The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 22, 1922, Image 8

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GE EIGHT

Wanted, Sale, Rent, &c.

FOR SALE—3x10 black iron
neumatic water tank, in first-class
Mount
Apply to Box 104,
condition. 22.1t-pd.
Joy, Pa.
BUILDING FOR SALE—I have a
24x36, with slate
_room frame house 2
i in good shape that I will sell
right. Purchaser can move as a
whole or demolish it. Reasonable
time given for moving it. "Jno. BE.
Schroll, Realtor, Mt. Joy, P:
a
nov.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 



pick Roadster, $40.
ring carteguith new bat-
mgank Sclioeis, 11-8-ti
—n ee, p— meer
FOR SALE—A Ford
for $95.00. P. Franck Schock
Joy. nov.
ring Car
 
 
 
 
 

 

DRESS MAKING and all kinds of
plain sewing. Mrs. Ray Miller, Flor-
in, -Pa. nov. 15-3t-pd





 
 
 

Hundred Bun-
3. R. Snyder,
a -2t


 
 


 


—————
ung man to work
or 16 years
n 2-21
 

WANT
in Drug Store, mus
of age. E. W. Garber.

 
 
 
 
ee —-— NTED—Middle aged wiuan
for ¢ _housework, no washing.
Apply to MIS ePediaglicy, Flori
1 3 y 29 _9t
Do « =2t.
Penna. i. Tok
RIFLES—To rent out for the
bear and deer season. N. J. Har-
man, 19 Poplar St., Mt. Joy, Pa.
nov. 15-3t-pd

—

 



























ng
LOST_X eg gle hound, colored
white, black an@mtan, near Joint
School. License 3728 Reward. H.
D. Ruhl, 411 S. Markets St., Eliza-
/n. novi-15-tf










Buick
AP—A
Qn. 1917



FOR SALE— i
owers, sweet peas, chr
ations. D. H. Zerphe
nov.
FOR RENT—A
the shares. Apply to
ount Joy, Pa.
FOR Part of the Nissley









residence, 24 in street, Mount
Joy, Pa. Wil mak ges to suit
tenant. Apply to Mrs. Jaey.

WANTED—Everybody In this sec-
tion to use our “wanted, for sale,
» column more frequently. It
to pay. Just try it. [34
erscy Black Giant
want to improve
Just buy one
ifice prices.











 
 
 
 
 

ww

 


Can You Believe This?
Advertising is the foundation of
all successful enterprises. If your
advertisement were here it would be
read by every reader of the Bulletin,

 
 
 





WANTED—Every family in this
entire community to subscribe for the
Bulletin and in that way keep posted
n the news of the day. 2

 
 






 
 


__8550 Piano sold by Stieff
in mahogany case, same
as new, only D&i used two months.
Will sell for $325 time, less dis-
iculars ad-
Maggt0 for cash. Pog hig ga
oss Box No. 109, East Kingeglreet,
. nov. 192
N WANTED—Cook
qrl, wages $12 per
n for upstairs
Company,

 
 


 































 



TWO V
and down stairs
week. Another Ww
work to assist with ¢ wages $10
er week. Apply to 301 een St.
neaster, Pa., Bell phone 925
oct. 2°


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



. Government Underwear




 
 
 
 
 
 
 


9 508000 pieces New Governmen
Wool URMlerwear purchased by us t«
gell to th ublic direct at 75 cent
EACH. Aaa] retail value $2.50
each. All sig, Shirts 34 to 46
Drawers, 30 to Send correc
sizes. Pay postmatg on delivery ox




 

send us money order. If underwear
is. not satisfactory, we rill refund
money promptly upon red gt. De
partment 24. PILGRIM "WOOL-
EN CO., 1476 Broadway, New York
City, N.Y. nov. 15-tf


 
 
 



BE — ’




 





EXECUTOR’S NOTICE
Estate of Eli S. Eby, late of Rapho
Township, deceased. ;
Letters testamentary on said es-
state having been granted to the un-
dersigned, all persons indebted there-
to are requested to make immediate
payment, and those having claims or
demands against the same, will pre-
gent them without delay for settle-
ment to the undersigned, residing at
Mt. Joy, Pa.
CHRISTIAN M. BRENEMAN.
Executor.
Chas. E. Workman, Attorney.
oct. 25-6t-pd


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 











 
 
 
 






PUBLIC SALE
urday, December 2nd, 1922.
undersigned will sell at public
he premises, 2% miles North
Joy on the road leading
t Joy to Milton Grove
Mill the following Real
rsonal property:
F GRAVEL LAND
Containing 13%acres and 33 perches
on which there¥g erected a TWO and
ONE-HALF STORY FRAME











 














 











near Risse
Estate and
A TRAC
 






 





in HOUSE 23x33) Summer
House 15x16, Ove >
House Attached. Good
agon Shed and
d 30x34 with
oultry House
Frame Barn 27x49,
Corn Crib, Tobacco S
Stripping Room 12x14,
12x44.
All these buildings are
pair. There is fruit such cherries,
apples, peaches, plums, st wberries,
grapes, etc., on the premis®. This
farm is conveniently locat a
good farming sections and is > to
churches, schools, ete. Any rson
wishing to view same prior to dy of
sale will please call on the undersgn-
ed residing thereon.
Also at the same time and pla
will be sold 175 Head of Brown an
White Leghorn and Minorca Chick
ens and a Lot of Farming Implements.
: Sale to commence at 1 o’clock p.
m., when terms and conditions will
be made known by
. ISAAC 8. GIBBLE
C. S. Frank, Auct.
H. G. Carpenter, Clk.

 
 
 





 
% If you want to succeed—Advertise

v

ORE ATER EAE
_ fi
N ORPHANS’ COURT SALE
"
—
-
7 Our Sale Register [
Friday, Nov. 24—At their stock
yards in this place, carload of cows,
Keller & Bro.
Friday, Dec. 1,—At their sales]
barn at Middletown, 200 head of ac-|
climated and western horses, colts}
and mules by D. B. Kieffer & Co.
See advertisement.
Saturday, Dee. 2,—On the pre-
mises, 2% miles North of Mount
Joy on the road leading from Mount
Joy to Milton Grove near Risser’s
Mill Real Estate and personal pro-
perty by Isaac S. Gibble.
Monday, Dec. 4—On the premises

n the village of Florin, real estate
y Annie Royer, Administratrix of
Jizabeth Sides, deceased, Frank,
auct.
Friday, Dec. 8—On the premises
in the village of Florin, at the Florin
Inn, building lots by S. G. Myers, Ad-
ministrator as Trustee of Malinda G.
Myers, deceased.
a
FARM WOMEN STUDY
DYE FOR BASKET MAKING
Rural
Southern
some of the
make baskets
as a home industry, with the help of
women in
States who


extension workers of the United
States Departmen: of Agriculture
and tl} State agricultural colleges,
are studying the harmonizing of col-
and the utilization of home
wild-dye material, such as
pokeberry, sumae, and many
or
grown or
nut

others, to enable them to get uni-
form colors. Many of these farm
women are producing beautiful bas-
kets made of wild honeysuckle vines
coral berry runners, long-leaf pine
sweet grass, split oak and
using only materials which
grow abundantly in their locality.
Basketry work is taught in short
courses in many of the agricultural
colleges. It is carried on by farm
women chiefly in Arkansas, Missis-
sippi, Florida, Georgia, and Ala-
bama, with the encouragement and
assistance of extension agents.
———
New Leaflet on Clean Milk
A leaflet on clean milk, showing
that milk of high quality may be
easily produced by following a few
simple rules, has been issued by
the Dairy Division of the United
States Department of Agriculture.
To produce milk clean enough to
meet all the requirements of city in-
spection is chiefly a matter of care-
fulness, and the methods are not
difficult to understand or especially
hard to carry out for anyone who
has inclination..
The leaffet consists of four pages:
(1) Clean, healthy cows, (2) steril-
ization of milk utensils, (3) use
small-top milking pails, and (4) cool
milk properly. Each subject is il-
lustrated, and references are given
to bulletins which explain it further.
“Keep milk clean, covered, cold,” is
the concluding advice.
eee GG QR ee nc
needles,
willow,

Better Price for Reactors
A check on the reacting cattle
sold on the Buffalo market shows
that the efforts of the Packers and
Stockyards Administration and the
Bureau of Animal Industry of the
United States Department of Agri-
culture have been securing better
treatment for persons who have
cattle of this class to sell. Records
from June 1 to September 23 show
that on a total of 542 head of tu-
berculous cattle the gross price paid
per head was $22.17, less expenses
of $3.84 per head. In the past, re-
cords had been kept on 4,500 head
and the average price paid was only
i
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY LANCASTER COUNT Y, PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
chroll’s
LOCAL DOINGS
AROUND FLORIN
ALL THE UP-TO-DATE HAPPEN:
INGS FROM THAT THRIVING
AND BUSY VILLAGE
THE PAST WEEK
week on account of sickness.
Mrs. Jacob N.
to the hospital for treatment.
house with an attack of sickness.
of relatives.
Mrs. H. M. Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. H.
family at Columbia on Sunday.
the General Hospital at Lancaster.
Mrs. Annie Buller and her niece,
Miss Ruth Kline, of Florin, spent a
few days in Philadelphia and Cyn-
noyd.
Mr. and Mrs. William Hamilton
bethtown, the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Geyer.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brinser of
Elizabethtown, were Sunday visitors
to the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Keener.
Mr and Mrs. Straub, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Geyer of Harrisburg, were
Sunday visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Booth.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roads
daughter Mae and Mrs. Ephraim Mor
ton and daughter Edith, of Columbia,
visited in this place on Sunday.
and
A wedding dinner was given in hon-
or of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Miller at the
home of the former’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. H. M. Miller on Sunday
Relatives and friends from Florin,
Reading and other places were pres-
ent.
mmm etl Ce
USES MILK TESTER
TO FIND COAL ASH

A. M. Rodgers, a research worker
in the School of Mines at the Penn-
sylvania State College, has devised a
novel scheme for estimating rapidly
the amount of ash likely to be con-
tained in a given sample of coal. By
means of a centrifuge such as is used
to test the proportion of cream in a
given sample of milk, he has succeed-
ed in perfecting a method for testing
coal in a few minutes whereas the
previous method, which necessitated
the burning of the coal, took nearly
a day.
The coal to be tested is ground
finely and poured into test tubes con-
taining a liquid. When the tubes
are whirled around rapidly by the
centrifuge, the slate and sulphur go
to the end of the tube and the com-
bustible part of the coal is left near
the top. Graduations, like those used
in the milk and cream tester, show at
once the proportion of waste in the
coal.
rr Qe
PENITENTIARY CONVICTS
WILL GROW MANY TREES

£14.50. Few buyers are now taking
advantage of the farmer who is try-|
ing to clean up his herd. Many of |
them find that they can afford to
pay as much for reactors that are
not condemned as unfit for food as|
they can pay for untested cattle of
same kind and quality.
erent GQ ee

\ —of—
4 BUILDING LOTS
4 FRIDAY, DEC. 8, 1922
% At 2 0'Clock P. M.
In Bursuance of an order of the
Orpharly’ Court of Lancaster County, |
will beéisold at public sale at the
Florin Imp, T. F. McElroy, Proprie-
tor, Flori, Pa., the following real
estate:





ining 240 Feet
>» North side of Square
ending 200 feet in
ley, in said village
lots will be offer-
re very desirable |
tial or Factory
o Pennsylvania
e to make the
aratively in-
Fronting on t
street and e?
depth to Clay
of Florin. Thes
ed as a whole an
for either Residé
Sites. Very close
Railroad and on a gr
laying of a siding co
expensive.
Sale will be held on
8, 1922, at the Florin
o’clock in the afternoon, V
and conditions will be made
S. G. Myers,
Administrator as Trustee o
da G. Myers, Deceased.
B. Frank Kready, Attorney.
Chas. S. Frank, Auct.
Henry G. Carpenter, Clerk.








nn, at 2
en terms
nown by
Malin-

riday, Dec. | —
Pa., Nov.


Harrisburg, 22.—Con-
victs at the State Penitentiary, in
Centre county, will grow millions of
{trees to be planted in all parts of the
{ State. The Department of Forestry
has arranged with the prison officials
for the establishment of a nursery at
the institution. :
About eight acres will be devoted
to a transplant nursery of shade and
| ornamental trees. This tract will be
developed this fall. Next spring
another area of similar size will be
prepared for growing large quanti-
ties of young forest trees.
eet Mere en
The problem of preserving viable
seeds in the tropical climate of Guam
from harvest until the next plant-
ing season has been solved by the
Federal agricultural experiment sta-
tion on that island by devising a
simple container made of metal or
glass, so surrounded by coconut or
other slowly volatile oil as to make
it moisture, insect, and rat proof.
Seeds free from insects and insect
eggs and properly drled when placed
in the tank will keep in good condi-
tion and maintain their germinating
power indefinitely.
— RR
Who Wants This
Is there a tenant farmer around
here that wants to make as much
money with less work than he is do-
ing now? Here you are. A 30-acre
dance of fruit, fine water.

BIRT RPidibi ddr


 

PRINTING |




PUBLICITY
RARE AR

TP PPP LB PRB Br Te 2

{it is close to markets. Don’t delay.
{Act quick as I am going to turn this
J. E.
«tf
{ farm—Call, phone or write
| Schroll, Mt. Joy.
tl

1
Our Murkets v
following prices are paid to-
lay by our local merchants:
The
|
|
|
|
|

Everything is right, all modern con-
veniences, garage, ete. and good
reasons for selling. J. E. Schroll,
Realtor, Mt. Joy. tf
rs eet GI Cree.
If you hae a news item at any
time, please let us have it. We want


=
If you want to succeed—Advertise
the news and so do our readers.
Mr. John Carson is off duty this
Hershey was taken
Mr. John Heisey is confined to the
Mr. Jacob Landvater sr., of Lan-
caster, spent Sunday here the guest
Mr. and Mrs. John Miller of Read-
ing were Sunday visitors to Rev. and
J. Schadt and son
called on Mrs. Edna Alexander and
Mr. Charles Brooks, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Brooks, is improving at
and children spent Sunday at Eliza-
farm 14 mile from Manheim, best of
gravel land, good buildings, an abun-
This
would make a dandy truck farm as
NY
’
MANY COUNTIES ERADICATE !
TUBERCULOSIS IN CATTLE |




——e |
| The most important featuré of |
| the tuberculosis-eradication move- |
ment continues to be cleaning up of |
definite areas, principally counlifs,
according to the United States De- |
partment of Agriculture. Reports |
for June, July and August show |
that 31 additional counties in 10 |
States have officially adopted the |
area plan. This brings the total of /
counties now doing intensive work
up to 144. Thirty-nine counties
have completed one or more tests.
Of the 31 counties that began
area work this summer, California,
Indiana, Virginia, Tenessee, and
Maine have 1 each, Nebraska,
Michigan, and Oregon 1 each, Wis-
consin 5, and Wyoming 12.
To date the best example of a
successful country-wide drive is the
one carried on in Steuben County,
N. Y. During a period of 19 days
there were tested, by veterinarians
4,615 lots containing fore than
45,000 head of cattle. The disease
was found on 486 farms, and 1,674
reactors were removed. The total
cost of the campaign in the county
was $10,800—about 23.5 cents a
head for all animals tested. Ninety-
the herds were
and the few
” remaining
eight percent of
tested in the drive
“conscientious objectors
have decided to have their cattle
tested. The great success of the
work in this county was due in large
measure to the whole-hearted coop-
eration given by the live-stock own-
ers, the Farm Bureau,railroad live-
stock agents, women’s clubs, the
Dairymen’s League, breeder's or-
ganizations, county commissioners,
chamber of commerce, and other
organizations.
etl Qe
WASHINGTON WOMEN INSTALL
LABOR-SAVING DEVICES

A total of 463 home conveniences
was purchased by members of test-
ing circles recently conducted among
rural women in the State of Wash-
ington, under the supervision of the
extension workers of the United
States Department of Agriculture.
A testing circle is usually a group of
about six women in a community
who try out one article at a time in
their homes, and then pass it on in
exchange for another piece of de-
sirable equipment. Testing circles
were formed in rural communities
all over the State.
As a result of trying out labor-
saving devices in their homes, 105
women bought pressure cookers for
canning and cooking, 96 bought fire-
less cookers, 75 bought dish drain-
ers, 70 selected utility tables, 60
wanted steam cookers, 24 purchased
gasoline irons, 20 installed bread
it is estimated, will save Washington
housewives 32,445 hours of time an-
nually. Moreover, a dish drainer
saves energy as well as time, since
the operation of wiping the dishes
is eliminated. This would not be
true in the case of a cooking de-
vice, because the housewife would
 
 
 

Large or Sm:all Farms, Maiisions,
Business Places, Building
I AM PLEASED TO INFORM PROSPECTIVE RE
GOOD LIST OF OFFERINGS,
A $30,000 MANSION OR FRO
YOU WILL FIND LISTED
YOU DON'T SEE WHAT YOU
THE SPOT. YOU KNOW IT’S MY BUSINESS TO HELP
IF YOU WANT A POUND
GO TO A CLOTHIER, AND IN
Lots-==Anything

ALL PRICED TO SELL. I HAVE ANYTHING
WANT,
A REALTOR THAT WILL DEAL FAIR AND HONEST WITH YOU?
YOU ARE NOT UNDER OBLIGATIONS IF YOU COME TO ME.
ANY PROPERTY I HAVE AND
WILL
REMEMBER THERE IS NO CHARGE. STOP
YOU ARE IN MOUNT JOY.
No.
mixers, and 13 obtained vacuum | goo house, tobacco shed, barn, ete.| 31 acres timber, good buildings in-
cleaners. It is interesting to note | g4 000.00. cluding silo, possession any time; a
that the dish drainer apparently| No. 183—2 acres and, rather | large portion of money can remain.
saved more actual time to each indi- | ough, large double house, fine for| No. 161—A 235 acre farm in In-
vidual user than any other device |poultry. $650. diana Co., 1756 a land, bal-
except the pressure cooker, which, No. 184—13 acres of sand and |ance timber, good 5, young
imestone in Rapho, frame house, orchard, fine water se to mar-
ood bank barn, fruit, running water.
)nly $2,000.
MEDIUM SIZED FARMS
128—A 31
No.
gravel land at

not necessarily have been active
every minute while the food cooked. |
Fach of the seventy-five women
who bought a dish drainer expected
to save 180 hours a year, or half an |
hour a day by its use.
ees ret meee
WIDE SPREAD OF CORN BORER
IN NEW ENGLAND STATES
Fourteen townships in the Merri-
mack Valley of New Hampshire were
newly invaded this year by the Euro-
pean corn borer, which has been a |
destructive pest for the last five |
years along the Atlantic coast of the
New England States.
the field representatives of the Bu-
reau of Entomology of the United
The corn borer is also estab- |
as far west |
ed.
lished in Massachusetts
as Lancaster, Clinton,
and Worcester. Its new
tends into Maine as far up
coast as Saco, and through three
townships of Rhode Island near Pro-
vidence.
On October 10 the commissioner
of agriculture of Massachusetts, A. |
W. Gilbert, conducted a party of
State and Federal legislators and en-
tomologists over the most heavily in-
fested area with the idea of secur-
ing additional funds for the purpose
of combating the corn borer in
these heavily infested weed and gar-
den districts. At the present time
available funds are insufficient to
stop the further spread of this pest,
which attacks truck crops as well
as corn, and is even destroying the
beautiful fall New England flowers,
such as dahlias and asters.
————-0 Gee se
Fighting Corn Rootworm
Of all corn pests in the South, one
of the most serious is the larva, or
young, of the 12-spotted cucumber
beetle—the so-called Southern corn
root-worm. Attacked plants either
die outright or are so badly stunted
as to be unproductive. One control


oe
&
i
t
fe
ERP d Foro, vier - nD pr : :
‘ i gsvaEls WW i E zgs, per dozen ...... . 62-65¢ | measure advised by the United States
: FConnnrty - n . . :
# Stata | 3! ounrty butter, perlb., ....... {4c | Department of Agriculture is the
¢ © x he 3 ar . 1} 9 3
) 3 { Lard, per 1b cob RE Po 13¢ | burning over.of waste places, such as
|X po | dors ang arrac RL :
i Is 3 i 1. D. Stebinan Pays: | the borders and terraces of fields.
5 A Valuable Asset 3 Wheat .... 0 Lola or iS TR Large numbers of the beetles are
* o 4 table Asset $i Now Corn. 20c | destroyed in this way. It should be
hy ¢ LOUr Ousiices i $ 01d Corn... = 85¢ { done in the winter and on cool days
Poe oe Ch a kl DL errata ees ari Or . s
£ Sa nine when the beetles congregate in the
: We thats Our Cire 3 A Beautiful Home dead grass, se king protection from
. ih ] Dur Gus. 1 T have one of the finest and best cold. The killing of one female in
Y a y St - . % , Y > 0) as 1 apts Q y
- Sine p success 4 | built residences in this town for sale. winter is as impartant as would be
* 1 saanta bl . ? . Sat 1 .
# Was re sentable, i A brick house, modern in every re- the destruction of from. 400 to 600
¥ rofitable bd spect, in the residential. section.| "Cl 'S Ip the Spine.
_ If you contemplate selling or buy-
ing Real Estate, I will be pleased to
handle your deal in a fair and honest
way. That always was and always
will be my policy. I await your in-
quiry.
RI
It pays to advertise in the Bulletin
house, lot of shedding for cattle .
scales, ete., good well, also running No. 181—92 res, best of lime-
water. Cheap. tone land in East Donegal, meadow,
No. 178—A 30-acre
twp., near Manheim,
land very productive.
TRUCK FARMS
107—an 8% acre tract of land
in East Donegal, near Reich’s church,
ber; good buildings, 2 silos, shedding)
for 7 acres tobacco, a real farm. ;
No. 154—183 acres, 120 farm land








kets, schools and
No. 161—The
state road 2% mi
bethtown, 95 acr,
brick house, g
$137 an acre.
pr Dalegfarm on
west of Eliza-
"15 acres mr2adow,
acre tract of 1 :
& harn, silo, ete,
Union Square, large
pring water creek, good house witn
farm in Rapho
eat and bath, large barn, tobacco
good buildings,

Price interest-| hed, ete. - A very good buy. several
ing. 5 No. 180—b56 acres of the best
No. 187—30-acre farm in Perry limestone, good barn, brick house] Joy
ice place, good buildings, with all conveniences, 2 tobacco! house,
{County, n
‘would mak
hunters as it is right in the game
Place is dirt cheap.
No. 185—A 42-acre poultry and
duck farm known as the Spring Lake
Duck farm, in
bungalow, electre lights, ete.
LARGE FARMS
No. 94—A
stone soil, on Seravel pike, bank barn,
Reports to! 8.room house, shedding for 20 acres
$90 per acre.
No. 95—A 65 acre farm near Con-
district.
tobacco.
Franklin, Bow, and Hill are affect- | timber ready to cut. No better farm
in the county.
No. 138—A 81 acre farm of all
Shrewsbury, ! limestone soil in East Donegal, 11-
area ex- room stone house, barn, tobacco shed,
the | b acres meadow, % of money can re-



for 9 acres, 10 acre meadow, 3% of
money can remain.
No. 148—A 114 acre farm near
Sunnyside, 10 acres meadow,
and, 2 frame houses, big barn, tobac-
co shed, ete., good reason for selling.
Price right.
No. 151—A 170 acre farm, 80 A.
farm land, balance pasture, some tim-
|

e a wonderful camp for sheds, abundance of fruit, one of the| cheap.
best farms I have listed.
. No. 179—107 acres of limestone
in East Donegal, new barn, brick
house,, meadow with spring water, 2
tobacco sheds, price very reasonable.
No. 175—A 95 acre farm 2 miles
from Elizabethtown on the state
road, frame barn, brick house, silo,
meadow. $135 an acre.
Cumberland county,
200 ft.
149 acre farm, iron No.
DWELLING HOUSES
tt atl : No. 83— p S j-1s
States Department of Agriculture ' ewago Station, all farm land, running Sos Siang 2 Ifans house i vas ing 16
indicate that Nashua, Huds Bed- water, bank barn, brick house, ete. |. “1. cio v MEAL hey . JOY, boro.
indicate that Nashua, Hudson, Bec ’ : oa in business center. All improvements. |
ford, Concord, Merrimack, Man- for $6,000. hhwediste posse. . .
ne I Lt LR To No. 102—An 86 acre farm in Wes
chester, Hooksett, Litchfield, Lon Donegal, finest farm I ever offered, | No. 83; fine shape, all improvements, | would
donderry, Canterbury, Joscawen, good buildings, on piked road, 4 acres prefer to sell both. [ne =
No. 92—A 21% story frame house |
Mount Joy. Only $2,000.
No. 117—Lot 40x200 in Master-
sonville with frame house, stable,
butcher shop, ete. Must be sold quick.
No.
% t any
main. No. 147—Acre of ground with 10- 8
i No. 139—A 89 acre farm of alll, om brick house, good repair, steam
imestone soil in East Donegal, 9-1}0a¢ at railroad. Near Mariett
room brick house, barn, tobacco shed No 149—A b. tiful Bie 2 a nN
. er, eautiful 7-room an o.
bath brick bungalo in Marietta boro.
Very modern, beautiful location and
price right.
No. 166—Fine corner lot in resi-
dential section of Mt. Joy, 13-room
brick house with all conveniences,
gas, steam heat, electric light, bath,
ete. A very good buy.
sand yuild.
timber
in Florin,| No.
frame house, frame stable, etc $2,400
No. 186—An 8-room frame house,
garage, steam heat, electirc light, on
West Main street, Mount Joy.
Ned, No. 168—Lot 40x200
FACTORY BUILDINGS No.
No. 140-3 acres and 49 perches on the
of land in East Donegal with large
or stone mill cor,
erted into flats for


Cl esidences. $2 I also have a nu
ur that owners do ngj
! BUSINESS STANDS vertised. If yo
No. 63—The entire concrete block | want in thig
manufacturing plant of J. Y. Kline


at Florin,
machinery, buidings,
Price very low.
No. 160—A very good business
proposition in Mount Joy, including
twp., with a large frame
Jonegal, limestone, good condition,
on a highway and a fine place to
No. 42—An 85 acre tract of farm
egal township, tract adjoins Masonie
Homes ground on two sides.
very low.
Mt. Joy and
ment to some speculator,
~ iw
has many advantages
located. One of the bg
have it.
ALTY PURCHASERS THAT HERE IS A VERY
FROM A $500 HOUSE TC
M A )NE ACRE TRUCK PATCH TO A 300 ACRE FARM.
BELOW ALMOST ANYTHING YOU ARE LOOKING FOR AND IN CASE
PLEASE PHONE, CALL OR WRITE AND I'LL BE JOHNNY ON
YOU BUY OR SELL PROPERTY.
OF SUGAR YOU GO TO A GROCER;IF YOU WANT A NEW SUIT YOU
CASE YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A PROPERTY WHY NOT GO TC
CHEERFULLY SHOW YOU
AT MY OFFICE ANY TIME
together with all stock,
contracts, ete.
houses on Main street.
No. 172—An acre of ground in Mt.
ice
elevator, two big ponds, ete.,
BUILDING LOTS
No. 2—Three Lots, each 50x200 ft,
on North Barbara St., Mount Joy.
No. 45
Four Lots in Florin, 40x
They front on Church St.

77—Very desirable bui, r re
| lot fronting on the southside 61 or
| ietta street.
| feet you want at $6 per foot.
| No. 145—A tract of land contain-
Will sell any number of
14 acres adjoining Manheim
Fine building sites.
I te: No. 57—A b acre tract in th
No. 84—A frame house adjoining! ,¢ at or os or borg \
be a money-maker for truck-
speculating on building lots.
with slate roof on West Main street, aA ne buliging Jorma
Price right.
171—Large number of build-
ing lots between Mt. Joy and Florin.
I can give you any number of lots at
location, at any old price.
JUST LAND
167—A 4-acre tract in East
Not far from town.
and pasture land in West Don-
Price
169—A]J15 acre tract between
lorin. A real invest-
FACTOR
10—A tract
P. R. R. siding


i
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