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The Gettysburg Times from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania • Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE GETTYSBURG TIMES, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1968 CAST GOES TO JAIL AFTER EACH CURTAIN By LINDA DEUTSCH Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES A When the curtain falls at the Warner Playhouse, the police come and haul Jean Harlow and Billy the Kid off fro jail almost every aight. Not the real Billy or Jean, of course, but two young actors who portray them in a sexy play which is causing Los Angeles' biggest theatrical censorship row in a quarter century. The play is "The Beard," and its cast and producer have been arrested nine times since it opened two weeks ago. They have posted $25,000 in ball and continue to keep paying $625 each for release each night. Meanwhile, a U.S.

flistrict judge ruled Monday lhat there are "serious constitutional questions" involved in the continuing arrests. He has ordered a three-judge panel to convene Friday to rule on the matter. OBSCENITY CHARGED "The Beard," was written by San Francisco playwright Michael McClure--who was arrested on opening night and charged with using obscenity and disturbing the peace. He pleaded Innocent Monday. His trial was for March 25.

A vice squad raided "The Beard's" premiere in San Francisco in 1965, but the case was subsequently thrown out of court. In. Los Angeles, police denied Barrows a permit to produce the play. The permit is normally a minor technicality for productions. On opening night they arrested him.

Alexandra Hay, 20, and Richard Bright, 30, on charges of producing a play without a permit. On subsequent nights all were charged with lewd and dissolute conduct and using obscenity in a public place. Social Happenings For Social News Phone 334-1131 18 HOUSING TO BE TOPIC TONIGHT A Third Ward community meeting on housing wil be held tlhis evening at 7:30 o'clock in the community room of the West St. Branch of tihe Gettysburg National Bank. Miss Caissie A.

Nutter, program coordinator for the County Community Action Agency, said that among those who have been invited to attend the meeting are Robert. Taggert, supervisor of regional coordinators of the Bureau of Economic Develpment: Herman Moton. regional coordinator of the Bureau of Economic Development: Harvey White of the Adams County Housing Authority: John Callenbach. director of the Adams County Planning Commission; members of the Gettysburg Ministerium and members of the borough council. Miss Nutter's letter said "it is hopeful that through the deep concern of the citizens of the Third Ward the meeting will view the feasibility of acquiring a program for better housing for low-income persons." AAUW Literary Group will mep, toyight at 8:10 o'clock at the home of Mrs.

Henry A. Schneider 11! 159 W. Broadway. DonaW H. Fotum.

161 Gordon Ave Twin Oaks, will be in char.ee of program. The Gettysburg College Choir will return tonight after present- in? the fina 1 concert of its midwinter tour at St. John's Lu- tfieran Church. Hagerstown, Md Miss Drucilla Deitch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Druid JC. Deitth, Oak Ridge, is the iuiai oi liie choii. Invited representatives of the service organizations of the county will be guests of the Columbia Gas Company at dinner Thursday evening at 6:30 p.m. at Stonehenge to discuss plans tor the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra concert to be given Monday. March 11, in the Gettysburg High School auditorium.

Julian Estep, manager of the gas company, and Mrs. Ingolf J. Qually, general chairman of the concert committee, announced that civic and service clubs benefit from the sale of concert tickets. Seaman Ronald Sachs, son of Mr. and Mrs.

John Sachs, R. 1, left this afternoon for Aviation Electronics School, Memphis, after spending a two- week leave at his home. The 1943 graduating class of Gettysburg High School will meet at the West St. branch of the Gettysburg National Bank, February 14, at 8 p.m. Mrs.

Ourvdn Middey, Orrtanna R. 1, president, and Mrs. William Gallagher, Lake Heritage, past president, will be in charge of the meeting. Miss Harbach, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.

Harrison F. Har bach, Fairview returned Sunday to Wilson College, Gham- foersfoting, after spending the mid- semester vacation at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Mallow, R.

5, had among other guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fletcher, Baltimore; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wrigdit and daughter, Shawn, Norristown: Mr.

and Mrs. Ernest Alexander, Essex, Md. The 11th Grade Y-Teens will meet Wednesday- after school at the YWCA. The Campus Bridge Club will meet Thursday evening at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs.

Sherman Hendricks, 3. Mrs. William T. Smyth and sons, Tommy, David and Jimmy. Timonium, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Roy Alexander, Rodes Ave. Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Aiken and daughter.

Kathryn Jean, College Park, spent the weekend with the former's mother, Mrs. A. C. Aiken, E. Lincoln Ave.

Plan Cub Pack For Hunterstown The first minting to organize a Ciro Scout pack was held in the Hunterstown Community Building cmng. A film. "The PuiTXi.se of Cub Scouting." was- shown by the Seoul executhe, James Tiie importance of the commissioners' staff in Scouting was explained by tiie district commissioner. Charles Knpston. The Scout Handbook was explained by Alien Dubbs.

Boy Scout round table commissioner in the Blare Walnut Clarence Dieffenderier. assistant Scout of the Boy Scout Council. elaborated on importance of the farr.Ly in Cub Stx.itjn£ A orcanizauona'. nwt- held Monday, February 1'2. 3' rn 1:5 Uie h-" Area Poultrymen Meet Thursday The Adams County Poultry- men will fiold an educational meeting Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the West St.

branch of the Gettysburg Na- lional Bank. A 30-miuute film on "New York Egg Pricing," will be provided by the Co. and wiii be followed by a question and answer period conducted by Larry Yager, area marketing agent. Floyd Hicks, extension poultry specialist, will discuss records and analysis of fact from records to make intelligent decisions and predictions in poultry enterprises. Credits, taxes, money management and labor relations will be discussed.

Tickets to the annual poultry ban-iuet. to be held March 5, at 6:30 m. at St. James Lutheran Church in Gettysburg wili be on sale at the meeting. Tell Of Hunting Sheep In Yukon Yukon" the of film mem- of uie Or.

jrr. ar a meet it', ihe Holiday Inn Moiiiiaj r-ing. Dr Drum, will: Robert Plank. went to the Yukon for two weeks to hum wild sheep. The fi depicted uctiw'ita of the :i.ii their in their of TeeK'i an- nomicc-d thj.t for 'he hnrph Symphony OrcliCHra concert tn the Columbia Company at fie Gettysburg Junior School auditorium March I I are available.

Mem'' ers of the Lions Club will visit the- local group at the iiuhduy Inn Monday at 6 30 Accident Victim Is Buried Today Funeral services for Vincent P. O'Neills. 74. Gettysburg R. 4, the county's first traffic vic- i in 1968.

were held this morning at o'clock from the Peters Funeral Home. There was a requiem M-ass 9 o'clock at the St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church with the i Ft. Alphonse Marcincav- pastor officiating Interment was made in Mt. Carmel Cemetery st Littlestown.

Mr O'Neills w-as fatally hurt early on the morning of Feb- a 1 while walking across the Lincoln Highway about six miles east of here. O'Neills lived near Salem EUB Church and had lived in this county since 1940. He was a former Canadian Mounted policemon. a son of the late John and Eunice Lvnch O'Neills wife died in 1960. A brother Fred lives in New Rr.ir^wick.

Canada, ant! there are several nieces and nephews. 47 DISLOCATES SHOULDER Gary Hull 18, Fairfield. was treated Monday at the Warner Hospital for a dislocation of his left shoulder suffered while ski- ins ENGAGEMENT Smith--Livelsberger Mr. and Mrs. Raymond B.

Livelsberger, 506 North McSherrystown. have announced tlie engagement of their daughter. Deboran Jeanne, to Brian C. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.

J. Carroll Smith. Hanover R. 4. Miss Lh elsberger, a 1967 graduate of Delone Catholic High School, is employed in the office of the Hanover Shoe, Inc.

Her fiance a 1967 graduate of Uie same school, is a student at Mt. St. Mary's College, Em mitsburg Briton Warns Of Perils Of NATO Cut LONDON (AP)--NATO's British army commander in northern Europe warned today that any large reduction of Western forces on the continent might offer the Soviet Union "temptations to military adventure which would be hard to resist." Gen. Sir John Tarjett wrote to the London Times from his North Atlantic Treaty Organization headquarters in Germany that Soviet forces are in "a high state of readiness quite close to the demarcation line." The West, he said, must maintain sufficient forces in Europe to keep the Soviet force from guiding "events in the sole interest of the U.S.S.R." and "ensure that the legitimate defense requirements of (West Germany) are met in a military system which the Germans do not themselves dominate." New Soviet Agency May Be For Arms MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Union announced today the creation erf a fifth ministry of machine building, the name which Western analysts believe the Russians use for agencies producing weapons. An official spokesman refused to explain how the new ministry of machine building differs from the existing ministries of general machine building, medium machine building, construction machine building and light industries machine building.

These have been booming lately. Vyacheslav Bakhiryev, a deputy minister of defense industry, was named to head the new ministry. A new ministry might be needed for production of a new type of weapon, such as full- scale output of antiballistic missiles after long testing, but this was impossible to confirm. Germans Riot At U.S. Trade Center A Germany (AP) About 1.000 demonstrators against U.S.

action in Vietnam broke windows Monday night at the American trade center and Amerikahaus cultural center after police drove them away from the U.S. consulate. About a dozen of the young demonstrators were detained. About 300 riot police with dogs were waiting at the consulate, which was stoned Friday night. When the demonstrators approached, shouting "Americans get out of Vietnam," police drenched them with a water cannon in the near-freezing temperature.

The crowd turned to the trade center, where witnesses said the demonstrators hauled down a West German flag and burned it. SOIL SESSION WEDNESDAY A soils and fertilizer meeting will be held Wednesday, February 28 at the North Gettysburg "Office of the Adams County National Bank. J. Robert S'tauffer assistant county agent, said the meeting will begin at 9:30 a.m. and the material covered will include the new Adams County soil survey, the new soil test report form and information concerning lime and fertilizer.

BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS At Warner Hospital Mr. snd Mrs. William J. Pritt. Orrtanna R.

1, son. today. Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Fritz.

Linwood son. Monday. At Hanover Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Jason E.

Culp. Abbottsiown R. 1. son. Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. James T. Cook. Abbottstown R.

1. daughter. Sat- urdav. VANDALS DAMAGE WINDOWS Grant's Chambersburg reported that vandals caused damage to their front show window Sunday night. Jake Dracha assistant manager, told bcr- ough police that two BB shots were found in the windows.

An investigation i being continued. TO FLUSH LINES Fire throughout Oxford liorough will be flushed starting this afternoon and continuing until the entire borough has boon covered. Residents are asked take note since flush- in is likely to cause rust aud to water CAPT, BOYD, TOWN NATIVE, DIES IN CRASH Capt. Cecil S. Boyd, 28, Laredo, a native of Gettysburg, was fatally injured last Tuesday evening at 8:08 o'clock when his T-38 training plane crashed about 20 miles southeast of Zapata, while he was on a solo training flight from the Laredo Air Force Base.

Boyd was a son of Mrs. Neil Miller, the former Sara (Rife) Boyd, Penns Grove, N.J., and the late Cecil Boyd who died in 1957. A number of years ago the Boyds operated a tourist camp and garage along the Emmitsburg Rd. ANNAPOLIS GRAD The deceased graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1961, having received his appointment there from California.

Following graduation he entered the U.S. Air Force. In addition to his mother he is survived by his widow, one son, Dennis, aged five: two daughters, Susan Lynne, four, and Karen Faith, 11 months. A number of relatives reside in Adams County. Funeral services were held last Friday at the Laredo Air Force Base chapel conducted by Rev.

C. H. Mtirph, pastor of the First Methodist Church. The body was cremated and ashes were scattered over the base. Upper Communities Telephone Mrs.

Robert E. Baker, Biglerville 677-7614 BULLETINS ST. LOUIS (AP) Strikes idled two of the nation's major railroads today, and there were indications several other systems might become involved. Affected by the walkout of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen were the Missouri Pacific Lines and its subsidiary, the Texas and Pacific, and the Seaboard Coast Lines. The Missouri serves 12 states in the Midwest and Southwest, and the Seaboard Coast Line operates from Washington, D.C., to Miami with branches extending inland to Birmingham, Atlanta, Montgomery and other cities.

NEW YORK (AP) The city moved in court today to have the leaders of the Uniformed Sanitationmen's Association punished for contempt in failing to call of a garbage collectors' strike now in its fifth day. The legal maneuvering continued as heaps of garbage at the rate of 10,000 tons a day plied up in the streets. The Hospital Employes Union, saying it wouldn't allow its members to become "scabs," refused to let them carry out an order to haul off refuse from the city's 71 hospitals. HARRISBURG (AP) Atty. Gen.

William C. Sennett appealed today for legislative approval of a bill to permit court-ordered wire-tapping in Pennsylvania. Sennett said the Shafer Administration bill now before the General Assembly would outlaw the possession or use of electronic eavesdropping devices with the exception of closely supervised, court-approved electronic surveillance" by the state police. He called it an extension of the 1957 state law which flatly prohibits the use of wiretapping by any party. HARRISBURG (AP) Delegates favoring a reduction in the size of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives failed today in renewed efforts to amend a proposal maintaining House membership at the present 203.

Six amendments, which called for anywhere from 100 to 200 members, fell by substantial votes, but the proponents refused to give up. HARRISBURG (AP)--The state attorney general, in an "informal c.oinion," said today the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission should identify school districts that have been ordered to submit racial desegregation plans by July 1. Moreover, a deputy attorney general has been assigned to check both the state's right-to- know law and the Human Relations Act to find out if there are legal barriers to the disclosure of such information. The Goodwill Sunday School Class or Flohr's Lutheran Church, McKnightstown, wffl meet at 7 o'clock Thursday evening at the Lamp Post Tea Room, Gettysburg, for dinner. Mrs.

Faye Reeder is now convalescing at her home, Aspers 1, after an extended stay at the York Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Merl Culp, Bendersville, were honored at dinner Saturday evening at Smith's Restaurant to celebrate their 50th ding aruihersary which they observed Monday. The dinner was given by their children Ralph Gulp, Richard Culp, Mrs.

Norman Blocher and Mrs. Robert Heyser. Also attending were the childrens' husbands and wives as as grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Additional guests included Miss Sandy Singley, Miss Jane Lawver and Atiee Taylor. The couple was also presented with a set of gold wedding bands from the children.

Practice for the play "Harvey" sponsored by the Junior Class of Biglerville High School has started. Members of the Ninth, 10th and llth Grades make up the cast of the play which will be presented March 8 under the direction of Mrs. Fred Slegal. A change in choir rehearsals at Trinity Lutheran Church, Ar- endtsvilte, has been announced. Members of the Cherub Choir will meet at 6:45 o'clock; Chapel Choir 7:15 o'clock and the Chancel Choir at 8 o'clock.

The Cherub and Chapel Choirs will meet in the upstairs Sunday School room and members- are asked to use the side door next to the parsonage to avoid a conflict with another meeting in the church. The listed changes will remain in effect until further notice. F. W. Weigle, Biglerville, has returned home after spending the past three months in the Nightingale Convalescent Home, Camp Hill.

The Ladies' Bible Study Group will meet at the home of Mrs. Richard E. Shaffer, 27 Seminary Gettysburg, Wednesday morning at 9:30 o'clock. The group will complete the study of the book of Ruth. The Ira E.

Lady American Legion Post wil meet Thursday evening at 8 o'clock at the post home, BiglerviUe. Biglerville ambulance drivers on call this week are Samuel Helsley and Dale Guise. Residents of upper communities are reminded that Thursday is the deadline for contributions to the Donald E. Sterner memorial fund, at Biglervffie High School. The award will be given yearly to the outstanding boy in track.

Money should be given to David Houck, business manager. Persons wishing to join the first aid class at Gettysburg Wednesday evening should meet at the Biglerville Firehouse at 6:30 p.m. to go as a group. New members may be enrolled in the class this week. The Youth Choir of the Bender's Lutheran Church will meet for rehearsal at 6:30 o'clock this evening.

The Seventh and Eighth Grades of Biglervffie High School will provide an assembly February 15 for the enjoyment of the school, parents and friends at 8:30 o'clock in the morning. The program will include a play "So Precious a Gift" which is the story on the development of ether for operations. The student director will be RonaM Eicholtz. The junior high band and choir will also participate and are under the direction of Miss Alice Alwine. MEXICO CITY (AP) Twelve of 29 Mexican students from a Jesuit school are apparently dead on the frozen slopes of an extinct volcano, according to Red Cross radio reports today.

The students were trapped in a snowstorm Sunday at the foot level cf Ixtacihuatl, the smaller of Iwo landmark snow-capped peaks about 30 miles southeast of the capital. FIRST REHEARSAL Roger Parscls. band director at the Gettysburg High School, announced the first reheard for the Adams County Band and Chorus concert will be held Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. at School. The second rehearsal will be tuld noxt Wednesday and the concert will be presented February 21 at the Lit- tlostown High School.

All students selected to participate are urged to Attend ibeai rehearsals WARNER HOSPITAL Admissions: Mrs. William J. Pritt, Orrtanna R. Mrs. Sterling Fritz.

Linwood. Mrs. Russell Fritz. Littlestown R. Mrs.

Robert Wenschhof, R. 2: Mrs. Clarence Sheely. Littlestown: R. Dale Guise.

Biglerville: Mrs. Clarence Nett. R. Mrs. James R.

Castle. Frederick: Charles Steinour Littlestown R. 1: William Eckenrode, 385 Buford Ave. Discharges: Mrs. Edna Senseman 264 Baltimore John Staiger.

152 W. Middle Mrs. Lester Starry. R. 6: Mrs.

George Gorsuch and infant daughter, Westminster R. 3: Mrs. Mildred Dutrow. Emmitsburg: Mrs. Harold Fair and infant son, R.

3: Mrs. Dale Daywalt and infant daughter. 238 S. Washington Mrs. Michael Joy and infant daughter, Emmitsburg.

STOCKS FIRMER NEW YORK (AP) The stock market firmed a bit and began to rise slightly early this afternoon. Trading was fairly active. Although losers continued to outnumber gainers they did so only by a slight margin. The spread between the two was about 60. The Dow Jones industrial average, which had been off as much as 2.43 points in the early hours, rallied and was up 1.33 at 862.46 at nooc.

DEATHS Mrs. Samuel Davis Mrs. Sallie Alberta (Myers) Davis, 79, widow of Samuel Davis, 25 W. Walnut Hanover, died in the Hanover Hospital at 2:30 p.m. Monday.

She was a native of York County and a member of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church at York Springs. She formerly resided in that community. Surviving are two sons, Parker J. Davis, York Springs R. 2, and Charles F.

Davis, York Springs R. a daughter, Mrs. Mary Starner, New Oxford R. 11 grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and a number of nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Thursday morning at 11 o'clock at the Pittenturf Funeral Home, York Springs, with her pastor, the Rev.

Ray J. Bohn, officiating. Interment will be made in Sunnyside Cemetery at York Springs. Friends may call Wednesday evening from 7 to 9 o'clock at the funeral home. Mrs.

Thomas A. Koontz Mrs. Amanda S. Koontz, 82, wife of Thomas A. Koontz, Ldt- tlestown R.

1, died at 1 o'clock this morning in the Golden Age Nursing Home, Hanover. A daughter of the late David H. and Ann Mary (Myers) Bair, she was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church, near Littlestown. Surviving in addition to her husband are five children: Charles E.

Koontz and Mrs. Claude M. Gerrick, both of Littlestown R. Mrs. Luther Angell, Taneytown R.

Albert T. Koontz, Jacksonville, and Roy L. Koontz, Littlestown; 21 grandchildren, 56 great-grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Clara Hoffheins, Hanover. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Little Funeral Home, Littlestown, with her pastor, the Rev.

William C. Karns, officiating. Interment will be in Rest Haven Cemetery, a Friends may call at the funeral home in Littlestown Wednesday evening. Tito Working On Arab-Israeli Pact By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ASWAN, Egypt (AP) President Tito of Yugoslavia is trying to win President Gamal Abdel Nasser's approval of an Arab- Israeli peace plan permitting Israel to use the Suez Canal, informed sources report. Egyptian sources said in talks Monday, Nasser insisted on settlement of the Palestine refugee problem as a condition for permitting Israeli ships to use the canal and ending the 20-year Arab state of belligerency against Israel.

Tito has called all along for Israeli withdrawal from captured Arab territory. However, he modified the peace plan he suggested last August by -adding explicit proposals for Israeli use of the canal and an end to Arab belligerency. Yugoslav sources said the plan might be the basis for a new approach to the U.N. Security Council. The Weather Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High Low Pr.

Albany, cloudy 33 23 Albuquerque, clear 55 31 Atlanta, cloudy 56 37 Bismarck, clear 33 10 Boise, clear 49 32 Boston, cloudy 36 26 Buffalo, clear 31 21 Chicago, clear 46 29 Cincinnati, clear 49 23 Cleveland, clear 44 22 Denver, cloudy 55 25 Des Moines, cloudy 49 32 Detroit clear 45 25 Fairbanks, clear -28 -43 Fort Worth, clear 60 38 Helena, clear 46 17 Honolulu, clear 80 67 Indianapolis, clear 48 25 Jacksonville, rain 65 53 .03 Juneau. snow 37 34 1.34 Kansas City, clear 52 29 Los Angeles, cloudy 76 58 Louisville, clear 49 28 Memphis, clear 56 33 Miami, cloudy 72 65 .05 Milwaukee, clear 44 24 snow 42 32 .02 New Orleans, clear 65 43 New York, clear 40 27 Okla. City, clear 53 30 Omaha, cloudy 53 34 Philadelphia, clear 45 26 Phoenix, cloudy 76 50 Pittsburgh, clear 43 21 Ptlnd, clear 3D 15 Ptlnd, clear 55 44 Rapid City, cloudy 56 26 Richmond, clear 56 22 St. Louis, clear 49 25 Salt Lk. City, cloudy 45 26 San Diego, cloudy 71 54 San clear 57 52 Seattle, clear 47 37 Tampa, clear 74 58 Washington, clear 53 33 TO ELECT OFFICERS The Adams County 4-H Horse Club wili elect officers Thursday evening at 7 o'clock in the Xorth Gettysburg Office cf the Adams County National Bank.

A film will be shown. J. Robert Stauffer, assistant county agent, has urged members to bring a prospective to soeetinj. For Your Valentine A GIFT OF JEWELRY Will Bring Joy the Year 'Round BLOCHER'S Jewelers Since 1887 25-27 Chambersburg Street Gettysburg, Pa. Chas.

Weaver. Owner FOR PAINTING JOBS Big or Little Spray Paini Jobs Special Paints for All Purposes Paint Brushes Rollers and Trays Masking Tape Brush Cleaners Paint Thinners Paint Removers Siepladders GEO. M. ZERFING Gettysburg HARDWARE, INC. Littlestown USED CAR BUYS 19 67 Bonneville Convertible, P.S., P.B., Red Finish, Like New '67 Pontiac 9-pass.

station P.S., P.B., owner, clean '62 Old. Wr. H.T. PA, P.B., 1 owner '60 Pontiac S.C. 4-dr.

P.S., P.B., clean '61 Corvair 4-dr. auto, trans. '67 Pontiac P.S. P.B., blue finish '66 Thonderbird H.T. P.S., P.B., 1 owner '65 Bonneville H.T.

P.S., P.B., 1 owner, like new '63 Pontiac Cata. 4-dr. R.H., P.S., WWT. '59 Ford auto, dr. Sdn.

'59 Pontiac S.C. 4-dr. P.B., ivory finish Pontiac. Inc. 125 S.

Washington Street Gettysburg, Pa. 1. Paint It With Gleem Paint Easy to Apply Fast to Dry Washable Lasts for Years For All Interior Walls-Woodwork Wide Choice Decorator Colors Any Color You Need Made With Our Press-A-Color Dispenser Gleem Paint Lasts Longer on Anything SHOP REDDING'S 30 York Street We Give SH Green Stamps Clearance Sale Specials Lowson Sofa Gold Mcrtelasse Fabric Reg. $475.00 NOW $385.00 Lounge Chair Beige Reg. $214.50 NOW $155.00 Extended Payments 9 Chambersburg Street Evening Appointments Gettysburg, Pa.

KELVINATOR NEW GO-TOGETHERS Them at Weishaaf Bros. 37W.Middk Gettysburg, Pa. Your Kelvinortor Dealer Your Advertising In The Times Doesn't It Pays.

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About The Gettysburg Times Archive

Pages Available:
356,888
Years Available:
1909-2009