the Council of Trinity Lutheran Church.

An enthusiastic gardener, he spends profitable hours in his garden.

His hobby is collecting antique china, particularly Gaudy Dutch.

His wife, the tormer Cora Loomis, Spring City, also claims KSTC as her Alma Mater; holds a Bachelor's degree from the University of Pennsylvania,

| Mrs. James Grccnawalt and children ' Darlene and James, near Wanamak-j cr's; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Funk and | Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gasscrt, Allen­town; Harry Heck, Kutztown R. D.;

! Mrs. Lizzie Fegley, Fleetwood R. D.; j Mrs. Harvey Seidel, Mrs. Lcc Bowers, j Mrs. Elizabeth Mertz and daughters Corinnc and Lena, Mertztown R. D.;

: Mrs. Bert Schmoyer and daughter Jean, I Wanamakcr's. j Also the host and hostess and chil-j dren Betty and Terry Lee.

ATHLETES FOOT GERM KILL IT FOR 35c

The funeral of Mrs. Anson Stump, Klinesville, was largely attended.

Frank Wagaman is having his bunga­low painted.

Edward Kcrchner and William Requires a PENETRATING mobile liquid,

such as ful l streength alcohol. Powders, salves and mild solutions do not penetrate sufficiently. Te-oi is the only solution, we j Greenawald assisted Harold Herring in know of made w i th 9 0 % alcohol. Feel it - , PENETRATE. REACHES MORE GERMS. ! sawing firewood. Many druggists are now supplied. Small < \\T a n d Mrs. William Greenawald, shipment just received at , , ... , . , , , , T _ ___ , BflrnirPI I Lenhartsville, and Mr. and Mrs. James

KUTZTOWN. PA. i Schaeffer and son Barry, Stony Creek,

STRAND KUTZTOWN

Fri. & Sot.. May 18-19

LON MacALLISTER JEANNE CRA1N in

WINGED VICTORY Feature begins promptly at 7 & 9:15

Mon. & Tues., May 21-22

RAT MILLAND

BARBARA BR1TTON in

Till We Meet Again Wed. & Thurs., May 23-24

IRENE DUNNE

CHARLES BOYER in

TOGETHER AGAIN

ORDER N O W Orde r your fruit trcet*. shade or o r n a m e n t a l t rees, ever­greens and s h rubbe ry now for fall de l ivery! The slogan of " T h e Ear ly B i rd Catches the W o r m , " also appl ies to t h e person who places his o rde r ear ly in the season, will also receive the t rees and shrub­bery h e o rders . T h e person who waits wil l get w h a t is left over, and in some cases wiD. not get the best var ie t ies he wishes to have .

RAYMOND H. RAHN

85 S. Whiteoak St., Kutztown, Pa. Phone 4056

Local representative for the Stark

Bros. Nurseries & Orchard Co.

Help WANTED MEN AND WOMEN Machine

Operators; Spark Plug Dept.; General Labor; Shipping Dept.; Formation Dept. Steady Work . . . Pleasant Conditions.

APPLY WEEKDAYS. 8:30 A. M. to 5:00 P. M. AT PLANT . . . . located to left oi Kutztown Road belore entering underpass leading to Reading.

Bowers Battery and Spark Plug Co. W.M.C. Regulations Observed

YUM, YUM! " G e e , b u t t h i s food looks g o o d . — W o n d e r h o w

it t a s t e s . Oh! i t ' s d e l i c i o u s . " T h a t ' s w h a t y o u

wi l l s a y , o n c e y o u ' v e ta s ted one of our m e a l s .

TRY US TODAY!

We Specialize in

SEAFOOD and STEAK DINNERS

PHONE 6778

WILTROUT'S R E S T A U R A N T BEER WINE LIQUOR

1 Vi miles west oi rutttown—222 & Crystal Car* Rood

Thc bungalows along the Maidcn­creek wcre occupied over the week-end.

Lillian Rauenzahn, Fleetwood, vis­itcd local friends.

Pvt. Daniel Reinert, Mertztown, call­ed on Russell Hoffmastcr.

Ceorge W. Miller visited Samuel Nester, Jacksonville, and Kenneth Kun­kcl, Lenhartsville.

Frcd Bowers, West Chester, called on local friends.

Mrs. Maude Hepler and children Jesse and Mary, Rcading, spent the week-end at thcir bungalow, here.

Kenneth Kunkcl and Earl Lorah were in Rcading.

Mr. and Mrs. William Kamp visited Howard Ncstcr.

Mrs. Sarah Wolff, Mohnton, spent

service honored this week in conjunction with observance of thc 95th anniversary of the central city department store.

In a full page advertisement that ap­peared in our paper, the firm said:

"Because of thcir year after year loyalty wc pay tribute to a great store family. H. Leh and Co. grew to domi­nance in this community because of thc loyal and enterprising scrvice of its em­ployes. Wc salute them. We mean all of our hundreds of co-workers of H. Leh and Co. Space prevents us from publishing thc names and pictures of those who have been serving here for less than 10 years. It is service such as thcy have rendered that has made H. Leh and Co. more than a store—an institution—now celebrating its 95th an­niversary."

Among the 107 workers whose names and photographs appeared in the ad­vertisement, along with their service records, were:

Annie Hcld, 60 years; Mabel Roth-rock, 45 years; Waltcr Richardson, 41 vears; C. Reinhard, 40 years, and Lil-

You haven't forgotten the Children's Ward at the Reading Hospital, for you've given your Birthday Lady a num­ber of surprises for the sick boys and girls.

Gloretta Fishcr brought paper doHj in large envelopes,—the largest doll is Shirley Temple, made of wood, who stands alone, and is the delight of Anna Mae Seese, who's been in the hospital the longest. And there are enough paper dolls to least for two more weeks.

Esther Sweigart gave me story books and the children like the pussies, bun­nies and puppies best, and wonder how the little anirpals managed to be still long enough to have their pictures taken.

And guess what happens sometimes, When ^Dr. Kotzen comes into the ward? Before he examines the children he tosses chewing gum or lollipops to them, and what fun they have catching them! And last Saturday one of the nurses passed around pretzels.

So if any of you would like to give me lollipop, pretzel or chewing gum surprises I'll gladly take them to the sick boys and girls, and I'll promise on my Girl Scout honor not to "snitch" even the salt on a pretzel!

So here's to all my Birthday Club members who like to plan surprises for children whose arms or legs are broken; who are burned; who have rheumatic fever, or a weak heart; or who have their tonsils or their appendix taken out.

Next week I'll tell you how they help me to run the Movies.

Seven of us had a birthday this week and I hope you'll have many more.

Kutztown Janice Hoch, 144 Normal mc, 10,

May 11. Edwin Adams, Walnut St., 10, May

15. Eleanor Bieber, 222 Noble, 9,

Mav 15. Elaine Bailey, 409 Main, 9, May 16.

Kempton Lester Kutz, R. D., 10, May 12.

Topton Ethel Schofer, 104 Haas St., °,

Mav 13. Donald Lesher, 215 Haas St., 9,

Mav 15.

thc week-end with her daughter, Mrs. i l i a n Snyder, 40 years Harold Hoffmastcr.

LOWER LONGSWAMP Loo A. Reinert

Reporter

Eleven more were shown with serv­ice of 30 years or more and there are 36 who have been employed by the company for 20 years or more.

• + A surprise party was hcld at thc j

home of Janet Boyer, Longsdale. in ! honor of Hilda Mcck. Thc following, wcrc present: Rachel Schocdlcr, Carl I Shoemaker, Anna Schlcgcl, Richard Merkel, Betty Miller, Stanley Bau- j man, Jr., Joyce Wihver, Lce Fegely, j

The hardest way of learning is that i of easy reading; but a great book that I comes from a great thinker is a ship | of thought, deep freighted with truth I and beaiity.—Theodore Parker.

Thc reason we constantly discover ncw truth in Shakespeare is that his complete understanding of the particu­lar includes the universal.

—Austin O'Malley.

i• • • START CHICKS * / * « ' For quick growth, high livability, depend on America's favorite chick starter. Two pounds per chick is all you need.

Call for PURINA STARTENA

Purina Bulk Purmo GARDEN SEED VEGETABLE Economical way to buy seed for home planting. Garden tested for germination. All fresh stock.

SEED Choice varieties of most garden vegetables. High germination.

Packet 10c

0 SpecfaI Feed For SOW and PIGS!

Built to supplement gra in for big litters, h e a v y p ig s . St imulates^ milk f l o w — g i v e s pigs ear ly start. Try Purina SOW & PIG CHOW

C PreparM Cows foi

HEAVY MILKING Special-built feed for dry cow and after freshening. Gives 'em a head start. D& F COW CHOW

Get keady for SPRING PIGS Clean and disinfect farrowing houses, wash sow's sides and udder. Use Purina CBE-SO-FEC.

KHS Exhibit tComtimued frmm Page I )

make the bedside table or book nek you've been wanting for eons. You may also' discover at thc Fashion Show, 9:00 to 9:30 p. m., the very person to convert a feed bag into a house-dress.

Of course you'll want to go to thc "Science Fair;" to the Spanish exhibit, and the showing of German regalia captured in World War II; mathe­matical instruments, history units, guid­ance notebooks, and English notebooks and daily recitation papers will also be of interest; and the agricultural ex­hibits, too large for class-room showing, will be found in the driveway.

Grade School exhibits will include workbooks, art, handwriting, and book reports; Egyptian and Colonial figures; a pre - historic diorama; arithmetic graphs, health posters, not to mention slides on "The King of the Golden River," made by the children.

The Health Room exhibit will also be well worth lingering in. and from 9:40 to 10 p. m., an exhibit of gym­nastics will be presented.

Throughout the evening the Grades and the High school will offer music: 7:00-7:30, KHS B a n d ; 7:30-8:00, choruses; 8:05-8:15, Fourth Grade Toncttes; 8:20-8:50, Junior Orchestra; and 10:10 to 10:30 p. m . High School Orchestra.

Water Tablet Only poultry water tablet with 3-way action. Germ killer, bowel astringent, fun­gicide. Economical.

CHEK-R-TABS

Raise 'em on Catf

STARTENA One bag replaces 40 gallons milk. Helps grow big, rigorous calves. ,

PALACE THEATRE TOPTON

Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.. May 17-18-19

_xm **£

«^j_B9&»ars MAN' cutfll Soiiito mSae • «o«e* «j»« M l CHAIl CTjg

\jmmi

M.nn..T_i_»»-Wed.. May 21-22-23

"Romantic •* a

t h e d a r b

kiss i n

,o.iu tcntmue fhturoX'Covert II

'HlENCHMA^I CREEK:

Thurs..Fri.-S<rt.. May 24-25-21

HOTEL BERLIN

Mar May May

May

M«T

May 31 !•»• lane fane 13 fane 14

w

Ri Patriot alar .

Come

Kul

6 Yonr «_:_..• whole Sai DUST

PE1

22S Chi

1

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2 B

123 MAIN

2

REN'S NER

lay Lady

stten the Children'* iding Hospital, for

birthday Lady a num-thc sick boys and

brought paper dolls I,—the largest doll it lade of wood, who the delight of Anna

, been in the hospital jiere are enough paper |two more weeks. J gave me story books pke thc pussies, bun-»est, and wonder how managed to be still havc thcir pictures

happens sometimes, en comes into dfhe xamines the children gum or lollipops to

an thcy have catching (Saturday one of the (ind pretzels. ^u would like to give rzcl or chewing gum Uy take them to the I, and I'll promise on onor not to "snitch"

pretzel! my Birthday Club

to plan surprises for is or legs are broken; who have rheumatic heart; or who have

their appendix taken

tell you how they Ithc Movies.

a birthday this week havc many more.

town 144 Normal awe., 10,

Walnut St., 10, May

222 Noble, 9,

|09 Main, 9, May 16. ipton

t. D. , 10, May 12. fopton

104 Haas St., 9,

215 Haas St., 9,

Exhibit fram Page D

> table or book rack ing for eons. You may

the Fashion Show, _., the very person to ag into a house-dress.

fl] want to go to the the Spanish exhibit, of German regalia

told War II; mathe-hts, history units, gui<J-bid English notebooks Dn papers will also be

the agricultural ex-0r class-room showing,

Ithc driveway. exhibits will include andwriting, and book and Colonial figures; diorama; arithmetic

_sters, not to mention iKing of the Golden [the children, loom exhibit will also tigering in, and from E an exhibit of gym-Csentcd.

Jte evening the Grades fchool will" offer music:

B a n d ; 7:30-8:00, l l 5 , Fourth Grade

i 5 0 , Junior Orchestra; |30 p. m., High School

ACE TOPTON

. May 17-18-19

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.JEAN spurt»;£*?*"*!£

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The Kutztown Patriot, Kutztown, Pa., Thursday, May 17, 1945 SEVEN

The Kutxtown Calendar T«niaht—25th Anniversary Banquet—Grange—Legion Hall in-VlS At 7:30 P- **• M-other-Danghter Meeting—Auspices GMG

St. Paul's Reformed Mav 18—Final KHS Senior Dance May 19—Opening Kutztown Park Mav 24—-Grange May 24—KHS Exhibit; May 27—Baccalaureate; May 29—Com-

Mcw™*--Public Card Party—Keystone Hotel—Auspices Legion Auxiliary

Mav 25—Lions Club J£_y 2G KSTC Commencement and Alumni Day—Baccalaureate,

May 20 _, 28 St. Joseph's Hospital Auxiliary—Mrs. Harold Greenawalt ,

Hostess Mav 28—Cab Pack jYj ' 3Q At 7:45 p. M. Memorial Day Services—Hope Cemetery « a y 3i Woman's Club—"Latin America," David Kern , n n e 4 Service Mothers; June 9—Public Card Party—Legion Hall June S-22—Da-ly Vacation Bible School lane 13—Kutztown Kamera Klub i a n e ]4 Beading Hospital Auxiliary—Mrs. Harry Kline. Hostess

1945 1945

Clip This Handy Calendar Page And Hang

Up For Reference In May

Rationing information MEATS. FATS. ETC.—Book Fonr red stamps TS and ZS and A2 through D2 good through fane 2. Stamps E2 through 12 good through June 30; K2 through P2 good through July 31; Ql through U2 good through August 31.

PBOCESSED FOODS—Book Four blue stamps H2 through M2 good through June 2. Stamps N2 through S2 good through June 30; T2 through X2 good through July 31; T2 and Z2 and AI through Cl good through August 31.

SUGAB—Book Four stamp 35 good through June 2 ior five pounds. Stamp 36 good through August 31 for five pounds. Next stamp valid September 1.

SHOES—Book Three airplane stamps 1, 2 and 3 good Indefi­nitely. OPA says no plans to cancel any. Next stamp val id Au­gust 1.

GASOLINE—15-A coupons good ior iour gal lons through June 21. B-6, C-6, B-7 and C-7 coupons good ior five gal lons .

FUEL OIL—Period One through Five coupons good through Au­gust 31. Last ye<ar's Period Four and Five coupons a lso expire August 31.

SUN M O N TUES Buy More

WAR B O N D S in the 7th ,

Buy More WAR B O N D S

in the 7th

Reasons Why Patriot Want A<ls Are So Pop­ular . . • THEY'RE DIVERSIFIED . . . THEY'RE INEXPENSIVE . . . THEY'RE FAST-ACTING . . . THEY'RE CERTAIN . . .

Come in . . . or Write

The Kutztown Patriot

WED THURS FRI SAT

Let's fight the enemy—NOT each other L e t ' s b e p a t i e n t

— b e c o n s i d e r a t e

i— k e e p s m i l i n g a n d

CARRY ON — w e ' v e g o t a w a r t o w i n

Roland S. R h o d e INSURANCE

Phones: 3171 - S706 RHODE BUILDING KUTZTOWN. PA.

6

F I R E . . . i s a c o m m o n e n e m y t o u s a l l a n d i t ' s

o n e w e h a v e n ' t b e e n a b l e t o " l i c k " y e t

. . . O u r b e s t b e t . . . I N S U R E A N D

BE S U R E !

F A R M S B O U G H T A N D S O L D

P h o n e 4 1 7 1

SAMUEL D. BUTZ 253 West Main Street

Insurance Agency Kutztown. Pa.

With So Much on Your Mind—Welcome the Light Heodedness of

Our

New STRAW HATS $1.00; $1.50; $2.25; $3.00; $3.50; $7.50

Wallets $2.50 to $3.50 Ties 65c—75c—$1.00 and $1.50 Slack Suits and Slack Pants. Sports Shirts $1*95 to $3.95

Phone

6811

274 Main Street

H E R M A N S * -GEOBGE M. WELDEB ( I U

Katztown. Pa.

Avoid Summer Sorrows

DEPEND ON US FOR

STORAGE & CLEANING Your entire Winter wardrobe can be thoroughly cleaned now and placed in «tor»fj_ daring the whole Summer. All garments insured against loss by FIRE. THEFT. DAMAGE by MOTHS, DUST and DAMPNESS. No charge until delivery next FalL

Dial 3071

SAMUEL L. KELCHNER Successor to

PETER B. BLATT—DISTINCTIVE DRY CLEANING Same Company—Same Trips—Same Prices

225 Church Lane Kutztown, Penna.

STARTENA ^ When you buy PURINA STARTENA you

get America's Largest Selling CHICK STARTER and everything i t stands for in Growth and High Livability. Give your chicks a chance—USE PURINA START­ENA.

PURINA CHEK-R-TABS. super-efficient poultry drinking water tablets; PURINA CRE-SO-FEC for disinfecting the brooder. OTHER CHICK SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT.

DIAL 5251

HAUCK FEED a SUPPLY 15 PINE STBEET KUTZTOWN. PA.

James G. Sittler Buyer of

Hay and Straw

K u t z t o w n . R. 1

P h o n e 4 7 9 3

CHANGEOVER SERVICES PROTECT THE LIFELINE OF YOUR CAR

Want to be sure your car lasts for the duration? The answer to tha.

question is in your hands, for you are the guardian of your car's lifeline.

Don't take chances by driving your winter-worn car into Spring without

proper servicing. Insure a ldnger'lifeline'for your car by getting complete

changeover service now! I

d

Dial 4286

DE TURKS SERVICE STATION 31 NOBLE STBEET KUTZTOWN. PA.

13 |14 FOR RAPID, STURDY GROWTH, FEED YOUR CHICKS . .

BECK'S Chick Starter Poultrymen who have tried BECK'S CHICK STARTER and BECK'S CROWING MASH tell us they like our feeds because they help chicks grow fast, build sturdy bodies and develop into profitable layers or broilers wi th minimum feseding costs. Make a 60-day feeed-ing test ar<_ see the actual results of balanced feeding.

BECK'S FEED a GRAIN SERVICE RAILBOAD & PEACH STS. DIAL S2S1 EUTZTOWN. PA.

CLOVER VALLEY FEED MILL 154 W. MAIN ST. DIAL 3SS1 FLEETWOOD. PA.

F A R M EQUIPMENT

S E R V I C E Dial 6281

REUBEN D. LEIBENSPERGER South Maple St. Katztown

BE S A F E , N O T S O R R Y ! O u r m e c h a n i c s w i l l s a v e y o u t i m e a n d m o n e y . T h e y ' l l

p r o l o n g t h e l i f e of y o u r c a r a n d s a v e y o u f r o m s e r i o u s

a c c i d e n t s a n d c o s t l y d e l a y s .

E x p e r t s e r v i c e o n a l l m a k e s of c a r s a n d t r u c k s .

P h o n o 5 1 0 1

KUTZTOWN AUTOMOBILE CO. 1 1 0 M a i n S L K a t z t o w n . P a .

20 21 22 23 24 25 26 PRE-WAR

BABY CARRIAGES $19.95

AND

$21 95

* ALL-METAL PARTS and LEATHER TOPS

* BLACK * FULLY COLLAPSIBLE * QUILTED

* RUBBER TIRES * CHROME HANDLES

* Can be folded and carried in car

Kutztown Furniture Store IDMUND COLLINS. Jr.. trap.

NEXT TO POSTOFFICI AND JUST AS DEPENDABLE

123 MAIN STREET Dial 6161 KUTZTOWN

LUMBER

BUILDERS SUPPLIES HOOFING—MILLWORK

READY-MIXED CONCRETE

FEED—COAL

W. THEO. MILLER E SON KUTZTOWN Phone 3381

VIRGINVILLE Phone Hamburg 9403

THE BEST TO BE HAD ANYWHERE

KUTZTOWN BIRCH BEER Soft Drinks

Popular Brands of BEER.

ALE and PORTER

IN KEGS AND BOTTLES

Dial 6231

KUTZTOWN BOTTLING WORKS 78-80 WHITEOAK ST.. KUTZTOWN

27 28 29 30 J. J. SCHOFER a SON

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

QUALITY FURNITURE

Phone Topton 30

TOPTON. PA Store Open Every Evening UntO S

We Still Hare A

GOOD SELECTION

of

Quality

Used Cars

LEESER MOTOR CAR CO.

ALBURTIS

TOPTON BOWERS

31 Buy More

WAR B O N D S in the 7th

Buy More WAR B O N D S

in the 7th

Phone 5121

T R U C K I N G All Types ol Tracks—DUMP, STRAIGHT. TRAILER

E X C A V A T I N G

C A R L R . B I E B E R KUTZTOWN. PENNA.

J. I. GRIMLEY

BUILDER KUTZTOWN. Pa.

DIAL 4241

^HHB

Let us give you a PERSONALITY PERMANENT

W e l l style yonr hair in a flattering coiffure that will be easy to keep and very becoming. No split or dry ends, no straggling curls. You'll be more than pleased.

All branches of Beauty Culture—MACHINE, MACHINELESS and COLD PERMANENT WAV­ING.

WE USE PERMUTIT WATER EXCLUSIVELY

Phone 5221 CLOSED MONDAY MORNINGS. WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS

PEGGY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE 214 W. Main SL KntrtowB. Pa.

R I G H T The Kutztown Patriot, Kutztown, Pa., Thursday, May 17, 1945

LECAL NOTICES

M E N W A N T E D for at«Mdy w o r k n o w a n d w h e n t h e w a r la o v e r . T h i s U an eaaent ia l X » . e x c e l l e n t w o r k i n g c o n d i t i o n s , good p a y . D o n ' t w a i t . A p p l y a t o n c e . W r i t e P a t r i o t B o x N o . <S8, K u t x t o w n , P a .

8 e p t l 4 - t _

E a a e n t i a l I n d u i t r y N e e d , Y o u

M E N — W O K E N

N o E x p e r i e n c e Nec«. sgary

S t e a d y W o r k N o w and A f t . r t h e W a r

T r a n s p o r t a t i o n A r r a n g e d

P E I C E B A T T E B Y C O R P O R A T I O N

H a m b u r g , P e n n a .

2 C O O K S A N ! ) 2 K I T C H E N H K I . P E H s for c a m p in t h e POeeeoa. Apielv J a r r e t t I.. N i c k s , 18 N . W h i t e o a k S t . , K u t z t o w n .

U a y l 7 - 2 t *

s c r e e n i n g m a c h i n e r y . I'S__S KU!<-K Obocnred. T i m e a n d o n e - h a l f o v e r 4it heiurs. Key­s t o n e Quarry <e.. . Haieiv S t . . K u t s t o w n , P a . M a y l 7 - 2 t »

C A R P E N T E R S W A N T E D for e w e a t t a l work. A p p l y J . K. G r i m l e y , K u t z t o w n . T e l e p h o n e 4 2 4 1 . M a y l " - 4 t

GIRL, for p e r m a n e n t pos i t i on a< a s s t . book­k e e p e r ami s t e a a g r a p b e c in F l e e t w o o d . P o s t w a r pOHlttou a s s u r e d in rap id ly expanel-Infe cone-ern. B s p e r i e n e e pre ferred , leut b u s i n e s s _vho.il sraduate- m.iy apl . ly . If a t p r e s e n t in b u s i n e s s school , a r r a n g e m e n t s cou ld 1H> mail.- fe.r • p a r t - t i m e work unt i l g r a d u a t i o n . Write- t o I V r k s L e h i g h Co-op. F r u i t . . r o w e r s , toe., 130 I. m i s t S t . , Kleet-WOIKI. I'a. M. iv lT-t f

MISCELLANEOUS A U C T I O N E E R

S e e H o w a r d H e i n l y . 12? P o p l a r S t r e e t , F l e e t w o o d , P a . A u c t i o n e e r i n g aa lea for t b e l e a d i n g a u c t i o n h o u s e of R e a d i n g . J n n e l - t f

A D l - I N I S T R A T R r X ' 8 B A L E In e s t a t e o f R U S S E L L D . S T E I N , l a t e of .'

t h e B o r o u g h of K u t z t o w n , P a . , d e c e a s e d . | t . N o t i c e i s h e r e b y g i v e n , t h a t l e t t e r s o f a ,

a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on t h e e s t a t e o f t h e above j . ' n a m e d d e c e d e n t h a v e been g r a n t e d to t h e i ,,'j u n d e r s i g n e d . ! '

All persons i n d e b t e d t o t h e e s t a t e of t h e I sa id def-edent a r e reques ted t o m a k e p a y m e n t . _ , and a l l persons h a v i n g c l a i m s or d e m a n d s a g a i n s t t h e e s t a t e o f t h e sa id d e c e d e n t , are n e p i e s t e d to m a k e k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t d e l a y , t o t h e u n d e r s i c n e d a d m i n i s t r a t r i x .

EOO-MS S. S T E I N . 203 W e s t Main S t r e e t ,

K u t s t o w n . P a . A d m i n i s t r a t r i x .

ALLAN' K. G R I M , S T E V E N S A L E E , A t t o r n e y s , 18 S. nth S t r e e t . R e a d i n g , I'a. LI -Apr l9 - f i t

E X E C U T O R S ' N O T I C E ! In e s t a t e of H A R R Y H. S C H I T T L E R . ; a l s o k n o w n a s H A R R Y H. S C H I T L E R , l a t e ' of R u s c o m b m a n o r T o w n s h i p . B e r k s County , j P e n n s y l v a n i a , dee-eased.

N o t i c e is hereby g i v e n , t h a t l e t t e r s t e s t a -| m e n t a r y on the e s t a t e of the above namod , d e c e d e n t have been g r a n t e d to the under-

s i g n e d . I A l l persons i n d e b t e d to t h e e s t a t e o f t h e j sa id d e c e d e n t are r e q u e s t e d to m a k e p a y m e n t . , a n d a l l persons h a v i n g c l a i m s or d e m a n d s ; against , the e s t a t e of the sa id d e c e d e n t , are j reque-sted to make- k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t j d e l a y , t o t h e u n d e r s i g n e d e x e c u t o r s .

H A R R Y M. S C H I T T L E R , 1<>12 E l i zabe th A v e . . I^aureldale, P a . H O W A R D S C H I T T L E R , F l e e t w o o d , R. F . I). No . 1, P a .

Bxeeuteirs . i A N N A D I C K I N S O N , i A t t o r n e y ,

31 lt.-ed S t . . R e a d i n g , P a . L_-Apr26-6t

of l a w f u l and h e a l t h f u l recrea t ion . T h e busi­ness of the CeirrHH-ation is t o be t r a n s a c t e d in Penn TownAiiip. Berks County . P e n n a . ' ' t.e . .mended and alte-red so a s to r e a d : —

• • A R T I C L E II. Saiel Corporat ion is t o m e d for t h e pur­

ines, af tiie niainteii-ini v e.f an oui'lexir .-lute for s.H.ial e n j o y m e n t , t h a t is for t h e pnrpone of b a y i n g , l e a s i n g aad furn i sh ing and equip-]ei::i_. an.l properly roadtacttog a bui lding anei greeunds or p laee where the m e m b e r s may meet fi,. the- promotion .>f •oc ia l Intercourse the'niselves, a u d ti njn.win-nt of l a w f u l them s i e v e s , an.l the- e n j o y m e n t of l a w f u l and hea l th fu l recrea t ion; and to raise a fun.l f..r the- p a y m e n t of d e a t h t>encfit.s to a c l a s s ..f m e m b e r s :.. !*•• d e s i g n a t e d by the , B y - L a w s

Benefic ial Members , saiel p a y m e n t s te. !»• le to the. he-ir e.r iieirs of d e c e a s e d , mi-

BBrried Benefiriql Members , tee tbe wiele.w a m i . o r heirs e.f deceased married Benefic ial Members , e.r te. the beneficiary or benef ic iaries to .1 s i g n a t e d by the d e c e a s e d Benef ic ia l Membeer. In p r i t i n g . w h o have compl ied w i t h the Rules , R e g u l a t i o n s anel B y - L a w s e.f the A s s o c i a t i o n , te. ass is t in d e f r a y i n g the- funer­al e x p e n s e s of sa id d e c e a s e d Beneficial M< ta * rs and to be In such an amount a s is tix-.l by t ie' My L a w s of the A s s o c i a t i o n . "

4. That" A r t i c l e s of A m e n d m e n t h a v e been filed in the otli.-e e.f Hie Prothonotary of B-rks County , P e n n s y l v a n i a , to the above t.-rm ami num!>or. ami the- app l i ca t ion wi l l be presented t o , s a i d Court on Hie 4 th nay eef June . A .D . 1!M.~.. at 10:00 o'c lock, A. M., Eastern War T i m e

M A T T K N A N D M A T T E N . 536 Court S t r e e t ,

R e a d inn, P e n n s y l v a n i a . I.I \ l a y I 7 - l t A t t o r n e y s .

AUDITING NOTICES

ORPHANS' COURT

230 Pupils (Continued from page five)

To ail legatees, creditors and other per- j c ^ ^ D e a n e Grace Ri t ter , Gladys s o n s i n t e r e s t e d . I J l ' ' _ _ _ _ « • j •_**__ r-e. r*

Notice ie hereby given that the following j Die ter ; 4 4 0 \ ard Relay: D e a n e Grace accounts respectively have been filed in the t) ,)-t r r FaVB S t o u d t , Marv H u m m e l titti .e of the R e g i s t e r of W i l l s in and f o r i 1 V U , ' , c . r „ , , . u „ . said county and that the same will be pre- \ and B e u l a h Strausser, hrst; H e l e n sented to tbe Orphans' Court fe.r confirm..- ; i i-flf-..,--. Fc thrr Anderson Marearet tion and distribution of the balances shown , i -Ottman, t S t n e r _Anutr_U.l, -Vidlgdic. therein to the creditors, legatees, next of ; Mc.SCfSmith and Juaillta P n c e , Second; kin. heirs and o t h e r s l e g a l l y e n t i t l e d t h e r e t o . ' * \_r„„-_a- \ t . . r _ - I r » 4 w _ o I n n « . ,.n T.esdav the 5th day e.f June, A.D. 194.",. A n n a \ \ anncr , Mary LUC-V. Ig, LOUlSC at 10 o'clock in the forenoon. Eastern War; S ] t p p y N i n a H a z e n , third. T i m e Audit anel d i s t r ibut ion at t h a t t i m e in ! u rr- '

G R O U P II: Grades 9 and 10: Boys: 100 Yard Dash: W a n e n

Miller. Richard Rothermel, Ralph Rauenzahn; Half Mile Run Lee

barracks of the State police for protec- prising Mr. and Mrs. Howard Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Merkel, Mae Wartzenluft , Russell Bieber, Myrle Schaeffer and Harry Schaeffer, sang three numbers; and Howard Baldwin rendered two instrumental solos. Al­liene DeChan t played the accompani­ments.

Reminiscences Opportunity was given the Gucst

Wor thv Masters for brief remarks, and

tion which was furnished and similarly Allcntown police sent two cruiser cars out to the High School. T h e arrange­ment continued yesterday.

A similar situation developed in this community with threats voiced about thc use of buses to haul children from Lyons and Maxatawny to .and from

i Kutztown. Six officers from the Read-j ing barracks of the Statc police have j been assigned to furnish protection to j thc school buses in use here.

A number of thc high school chil-j dren start thcir final examinations ncxt week and it is extremely important

chairs of the charter members were decorated with crepe paper; and flow­ers, in low containers, included tulips, iris, snap-dragons, bridal wreath, col­umbine, peonies, pansies and other blooms.

Favors wcre mints in silver-paper containers.

Commit tee on Arrangements

Paul C. Dunkelberger, John Schaef­fer and Raymond Kulp comprised the

Schucker. Samuel Madeira, Carl Her-1 ^ t h c c h i l d r c n a t t e n d ' s c h o o i ^id | D r J a m c s S . Gr im voiced the senti-1 Maude Schaeffer, Mrs. William Schultz man; SJ_°t-Put: Arlan Hettner ay j H o b a r t A F a r b c r , Lehigh County i men t of all when he said, "I got more | a n d Mamie Dietrich had charge of the

~ul Baer; High Jump: Arlan : S c h o o l Superintendent. Hc also dc-1 out of Grange than I pu t into it ." j.decorations, favors and badges. Angstadt. Richard | ^ ^ A J f n r , f f W A i 1 > l n - f r n m I Granger Ruth ' s Talk

Granger Ruth , five of wbose chil-"cscosville and othcr points along

C O R P O R A T I O N N O T I C E In t h e Court of Common P l e a s of

Berka County . P e n n s y l v a n i a N o . 67 J U N E T E R M , 1945

Not i ce is heri'ley g iven that an applie-a-tie.n wi l l be nut'le' te. t h e t'e.urt o f Common l'le-as e,f Rerks Connty , P e n n s y l v a n i a , feer a c h a r t e r for " W h i t e D e e r .Sun Club, o f j Company , Trus t Bead ing . P e n n e y 1 v a n i a . "

1. The name .if the proi^se-d corporat ion is W H 1 T H D E R R G P N C U B , u l ' B E A D ­ING, P E N N S Y L V A N I A .

I . T h e proposed ronior. i t inn i s tn bo c r . ganiaed under the pre.viKi.ins of the Art of

f t'le I 'ommeenwealth ii and c i t ed as the L . w . approved the

t h e Orphans' Court Room on the N i n t h Floor of the Court H o u s e , in the Ci ty of B e a d i n g , l V n n s y l v a n i a .

2S0. A l b r e c h t , K a t e — T h e B e a d i a g Trust C pany. Kx. Gteorg* M. J o n e s . A t t o r n e y .

2s7. B a g e n s t o s e , P a u l J . — T h e R e a d i n g Trust Company , Guardian . Itody, Muth & Rhoda, A t t o r n e y s .

( 8 8 . B e r t o l e t , J a c o b — B e r k s C o u n t y Trust

0 ^ i S * i ^ r C p u S " o f i£a«i M. BertoWL I Little, Paul Baer; High Jump: Arlan I j J J J J Super in tendent" He also de'- j out of Grange than I pu t into i t ." s. B. & J. w . Bertolet, Attorneys. ' H e f f n e r . Ldward Angs tadt , Richard , „ il c x. xU x C 1 ! „ (-^m

•sj) Bidden. Chester Arthur—The Read- " . " '„ , , c t x i l ! p lored t h e fact t h a t ch i ldren from in- Trust company, K_. zieber & Snyder, Mil ler; Broad J u m p : Samue l M a d e i r a , ' , , -Atte .rneys .

380 B i e r y , U r i a h — T h e R e a d i n g Company, A d m . . D . B . N . , C .T .A . T r e x l Trex ler , Attorney

2»1. B o y e Rank of B Bn-idenbser.1, A t t o r n e y

2$-. Brintzenho-f , E t h e l M — D o r o t h y M. BrintzenholT, A d n i t r x . . D . B . N . , C .T .A. Mat­ten & M a t t e n . A t t o r n e y s .

293. Broad. F e r n , a m i n o r — C l a i r e M. Ste.rt i . (Guardian. Body , Muth A- Rhoda , At­torneys .

294. B r o w n . R i t t e r — B e r k s County Trus t Companv. A d m . J. P. Batdorf , A t t o r n e y .

Damato. Franoisco-Pas.maie i .,ma | sd iac f fcr , B e t t y Jane Bieber , D o l o r e s

the charter members also gave delight- j committee on arrangements. M n . ful reminiscences, including a spirited Howard Baldwin, Mrs. Raymond Kulp meeting when the Grangers debated j a n d Alliene DeChan t wcre the "wel-whether Pinchdt or Granger McSpar-1 comers;" and the Home Economics ran should be the next Governor. And j committee, Mrs. Mildred Merkel, Mrs.

T r u s t Carl Herman Richard Rothermel; \ &_ A l l c n t o v v n & R c a d i n g r o u t c > w h o s c j d r c n ._- m e m b c r s o f N a t l 0 n a l Grange ! " A N hle Relay: Arlan Ileffner James Spcn- ( t r a n s p Q r t a t i o n JS n Q t p a i d b y s c hool brought greetings from Bernville

yer Erma a "unor-The National i ccr. Samuel Madeira , W a n e n M m e r , j b ^ d h ^ f d t o h i k c o r a t . G d t d t h a t t h c G

ioyertown, i'a., cuardian. H . i « i ; £ „ i . r c c Schucker Carl H e r m a n . . <.,i i „ • _ »t_ • rr - VJ"1"&V-' " ' " em. - * " ' d e m p t t o t h u m b n d e s m their e f forts : 1S t h e b a c k b o n e of Parmer organiza-

OBITUARY Miles Becker, Elwood Noll* second; Richard Rothermel, Donald Van Bus-kirk, Ray Burgert, Will iam Burns, third.

Girls: 50 Yard Dash: Ruth Ann

B E N N E V I L L E S. B U R K E R T T h c funeral of Benneville S. Burk­

ert, 75, retired farmer, who died May 12th, was held this afternoon at his home in Blandon, the Revs. E, F . Wenr ich and E. K. Angstadt offi-

to get to school. | tions, and has done much through On several occasions during the past | Juvenile Grange and 4-H Clubs to

five days and nights, Mr . Fernon said J inspire youth. he contacted spokesmen for thc bus "Pennsylvania," he said, "is the drivers and asked them to talk over! arsenal of democracy, and leads the

KX nariington Hoopes. Attorney. ~ , matters and come to somc agreement; country in the recent contribution of j ciatmg Burial, «n charge of thc Stump ne . i)eem. AibwtD.-The Reading Trust Hammes; Baseball Throw: Grace Berg, h , b l d , t i n t 0 i clothes for European needy. It is first Fnneral Home, l-lcctwood, was made

l l l ' T ^ J T ' ^ ^ X ^ r , l h a " - 1 *** J « J * ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ ; ™*™m[hC

h*7c>dZ onl'• t L meet-! l ^ l A , cement, agriculture and j in Blandon cemetei,-

Fd'rV ^ C , ; % S ^ T A ^ V ^ ' \**te*f l h r ° w : ^ " " a " ? « " ' ] _ % \ ^ wcre held at which no agreement I is thc third Statc in the Union in 1 He was a son of the late Samuel ' L. De-1 phinc Cronrath, Betty Bieber; 440 I _9H.

T t i n k D e T u r c k , P h i l i p D. lle.ra,-e t a l . , Kxrs. J. W i l m e r Fi

t l A s s e m b l y l ' enns

lprotit Mh da

: i . Ti

iri«>rati

P U I - L E R B B C S H S E R V I C E rendered p rompt ­l y . M a i l o r d e r s a t t e n d e d t o a t once . S c o t t V a n H o r n , 8 2 5 W . W a l n u t S t . , K u t i t o w n .

J u n e 8 - t f

n r B K I T T T R I - A S T ) H O U S E H O L D GOODS B e s t p r i c e s p a i d for a l l k i n d s o f househo ld

f o o d s , s t o v e s , w a s h e r s , r e f r i g e r a t o r s o r a n y ­t h i n g v a l u a b l e . A l s o a n t i q u e s . I m m e d i a t e re­m o v a l . C a l l u s a n d be c o n v i n c e d . W e buy a n d s e l l d a i l y .

Q. M. F R E D E R I C K J a n l l - t f L y o n s , P a .

I N S T R U C T I O N — F E M A L E

G I R L S — W O M E N

B E A P R A C T I C A L N U R S E

B I G D E M A N D — H I G H W A G E S

I n s t r u c t i o n . H i g h school not neccaoary . E a s y to l earn a t borne ia spare' t i m e . A g e s 18 t o 98. W a r d e m a n d s h a v e caneed t.iir s h o r t a g e , r r e p a r e ne.w for t l i i s i n t e r e s t i n g . prof i tab le anil p a t r i o t i c w o r k W r i t e for F R E E I n f o r m a t i o n . W a y n e School of Prae -t i e a l N u r s i n g . B o x 42. P a t r i o t Oflke.

M a y l T - l t *

A D M I N I S T R A T O R ' S N O T I C E E s t a t e of T H E O D O R E K. R I K S E L . l a t e

of the Ci ty of R e a d i n g , B e r k s C o u n t y , P e n n ­s y l v a n i a , c . t . a . , d e c e a s e d .

L e t t e r s o f a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on t h e above e s t a t e h a v i n g been g r a n t * to t h e under-s i g n e d , a l l i>ersons i n d e b t e d to t h e e s t a t e are reques ted te. m a k e p a y m e n t , and those

' h a v i n g c l a i m s to p r e s e n t t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t ; d e l a y , t.<

A L L A N M I L L I K R N C I ' L L F M . Rivereelge F a r m s ,

R e m T o w n s h i p . R e a d i n g , P a . , A d m i n i s t r a t o r , c . t . a .

or to h i s a t t o r n e y , R A N D O L P H S T A l ' F -Baer Bl i ig . . R e a d i n g , P a .

l_J-Apr2f.-«it

M :n>o*

.V.

2!<i). Kxtrx.

MO. II. Lee

At-

Nol l ,

Is tee ••e.ns f a c i l i t i e s and to r; death bene des ignate ,1 members , hi'ir or heirs

D i e t r i c h , A n n i e C . — F l o r e n c e M. Paul I). E l e l m a n . A t t o r n e y . D o t t e r e r , A l i c e — J a m e s Dot terer , Kx. ii B r e i d e n b a c h , A t t o r n e y .

proposed c o r p o r a t i o n ! 301 . D r a s e , E l i z a b e t h A . — T h e R e a d i n g i w i ld life>. provide ; Trus t Company . s n W t i t n t e d Truste . - of H a r r j a m e anel wi ld Ufe , ; B. Drase . S t e v e n s & L e e . At toraeyg . eer the p a y m e n t of | :*Ji2. Drie»s. M a y m e L . — K l d a T h o m a s ,

«.f m e m b e r s te, b a w s as iH-netii-iii

ni payment* to be

Bxtrx. Emanuel Weiss, Attorney. 30... Eckert. William B.—Mary P

Richardson, Kxtrx. Wm. E. Richardson,

fleiarj e.f <le

mem

FBR,

FOR SALE

E X E C U T O R S ' N O T I C E In e s t a t e of J E F F E R S O N H I C H . l a t e of

R e a d i n g , B e r k s County , P e n n s y l v a n i a , de-ceased .

N o t i c e is hereby g i v e n , t h a t l e t t e r s t e s t a ­m e n t a r y on t h e e s t a t e e.f the above n a m e d ele-e-e d e n t h a v e been g r a n t e d to the under­s i g n e d .

Al l persons indebte'd to t h e e s t a t e of t h e sa id d e c e d e n t are reques ted to m a k e p a y m e n t , and al l persons h a v i n g c l a i m s or d e m a n d s a g a i n s t the> e s t a t e ..f the said d e c e d e n t , are r e q u e s t e d to m a k e k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t elelay, t o t h e unders igned e x e c u t o r s .

C L A R E N C E J. H K I I I . :_23 P e a r S t . . B e a d i n g , P a . P E A R S O N M. H I G H , <tf)9 Stokers A v e n u e . Coll in gswoeid, N . J . , .

E x e c u t o r s . E D E L M A N , Esq . ,

re ta l ia t ions ami By-I_

L a w s of the org: I T h e Ar t ic le ' s

Bled in the Dili,

es..,i unmarried l«i • widow and/or he eneflcial memtoera.

ipile.i w i t h the rub's, vs of the o r g a n i z a t i o n ,

ami te) he By-

Yard Relay: Anna Hoffer, Janet Adams, Dolores Hammes, Joanne Hartman, first; June Barlet, Betty Snyder, Betty Bieber, Pearl Chns tman, second; Shir­ley Bieber, Kathryn Wanner , Evelyn Zillhardt, Sophie Neuheimer, third.

G R O U P III : Grades ? and 8: Boys: 75 Yard Dash: William Sny-

;recment is thc third State in was reached. potatoes and eggs, and thc fourth in | and Het t ie (Snyder) Burkert, and was

Mr Kcmnn .nnko with Gcorze I milk. And farmers of America must j a member of thc Lutheran congrcga. Kiioules " T o n " s e e r c t i f Monday j feed the world, and the call on them tion of Blandon Union Church;; F t a -night, and last night Federal Concili- when the boys return, will be even wood Orioles Nest No . 21 , F.O E , ator Waltcr Moser, secretary Knovvles, | greater than ever. Kutztown; and the Blandon Fire

• and Allentown & Rcading company ' "America it the only nation where Company and its Relief Association. officials met at the company's offices I everybody has enough to cat; and Sumving .a re his wife: Mrs C a n d «

d n Reading. rationing has been a blessing, for the Ko ler Burkert; these children Floyd death-rate in rccent vears. has been | and Mrs. John Richards, Evansville;

t(M. E l y , A n n a H . - T h e R e a d i n g Truat mpany , Adm. Stevena ft I.<•«•. A t t o r n e y s , in.". E m o r e . W i U i a m H . — W i l l i a m H . e'igle. Kx. John (J. B o t h e r m e l , A t t o r n e y . :.nr>. E n d y , John H . - J o h n F. 1-rrkin. Jr . .

a l . Kxrs, H e n r v M. Koe-h. A t t o r n e y . :.nT. Erb. M a t i l d a E.—<;eorge M. B a i l e y ,

a l , KXI-K. s . 1). ft J. W. B e r t o l e t , At tor-

:V\S. F o l t z , E v a E. P . x. Bodv , Mutli & Rh 309. Fre tz , Morris D .

der, Richard Heller. Richard Knoll;! » » 0 U B n , , , c . m a u ^ l " t ; u i U U L 1 " U " ' j ."hc""io.vest "in "our^historv W e have I M B . Frank Kunklc, Shocmakcrsville; Broad Jump: DonaTd Rcinhart, Arlan ! » " * a n amendment to its present con- g J W » o u r " J J J foods " ! Leon. Bloomsburg; Mrs. Herbert Wessner. Willian, Snvder; High Jump:! »««* ^ i t h the striking bus drivers to ; « n o d t o at the p 0 ^ ^ o o d s | B l a n d o n ; ^ ^ ^ D

Arlan Wessner, Richard Angstadt, ^ g * £ » £ " ^ w a g " P ml ' o s i " tl rotigh t e Red S s s d a s t S s \ Nor thmont ; and Mrs. Lloyd Baer and Richard Heller; 880 Yard Rclav: Rich- c a l l c c ' , t o r n , t l i c P r t s c , n t w a g e S . P 1 ™ ( l u n t l o f S^OOOOOOOO having been Mien, at homc. ard Knoll. Glenn Merkel. Russell Hart- ™g \V ar Labor Board ^ p r o ^ tht ^ ^ ™ W g ^ O Q ! ^ 8 I Also 23 grandchildren, four great-man, ]r., Arlan Wessner, first; William | m w m . representatives considered it | oveisutecnbal ^ W W " ^ .. [$ \ g r a n dch i ld ren , and a sister, Kate Burk-

B be Re

at K.ton MA i

U I - M a y l T - l t

- . ,i i ,,urt on June -it h» k. A.M. . i : \VT. i;.\ A N D M A T T E N ,

."i_f> Court Stre«», R e a d i n g , P e n n s y l v a n i a , A t t o r n e y s for Pet i t ion .

D a w s o n II. Mutl a. Attorneys. h.' National Bank Snvder, A l l en Becker , D o n a l d Rc in -

Pa. , Truste'e feer I tess ie r . n Bre idenbach , At torney . A d a m R. - K a t i

Moser. 11. I. 310. Gaul

Aelmtrx. \V. B. S i i a n n a n . Attr 311. Gehret , E m m a - l i n k s

Company, S u b e t i t n t e d Truste'. Gehret , e t al. Chas . K. Derr.

Robert Raucn-

l l , Atte

N.eti.'c i s he Ini'oriK.ration wil l )H

- \ 1 - mia . at Hi

T I B G I N V 1 L L E 5 room, s i n g l e h o m e . I j i r g e y a r d , e l e c t r i c , good c o n d i t i o n . Only $3 ,000 . L . A . G r a m m e s . R e a l t o r . 12-. W . W a s h i n g ­ton S t , F l e e t w o o d . P h o n e 2461 .

P A I ' L D . A t t o r n e y , , .22 W a s h i n g t o n S t . R e a d i n g , P a .

A D M I N I S T R A T O R ' S N O T I C E E s t a t e o f J O H N H . M E T Z G E R , l a t e o f

, , . ! M a x a t a w n y T o w n s h i p , B e r k s County . P e n n --Mayd-Jt j e y i v a n i a . deceas.?d.

~ I ~ ~ „ . „ 1 L e t t e r s of a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on t h e above S I X W E E K O L D P I G S . A p p l y to M. O. H i l l . | e ! , t a t e h a v i n g been g r a n t e d to t h e under-

C r y s t a l C a v e R o a d , K u t z t o w n . R o u t e 3 , s i K n e d , a l l persons Indebted t o t h e e s t a t e P a . M a y l 0 - 3 t I a r e r eques ted to m a k e p a y m e n t , and t h o s e

h a v i n g c l a i m s t o p r e s e n t t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t F H I I - C O T r a n s i t o n e A u t o Rad io . Cal l 459 d e i a y

E. Main St. or d ia l K u t z t o w n 4341 . M a y l - l t "

H O M E a t 3 2 W . Main St . and W . Main in F l e e t w o o d . Horn h a s a l l modern e-oiiveni.'iie-es. Apply a f t er 4 o 'c lock a t 32 W . M a i n , F l e e t w o o d , I'a.

M a v l 7 - 3 t *

C H A R L B S H . M E T Z G E R . 4.")6 B r o a d S t r e e t .

N e w a r k . N. J . Executor

NOTICE v given that Articles e.f

1 with the Depart-Bonwealth of Pean-,n Friday, May 21,

tor the- puri.e.s,. e.f o b t a i n i n g a (Vrtit i a t e of Itie-oroieratie.n of a propose.! bus ines s orporatlon to lie organ i sed under the Rusi-e s s <'..r|eoratie.n I . i w e.f the' C o m m o n w e a l t h f Pennsylvania, apiiroved Mav ... 1!i_3. The a m e of the proposed .e.rporat i.ui is K 1 T Z -

j T O W S AVlATI i>N S E R V I C E , INC, The | pur|M.se or purposes for which it is te. be

. nc «t " r s ' " l i z ' ' 1 1 •'lr'* f " r ""' m a i n t a i n i n g and e.]«T-I>i-Apr-ti-ot j atui i ; a i-onnnere ial tlyinu' serv ice and in con­

n e c t i o n t h e r e w i t h tee purchase , l e a s e , con­s t r u e - , i'e)uip. o w n . m a i n t a i n and operate lanel. l anding fields, a ircraft and b a n g e r s ; buy ing , s e l l i n g , opera t ing , repair ing an.l d e a l i n g in a i r p l a n e s , a i r sh ips , ba l loons ami a r t i c l e s usesl la Hying and transjuirtat ion in air . incSojiing equ ipment and accesaorh's ; g a s o l i n e ami oi l steerau'e' f a c i l i t i e s ; m a c h i n e ainl repair she.p f a c i l i t i e s ; restaurant fac i l ­i t i e s ; ami te. ae- iuire. preaetve anel d i s s e m i ­nate va luable i n f o r m a t i o n and know led _e fhrough books, le. tures and p a m p h l e t s on the subject o f a v i a t i o n , aud to dei all t h i n g s

RotMTt l t .

l i . Frei-Leou

Git-

i 312 Gerhart , John K | Kx. I^iely A Leidy , Atte j 313. Gi lberg . Joseph

manii , Aelmtrx. D. B . N . Bre idenbach , At torney .

314. G i t t e l m a n , A l l a n B L — H e n r y A t e l m i n . Kx. I'aul H. 1'riee, A t t o r n e y .

315. G o t t s h a l l , F r a n k B . Frank H. Gott sha l l . Kx I-ecielv & I / i d y , A t t o r n e y s .

31t5. G r e e n t h a l . W i U i a m F . O . — B e r t h a K Bag le , Aelmtrx. C.T.A. Richard T. Wi l l iam­son. At torney .

317. H a a s . George Y . — H o w a r d K. H a a s et a l . Admrs . H. 1^-on Bre idenbach , A t t o r ne

hart, Karl Schaeffer, second K. dam. Knoll. Richard Heller, Ralpl

unty Trust /aim. Bernard Dictrich. Girls: 50 Yard Dash: Marilyn

Schocdlcr, Betty Merkel, Doris Keim; Baseball Throw: Betty Merkel, Mary Ellen Wolfe, Arlene SchacfTer; Bas­ketball Throw: Geraldine W a h l , Arlcnc Schaeffer, Maureen Win te r : 440 Yard Relay: Doris Keim, Marilyn Schoedler, Marilyn Herring, Geral­dine Wahl , first; Nancy Knoll, Betty

without taking a definite stand. "America's heart is big, anc America that the nations of thc i ert, Mcetwood. Mr. Knowlcs asked management for i r 0

another meeting to bc hcld this after­noon.

Samuel Heffner's

world have always turned. W e are not i interested in getting land, or sub- j inciting peoples—our job is to be ready to give.

"Let us keep up thc spirit fostered by thc Grange, and do our utmost to bring about a peace for all t ime."

T h e Banqueters

tore at 3 4 | •'•- or to h i s a t t o r n e y , A L L A N K. G R I M , S T E V -

" E N S & L E E , 18 S. Sth S t . , R e a d i n g , P a . L J - A p r l 2 - 6 t

SERVEL GAS REFRIGERATOR. Calorie gas s t o v e , e l e c t r i c w a s h e r , elee-trie- s w e e p e r , e l e c t r i c i ron , l a w n m o w e r . Apply te. P a u l G e i s t , lf> W h i t e o a k S t . or W m . 11. W e i g l e . K r u m s v i l l e . M a y l T - l t *

WANTED

A D M I N I S T R A T R I X ' S N O T I C E In e s t a t e of G E R M A N C S G. B E N N I C O F F ,

la te of G r e e n w i c h T o w n s h i p , B e r k s County , P e n n s y l v a n i a , d e c e a s e d .

N o t i c e i s hereby g i v e n , t h a t l e t t e r s of a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on t h e e s t a t e o f t h e above n a m e d d e c e d e n t h a v e been g r a n t e d to t h e unelersigned.

A l l p e r s o n s indebted to t h e e s t a t e of t h e sa id d e c e d e n t are reques ted to m a k e p a y m e n t

F A R M S . W e h a v e c a s h b u y e r s for both l a r g e j B n d a l l p e r s o n s h a v i n g c l a i m s or d e m a n d s a n d s m a l l f a r m s . For a ejoiek sa l e l i s t w i t h a g a i n s t t h e e s t a t e of the sa id d e c e d e n t , are u s . W i l l i a m K. F e n s t e r n i a ' h e r . A g e n t ; r eques ted to m a k e k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t Asso . F r e d e r i c k ' s R e a l E s t a t e . R o w e r s IM.. d e l a y , t o t h e unders igned a d m i n i s t r a t r i x . T o p t o n , P a . M a y l ~ - 3 t j NAOMI R. L A N D I S ,

1 • L y o n s S t a t i o n , P e n n s y l v a n i a , A d m i n i s t r a t r i x .

I R A P . R O T H E R M E L , I J O H N G. R O T H B R M E L

• i . l e ' I i t a l t i there to , ami possess anei enji. and benefits of t

P A I L

I_J-MaylT. l t

el bus fe>r tl l.'se purpos

II the right -a iel A . l e.f EDELMAN,

i g

l ,s, | .

31S. H a i n . El lon S. — B e r k s County Trust Company, Trustee- for Carrie Raver , e t al. J. Wi l l i . - r Eish.-r. A t t o r n e y .

319. H a i n , R o b e r t George , a m i n o r — Peoples Trust C o m p a n y of W y o m l s s i n g , P a . . Cuardian . J P. Itatdorf, A t t o r n e y .

820. H a n n , M. C — M r s . M. O. H a n n , E x t r x . W i l l i a m BL Rieharelson. A t t o r n e y

821. H e a t h , J a m e s C - Naomi Kreisher . et al . Kxtrx . H e n r v M Koch. At torney .

322 Heffner . F r a n k l i n D.—I>anie l E. Heff­ner Kx. Chas . K . Derr, et a l . A t t o r n e y s . 523. H e n d r i c k s . Sa l l i e A . — P e o p l e , Trust Company of W y o m l s s i n g , I'a.. Adm. H. Frankl in B r o s s m a n . At torney .

324. H e r t z l e r . K a t h a r i n e — Milford* R H e r t s l e r , Adm. A. II. R o t h e r m e l . At torney .

H e r t z o g . I rv in S.-•• Esther May Ack-M a t t e n , At

(Continued from pegs 1 )

convention of the Luther League. " W c were serenaded by more than

half a dozen Calithumpian Bands," Mr. Heffner also remembers: "Railroad Crew, who used links and pins. Kutz-

Mcrkcl. Arlcnc Schaeffer. Joan Brobst, j town Foundry and Machine Com-1 \VQj' t \ l v ' f a s t e r and Mrs. George J second; Clara Madeira, Maureen pany, Kutztown Band, St. John's Choir j Schaeffer Cha-nnan and Mrs. Paul C .

M R S . H O W A R D A. K L I N E T h e f u n e r a l of M r s . E m m a Alice

( Y o d e r ) K l i n e , 63, w i f e of H o w a r d A. K l i n e , w h o d i ed T u e s d a y at her home in F l e e t w o o d , w i l l be held Sat­urday at 2 p. m. in the Stump Funeral H o m e . B u r i a l w i l l be m a d e in Fleet­w o o d cemetery , the R e v . A. G. W o o d -

W i n t e r . A n n a M a c C u l i n e l l o , Sarah

W e i d n e r , third. G R O U P IV: Grades 5 and 6: Boys: Hop-Skip-Jump: Dale Wah l ,

Glenn Hill. Michael Orlando; Relay: Richard Heffner. Bruce Dictrich, Rob-

DtinkclbcTgcr, Pomona Grange Mas­tcr and Mrs. John Blatt, Chaplain and j " J , * g ^ " t t *"3 *3o Mrs. Harry Schaeffer, Song Leader, Ruth Lafferty.

Charter Members: Mr. and Mrs. Allen Fink, Mr. and Mrs. John Kemp.

A d m t r x . T . A . M a t t e n A "e22 W a s h i n g t o n S t r e e t ,

Reading. Pennsylvania Molie

t o r n e

NOTICE County

L J - A p r l 2 - 6 t

T O R E N T a 5 or 6 room h o u s e in K u t z t o w n i m m e d i a t e l y o r w i t h i n t h e n e x t f e w m o n t h s b y a r e l i a b l e p a r t y w i t h the b e s t of refer­e n c e s f u r n i s h e d . W r i t e to P a t r i o t B o x No . S9. K u t z t o w n . P a . May3-3 t j D A N I E L G. R O T H E R M E L ,

——.———•— A t t o r n e y s , A S M A L L F A M I L Y t o h e l p o p e r a t e a f a r m 31 North S i x t h S t . .

and t a k e c a r e of d a i r y herd. A p p l y t o J. R e a d i n g . P a . G. S w o y e r . K u t z t o w n , R o u t e 1. Apr2«- t f — —

' : E X E C U T R I X ' S N O T I C E H O G S C A L V E S S T E E R S , B E L L S . G e h r i s I In e s t a t e o f J A C O B C H R t S T M A N , l a t e of

M e a t M a r k e t , R e a d i n g . R . D . 2 ; P h o n e ! K u t z t o w n , B e r k s C o u n t y . P e n n s y l v a n i a , de-B e a d i n g 9-2438. Apr5- t f ; c e a s e d .

— —— j N o t i c e 1 B U T C H E R c o w s h o g s a n d g h o a t s . Ear l I. I m e n t a r y on the e s t a t e of t h e a b o v e n a m e d

Mi l l er F l e e t w o o d , R o u t e 2, P h o n e Kuta- j d e c e d e n t h a v e been g r a n t e d t o t h e u n d e r t o w n 6 7 6 2 .

W A N T E D TO R E N T , 1 s t floor a p a r t m e n t or h o u s e in K u t z t o w n . Ca l l K u t z t o w n 5811.

M a y l » - 3 t

A N X I O U S TO B E N T a p l a c e o u t s i d e o f t o w n or in t h e c o u n t r y . P l e a s e e 'ommunicate a t o n c e w i t h Irv in H i l b e r t , 131 So. F r a n k l i n 8 t . , F l e e t w o o d . I'a. M a y l o - 3 t «

PUBLIC SALE P U B L I C S A L E

S A T U R D A Y . M A Y 26 , 1945 a t 1 o 'c lock

2 s t e e l c h a i r s , iron boards , g a r d e n t o o l s , porch g l ider , l a w n m o w e r . 9-room V i c t r o l a h e a t e r , 1 burner coa l o i l h e a t e r , 1—1-4 in. e l e c t r i c dr i l l . 1 — 1 * g a u g e shot gun . 1—.410 g a u g e shot g u n . 1 — ti p i e c e s.voket s e t , 2 — •ext l a d d e r s . 1-2 h .p . motor , l i k e n e w : car­p e n t e r t o o l s and o t h e r s , elee-tric w a s h e r , cool-e r a t o r , l i k e n e w , used 1 s e a s o n . . . and m a n v o t h e r i t e m s too n u m e r o u s t o m e n t i o n .

FILED E. SCHADE tat W. Main St. (rear)

Mayl7-2t Kutztown, Pa.

PUBLIC SALE OF REAL ESTATE AND PERSONAL PROPERTY in V i l l a g e of B o w e r s . P a . , on

S a t u r d a y , M a y 26 . 1945 1 f r a m e b l d g . used a s b l a c k s m i t h s h o p

3 5 ' x 22 1-2', s i t u a t e d on lot w i t h OT front a g e a l o n g m a i n h i g h w a y .

P e r s o n a l P r o p e r t y C o n s i s t s of f u l l l i n e of b l a c k s m i t h e q u i p

m e n t a n d t o o l s a l l in good condi t ion S a l e to c o m m e n c e a t 1 p . m. Condi t ion!

t o b e m a d e k n o w n on d a y of s a l e T o be so ld a s the property of t h e R o y B

B a r t o E s t a t e .

.Notice i s hereby g iven to Berk Bu i ld ing and I.ean Assoc ia t ion N succes sors or a s s i g n s , tha t the. p e t i t i o n of j fert , Ad n ine forty Penn S t . , R e a d i n g , Inc. w a s pre- ' s . n t e d on Apri l 30 . 194... t o t h e Court of Common P l e a s of Rerks County to No. I'A May T e r m . 1943. s e t t i n g forth t h a t n ine forty Penn S t . . R e a d i n g , Inc. is the o w n e r of:

Al l tha t cer ta in t w o - s t o r y f r a m e d w e l l i n g house and lot e.f ground on w h i c h tbe same-is e r t c t e d . s i t u a t e on the north s ide of Cherry s t r e e t b e t w e e n Ninth ar.d T e n t h s t r e e t s . No. 949. in tiie Ci ty of R e a d i n g , in the County of Rerks and S t a t e eef P e n n s y l ­van ia , iKiunded and descr ibed a s f o l l o w s , t o w i t : ,

On t h e north by Mrs. R o l a n d ' s E s t a t e , on the e a s t by property of J a c o b Leader by property of now e.r l a t e Reynon Bata te an.l property of S a m u e l Boone , on the south by sai. l Cherry s treet and on the w e s t by proji­er ty of John Roland.

Conta in ing in front a l o n g said Cherrv s tree t hereby g i v e n , t h a t l e t t e r a t e s t a - I fifteen f e e t and in d e p t h north and south

one hundred fee t . That said p e t i t i o n e r obta ined t i t l e to sa id

r>'.'il e s t a t e , inte'r a l ia , bv deed from Otho D. R e c h t e l . da ted April 20 . 1945, and re­corded on Apri l 2 1 , 194... in t h e Office for the Record ing of Deeds in and for Berks Comity .

T h a t a m o r t g a c e from W i l l i a m II. A u g e to B e r k s County Bu i ld ing and ixc in Assoc ia­t ion No. _, d a t e d J u n e 21, lHTfi. c o v e r i n g and concerning the aliove-describi^d mortgagee! premises , and renordeel in M o r t g a g e Book Vol . 30 , I 'aee 209, is not sat is f ied or re l eased on the record.

T h a t more than 21 y e a r s h a v e e l a p s e d s ince the pr inc ipal of sa id m o r t g a g e b e c a m e due and s i n c e a n y d e m a n d for [ia.vn.ent of prin­c ipal or i n t e r e s t by said m o r t g a g e e , or any person e l s e , has been m a d e of your pe t i t i oner or his p r e d e c e s s o r s in t i t l e .

W h e r e u p o n , the Court ordered and decreed t h a t notie-e b e g i v e n to t h e r e s p o n d e n t s , t l ieir s u c c e s s o r s or a s s i g n s , to a p p e a r in t h e saiel Court on M a y 28 , 1945, a t 10:00 o 'c lock A. ML, to s h o w c a u s e w h y the Court should not elecree and d irect t h a t the rea l e s t a t e sub-ji-ct t o sa id m o r t g a g e b e re l eased and dis -

harged from the s a m e and from the pay-brought

HU1, S a m u e l S m i t h . S a m u e l H i l l , Jr . , ;,n. John A. Moss. A t t o r n e y . .J7. H i m m e l b e r g e r , Georges-.Ieehn I. Ans ,•!;. Ex Ira P. R o t h e r m e l . et al, At torneys TJX. Hoff. R o s e B . -John Barbey Hoff. cces sor T r u s t e e . Zieber A Bajrder, At tor-

and Aid Society, Dramatic Club and thc neighbors."

"Speaking of the Dramatic Club ," Mr. Heffner continued, "1 belonged to thc second one, and T o m LcVan uscd to say he had more trouble with mc

ert Steindl. Dale Wah l . first; Clenn ' than all the others! But he praised me j j | o r . D c ; shC r . Alvin F . Kline, W i l Philips, Harold Kinsig, Donald Good-j the night I ad-libbed, on forgetting j j ^ , , ^ Wartzenluft , Dr. James Grim. hart. William Hazen. second; Leonard '' my cue. while kneeling before Annie [ Visiting Grange Masters: John C Hoffer. Braynard Rauenzahn. Dale j Marks! She madc hcr exit then, and I ' Hollenbach, Dale Stuber, third; Stand-1 murmured. 'She went out. There, shc

went out!' and thc audience was none thc wiser." He also recalls thc time hc couldn't find a very necessary stove pipe hat, "and the curtain puller plop-

T h c 138 banqueters included the , ring officiating, following: i She was a daughter of the late

Speakers' Table: thc Rcv. Frank W . } James and Alice (Ebert) Yoder.

W-IXIAMT>TITZER The funera l of W i l l i a m Stitzer, 76, ret ired f a r m e r w h o d ied W e d n e s -

d a v at his h o m e in P r i c e t o w n , wi l l be p. m. at the

mg Broad Jump: Dale Wah l , Richard Heffner. William Clark; 50 Yard Dash: Richard Heffner, Glenn Philips, Dale Wahl .

Girls: Rclav: Lucille Homan, Gloria ped his cap on mc and shoved me out | M _ a n d M _ . Gcoxgc DeLong, Mr.

Stump Funeral Home, Fleetwood, the Rev. Paul J. Dundore officiating. Burial will be made in Pricetown cem­etery.

He was a son of the late Ephraim [and Lovina (Brown) Stitzer, and was j a member of Fleetwood Lodge of Red

Marcks and Mrs. Marcks, T i cde r town ; SuVviving are his wife, Mrs. Agnes Pari Diehl and Mrs. Diehl, Pioneer, \ F r e v S t i t z e r ; t w o s o n s > Howard and Topton ; Howard Koller and Mrs. Kol-J i e v ; p r ice town; a number of grand-lcr, Fleetwood; Alvin K. Kring and : chi ldren; a sister, Mrs. Sallie Shoe-Mrs. Kring. Gouglcrsville. 'maker , Reading, and a brother John,

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rabenold,! Shillington.

Hoff er t . Char les M. nof

J a n l 8 - t f ! s i g n e d . ! Al l j iersons Indebted to t h e e s t a t e o f t h e

s a i d d e c e d e n t are reques ted t o m a k e p a y m e n t , a n d al l persons h a v i n g c l a i m s or d e m a n d s a g a i n s t t h e e s t a t e o f t h e s a i d d e c e d e n t , are reques ted to m a k e k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h ­o u t d e l a y , to t h e u n d e r s i g n e d e x e c u t r i x .

T I L L I E C H R I S T M A N . 269 G r M n w i c h S t r e e t ,

• j K u t z t o w n . P a . ^M K x e c u t r i x .

I R A P . ROTHRRMRT. , J O H N G. R O T H E R M K L . D A N I E L . G. R O T H E R M E L . A t t o r n e y s , 31 North S i x t h S t . , R e a d i n g , P a . I_J-Aprl2-6t

ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE In e s t a t e of D A T I D W . K O L L E R . l a t e of

Maidencreek T o w n s h i p . B e r k s C o u n t y , Penn­s v l v a n i a . d e c e a s e d .

N o t i c e i s hereby g i v e r , t h a t l e t t e r s o f ; a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on tbe e s t a t e of t h e above n a m e d d e c e d e n t h a v e been g r a n t e d to t h e i unders igned . |

Al l per-vms indebted to t h e e s t a t e o f t h e m e n t thereof , a n d t h a t a l l a c t i sa id d e c e d e n t are requeeteed to m a k e p a y m e n t , ami a l l persona h a v i n g c l a i m s or t i emands airainst t h e e s t a t e of t h e saiel de'e-edent. are re'eiueste-d to niak.' k n o w n the same-, w i t h o u t d e l a y to the unders igned a d m i n i s t r a t o r .

C E O R G B W . K O L L E R . Sli'M'tnakersville. R. D . ,

B e r k s County . P a . , A d m i n i s t r a t o r .

P A C E D . E D E L M A N . Esq . , A t t o r n e y . .-,_••_' W a s h i n g t o n S t . , R e a d i n g , P a . I_T-Mayl7-ot

B B B T H A C. B A R T O . ^Adminis tra tr ix

W M O. S T O U D T . A u c t . H O M E R S. MOLL. Clerk.

A D M I N I S T R A T O R ' S N O T I C E In e s t a t e of J O H N VlCrCRLfi, l a t e nf

LECAL NOTICES

F l e e t w o o d . B e r k s C o u n t y , P e n n s y l v a n i a , de ­c e a s e d . , ,

N o t i c e i s hereby g i v e n , t b a t l e t t e r s o f , a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on t h e e s t a t e of t h e above

M a y l 0 - 3 t n a m ( . , i de'eedent h a v e been granted t o t h e ________-__= unelers icned.

I Al l persons indehted to the estate, of ! •• I sa id d e c e d e n t are r e q u e s t e d to m a k e p a y m e n t ,

and al l persons h a v i n g c l a i m s or d e m a n d s ' a g a i n s t t h e e s t a t e of t h e sa id d e c e d e n t , are

r e q u e s t e d t o m a k e k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t E X E C U T O R ' S N O T I C E I n t h e e a t a t e of I D A S W O T E R , l a t e of | d e l a y , to the " n d e r s i e n e d ^ d m i n i s t r a t o r

R e a d i n g . B e r k a C o u n t y , d e c e a s e d N o t i c e i s h e r e b y g i v e n t h a t l e t t e r s t e s t a ­

m e n t a r y on t h e e s t a t e of t h e a b o v e n a m e d d e c e d e n t h a v e b e e n g r a n t e d t o t h e under-

"^AH 1 'person* i n d e b t e d t o t h e e s t a t e o f t h e aa id d e c e d e n t a r e r e q u e s t e d to m a k e pay­m e n t , and a l l p e r s o n s h a v i n g c l a i m s or de-Jt,_nd_ a e a i n s t t h e e s t a t e of t h e s a i d dece - , 31 N . Rth S ? . " ' are r e q u e s t e d to m a k e k n o w n t h e | R e a d i n g . Pa

u n d e r s i g n e d d e n t , are if t h e

r e q u e s t e d • m e , w i t h o u t d e l a y

e x e c u t o r . J A C O B _ S W O Y E R

K u t i t o w n , R. D . 1 , E x e c u t o r .

40". W . 5th A v e n R o s e l l , N e w J e r s e y .

A d m i n i s t r a t o r . IRA P R O T H E R M E L . J O H N (.. R O T H E R M E L . D A N I E L G. R O T H B R M E L . A t t o r n e y s ,

fitli S t r e e t . I , l - M n y l 7 - « t

Apr2«-6t

E X E C U T R I X ' S N O T I C E

A D M I N I S T R A T O R S N O T I C E E s t a t e of G E O R G E A. R A V E L , l a t e of

R e a d i n g . P e n n s y l v a n i a , d e c e a s e d . 1 L e t t e r s of a d m i n i s t r a t i o n on t b e above 1 e s t a t e h a v i n g been g r a n t e d t o t h e under

thereon be barred. J O S E P H R. D I C K I N S O N , J R . ,

S h e r i P of B e r k s County Z I E B E R A S N Y D E R . A t t o r n e y s , ".IS W a s h i n g t o n S t r e e t , Readi i ig . P a . M a y S - l t

CORBY'S PARROT BASIS FOR NE DISPLAY PIECE

John E. S h a r m a n . At t

XV). H o f f m a n . A m e l i a C Cramer, e t a l , Exrs . I'aul I torney.

881 . H o f f m a n . L u l u M. — T b e N a t i o n a l Bank of Boyertowi - . P a . , A d a . II. I * o a Rreidenhacfa. A t t o r n e y .

S32. H u n s b e r g e r , N a o m i A. -The R e a l ing Trust Company , el a l . T e s t a m e n t a r y T r u s t e e s f..r Lenora M. Guldin . ZiebC* A Snyder . A t t o r n e y s

333. J a c k s o n . J o s e p h i n e C .—Florence B Jackson , E x t r x . Ziet>er A Bayder , A t t o r n e y s .

'AM K l i n e . Mary A n n - Danie l 8. K l ine . Ex. J a m e s F. Marx. A t t o r n e y .

335. K l i n i k o w s k i . Joanna—Clara Macko-w i a k E x t r x . S t e v e n s A I,ee. At torney* .

33*. Kr ick . Edna V. - B e s U h A Krick, A d m t r x . David Sharman . Jr . , At torney ,

33T. Kr ick . E m m a S .—City Bank am! Trust C o m p a n v , A d m . . D . B . N . . C .T .A . P. Herbert Re igner , At torney . . . •

33S. K u t s h e r . Mary M. G. — B e r k s County Trust Company , Cuard ian for Karlirvn M. Kutsher . l l a r v e v F. H e i n l y . M t o r n e y .

339. L y k e n s , A l i c e M.— R u s s e l l 1). I .ykei is . Adm. Ear le I. Koe'h. A t t o r n e y .

.t in. Mai t l and , B a r b a r a — D Z e c h m a n . Adm. P a u l H. Pr ice , Atte.rn

341. M a l a s k y , L o u i s — J e n n i e T r a u t w e i n . A d m t r x . . C .T .A. M a t t e n & M a t t e n , Attor

34_. Mann . Sarah — The R e a d i n c T r u s t C o m p a n y . Ex . D a r l i n g t o n H o o p e s . A t t o r n e y .

: m . Mayberry , A n n i e — Minnie Merget , E x t r x . Zieber A Snyder , A t t o r n e y s .

844. Mayers George W . — A u g u s t u s G. Mayers , et a l . E x r s . S t e v e n s A l>-e, Attor­nevs .

34r. Meck. Cora J. — Briglite.n Meek, et a l . Exrs. T r e x l e r A T r e x l e r , A t t o r n e y s .

,34R. Mohn, John G.—John I). Mohn, Ex. Zieber & Snyder , A t t o r n e y

Strohm. Margaret Rothermel, Jean j on the stage!" i arid Mrs Philip Mertz, Mr. and Mrs. j C H I E F S E I G E R A T T E N D S Schaeffer. first; Catherine Miller. Carol | "Sam." as his many friends dob \j>an\ HObert Mr and Mrs James D e d R E A D I N G P O L I C E M E E T I N G

vbiman'1 sV S t , l f f k ' r - Barbara Keim. Bettv Werner , j him. attended thc local Keystone Nor-; L o n g M f ^ N ' j _ s C h a r l c ' s Sehacf-1 Chief of Police Raymond Seiger was scu>nd; Dorothy Borrell. Janet Keim. \ mal, and was graduated from Eastman i f c r ^ j r a n c j ^ r s ].f]warr] Dietrich j among those who attended a meeting Verna Manmillcr. Ruth Rcinhart. I, Business college. Poughkecpsic, N . Y., j T ' ^ j _ ' J n ( j ^ j r s ' g | m c t Schaeffer, I °f Reading-Berks police at the Ameri-tlurd. follow)-.-g which hc was associated with j ^'_ ^ j ^ j _ _ * p j w a r d Dietrich Sr ' ] c a n L e g l o n Home, Reading, last night,

Baseball Throw: Jean Schaeffer, his father. James S. Heffner. at whose U j r ' ^ n d M r _ j o h n D Schaeffer, Mr'. w h t n N l a J n r Thomas Mart in , director

and Mrs. William Schultz, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Merkel, Mr. and Mrs. Ravmond Kulp, Mr. and Mrs. Allan

worlds records wcre broken on t h e | K g ^ M r a n d M r s J a m c s S c h a c f .

.atL he "took ovcr. During his regime as Race secre­

tary of the Kutztown Fair Association,

of the State Po l i ce T r a i n i n g School, H e r s h e y , s tated "It is i n d i v i d u a l per­sonal i ty w h i c h inv i t e s cooperat ion." John F. Sears , s p e c i a l F B I agent , also spoke, and a conf ident ia l film from

Margaret Rot l i crme l . Gloria S t r o h m Basketball T h r o w : D o r o t h v Borrell , Luci l le H o h i a n . Shirley Hi lbert ; 50 Yard Dash: Catherine Miller. Janet Keim, Sandra Frazcr.

G R O U P V: Grades 3 and 4: . Bovs: Standing Broad Jump: Bcr- \ he also sened as secretary, perpetual J ^ J ^ *WaltCT~Ba_tiiaser, Mr. and Mrs . 1

nard I u s e r , Richard Hilbert. Thomas care for the entire cemetery was in- j j n o m a s Merkel Mr and Mrs Wi l -Donald Wolfe, W a n e n auguratcd. which system was likewise | ^ D i c t r i c h , M r ' . a n d Mrs". Clarence

Dietrich, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lutz, another public card[party at the Key Papp: Rela Hill. Allen Stump, Richard Angstadt, I put into practice, after consultation first; Neil Ludwig, Dennis Rauenzahn, I with him, at both cemeteries in Flcet-

nenjamin John Merkel. Gerald Moyer. second; | wood, and at Mosclcm. He has also Bernard Frazer, Warren Faust, Thorn- i been secretary of thc Saucony Shoe

local track; and while a trustee of thc j fc_ M r ' a n d M r s E a r l R abcnold, M r . ' the W a r Department depicting mili Hopc Cemetery Association, of which i a n d ^,_$ j j m v a r f j Baldwin, Mr. and tary action in the Pacific, was shown.

P U B L I C C A R D PARTY T h e Legion Auxiliary will conduct

Mr. and Mrs. Galen Howertcr. Mr. ! s t o " 5 Hotel .May 24th. and Mrs. Morris F . Grccnawalt, Mr. i T h e sale of popp.es, made by veter-and Mrs. George W'cldcr, Mr. and ' ?™ «• Pennsylvania hospitals was live-

Hummel , I homas Lapp, third; 50 I Company. His lodge affiliations include i ^ j _ _ Gcorec Dietrich Yard Dash: Allen Stump, Paul Price, | tbe Consistory and Shnnc, Rcading.

Huguenot Lodge, F . & A. M.; Knights of Pythias, and Knights of thc Golden Eagle.

Since its beginning, March 13, 1942, hc has scrved at the local Ration­ing Board.

Mrs. Heffner. now a semi-invalid, was reared on a farm, and was famed for hcr good cooking.

Both wcrc recipients of many gifts,

Richard Hilbert; Baseball Throw Clyde Hess, Allen Stump, W a n e n Faust.

(.iris: Relay: Lucille Schocdlcr. Lois Noll, Nancy Kemp. Marylou Adam, first; Shirley Dictrich, Carol Phillips.

347. Moore. Sarah R. (also known as Sadie j Gloria Achcv ; Roscmarv H u m m e l . SCC-R. M o o r e ) — M a r v B. M'>ore, e t al . A d m t r x s . j j /-> i V \ \ . r^ 1 r> __r*3er A Snyder, Attornevs. o n d , Carol D a w n M o v e r . Carol Bur-d i . s . Morton. Mary - -Girard Trust Co ' ^ c - t > J a n C v Ste ind l . Virginia W c i n -

A d m . . IVR.N".. C .T .A . J a m e s F. Marx, et ill. | - ' ° Atte.rneys I m a n , third; Ball I hrow: Marv lou A d ^ t r x K ^ ^ ^ t S Z - A ^ ^ , , , I M ^ Adam, Carol Phillips. Janet Rissmiller;

350. Murray, John Kurtz — John Chester , 0 Yard D a s h : Lois N o l l , Joan Bor-

rell, Carol Phi l l ips; H o p p i n g Race:

Carol Phillips, Lois Noll, Joan Borrell.

Mrs. Stanley Gcorgc, Mrs. Irwin Mover, Mrs. Emerson Mull , Mrs. Woodrow Transue, Mrs. George D . Schaeffer, Mrs. Horace Deisher, Mrs. Emma Kratzer, Mrs. Charlcs DeTurk, Mrs. Will iam Wartzenluft , Mrs. Alvin F. Kline, Mrs. Miriam Roth, Mrs.

ly and brisk, and proceeds, which were generous, are to be- used for thc re­habilitation of veterans. T h e local quota was 1,400.

O R D A I N E D 10 YEARS AGO T h e Rcv. LeRoy Bond, of the New

Tripoli Lutheran Parish, celebrated thc 10th annivcrsarv of his ordina-

E x r s . H e n r y Mal tzberger ,

Famil iar Ctfrby's Symbol Reproduce* in Full Color and Life Size

SAY , CORBYS

T h e tami l ia r Corby's pa r ro t symbol which is carr ied on every Corby's bot t le

Murray. Attorney.

351. Nagle. H a M.—Albert n . Schmoyer, Ex. H. I^'on B r e i d e n b a c h , A t t o r n e y .

352. P e a c o c k , Char les G . — B e r k s County , Trus t C o m p a n y . S u c c e e d i n g T r u s t e e for Mary F r a n c e s W a n n e r , e t a l . R ichardson e t a l . A t t o r n e y s .

353. Earner , N o a h R. — H e l e n Del_ong R a m e r , E x t r x . P a u l H. Tr ice , A t t o r n e y .

364 . R e h r , L a m b e r t A , — T h e R e a d i n g T r u s t C o m p a n y , E x . Zieber A Snyder , A t ­torneys .

355. R i s k , George A , — G e o r g e R. H o w e l l , e t a l . , Bxr8. P h i l i p F. S c h m e h l , At torney .

35«. B i t t e r . Marjor ie E . , a m i n o r — T h e F a r m e r s N a t i o n a l Bank and T r u s t Company o f B o y e r t o w n , P a . , G u a r d i a n . L e u l y & Le idy , A t t o r n e y s .

357. Rohrhach , B l a n c h e — T h e F a r m e r s N a t i o n a l B a n k and T r u s t C o m p a n y of Boy­e r t o w n , P a . , E x . r/eidy A I^eidy, A t t o r n e y s .

358 . S a u l , S a m u e l R . — T h e R e a d i n g T r u s t C o m p a n y , A d m . E m a n u e l W e i s s . A t t o r n e y .

359. Schearer , J o h n M . — W i l l i a m Schearer , E x . Rody. Muth A Rhoda . A t t o r n e y s .

3fiO. Schupp. J o s e p h F . — C i t y B a n k and Trus t Company of R e a d i n g , T r u s t e e for B e t t y Schupp. E l l i s B r o d s t e i n . A t t o r n e y .

361 . Sharp . R a y m o n d — F r a n c e s C. Sharp, et a l . E x r s . Geo. E v e s , A t t o r n e y .

362. Sh irey . S a r a h F . — J, H o w a r d Bon-sa l l . Ex. G. W . Manderbach , A t t o r n e y .

3B3. Sh irey , W a l t e r E . — M a r g a r e t L . B u c h a n a n , B x t r x . T r e x l e r A T r e x l e r , Attor­n e v s .

3fi4. S imon , M a r t h a W . — T h e R e a d i n g Trus t Company , E x . Rando lph Stauf fer , At ­tornev .

3B5. S i m o n s , I d a S , — M a r y S. W a m s h e r , E x t r x . . of E s t . of "Wm. H . V a n R e e d , De­ceased w h o w a s s u r v i v i n g T r u s t e e . S. E. A J. W . B e r t o l e t , A t t o r n e y s .

3««. S m i t h . John A . — L u t h e r S m i t h , E x .

In e s t a t e of V E R O N I C A F A L T E R , l a t e of n R e a d i n g . B e r k s C o u n t y , P e n n s y l v a n i a , de - I h

" ' w e Is h e r e b y g i v e n , tfiat l e t t e r a t e s t a ­m e n t a r y o n t h e e s t a t e o f t h e above n a m e d d e c e n t have been granted to the under

signed, all persons indebted to the estate . and reproduced in Corby's advertising,; Richa'rdsoft, et al. Attorney re r e q u e s t e d to m a k e p a y m e n t , and t h o . , a v i n c e l a i m s t o p r e s e n t t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t e l a v . t o -.'—.. -.-,-

W A L T E R B . BAVK-_, 1251 Eckcr t A v e n u e .

R e a d i n g , P a . A d m i n i s t r a t o r

"iK?Vvd- . 4n . i -h .ed to t h e e s t a t e of t h e i or to h i s a t t o r n e y . John H . B e r t o l e t . S t e v e n s ._£.nflZZ\ ' a r e ^ u e s t ^ i n t a k e p a y - , A I ^ e . 18 8 . 5 th S t r e e t . B e a d i n g P a s a i d d e c e d e n t a r e r e q u e s t e d ~ m e n t a n d a l l p e r s o n s h a v i n g c l a i m * or d e ­m a n d , a g a i n s t t h e e s t a t e of t h e s a i d dece - , d e n t are r e q u e s t e d t o m a k e k n o w n t h e s a m e , w i t h o u t d e l a y , t o t h e u n d e r s i g n e d e x e c u -

t r i X - A N N A M. 1 B A C H , 421 N o r t h 1 0 t h 6 t . ,

R e a d i n g , P a . . | E x e c u t r i x .

I R A P . R O T H B R M E L . J O H N G. B O T H E R M E L D A N I H L G. R O T H E R M K L , A t t o r n e y a , 8 1 N o r t h S i x t h S t . , R e a d i n g . P a .

LT-Mayl7-6 t

tornevs 3i.S. S t u p p . W . P . — R o b e r t J. S tupp , E x .

Chas. K. Derr, e t a l , A t t o r n e y s . 3<». T r a t e . Mar ia — E l s i e R. Grant ,

A d m t r x . H e n r v M. Korti, A t t o r n e y . 370. W a l b o r n , E l l a C — E a r l E. W a l b o r n ,

°* a l E x r s . Z ieber A Snyder , A t t o r n e y s . 3 7 i r W e i t z e l , I s a a c — C h a r l e s S t a h l e r , E x .

I_J-Apr2»-«t

ADMIinSTRATOBS M0TICE In eatate of CARL E. SCHLENKER.late

of Ruacombmanor Townahlp, Berka .County, P , N o « e « T h e r e b y given that letter^^of adminlatration on the ertate ot the above named decedent have been granted to the

^ i i r i S ^ n . indebted to * e eatate.of the •aid decedent are requested to make pay­ment, and all perwme having c 1 " ™ <*,<£• mands agatnat th* eatate of the Mid dece­dent, are reqneated to make known the same, without delay, to the nnderaigned adminls-

******* __ MERTIN HCHL-SNKEB, Fleetwood. R. D. No. 1, Pa.

U-MayS-St Administrator.

CORPORATION NOTICE I n t h e Court of Common P l e a s of

B e r k s County . P e n n s y l v a n i a N O . 6 6 J U N E T E R M . 1&45

N o t i c e i s hereby g iven t h a t an appl ica­t ion w i l l be m a d e to t h e Court of Common P l e a s of B e r k s County . P e n n s y l v a n i a , for t h e a m e n d m e n t of t h e c h a r t e r o f T I V O L I C A M P I N G C I - T B . to w i t :

1 T h e n a m e of the corporat ion i s T I V O L I C A M P I N G C L P B . a n d . i t s r e g i s t e r e d office Is in P e n n T o w n s h i p , B e r k s County . P e n n s y l ­v a n i a .

2. T h e app l i ca t ion for t h e a m e n d m e n t of t h e c h a r t e r of the corporat ion Is t o b e m a d e u n d e r t h e prov i s ions of the A c t o f A s s e m b l y k n o w n and c i t ed as t h e "Non-Prof i t Cor­porat ion L a w . " approved M a y 5 t h , 1933.

3 . T h e n a t u r e and c h a r a c t e r o f t h e pro­posed a m e n d m e n t i s a s f o l l o w s : —

T h a t A r t i c l e 2 of t h e C h a r t e r , w h i c h reads a s f o l l o w s : —

" A R T I C L E I I . S a i d Corporat ion i s fornred for t h e pur­

p o s e o f t h e m a i n t e n a n c e of an outdoor c l u b for soc ia l e n j o y m e n t , t h a t i s f o r t h e pur­pose of b u y i n g , l e a s i n g and f u r n i s h i n g and e q n l p p l n g . and proper ly c o n d u c t i n g a h o l l a ­ing and grounds or p lace w h e r e t h e m e m ­bers m a y m e e t for t h e o r o m o t i o n o f s o c i a l Intercourse and e n t e r t a i n m e n t , and fr iend intercourse ana e n . e r . a i n n . - T i i , >mi l n r a u - • J _ _ _ -xniy, sh ip a m o n g t h e m s e l v e t , a n d t h e e n j o y m e n t I * ° - « U » p C l O t n .

has now been made into a bri l l iant new 3frr standt. Raymond G. — Elsie M display piece in full color, which will ££_!_!! A d m t r * - c h a s - K- J*"-- e t a l- A t

soon be distr ibuted to t h e t r a d e in Pennsylvania, i t was announced by t h e Philadelphia office of J a s . Barclay & Co.. Limited.

Completely cut out, t h e p a r r o t is balanced on a perch, with t h e words 'Say Corby's" in a balloon a t t h e ! J-J? Bertolet. Attorney bottom of t h e display. I t is designed to h a n g by a decorative cord in such a way t h a t it will a t t r a c t a t t en t ion and it can be used in combinat ion wi th a pyramid of Corby's bott les.

"We feel t h a t th i s hang ing pa r ro t will remind people to ask for t h e whiskey wi th t h e g rand old Canad ian name." said J . Ben Taylor , Eas te rn Pennsylvania Distr ict Manager for Barclay. " T h e Corby's p a r r o t h a s long been associated wi th th i s l ight, sociable whiskey and its life-like reproduct ion tn full color makes i t t h e k m d of d i s ­play t h a t t h e average out le t will be ?lad to use. I t is p r in ted on both sides io whichever way it t u rns , t h e design is legible."

jThe sign was produced by Eleventh Hour Service of Phi ladelphia , from a n original oil pa in t ing by Pau l Musso. An added fea ture is a complete coat ing jf lacquer, which adds t o t h e p e r m a -lence a n d beauty of t h e display a n d permits easy cleaning by wiping wi th

372. W e U e r , E l l e n C — C l i n t o n B . W e l l e r , Ex . H. Leon B r e i d e n b a c h . A t t o r n e y .

3 7 3 . W i n t e r s , J a m e s R . — T h e R e a d i n g T r u s t C o m p a n y . T r u s t e e for Nora I. W i n t e r s . P a u l D. E d e l m a n , A t t o r n e y .

374. Z e c h m a n , W i l U a m M . — B e r k s Connty T r u s t Company , T r u s t e e for K a t e Z e c h m a n , e t a l . T r e x l e r A T r e x l e r . A t t o r n e y s .

375. Z i m m e r m a n , M a r y A . — A n n i e B . W i l s o n , e t a l , E x t r x s . George M. J o n e s , A t ­t o r n e y s .

L a s t d a y for filing a c c o u n t s for t h e Sep­t e m b e r U s t , J u l y 3 1 s t , 1945.

J O H N C. COOK, R e g i s t e r o f W i l l s & E x Officio Clerk o f

Orphans' Court . M a y l 0 - 4 t

Ruth Shankweiler has accepted a

clerical position in the business office

at KSTC, replacing Mrs. Russell Os­

wald.

She is a graduate of KHS and Mc-

Cann's Business College, and is treas­

urer of the Gradale Sorority!

G R O U P VI : Grade 2 Fifty Yard Dasb: Rcddy Zcmbcr,

Eleanor Heckman, Wal tc r Ricbard Christ; Jump thc Shot: Faye Hinkcl. Roasrio Orlando, Rosclla Seyler; Bean Bag Throw: Eleanor Heckman, Ken­neth Kuzan, Faye Dictrich; Penny Hunt : Gene Esterly, Edward Gieringer, Doris Angstadt.

G R O U P V I I : Grade 1: Penny Hunt : Franklin Yoh, Donald

Kline. Richard Bailey; 50 Yard Dash: Ronald Arnold, Janice Noll, Donald Kline; Bean Bag Throw: Mary Louise Schlcgcl, Richard Hamilton, Dean Kriner; Jump thc Shot: Charles Mohn , Pcgg>- Newcomer, Richard Hamilton.

Bus Strike < Continued fram Page •«#)

of Sundays and Holidays, after arbi­tration is decided upon, the party so failing shall forfeit its case."

Mr. Keeker, vice-president and superintendent of the Transit Co. , said that on May Sth at the regular monthly meeting of the grievance com­mittee, only routine matters were dis­cussed, and not a word was said in re­gard to going out on strike four days later.

O n Tucsday, school bus operators from the Upper Macungie township school district for hauling children to the Allentown High School are al­leged to have been threatened. Upper Macungie township's school directors ordered their bus drivers to take high school children into Allentown. T h e children in the past have been fur­nished with transportation tickets for use on the Allentown & Reading lines. T h e school board payed for such trans­portation.

After unloading the children at the High School, Strohl, one of the driv­ers, was warned, he reported, by strik­ing drivers to stop the practice. Fear­ing violence on the return trip, ar­rangements were completed through Sergeant Simmons of the Bethlehem

\ 3 t h 3 n Scliiicifcr Mildred Rabcnold. Dorothy D i e t J tion, at special services in the Jackson-

rich, • Ethel Balthaser, Marie Kamp, I v l l lIc

I < - h u r o n -. Elsie Dictrich, Mac Wartzenluft , He was presented with a purse con-

a n d t h c wedding cake was shared with M v _ l c S c h ; l c f f c r i G r a c e a n d A r l e n c taming $ 5 2 5 m

. - ' , , . , . .1 • . . . . . I Lcibv, Helen Johnson, Mamie Dietr ich,!

r L " a s 1! °i? toJS!f!ri£_Sleri A > AlHcnc DcChan t . Elizabeth Schaeffer, i W I L D L I O N S 1 I vclyn Dichl. T h e Kutztown Wi ld Lions have

Joshua and Richard Gaul, W a y n e | organized and practise on thc Fair and James Dictrich. Luther Balthaser,! Grounds. They include Rav Oswald,

son, Paul Heffner, whose widow Mrs. Ethel Heffner, Fleetwood.

Thcir grandchildren include Pvt Will iam Howertcr. Francis Wartzen-

John Richard Schaeffer, wounded a t ; , c. ,-., ; T. , , . ' .. . T luft, Clarence Johnson, Russell Bieber, Iwo Jima, who has since died; James Heffner, with the U. S. Navy: Mar­garet Jcan Schaeffer, Mary Jane Schaef­fer, wife of George Collins; and Anna Louise Schaeffer,. wife of James Schaeffer, Kutztown, who live at In­diana, Pa.

Thcy also havc two great-grand­children: Dolores Schaeffer and James Heffner. Jr.

Anniversary Guests In addition to thc neighbors, thc

following shared in the anniversary celebration: Mr. and Mrs. John A. Schaeffer and daughter Margaret, Charlotte, N . C ; Mr. and .Mrs . James Schaeffer and daughter Dolores, In­diana, Pa.; Mrs. James Heffner and son James, Jr., Fleetwood; and Mrs.

Louis Hilbert. Corp. Henn - Emsing Bard, U S M C .

Allan K. Grim, James S. Grim Jr.,

catcher; R o n a l d Weidenhammer, pitcher; Gordon Konemann, first base; Barry Lee Adam, left field; Richard Robinson, second base; Donald Drey, third base; Richard Adam, short stop;

1 Lucille Schadlcr, Janet Weidner and M o m s Sell and Mr. and Mrs. John j ^ ^ M c c k e _ /

Lucille Transue, Emily, Verna, Marie | Donald Stein, center field; and Lee and Sara Fink, Richard and Shirley I Schlenker, right field. Rabcnold, Anna, Eleanor, Richard! Recruits are wanted! and James DeLong, Betty Johnson, John and Shirley Schaeffer, Laura, Gene, and Ray Kulp Jr.

W a n e n Weidner , Caterer Warren Weidner . caterer, was as­

sisted by Mrs. Harry E . Kohler, Mrs . Nora E. Hilbert, Mrs. Paul Frederick, Mrs. Mary Bieber, Mrs. Thomas Wartzenluft , and Mrs. Irvin Dclcamp; and thc waitresses were Betty Fred­erick, Eleanor Wartzenluft , Eleanor Bieber, Helen Bock, Betty Dietrich,

Sell, Kutztown R. D . 3 T h e celebrants were thc recipients

of many gifts.

Grange Anni. (Continued fram page ame)

prestige and democratic spirit. Program Highlights

In addition to Senator Ruth 's talk, Judge Schaeffer gave reminiscences of boyhood days on the Schaeffer farm, now occupied by Wor thy Master Schaeffer, and told how he earned his first dollar, a large, silver one, by help­ing to harvest 26 loads of wheat for Farmer Luckenbill, who operated a steam thresher. "This is great country, here," he added.

"Grangers of Tomorrow," as W o r t h y Master Schaeffer calls them, presented the following: Laura Kulp, recitation; Eleanor DeLong, accordion solos; Lucille Transue, recitation.

Ruth Lafferty, music supervisor of the local schools, was Song Leader, with Mrs. Paul C . Dunkelberger at the piano; the Grange Chorus, com-

T h e menu consisted • of chicken noodle soup, roast chicken, potato fill­ing, giblct gravy, com, peas, cranberry-salad, rolls, stuffed olives, pickles, car­rots, celery, apricot pie, ice cream, coffee and mints.

Membcrs donated the chickens. Decorations

Each banqueter was presented with a ribbon badge; the speakers' table Was centered with red carnations; the

B I R T H D A Y S U R P R I S E F O R W I L S O N KUTZ

Members of the office force at KSTC gave Wilson Kutz an informal surprise at his home on College Hill, on the eve of his birthday, and brought a bounteous lunch. Thcy included Mrs. Laila Heffner, Mrs. Ruth Moyer, Mrs. Glendowyn Schappell, Mrs. Mil­dred Wilson, Arlene Sieber and Pauline Haas; also Mrs. Bettie Singer, a formcr member, who made a special trip from Reading.

Enroute home from a dinner bridge at thc Bruce-Orth, college teachers stopped to sing "Happy Birthday."

Mrs. Kutz also shared in the fun.

L I O N S C L U B , MAY 25TH Harold Miller will have charge of

the May 25 th meeting of the Lions Club.

FOUND? TRY CLASSIFIED

C O M M E N C E M E N T D A T E S

T O P T O N : May 23-Sena to r F . W . Ru th , Speaker. Baccalaureate, May 20, Rev. W . H . Kline- Minister.

F L E E T W O O D : May 25 (Also May 2 4 ) - " T h e Four Freedoms." Bac­calaureate, May 20, Rev. A. G. Woodring, Minister.

K S T C : May 2 6 - D r . Bess Goodykoontz, Speaker, Charles F . Seidel, Alumni Speaker. Baccalaureate, May 20, Dr. Paul J. Hoh , Minister.

K U T Z T O W N : May 2 9 - D r . Q , A. W . Rohrbach, Speaker. Baccalau-reatle, May 27, Rev. W . K. Cassel, Minister.

L O N G S W A M P : May 3 1 - W a r r e o K. Hess, Speaker. Baccalaureate, May 27, D r . C . E . Keiser, Minister.

All events will take place in t h e evening wi th the exception of l o n g ­swamp Baccalaureate, 10:30 a. m., and K S T C Commencement , 2:30 p . m .

r>0.

VICTORY O V | V - E D a y b u t i n N e w York 'd

C

Foolproof! To Hell

T h e fitting of holes in modern increasingly imporj Schools are doing youth find their in life.

Vocational Guic ^ l t h Grade and school diploma-ti member being Osc

Mental ability J tients) of various 1

sonality Trai ts , ha H . B. Yoder, are members , the ini tjal; and Counsel gjrant each pupil a t ] a year. \ Mr . Stein is anl

i j expected of yoi business, and is all future of those en] Agriculture and H<i also has much to of. £pr higher instituti] in addition to assis of inst i tuton, courses, and entraj vises as to ways anc the cost.

Three Kut

Recentl; Among t h e m a n l

ers liberated from I three from Kutz t l Pvts. Ralph ("Pe te] ^rt Greenawalt , K Allan Dietrich, K u ^tfiat freedom m e a l den between the h i to their loved o n d

In a letter da ted] Adam writes his Louise Luckenbill o? seeing me very , n_y way out of GeJ *<4l you how glad] a.§ain. Many will t Wl , bu t you prot a i ) y of them, bee-unreal. But I am a , safe and well in U | Reported missing ] he wrote on Good r m he was imprisc . Robert Greenawa Mrs. Morris Greenai •UL reports to his wi ^ 5th, tha t h e 2 9 t h , and is still i ^ c u a t i o n . A sped Promised. "No-onel *J?at it meant to u s , | ™* American Flaa

"whirled at the U I 12-45 P. m., an)

l H 4 P \ m ' " M i s s i n < * € * * ne was red

November 10, I944J

» # • Dietr ich. i n |

i ! 0 8 1 P 3 !**. dated

Annual JL: Downtcr

Right's the nid ton1gn?,°rSftCn^ J R s c h o o I s ' h°** ^ P a t r o n s wfll

n a experience.

«**$_££-in *c I

^Sm)^ * f yT® Band and t ** ** ith Grade

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