> THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT VOLUME UV KUTZTOWN, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 No. 18 Kutz- korth of iown as lei with |y (140) |e alley, VOCATIONAL SCOTCH BAND TO thirty ?st oar- it wide itztown COURSES BARRED BEAUTIFUL SPANISH-TYPE BUILDINQ PLAY HERE NEXT • same begin- Kutz- IN HIGH SCHOOL land in SUNDAY, SEPT. 30 red and f Earl IS PLANNED EOR TEACHERS' COLLEQE tingler. BECAUSE THE NUMBER OF MUSICIANS VERY POPULAR lowners. CLASSROOMS IS NOT HERE SEVERAL SUFFICIENT. YEARS AGO.

p. D.) jne-half •ould Teach Commercial Sub- Two Concert*—Afternoon and dwell- frame ejects, Home Economics, Man­ style." Evening—Under Auspices of ces of ual Training, But No Room. le are I Kutztown Fire Co. ship of ptate of le Man Wells, Standard No. 3, in the list of accred­ Roy D. Smith's famous Miami Kil­ r. 1918. ited high school, states that "a suf­ be re- ties, internationally famous Royal jces of ficient number of qualified teachers Scotch Highlander Band, will appear las lots must be prepared to take care ade­ in the Kutztown Park Sunday after­ Id Plan quately of all instruction offered. Not Ind are noon and evening, Sept. 30, in two |nd de- less than the equivalent of the full program, one at 3 and the other at 8 wit: teaching time of three teachers may be o'clock, under the auspices of the Ity Ave- given to academic subjects in the Jon said Kutztown Fire Co. (aid Lot smallest four-year high school." Closing the season at Miami, Fla., ly bv a In speaking of the smallest four- on the where the Kilties played before an au­ L5') feet year high school, a school with but few dience estimated at more than a mil­ [No. 199 students in any one class is meant, a lion people, the band will tour more partly condition which makes it possible for Ian and than a dozen states in a specially decor­ Hav- the teachers to throw together several ated Pullman trimmed and painted | Liberty of the classes so as to reduce the teach­ up with scenes depicting the tropical ind ex- ing time to a point within the legalized |f equal city of palms and sun-kissed beaches. feet to requirement of the Department of Pub­ Perhaps no other aggregation in the ey. lic Instruction. For instance, when NEW BUILDING FOR TRAINING SCHOOL AT LOCAL STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE AS REPRODUCED FROM ARCHITECT'S DRAWING south is as colorful as the Kilties, who |r them- the local high school was first recog­ were originally brought to America by >rs, ad- nized as a four-year high school the the late Lieut. Malcolm MacGregor. |ant and classes were so small that the two up­ ixtures, ?rs, g-as per classes could conveniently be Concert Artists |1 otber thrown together into one class in sub­ STITZELS LEAVE FOR WEST AT NEW YORK RADIO SHOW ind all TRAINING SCHOOL . On their appearance here the Kilties ;s, flues jects like Latin and the sciences, thus MAXATAWNY S.S. will present a varied array of concert reducing the number of classes taught Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Stitzel, of George O'Neil and F. B. Willis at­ ROTARY GIVES $75 •electric Kutztown, left early Monday morning tended the radio show in New York artists who have gained fame in past Is. bath by at least two a day and, naturally, seasons with the band. Included in [enances the corps of high school teachers at in their new Ford roadster for the San AT LOCAL COLLEGE City. There were 149 exhibits, includ­ things, TO GIVE PAGEANT i Joaquin Valley, California, where Mr. ing 60 licensed radio dealers. The TO LOCAL RED CROSS these will be Bobby Brollier, Scotch the real that time was very adequate. tenor; Marian Barry Taylor, violin so­ tall not j Stitzel expects to regain his health, Zenith $2,000 machine was an out­ ill pass Big Student Increase ! having recently undergone a very seri­ standing feature of the show. loist; Miss Dora Hilton, formerly of the Istate at MOST MODERN Metropolitan Opera Co., and "Wee le pay- Since then the school has grown so Next Sunday Evening in Zion's ous operation at the Reading Hospital. To Be Used for Florida and Mr. Stitzel has purchased a small farm TRINITY FOOD SALE Jamie" Clark, noted Scotch bag piper rapidly that each of the four classes and comedian. [f Harry has become not only a large section by Church—Portraying America's in the San Joaquin Valley, near the West Indies Hurricane Disas­ ?der, his city of Kirby, and they expect to make ARCHITECTURALLY A NEW The Ladies' Aid Society of Trinity Composed of 30 pieces, besides the Harry itself, but each of these classess has Opportunity Now for World ter Sufferers—Hauser Delivers become so large that all four had to this there future home. This informa­ Lutheran Church will conduct a food group of soloists, the band presents a Eliza- DEPARTURE FOR THESE colorful spectacle with its members irre-ten- be divided into two sections, thus form­ Service and Influence. tion is supplied by Bruce Lesher, Kutz­ sale under the pergola in the yard of Excellent Address. krre-ten- ing eight classes where less than four town R. 3. INSTITUTIONS. John C. Kohler, Main Street, Saturday garbed in the famous costume of the existed when the school first became afternoon, Oct. 6. Members and friends Highland Scot. They present a pro­ ST. JOHN'S PASTRY SALE of the society are urged to bring their gram of wide variety, including classi­ a four-year high school. In the mean­ The Maxatawny Zion's Union Sun­ time, however, the teaching corps has donations by 2 o'clock and without The members of the Kutztown Ro­ cal and popular numbers and groups day School will present a pageant of The women of St. John's Lutheran Will Be Fireproof Throughout. further solicitation. The public is in- tary Club at their meeting last eve­ of Scotch folk songs as famous in been increased by less than one-half, Christian Liberty, entitled "The Strik­ D.) Church will have a pastry sale Satur­ vited to fche sale America as in Scotland. due mostly to a lack of adequate class ing of America's Hour," Sunday eve­ Two-Story Brick Trimmed ning subscribed $75 for the West Indies Matten, rooms. day, Oct. 20, in the front of the store and Florida disaster and the money They will return to Miami for the ning, Sept. 30, in the Maxatawny Zion's room occupied by George O'Neil and winter season after their tour of the brick Furthermore, the introduction of the Church at 7.15 p. m. With Indiana Limestone. TAKING EXTENSION COURSE will be sent to the local Red Cross, |use, to- U. B. Ketner. eastern and middle western states is subjects of drawing and public school Music for the occasion will be pre­ from This is what the Rotary clubs through­ neded. ground music, each under specially trained Gomer Saul, who graduated |ted. sit- sented by the Maxatawny Church INSTALLING ORGAN the local high school in June, has en­ out the country are doing. The mem­ "ranklin teachers, draws heavily on the class choir. The cast is composed of about The new grade school building to be )d South rolled in the University of Pennsyl­ bers can feel proud of their splendid COMMUNION IN ST. PETER'S room situation, so that students are 45 characters. The aim of the pageant erected for the Train,ng School at the contribution. '""ranklin compelled to study during vacant peri­ The Moller pipe organ people of Ha- vania Extension School, Reading. He County is to show that America is facing to­ gerstown, Md., are installing Mrs. State Teachers College here will take Stanley Hauser, who is associated blvania. ods under crowded conditions, which the college, and Kutztown as well, to a will take the course in accounts and Communion will be held in Becker's day her hour of opportunity for world Louisa Gonser's memorial organ into finance. with Fred Fisher in the coal and lum­ lows, to are an injustice to pupils, teachers and service and influence to sound a warn­ new and higher level architecturally. (St. Peter's) Church by the Reformed iiow or parents. Grace Evangelical Congregational He is a son of Postmaster and Mrs. ber business in Kutztown, gave the wing on Sunday, Oct. 7, at 9.45 a. m. the East ing from the history of the great na­ Church in Kutztown. . It has a distince leaning toward the club a most interesting discourse on on the Lack of an adequate number of class Spanish and this feature has a ten­ Darnel M. Saul. Rev. H. D. Houtz, of East Berlin, tet .and tions whose glory has departed; to ex­ bus transportation. He said the trans­ rooms and, consequently, a teacher alt liberty, justice and brotherhood as dency to soften the lines that utility Adams County, will conduct the serv­ or late portation problems of this country are ices. lining in shortage, also bars from the school taught by the Lord Jesus and to hold would demand. A photograph of the becoming more acute each day and lin Street such additional courses as are impera­ architect's drawing is reproduced above. ^ngth or up His Cross as the hope of America HALLOWE'EN HERE IMPROVEMENTS IN with the great increase of the automo­ 10') feet, tive to a well-organized modern high and the world. Work on the new building, which has bile and the desire of the people to LIGHTS AT MARIE PARK of Pete school, such as commercial, home been designed by Ritcher & Eiler, reg­ iato. his Large Cast travel, there arise great dangers and lers. economics and manual arts courses, to­ ON WED., OCT. 31 istered architects, of Reading, will be LOCAL TOWN HALL many worries for the average driver. U. B. Ketner installed a Delco light­ gether with an explanation of the The cast of characters is as follows: started this fall. The planning is suf­ The motor bus, with its modern equip­ ing system in the comfort station at academic courses. Prolocutor, Mrs. Warren Gernerd; ficiently advanced now, together with ment, does to some extent relieve the Marie Park, George Kemp, proprietor. choir; trumpeters, Rachael Mengel, the specifications, to advertise for bids This is a fine improvement for this The Remedy Association to Hold Carnival Be­ average person of many of these wor­ Laila Bleiler, Anna Walbert, Ruth for the construction of the building. Equipment Added to Kitchen, ries and it is being used more and j popular road house. IE. p.) The weakness, therefore, lies in the Mertz; Spirit of Brotherhood, Homer Within another month it is expected physical plant and the remedy is an ginning Next Saturday Evening New Linoleum Laid — Card more every day for both local and na­ Vatten. F. Guldin; Liberty, Trula Bleiler; Jus­ that the bids will be awarded and tion-wide touring. LEVIN NOW "DADDY" expansion of this plant so as to meet tice, Maude DeLong; Egypt, Mary to Raise Funds—Band Music then operations will be started imme­ y bitok the immediate requirements. The Parties First Friday in Each piece jjl Greenawald; Rome, Maurice Mertz; diately. Kutztown's Modern Bus Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Levin became lis erect- Veatest asset of any community is a Babylonia, Robert Greenawald; Greece, Every Evening. Month Starting on Oct. 5. ' \ealthy, well-organized and compre­ To Be Set Back 115 Feet Kutztown can really feel proud of its the parents of a daughter. The baby |of South Anna Mertz; America, Mabel Stump; I modern bus. The operation of such a was born in a New York Hospital. 552. be- hensive school system, a situation pos- Handmaidens, Edna Grim, Ann Hen­ This fine new structure will be lo­ 1 treets, in 'ible only when the physical plant means of transportation is quite an The Levins reside in apartments in the |of Berks derson; Indians, Kenneth Haydt, At a meeting of the Kutztown Hal­ cated 115 feet back from the curb line home of Prof. Clyde F. Lytle, this bor­ bounded meets the demands of an up-to-date Wayne Hess, Walter Greenawald; flag of the William Penn Highway and The Town Hall in Kutztown has been undertaking and requires a great deal h lowe'en Association the following were redecorated. The color scheme is ivory of work. The mere matter of insurance ough. Sam is wearing a big smile since hrlt: school system. bearer, Oscar Leiby; pioneers, Warren about centrally between the boys' wing |of Fred- elected: President, J. D. Geiger; sec­ is quite an item. Mr. Fisher's new bus, he is a daddy. He is employed in the „ink; on Mertz, Nevin Haas; Negro nurse, Mar­ of the Main Building and the site of with different borders in each room. retary, Paul Serf ass; treasurer, Irwin The work was done by Grover Stein. which has a seating capacity of 30, composing room of the Kutztown Pub­ rhteenth garet Nutz; immigrants, Maude De- D. Kemp. the former Biehl residence. Examina­ lishing Co. ;rty now Long and children; foreign nations, tion of the picture will show a wing This was financed by the Town has made over 9,000 miles since he and on It was decided to hold the celebra­ bought it, which was about the first of illev. China, Ada Kerns; India, Laura Men­ planned for each side. These will not Council. ALBANY TOWNSHIP tion in Kutztown Wednesday, Oct. 31. The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Kutz­ July of this year. This bus does a Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Spayd and Hdth on gel; Japan, Ada Fegely; Korea, Mary This is the date for Hallowe'en, which be erected for the present. The build­ thirteen Dietrich; Africa, William Bailey; Ara­ ing without the contemplated wings town Fire Co. again showed its will­ great deal of advertising for Kutztown daughters, Mr. and Mrs. James Hix and }ast and should help to give the affair the real and Mr. Fisher is really rendering a hundred bia, Clara Richards; doctor, M. F. will have a frontage of 165 feet and a ingness to help. They placed a new Theodore Miller, all of Tilden and HAS 247 IN SCHOOLS spirit. The King Frost Carnival at range the kitchen," new folding service to this community in giving the Upper Bern, and Mr. and Mrs. Reinsel, Keet wide Greenawald; nurse, Mrs. Homer Gul­ Hamburg will be held Saturday eve­ depth of 65 feet. The front of the building will run parallel to the high­ chairs a new oilcloth. The kitchen People the opportunity of seeing the Topton, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. of Har- din; teacher, Mrs. Frank Deisher; play, ning, Oct. 27. coun way. It will be two stories high so is very well equipped now with two try P. B. Blatt, Walnut Sereet. Iriesemer. Mary Clouser: children, Robert Fegely, There will be a dance after the par­ Mr Kempton Has Largest Enroll that the central feature will rise to a good-sized ranges, an oil stove, a large - Hauser spoke in quite some de- Carolyn Fegely, Esther Deisher, Evelyn ade on Hallowe'en night in the Park tai1 in height of 46 feet. The additional units sink and a cupboard filled with plenty reference to their coming win- Employs Deisher, Marion Mertz, Mabel Greena­ Theatre. The next meeting of the as­ ter tour of ment in the District planned, but not to be erected for the of dishes. This kitchen is available for Florida. He is a Kutztown wald. sociation will be held at the Eagle Ho­ b and 11 Teachers, Eight of Whom present, are to have a frontage of 40 any organization that desires a place °y acquitted himself most sue- The public is invited to attend the tel Monday, Oct. 1, at 8 p. m. It is to serve a supper. cessfully. PA. CONVENTION OF (E. D.) presentation of this pageant. hoped that a good number will at­ feet. Matten, Are Women. The exterior of the structure will be The monthly card parties by the La- President Doc Saul was highly elated tend. Make this a community affair. dies' Auxiliary of the fire company will over the fact that the club had a 100% Aged Man Injured More citizens should show interest so of brick and Indiana limestone. The SABBATH SCHOOLS ipiece of central feature, including the main en­ be held the first Friday evening of meeting and urged the members to fownship. Garion Folk, 68, Fleetwood, received that the arrangements and responsi­ each month. The first one will be on turn oufc aSain next week in order to )f Penn- The schools of Albany Township a broken leg and an injury to the head bility are not in the hands of only a trance, to be made of carved Indiana reet and he Map or opened with an enlarged enrollment limestone, is surmounted by carved Oct. 5. There will be 20 prizes award- S ar District Governor I Dechant. when he was struck by a car driven few. These Hallowe'en celebrations ed to those holding the highest scores, Charles Ackley, of Vineland, N. J. To Be Held in Philadelphia on kptember, this fall, the total number of school by Carl Schweitzer, jr., of Temple R. 1. have been a credit to Kutztown for the stone panels and cornice, the middle panel bearing the seal of the State of and refreshments will be offered for jng been children in that district being, accord­ He was taken to the Reading Hospital. last few years and each year should ODD-LOOKING POTATO Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, fr's Office ing to latest figures. 247. Quite a num­ Pennsylvania. This portion has three sale. It is hoped the public will pat­ }nnsylva- show an improvement. ronize these parties and help them 14, and ber of the eighth grade graduates of windows on the second floor having Oct. 10 to 12—Auditorium No. 5 in ST. PETER'S RE-DEDICATION Carnival Planned arches and wrought-iron balcony rail continue their good work. Edwin Reppert, faithful employee in last year are attending the Slatington ! the culinary department of the State Engaged Holds 10,000. >e build- High School. A carnival will be sponsored by the ing in keeping with the rest of the iid Plan The combined congregations of Teachers College, brought to the Pa- s s i n g The enrollment for this term by Hallowe'en Association, with Benjamin Spanish influence in the design of the REV. A. L. BRUMBACH jnded on Becker's (St. Peter's) Church, Rich­ | triot Office a potato of the Early Red schools is as follows: Kempton, 37; Serfass acting as chairman, starting building. r iet ng a m orma nilevard: mond Township, will have a re-dedica­ Saturday evening, Sept. 29, to Oct. C, A letter has just been received by Ihe South Trexler. 19; Mountain, 26; Miller's, 15; tion of their newly painted and reno­ No Basement TO CONFIRM 2 CLASSES J£ n *£™ , ,? S'Tf'J5 " Jlley. and Bolich's. 25; New Bethel, 31; Albany, inclusive. The carnival will be run There is a secondary entrance at tion. With a slight play of the im­ President Otis S. Rothenberger, of the |he West- vated church on Sunday, Oct. 14. every evening during this time with Rev. A. L. Brumbach popular Re­ Berks County Sabbath School Associa­ through 29; Greenawait's. 14; Stony Run, 21; Services will begin at 10.30 a. m. and each end of the building to be erected. agination the potato has the appear­ between Clover Mill. 32; Wessnersville, 28. the exception of Monday evening. The formed pastor, of Kutztown, is also ance of a pig's face. It is about three tion, assigning to this county a mini­ U hereby 2 o'clock in the afternoon. This time There will be no basement under the among those who will hold confirma­ The Board of Education of Albany Cadet Band, of town, will furnish mu­ building with the exception of a small inches in diameter, excluding the pro- mum of 100 delegates to the great reeled on of 10 30 for the morning service is cor­ tions this fall in two of the congrega­ Pennsylvania Sabbath School conven­ a front­ Township as at present constituted is sic for the first three evenings and the mechanical room at the western end tusions. The tuber was raised on the rect, as the other church in the neigh­ Kutztown Band for the last three eve­ tions of his charge. tion to be held in Philadelphia, Oct. on said as follows: President, William Berk, borhood has services at 9.30 and in this for steam valves, water valves and jani­ college farm and picked up by Mr. , a depth Kempton R. 2; vice president, Walter nings. The carnival will be held on In the New Jerusalem (Red) Church, Reppert, who will preserve it for show 10, 11 and 12. [fty (150) way the two services will nat conflict. torial purposes. urpose He ls mak ing hls home with Gehrmger. Kempton R. 2; secretary, North Whiteoak Street. near Wessnersville, the following will P /\, T A Pennsylvania this year, with the aid The entire projected structure is to be confirmed on Saturday afternoon, Mr. and Mrs Irwin Adam, Upper Main of IIow- Howard H. Lutz, Kempton R. 2; treas­ If this carnival provides enough Street thls of her largest city and the balance of jraul. his L. G. E. SOCIAL NIGHT money for the Hallowe'en celebration, be strictly fireproof. All of the floors Oct. 13, and take their first com- - borough, the state, fully expects to hold the urer, Maurice D. Henry, Kempton R. and the roof are to be of re-inforced Ivners. 1: Albert Kunkel. Kempton R. 2. there will be no solicting for funds. munion on Sunday, Oct. 14: Paul Zim­ largest Sabbath School convention in concrete. All the partitions are to be WALLACES MOVE n- The teachers for this term are as Purity Temple, No. 124, Ladies of The next big event *in Kutztown will merman, Edward Schlegel, Elwood the world. the Golden Eagle. Kutztown, will hold take place Wednesday evening, Oct. 31. constructed of gypsum, block and the Stetler, Rhea Lenhart, Florence Fis­ ——— follows: floors to have a composition covering. Robert Wallace, the golf professional Pennsylvania, with her 10,609 Prot­ Bolich's, No. 1, Homer Kunkel, Al­ its first social night for the season It is not too early to make plans for ter, all of the vicinity of Kempton; estant Sabbath Schools and with her bany. Tuesday, Oct. 2. All members are (Continued on Page Twelve) Mary Lenhart, Wanamakers. This con- at the Berkleigh Country Club, moved (E. D.) that make up. Remember the meeting from the Bear Apartments into the two-and-a-quarter million Sabbath attorneys - urged to be present at these meetings Monday evening at the Eagle Hotel. grgeation has about 50 members. School teachers, officers and pupils, ,ry brick M:Iler s. No. 2. Miriam E. C. Mertz, and enjoy a social hour. stone house on the club property, piece of SaHy Ann Furnace. Come with suggestions and ideas. In Friedens Church, Wessnersville, only one in four of her population goes Rev. Brumbach will confirm the fol­ which has been remodeled into a resi- is erect- New Bethel. No. 3, John O. Baer, RABBIT HUNTING Nevin dence for tne Wallace family and dor­ to Sabbath School regularly. [of Chest- Kempton R. 2. LOCAL RED CROSS COUNTRY CLUB CARD PARTY lowing on Saturday, Oct. 27: This state has one-sixteenth of the Avenue. OPENS NOV. 1 AND W. Stump, Harold H. Smith, Elmer W. mitories. rreet. for- Mountain, No. 4. Louisa P. Merkel, MEETING CALLED FOR entire Sabbath enrollment of the world fcurth and The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Kutz­ CLOSES DEC. 15 Smith, Francis W. Genslinger, Gordon . Mf' and Mrs^Wallace spent two days •omissing' Kempton R. 2. NEXT MONDAY EVENING m Clt met a and one-eighth of the United States town Country Club will sponsor a card H. Livingood, all of the vicinity of f "** J«* ^ »2 sister Borough Trexler. No. 5, Helen Kistler, Wana- of Mr alIa e ho enrollment. Spring maker. A meeting of the local Red Cross and party at the club house, Friday eve­ Several newspaper clippings Kempton; Norman H. Buck, Kutztown f ^ ^ 5 ' ^ returned from an The great auditorium in which the fennsylva- from Berks County newspapers, R. 4; Mary I. Mohn, New Tripoli R. D. extended visit in her native land, Scot­ follows. Wessnersville. No. 7, Florence L. Kun­ all other charitably inclined citizens of ning, Oct. 5. Members and friends are land. convention will be held in Philadelphia kel. Stony Run. this borough and communitv has been invited and urged to be present. which have been received at the Verna M. Buck, Kutztown R. D. The will seat 10,000 people, half of whom Chestnut offices of the Game Commission, class will take its first communion on Clover M.ll. No. 8. Hilda Hartman, called by Dr. James S. Grim, local HENRY BILLMAN are expected to come from Philadel­ ten feet '38 South Fourth Street. Hamburg. chairman, for Monday, Oct. 1, at 8 p. GREENAWALD DUCK DINNER give the impression that the Sunday, Oct. 28. This congregation phia and the other half from through­ [operty of farmers of that section are still has a membership of 100. West by Stony Run. No. 9, Ira J. Schroeder, m.. in the Town Hall. Henry Billman died at the home of out the state. he west- Trexler. Arrangements have been made for The following visited the family of of the belief that the rabbit sea­ lifty-eight He his sister, Mrs. Kate Bower, Greenwich Choir of 500 Ju.v's, No. 10, Miriam E. Greena- the Bov Scouts to make a envass ^f If. A. Greenawald on Sunday and en­ son begins on Oct. 15, and are BURGLARIES REPORTED Ivenue. therefore protesting such an ear­ Street, Kutztown, .aged 77 years, 4 [id Chest- •** Albany. the town for suitable cloth'ng to be joyed a duck dinner: Mr. and Mrs. A choir of more than 500 voices has ly season. Residents of Berks Peter Reber, who bought a farm months and 6 days. There survives been selected from among the best and m Kempton, No. 11, Kathryn Shank- sent to the homeless and destitute in William J. Hein and daughter Alma, an Mr. and Mrs. William Greenawald and County are advised that the Oc­ from Samuel Smith, near town, had other sister, Mrs. Kitty Wink, of singers in Philadelphia's 750 Sabbath Ky of R- •«{». Kutztown. the hurricane devastated areas in Ta maqua Greneawalts, No. 12, Anna M. Sitt- Myron Boyer, all of town; Mr. and tober season for rabbits was quite an experience last week. Burg- , ; -^eral services will be Schools. This choir is training once Eckert, ier Florida and the West Indies. Shoes changed by the Board of Game lars visited his place and relieved him feld on Saturday, Sept. 29 at 1 p. m. , Kutztown R 4. and hats cannot be used. Only light­ Mrs. Paul B. Greenawald and daugh­ each week under the direction of H. C. f.rtgagors. ter Emily. South Temple; Mr. and Mrs. Commissioners at the meeting from his home, with further services Lincoln, who will have charge of the Trix oMin-f ,**-A. weight, clean, washable clothing, even of some money. of Robert Bear and sons Solomon and on Aug. 6, 1928. The season for Calvin Stamm, one of the Kutztown and interment at Friedens Church, choir during the convention. TRIBUTE FROM TOPTON if wom previously, suitable for wear in John, Hamburg; Eugene Frase, Eas­ rabbits will begin on Nov 1, and Wessnersville. Rev. Ira W. Klick will ;lla the tropics, is needed. The canvass rural carriers, was robbed of five auto A special convention hymnal has ton. will extend to Nov. 30, with hunt­ tires. They were taken from a sedan officiate. Undertaker William S. Fritz, been prepared which contains not only ? Among the tributes of Irene Ella will be made on Friday and Saturday of town h&s ing on Thursday, Friday and which he has in his garage on the* rear - charge^ those selections that have the approval fenstermacher. popular young daugh- of this week. Saturday of each week, and will of his lot. The car was jacked up, as ;r of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Fen- VISITING FN ALLENTOWN of leaders in religious educational work, i All cash contributions are to be given continue from Dec. 1 to Dec. 15, he was not using it at present. All Attend Allentown Church but also a few choice worship services (,e gold by ^nacher, Allentown, was a large de- to C. I. G. Christman. treasurer of the 1ART. 1 Clara Butz, who lives with her with hunting permissible six days the tires were good. They were taken Mrs. John C. Kohler, Amelia Bolich that can and should be used in the [ Sheriff fip . representing gates ajar, present- local Red Cross. The local civic or- a week. by the employees of the DeLong ganizations are taking up the subject nephew F^ncis S^radm and fam during the day time. and Erma Dietrich attended Sunday modern Sabbath School. School and church services in St. oC J^nuture Co., Topton. The funeral and contributing cash. The meeting ily, is spending a week with relatives BOARD OF GAME COM- F. Nevin Wiest and three cornet so­ [if!eI* d ,VLtthat Rev. H. J. Kline spent Monday in John's Lutheran Church, Allentown, **f held from the home of the par- Monday evening has for its object the in Allentown. She has been suffering MISSSIONERS, loists have been engaged to help in the with rheumatism for many years and Allentown attending the Lehigh Valley Sunday morning. They went to observe music at the convention, which is to be ttbe Court kl~ Saturday afternoon and was finishing of the local campaign and Harrisburg, Pa. attencJ Ministerial meeting of this denomina-1 methods of teaching in the Sunday DrS ed. Undertaker Irwin completing other details. The public leaves the house very seldom. Her held in the 108 Artillery Armory, 2110 S20-»t- "eLong, of Topton, had charge. is urged to attend. cousins fetched her by automobile. tion. j School. North Broad Street, Philadelphia, PAGETWv. THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928

SHAMROCK Mr. and Mrs. William Kieffer and Mr. and Mrs. John Leibensperger, KNITTLES ENTERTAIN him by the Reading Company, which Mrs. Mary Leibensperger and Mrs. Ep- THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT — i placed him on the "emeritus" pension Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Rahn called on SOCIAL CLUB OF THE pinger, Reading, called on friends in PuUbbed WMUT by Mrs Mary Ackerman, Allentown, [ "St. His position as station agent ia Mr. and Mrs. William Clouser, Read­ whil< living with her son, Jonas Ack- | being temporarily filled, and it ia ing on Sunday. town on Sunday. The Kutztown Publishing Company KUTZTOWN GRANGE Mrs. Jennie Yoder, daughter Geral- lacorponted erman, passed away from the infirmi­ hoped that the postal department will Mr. and Mrs. Scott Melot, John Me- ties of her advanced age, having been in the near future find a suitable man lot and Frances Bordner attended the dine and Walter Miller visited at Stony Chas. H. Ewer Publisher The social club of the Kutztown up in the 80's. Funeral services will as postmaster. Allentown Fair Saturday. Run on Sunday. Alfred W. Blatt Business Manager and Editor Grange held its monthly meeting at be held on Saturday, Sept. 29, at 9 Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Musselman the home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel a. m., daylight saving time, at the and son, Glenn, of Cranford, N. J., Knittle. It was decided to hold the house, to be continued at Huff's spent the week-end here. Mr. Mus­ Tk« Katitcwn Patriot ia •ant to rabscribor. by mail, postage free, i . the monthly card parties the next to the Church, where she was a lifelong mem­ selman on Sunday .morning brought DR. JAMES N. BIERLY JOHN W. RHODE | United States. last Wednesday of each month, in the ber, and where interment will be his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mus­ Grange Hall. The third and fourth de­ made. selman, of Landisville, Lancaster Dentist Justice of the Peace j grees will be conferred at the meeting Personal County, here, and on Sunday aft"- X-Ray Gee Adsalniareren Catering to Commercial JS«YMI. ..$2.00 Six Month*. $1.00 Single Copies.. 5c Thursday evening. Oct. 4. The next Legal Advertising Rates, per Line, 10c William C. Jarrett, Longsdale, was | ™>on took them along to his home in 404 MAIN STREET Business meeting of the social club will be held KUTZTOWN, PA. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Irwin the Bowers-Longswamp delegate to Cranford. The Musselman family for­ KUTZTOWN, PA- Moyer. the 70th convention of the Reading merly resided in Kutztown. Cash »eat by mail will be at the sender's risk. Remittances should be Conference, held in Zion's Church, Mr. and Mrs. Ira C. R. Guldin and •— by registered tetter, post office or express money order, or check to the These were in attendance: Mr. and Windsor Castle. children, Kutztown, and Mr. and Mrs. Katstown Publishing Co., Inc.. Kutztown, Pa. Mrs. Daniel Knittle, Mr. and Mrs. Al­ The painters, Edwin Kuder and Ivan J. Snyder and children, Philadel­ len Pink, Mr. and Mrs. David Schaef­ Joseph Romig, of Alburtis, are put­ phia, were here on Saturday evening. Subscribers who send notice to this office to have their address -hanged, fer, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Seidel, Mr. ting the finishing touches to the new The Scout Troop of Longswamp in­ As aid state the name of the post office or rural route from which k is to be and Mrs. Frank Hoch, Mr. and Mrs. home of Clarence Walbert here. The vites the public to its oyster supper in Royal Standard & Royal Portablef efcanged, as well as the name of the post office or mail route to which it is Charles Schaeffer, Mr. and Mrs. John dwelling, reconstructed from the ma­ the high school building, Saturday, se be sent. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rahn, Mr. terial of the Evangelical Church of Sept. 29, at 5 p. m. Typewriters and Mrs. George Schaeffer, Mrs. Calvin this place, will soon be ready for oc­ Entered at the post office et Kutztown a* second-class mail matter. Stamm, Mrs. Jerry Bennicoff, Mrs. Lu- cupancy. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kratzer, Emaus, zetta Kramer, Mrs. Rosa Rahn, Mrs. S. D. Becker, for many years the were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John AUTHORIZED DEALER Kline. GIVE A HELPING HAND Irwin Moyer, William Kemp, Naomi local station agent and postmaster, is Bennicoff, Elizabeth Schaeffer, Luella enjoying his long-earned rest, and is Mrs. Mayme Sellers, Philadelphia, Reading Typewriter Exchange Weidner. Anna Schaeffer, Anna Seidel, deserving of the honor conferred upon visited Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Rahn. Lewis Mertz, Irvin Kramer, James 835 WASHINGTON ST. READING, PENNA. Hundreds of people were killed in Florida and Porto Rico by Schaeffer, Clarence Smith, John Sei­ the hurricane that swept the tropics In that section, and thousands del, Nathan Schaeffer, Carl Rahn, . Telephone 22551 are homeless and destitute as a result. The Red Cross is following Seidel, Fred Bennicoff, John Schaeffer, Lee Knittle and George D. Schaeffer. its commendable practice of acting at once to relieve the sufferers. This gTeat humanitarian organization is staging a quick campaign for cash and clothing to help the residents of the stricken areas. The goal for Berks and vicinity is $15,000 in cash and whatever in NEW Y&RK^ PARIS 'Better Values Akvays" clothing people wish to contribute. Thus far a total close to $5,000 has been raised in Berks, with more'gradually coming in. FASHIONS , No specific quotas have been assigned to the various sections of the county, but it is hoped that they will contribute to this worthy cause. Let us of Kutztown and vicinity, who as a com­ Real Topcoat Weather- munity know nothing of such disasters, give what cash we feel we can give to this most appealing charitable purpose, and turn over whatever washable clothing suiFable for wear in tropical countries, and we have even if previously worn. Onjy light-weight and clean clothing can be used. Let us do our share in this cause. On another page of this issue of the Patriot you will find the names of the Kutztown Gas holders in meny sections of the country are now being used as "land- atarks" for aviators. Gas companies of Pennsylvania, acting on the request folks in charge of local Red Cross activities who will see that what­ Real Topcoats The burgess has promised to renew efforts for paving •when you are all set for th<^ train or 27-lnch Dress Ginghams, 25c value, yard .12V2 boat, you and your baps look not un­ X X there, and the residents are giving greater strength to their request to like the cover of a. magazine, a nice Dress Goods—Special, yard .19 Shankweiler & Lehr one. t t have town council compel moving of the tracks so that citizens can 25c Socks, pair .19 of Allentown proceed with the construction of the paving. The lady in the^picture, is wearing X y her tweed ensemble of the new shade X Ladies' Hose—Specials, pair 15c, 45c, 85c y of deep burgundy and her luggage is Coates' Spool Cotton, for this Sale only, spool 04 covered with a new patterned lacquer­ X y WHEN YOU DISAGREE WITH US fCotex, Special 3 for .95 ed material in the exact same shade. T X KLINE'S KLINE'S KLINE'S KLINE'S KLINE'S Fabrikoid, the material is called and Green Glass Sherbets, each ., 10 if you don't crave burgundy—as a T X We do not expect everybody to agree with everything that is color scheme—you may have r»ig^. X 25c Cretonne—Special, yard 15 X said from time to time in these editorial columns any more than blue or black. The pieces shown in the sketch include a large wardrobe X 20c Outing Flannel, yard .15 r XI MB* the public in general is expected to agree with what is being said by trunk, called wardrola. because it has Imitation Alligator Leather Boston Bags 1.00 X FALL COATS the teacher, the preacher, the lecturer, or the prominent citizen among its other features, a roller that T z solves the problem of getting the 4x4 Bleached Hill Muslin, yard .18 speaking in public. The opinions expressed in these editorials are X Kline's collection of new Fall Coats offer you a wide variety M- trunk open without calling fo^ h«-lp X A Fine Line of School Supplies not haphazard thoughts expressed in a free and easy manner, nor The next piece is the wardrobette jun­ X and selection—The value and quality-wise will choose now, ior, a glorified hatbox that has room T Deisher Ribbed and Munsing Underwear X early selections are always best—There are plenty of the fash­ are they given without a clear view constantly of the responsibility and compartments in it for every­ See Us For Hallowe'en Material and Suits ionable Black Coats with black or contrasting big Fur Collars involved in the expression of the ideas transmitted. These editorials thing short of golf sticks. The last is X X the always useful suitcase which may and Cuffs; also with furred bottoms. Utility Coats for busi­ r X mm represent a broad general viewpoint with the good of the general or may not be Sited. y ness and everyday service Coats—in stunning tailored or fur z public at heart, and they are the subjects of careful study before X44^+44$^4^^^^4^+^^+^^++^++ 4 models. All marked at Kline's always lower prices— pi they are published. •808-10-12-14 Hamflton Street, Allentown1 X This does not mean that we are not willing to give space on this page to opinions at variance with those expressed in our edi­ 9.98 14.98 19.98 torials. In fact, we welcome open discussion. And we wish hereby c to give the assurance that if any of our readers have the desire to THE HEINZ STORE 2 pi give their viewpoints on subjects under discussion, we will gladly 24.98 to 57.50 publish them, provided they are written in decent, readable and un­ derstandable English, accompanied by the name and address of BARGAIN BASEMENT Lovely New Fall Dresses the writer to be published with the article. Of course, we are not to li - be expected to prepare the article expressing a disagreeing opinion "THE BARGAIN SPOT OF ALLENTOWN" 9.98, 12.98, 14.98 C nor are we to be expected to publish articles subversive of morals, Kline's collection of Dresses are leader* in «tt-it> O^A ;*• z individualized Dresses of real character vou should P. derogatory to religion or openly unpatriotic. Send us or bring us your Full Fashioned ment of new velvets, transparent velvets' see Klines assort- combinations. A price line to fit *very satins. flat crepes, and velvet c/i article, together with name and address, and we will give voice to New Swagger SILK HOSE Unusually Smart size demand. Colors, that are new. budget requirement and every your thought on the subject. Sports Coats 87c Fall Frocks Fall Confirmation Time is Drawing Near Buy That Service weight with INTRODUCING NEW PARTY FOR MRS. GREEN high boot heel and White Silk Confirmation Dress Now 9.87 ribbed lisle toD. £ MAGAZINE, "FLYING 4.87 Models rich and smart—either plain All shades. 7.98, 9.98, 14.98 STORIES," BY AIRPLANE A number of Kutztown folks atended a farewell and birthday party at the or fur-trimmed. Satin, Charmeuse, Flat Crepe, The very newest Fall fashions, created of flat crpne« *T,A =iii, „ IP home of Mrs. Margaret Green, Maxa- Full lined with good quality lining LEATHER Jersey Perhaps no more unique and appro­ tawn. Mrs. Green is leaving for Pas­ or plaid back materials. priate method of introducing a new Long roll or mushroom fur collars. BAGS In one and two-niece effects, new saic, N. J., where she will spend the necklines and combination trims. periodical has been devised than that Make Kline's Your Headquarters for Your now being utilized by Macf adden Pub­ winter months. A fine dinner, consist­ PLAID AND CHECK All the newest shades. ing of chicken, waffles, peas, beans, 97c Sizes 16 to 50—a very complete Fall Home Replenishing Needs lications, Inc., in connection with its fruit salad, custard, jello, ice cream MATERIALS A new assortment. showing. new magazine, "Flying Stories," the Silk lined and with Bed Blankets Z first issue of which will appear on was served by the hostess. small mirrors. Comforters. Sanitary Oct. 23. The guest list included Mr. and Mrs. The pood heavy warm kind. Sin­ Cotton Filled in Fanning, Passaic, N. J.; Mrs. A. B. gle and double blankets. Our 2.98. 3.98. 4.98 Being a magazine of fiction, romance prices—«9c, 1.69, 1.9M, 2L98, 3.49, and adventure with a background of Weidner, Mrs. Alice Batz, Mrs. William H. Stein. Mrs. John Kline, Mrs. Charles GIRLS' NAVY 3.98, 4.98. 9x12 Ft. Armstrong Inlaid aeronautics in its various phases it is NEW FALL HATS tn Linoleum Roars entirely fitting that word of its com­ Wessner, Mrs. Penrose Moyer, Mrs. Our price 9.0s ing should reach the distributors in Agnes Rudolph. Mrs. Annie Schadler, CHINCHILLA COATS z Window Shades, water colors the big selling centers by plane. Ac­ Mrs. Louisa Heberly, Mrs. James and oil opaque, complete 9x12 Ft. Axminster Floor Rag* 1.87 Very pretty designs. Our price cordingly, one of the first subjects dis­ Schaeffer. 49c. 79c. 98c cussed upon each landing by J. E. Wil­ 24.9M liamson, sales promotion manager for Light weight Felts. Velvets and Combina­ 4.87 PENNYPACKER IMPROVING tions in new and becoming styles for miss Buy Your Winter Underwear--Be Prepared for the Cold the Macfadden organization, who is All wool Navy Chinchilla Coats for the now touring the country in the com­ and matron. Winter Weather That is Almost Upon Us Two brothers, the Messrs. Altee. of school girl. , CO pany's big Lockhead-Vega monoplane, Jacksonville. Fla.. called on Mrs. A. B. Smart close-fitting styles, beautifully trim­ Fully lined, tailored collar, inverted pockets Men's Heavy Hitch Roek , is the coming of the new flying maga­ Pennypacker. They became friends of med. and double-breasted model. u Fleeced Vnion Salts Children's Ribbed Fleeced zine, a publication for which Macfad­ Mr. Pennypacker at the Mayo Clime, Z In all colors at..._ 1.49 Vests and Pants c den Publications, Inc., feels there is a at Rochester. Minn., and Mr. Penny- mm According to age. from 2 to 16 mi Men's Ribbed Fleeeed Union Salts years, at 23c to 4»c large public demand. packer asked them to stop to see his Cream or gray, at 1.39 z A sort of combined "Message to Gar­ wife as they motored through Kutz­ TWO NEW ADDITIONS TO THE BARGAIN BASEMENT in cia" and Paul Reveres ride, the in­ town on their way to Florida. One of Men's High Rock Fleeced Sepa­ Children's Ribbed Fleeced Unions rate Shirts and Drawers dividuality of this manner of an­ them is a linotype operator and the Boys' and girls', according to Each at 79,. nouncement, makes a notable impres­ other a mechanical engineer. age. 2 to 16 years, at... 44c to 9Sc sion wherever the Macfadden sales They reported Mr. Pennypacker get­ f representative drops down out of the ting along nicely, gaining in weight. SHOE SECTION MUSIC SECTION § See our new Silk Drapings—New Curtains—all at cut prices c sky. He was disappointed to see them leave, as they had been there only four weeks At all times a complete stock Make thJa Section your Music Headquarters Boys' and Young Men'* Crew Neck and V-Neck Heavy z and Save MEITZLER MOTOR TRIP and he has been there eight weeks. pi He hopes, however, to be discharged Slip-on Sweaters—3.98 v> Mr. and Mrs. Richard C Meitzler, in a week or two. They said Mr. Pen­ 2.95 3.95 4.95 PHONOGRAPH RECORDS accompanied by their grandson, Rus­ nypacker was good company and they 3 FOR $1 C/J sell Moyer, daughter Mamie, AL Funk had spent many a pleasant hour to­ Boys' Shoes Misses' Shoes 9m4 Cooah PiniH Pri—> and Mr. and Mrs. John D. Geiger mo­ gether. Also Player Rolls. Portable Phonograph* Z tored to Harrisburg Sunday. They 1.95 to 2.95 1.19 to 2.95 and Sheet Music made a trip of 229 miles. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Hawk, Mr. 821 and Mrs. George Henne, Shartlesville, Mrs. Hettie Schmick spent a day in visited Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Feick, RUNE'S Hamilton Street 3 Baldy Street. THE HEIN2 New York City buying merchandise. ST6RE KLINE'S. KLINE'S KLINE'S- KLINE'S KLINE•''5 THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 PAGE THREE

Mrs. George Diefenderfer, Allentown; KEMPTON can assist in potato picking. John Long delivered timber to the Grimsville, called on Iowa Krammes Mr. and Mrs. E. G. M. Kuhns and The two local fire companies re­ mines. and family on Sunday. daughter Mae, East Texas; Walter Practically all the farms of Albany sponded to a call near New Tripoli on Frank Zettlemoyer, shoemaker, of Keller, Bethlehem. Township will be closed to hunters this Sunday evening. Lenhartsville, is sick. MAXATAWNY AND VICINITY Charles Metzger, cashier of the Na­ year. Trespass notices are being erect­ Miss Clara Richards, Correspondent tional Biscuit Co., located at Lancas­ ed in great numbers. ter, spent several days in town at the The Berks County Boosters' Asso­ GKEENAWALT STONY RUN home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ciation of the Order of Independent Wonderful Buy in l Pa da m John Metzger. Americans held its monthly meeting at George Bond unloaded a car of phos­ Many people from this section at­ ^?%£?LTSL". ? [?*^ yi «it committee for agricultural en- phate which he supplied to his cus­ f r at 0pened neerin J. B. Fisher and wife delightfully en­ the Goodwill Hall on Saturday eve­ tended the Allentown Fair. 5 TJ™ f? rSTSi ° ^ & includes an investigation into tertained on Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. tomers. Maurice Kunkel is making cider for a Used Car £v w^H«m ^ nrl rfriCHSmUni0nSiPOtat0 to™ting machinery with the ning. State Councilor Mr. Weber, Re aC e a el 0bject of findin a William S. Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pottsville; State Vice Councilor Bul­ Samuel Nester, of Steinsville, visited his many customers. nt^irSS, ^5 ?^ « Jo f^ °" ' * machine to lift and Fisher, Clarence Smith and two male the family of Oscar Heffner at Len­ The Berks County Boosters' Asso­ Oakland Coach, mileage quent sermon on St. John 6:68, "Then collect potatoes on a large scale. In lock, Royersford; Co. Supt. A. F. Kemp friends, Hokendauqua; Mr. and Mrs. and Charles Werner, Reading, were hartsville. ciation of the Order of Independent only 800. All-American Six. Simon Peter answered him, Lord, to introducing the subject the committee Warren Fisher and children Kenneth Many local people attended the Al­ Americans held its monthly meeting whom shall we go? Thou hast the words notes that in no country does the po­ the principal speakers. Wagaman's Gardner FOOT Touring. and Jean, Easton; Agnes Leibensper­ Orchestra, of Allentown, furnished lentown Fair. in the Goodwill Fire Hall at Kempton of eternal life. Two hundred eighty- tato play such a large part as in Ger- ger, Reading. William Koch, of Orwigsburg, was on Saturday evening. three members besides private com- many, which harvests about a third music. George M. Merkel, Schofers Inn, at­ The oyster supper, which was held here and transacted business. Farmers are busy sowing, digging po­ mumcarrts, partook of the sacraments, of the world's production In order to Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Dietrich, Wind­ WILTRODTBROS. A catechetical class of 17 young peo- harvest these Germany has every year tended a party held at the home of at the park pavilion was largely at­ tatoes and chopping corn. his sister, Mrs. Charles Levan, at Top- tended. The Snyder Family Orchestra, sor; Mrs. Lloyd Kistler, grandson The peach growers of this section pie. which had been instructed by the to obtain the assistance of some 160 - David Kistler, Harold Bailey, Wana- KUTZTOWN, PA. pastor since last spring, was confirmed 000 foreign workers. Its own laborers ten, in honor of Venus Walbert's 40th of Allentown, furnished music. harvested a fine crop this year. birthday anniversary. Mary A. Greenawait is visiting for makers; Mrs. Richard G. Trexler, Vir­ Elmer T. Kroninger, saddler, of at this time. The examination held are growing less and less inclined to ginsville, visited the family or George the previous Saturday afternoon was undertake this kind of labor Helen Bortz called on Mary Clouser. several weeks in Glassboro, N. J. Gordon Gray, accompanied by a Miller. cf the highest merit and the class has ( Buildings and whole cities of glass Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Greenawait, An­ a splendid record in the way of attend- are predicted by a well-known archi- number of his male friends of Passaic, nie Greenawait and Mrs. Albert Fink Jonathan Kramer visited the family N. J., spent the weekend with his attended the Berks Sunday School of Edwin Gruber, near Little Round ance. It was a beautiful scene to wit- tect. There would be two shells of glass Top. nass their first communion, which was to a high building 18 inches or so mother-in-law, Mrs. Margaret Green. convention at Boyertown. rinded by a large number of mem- , apart, leaving space to be made into Mrs. L. Shankweiler, Lovie and Eva Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keiper, of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Schaner and ^s and friends. The following peo- : at least a partial vacuum. Glass build- Phillips, Monterey Inn, attended the Wind Gap, visited F. A. Deisher and children and Leon Stump transacted j.^ comprised the class: Helen Bortz, ings would probably be heated and Allentown Fair. family over the weekend. business at Lyons. Pauline C. A. Miller, Irene E. Wessner, cooled in the same way as a thermos Those who visited Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Mr. and Mrs. James Berk and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Bailey visited the family of Jonathan Kramer. PUBLIC SALE Anna M. Henderson, Marguerite B. j flask is used to maintain heat and cold M. Merkel at Schofers Inn included: and Mrs. V. F. Dietrich and children Nuts, Pauline C. Stump, Anna W. Wal- I Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Merkel, sons Cy- Maurice and Helen made a trip to the Charles Snyder and Harvey Stump, bert. Beulah A. Bailey, Mildred S. j Wheat Yield Discouraging rill and Sterling and daughter Minerva, Poconos on Sunday. of Little Round Top, made a short call Cronrath, Irene S. Kretzer, Curtis F. ' Bunt or stinkink smut of wheat can Fogelsville; Mr. and Mrs. Solon Hilbert, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fluck and chil­ on George Miller. Moser. Harold J. Schlegel, George E. De controled by cleaning the seed and Fleetwood. dren and Mr. and Mrs. Wolfinger, of Grim, Kenneth S. Stump, Edgar C. treating it with copper carbonate dust, Mr. and Mrs. Homer F. Guldin and Telford, called on A. B. Greenawait Bailey, Norman C. Epting, Joseph Z. formaldehyde dust or the liquid for- son Ralph, Kutztown, were in town on and family. Lichtenwalner. | maldehyde. The failure of wheat this Sunday visiting the former's parents, Harold Trexler, of Atlantic City, is COAL Fine 161-Acre Farm Regular preaching services will be j vear has discouraged many farmers Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Guldin. visiting his parents here for a week and Mr. and Mrs. George Fritzinger and Old Company's Lehigh conducted by the Reformed pastor, some are even thinking of chang- before he resumes his studies at Hah­ Wfll Be Held On the Premise* Rev. George B. Smith, on Sunday, inS from wheat to oats or barley. In sons Earl and Ernest, near Hynemans- nemann College in Philadelphia. Citizen's Coal Dock Sept. 30, at 2 p. m. Sunday School will many instances such a change would ville, were guests of the first-named's The schools of Albany Township are John H. Bleber. Prop. be in session one hour previous. be a doubtful value in the opinion of parents on Sunday. closed for this week so the children KUTZTOWN the experimental farm agents. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Zwoyer had as Saturday, Oct. 13, at 2 P. M. To Render Pageant their guests their son-in-law and A pageant of Christian Liberty, en­ French manufacturers of paper handkerchiefs have found a small but daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bartla Heff­ titled "The Striking of America's growing market for their product in ner and their son Kenneth, Hotten- This property, known as the Sell or Gable farm, is located Hour." written by Laura Scherer Co- the United Kingdom They are sold in steins. in Maxatawny Township, two miles north of Bowers, on penhaver, Katherine Scherer Cronk and packages marked, "Use me, then burn William Steffy and sister Katie, Al­ road leading from Bowers to Schwoyer's Crossing. Two Mathilde A. Vossler, will be rendered me." lentown, spent Sunday in town with • and a half story stone house, fine Swiss barn and all other in Zion's Union Church on Sunday, I Public sale of valuable household the family of Nathan Grim. Sept .30. at 7.15 p. m, by members of goods will be held at the residence of Frank Kemmerer, Kutztown, visit­ buildings in best condition. Good water. Fertile soil. the two missionary societies and the Henry Miller in the village of Ring- ed his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. Level land. Sunday school. About 75 people will town, about two and three-fourths and Mrs. Daniel Delp and family, who take part in full dress. The following miles from town, on the public road are occupying the farm formerly known To be sold as^the property of C. D. Kutz and the estate of are the characters: Prolocutor, choir, leading from here through Klines Cor- as the David Smith farm, near town. Edwin DeLong, dec.; terms and conditions by trumpeters, Spirit of Brotherhood, ', ner to Topton, on Saturday, Oct. 6. Gray of mist, gold of sun, Liberty, Justice, Egypt, Rome, Baby- ! Sale wiil commence promptty at 1 COSMOS D. KUTZ, Ionia. Greece, America, Handmaidens, o'clock. Edwin Mengel, auctioneer. Hills that flame, one by one; olors Indians, Pioneer, Negro, Immigrant, i Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Wessner, Kutz- Glowing noon, all the sod SUSAN DE LONG, Child Laborers, Foreign Nations, Doc-[ town; Mr. and Mrs. Abner Steckel, Lit by bright golden rod. c EDWIN L. DE LONG, to , Nurse, Play. J Dover, N. J., visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed- Gray of seeds—floating crowds, that leading artists Executors. The aim of this pageant is to show ; win Schlegel at Monterey on Sunday. Gleaming like silver clouds; that America is facing today her hour The Busy Bees, of Kutztown, were Gray of dusk, gold of stars, of opportunity for world service and entertained at a party in the summer Peeping through the sunset bars. influence and to sound a warning from home of Mrs. Margaret Green on the have selected..., the history of great nations whose Kohler farm, near town. Mist of morn, gold of noon, glory has departed; to exalt liberty, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bright and Dark of night coming soon; justice and brotherhood as taught by their grandson Harold, Mrs. Mary Some days June—some December, For years Devoe has made the col­ the Lord Jesus, and to hold up His Clouser, Claude Frederick, Reading, Oh, we know—it's September. ors which leading artists have used ipjuri cross as the hope of America and of were entertained in the home of Mr. —Alice E. Allen. in their work. the world. A cordial invitation is ex- and Mrs. Eugene Knittle at Scnofers iHS»Ti33fl*» tended to the public to witness this on Sunday. In the afternoon the lat- Mrs. John Kauffman, daughter They have imported rare pig­ pageant. j ter family accompanied the Reading Katherine, Oley; Mrs. Amos Bell, chil­ ments—from China, from France, The October meeting of the Ladies' people to Kutztown, where they called dren Richard and Miriam, Leesport, from the Ivory Coast of Africa. Aid Society of Zion's Union Church on Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Knittle and and Mrs. Percy Ort Emaus, were enter­ Colors which live today in countless will be held on Monday evening, Oct. later in the day the entire party mo- tained at the Gonser home. 1, at the home of Mrs. Edwin Sieg- tored to Reading to the home of Mrs. famous paintings—colors so lovely fried, Kutztown, an associate member. Mary Closer. that they are worth going to the far While the storm with its attendant j Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Stettler and ends of the earth to obtain. QUALITY cold wave last week may not have been son Arlington, Schofers, spent Satur- relished by the people in general, it day in Allentown. DANCE Now, into this remarkable new IN has had the effect of reminding house- I Devoe Mirrolac Enamel these very Distant Visitors holders that there is a coal problem. Every Saturday Evening shades and tones have been Recent visitors at the Zimmerman Quite a few of the residents of the introduced. Come in for a color card. WHATEVER YOU BUY. town have cellar furnaces in operation. home included: Mr. and Mrs. C. A. at the Now is the time to have your winter's Bird, Mr. and Mrs. E. Hotton Webster p "WHERE QUALITY COUNTS" supply of coal, for the good old sum- ort Byron, N. Y.; W. O. Cooper, mer time ended on Sunday, according Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Grimsville Hotel to the calendar. The closing days of Martin, Greenwich, Conn.; Mr. and C. F. Fenstermacher's the summer season were keenly felt by , Mrs. Samuel Smith, Kutztown. Harry Campbell, Prop. HARDWARE STORE the roughness of the weather, which Those who visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed- High-Art Coffee heralded the approach of autumn, and win Ruhf and family at their home in GOOD MUSIC Kutztown, Pa. there was little or no enjoyment to the Stonequarry District were: Mr. and For those who prefer a Mrs YOU ARE INVITED majority of people. ! - Elmer Reinert and children heavy-bodied Coffee. With'the widespread interest in the Lulu, Harlan, Freddie and Joyce, coming election reported from all parts Shamrock; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mil- Reg. 49c Pound Sealed Tin 45c ol the country, it will be interesting to ler and children Mae, Mildred and watch the turnout of voters in Novem- ; Benton, Kratzer's School House; Mr. >er in a country where at no time has and Mrs. William Yenser, Charles liore than 50 per cent, of the eligible : Snyder, Allentown. vjte been polled. The years 1920 and ! The following visited Frank Snyder 21c ASCO . \'924 had fairly intense political cam- and family, near town: Mr. and Mrs. ASPARAGUS STALKS 3c150c paigns. vet onlv one out of every iwo ' Fred Stevens and children, Pauline, of all qualified voters went to the polls. I Donald, Edgar. Fred, jr., Dorney Park; SEASONABLE SUGGESTIONS This year it is estimated there are Mr. and Mrs. Phaon Weaver and son, 62.000.000 eligible voters in the United Alfred, Cementon. lars States. It remains to be seen how ! Guests of Mrs. Lovina Schaeffer re- ASCO Pancake Flour pkg. 10c ! many will participate in the election. cently included: George Dierolf and ASCO Buckwheat pkg. 9c Both major political parties and many his daughtter and husband, Oley; Mr. civic organization are united in the and Mrs. William Odenwelder and Maypole Table Syrup bot. 19c urge to the electorate to exercise its children Doris and Billy, Mrs. Mary ASCO Corn Flakes 3 pkgs. 20c A. Baer, Bethlehem. right of suffrage. The stay-at-home Post Bran Flakes pkg. 12c this year is going to come in for greater Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ehrie and censure than ever, according to all in­ daughter Arlene. Mr. and Mrs. George ASCO Pure Honey jar 15c, 38c Rhoads and son Ralph, Allentown. were dications. The present campaign prom­ ASCO Sliced Bacon J4-lb. pkg. 19c ises to be the greatest educational pleasantly entertained in the home of movement for the exercise of suffrage Mr. and Mrs. William Stump and fam­ ASCO Sliced Dried Beef %-\h. pkg. 15c that has ever affected the country. ily on Sunday. Mrs. Mahlon Guldin spent a day in Potatoes Fair Kutztown at the home of her son and REMINDERS! t irmers in this section are digging daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ira C. wtatoes. According to general re- R. Guldin. and family. New Crop Tender Peas can 10c rts the crop is a fair one, with the Allen and Paul HofTart, Harrisburg; exa ption of those in the lowlands, Milton Devitt. Allentown; Mr. and Mrs. New Pack ASCO Peas can 18c, 23c which are poor, due to the rainy Thomas Edwards. Delano, visited John Farrndale New Pack Peas 2 cans 25c ther during the past season. Farm- DeLong and family, near sown. • :!1 have to turn their attention Weekend callers in the home of Mer- ASCO Solid Pack Tomatoes can 12c, 19c soon to the harvesting of their corn. i chant Fegely and wife were: Dr. and Rob Roy Pale Dry Ginger Ale 2 bots. 25c Many fields throughout the country | in shocks, while at other places Puritan Cereal Beverages 3 bots. 25c they are approaching the ripening ASCO Whole Grain Rice lb. pkg. 12%C The crop looks exceptionally Seed corn, if possible, should be Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise 8-oz. jar 20c p.eked from the fields before they are cut Such selection enables the picker to see what kind of a stalk the ear pan grows on. This is a more scientific | loaf way cf selecting seed corn than the i VICTOR BREAD 5c bit-or-miss method of picking it out I A triumph in individual beauty... a of the crib. Another advantage comes wrapped Q_ in be:ns able to cure the corn properly refreshing and radical departure from B BREAD SUPREME loaf OC before freezing weather begins. It is a | good plan to pull twice as many oars as will be needed for planting. About the tiresome commonplace ... a new Gold p 15 meduim-sized ears will plant an Seal acre. ROLLED OATS 2 fofl5c The program of the German govern- style, a richer style, a more alluring Big Boy Wheat Cereal pkg. 15c style than the world has ever known! Reg. 19c Orange Marmalade jar 17c

"I FIT RIGHT GLASSES Hartley's Marmalade jar 35c TO WRONG EYES" TH E SAME PRESCRIPTION Only one completely new S ILVER. ine good taste. Here is a new ASCO Butterine |b 21c old motor car style in the past style—a richer style—a more Red Candy Cherries \\y 23c twenty-four months—only ANN IVERSAHY HE WROTE IN 1892 alluring style—than the mo­ Tootsie Molasses Rolls 3 for j^ one truly original and beau­ tor world has ever known. tiful development in body And here, too, is tremen­ ASCO or Del Monte Asparagus Tips 3 sq. cans 85c When Dr. Caldwell started to practice design—and, as the whole dous increase in power, in ASCO or Del Monte Asparagus Tips picnic can 17c medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a With Masterpiece Bodies By Fisher laxative were not as great as today. world realizes, it is the flexibility, in responsiveness Silver Anniversary Buick with Master­ People lived normal 'lives, ate plain, — so outstanding as to amaze even those HOUSE CLEANERS! wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh piece Bodies by Fisher! motorists who have long been familiar air. But even that early there were with Buick's superior performance. drastic physics and purges for the relief Here is an entirely new scheme of body High Grade Brooms each 53c, 63c, 73c of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did lines and contours—arresting new color That is why America is according the Scrub Brushes each 10c, 14c, 17c not believe were good for human beings. combinations—matchless new interiors— Headaches Silver Anniversary Buick the most en­ Dust Brushes each 22c 4Qc The prescription for constipation that new appointments of comfort and con­ he used early in his practice, and which thusiastic reception every enjoyed by 111,180 3 sma Are frequently caused by venience unapproached by any other H Pkgs. 25c; big pkg. 19c he put in drug stores in 1892 under the any fine car. That is why this beautiful eye strain that can be entire­ name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, automobile of the day! P. & G. White Naphtha Soap 4 *£ 17c ly relieved by getting glasses is a liquid vegetable remedy, intended new Buick has already become a country­ ASCO Washing Soda big pkg 1(k perfectly fitted by us. Stop for women, children and elderly people, Here is true distinction wedded to genu- wide vogue! Young's Borax Powder . * « those headaches. Consult and taey need just such a mild, safe bowel stimulant. Octagon Soap ZZZZ«*« 6c I us now. This prescription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling liquid laxative. It has won the confidence of KUTZTOWN MOTOR CAR CO., Inc. Reg. 23c Prof. W. A. Weidner eople who needed it to get relief from b eadaches, biliousness, flatulence, indi­ ASCO PURE FRUIT PRESERVES >19c 528 Hamiltoo Street Egestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad KUTZTOWN, PA. KLINE'. Allentown. Pa. breath, dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your druggist, xor write "Syrup Pepsin," ALSO 4c ANCHOR OPENER FOR lc *»ta 1'huDM. Dept. BB, Monticello, Illinois, for Ires WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT . . . BUICK WILL BUILD THEM trial bottle. THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 PAGE FOUR Mrs. Ella Schearer, accompanied by his boyhood days. He also visited the Red Cross. This sum was asked by in other ways, Charles K. Wj* her son Archie and son-in-law and farm owned at one time by his father, Payne in a telegram to Miss Mary tive of Berks County, who commit ted daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kohler, N£W YARK-"PARIS' FREDERICKSV1LLE James Grosscup, now owned by Henry Frazer Bryan, executive secretary of suicide in New York this month, left Allentown, visited Mr. Kohler's par­ GAME BOARD ASKS H. Rohrbach. the local chapter. a trust fund which may amount to ents, near Schnecksville. Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Heydt enter­ more than a million dollars. FARMERS TO GIVE FASHIONS The teachers of District and Here­ tained Mr. and Mrs. George Ober- Determined to have mills, factories ford townships met in the school house holtzer, sons George and Harold and and stores closed on Monday, Nov. 12, Sunday. Sept. 20, was a Red Letter at Huff's Church and organized for the Joseph Guldin, Gilbertsville; Lawrence in observance of the 10th anniversary Day in the history of the Reading term. The following were elected: Buchert, Pottstown; Arthur Haas, of the ending of the World War, war Museum and Art Gallery. The King CO-OPERATION President, Jacob F. Greiss, Siesholtz- Pleasantville; Mary and Carrie Heydt, veterans and associated organizations Tut throne furniture from tgypt was ville; vice president, William I. Rein­ Reading; Samuel Kinsey and Annie sponsoring the Armistice Day celebra­ placed on exhibition. ert; secretary, Stella Brensinger; mu­ Rudolph, Heilig's Forge, on Sunday. tion launched a fresh effort to obtain MAY FIND IT NECESSARY TO sical director, Lawrence C. Machmer. Chamber of Commerce Sanction of B S Schmehl, New York Ciety, spent They will meet in the evening at the an industrial holiday. the weekend with his parents, Mr. and OUTLAW DEER IN SOME above-named school house on the first Mrs. N. S. Schmehl. Monday of every month during the BERKS BRIEFS SECTIONS. school term. Choosing Reading as the 1929 con­ Martin B. Landis sold two cows to vention city, the League of Third Class Cities authorized its law com­ WE BUT Howard B. "Reinert, drover, Huff's At a special meeting of the Muhlen­ mittee to aid in efforts now being Church. made to have the legislature pass a WASTE PAPER Violent Measures May Have to John R. Hertzog, who sold His farm berg Township School Board in the high school building, a resolution was measure by which there would be a T«r« roan into nrout. U will fcayjWksV Be Adopted, Says Secretary. with the stock to Benjamin J. Miller, passed by unanimous vote to submit division of monies derived from the tcttlMK dividend* on •• lnve«t»j««t. of Reading, purchased the house of to the voters at the November elec­ registration and licensing of automo­ "We Are at Yosr Service" Must Control Deer Herd Now. Mrs. William Bieber, Topton, and will tion the proposition of increasing the biles in Pennsylvania. take possession of it as soon as the WM. H. WEAVER indebtedness of the district by issu­ «T-2» THORN ST. READING. 1»A- house is vacated. ing $100,000 4'/4 per cent bonds, ma­ Clinton Moyer, Arthur Trumbauer, For establishment of better homes Bell Phone, 42871 Conn. 4388 GAME BOARD TAKES turing in 15-30 years, for improve­ for "working girls" and for their aid Howard Greiss, Violet Trumbauer, Ma­ ments to the high school building. THE RESPONSIBILITY bel Moyer and Eva Reese motored in FOR THIS ARTICLE Mr. Moyer's car to the Trexler deer and buffalo reservation, near Schnecks- With County Engineer Christman For those who want the BEST THERE is nothing that has ever The article hereinafter pub­ ville. planning to start a survey next week taken the place of Bayer Aspirin a*^ lished, asking the farmers of of the Essick tract to select a definite Martin B. Landis purchased a Ford site for the new Berks prison, work­ an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi­ Berks to co-operate in making coupe of George M. Frederick, Lyons. cians wouldn't use it, and endorse its the 1928 antlerless deer season house, almshouse and tuberculosis Edwin Peter, student at the town­ sanatorium, and with work on the new use by others. Sure, or several mil­ a success, has been sent to the ship high school at Longswamp, was lion users would have turned to some­ Patriot by the Board of Game Reading City Hall well under way, unable to attend school for several there remains but one major matter thing else. But get real Bayer Aspirin Commissioners of the State of days due to the fact that an automo­ (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the Pennsylvania. It is written by to decide in the county, selection of bile knocked him down while crossing a new court house location. box, and the word genuine printed in John R. Truman, secretary, and the road near his home. red: published at the request of the Eggs are selling at 42 cents a dozen. board. Strong feeling has been Suit for $51,500 damages for the People from this section attended death of her husband, Floyd Benja­ aroused among the Berks farm­ the Allentown Fair. ers and they are closing their min Inman, an Orpheum actor, was lands to hunting this season. Elwood Kline made a business trip brought by Sarah Inman, through At­ The NewFarquharNori'Wraf>Spreader Readers of the Patriot are asked to Amityville. torney Paul D. Edelman, against Wal­ to keep in mind that whatever THE large hat has won a definite Wilson Reinert made a business trip lace H. Rohlfing, of West Reading, and HE NON-WRAP Beaters heavy or light the application. is staled in the article is entirely place in the summer scheme of to Topton. George Arentz, Reading, arising out Tof this Spreader positively Sturdily constructed. Light from the Board of Game Com­ things and so the best Paris milliners The stork visited the family of of an automobile collision on July 1 assure complete br eaking up and draft. Shortest possible turning missioners and not from the have turned their attention to giving Daniel Gamier and left a girl. Mother in Reading. pulverizing of any kind or con­ radius. Proper height for easy Patriot management. this fashion variety and newness- and girl are doing nicely. dition of manure and a wide and loading. Ask for actual field Weighty trimmings are taboo, you The storm lodged the corn and Berks County's goal in the Red even distribution no matter how demonstration. see. Our coiffures are still small and ruined the apple crop. The corn crib Cross drive to relieve hurricane dis­ Bend for complete description •spirts It of Mrs. David H. Heffner was blown the trade mark of even if the hair has been allowed to tress in Porto Rico and Florida was Bayer Manufacture Word has been received at the of­ grow, the tiny chignon of the mode is down. set at $7,000 by John Barton Payne, A.B.FARQUHAR Co.LIMITED.YORK,PA of Monoacetlcacidester of Sallcyllcacld fices of the Board of Game Commis­ hardly sufficient to support the sort Daniel Gamier and Oliver Grim each chairman of the American National sioners that Berks County farmers are of birdcage affairs we used to call lost a valuable hog by death. closing thier land to hunting this fall hats. Trimmings being out, except in William Reinert purchased a tract in an attempt, it is presumed, to com­ the most limited sense of the word, of pasture and woodland of William bat the season on antlerless deer an­ the milliners have seen what they B. Fox. nounced by the board. could do in the way of combining People from this place attended the The people of Berks County should straws and evolving interesting weav­ sale of the household goods of Daniel be informed that this move will not es. Grosscup at Topton. SIXES benefit conditions, generally speaking. Reboux. for instance, has one a Simon Brensinger is in a critical FOURS I First, because the gave commission great deal in two tone rough straws condition from a stroke of apoplexy. *795 • *1550 and copies of this idea are to be had *595 r »725 does not liberate game in sections The thermometer at the local weather /. o. k. Laming where land is closed to hunting. Berks in black and white, blue and white, station registered 38 degrees above zero f. o. b. Lansing farmers and sportsmen are, we feel and red and white, at all the smart on Monday morning, the lowest read­ sure, interested in having game of as shops. 1The hat at the bottom of the ing for this fall, close to the frost line. many kinds as possible on their prop­ sketch, was a red and white one made Daniel Grosscup, of Topton, visited erty. The gave commission cannot of this very rough straw and simply David S. Hess and family, his old home­ use the sportsmen's money in releas­ trimmed with a white ribbon and a stead, where he was born and spent ing game where the sportsman cannot red shell buckle. The other hat like­ get a direct return for his money. wise makes use of unusual weaves. It is from Maria Guy and she used that Not Co-operating lovely fine linen straw in contrast to Second, because if the people of the broad ribbon made of braided Berks County prevent deer killing by cellophane, which she uses so much posting their lands, they are not co­ In many of her models. Used operating in solving the state-wide deer problem which so badly needs solution. Critically disastrous con­ RICHMOND CLOSED ditions exist only in certain sections On Sale at the present time, to be sure; but if An association was formed by the deer are not reduced in numbers over­ land owners of Richmond Township at crowded conditions are certain to de­ a largely attended meeting held at the 1925 Touring. velop in sections where they are only Moselem Springs Hotel for the purpose relatively common today. Further­ of discussing the proposed hunting ban 1921 Ford Sedan. more, since does have been protected for the coming season. It was unani­ Oakland Ail-American 6, since 1907 it stands to reason that an mously decided by those present improper ratio exists between the to close their properties to hunters. 1928, mileage 2000. sexes which has resulted in smaller, The following were elected: Lawson G. weaker animals, of which we cannot Dietrich, president; Milton Hill, sec­ be proud. It is realized that there are retary;; Mr. Berger, treasurer. Ar­ not a great many deer in Berks Coun­ rangements have been made that all ty today; there is food enough and to who desire posting notices can secure Normal Hill Garage spare, now, but we must control the them from the secretary, Mr. Hill. Ed J. Heffner, Prop. Berks County deer herd NOW so as to prevent its becoming so large as to KUTZTOWN, PA. require in the future drastic handling READ THE PATRIOT ADS. such as is necessary in other counties today. Damage Problem Third, because farmers need relief wherever deer live. Deer, even where they are rare have taken to coming down into the orchards and farms to eat grain and trees. They have be­ come semi-domesticated, because they are protected throughout most of the year. Unless the deer are thinned out and driven back the deer damage problem everywhere will become more Opportunity Day acute. If, in future months, Berks County farmers, who have posted their lands this year, are to ask for help from deer which have been doing damage, what can the game commission do? Can they be expected to co-operate in Friday, September 28th helping the farmers with such a prob­ lem when these very farmers have re­ fused to help the gave commission prevent this problem? Fourth, because unless this year s antlerless deer season is successful, it may be necessary to outlaw deer al­ Offers Fine together in certain sections, consider­ DURANT ing them as vermin, throwing the en­ tire season open to them, and thereby removing the animals which the Old songs die with the shadows of sportsmen should have removed them­ selves. This sounds drastic; but when yesterday as a new strain captures the safety of the deer herd, as well Quality Merchandise as of the valuable livestock of this state demands the drastic lessening of our imagination. And old standards the herd, then violent measures have to be adopted. of motor car performance are forgot­ It is hoped that Berks County citi­ zens will see the wisdom of co-operat­ ing in this year's antlerless deer sea­ at Excellent ten as you thrill to the touch of the son to the best of their ability. Take Half Deer Herd Now steering wheel of the new Durant Comparatively few deer hunters ff will invade the county; relatively few 65". Come in and drive one. deer will be taken. The ability of deer to rehabilitate an area is amaz­ Low Prices ing. Better take half your deer now and save the state's herd, than pro­ tect them now and lose them al­

• together. DURANT FOUR DURANT "65" JOHN B. TRUMAN, DURANT "75" Secretary. Sport Roadster $595.00 Sport Roadster $1025.00 Per M. S. Coupe 595.00 Four-door Sedan $1385.00 Two-door Sedan 595.00 Touring 795.00 Brougham 1550.00 The merchandise offered is of the most authen­ : Four-door Sedan 695.00 Coupe 975.00 tic for the Fall and Winter season, all of the Convertible Business Roadster 580.00 Two-door Sedan 975.00 finest quality and workmanship. Here you Chassis VA ton) 495.00 Four-door Sedan 1075.00 RUGBY will find garments, etc., for every member of Cabriolet 1045.00 3A Ton Fast Mail (panel Brougham 1175.00 your family offered to you at exceptional DURANT "55" body) $975.00 Passenger Chassis 725.00 prices. Take heed to this opportunity and Coupe $795.00 One Ton Express Chassis 975.00 Two-door Sedan 795.00 One Ton Express Chassis 1 save money. (All Prices, F. O. B.) Brougham 895.00 (with cab) 1150.00 amNiALocurf below Broad PHILAPtlPtilA Before You Buy Any Car, See and Get a Demonstration on These New Your time in Philadelphia Durants and Stars. We Sell on Time Payments or Cash. will be time well spent if you •top at the Sylvanu. Comfort, elegance and greatest satis­ faction at modest rates. All C. J. ZWOYER outside rooms with baths. Music and dancing during H. LEH & COMPANY DEALER luncheon,dinner and supper. Phone 922-R-32 MAXATAWNY, PA. Single Room Doable Room with bath with bath $3.50 up $6 up ionth After Month Durant Factories Continue to Break Their Own Productm Records r <

THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 PAGE FIVE

PREACHES AT LAURYS iRev. Scheirer preached the opening GREENWICH HAS 138 Famous Sacred Cattle of India Thrive in Florida; ——- i sermon. Rev. Scheirer and his sister, t Rev. David Scheirer, Willow Street, Mrs. C. I. G. Christman, were for- Lancaster County, visited Mr. and Mrs. mer members of the Reformed con- ON ITS SCHOOL ROLL Richer Milk and Better Veal Result From Brahmin Breeding C. I. G. Christman. On Sunday they gregation of that church.

READING. PA, ft KUTZTOWN, PA. i"\l t WE ALWAYS GIVE YOU WHAT YOU PAY FOR

ONE OUR PRICE AL WIEDERH0LD POLICY TO FURNITURE CO. THE EVERY- GOLDEN BODY 214 Main St., Kutztown, Pa. RULE PHONE 152 • Parisian beauty experts consider i fact, they claim she's the most beauti- Mlle. Ilona Karolevna— whose wistful! ful ever to arrive from all Russia, 'FURNITURE OF THE BETTER KIND" — EXCLUSIVE, BUT NOT EXPENSIVE eyes greet yours from the above photo J By profession she's a dancer of great —as one of the finest types ef feminine talent, whose performances have won OTHERS ADVERTISE TO SELL—WE SELL TO ADVERTISE -as one of the finest types of reminine widespread favor with French theatri­ pulchritude in the French capitol. In cal folk.

MARY DREIBELBIS ESTATE i Trust Co., guardian of Robert Dreibel- I bis, a minor, $210.30. Attorney T. K. & The account of Harry M. and Fred I Leidy appeared for the accountants. I TTTE /"-> / JUL M. Dreibelbis, executors of the estate of Mary Dreibelbis, late of Fleetwood, LUTHER LEAGUE PROGRAM shows a balance of $5,678, distributed as follows: William M. Dreibelbis, The program for St. John's Luther TBADE MAP* »E& U S CAN-PAT 0»X $630.88; Harry M. Dreibelbis, John M. League Session Sunday evening, Sept. Dreibelbis, Fred M. Dreibelbis, G. Logan 30, will consist of the following: Lead­ eautifuVA ft Dreibelbis, Alice Hein, Annie Mertz and er, Mrs. Emma Kratzer; Scripture, Sallie Smith, $630.89 each; Howard Paul Fritz; music, Lucy Luckenbill; Dreibelbis, $210.29; Anna Dreibelbis, topic, Rev. J. W. Bittner; select read­ $210.30; the Hamburg Savings and ing, R. Arlene Moyer.

CHANTUNG, as w« have mentioned gnilllllllNIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllflllllM^ before, has become an important summer fabric again after being- re­ With its beauty to delight your eye and its super-com­ garded for years as just a good sen­ sible material for little boys' ,pi&y { Low Prices on Good Tires I fort to rest your work-weary body, this beautiful suits and the Ilka In its 1928 em­ Streit Slumber Chair adds distinction and comfort to See It In Our ergence into the fashion world, how­ We are not offering you cheap plunder in these tires. = your room. How well proportioned it is, how grace­ ever, it leaps right over a great many B Motorists in this community are using these tires and get- 1 ful in its sweeping lines. It is an old-fashioned easy competitors and is found In the front ranks along with such smart weaves chair, adjustable to every angle of your body to give as pique, handkerchief linen and all 5 ting exceilent service. 3 comfort. Come in and sit down in it. Picture it in Show Windows the >erepe silk family. It comes in your favored corner in the living room. h.avtjnly colors, too, but it is really 00 at its smartest in cream white and Quality Heavy 1 00 more white than cream, at that It is used again and again In one We handle this kind of fur­ piece tennis dresses and, in case yon Duty Cords | Why Do We Handle don't know it, any one piece sleeve­ niture exclusively in our less dress this season is called a ten­ 30r3|/2 $ 8.10 [ stores because it is the best nis dress, tho' they are equally correct 32x4 13 35 Jamestown and Grand built furniture in the world. for boating, golf, tea-Ing or taking SfO}'^ *m - I the children for a walk. In any We know when we sell you .00 event, shantung ta one of the most 34x4|/2 19.20 I Rapids Furniture? this furniture that you will LOO popular matertala. And often these get lasting satisfaction from frocks have coats to match as does it because it is built to last. the one in sketch with a brilliant 00 touch of color introduced into the en­ semble by means of bright red shell buttons, the note being repeated on Quality Balloon EDWIN NUEL thf '-frock by th* double ban belt ^•Kkle. Cords Manager, Kutztown Store of

29x4.40 $ 8.80 • nM ORPHOPHONIC VIC- 30x4.50 9.15 HIGH CLASS ALWIEDERH0LD TROLAS AND RECORDS FURNITURE! ONE QUALITT > 31x5.00 12.35 PRICED TO SUIT VICTOR RADIOLAS BVBBYBOOri FURNITURE CO. O.VLT— 31x5.25 14.20 PURSB 812 PENN STREET, READING, PA. THE BEST Blatts BOSCH RADIOS o~ 214 MAIN STREET, KUTZTOWN, PA. ARTROLA RADIOS 33x6.00 17.20 168 Main St WE SELL YOU B. A. STEIN LLOYD E. DETURK ALL GOODS Ma—Ml TIRES AND BATTERIES LIFETIME SERVICE IBT PLAIN FIGURES Kutztown 21* MAIN ST. KUTZTOWN Main A Noble Streets Kutztown iiitmitiiitiiiiiUiiimiiiiiimimiiiH^ PAGE SIX THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 A —" Helen Saul, Town. Verna Bieber, Cornwell Heights. Paul Brumbach, Teachers Coll., j1 1 I I II 1 111 1 II 1 11111 U 11 II JOHN C. LUTZ ESTATE through the season so that the vines did not receive the direct force of the H. B. Yoder, Principal, Town. Dr. Lewis Wagenhorst, Director, Town. APACHE INDIAN sprays. As a result/ blight killed the Laura Hepner, Town. Training School, State Teachers Col­ Mildred Smith, Business College, Al­ STATE TEACHERS The will of John C. Lutz. late of lege, Slippery Rock. lentown. Albany Township, was filed at the of­ vines which did not receive any spray Mrs. Robert Yenser, DeTurk's. except that which drifted and settled Catharine Lynch, Upper Darby. Alma Hein, Art Supervisor, Plymouth Frederick Kutz, public school music, REMEDY COMPANY fice of Register Deem and letters were Prof. H. O. Dietrich, Norristown Su­ District, Montgomery County. West Chester. COLLEGE NEWS issued to the two sons, Albert E. and on them. —AT- Norman E. Lutz, who are named ex­ Alfalfa Yield. Well—While alfalfa perintendent. Myron Boyer, Spring Valley. Gomer Saul, University of Penna. Mildred Gross, Atlantic City. Harold Dietrich, Yale University. Extension School, Reading. ecutors. The estate is valued at $50 is especially adapted to warm and Eaglepoint Inn in personal property and $6,300 in semi-arid conditions, and can survive Helen Kressley, Music Supervisor, Lloyd Kemp, Howard, Pa. Daniel Lenge], a member of the under conditions where nearly all Wyomissing. David Wink, Military School, Mor- GENE TUNNEY AND FIANCEE ~ class of 1917, head of the Pottstown Albert be given the privilege of pur- Monday, Oct. 1 real estate. He directs that his son other forage crops fail, it will produce Jacob C. Hoch, Grim's Independent. gansville, N. J. High School for a number of years, even larger crops under humid con­ Myrtle Schaeffer, Norristown. Gene Tunney and his bride-to-be are was recently elected to fill a vacancy chasing the farm for $6,000. Setting Students Present* Fijrhtlnjr Hawk, a blood forth that his wife, Moilie, deserted ditions, such as those in this state, if Howard Kemp, Irwin. the subjects of the aquatone portrait Indian, performing: native in the Pottstown High School at a sal­ its soil requirements are cared for ary of $4,500 a year. him, the decedent directs that she is John Christman, Perryopolis. Marion Bonner, Swarthmore College. with next Sunday's Philadelphia dances; also Apache Jack In per­ not to participate in the estate. The properly. The only climatic handicap Oscar Stein, Town. Edgar McNabb, Muhlenberg College. Record, a most popular likeness of the son and Annette Arndt, musical Alice Lazarus, i 923, Bethlehem, a of the eastern grower is greater trou­ Stella Stahler, Hellertown. Edgar Saul, Drexel Institute, Phila. great world champion and a most teacher in the Allentown schools, re­ two sons share the estate in equal entertainer. Two hoars of fan. shares. He directs that Attorney John ble with grass and weeds, and conse­ Carolyn Stahler, Hellertown. Maude Boyer, University of Penna. charming picture of the New England signed her position to go to New York quently shorter lived stands. University and specialize in public W. Speicher be consulted in the set­ Carolyn Leinbach, Reading. George Dunkelberger, Muhlenberg beauty he will marry shortly. j • tlement of the estate. Cut Corn Stubble Low—Cut corn Paul Bordner, Upper Darby. College. n 111 m i r 1111 m 11111111 school music. low in the corn borer-infested area. A Claude Bordner, Town. Allan Grim, Law School, Harvard. At the first meeting of the Y. M. stubble not over two inches high is ^iiiffffiifiiiiiirfiifititiiiHiiiiiiiiiififiiifliitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiffiifiiiiiiiiffiiiffifiiiiiiiftiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii^ C. A. for this term, the address was Mr. and Mrs. Paul Christ, Bethle­ Constance Rhode, Reading. Marshall Grim, Columbia University. hem, spent Sunday with Mrs. Maggie recommended. Also be sure to cover Charles Wink, Coplay High School. Russell Stein, Lafayette College. delivered by Prof. W. H. Yeager, all stalks and stubble completely when teacher of education in this institution. Christ. Mae Ressler, Bethlehem. Charles Saul, Muhlenberg College. plowing. Grace Weaver, Music Supervisor, Anna Dunkelberger, Women's Medi­ Mrs. J. J. Litzenberger, widow of Prepare for Planting—Prepare the Reading. cal College, Phila. the former steward, spent a few hours beds for fall bulbs now. Some bulbs at the school on her way to Allen­ Amelia Bolich, Town. Forrest Stein, Teachers College, Town. SWOYER'S should not be set until late next month town. PA. LUTHERANS ' Russell Baver, Schofers. Mildred Springer, Training School, but time will be saved by having the Mae Weidenhammer, Molltown. Reading Hospital. Dr. and Mrs. Rothermel and Supt. beds ready at planting time. W. D. Landis were in Reading. Rosa Welder, Reynolds. Arthur Schaeffer, Muhlenberg Col­ Dorothy Schatzlein, Physical Educa­ lege. Mrs. Ross Purinton, of Reading, TO MEET IN ERIE BERKS BRIEFS | GRADE A MILK ( spent some time with Miss Ruth May tion and Hygiene, Ardmore. Nevin Shankweiler, Muhlenberg Col­ 1 Rothermel on Saturday. They motor­ Harvey Kline, Manassas, Va. lege. half miles on each side of the Potts­ Hilda Hartman, Saegersville School. Helen Bear, Music Course, West Ches­ ed to Allentown in Mrs. Purinton's Charles H. Esser, Kutztown, and ville pike just beyond the fair grounds, car. John Messersmith, Palmerton. ter. Dr. D. D. Fritch, Macungie, will be will be planted in the near future by Margaret Grim, Teacher of English, Esther DeTurk, Teachers Coll., Town. Is Best for Infants Miss Welsh, Mrs. A. C. Rothermel among the 192 degelates who will the Berks County Federation of and Miss Ruth Rothermel went to represent the Lutheran congregations Topton. Mary DeTurk, Training School, Phila. Women's Clubs and allied organiza­ Mary Hein, Virginsville. General Hospital. Reading to hear "The Desert Song," of the state of Pennsylvania at the tions and the civic and junior divi­ one of Schubert's productions, given sixth biennial convention of that body, Kathryn Reilly, Reading. Erma Dietrich, Teachers Coll., Town. sions of the Woman's Club, which is Naomi Holl, Virginsville. in the Orpheum Theatre. meeting in Erie, from Oct. 9 to 16. affiliated with the federation. Mildred Faust, Business College, Al­ The teachers college heads of the The biennial convention which is Kathryn Shankweiler, Kempton. lentown. 'Because it is next state and the trustees representing the the legislative body of the United Lu­ Dorothy Deisher, Town. Marguerite Herman, Teachers Coll., Plea for better facilities for keeping Mamie Hartman, Town. Town. various institutions held a joint meet­ theran Church, is composed of 550 of both county and city records was to mothers' milk" ing in the Senate caucus room at Har­ clerical and lay delegates from all Ruth Bonner, Town. Evelyn Hoppes, Teachers Coll., Town. risburg. A joint luncheon was held made by Councilman James Maurer Erma Dippery, Reading. parts of the United States and Canada, who Baid he had just discovered by ac­ Sarah Kemp, Teachers Coll., Town. < at the Penn Harris Hotel. Miss apportioned according to membership cident, that no deed has ever been Mabel Fritz, Northampton. Helen Kutz, Teachers Coll., Town. O'Hara, of the attorney general's de­ among the 34 district synods. These transacted for the exchange of land be­ Mary Bieber, New Jersey. Hermie Lutz, Teachers ColL, Town. I partment, and Dr. John Keith were synods with a total baptized member­ tween county and city in connection Bertha Meitzler, Norristown. Dorothy Miller, Teachers Coll., Town. the pripcipal speakers. The purpose ship of 1,555,545, are grouped in with the building of the Berkley •Mamie Meitzler, Breinigsville. Grace Moyer, Teachers Coll., Town. of this joint meeting was to let the 5,416 congregations, served by 3,252 Bridge. Franklin Butz, Supt., Nether Provi­ Mildred Smith, Business College, Al­ various schools know what changes ordained pastors. dence. lentown. : may occur in the state schools in the These from Allentown will attend: Mrs. William Greenawait, Walnut­ Esther Narehood, Teachers Coll., near future. This institution was H. A. Fritch, Rev. G. A. Greiss, Rev. town. Town. j V* represented by Mrs. Edgar Krauss, J. A. W. Haas, Frank T. Hagenbuch, STUDENTS AND Mary Levan, Maple Shade, N. J. Myrtle Stein, Teachers Coll., Town. Supt. Landis Tanger and Herman Fis­ Rev. G. H. Kinard, Elmer Osenbach, Mrs. Elmer Green, Quakertown. Mary Fox, Business College, Allen­ ter. Hon. Claud T. Reno, George F. Sei- Blanche Bryant, Schwoyer's Cross­ town. Luella Fogelsanger, who was ill and berling, Prof. Merim Wertman. ing. Pearl Slonecker, Business College, consequently one week late because of Reading—A. Raymond Bard, Rev. TEACHERS OFF Mrs. Paul Snyder, Heckman's School, Reading. her illness, has reported for duty. Charles G. Beck, Rev. W. A. Fluck, near Temple. Helen Snyder, Teachers Coll., Town. Last Saturday 17 additional stu­ George M. Jones, Rev. W. O. Laub, Wayne Koch, Dover, N. J. Frederick Fister, Lafayette College. dents were enrolled to take up the Rev. H. F. Miller, James A. Schofer. TO THEIR DUTIES -Carl Boyer, Muhlenberg College. Paul Stanley Klick, Drexel Institute. work toward their B.S. degree. Paul Lutz, Three-Mile House. Richard C. Klick, Muhlenberg Col­ The get-together party held by the BIEBER BIRTHDAY DINNER Robert Dreher, Emaus. lege. Y. W. C. A. in the Gymnasium last LONG LIST PROVES THIS TO Mark Grim, Emaus High School. Kathryn Saul, Teachers Coll., Town. week was quite a success. The idea Mrs. Ray Conrad, Hyde Park. Mildred Stichler, Teachers Coll., was to have the new people become Mrs. U. S. G. Bieber celebrated her BE AN EDUCATIONAL birthday anniversary at the Pennsyl­ Mae Smith, Norristown. Town. acquainted with the older students. Ray Webb, Breinigsville. Irma Siegfried, Cornell University. Games, charades and dancing were vania House Monday evening. A duck COMMUNITY. dinner with all the side dishes was Raymond Barner, Rockwood. Marie Baver, Teachers Coll., Town. Proved By Actual Test part of the program, and light refresh­ M. Emory Barner, Allentown. Raymond Rahn, Teachers Coll., Town. ments were served. served in real Pennsylvania Hotel style. Richard Barner, Vanderbilt. Clarence Druckenmiller, F. and M. In a recent case in Kutztown in which a child was unable to = The first meeting of the Y. W. C. A. The following were gathered around Local Teachers College Gets the College. •was largely of a musical nature. A the festive board: Dr. and Mrs. U. S. G. William Kutz, principal Junior High, digest pasteurized milk, Swoyer/s Grade A proved the prop- | Bieber, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bieber, Margaret Dietrich, Teachers Coll., song service, interspersed with vocal Largest Number of Institutions Northampton. Town. er food. And, similarly, it has been proven during our 29 1 and piano solos, was the nature of children Eioise, Wilson, Marie and Edgar Bleiler, near Pittsburgh. years of service in hundreds of cases of children that this 9 j Sarah Anna, Edgar Bieber, Rev. and Represented. Richard Bordner,- Teachers Coll., the first meeting. Myrtle Stufflet, near Allentown. Town. , milk has agreed with them. Often when other milk failed, 9 Mrs. A. C. Rothermel attended a • Mrs. J. W. Bittner, daughter Dorothea, bridge dinner given by her sister, Rev. Bittner's mother, Mr. and Mrs. Swoyer's proved the ideal food. 9 i . Peter Schwoyer, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mrs. H. J. Schad, at the Willows 8 t The list of young folks of this com­ Swoyer's Grade A Milk has just the right elements to be 9 uated on River Road. ' S. Sharadin, George B. Kohler and munity who leave in fall for higher readily digested by the child. With its bone and tissue- 9 M Prof, and M Stanley Seyfert, of Lizzie Graver, the proprietress of the institutions of learning, some just en- FINE FARMS FOR SALE Lehigh University, called on Miss hotel, who celebrated her birthday an­ tering and others resuming courses building contents, it promotes growth. So after your child 9 niversary Sunday. 135-acre farm, in good shape. Running water. Price $7,500. Clara A. Myers and the Rothermels. started in precding years, and the 112-acre farm, on highway. Good shape. Price $6,500. has passed the bottle age, continue to give this milk. Mr. Seyfert recently returned from the number of folks of town and vicinity 120-acre farm, level land, fine shape. Cheap. School of Technology, Boston, Mass., who follow the teaching profession, is 128-acre fruit farm. Running water. Fine shape. •where he took one year's post-grad­ always impressive. Education has a uate work. Since the death of Dr. FARM CALENDAR high place in this community, judging 49-acre farm, in excellent shape. Good buildings. Running water. Retains All the Vitamins Estes, Mr. Seyfert has been taking by the number of names in these Price $5,000. full charge of the Electrical Engineer­ groups. There is always a good per­ 80-acre farm, rolling land. Good shape. Price $5,000. Swoyer's Grade A Milk is cooled immediately after milking 9 and is kept cold because this improves the flavor and checks 9 ing department at Lehigh. Mr. Sey­ Timely Reminders from the Penn­ centage of students at the local state Workmen's compensations, automobile, liability, property damage, fert is a member of the class of 1899, teachers college coming from Kutz­ collision, fire and theft insurance. See me for rates. the growth of bacteria. It is delivered twice daily, insur- 9 while Mrs. Seyfert graduated in 1900. sylvania State College School town and other parts of Eastern Berks. Have money'to place on first mortgages. ing freshness and quality and making pasteurizing unneces- 9 Before her marriage she was Mi%s Following is the list of those pursu­ Affidavits handled, as well as other business incident to the office of Helen Beam, of the faculty. of Agriculture. ing educational work in Kutztown or notary public. sary. In this way all the vitamins so necessary to good 9 Albert Berger, who graduated from ;ln other parts: health are retained. 9 this institution last June, receiving \ FRANK D. BUTZ, Kutztown, Pa. his B.S. degree, was a week-end vis­ Poultry Show Promoted — Poultry Teachers NOTARY PUBLIC itor at the college. specialists of the Pennsylvania State Guy Moyer, Collegeville. Real Estate and Fire Insurance on Buildlnes and Household Goods* Produced By Tuberculin-Tested Cows Clark Werley, who graduated last College who have been judging exhib­ Ellen Boger, Hellertown. year, is now teaching in Lehigh its at county fairs report that some Edna Smith, Shoemakersville. County, having left this institution re­ of the best poultry displays they have Verna Druckenmiller, Town. cently in order to fill this position. seen this year have been where ex­ Mrs. Charles Herman, Reading. Annie Bulloch spent an afternoon hibits have been limited solely to resi­ Florence Bernd, Quakertown. in Reading, and Helen Gardner and dents of the county. Kathryn Bernd, Town. Lydia Jacobs in Allentown. Set Spray Nozzles Right—Attention Mary Greenawait, Schaeffer's School. Monday of this week three addi­ of potato growers in the state has been Grace Snyder, Lower Macungie. tional students were enrolled. This called to the importance of spray noz­ is the last day for enrollment for this Arline Hunsicker, Bloomsburg, N. J. zle adjustment more this year than Hilda Shoemaker, Milford Square. semester. Saturday, Sept. 29, will be ever before. In a Centre County field Katherine Weidenhammer, Maxa­ the last day for the Saturday enroll­ because of a mistake in planting there tawny. ment for this semester. SeUIt was a 40-inch space between two rows Paul Christ, Bethlehem High School. instead of 30 inches. The end of the Anna Moyer, Music Supervisor, MAD THB PATRIOT ASS. spray boom hit this wide space all Emaus. ./" vMale HEATROLA -" C H R Y $ LE R == • // You Don't Need It HOWandWHY

There is somebody in this wide world who ymoifth needs that refrigerator, stove, rug, carpet, Week. washing machine, or piece of furniture stored in your basement or attic—and would be glad Sept.1-1 th r to buy it at a fair price. toOct.6*hg i A Why not use Kutztown Patriot Classified de­ partment to tell the public about the things you have to sell? Folks buy used articles all year round so why delay using the Classi­ fied?

There's a special display in Phone 107, Kutztown our window this week which Get in touch with Kutztown Patriot Classified is attracting a lot of atten­ Department, tell us what you have to sell. tion, and is really worth We'll frame the ad for you. going out of your way to \ Winning public preference see.„ It shows the answers to all the questions on home* because of greater dollar value heating which people are asking. It is part of the nation-wide demonstration of the With the arrival of the new Chrysler-biiilf Plvm. outh the search for greater dollar vajue in the Come in an Listen to Estate Heatrola which was advertised in five pages of the lowest - priced field is made surprisingly simple. Sept. 29th SATURDAY EVENING POST. Be sure to see It is so unmistakably in a class by itself—with The New this display; then come in for further information, or tele­ its full size, its new and original style, its fine phone and invite us to call at your home. quality of finish and fittings. 675 But the contrast in Plymouth's favor becomes still more startling £ AND UPWARDS Stewart -Warner in the matter of performance—in its speed, pick-up and power, Ask These Owners HOW and WHY they like the Heatrol~a t from its new "Silver-Dome" high-compression engine using any Roadster .... $673 All-Electric A. C. Radio Mahlon Guldin. Maxatawny Henry XV. Grim. 140 Main St.. gasoline; its smoothness and readability; its safety because of (with rumble seat) Geo. B. Stamp, Maxatawny Kutztown light action internal-ex ponding hydraulic 4-wheel brakes. Coupe .... 685 Perfected by the Jpas. H. Reidenaner, Maxatawny Chaa. Schaeffer, Route a, Kutz­ Touring .... 695 Ralph Werner, 94 Railroad St„ town The buyer who seeks dollar-value first will inevitably choose 2-door Sedan . . 700 Kutztown John A. Mertz, Route 4, Kutz­ Frank Zimmerman, 81 Noble St.. town the new Plymouth, after observing the very significant contrasts De Luxe Coupe . 735 "ELECTRIC EAR" Kutztown And many otpt n> greater dollar-for-dollar value it presents to every other car (with rumble seat) 4-door Sedan' . . 735 See Our New Models in the lowest-priced field. AH prices f. o. *. Detroit. Plymouth dealers are in a position to extend the convenience •/ time payments, DeTURK'S HARDWARE STORE PARK MOTOR CO. SELLERS DRUG STORE KUTZTOWN, PA. Paul S. Luckenbul, Prop. KUTZTOWN, PA. KUTZTOWN, PA. THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 PAGE SEVEN

j PORTRAIT OF GENE LYONS Visit in New Jersey TUNNEY AND FIANCEE Mrs. John Wentzel and Kate Spring­ ROHRER DECLARES IN SUNDAY'S RECORD er spent three days at Annandale, N. The following enjoyed a trip to J., guests of Mrs. Wentzel's son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Stacy STATE COLLEGE IN Valley Forge: Mr and Mr.. Ira Moy- | Sunday's Philadelphia Record Next Emmons. They made the trip both er. Mr and Mrs. Amos Grim. Mr and win Kg featured by a gift of the usual Mrs. Charles Grtm and children Elda, aquatone portrait, but this time it car- ways on the bus. a NEED BOND ISSUE Kutztown Motor Car Co., Inc. Margaret and L.nn Ira; Mr. and Mrs. ries one of the ^^ CHRISTMAN GUESTS Ham ^nm' £ennet£, Gnm; Ver™ characters and his bride-to-be Gene Heftner, hern L»nm, Margaret Grim. TH,mn<»r «,^.u -1 t »- . . KUTZTOWN, PA. *< Mr. and Mrs. Robert MarJL and chil- ^S^TSitfSSLnf n S^S? Mr' and M"' H«oId Pete» and George Rohrer, of Dryville, pro­ NeV Eng dren. Margaret and Donald, and Mr. £5 l^L^SLSSJ l'n \ , ' children, Raymond, Betty, Robert and prieto. r of the Stony Ridge Orchards, and Mrs. Bingaman and children. Z^tf^^l' ^EPSS , exclusive Roland, Mauch Chunk, and Mrs. and a State College booster, declares Olive and Rowland, of Gordon. JS! 52L#PS ZSSLl l00kS VCly P*te" father' Paul Meckes, and emphatically in favor of the proposed « Mr. and Mrs. Paul Readinger be- ! 5l, .,D™ ~J£? ^rt^ "P**!?* daughter, Grace, visited Mr. and Mrs. State College bond issue of $8,000,- 0 ac b Is now the dealer in came parents of a daughter. j ™lrjTn^^i^™01„?1^!?1 J ° Christman, Greenwich Street, 000, because, he says, seriously in- 1 SundaV Sunday visitor, at the home of Mr. \^nTn£FL^J^*^ "?* ^ I « adequate financing over a period of and Mrs John Loeb were: Mr. and *£^£SS *ilTVSSiSm\^S^l I years has ao curtailed and depleted the Mrs. Raymond Loeb and children, i J* jS^S HtSL^!^^ R^ord MISSIONARY DELEGATE physical plant that the college is un­ Eastern Berks for Carl and Myrle- Mr and Mrs Paul J1" tart °n Pridtay of **"« week a able to perform the vital public serv Wagaman and wn, Harold; Mrs.' Han- £HKf aJfJ?.*S.£ S* l0Ve .°f M"- Ed8ar Krauss, president of the ice which is now being demanded of nah Balthaser. and Mr. and Mrs. AI- JJ? SJhlSu J22L* •I?* iSS" Women's Missionary Society of Trin- it by the people of the commonwaelth. bert Hein. of Lenhartsville. | ^Ttary is^ntitled^T^ni?13 ^r? f * ity Lutheran Church, is attending the A crisis has been reached, states Mr. Mr. and Mrs. George Fei-stermach- ong f * unirawl f Young Women's Missionary Congress Rohrer. The college can no longer rornance er and sons, Edward, George and fVi.c, mtnrm J" 4.w_L^_i, L ?, S—- and the Woman's Missionary Society carry on its present program of work Franklin, motored to Mt. Royal, N. {g^ff*°* "» bewildering lover of conventions of the Lutheran denomi- because the present buildings are over J., where they visited relatives. They daphne for the man her step-sister h opes to nation at Johnstown this week. crowded and inadequate to meet the stopped at the duPont Gardens and . marry. You will be carried needs of the student body of 4,000. a number of other points of interest. •*"* 0I\ Fhe sweeP Of emotions cre- thl C. R. GRIM, SR., LAID AT REST Vital scientific research work author- John Haring secured employment f^^y s remarkable serial. Follow ized and supported by the state and GENERAL th at the Fleetwood Metal Body Works. f fascinating course it takes to its The funeral of Cyrenius R. Grim, the nation is seriously hampered by Clark Fields and family returned astonishing end. Don't miss it, in the Sr., was held from his residence at unfit and inadequate buildings. from Nanticoke, where they resided Philadelphia Record, starting next Monterey. Short services were con- The da»V work of the college is TISUB for about a year. They are tern- Friday. advt. ducted at the house, with further serv- being done in buildings that in many porarily staying at the home of Mr. ices in the Maxatawny Church. In- «••• are obsolete in construction and —\foe$ a long way to make friend* and Mrs. John Eck. terment was made in the adjoining dangerous to student occupancy, John Sanders purchased a new cemetery. Members of Huguenot Several of the largest buildings Durant sedan from C. J. Zwoyer, of REFORMED CHURCH Lodge, No. 377, F. and A. M., of must be replaced at once or the col- Maxatawny. Kutztown, attended the funeral and l*ge will be compelled further to re­ With General, quality is a N. C. Bastian and Noah Musser served as bearers. The Masonic serv- «*nct .ts work practical thing, giving values each have men employed filling their BACKS PROHIBITION ices were conducted at the grave. . The proposed bond issue offers an silos. The remains rested in a metal casket, immediate, practical solution of these you can see and feel. It has Ruth Fenstermacher secured em­ The tributes consisted of a slumber problems, and makes possible a con- ployment at the Keystone Shoe Fac­ robe from the family; casket spray of J*nuous, well-planned program of come to mean exceptionally tory in Kutztown. General Synod Takes Emphatic rose,, daughters; pillow, son Cyrenius bu.ldmg replacement and growth. .. Irvin Musser, foreman of the local Stand for 18th Amendment and family; basket asters, grandchil- the conclusion reached by Mr. Rohrer. long mileage, unusual comfort. hosiery mill, made a business trip to dren Greenawait; Masonic design, Mohnton. and Considers the Presidential Huguenot Lodge, No. 377. F. and A. J. W. A. KNOSKE The fast-spreading fact that Mr. and Mrs. Fred N. Heffner and M.; asters, Margaret and Bilhe; gladi- son, Lloyd, spent Sunday visiting rel­ Election a Referendum. olus, Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Bogert; The funeral of J. William A. Knoske there is economy in top qual­ atives at Bally. asters Mrs. Mary Yenser; gladiolus, took place from his home at Bowers, ity tires resulted last year in Rev. Lewis Foltz will conduct com­ Home Dept., Maxatawny Zion's Sun- Friday afternoon, with short services munion here on Sunday morning, The General Synod of the Reformed day School; asters, E. D. Zimmerman at the house, followed by continued hundreds of thousands of ex­ Sept. 30. Church in the United States has taken and family; gladilus, Mr. and Mrs. services in the Trinity Lutheran •1 Mr. and Mrs. H. U. Gottshall, of an emphatic stand for national pro­ Mark Holl; asters, Mr. and Mrs. Solon Church at Bowers, and interment in perienced tire buyers changing Toledo, Ohio, are visiting at the home hibition and the 18th Amendment— Adams; asters, sister, Mary; basket, the Bowers Union Cemetery. Rev. of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Merkel. issues which are involved in the Presi­ Lena Miller; hand bouqueti family; William F. Bond, of Shamrock, offi- to Generals. It takes only one Clarence Yerger, of Topton, was a dential campaign'—members of that dahlias, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ziegler ciated. Undertaker Irwin D. DeLong, week-end guest of Howard Moyer. denomination are reminded in a state­ and Mr. and Mrs. Trevdore Winger; of Topton, had charge. The bearers tire to prove it. Make your Elmer Angstadt is having repairs ment issued by Rev. Dr. William E. asters, Mrs. Annie Schubert. Rev. W. were George Loch, Jacob Snyder, Ja- made to his house by Contractor Da­ Lampe, executive secretary of the S. Dry and Rev. George B. Smith offi- ner and Levi Conrad, next tire a General. vid Adam, of Kutztown. executive committee of the General ciated. Funeral Directors J. J. Scho- cob Loch, Jacob Hamsher, Frank Dan- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Boyer, of Synod. fer & Son, of Topton, had charge. The tributes consisted of the fol­ Mertztown, were guests of Mr. and Under the authority of the General lowing: Large casket spray of roses, Mrs. I obias Kern. ^j,.,»,u urcam me executive ;ommit- sister and brothers; large basket dahl­ Synod creating the executive com H. LEH & CO. EXPOSITION Edgar Gehris resumed his studies at tee, that body is ordered to "give ade- ias, nieces and nephews; asters, Alton General Tire Is a Top Quality Product Temple University, where he and Lester Kunkle; wreath, Oscar quate publicity to the pronouncements What the well-dressed woman will senior. Knoske and family, Akron, Ohio; of the denomination." Under this wear presented a problem for the so­ Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Ruppert, Mr. gladiolus, from Tilghman DeLong and authority, Dr. Lampe issued a record lution of which nearly 800 women as­ and Mrs. James Oswald and daugh­ family. of the various actions of the church sembled on the second floor of the H. ters, Arlene and Minerva, of Dryville, on prohibition. The denomination Leh & Co. store, Allentown. The Fall were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. El­ represents about 1,750 congregations Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rohrbach and Fashion Exposition pleased a remark­ daughter Pearl, Temple, visited Mrs. mer Angstadt. with a membership of nearly 360,000. ably large number. Mr. and Mrs. George Stahler, Mr. Rohrbach's sister, Mrs. Lloyd Borrell, and Mrs. Forrest Dornblaser and chil­ Great Moral Experiment and family. Improving Home dren, Viola, Naomi and Arthur, mo­ "We are now in the midst of a Mrs. Alice Hottenstein is having her Marie Hepner called on Jean Ang­ tored to Northampton County, where Presidential campaign, the greatest is­ home repainted in yellow and white. stadt, Allentown. they visited relatives. sue of which is a moral issue," said Dr. Lampe. "The whole campaign H. G. Dellicker has the job. She had centers around the 18th Amendment. one chimney rebuilt and the other re­ FLEETWOOD It resolves itself into a kind of refer­ paired. endum as to whether the country will Bechtel Brothers started work on be wet or dry. Having set our hands Mr. and Mrs. James Schaeffer, their new summer resort. They are to the plough in the 'great moral ex­ George Schaeffer and children James, having plans prepared for a comfort periment' of prohibition, we cannot Nathan and Elizabeth, were guests of station on the property recently ac­ turn back, and if the decision of the Obie Bortz, Esterly. quired from Owen Snyder, south of ballot box on November 6th would be Mrs. Oscar Bittenbender, Lillian Bit- the borough, along the concrete road in favor of the wets, there would be a tenbender and Raven Ziegler were to Pricetown. real setback in church work, and real guests of Mrs. Kate Prey and Mrs. Lloyd P. Hehr was the first in town discouragement for social workers. Louisa Gonser. to install a gas meter at his home on The outside world would laugh at Richmond Street. church workers and glory in their dis Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Travanisch, of Peter Rothermel and wife, who re­ comfiture It is therefore the duty of Michigan City, Ind., on an automobile turned from their honeymoon trip, are every church member, regardless of tour of the East, figured in a thrilling now occupying the home at 30 West his denomination, to register and vote, hold-up at the Summit Inn, atop the Vine Street. Mr. Rothermel is em­ and to influence all others whom he Blue Mountains, 28 miles north of Al­ ployed at the post office. can. The church's stand on prohibi­ lentown, and lost $350 in cash and l/\t the wheel you will learm Work on the new fire hall will be tion has nothing to do with the religi­ $600 worth of jewelry. The Indiana rushed so as to complete the building ous faith of the candidates. The couple went into the inn shortly be­ before cold weather arrives. church needs to be conscious of its fore noon, to find the wife of George Potatoes are selling here for 80 strength and to use its voting privi­ Dorward, the proprietor, being held up something new and better in cents a bushel. leges to the best advantage." by three youthful bandits. We have Frank Buck, a patient at the Never- sinlc Sanitarium, is improving. \1I WINNERS AT CARD PARTY That the 1928 Good Will Tour of The Fleetwood Metal Body Cor­ the Allentown Chamber of Commerce Willards from poration is operating its plant day and OF LOCAL SHEPHERDS fine cat performance* has struck a popular note is evidenced night. by the large number of businessmen The baby clinic work for the past The Shepherds of Bethlehem card party was held Wednesday evening in who daily signify their intention of week follows: Old, under I year, 22; accompanying the tour to Harrisburg Scores of motorists firth from examining and riding I to. 2 years, I I ; 2 to 6 years, 12; to­ the F. O. E. Hall. A jolly evening In Buying a Hudson was spent. The following received and Washington. Thus far more than $12.50 „, in the latest and best cars of the day declare Hudson tal, 45; mothers, 37; friends, I; chil­ a hundred men have given assurance You Save up to dren, 7; cousin, 1; visitors, 5; sisters, prizes: First in flinch, Mrs. Annie Schadler; second, Mrs. Edwin Long; that they will make the trip; Several Hundred Dol­ the supreme performer of their experience. 2; grandmothers, 2 aunts, 2 highest We figure our prices for hasenpfeffer, Carl Christman, Ellen number, 167. Doctors and nurses in genuine Wiliard Batteries to lars a Oar! Moyer, Mrs. Ed Schaeffer, Walter Allentown enjoys the lowest water You will find this Hudson smooth, fast, reliable, bril­ charge, Dr. O. T. Gehris, Mary I. fit the pocketbook of every Arndt, John Fox, Mrs. Robert Schear- rents of any city in the country. In man who drives a car. Here's Brown, R.N.; assistants, Mrs. F. C. liant. Its fuel economy is unequalled in cars of its er, Mrs. Calvin Stamm, W. Bright- addition, its people have had a prac­ a battery with a great big Walther, Mrs. Charles Kutz. bill, Lucetta Kramer, Mrs. Germanus tically unlimited supply of water, no margin of useful life for weight and power. Bennicoff. * meters being used for householders. every dollar of its initial cost. *I250 The next party will be held Wed­ Water is one of the cheapest and best But for the story of what Hudson will do that you BOWERS nesday, Oct. 31, to which the public things in Allentown, and has been so AND UP would not ask other cars to do—will you please take is invited. from the very earliest days of the city. Lloyd E. DeTurk All prices /. o. b, Detroit the wheel for any test you desire? Dunlop Tires and Buyers can pay for cars out of income at lowest available charge Mrs. George Loch was at the Allen­ Service for interest, handling and insurance. town Fair. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith, of Top- KUTZTOWN, PA. ton, and daughter, called on Mrs. OHM WTL1AKD BATTERIES AKD Smith's mother, Mrs. Essie Schaeffer. WnXAKO SERVICE FOR AIX MAKES EARL T. ADA The corn supper, which was held in the basement of the Lutheran HUDSON-ESSEX DEALER Church, was well patronized and a large sum was realized. KUTZTOWN, PA. (E. R. SCHEIDT, Mgr.) BREINIGSVILLE, PA. The funeral of William Knoske was well attended by his relatives and friends. Marie Heckman, of Reading, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. George Sharadin. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Becker and daugh­ ter, Vivian, of Fleetwood, were week­ "Now What Must I Do?" end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Sny­ der. Mr. ancl Mrs. Clarence Fegley spent Sunday in Philadelphia. Curtis Frauenfelder, of Hamburg, This is the question asked by nearly galled on his grandparents, Mr. and every individual appointed executor of Mrs. Jam.es Barto. an estate, because the duties of this appointment are entirely out of his or TOPTON her experience. He must get a jus­ Trinity Lutheran" Sunday School tice of the peace or lawyer to guide will observe Rally Day on Sunday, him at every step. ~ct- 7. An address will be delivered by Carl Henry, student in the Lu­ Give Me theran Theological Seminary, Phila­ delphia. This Bank Does Not Trinity Lutheran Sunday School Guernsey Milk W'll hold a Hallowe'en social in the basement of the church, Tuesday Have To Ask n'ght, Oct. 30. Every Time Leroy Merkel resumed his studies Because It Knows at Franklin and Marshall College. John C. Cook is paying $1.30 for Men who labor physically as black­ wh This bank knows the duties of an ex­ «t. He shipped I I cars of the smiths, bricklayers, stone masons, dig­ nev*' wheat. ecutor, administrator, or trustee, by The Metropolitan Edison Company ging trenches, in mills, factories, foun­ actual experience, the best teacher. has completed the installation of the dries, prefer our Golden Guernsey No time nor money is wasted in ask­ ne "*' lighting system throughout the ing somebody else what to do. Ap­ own. About 50 more lamps have Milk because its flavor satisfies and be point this bank your executor or for *n installed. because this high test milk builds bone, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rohrbach and whatever other fiduciary work you re­ V Kebecca Rohrbach figured in an acci- muscle, blood, stamina. quire and you will get prompt, honest, ^dent when the steering gear broke on expert service. £ their auto while they were driving If you prefer pasteurized milk, we •long the concrete road leading into handle that, too. •own Judge Paul Schaeffer approved the KUTZTOWN NATIONAL BANK 'eport of Miles B. Dechant, E. F. Scholl DANNER'S DAIRY •K ^' *'• .SPatz, inspectors to examine -.e new reinforced concrete bridge over KUTZTOWN, PA. KUTZTOWN, PA. tie Schuylkill Biver at Hamburg, rec- omnu-nding the acceptance of the Phone bndge. They found the work was ex- ««ed m a satisfactory manner. - PAGE EIGHT THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928

MOSELEM SPRINGS FREDERIC CHICKEN DINNER One of the largest and finest ex­ Largest Lighting Unit? hibits and evidencing a great amount ELECTRICAL POWER A wonderful chicken and waffle din­ David L. Treichler Harold Gift secured employment at ner was given by Mr. and Mrs. Percy of thought and work was the fine the Temple Foundry. Frederic for the following: Mr. andshowin g at the Allentown Fair of farm HARNESSES & BASKETS Harry Adam is the proud owner of LIFE-SAVING AGENCY products made in three displays by a new bicycle. Mrs. H. Kerns, Anna and Kathryn 208 East Main Street Kerns, May Heffner. Mrs. William the Trexlertown, Macungie and Laury Robert Gift, Sr., and Harold Gift Kutztown, Pa- Displaces Factory Shafts and Frederic and daughters Bertha Mae Granges, in competition for prizes to­ visited the Scheirer family. and Betty, Mr. and Mrs. Vernie Kerns Mr. and Mrs. Alvin P. Adam enter­ Belts and Lessens Menace and children Arline and Jean, Mrs. taling $255. tained some of their friends at a de­ To Workers Reuben Ringler and daughter Made­ lightful card party. Hasenpfeffer was line, Mr. and Mrs. George Kerns and played by the older folks, while the children Kenneth, Mary and Francis, younger ones enjoyed music and other Replacement by electricity of vari­ Daniel Levan, Mrs. Wiliard Kerns and Three Beautiful Brick Homes games. The following were present: ous forms of manual and mechanical son Stanley, Luther Houck, Harry Mr. and Mrs. Alvin P. Adam, Mr. power in American factories has been Frederic, Claudine Knappenberger and and Mrs. John Moll, Mr. and Mrs. the means of preventing thousands Kathryn Frederic. John Buchman, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel of accidents and the saving of many For Sale E. S. Dries, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert K. lives, according to J. P. Jackson, in­ SCOUTS TO BUY STOVE Dries, Alice Dries, Grace Dries, Ches­ dustrial engineer of the New York ter Buchman, Ellis Buchman, Helen AH of these are located very desirably on Smith Street, Dries, Mary Adam, John Landis, Ar- Edison Company. George Ettele, reporter of Troop No. line Dries, Edna Dries, Fred Moll, The introduction of electrical 3, Boy Scouts of Trinity Lutheran Topton. All equipped with hot water heat, bath, electric Harry Adam, Harry Dries, Mary Dries, power has displaced miles of shaft­ Church, states that signaling and first Alvin K. Adam and Alvin C. Adam. ing and belting as well as innumera- aid were studied in patrol sessions this lights and all other conveniences to be expected in an up- The prizes were won by Mrs. Daniel b'.e gears and clutches, Mr. Jackson week. They are planning to put a stove Dries and John Landis, best, while says. "And with them went great in their meeting room. Raymond to-date home. Very reasonably priced, for cash or part Mrs. John Moll and Daniel Dries won hazards to life and limb," he adds. Beck, jr., was a visitor at this meeting. booby. Refreshments were served by "Electric power is also important He will join the troop soon. payment and balance on easy terms if desired. the hostess. After refreshments a so­ as a factor in preventing accidents cial hour was held, in which Alvin K. A new two-story building will be 1 resulting from human fatigue," says Adam furnished music on the violin, erected by the Ruttenberg Furniture assisted by John Buchman on the pi­ Mr. Jackson, who is quoted by the F. A. TREXLER Pennsylvania Public Service Infor­ Company on the site of the old Chinese ano. Some fine vocal solos were ren­ laundry building at 49-51 South Phone Topton 11-R-H dered by Helen Dries. All had a most mation Committee. "Experience in­ Sixth StVeet, Allentown. The esti­ Topton, Pa. enjoyable time. dicates that fatigue is a prolific source mated cost of the new building is $50,- Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dietrich visited of accidents. It is estimated that 000 Alvin P. Adam and family. shop-worker now has available for his use about four and a half horse­ MRS. TAYLOR RECUPERATING power. As a result, in a large pro­ • •••••••••••••••*••••••••••••••••*• + + * + * HERE AT HOME OF SISTER portion of our present industrial anm, •$• operations, man becomes a director Shades of the old gas-light, lamp­ light unit in the world and, to prove Mrs. Lloyd Taylor, Allentown, is re­ post—look what they light their streets its size, had this young lady step i of power rather than a source of with in South Bend, Ind.! through its door and comfortably seat X cuperating at the home of her brother- power." in-law and sister, Walnut Street. She The natives claim it's the largest herself within. Can you beat it? ? X was confined to the Sacred Heart Hos­ X pital 10 days before she came to Kutz­ T town. N&W YARK— PARIS T T X X SEE "DESERT SONG' FASHIONS ^©^ FADA "70" X Mrs. Paul Luckenbill, Mrs. Helen T X Bieber, Linda Keinert and Mrs. Helen T Esser Millard witnessed the produc­ T tion of "The Desert Song" at the Or- T pheum Theatre, Reading, Monday eve­ Y X ning. 3»*£V1S£!&--* !X H Greatest X Ocean City Visitor «-#-* X X Susan Willis, Ocean City, N. J.; Mr. W&*&**7aninnr i III a i • X and Mrs. James Todd and Fred Todd, T Moore, Pa., spent the weekend with X Achievement T !! Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Willis. X X Permits-.for 16-two-story dwellings, one a combined store and dwelling, to X X be erected in Hampden Heights, Read­ x ing, at a total cost of $955,000, and per­ T mits for 22 one-story garages to be Y In Modern Radio X erected in the same locality at a cost Y of $12,600, were issued to Samuel M. X Sherman. Y X X X Decision to place before the voters of T Lower Alsace Township, Berks County, T the matter of executing a school loan TW 4-Door Sedan Body try Fisher Y at the November election for erecting a x X new building, was made by Lower Al­ Because Six offers infinitely more than X sace Township School Board. other cars of comparable price, over 350,000 X Pontiacs are now in use ... It is the lowest X priced six offering the style, comfort and T NCW VARK—PARIS silence of bodies by Fisher. It is the only low- Our ] priced six offering a 186 cu. in. engine with X X the G-M-R cylinder head. It is the only six of Challenge X FASHIONS its price combining the advantages of cross- X flow radiator, of foot-controlled headlights and This is the greatest forward • of coincidental transmission and ignition lock. Y It is such features as these which are so impres­ X step in radio since the days t sive when is compared with any TpHE Sehiaparellji 'sutiourrr bathing x of the crystal set. Embodies N other car of similar price. They typify the ex­ suit is, by now, one of thos. fam­ X Fada's four famous features X ous fashions that is copied and adapt­ ceptional quality and value being built into ed so many times that it becomes a'- this low-priced Six. Come in X —r-Tone quality! Distance! X most a'byword, like Chanel's crystals —and learn how much more you get for you? X or Reboux's vagabond hats of a sea- X Selectivity! Reliability! We son or so ago. In this case. It all money when you buy a Pontiac Six. Y grew out of the ffreat vogue for sun­ I •:• claim and are ready to 2-Door Sedan, $745; Coupe, $745; Sport Roadster, $745; Phaeton* f Y burned complexion*. Nothing Is so $775; Cabriolet, $795? 4-Door Sedan, $825; Sport Landau Sedan, ugly as a woman in a low cut evening $875. Oakland All-American Six, $1045 to $1265. All prices at far. f prove that the Fada "70" Y i = gown whose face and arms are a nie« *ory. Check Oakland-Pontiac delivered prices—they include lowest handling charges. General Motor* Time Payment Plan available at will show superior perform­ X golden brown and whose back is pa;* minimum rate. T pink. But even the most advanced « ance over any other stand­ Y as lacked the temerity to cut away the x backs of our bathing suits much be­ ard make of radio receiver Y \ low tne shoulder blades until Schla- Y Y parelli came along and made the nude regardless of price. backed suit a smart fashion. And she WILTROUT BROS. Y Y did it so cleverly too. by adding an Y Y sxtra piece to the skirt that can be Garage along William Penn Highway, Y buttoned up to the shoulder straps One Mile West of Kutztown Y thus saving the day if you happen to Y Y find yourself at a critically «eyed beach KUTZTOWN, PA. Y party. i This suit of hers is smart in other Y respects. It has the new circular X skirt, the molded hip-line and the ad­ X dition of a few buttons by way of Y X trimming, for buttons are appearing Y Tubes Last Three Times as Long Y on bathing suits again, just as thej PCNTIAC SIX Y are on frocks and coats. PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS Y The Fada has an economy of operation that is outstanding. Fada Y tY uses the long-lived 227-type INDIRECT HEATER TUBES in this "70" model. These tubes last three times as long as ordinary tubes X X —minimize hum and contribute to flawless reception. Fada was the KLINE, EPPIHIMER & CO first to develop the circuit design making use of this exceptional tube. Y t>LT~RS arc beginning to be shown by PENN SQUARE READING, PA. Y Push-pull amplifier of advanced design is used—clears reproduction, the smartest houses and in every­ thing 1 hat pertain:- to fashion from ev- X eliminates undesirable harmonics, prevents overloading of tubes, re­ X ttiing frocks to tweed suits. We hni sponds to all frequencies. Y H hint of the recrudescence of navy X blu. last spring. It was very smart X Y tn.! had a distinct look of newness X Y alter so many springs of browns and Full Electric Operation greens. It will be even smarter this X i Spring and much more worn. But this The Fada "70" is built for full electric operation—plug it in, turn it new fancy for blue doesn't stop in the X Y Avker shades, by any manner of PREMIER Y on, that is all. Fada's precision methods have developed, through X •ir-ans. Pale, pale blue is extremely X hundreds of experiments in Fada laboratories, the most reliable re­ (fro 1 and all tones between the faint- X «st ciel blue and the deepest midnight or X ceiver ever offered. "Perfected" not in the demonstration stage Y are being given attention by almost all only, but for years to come. You'll have continuous, day in and day Y the <*0<'*uriers here and abroad. Y Yru little suit sketched above is in out, use of your Fada "70." Y #tte of the many new soft woolens FALL, With the great power of a searchlight, this Fada "70" pierces the Y With a marked weave and in a dusty X dull blue of the type -hat Pa-quin « crowded air to select for you the program you want, as you want it, Y sponsoring in both coats and frocks. clear, undistorted, vivid. While simple in the extreme, it makes FOOTWEAR • «ee of some of the important fashion X Botes of the new season. These in­ t Y clude circular unpressed pleats, but­ Tone Quality—Distance tons and belt buckle exactly matching Every model X Y the Otitic in tone, and for contrast a T Fada's newly developed Super-Dynamic Speaker gives you a tonal X belt of darker shade to whirh the reveals a new •lever woman sees that the accessories, Y range hitherto believed unattainable. From the rich mellow note of Y socket book, hat band, for instance, X the pipe organ to the clear trill of the nightingale—from vast audi- are absolute companions. grace of line, X X i torium volume to the drowsy living room lullaby. Notes never be­ X and the entire X fore heard through radio are revealed to you by this modern ultra­ COWS at T sensitive reproducer. If you like the thrill of far-off programs, get X collection is the Fada "70" and not once in awhile, but practically every time you Private X so desire, you have these programs. Y Sale notable for X X We offer at all time* from X T. B. Tented Herd* fashion, fit 40 to 60 Cow, X Everything You Want In a Radio and For X These cows are all shipped Y from Accredited Areas of Michi­ and quality gan. Wisconsin and Canada and Y Less Money Y are ready to go into any clean herd under State Inspection. Y X Ilolstrin*, Gnernaeys and Jer- Y% . In P tent Leather, as well as Creole Brown X *eya a specialty. | With Black Python vamp and silk kidskin 6T> Days Retest granted. De­ K.OX1© Kidskin, with a cleverly woven X livered by truck anywhere. •JUHC quarter materials that are new and <-J C 00 X We have sold hundreds of lifferent 1 »J strap $12-50 Y cows all over the east and our (This may also be had in Brown Ooze.) a «, Genuine lizard vamp and the quartar la of Y many satisfied customers is as­ Real, chic French type Pump of Java Y surance that this is the place to /\8COC suede—Either Black or Brown, <1i,Sn Christ's Dep't Store buy. Our sale Barns are open Cameo Brown Suede with genuine lbs- <1 "5.50 at all times for your inspection. ard trimming, piped In gold kidskin it X Do not fail to visit our Farms, X two miles east of Lehighton. •T Carbon County. Pennsylvania, KUTZTOWN, PA. R. F. D. No. 3. A trip to Fairy- Many other Smart Styles for Fall at $7.50 and $10.00 Y Y lnad will convince you. •Shoe Dept, Russell Miller, Mgr., First Floor, Rear X FAIRYLAND FARMS •iX X• •M rim in iii mrrri 'iiinMiH juiKWJi • *••«»—w 1 X X X t Y X X IT THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 PAGE NINE

BEAUTY :wKto»Mwe»raeiM«ows«WMe•HNKIN^ G \ri B»1

k *•.;•••: •v:--:x:-v.v:i!i>bjis»^.'c»»»:-»>»:«'»^^-^rt @>t4EYSTW*E VIEW CO*$W£^ ^^^>fl DOLOKES 5: t Showgirl and sculptured beauty m% /tn. a face less regular than that of the famous beauty taken when she Dolores, yet here shines through was past sixty, tier thoughts were X TEE SECOND OF FOUR COUNTESS SCI70NTJ0RN the eyes a splendor of character always youthful and cheerful, and t ARTICLES American born, and mors beau­ that makes her truly beautiful. the had no lines. tiful, because of the charm of h*r By BETH JEFFRIES expression than because of regu­ human beings—in fact, she had rather to be that of the correspondTng flower. more, and, because she was known to X larity of features. "For," he wrote, in urging his sugges FRIEND and fellow-singer be generous, she carried the burdens of tion as a positive aid to health, "the in the opera with Caruso, in the world." Note that he did not many others as well—but because she flower modelled on the side will be the X the greatest of all tenors, say "handsome," because thrrc':5 a vast made it a rule of her life not to ad­ symbol of the clean living we ure to revealed the other day a difference between real beauty and mit worry and care and discontent follow, for the flower is conceived in little trick of this great what we call "handsome." into the scheme of her existence. pure, passionless love and stretches its X artist to get the utmost of "Why did this artist think this of She often told her friends and lec­ origin back to the fount of li*e." beauty cut of his notes. the man with the face that made one ture audiences how every day of her He went even further and suggested Fundamentally, he had to think of crustaceans and bivalves? life she made it a practice to say that every child born into the world t have the organ to work with, of course, Because this man had a soul so beau­ "Good morning to God," by which she should be surrounded from its begin­ and the technic to manipulate it, but tiful that he found his Heaven right meant that instead of tumbling lazily ning with its proper color in all the T he then brought psychology to his aid. here and took every one with whom out of bed with a grouch she always little intimacies of life with which it "Whenever he took one of those deep he came into contact right into it with went at once to an open window and first comes into contact in order to T inhalations before uttering his note, he him1 ' . Nobody ever saw the grotesque gave her thanks to God for all good create a harmonious existence. "It always carried in his mind the idea features, or, if they did, they asso­ things. So she filled her mind with should be taught to use a soap," he f and picture of a wonderfully beautiful ciated them with the real beauty that good thoughts instead of peevish ones said, "which is colored and faintly ABOVE—HOMELIEST ONE T rose hel in his hand—a great, full- looked out from behind them, through with which +o start the day, and also scented in harmony with its being. Mary Ann Bevins. proud of her bodied and luscious ros-—whose fra­ the kindliness of the eyes and in the her lungs with the cleanest air that ugline.it and confirming her fea­ rTwtos by was available. So she chose colors with The soundest beauty philosophy was tures in that mold. Sh* needn't b. grance he was inhaling. Thus, th<; deeply graven lines expressive of a once expressed in a bill-board adver­ X beauty of the rose, through his imagi­ Keystone which to surround herself which were vgl>i. Below you see, her as the life-time of human sympathy and un­ View Co. tisement, which is no longer to be seen, X nation, was translated into sound. derstanding.- He was often sought by in harmony with her inner being, and could be. She thought tnott of carried out this plan consistently, even advertising a condensed milk and the linet into her features; the can In which there is perfectly sound his fellow-artists when they wanted to showed a beautiful pastoral scene with X beauty-theory which may be applied and there is no doubt that she is as Yet here something shines out through to the color of her toilet soaps and think most of them out. create a face portraying true beauty beautiful as is claimed. Yet her face the corresponding scent. cows grazing placidly in the fore­ in many ways. A man died in New of character and soul, and he has been the eyes that is of the soul and ground. It bore the line: milk, X is a mask, animated only because she York a few weeks ago, quite famous preserved in marble and bronze. from the beauty of character which it Which opens up a little thought of from contented cows. tiful thoughts will produce beauty? in his line. He was an artist, and his carries it around with her. What may denotes. T There's a famous European artist what used to be considered as "occult," Which expressed a perfectly well- Remember that your sub-consciouS in this country at the present time who lie behind it is unknown, not that it The late Lillian Russell, who reigned but which now is known to be a part of self is your real self and that it never work mar he seen in manv important is inscrutable, but that it tells nothing thought to the mind will have this f public calleries. Nature had endowed is here to paint the most beautiful supreme as a bear'y longer, perhaps, the real scheme of things. A physician known psychological fact, that the at­ sleeps. It functions as steadily as women he can find in America. As of character. It is simply sculptured than any other women has ever done, in a large southern city, who may not your heart beats or as your lungs per­ X him with the most grotesque features beauty in line and contour, worked in titude of the mind is reflected in the tTmt wrr» rterharts ever rtnt on a human yet he has not selected a single one kept the lines of disfigurement out of want his name used because his physical well-being. Anger in a form the function of breathing. It is X of "the ten most famous beauties" as flesh instead of in marble or clay. her face by continually thinking youth thought is very far from being "ortho­ the beauty of that sub-conscious self b^inc He had iowls like the dew-laps Compare it with that of another, also mother has been known so to poison of a hlrvoJbonnd: a nose like the claw a model. "I don't want to paint dolls," and cheerfulness. Her last photo­ dox," recently wrote to a prominent that makes the beauty of children, a T an actress, who has never been fea­ firm of unreceptive soap manufactur­ the milk for a nursing child that it of n boiled lobster in size, shape and he has said. "I want to paint women graph, taken when she was past sixty died. If the admission of discordant beauty which too often vanishes when X with real souls and character." tured as a great beauty but upon years of age, 6hows nothing of the ers suggesting to them that they bring the conscious mind has been permitted eolor: ears that were like nothinir whom the eye can rest with real pleas­ out a toilet soap which should have thoughts to the mind will have this hnt Tinr* nvsters. and be was as bald Also, there's a famous beauty who lines of discontentment and of worry physical effect, is it !o be wondered at to absorb tho?7rWs of an unbeantifn! • is what we used to call "a show girl," ure. Ruth Shepley's face may not be which are destructive of beauty. This different colors and odors to be used nature nnd tbns distorted and made ^s an apple. Yet another artist, in bv people according to the color of that the thinkinc of mibeantiful -$YT»nV!rtr" of him on^ d-*v. said "T tb'nV and the term is absolutelv descriptive. perfect from the point of view of line is not because she did not hav£ as thous'hts will be r«*<~isf-er^d in an nn- pnbeauHfnl the inner self throueh Her features are undoubtedly perfect, and contour, and regularity of feature. many cares and worries as fall to most their birth month, the color to be that ' sendin? it false impression*. Beauty X he's the most beautiful man, probably, of the jewel of the month and he odor beautiful face? And is it not equally true that the constant holding of beau- in vonr innrr self will show in the outer I self which others see. T HYNEMANSVILLE I to Orwigsburg and then on to Hamburg violently upon the concrete road, frac­ Mr. and Mrs. Counsel Rigg and son An estate valued at $350,000 in ! and home. turing his skull and his left leg at two will of Charles W. Hendel, late of B. Hendel, executors, t William visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. personal property and $75,000 in real The will is A party was held to celebrate the The schools of Weisenburg are closed places. Dr. M. E. Hartman, who was Reading, retired hat manufacturer and dated Aug. 7, 1928. Weiser. estate, the residence 746 Centre Ave­ Y 62rid birthday anniversary of Welling­ this week. Farmers are digging pota­ near the scene when the accident hap­ Rev. and Mrs. J. B. Landis and chil­ chairman of the board of directors of ton A. Hoffman, merchant, of this toes. pened, rendered first aid treatment and nue, Reading, valued at $50,000, and the Reading National Bank. Letters T dren Robert and Ruth and James t\i residence at Orlando, Fla., valued Mr. and Mrs. John Geiger and two place. Those present were: Mr. and The family of Oscar Werley was vis­ summoned Jas. W. Stump, who con­ Refiner visited D. E. Scheirer and fam- were issued to the sons, Charles W. children, Stanley and Wayne, visited X Mrs. Wellington Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. at $25,000, is distributed under the Hendel, Jr., James M. Hendel and Paul ited on Sunday by Richard Reitz and veyed him to the Reading Hospital in ay. friends in Allentown Saturday. X Alvin Hoffman and their children family, Mrs. Ida Muth, Chester Derr his ambulance. Mr. Folk is in a criti­ Clarence, Clayton, Mabel Stella and and family, Ralph Krause, Winnie cal condition. j Robert Gift, jr., who was a patient X Pearl, Harold Haring, Marion Herman, Long, Charles Muth, Mrs. Henry Noll, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin B. Staudt, who • in St. Joseph's Hospital, was removed Amandus Adams, Margaret Smith, Mr. Charles Schlegel, John Bissey, Mr. and spent two weeks with the family of to the home of his parents. He is still and Mrs. D. W. Benedict, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. John Ruppert and two children, Daniel E. Scheirer, returned to their confined to his bed, but is on a fair way Oscar Werley, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hoff­ Temple; Horace Kramlich and Herbert l home in Interviila. to recovery. He will soon be able to f j attend school. man, Paul Werley, Herbert Herman, Mr. Herman, this place. The farmers are sowing wheat, cut­ X and Mrs. Herbert Osenbach, Eugene ting corn and digging potatoes. j Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gift became Young, Mr. and Mrs. Adam Hausman, ) the parents of a son. Grace Hausman, Mr. and Mrs. Fred MOSELEM SPRINGS TUDEBAKER, T Herman, Lillian Herman, Alice and X Dorothy Osenbach, all of this place; Garion Folk, who made his home Mr. and Mrs. V. G. Gruber and their with Frank Bower, was seriously in­ RUPTURE X children Alice, Lottie, Joel, Stanley jured while walking along the Memo­ OR TRUSSES PROPERLY FITTED IN MEN, X and Otto, Indian Spring Farm. rial Highway near the Bower resi­ Cured WOMEN OR CHILDREN holds dence. Mr. Folk was on his way to a Have been located, and making a specialty of thia work In Reading; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hoffman, May, for the past 30 years. Call, write or phone me at my new address, T Florence and Leroy Hoffman, Bernard field to engage in his daily tasks when 433 Penn Street. Second Floor. Reading. Pa, DR. ALLEN. Derr and Henry Miller, Adamsdale; Mr. i hit by an automobile, throwing him X and Mrs. B. B. Bower. Mr. and Mrs. C. Y Hulz. Mr. and Mrs. William Grim, all 114 official records X of Allentown; Mrs. Ida Smale, William I WK?It. Rock Fleece Overcoats. It in a further mark of our prestige. section to finish cutting corn. vj Jere Schwoyer purchased 1 5 shoats Just Arrived from Constantinople" from Roy Angstadt. Three automobiles figured in a col­ lision at Michael Braucher's place. No­ a noteworthy collection of body was hurt, but the machines were badly damaged. If your winter Overcoat must be more HOTTENSTEIN'S SCHOOL Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kutz, David Kutz, Mr. and Mrs. George Kutz en­ becoming, more distinctive of genuine ORIENTAL joyed a fixe-day trip to Watkins Glen, New York; Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Toronto, Canada. ^ hile at Toronto value and enduring worth they spent a day attending the To­ ! ronto Exhibition and listened to the RUGS splendid music of the Royal Air Force Band, of England. They returned by way of the coal regions, covering 1050 miles. At the Lowest Prices We Mr. and Mrs. James W. Merkel, of Belmont, visited Mr. and Mrs. Irwin MT. ROCK Miller. Have Quoted for these Grades Esther DeLong. Luella Weidner, Maude DeLong and Mildred Batz were guests of Esther Wessner. Mr. and Mrs. William Wessner, .rsonally selected by our buyer months ago, Esther Wessner, Esther DeLong, Lu­ Persian and ella Weidner and Maude DeLong spent FLEECE when he was combing the great rug marts of the a pleasant day at the Allentown Fair. Gorevan Mahals East. The beautiful texture of these Rugs, their Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller, Read­ ing; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Schlegel mellow depth of coloring and interesting age-old and sons, Wilson and Kermit, Fleet­ is the Overcoat for you! designs bring the loveliness of the Orient to lend wood, visited the families of Irwin and Nevin Miller on Sunday. distinction to the modern home. Mrs. Elvesta Schmoyer, of Boyer­ An Overcoat of exceptional style and beauty that carries . 165-00 town, is spending some time with her Every Rug Has Been Carefully Washed! cousin, Mrs. Elias S. Burkert, and fam­ our full assurance of satisfactory Service and Wear. ily. Select a real Oriental Rug at much less than you Mr. and Mrs. Philip Mertz and Room Sizes Averaging expected to pay. daughter, Grace; Mr. and Mrs. George 8x10 and 9x12 ft. Siegfried and sons, Donald and Paul; Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Mertz, Mr. and Mrs. George Kutz, Dorothy and Paul .00 $ Kutz. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Leibensper­ ger called on William Wessner and family. Fine Mrs. Keturah Moyer and son, Ed­ Persian win, Allentown; Mrs. Elvesta Schmoy­ 50 Karadja Rugs Included in this Special Selling- Mossoul Rugs er, Boyertown: Mrs. John H. Wessner and children, Edgar, Anna and IN BLUE, OXFORD, TAN, GRAY AND George, Sittlersdale; Byron B. Burk­ HEATHER SHADES ert, Wilbur Bucks, Charles Gehringer 19.50 35.00 and Ralph W. Burkert called on the average size Scatter Size average size family of Elias S. Burkert on Sunday. Single and double breasted styles A street demonstration, the like of 3x4.6 ft. 3.6x6 ft. which was never witnessed before in that section, featured the Pageant of Mt. Rock Fleece Overcoats are an unusual product of very Oriental Rugs Progress, in Wernersville, in honor of the advancement made by this borough long strand wool that carry our unqualified assurance of Persian Fine and South and Lower Heidelberg satisfaction and wear. Finely tailored by Adler-Roches- All the romance of design that characterizes the larger Townships in recent years. There Mossoul Rugs Silky Hamedans were over 2,000 marchers in line and ter, they impart an exceptional style and luxurious fleecy Orientals, is imparted to these smaller-sized Rugs. a number of floats. Thousands of warmth that will win your increasing admiration through spectators lined the route of the pa­ They will add richness and beauty to any room. an unusual length of splendid service. 27.50 45.00 rade. average size average size 3.6x6 ft. Bladder Weakness 3.6x6.6 ft. If Bladder Weakness, Getting Up Nights. Backache, Burning or Itch­ ing Sensation, leg or groin pains make KOCH BROTHERS you feel old. tired, pepless, and worn out, why not make the Cystex 48 Hour ALLENTOWN'S LEADING CLOTHING STORE Test? Don't give up. Get Cystex to­ day at our drug store. Put it to a 48 CENTRE SQUARE HESS BROTHERS hour test. Money back if you don't ALLENTOWIS soon feel like new, full of pep, sleep well, with pains alleviated. Try Cystex Daily Closing 5:30 P. M.—Saturday Closing 8:30 P. M. today. Only 60c. L*h & Merkel Phar­ 11 :. macy, Kutztown, Pa. a*Ivt. THE KUTZTOWN PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1928 PAGE ELEVEN

Movies Find Wav to Make Attends Reading School 7" Mary Kemp, Mrs. Hettie Barto and Back from Pacific Coast M SCHATZLEIN HOUSE GUESTS Pearl Slonecker is taking a secreta­ Jerry Kemp motored to Orwigsburg Mr. and Mrs. Carl Christman and I PERSONALS rial course at McCann's Business and visited Mr. and Mrs. A.* M. Miller. children, Beatrice and Donald, visited ! Edgar Johnston and his mother were Wheels Turn Forward School, Reading. Mildred Springer spent Monday in Mrs. Christman's parents, Mr. and guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Schatz- town visiting her grandparents, Mr. Mrs. Horace Fisher, of Topton. Mr. lein- The Johnston family were at one time Ralph Sharadin, a druggist in Phila­ READ THE PATRIOT ADS. and Mrs. Emanuel Beck. and Mrs. Fisher just returned from a residents of Kutztown, living trip to the Pacific Coast. J where the Schatzleins now live. They delphia; was a weekend guest of his ___ left town about 20 years ago. Mr. brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Sharadin. Most Unique Office Building Mr. and Mrs. Free and daughter Johnston is a chemist. They have Ethel and Dorothy and David Lauster, Deen touring Canada and the New Beulah Geiger, Russell Moyer and Allentown, called on Mr. and Mrs. England States for two weeks. They Mamie Meitzler spent Saturday in Al­ On Boston's Water Front Emanuel Beck. j also visited relatives and friends in lentown. Mrs. Annie Scottin, Gainsville, Fla., ReadinS- Mrs. Adam Youse attended the Tren­ an aunt of Mrs. S. E. Rager, spent the j ton Fair. weekend with Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Rager. i READ THE PATRIOT ADS. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Youse and son Harvey and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bordner and son Franklin, Fleetwood, visited friends in Bechtelsville. A "Grown Up" Saxophone Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Borrell and chil­ dren, Florence Borrell and George Hoch, Fleetwood, visited William Miller and family, East Berkeley. Mr. and Mrs. William Braucher and son Warren visited friends in Hamburg.

COAL H Old Company's Lehigh Citizen's Coal Dock John H. Bleber, Prop. KUTZTOWN H When the old Pall River liner, "Con­ kept intact. These were then depos­ ' sm^^ necticut," was broken up for junk some ited on the Lewis wharf in Boston and Used Cars at labeled "Marine Office Building." 15 years ago, the pilot house, chart- I Our photo shows the unique struc­ I llllll room and a section of the deck were ture as it still stands today. For years, buggy wheels have turned The problem was solved at the Me- Bargain Prices backwards in motion pictures because tro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios by paint­ III ^vliOlli' of the "timing" of the revolving spokes. ing certain spokes a darker color so that the eye follows their motion in And to Think He Draws Good 1928 Chevrolet Sedan, like Now they've found a scheme to make the film. Pretty Eve Glazer is ex­ new. 'em turn forward in their natural way. plaining the idea to Billie Ross (above). Pay For This Job! 1923 Chevrolet Coach. FREE HALL 1924 Light Six Studebaker The Free Hall Union Sunday School 62,180,000 MILES • quarter next Sunday at 1 :30 p. m., 1920 Coupe. with special services. The school has PHONE WIRE IN U. S. 221 active members, the largest en­ rollment since its organization 15 years ago. Bell System Owns 55,245,000 H.S.BERK Mr. and Mrs. Herbert R. Hoppes, Miles—929- Enclosed Plenty of potential jazz here. Photo There are today 10 large factories in KUTZTOWN, PA. son, Linwood; Mr. and Mrs. Howard shows the new giant saxophone, which the former Kaiserland turning out the Hoppes and daughter, Mary Jane, in Cables was recently exhibited at the Leipzig "moaners" for export to all parts of made a trip to Atlantic City and other Trade Fair in Germany. the world. points of interest over Sunday. There is over half a mile of tele­ Howard Reinert, contractor, and phone wjre in use for every man, manager of the Free Hall Poultry woman and child in the United and Fruit Farms, cooked 120 gallons States, reports the Pennsylvania of apple butter so far this season. He Public Service Information Commit­ distributed it in Topton and Kutztown, tee. The 17,746,168 telephones are where he found a ready demand. connected by 62,160,000 miles of wire, Here's Good News for Every Mr. and Mrs. Russel Jones were of which 54,521,000 miles are used blessed with a baby girl. Mother and for local telephoning and 7,639,000 child are doing well. for long distance. Of this total, 55,245,000 miles are ADAM CONFINED TO BED owned by the Bell System, of which Man In Kutztown practically 92 per cent is in cables, Seneca Adam is confined to bed with thus insuring the continuity of serv­ illness. The following were callers at ice to a greater extent than has ever Just Arrived—the his home on Whiteoak Street: been possible heretofore. ^§ \ Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rohrbach and Underground cable is practically daughter Pearl, Temple; Mr. and Mrs. immune from interruptions of a seri­ Arthur Miller and children, Molltown; ous nature, while overhead cable, rep­ Mr. and Mrs. Francis Smith and chil­ resenting approximately 25 per cent dren, Moselem Springs; Victor Miller, r "Fabric Group" Huff's Church; Anna Miller, Temple, of the total mileage, will continue, in and Clayton Dreibelbis, of town. many cases, to render service even j when the entire line is prostrate on THE MOST COMPELLING LINE OF SMART the ground due to storms or other Declaring that his four years' experi­ disturbances. The amount of open SUITS EVER OFFERED THE MEN AND ence as assistant district attorney of wire construction is being yearly re­ Out on some of California's well of the "10 inches above the knee," Berks convinced him that the liquor known beaches, the cops have turned which the law prescribes. And, of duced, but there must always be a in their clubs, guns and billies and are YOUNG MEN OF KUTZTOWN. laws'should be changed, Abraham R. small proportion because of the con­ course, it becomes Mr. Officer's painful Rothermel, Democratic candidate for swinging yardsticks these days! nections to individual homes. Congress from the Berks-Lehigh dis­ The reason? Well, y'know how the (?) duty to go around measuring things trict, came out squarely for modification girls are. They buy bathing suits for up. >M STYLED BY WEBER AND HEILBRONER in his first political speech of the cam Mrs. Louisa Heberly colled on her anything but the water and sometimes Our photo shows one of the John paign. He spoke to a crowd of 100 in brother, George Stump, Maxatawny. said cosutumes are a bit—er—er short Laws "doin' his duty!" OF NEW YORK CITY. Tivoli Hall, Glenside.

Pleading with his hearers not to be <*r*ffjl» church tramps. Rev. C. E. Creitz preach­ $ $ ing at the last of the twilight services for the summer in Reading City Park / expressed the hope that those who par­ ticipated, seeking for a church to wor­ ship would be led to definite affiliation/ with some Reading congregation. $

Come in and examine them—compare them wmnce with other suits at the same price—here in size to fit every man.

I3L.THESE LOWEST PRICED A NEW DEPT.-—2D FLOOR

•*'*•- >. SEDANS See the Big Selection of New Fall Suits— All Sizes—New Patterns , $22.50

READING'S LARGEST SELECTION OF TOPCOATS —All Sin

/OW PRICE alone is not $ sponsible for the outstand- .50 $ $ success of these two popular cars. The reason is value—a full re­ turn for every dollar you spend.

Dorothy Gulliver, a featured player WHIPPET FOUR In high quality of materials and work- ' of the films and Wampas Babay Star WHIPPET sat NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY THAT SEDAN manship, in riding and driving com­ of 1928. is pictured above wearing .an SEDAN exremely smart suit. fort, in performance that challenges The charming costume was made of all cars in their field for ease of han­ black satin with white satin blouse trimmed with cross stitching. dling, lightning pick-up, sustained The small hat is of straw and 610 speed and surging power on hills — 77© NEW FALL HAT trimmed with black satin ribbon topped Touring $455; Road­ by a rhinestone ornament. there are the sound foundations of WORLD'S LOWEST - PRICffD ster (2-pass.) $485; SIX WITH 7-BEARlTvG FOR YOUNG MEN AND MEN WHO WOULD Whippet's towering success. CRANKSHAFT Roadster (with rum­ Touring $615; Roadster LOOK YOUNG—SIZES TO 7% ble seat) $525; Coupe Drive a Whippet Four or a Whippet Six $685; Coach $695; Coupe $535; Cabr iol c t Co u pe —then consider the price—and you $695. Prices f. o. b. Toledo, Ohio, and PRACTICAL ROOFING (with collapsible top) will know why all Willys-Overland's specifications subject to change THE STYLEPARK HAT $595; Coach $535. witbout notice. WUIys-Orerland, sales records are being broken. Inc., Toledo, Ohio. and THE DOBBS $E.OO THE STETSON $7 and $8 at Slate Roof Repairing FOURS WI''!>!>< *SIXE S $8.50 and $10 "READING'S LIVE STORE—ALWAYS RELIABLE" h. J. KERN A SON 107 Noble St SCHMOYER OVERLAND CO. Kutztown 164 Walnut St Kutztown, Pa. CROLL & KECK PAGE TWELVE THE Ktnrroww PATRIOT, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27,1928

TRAINING SCHOOL ANGSTADTS ENTERTAIN IN THE CHUROffiS AT LOCAL COLLEGE CLASSIFIED ADS ClASSDTEDADS MOST MODERN The following were entertained by CLASSIFIED ADS CLASSHTEDADS Mr. and Mrs. E. M Angstadt at then- home on Noble Street at supper Sunday: j FOR SALE SHERIFFS SALES Ber. B. B. Lynch, Lath. Pastor (Continued from Page One) LEGAL Pfonnca SHERIFFS SALES Steel stairways are provided at each Mrs. Hettie Hein, daughters Mary,. Trinity, Kutztown—Sunday School at Elda and Ella, James Wagner, Mr. and FARM of 83 acres in Albany Town­ above estate having been granted to property adjoining on the West, ex­ C.E.. and bearing date October. 1918. 9 a. m. Services at 10 a. m. and end of the building in what are known ship, on road from Stony Run to the undersigned, all persons indebted tending North from West Greenwich said Map or Plan Intended to be re­ as fire towers, the only points of ac­ Mrs. John Breininger, daughter Evelyn, | Klinesville; with or without stock; to the estate are requested to make Street. corded), said two lots or pieces of 7:30 p. m. Lewis Snyder, all of Reading; Walter pood potato farm. Immediate pos­ ground beinsr farther known as lots cess to the second floor, there being session with crops and all. Easy payment, and those having claims to To be sold as the property of Dome- numbered 197 and 198 on said Plan Bloch, Fleetwood; Mr. and Mrs. Homer terms. Apply to Levi Clauss, 601 present the same, without delay, to nico Giandomenico and Virginia Gian- known as "South Farview." and are Ber. J. B. Landis, Ref. Pastor no central stairway planned. All the BESSIE G. KUTZ. domenico, his wife. exterior doors are to be made of metal, Moyer and daughters Eleanor and Main St.. Kutztown. or Wagner's _ _ _ Administratrix, more particularly bounded and de­ Fleetwood—Sunday School at 9 a. m. Melba, of town. Service Station. Jy26-tf. scribed together aa follows, to wit: and so are the doors to the fire towers. •fc.. L. DeLong. Attorney. On the North partly by Liberty Ave­ Preparatory services at 7.15 p. m. All other doors to rooms, closets, ward­ BARBERING OUTFIT, including chair, S27-6t. nue and partly by Lot No. 196 on said robes, are to be of wood. TAKEN TO HOSPITAL mirrors and other paraphernalia ANNUAL STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING Plan: on the East partly, by said Lot Rev. W. H. Kline, Lnth. Pastor used in the business. Apply to The annual stockholders' meeting of No. 2. October Term. 1928 (E. D.) No. 196 on said Plan and partly by a The interior finish of the building is Frederic Eidle. Kutztown. S13-3t the Kutztown Rural Tel. & Tel. Com­ Charles W. Matten, Harry R. Matten. fifteen feet (15') wide alley; on the Fleetwood—Sunday School at 9 a. m. Mrs. Daniel Kline was removed to pany will be held on Saturday, Oct. Attorneys South partly by said fifteen (15') feet to be of oak throughout, the stair halls the Reading Hospital Tuesday in the DODGE COUPE—Late model, standard wide alley and partly by Lot No. 199 Services at 7.15 p. rn. Meeting of 13. from 2 to 3:30 p. m.. at the public All that certain lot or piece ot on said Plan, and on the West partly Luther League. and the corridors to have a brick institution's ambulance. She had been shift, like new. Selling for want of house of William F. Snyder. Stony ground, together with the brick and wainscoting four feet; high. All the use. Inquire Box M. Patriot Office. Run, Pa., for the purpose of electing frame building erected thereon, beinjf by said Lot No. 199 on said Plan and 1 Topton — Sunday school at 9 a. m. ill for several weeks. Mrs. Kline was S13-tf. two directors of the company and for No. 311 Elm Street, in the City ef partly by said Liberty Avenue. Hav­ Confessional and communion services windows are of steel sash. . formerly Mayme Stahler, daughter of the transaction of such other business Reading. Berks County. Pennsylvania, ing a total frontage on said Liberty Mrs. Reuben Stahler, Noble Street, KITCHEN RANGE. Majestic. Apply as may be brought before said meet­ having a frontage of 17 feet 10 inches Avenue of forty (40') feet, and ex­ at 10 a. m. Organization of cate­ Kindergarten Unit at Patriot Office. S27-tf. ing. on Elm Street, and extending in depth tending in length or depth of equal chetical class. Meeting of Luther The general plan of the interior calls where she was confined to bed. Mr. CHAS. A. STEIN. of equal width 110 feet, to a 10-foot- width one hundred ten (110') feet to * League. Kline is a Fleetwood man. S27-3t. Secretary. wide alley. said fifteen (15') feet wide alley. for eight units, six of which will take LOST To be sold as the property of Lena And the said mortgagors, for them­ care of the first six grades. One unit IX THE ORPHANS' COURT OF Werner. selves and their heirs, executors, ad­ Rev. W. S. Dry, Lutheran Pastor KUTZTOWN FOLKS ENJOY ministrators and assigns, covenant and will take care of the kindergarten and ENGLISH SETTER—License No. 9481. BERKS COUNTY. PENNSYLVANIA agree that all gas and light fixtures, Becker's Church—Communion services this will be located on the first floor. JACKSONVILLE EVENT Black and white; male. Reward. Estate of Sarah Hammes, late of including chandeliers, electroliers, gas at 9.30 a. m. This 1ms separate storage and toilet Dr. N. Z. Dunkelberger. Maxatawny Township. Berks County, pipes, electric wiring and all other 1\ S20-2t». Pennsvlvania. deceased. appliances used in lighting, and all accommodation and is accessible from A birthday celebration at which six To William Ritz. an heir of said de- No. 4, October Term. 1928 (E. D.) generations were present was held at Ralph H. Mengel. Attorney steam pipes, radiators, furnaces, flues Rev. W. L. Meckstroth, Ref. Pastor the outside corridor without entering ceripTit: All that certain lot or piece of and heating apparatus, gas or electric, the main part of the building. The the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas WANTED You are hereby notified and required ground, upon which is erected a one- hot water boilers and heatt Ziegel Church — English preparatory Creitz, Jacksonville. to be and appear before the Judge of story frame store building, situate in tubs, and mantels and appi services Friday, Sept. 28, at 7.30 p. m.; eighth unit, which is to be known as the Orphans' Court to be held at Read­ These were present: Mrs. Missouri SILK WEAVERS for day and for night Rosedale. Muhlenberg Township, Berks to any and all of the sai German preparatory service Satur­ the demonstration unit, will be located shift: experienced. Amalgamated ing, in and for said Countv of Berks, County. Pennsylvania, as shown by shall be regarded as part of on the rear, left, second floor and is so Greenawald, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Silk Corporation. Kutztown. S13-tf Pennsylvania, on Saturday, October the Map or Plan of "Rosedale," sur­ estate hereby conveyed and shall noi day, Sept. 29, at 2 p. m.; German 20th. 1928. at 10:30 o'clock in the veyed by W. H. Dechant, bearing date be injured or removed but shall pass communion Sunday, Sept. 30, at 930 arranged that its adjoining section, O'Brein, William Fetherolf, Mr. Daley, rnorning. to answer the petition of to the purchaser of the real estate at all of Allentown; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley SALESMEN, SALESWOMEN — Part August. 1902, said Map or Plan having a. m.; English at 730 p. m. Sunday known as the recitation room, can be time, full time: earn $20-$50 weekly Bessie G. Kutz and Helen G. Frickert, been duly executed and recorded in the any judicial' sale made for the pay­ turned into one compartment accom­ Seidel, Mrs. Mary Loch and daughters "Wonderful new hemstitched table­ presented to said Court, and the two Recorder's Office of Berks County, in ment of the Mortgage Debt. School meets at 8.30 a. m., standard citations thereunder, to show cause, if Plan Book No. 2. Page 13. and being To be sold as the property of Harry time. modating a possible 60 to 70 pupils, Helen, Marion and Elda, Mr. and Mrs. cloth looks like linen. No launder­ any you have, why an inquisition in Paul Hoch and son Lee, Lloyd Reid- ing. Not sold in stores. Address partition should not be granted as further known as Lot No. 353 on said E. Seder and Elizabeth May Seder, his Longswamp Church—Catechetical in­ part of whom will be located on raised Box M. Patriot Office. S27-3t* Plan of Lots laid out by Edward A. wife, mortgagors, and the said Harry seats, in other words, on a stepped up nauer, all of Kutztown; Mr. and Mrs. prayed for therein upon a two and Larter and known as "Rosedale." said E. Seder, husband of the said Eliza- struction and consistory meeting one-half story brick dwelling house lot being bounded on the North by bteh May Seder, real owner, terre-ten­ floor. Claude Ziegler, children Ernest, Her­ CROCHETERS. experienced on infants' situate in the Borough of Lyons. Max­ ant, with notice to other terre-ten­ Sunday, Sept. 30, at 2.30 p. m. man, Grace, Raymond and Robert, all hand-made sacques. Write Chas atawny Township. Berks County, Penn­ Lot No. 356 on said Plan; on the East Standard Units Metz. 11 North Sixth Street, Phila­ sylvania, late the property of Sarah by Lot No. 352 on said Plan; on the ants, if any. of Topton; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Epstein, delphia. Pa. S27-U* South by Elizabeth Avenue, and on Rev. J. W. Bittner, Lnth^Pastor The standard unit is in a sense un­ Harames, deceased, and to further re­ the West by Lot No. 354 on said Plan. Newark, N. J.; Mrs. Missouri Riegel, ceive what said Court shall have con­ Having a frontage on said Elizabeth Kutztown Sunday School at 8.45 a. m. usually modern in plan and purpose. Weisenburg; Mr. and Mrs. George SMALL FARM, to buy or rent at once sidered and determined in that behalf. Avenue of twenty feet (20'). and a German communion at 10 a. m. Lu­ By standard unit is meant the units Schmoyer, Katie Wisser, Emaus. Address Box S. Patriot Office. By order of the Court. depth, of equal width or breadth, of 1 S27-3t. FREDERICK A. MARX, P. J. ther League at 6.30 p. m. English which are to accommodate the six Edwin L. DeLong, one hundred twenty feet (120'). No. 24. October Term, 1928 (E. D.) communion at 7.30 p. m. English grades. Each of these units will con­ EXPERIENCED WEAVERS on hand Attorney for the Petitioners. To be sold as the oroperty of Stan­ Charles W. Matten. Harry R. Matten, Here from Delano looms. Steady work. Apply to Fis- S27-3t. ley L. Baer and Ida „\L Baer, husband Attorneys preparatory services Friday, Sept 28, sist of a recitation room, a class room cus-Harral-DeLong Co.. Inc., Kutz­ and wife. All that certain two-story brick at 7.30 p. m. German preparatory and an individual instruction room. Dorothy Edwards, Delano, is spend­ ing the winter with her brother-in-law town. S27-lt EXECUTOR'S NOTICE store stand and dwelling house, to­ services Saturday, Sept. 29, at 2 p. m. These units are planned to develop In the estate of Austin M. Herman, gether with the lot or piece of ground 1 teaching and observation under the and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lucken­ late of Kutztown, Berks County, Pa., upon which the same is erected, sit­ bill. She is attending the State Teach­ PUBLIC SALE defeased. uate on the North side of Franklin Rev. John Tanner, Catholic Rector varied conditions ordinarily encoun­ Notice is hereby given, that letters No. 17, October Term, 1928 (E. D.) Street between Apple Street and South tered in regular school life. ers College. Harry S. Craumer. Attorney Third Street, being No. 237 Franklin Kutztown—Mass in St. Mary's Chapel PUBLIC SALE testamentary on the estate of the All that certain lot or piece of Street, in the City of Reading. County Sunday at 9:30 a. m., followed by There will be two sets of toilets on of valuable farm will be held on the above named decedent have been ground. with the two-story brick • of Berks and State of Pennsylvania, each floor, all of them strictly modern. ACCOMPANY WILTROUTS premises on Saturday. Oct. 27, con­ granted to the undersigned. dwelling house thereon erected, sit- ' bounded and described as follows, to benediction of the Most Blessed Sac­ sisting of 72 acres, located in Rock­ All persons indebted to the estate of uate on the West side of Schuylkill wit: On the North by property now or 1 rament. i having metal partitions and four-foot land Township, about lMs miles from the said decedent are requested to Mr. and Mrs. Webster Frey accom­ make payment, and all persons having Avenue, between Green and Greenwich late of Elizabeth Norton; on the East Evansville—Mass Sunday morning at 9 ! marble wainscoting around the room. Fleetwood alone road from Fleetwood Streets, being No. 538 Schuylkill Ave­ by a ten (10') feet wide alley: on the panied the newlyweds, Mr. and Mrs to Dryville. Three acres good heavy claims or demands against the estate nue (formerly 438) in the City of South by said Franklin Street ,and o'cloek. The heating will be a combination of the said decedent, are requested to on the West by property now or late of direct radiation and fresh air heat­ Wirt Wiltrout, on a trip to Canada. New house, new waeonshed, and other make known the same, without delay, Reading. County of Berks and State They did not know they would be oak timber; 45 acres under cultivation, to the undersigned executor. of Pennsylvania, bounded and de­ of Agnes A. Moore. Containing in Rev. E. H. Leinbach, Ref. Pastor ing units fed from a central heating buildinss in fine rendition. scribed as follows, to wit: front or width on said Franklin Street traveling with honeymooners till just To be sold as the estate of the late WALTER E. HERMAN. On the North bv property now or twenty (20') feet, and in length or plant now on the premises. Among Isaac Angstadt. Kutztown. Pa.. depth of eaual width sixty (60') feet. St. Peter's Church—English services at the accessories will be sanitary drink­ before they started. S20-8t. Executor. late of Peter R. Krick; on the East 2 p. m. Sale to commence at 1:30 p. m., by said Schuylkill Avenue: on the To be sold as the property of Pete ing fountains, fire hose cabinets, bulle­ when conditions will be announced by South by property now or late of J. Pettinato and Angelina Pettinato. his tin boards, black boards and other HAFER GUESTS SOLON ANGSTADT. ADMINISTRATOR S >OTICE DeLong. and on the West by Miltimore wife, mortgagors and real owners. Rev. A. L. Brumbach, Ref. Pastor Executor. In estate of William Christman. late Street. paraphernalia. Mr. and Mrs. William Hafer and two Daniel H. Cronrath. Auctioneer. of Kutztown, Berks County, Pa., de­ Containing in front on said Schuvl- Friedens Church, Wessnersville—.Sun­ S27-Q18-25. ceased kill Avenue in width or "breadth, day School at 9 a. m. English serv­ Electric Lights sons, Maxatawny; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Notice is hereby given, that letters eighteen (18') feet, and a depth of ices at 10 a. m. The windows have been planned to Seifarth and son John, and Erma PUBLIC SALE of administration on the estate of the equal width one hundred thirty (130') Kerns, Reading, visited Mr. and Mrs. will be held Saturday. Sept. 29. at 1:30 above named decedent have been feet to Miltimore Street. No. 27. October Term. 1928 (E. D.) meet the modern requirements for suf­ p. m.. on the rear of 107 Noble Street, granted to the undersigned. To be sold as the property of Jacob Chas. W. Matten. Harry R. Matten. Rev. W. F. Bond, Loth. Pastor ficient light. A full system of electric James Hafer on Sunday. Kutztown, when the following will be All persons indebted to the estate of H. Miller and Matilda Miller, his wife, Attorneys offered to the highest bidder: the said decedent are requested to mortgagors and real owners. All that certain lot or piece of New Jerusalem—Sunday School at 8.30 lighting is being provided. One-horse farm wagon; spring wa­ make payment, and all persons hav­ The building is estimated by the ar­ Mrs. John Bell and son, Monocacy, ing claims or demands against the es­ ground, situate in Spring Township, a. m. German services at 9.30 a. m. visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. gon; buggy; Syracuse plow; spike har­ tate of the said decedent, are request­ County of Berks and State of Penn­ Class instruction Saturday at 2 p. m. chitect to accommodate 250 pupils un­ Emanuel Rothermel. Mrs. Bell's sis­ row; spring harrow; cultivator: feed ed to make known the same, without sylvania, as shown by the Map or der ideal conditions, but will take 400 cutterower;: gasoline engine. 1 ^ horse- Plan, surveyed by Wm. H. Dechant. Bowers—Sunday School at 1 p. m. Eng­ ter, Ella Rothermel, a nurse in a city I P 16-foot ladder: harness for two delay, to the undersigned administra- C.E.. and beaming date September. lish services at 2 p. m. Class Instruc­ without overcrowding seriously. _„„_ 4i_ /- i. T i -L. j- horses; corn sheller: grindstone; grain No. 18. October Term. 1928 (E. D.) 1910, said Map or Plan having been PETER D. CHRISTMAN. Rothermel & Mauger. Attorneys tion at 3.15 p. m. A reception room and private office near the Great Lakes, Who IS spending! cradle;, all kinds of harness, heavy and Kutztown. R. 4, duly recorded in the Recorder's Office for the director of the Training School her vacation with her parents, is spend- light; dump wagon: sleigh: timothv S20-6t. Administrator. All that certain two-story brick of Berks County, State of Pennsylva­ ha a t aw dwelling house and the lot or piece of nia, in Plan Book Vol. 4. page 14. and Rev. Lewis F. Foltz, Lath. Pastor are on the plans, and so is a room for ing a week with Mrs. Bell at Monocacy. L t^ ?™ M~!L i«? irt ?«~i.~i4 ground upon which the same is erect­ being further known as Lot No. 5 in the director of hygiene and a rest room Block "P." together with the build­ St. Paul's, Lyons—Sunday School at 9 I * At the same time a lot of household MISCELLANEOUS ed, situate on the South side of Green for the women teachers. Mrs. Mark Holl, Naomi Holl, Mrs. N. goods will be offered for sale. Street. No. 1030. between Mulberry and ings thereon erected, in said Plan a. m. Holy communion at 10 a, m. j s and cond North Eleventh Streets, in the Citv of known as "North Wyomissing The general style of the building Z. Dunkelberger and Anna Dunkelber- knJ*™ by DANIEL M. LEVAN. IN MEMORIAM Reading. County of Berks and State Heights." said lots being bounded on C. E. at 6.15 p. m. of Pennsylvania, bounded and de­ the North by Wyomissing Boulevard; St. Matthew's, Macungie — Sunday' follows the modern trend of thought ger motored to Philadelphia Wednes­ John Bordner, Auctioneer. In memory of my dear father, Joel in architecture for this purpose, but it S. Loch, who departed this life Sept. scribed as follows, to wit: on the East by Lot No. 6; on the South School at 9 a. m. C. E. at 6.15 p. m. \ day. The last-named remained in the S20-2t. 28, 1924. On the North by said Green Street; by a fifteen (15) feet wide alley, and Services at 7.15 p. m. is a distinct type, a new departure city, where she will be a student at a on the East by property now or late on the West by Lot No. 4. The West­ from that done at any of the teachers Woman's Medical College. Today recalls sad memories of P. O. O'Reilly, deceased, and Harry ern boundary line running through LEGAL NOTICES Of a loved one gone to rest. M. Laucks; on the South by propertv the middle of a party wall between Rev. Ira W. Klick, Loth. Pastor colleges in the state thus far. Curtis Hepner was a guest of Bruce The pain was great, he bore it all, now or late of P. O. O'Reilly, deceased, the building erected on the lot hereby Mayer, Allentown. PROTHONOTARY'S NOTICE T'ntil he heard the Saviour call. and on the West by property now or conveyed and the building erected on Grimsville Church—Sunday School at JOHN C. LUTZ Notice is hereby given that the fol­ Dear is the grave where he is laid. late of J. N. Schoible. containing in Lot No. 4. Said Lot having a front­ 9 a. m. German services at 10 a. m. lowing accounts have been filed in the Sacred the memories that never will front on said Green Street, East and age of twenty-five (25) feet on said Prothonotary's Office of Berks Coun­ fade. West, fifteen (15) feet, and in depth of Wyomissing Boulevard, and a depth Dunkel's Church—Sunday School at 1 The funeral of John C. Lutz, retired CLASSIFIED ADS ty, and that the same will be allowed equal width North and South, seventy- of equal width one. hundred fifcy (150) p. m. English services at 2 p. m. farmer, who died at the home of his and confirmed on Saturday. October ' Sadly missed by children. two (72) feet and two (2) inches. feet to said alley. 20th. 1928. unless cause to the con­ S27-lt. MRS. LOCH. To be sold as the property of George To be sold as the property of How­ son, Albert E. Lutz, near Mountain, trary be shown: N. Scheible and Cecelia Scheible. his ard F. Graul and Tillie M. Graul. his Grace U. E. Church of the Evangelical aged 63 years, 7 months and 8 days, FOR RENT Second and Final Account of Ada wife, mortgagors and real owners. wife, mortgagors and real iwners, Congregation Denomination, was held from the home of his son V. Walker. Committee of Marietta SHERIFF'S SALES Rev. H. J. Kline, Pastor ATTRACTIVE APARTMENT with all Oerhart. a lunatic, filed August 29th, Saturday morning. After brief services conveniences, at 230 Noble St. In­ ! 1928. Sept. 22. 1928. account confirmed Sunday School at 9 a. m. Worship at the house, the cortege proceeded to quire of Mrs. Catharine I. Smith. ] nisi sec. reg. with sermon at 10 a. m. Theme, the New Bethel Church, where Rev. C. S2T-tf. First and Final Account of the First ! National Bank of Fleetwood, Pa., SHERIFF'S SALE No. 19. October Term. 1928 (E. D.) No. 29, October Term. 1928 (E. D.) "The Church at Pergamos." Y. P. R. Rahn preached from Psalms 23:4, FARM of 60 acres; known as Simon Guardian of Israel Foose. Sr., filed ; Rothermel & Mauger. Attorneys Adam B. and John A. Rieser, Attorneys S. of C. E. at 6.30 p. m. Worship "Thy rod and thy staff they comfort Strausser's farm; mile southeast of Sept. 7th. 1928. Sept. 22. 192S. account All that certain two-story cement All that certain three-story brick Kutztown. For further information confirmed nisi sec. reg. block dwelling house and the plot or dwelling house and the lot or piece of ¥\ with sermon at 7.30 p. m. Theme, me." see John W. Rhode. Esq., Kutztown. First and Final Account of the Berks , piece of ground upon which the same j ground upon which the same is erect­ "The Gospel of Road Signs." The remains rested in a quarter- or Cal. E. Saul. Hamburg R. 2. ! County Trust Company. Guardian of i VALUABIOEAL ESTATE is erected, situate in the Borough of ed, situate on the South side of Chest- couch, solid oak casket with plate in­ S2T-tf. Frank Rhine, a weak-minded person, ! By virtue of certain executions, is­ Temple (formerly the Village of Tem­ I nut Street, formerly Boston Avenue, filed Sept. 22. 1928. Sept. 22. 1928, con- j sued out of the Court of Common Pleas ple). County of Berks and State of ! it being No. 460 Chestnut Street, for- Rev. George B. Smith, Ref. Pastor scribed "Father" on lid. The tributes i firmed nisi sec. reg. Pennsylvania, bounded and described ! merly No. 446, between Fourth and FOR SALE OR RENT Bv the Court. of Berks County. Pennsylvania, and to St. Paul's, Kutztown—Sunday School were: Blanket, grandchildren; 63 roses, me directed, there will be sold at pub­ as follows, to wit: 1I Fifth Avenues, formerly Wyomissing sons Albert and Norman and families; NELSON L. ROTHERMEL, lic vendue or outcrv. on Beginning at a point on the Kutz­ and Commerce Streets, in the Borough at 9 a. m. Services at 10.15 a. m. and FARM of 120 acres, in Richmond S27-4t. Prothonotary. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 13, 1928 town Road seventy (70) feet north of ' of West Reading, formerly Spring 7.30 p. m. Rev. J. P. Bachman will yellow dahlias, brother George and Township, one mile from William AT 10:30 A. M. a fifty (50) foot wide street, known as Township. Berks County. Pennsylva- \ conduct the morning service. The family; red dahlias, Mrs. Rebecca Penn Highway. Buildings and fences FARMERS BANK AXD TRl ST CO. at the Sheriff's Office. Court House, Miller Street: thence East parallel with '• nia. bounded and described as follows, • Ziegler; mixed flowers, sister Lena and in good condition. Will rent for STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING Reading. Penna.. the following de­ the same one hundred and forty (140» I to wit: sermon in the evening will be share. Farm lies along trolley road, A special meeting of the stockhold­ scribed real estate, to wit: feet to a twelve (12) foot wide alley, On the North by said Chestnut preached by the pastor. husband; gladiolus, sister Emma and starting at Schaeffer's turn-out, run ers of the Farmers Bank and Trust thence North along the same thirty Street: on the South by a ten feet Christ, Bowers—Harvest Home serv­ children; galax wreath. Blue Mountain ning north toward highway. Apply Companv (formerlv Farmers Bank) (36) feet to a point, thence West par­ ! wide alley; on the East by property of Lodge, No. 249, I. O. O. F. Frank Schaeffer 0 Franklin Street, will be held at the office or place of allel with said fifty (50) foot wide i William Quinter. and on the West by ices at 9.30 a. m. Fleetwood. Pa. S20-3t* business of the bank and trust com­ street to a point on said Kutztown property of David F. Brown, the west­ St. Peter's, Topton—Services at 11 a. m, The bearers were Jacob Sechler, pany, southwest corner of Whiteoak Road, thence South along the same ern line of said lot being fifty-eight Zion's, Maxatawny—Services at 2 p. m. Henry F. Kistler, George Deisher, Jas. and Main Streets, in the Borough of E. B. Rasbridge. Attorney thirty (30) feet to the place of begin­ feet (58') East from Fifth Avenue. Braucher, Pearson Hemerly and Chas. FOR SALE Kutztown. Berks County, Pennsylva­ ning. Containing in front on said Chest-' nia, on Tuesday, the 8th day of Jan­ No. 1, October Term. 1928 (E. D.) Containing in front on said Kutz­ nut Street sixteen (16') feet, and in Klingaman. Undertaker Samuel Nes- ' PUPPIES—Shepherd and collie. Ap­ uary, A. I). 1929, at 11 o'clock a. m., All that certain lot or piece of town Road thirty (30) feet, and in depth one hundred (100') feet. ARNOLD IMPROVED ply to T. 'R. Luckenbill, butcher, for the purpose of considering and depth of equal width one hundred and tor, of Steinsville, had charge. Inter­ Kutztown. -* S27-tf. ground, together with the two-story To be sold as the property of R. ment was made in the cemetery ad­ voting for or against the proposition brick dwelling house erected thereon, forty (140) feet. Resley Eckert. and Mintie S. Eckert. William Arnold, who had a bone re­ to apply for the renewing and extend­ situate on the North side of West To be sold as the property of Earl deceased, and Ella Eckert, mortgagors, joining. STEEL KITCHEN RANGE with res- ing of the charter, corporate rights Greenwich Street, between Eisenbrown A. Ringler and Florence M. Ringler, and Ella Eckert. administratrix of R. moved from his nose in the Reading ervolr attached. Apply at Patriot and franchises of said Farmers Bank and Clinton Streets, being No. 423 his wife, mortgagors and real owners. Resley Eckert and executrix of Min­ Hospital, is recuperating at his home Office. S20-tf. and Trust Company for a period of West Greenwich Street, in the City of tie S. Eckert. deceased, and Ella Eck­ on Noble Street. He feels greatly im­ TO INSTALL SODA FOUNTAIN twenty years, and for the transaction Reading. County of Berks and State ert, present owner. BRICK CORNER HOUSE, Franklin of such other business as may prop­ of Pennsylvania, bounded and de­ proved since the operation. and Haas Sts., Topton. Part of a erly come before the said meeting. scribed as follows, to wit: Arrangements are being made to in­ double dwelling; eight rooms; all By order of the Board of Directors. On the East by property now or stall one of the most modern soda improvements, light, heat and wa­ No. 23. October Term. 1928 (E. D.) Last season's Metropolitan Opera ter. Apply to Richard A. DeLong, CHARLES W. MILLER, late of Pasqua Fantilli: on the North sensation, "The King's Henchman," fountains at the Pennsylvania House. Bowers. S20-3t*. President. by an alley; on the South by said West Earle I. Koch, Attorney i It will be local in the main restaurant H. A. FISTER, Greenwich Street, and on the West by All those certain two and one-half Taken in execution and to be sold by an American work, composed by an Cashier. property now or late of Mayme E. story cement block and frame dwell- ' VICTOR L. GOODHART. American, Deems Taylor, in collabora­ room. It will add much to the at­ BRICK DWELLING HOUSE, bath, Edward D. Trexler. Solicitor. Hornberger. heat, electric lights, garage, very S27-15L Containing in front on said West ing house and a one-story frame Sheriff. tion with Edna St. Vincent Millay, tractiveness of the place. Work of in­ well built. In good state of re­ dwelling house built "bungalow style." ' N. B.—All persons interested in the stallation is so planned as to start Greenwich Street, in width or breadth, together with the lots or pieces of distribution of the proceeds of the librettist, and produced by an Ameri­ pairs. Located in center of town. ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE twelve (12) feet, and in depth or ground upon which the same are above sales are hereby notified that can company, will be a high light of work at midnight and have it finished Can be bought at a price that makes In estate of Sarah Hammes, late of length, of equal width or breadth, it profitable investment. Apply Maxatawny Township, Berks County, seventy-four (74) feet. erected, situate in the Township of ' distribution will be made by the Court the approaching concert season in and in operation by 5 o'clock in the Charles H. Esser. Cum-ru, County of Berks and State of on Monday. November 5th. 1928, at 10 morning. Pa., deceased. Subject to the joint use of an un­ Pennsylvania (as shown by the Mao a m., when and where they mav at­ Reading. M Sl-t. f. Letters of administration on the derground alley with the owner of the or Plan surveyed by E. Kurtz Wells, tend. S20-3t. Scotch Highlanders Band MIAMI KILTIES OF MIAMI, FLA., Roy Smith Conductor, 25 Artists In Kutztown Park, Sunday, Sept. 30 This band gave a concert for the Kutztown Fire Co. three years ago, and started the fund to pay for the new fire fighting apparatus. The organization also played for the Kutztown Fair. TWO CONCERTS — Afternoon at 3 o'clock; Evening at 8 o'clock Featuring the following Artists: : BOBBIE BROILER, Scotch Tenor DORA HILTON, Contralto JOE LAULETTA, Harpist JIMMY CLARK, Dancer-Piper MARIAN TAYLOR MARIAN TAYLOR, Violinist DORA HILTON MolJnist Dramatic Soprano UNDER AUSPICES OF KUTZTOWN FIRE COMPANY 4 Don't Miss This Big Event Tickets, 50 Cents