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The Sandusky Register from Sandusky, Ohio • Page 10

Location:
Sandusky, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TEN COURT HOUSE Neighbor Is Charged With Cutting Tree; Judgment Is Sought Citif tfriep GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPI- tal has released Harry Appleton, 134 Jackson-st, and Rhoda Young, 427 Dewcy-sl. Sandusky unit, Co. of the Slate Guard, Weld its first regular weekly drill of the new year CHARLES IIEYMAN, HURON, njght Th(j unU extends In course of trial before Judgc'and Mrs. Harry Dcnzer, 115 invitation to the public to visit X. H.

Savord, with the jury'Osbome-st, have been dischargedjits headquarters in the Cable State Guard Unit Seeking Members; Officers Listed SANDUSKY JAN. 3, 1946 waived, is an action socking judg- from Providence Hospital. merit of $2,500 for the cutting down of a tree. The suit brought by Sylvester Kramer, 1334 Campbell-st, whose THE FOLLOWING HAVE (been released from Memorial Hos- a lor Thomas Beat. 808 Wayne- neys are Young and Young.

Nor-' and Mrs Russell Doerner and walk, against. Ottomer A. Schcif-i baby Milan lcy, his neighbor, 1402 Campbell- st. The defendant i represented by Flynn. Frohman, Buckingham Py and Kruse.

Kramer states that on July us LIEUT. (CEO MITCHELL J. Zolik, 1419 Carr-st, was recently discharged from naval service at naval personnel separa- tion center, Great Lakes, 111. 1945. Scheifley cut down a large and beautiful maple tree which TWQ AUTOMOBILE COLLI- stood on the boulevard of llslsions werc re 0 rtcd bv police Wcd- prcmises without impact, between cars Scheifley admits cutting down the maple but claims that the tree, which adjoined the bouleva rd, occurred of his own premises, had been a vi ins, uw i in-'-al Polk and Lindsley-sts.

Anolh- inasmuch as it was in- wThirh er collision between autos driven iS i 1 8 Ks'r He Wh Wn, Old Heights, Claims that he tried to Bessie R. Jolfcrson. DcWrtt-av the insects in the tree but was unsuccessful owing to the partly condition of the tree. He asks that the suit be dismissed SHEEP CLAIM The board of county sioners'allowed a sheep claim to jjames Gillespie, RR 1. Berlin for one ewe killed by GETS DITCH CONTRACT The county board awarded contract, on low bid, for the excavation of the Fey single-county drainage ditch, Vermilion, to Sam Talbo, Lorain.

The board has received bids for operation of the county dog- pound for 1946 and for the carrying of liability and damage insurance on county equipment. FILE DIVORCE CASES Two suits for divorce have been filed in common pleas court. John Mackenzie, Vermilion, through William H. Williams, seeks a divorce from Lela Fleming same address, on the grounds of neglect and cruelly. parties were married in Vermilion in Jan.

1943. A divorce is sought by James Kellem. Cleveland-rd, from Betty Jane Kellem, Huntington, W. on the grounds of cruelty and neglect. He is represented by Catri and Catri.

The couple was married at Russell, in April, 1943. PROBATE COURT Application for authority to receive payment on behalf of minor legatee without appointment of guardian in the matter of Salvatore Corso. Ninth partial account in the guardianship of Benjamin Hall. Salesclerks Wanted Apply Weinberger's SPRAY UNES SPREAD DDT AT MARINE CAMP block The company members are anxious to complete the unit's recruitment in order to bring it to full strength and give it the opportunity to compete for honors with other companies of the 5th regiment. A few vacancies still exist in the local unit.

According to First Sergeant Joseph di Franco, any man in Erie- co, over 18, may enlist for one year. Unit members receiv-s uniforms, equipment and regular Army pay for meeting one night each week. The armory is open every evening of the week for anyone interested in learning details. Information may also be obtained from members of the company. The following local men are listed as officers and non-commissioned officers: John W.

Baxter, captain; Ran- Hoincvillc, resulted at E. Market and Hancock-sts. Slight damages! a11 Scnunk ls Lieut; Edward to all cars were reported. i Fe 'ck. 2nd.

Joseph Di. 'Franco, 1st. Alfred F. Wiley GROVER BALCOM, and Glenn S. Gallagher, platoon man or the Erie-co AAA, an-j sergcant6 The sergeants are John T.

Wil- ARTHUR SCHEEL Arthur Scheel, 620 Broadway-st, well-known and life-long resident of this city, died late Wednesday afternoon in Good Samaritan Hospital, following an illness of 10 days, aged 55 years, 11 months and 12 days. A veteran of World War he was employed as a machinist with the Klotz Machine Co. for many years. Fraternally he was charter member of the Loyal Order of Moose, 471, and the G. B.

No. 323. He was also tffiliated with Lowell C. Hein Post, 2529, Veterans of Foreign Wars. He is survived by his widow; one son, Richard Taylor Scheel, at home; his father, Herman; a brother, Fred, and' a sister, Mrs.

Norman Windisch, all of this city. The body is at the Charles J. Andres Sons' Funeral Home and late today will be returned to the residence, 620 Broadway-st. where may call, and where services will be at 2 p. m.

Saturday, the Rev. Hunsdon Gary, officiating. Burial will be in Oakland Cemetery. nounced today for the information of local farmers that dairy payments for October, November and December, J945, arc due and payable from the present date to the end of February. THE RESIGNATION OF MRS.

Marjory Cavanah as teacher of the Perkins public school led to the second vacancy in the county teaching staff for this term, Superintendent W. E. Weagly stated today. son, Denzel Downs and William Young; corporals: Albert S. Arthur, Donovan A.

Harple, Charles G. Hush, Erwin J. Richard and Rolland F. Zech. JOE A SANDUSKY, pleaded guilty to intoxication before Judge Lewis L.

Marquart today and was fined $15 and costs. CHARGED BY POLICE WITH speeding, Albert Kceton, Sandusky, today forfeited $10 bond in municipal court. MR. AND MRS. SAM SNOW- dcn.

Venice-rd, are the parents of a daughter, born at Providence Hospital last Friday, instead of a son, as previously announced. RUTH K. COWGILL. SANDUS- ky, charged by police with violating the stop street, today forfeited $5 bond in municipal court. ARTHUR LUCAS, 58, SANDUS- ky, pleaded guilty to intoxication in municipal court today and was fined $10 and costs.

He was ar- Lrested by police. Moose Club, regular Friday meeting, oyster stew. Saturday dancing to Will Keating. CAMP PENDLETON, Cal. (UPl war still goes on today for Marines and Navy doctors fighting an enemy whose GI designation would be something like "Mosquito, Hedge-hopping, barrel bellied little OY-1 observation planes thrump in at tree level over the Santa Margarita river here every week, spraying DDT over anopheles breeding grounds in every catchment within a mile of camp areas.

Infected troops, still bearing active malaria germs from overseas duty, and the deadly carrier mos- tjuitos are the main dangers of malarial incidence, Lieut. Harold B. Yust explained. Lieut. Yust and Capt.

J. T. O'Connel, USN. are in charge of the ficht to exterminate the threat of malaria. Ingenious spraying equipment mounted on the planes is fashioned from a 39-gallon lank.

10 feet of 3-i-ineh pipe and five holes on! either end of the pipe. i Two quarts of DDT solution per' acra can be laid down by Hie aerial', "spray guns." Augmenting these' are jeep-borne ground sprayers and smoke generators insecticide fog. FRANCE ACCEPTS PROPOSAL PARIS, Jan. 3 notified the United States today that it accepts, in principle, the Big Three proposal for a United Nations conference to be held probably in Paris to study draft peace treaties. The first English title of nobility in America was conferred on an Indian, Wanchesc, chief of a North Carolina tribe, was clubbed "Lord of Manteo'' after his visit to England with Raleigh's colonists.

Just received new floral and plain slip cover material. Cooksey's Slip Cover Shop, 1220 Hayes Ave. Local Police (Continued from Page One.) men in connection with cases at that city and two of the trio may be brought to Sandusky for questioning. Pokorny entered a plea of not guilty when arraigned before Judge Marquart and after a preliminary hearing was held for the grand jury on bond of $7,500. Captain Ryan said that Pokorny is a parolee.

The affidavit charges Pokorny with burglary and entering Kramer's service station, Huron-av and Elm-st, and the theft, of 15 auto tires, six bumper jacks, one radio, $50 in currency and an auto which since was recovered, all having an aggregate value of $800. In addition to Kramer's station, the Shell station, Fulton and Washington-sts, was entered and 516 in cash, two flashlights and a money-changer taken. A door was damaged. A combination clock-radio, valued at $45 was taken from the Fleetwing station, Tiffin-av and Monroc-st. Doors at both the Sinclair station.

fin-av and Monroe-st and Standard Oil Co. station, Tiffin-av and Venice-rd, were also reported damaged. According to Captain Ryan, Pokorny admitted entering the filling station at Bay Bridge, owned by Lydon Howman, and whero two shotguns, one electric mantel-type clock, one carton of cigarets and 150 pennies werc taken, and also entering the Fleetwing station at Tiffin-av and Monroe-st. Recovered property taken from service stations is being held by police as evidence, Ryan said. MRS.

FANNIE CLARK A life-long resident of Erie-co, Mrs. Fannie E. Clark, widow of Jesse C. Clark, well-known S. Hayes-av farmer, died Thursday morrting at her home, 920 Hayes- av, aged 74 years.

Before moving to Sandusky, Mrs. Clark resided on the farm for many years. Mrs. Clark was a member of the Sand Hill Methodist Church and an active member of the church Ladies' Aid Society. She is survived by a son, Charles Clark, S.

Hayes-av; two grandchildren, William Clark, of orwalk, and Richard, S. Hayes- av; two brothers, George W. Waldock, S. Campbell-st, and Charles Waldock, of Sandusky, and a number of nephews and nieces. The body is at the Keller Funeral Home and Friday morning will be returned to the residence, where friends may call, and where services will be at 1:30 p.

m. Saturday and at 2:30 p. m. at the Sand Hill Church, Dr. H.

Thompson and the Rev. Lloyd Walker, officiating. Burial will be in Sand Hill Cemetery. OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HUOPLfc VMEr'Me FlMD OPPORTUNE-. fUES FOR.MOO, MfXSOC- HOVJ ABOUT PROVIDING THE COfAMONMTV VOtTH FREE MUSIC BW 80ClNiG; FLUTE SCALES POLES MOT 80T FOR.

VOOR. HAME 30ST BEENi OFFERED FOR LARGE YOU'D SETTER, TAKE YOUR PANCAKES OM THE VOHENi MOO "HAW ONiE" ONifHE: mm MANUFACTURING CHURCH. BELLS creating Ernsi Speyer, M. D. has resumed practice.

Wives And Children To Join Officers In Europe FRANKFURT! 1. 'Ul' 'Oiiicers and upper-Kraut- MT- gcants of the American otrupa- tion force will be joined in Germany by their wives and 1 ln1 1 htartiim about April 1 if the Wi-i Department approves a elan e.ov. in its it was learned in- day. A detailed plan lor the tran fer of 90.H0O uumen and children from the United States to mili- lary posts in Germany has been -pproveu by the Ftiropean tlie- headquarters and to Occupation toiie soldiers eliui- ble to have liieir families uiih lliem in Germany include all oi- Jicers and ol- leers with the latiiej of Mail sergeant or hiy This Coifipl es procedure poveniina mililar. SAMKO'S Janitors' Supplies 1 in Water St.

Sell tliilij; That Cleans." 1 an St. MISS EVA SCHNEIDER Miss Eva Schneider, well-known and life-long resident of this city, residing at 713 Decatur-sl, died Thursday morning at Good Samaritan Hospital, following illness of several weeks. She was a member of Mary's Church. Her survivors are five nephews and two nieces. A brother, Joseph, and a sister, Mary, preceded her in death.

The body is at the Charles J. Andres Sons' Funeral Home and arrangements will be announced later. EDWARD A. HAWN Edward A. Hawn, well-known and life-long resident of S.

Hayes- av, died Thursday morning at Good Samaritan Hospital, following a long illness, aged 64 years and six days. He was an active member of the Sand Hill Methodist Church. He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Del Milner, Milan-rd; Mrs. Frank Goehring, Whitmore, and Mrs.

Andrew Meyers, Castalia: 11 grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. A. D. Brunover, Bloomingville. His wife, Mrs.

Carrie Krumholz Hawn, preceded him in death April The body is at the Charles J. Andres Sons' Funeral Home and arrangements will be announced ater. and William Albers, George Simpson and Fred Shellhorn. Services for Frederick J. Stiles will be at 3 p.

m. Friday at the Charles J. Andres Sons' Funeral Home, the Rev. Hunsdon Gary, officiating. Burial will be in Oakland Cemetery with Commodore Denig Post, 83, American Legion, holding military services at the grave.

The body is at the funeral home, where friends may call. Have your income tax returns prepared by Ed W. Rhode, 704 Polk. 3958-W. Little Change (Continued from Page One.) en meat will be at record levels.

FATS, OILS AND Fats and oils will continue in tight supply throughout 1946. Exports will be reduced. CORN AND OTHER LIVESTOCK demand for corn and other feed grains is expected to continue strong with supplies much tighter than a year ago. WHEAT Market supplies, which have been limited, are expected to increase in the weeks ahead, but prices will not decline much, if any, from present levels. POTATOES Prices which farmers receive in the next two or three months may average a little higher than minimum government support prices, and will rise from month to month by about the increase in storage costs.

Electrical (Continued from Page One.) reports on the status of their wage negotiations with the oil workers union (CIO). The panel telegraphed each company that hearings will be resumed next Monday in any case UNO Capitol To Be On U. S. East Coast LONDON. Jan.

3 determined real estate huntefs left for the United States today on a search for 40 or 50 square miles of "beautiful land" near but not too near Boston or New York where they hope to build an international city for His United Nations. The six men arc the delegates chosen by the United Nations Organization to select a site for the permanent headquarters of tlia UNO from a list of a dozen or so favored localities in the "Boston and New York areas. High up on the list is the rolling farm and woodland estate of the late President Roosevelt on the east bank of the Hudson river at Hyde Park, New York. The committee, which will set up temporary headquarters in New York during its property hunt, will recommend land for the UNO to purchase, and the UNO general assembly will then appoint a planning commission of experts to draft the plans for the world peace capital. Bloomingville Dance every Friday night.

WEATHER REPORT By O. S. WEATHER BUREAU SANDUSKY AND VICINITY: Occasional rain and warmer tonight and Friday; low temperature tonight about and high Friday near Gentle southerly winds. OHIO: Occasional rain tonight and Friday, slowly rising temperature. LAKE ERIE: Cloudy tonight with 18-mile, southwest to south winds, changing to foggy weather with 18-mile southerly winds alter midnight.

Attend sale now and save. Brownworth Furn. Elec. Appliance, 618 W. Wash.

FIND HEADLESS BODY SAN Jan. 3 and canyons along the road to fasnionablc Lake Arrowhead were searched today for clues to the identity of a nude young woman, her head and hands missing, whose mutilated body was found in a ravine. The body, with two bullet wounds in the chest, was found yesterday less than 15 yards from the heavily-traveled mountain road. WANT ADS BRING RESULT'S Sympathy Walkout Begins In Stamford STAMFORD, Jan. 3 (UP) The first of 10,000 workers who to paralyze industrial Stamford with a city-wide sympathy strike unless a settlement was reached in Yale Towne's 57- day-old labor dispute began leaving their jobs before noon today.

Approximately 250 members of the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smeller Workers (CIO) dropped their work at the Stamford Rolling Mills at 11 a jrc. and shortly before noon appeared In a body at the town square. Police around the town square were reinforced as the deadline ncared and little knots of townspeople, not directly connected with ihe walkouts, stood around watching. KILLED BY PLANE PROPELLOR DAYTON, Jan. 3 Russell L.

Kcenan, 18, of Zola, W. was killed at Wright Field last night when he walked into the turning propellor of a two- motored transport plane. He had been stationed at the field for a month, Air Technical Service Command officials said. LOCAL TELEGRAPH MARKETS STOCKS IRREGULAR IN LIGHT TRADING NEW YORK, Jan. 3 (UP) Stocks wore narrowly irregular today with trading light.

LIVESTOCK and CLEVELAND LIVESTOCK CLEVELAND. Jan. 3 market active steady. Steers, dry fed choice $17-lti; good $15-17; med $13-15: corn $11. canners and cutters ijU-l 1,.

oulv( heifers, eh $16-17; good $15-16; med Commrl Credit Stocks and Bonds New York Stock and Curb Quotations, furnished by Bache and Co. KAILS nn Central 32 3 i RR Pennsylvania 42 Pullman Co 61' Atchison 103 Southern Railway Southern Pacific INDUSTRIALS Air Reduction Am Sugar Ref ErifiRs MfR Natl Biscuit Borden Commcl Solvents com S10-12; canners andiCrosley cutters $8-10; cows, ch butchers $12- City Tie Fuel S13: gd to ch butchers $11-12; med Nat'l Distillers best cutter cows $8-n; canners Greyhound where agreement has not been ch bulls gd $11-'Gen Electric reached. It recessed Its 2. ow ra de -ii. i Gen Foods on Dec.

21 for further collective bargaining. Even more critical walkouts loomed, however, in the nation's steel and meat packing industries. Government experts were continuing efforts to head off the Jan. 14 steel and Jan 16 meat packing walkouts scheduled by CIO unions. There also was a possibility of a strike by the nation's shipworkers.

No progress was reported in the General Motors walkout. The glass workers walkout continued. And there was little progress toward a settlement of the oil industry dispute- Meanwhile, the United Mine Workers were expected to enter the already disturbed labor picture with new demand for a general wage increase within b'Q to days. UMW President John L. Lewis has authority to ask the coal operators to reopen their contract March 1.

Until the invention of the "Fly Shuttle," the weaver of cloth, in order to interlace the filling threads, would throw his shuttle from one hand to another. In 1733 John Kay invented a device by which the weaver could pull a cord and send the shuttle on its course through the web without throwing it himself by hand. American railroads moved nearly members of the armed forces in organized groups from Pearl Harbor through August 1945. market 50c lower. Ch good $15-16; med com $7-14.

SHEEP AND market active, steady. Spring lambs, ch gd $13-14; med $12-13; culls SI 2: sheep, ch wethers $6-7; ch ewes S5-G: com market steady at ceilings. Heavyweights, over 350 lbs S14.25-14.75: U. S. support mediums 240-300 S.

support Inter Paper Am Locomotive Loews Theaters Allied Stores Libby Owens Ford Montgomery Ward Nash Ketvinator Owens III Glass Penney Procter Gamble Paramount Pictures Sears Roebuck 57'i 54 48 32i, 24 3i! 71 47 1 i 7 47 30 33 4 7 -to 63 23 140 HO GRAIN FUTURES STEADY, EASIER CHICAGO, Jan. 3 futures were steady to easier on ithe Board of Trade today follow! ing the limit break on the close yesterday. Selling stemmed from profit-taking as the trade at- i tempted to benefit by the lower I income tax rates. GRAIN RANGE Open High Low Last May July Sept Dec May Julv Sept May July i Sept Dec May Sept Dec July TBOVi 180 177 177 173 173 173 173 118 118'i 118' 2 76 70 70 172 117', butchers lbs $15.05: vorkers! Dist 150-180 lbs light lights 146 lbs good pigs 100.130 lbs 5 roughs good quality SI stags, good quality CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Jan. 3 15-25c lower.

100240 lbs 250-300 lbs SH.65; sows calves 300; stdy, steers best eifers most cows bulls to $14; vealers $15 50 down. stdy. gd and choice lambs yearlings practically absent, native ewes $7.50. PRODUCE CLEVELAND PRODUCE CLEVELAND. Jan.

3 pint mostly 30c. lb sacks U. S. Is unwashed round white baskets topped and washed 50-65c. 114 31 Union Curb Warner Bros.

Wcstinghouse Elec Wool worth MOTORS Boeing Airplane Chrysler Gen Motors 7 11 Goodrich Lockheed 43 Glenn L. Martin Rubber Sperry jj fi 8 Studebaker United Aircraft STEELS Bethlehem Am Steel Fdy Am Rolling Mills Republic 3(1 Steel 81)1 a COPPER MINES Anaconda Copr ,37 3 Sept RURAL, CITY MARKETS SANDUSKY PRODUCK Eggs Potatoes Apples Onions 48c $2.50 $4.50 $2.30 Elevators WHAT FARMERS ARE Wheat $1.73 (Ear Corn, old $170 Ear corn, new $1.50 Oats 75c Barley $1.25 Rye $1 50 Soybeans $2.10 Buckwheat S2.25 Livestock Intl Nickel OILS Atlantic Ref Oil Del Oil vt Pet baskets various. Ohio Oil varieties combination U. S. Is and Phillips Pet U.

S. utilities in. min. few best Pure Oil S4.C5. CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO.

Jan. 3 330,388 lbs, unchanged. 13,927 cases, stdj'. The nonpoisonous indigo snake kills and eats the deadly rattler Standard Oil Ind Standard Oil Ohio Shell Union Texas Oil UTILITIES Cons Edison Tnter Am Si CURB STOCKS Am Gas Elec Cities Service 37 tifi' 33' 22 57 24' 60 'i Waldock Packing Company 29 190 28 180-240 lbs 1240-270 lbs lbs 300 350 lbs lbs I 115-160 lbs 120-135 lbs I Stags I Roughs I Steers, good to ch. 1 Heifers, gd to ch.

Heifers. Steers, com Cows, good Cows, commercial Ed. $14. $14. $14 $14.

$14. $12. $16 UO-17 $16 00-16. 8.00-12 9.50-11 8.50- 9. 65 65 65 5 75 50 .50 .50 .00 50 00 .50 00 WANT ADS BRING RESULTS MRS.

T. C. HAMILTON Word has been received here of the death of Mrs. T. C.

Hamilton, 81, life-long resident of Kelleys Island, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. George C. Cleary, Detroit, at midnight Wednesday. She is survived by "the daughter, Mrs. George Cleary; one son, Captain F.

E. Hamilton, Kel- lcys Island; and two granddaughters, vnne and Caroline Cleary, both, of Detroit. Her husband preceded her in death several years ago. Services will be held Saturday at the Crosby Funeral Home at Hamilton and Glendale, Detroit, and burial will be in the cemetery at Kelleys Island Sunday. The body will leave the airport at Port Clinton Sunday at- 11:15 a.

m. for the island in charge of the Keller Funeral Home. DR. ELLA T. FAST Word has been received here of the death of Dr.

Ella T. Fast mother of Mrs. Edith Grierson, this city, at the family residence at Paulding, Tuesday, follow ing a long illness. Dr. Fast with her husband, who is prominent in the medical pro fession, was one of Paulding's prominent civic leaders and was active in medical and literary circles.

She is survived by her husband and two daughters including Mrs Grierson, here, and one grand daughter, Miss Phyllis Grierson this city. Services and burial were scheduled for Thursday at Paulding. The Rev. Ray E. Evans conducted services Thursday afternoon for Mrs.

Elizabeth Erckman from the residence, 902 First-st liuiial was in Oakland Cemetery Pallbearers were Carl Kcimer Robert Stanley Glynn Erckman, Donald Curtis and William Smith, Sr. START 1946 RIGHT BUY YOUR MEAT AT Lake Shore Meat Co. I FRESH PICNIC HAM Pork Roast 27 ALL YOU WANT DRY SALT PORK SERVE WITH FRESH SPINACH I TENDER PORK Smoked BEEF TONGUES 49 iLoin Roast 33 VERY TENDER, FRESH SLICED BABY BEEF LIVER FRESH, RICH COTTAGE CHEESE WHITE, CLEAN FRESH PIGS' FEET HICKORY SMOKED BACON SQUARES THERE'S NO SUBSTITUTE FOR LAKE SHORE CHOICE BEEF 'AA' SIRLOIN STEAK FRESH SLICED Pork Liver Zl FRESH 4 Pork Kidneys 1 a SUGAR-CURED Slab Bacon Ol ANY SIZE SPRING CHICKENS 43 CUT TO FRY OR BROIL Services for Mrs. Amelia Seheufler were held Thursday afternoon at the I.utz Funeral Home, I lie Rev. J.

Quade, of- ''ieiating. Burial was in Oakland Cemetery. Pallbearers werc George Atwood. Edward Wintcrstcllcr, Fred 45 'AA' Prime Rib Roast 38 'AA' Choice CHUCK ROAST 31 18 30 EASY TO SLICE A Veal Leg ROAST 33 35 READY TO STUFF Veal POCKETS FOR STEW OR CITY CHIX Boneless VEAL EASY TO SLICE CHOICE VEAL RUMP ROAST Home Made SAUER KRAUT, lb. 50 Country Style Liver Sausage, lb.

RING BOLOGNA, lb. 320 Home Made Pork Sausage, lb. Boneless CORNED BEEF, lb. 390 Pure Pork Smoked Sausage, lb. 450 Fresh NECK BONES, lb 90 Plate BOILING BEEF, lb.

190 OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8:00 P.M..

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About The Sandusky Register Archive

Pages Available:
227,541
Years Available:
1849-1968