WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1025 yo. REALTOR THAT WILL DEAL FA YOU ARE NOT UNDER OBL ANY PROPERTY I HAVE AND R YOU ARE IN MOUNT JOY. | | cial DWELLING HQUSES No. 83—Frame house on E. Main street, Mt. Joy, in business center. All improvements and very modern. Mt. Joy. Very modern in every way. No. 84—A frame house adjoining prefer to sell both. i No. 149—A beautiful 7-room and | bath brick bungalo in Marietta boro. | Very modern, beautiful location and price right. No. 168—Lot 40x200 in Florin, frame house, frame stable, ete. No. 195—An 1l-room frame] house with electric lights, heat, bath, | water, green house, stable, ete., in| good condition. This house is in Rowenna. No. 205—An 8-room frame house with all conveniences in Florin. Also stable, ete. Splendid location. No. 212—A fine brick house of 11 rooms with heat, light, ete. Also bake house 20x80, garage, ete. Located on square in good town. Price $6,500 No. 215—A beautiful property on Main street, Mt. Joy, 13-room house, all conveniences, frame stable and room for three cars, one of the fin- est homes and locations in this town. No. 220—A 7-room house, acre of ound, frame stable, on. concrete ighway at Bamford. A good house at right price. No. 226—A fine room frame house along highway in Florin. No. 230—A fine frame dwelling on Marietta St., Mt. Joy, excellent condition, garage, ete. Price $6,500. No. 234—A 6-room bungalow on| North Barbara St.,, Mt. Joy, only built two years ago. All conven- fences and extra good location. No. 239—A very modern 7-room house on Marietta St., Mt. Joy, all eonveniences, big garage. No. 240—21% story frame proper- ty, on corner, in Florin, frame stable, Immediate possession. No. 243—A new house, corner, property, very modern in every way, all conveniences, trolley at door. Immediate possession. Will finance half. Price $4,750. Nos. 244-45-46—Three new houses along trolley, very modern, all con- and modern 9- concrete veniences, immediate possession. wil finance half. Price, $4,500 each. No. 247—A new and modernly built house on West Donegal street, | Mount Joy, all conveniences. sell to close an estate. No. 83; fine shape, all improvements, | Scholl's Realty Large or Small Farms, Mansions, Business Places, Building Lots==Anything I AM PLEASED TO INFORM PROSPECTIVE REALTY PURCHASERS THAT HERE IS A VERY GOOD LIST OF OFFERINGS, ALL PRICED TO SELL. , wees MANSION OR FROM A ONE ACRE TRUCK PATCH TO A 300 ACRE FARM. YOU WILL FIND LISTED BELOW ALMOST ANYTHING YOU ARE LOOKING FOR AND IN CASF YOU DON'T SEE WHAT YOU WANT, PLEASE PHONE, CALL OR WRITE AND I'LL BE JOHNNY . ON THE SPOT. YOU KNOW IT’S MY BUSINESS TO HELP YOU BUY OR SELL PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT A POUND OF SUGAR YOU GO TO A GROCER; IF YOU WANT A NEW SUIT YOU €0 TO A CLOTHIER, AND IN CASE YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A PROPERTY WHY NOT GO TO A I HAVE ANYTHING IR AND HONEST WITH YOU? IGATIONS IF YOU COME TO ME. EMEMBER THERE IS NO CHARGE. STOP AT MY OFFICE ANY TIME { Nos. 248-49—A frame double | house on West Main St., Mount Joy, | | one side has all conveniences. Make | | me an offer. | TRUCK FARMS | No. 107—An 8% acre tract of| land in East Donegal, near Reich’s! church, frame house, tobacco shed, | { barn, ete. $4,000.00, | No. 183—2 acres and, rather | { rough, larce double house, fine for| poultry. $650. | No. 184—13 acres of sand and | limestone in Rapho, frame house, | good bank barn, fruit, running water. | Only $2,000. | No. 196—A 2-acre tract in East { Donegal near Maytown, 8-room | { house, stable, chicken house, pig sty, house newly painted. No. 229—10 ‘acres limestone land in East Donegal, large frame house, frame stable, 3 poultry houses, ete. MEDIUM SIZED FARMS No. 185—A 42-acre poultry and duck farm known as the Spring Lake Duck farm, in Cumberland county, bungalow, electrie lights, ete. Neo. 200—A 14-acre ideal truck farm along state highway, east of Elizabethtown. Brick house with light and heat, stable, ete. No. 207—52 acres of gravel land 4 miles north of Mt. Joy, 7 or 8 acres meadow, frame house, bank barn, running water, cheap at the price, $6,200.00. No. 210—31 acre-farm near Mar- ietta and Lancaster pike, good crop- per, lots of fruit, evcellent tobacco and truck farm. Only $4,000. LARGE FARMS No. 94—A 149-acre farm, iron- stone soil, on Secravel pike, bank barn, 8-room house, shedding for 20 acres tobacco. $90 per acre. No. 95—A 65-acre farm near Con- ewago Station, all farm land, run- ning water, bank barn, brick house, ete., $6,000. Immediate possession. No. 138—An 81l-acre farm of all limestone soil, in East Donegal, 11- room stone house, barn, tobacco shed, 5 acres meadow, 3-4 of money can remain. No. 148—A 114 acre farm near Sunnyside, 10 acres meadow, sand land, 2 frame houses, big barn, tobac- co shed, etc., good reason for sell- ing. Price right. | No. 151—A 170-acre farm, 80 acres farm land, balance pasture, | some timber; good buildings, 2 silos,’ heddi for 7 of land in East Donegal with large Shedding for .7 acres tobaseo, & Teal mill converted into flats for farm. i No. 161—A 235-acre farm in In- diana Co., 75 acres farm land, bal-! ance timber, good buildings, young! orchard, fine water and close to mar-| kets, schools and churches. i No. 198—A 102-acre farm, gravel’ has many advantages and centrally soil, brick house, new barn, and to- located. One of the best in the town. shed. A wonderful tobacco. Possession any time. bacco farm. No. 201—104 acres in the heart of , that t,| East Donegal tobacco district, fine' vertised. If you don’t find what you Will! buildings, shedding for 12 acres of Fant in this list, call and see me. ve it. tobacco. This is a real farm. will sell separate. timber and pasture land in Donegal township, tract adjoins Ma- {sonic Homes Price very low. Mt. Joy and Florin. ment to some speculator. residences. —— FROM A $500 HOUSE TO A $30,00( I WILL CHEERFULLY SHOW YO. BUSINESS STANDS No. 63—The entire concrete block manufacturing plant of J. Y. Kline at Florin, together with all stock, machinery, buildings, contracts, ete. Price very low. No. 233—A 65-acre farm in the heart of East Donegal, good build- ings and land. Price right. BUILDING LOTS No. 2—Several lots, each 50x200 ft., on North Barbara St., Mt. Joy. No. 45—Four Lots in Florin, 40x 200 feet. They front on Church St. No. 77—Very desirable building lot fronting on the south side of Mar- ietta street. Will sell any number of feet you want &c $6 per foot. No. 57—A 5-acre tract in the boro of Mount Joy, fiue large lot and would be a money-maker for truck- ing or speculating on building lots. No. 163—A fine Euilding lot on East Man street. Price right. No. 171—Large number of build- ing lots between Mt. Joy and Florin. I can give you any number of lots at any location, at almost any price. No. 218—A wide lot fronting on the East side of Poplar St., Mt. Joy. A corner lot. Big garage in rear. No. 223—Two lots 40x200 in Flor- in, one has chicken house 14x60 ft. Both, including building, for $900; or JUST LAND No. 42—An 85-acre tract of farm, West ground on two sides. No. 169—A 15-acre tract between A real invest- FACTORY BUILDINGS No. 140—3 acres and 49 perches $2,000. FACTORY SITES No. 10—A tract fronting 107 ft. on the P. R. R. siding in Mount Joy I also have a number of properties owners do not care to have ad- I couldn’t eat it.” soles and heels to keep it from fall- was arrested and taken to the Lan- caster jail. work at his trade while confined here. What is yoar occupation, shoemak- a traveling ran,” said the hobo. er week. OWL-LAFFS (On With Laughter) Well folks how do you like the snow by now? The younger sex are having the time of their lives enjoy- ing the various passtimes it affords , while the grown-ups are madder ’en thunder because they must shovel so much of it. Lee Ellis told me that love may | make the world go round but have | you ever stopped to figure out that! a sock in the jaw will have the same | effect? i Now that they are making automo- | bile wheels out of aluminum it | should make getting run over easier | says John Tryon. | “Justice Is Demanded by Crippled | Veterans” newspaper headline. Gosh the married men have been doing the same thing for years and what have they got? I ask you again, what | HAVE they got? : Here's a hint to housewives: By | punching holes ‘in hubby’s derby hat a first-class strainer can be made. Dumb Dora, a certain ‘office vamp, sez to me: “At what age should a 16-year old girl be allowed to go | motoring unchaperoned?”’ “Back ‘0 the old grind” said a cer- tain West Main street man as he put his set of false teeth into his mouth. One of our booze hounds asked me “if liquor is red is it good rye?” How in thunder should I know? Bet- ter ask a few of the candidates of our poison ivy club. Dopy Dan has at last learned what | his ears are for. He says you have one on each corner to keep your der- | by hat from slippin down over your | face. Little drops of water Mixed in with the milk, Keeps a milkman’s daughter Clad in switching silk. In describing love, Silly Sally says it’s the only game two can play and both lose. There is only one way to give aid to a flat tire fellows and that is to stand back and give it air. Plenty of truth in that crack. An East Donegal Street vamp told me that a date with a guy in a closed car beats six street strolls these snowy January nights. Mart Hiestand said that he was at a Lancaster restaurant recently and the coffee was so blamed pale that he suggested the girl waitress put the rouge in the coffee instead of on her face. A Florin Woman’s Experience She gently rocked the baby In its cradle to and fro, She sang an old time lullaby The kind our mothers know. The baby gazed in askance, Within its eye a tear, “Why don’t you cut that stuff,” it said, “And jazz it, mother dear?” Helpless Hazel, from Salunga, has written me and asked if it is proper to refer to lock-jaw as an unspeak- able death. Poor Hazel, there's no hope. A fellow went into Stumpf’s res- taurant and asked for a pork sand- wich. “Haven’t any pork—got veal, said the clerk. “All right, what's the difference, its all off a hog any way,” said the customer. A kid about six went to the Cut Rate. Meat Shop and said: “Mr. Bucherman, give me for 15 cents some liver for the dog. I don’t want it so fatty, cause the last time Pap Met a Landisville girl on the street the other day and her complexion was so heavy that she wore rubber ing off. A fellow who loiters around here The Warden him: We always make said to a prisoner ing, blacksmithing, Or ut “I'm Guess that'll hold you for anoth- Of course you must re- member: If it’s night-time in Italy It’s Winter over here. A WISE OWL. Al conduit and on pole lines. , wire will be laid In these cables dur- i single THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. “70 SPEND $31.000,000° on } vad SAYS L G0, 10st One-third of Total Ex- penditures For Outside Telephone Plant, DE | Wi od 1 During the year 1925 the Bell Tele- Company will spend $31,000,000 for extensions to phon» in Pennsylvania | their present plant and for replacing equipment worn out hy wear and tear it Is estimated by officials of the com- puny, This money will he spent largely In providing additions to pole lines, jut- side wires and conduit system. In telephone parlance this equipment is called “outside plant.” Almost one-third of the entire ex- penditure will be for outside plant. Over half of this expenditure will be i for cable construction in underground Enough Ing 1925 to provide a telephone cir- suit of two wires from the earth to the moon. Bare and insulated wires strung on poles In the less congested areas during the coming year would | be more than sufficient to run eleven circuits between Philadelphia and San Francisco, Underground conduit, which will be laid during the next twelve months, would form a single duct from Read- ing to Chicago. New telephone poles for the additional placing old peles represent a very { material pertion of the year's outlay. If used as a single new pole line, these new poles would reach from Philadelphia to Madison, Wisconsin, Nearly $2,000.000 will he spent In new building construction. The com- pletion of eight new buildings and major additions to two of the pres. ent strictures will enlarge the vert able city of buildings which are used | hy the telephone company in this dis trict. It is estimated that 220.000 new telephones will be installed during the year, an average of 750 for each work- ing day. The net increase in tele- phones for the year will be 70,000. fhe telephones already In service with the new telepliones to be added will handle an estimated number of 1,500,000 local daily and ardund 60.000.000 toll and long dis- tance calls throughout the year. The construction program will ef fect virtually every town In the terri tory and at some time in the year telephone lineman or other workers will be in every part of the state, add ing to the far reaching network of wires already In place In the words of one of the tele phone officials the program “attempts to be both conservative and progres sive, conservative in that it add plant only where and when needed and progressive in that It attempts to look ahead to the future with a broa clear vision.” Telephone officials are looking ahead to a year of general business pros perity. ret A Aree Veterans of the “Line” T. Hines, of the Pres- Wire Chief J ton-Baring Central Office in Phila- delphia, has completed forty years of | service with the Bell Telephone Com- FIND MANY USES FOR TELEPHONE CIRCUITS Rapid Advance of Art and Meth- ods of Communication. During 1924 six separate and dif- ferent uses of telephone wires have been made. The wires have been used for lo cal telephone purposes, for long dis tance telephone conversations, fo telegraphing news stories papers, for connecting up the public address system, for connecting six- teen radio stations scattered over the country to broadcast the proceedings at the National Republican and Dem ocratic Conventions, and for sending photographs, finger-prints, cartoons and sketches by telephone, Less than half a century ago the world was startled when Alexander Graham Bell of the telephone, succeeded In sending volce messages over telegraph wires The art and methods of communica tion by wire advanced rapidly unt! not so very long ago means were de vised to send both telegraph and tele- | phone messages over the same wire at the same time. However, the de velopments of 1924 have pushed such | startling feats Into the brackground Uli ——— The Maiden City Londonderry, in Ireland. is known as | “The Maiden City,” in allusion to the fact that, although three times be sieged in its turbulent career, It was mever coaguered. wire and for re ! to news- | The Buick Valve-In- Head Engine starts easily —runssmoothly, an exclusive, automat- ic heat control on the carburetor that takes the ordinary annoy- ance out of cold weath- <<» One proof of Buick is in cold weather starting and driving S. J. ULRICH 10 RR Elizabethtown, Pa. When better automobiles are built, Buick will bui'd th em ME ER Everybody’s Invited To the regular monthly meeting of the Lancaster Auto Club, at Marietta, Com- munity Hall, Friday Evening. Jan. 16th AT 8:00 O'CLOCK The meeting is open to the public, both men and women. No admission. No collection, ‘The chief topic of discussion will be the proposed bill to be through his invention | EE EOE introduced in the Legislature whereby the city of Philadelphia is to receive $4,000,000 of the State Automobile License Fund, and delermine whether Lancaster County Motorists favor giv- ing the Quaker City such privilege as against every other city. WILLIS R. KNOX, Executive Secretary. 1D 3 0 = . 1 i $0000 © i i Quality Counts! in every line of merchandise, We have gained field be- American This is an accepted fact and it is particularly applicable in foods. leadership in the grocery and meat cauge the to know that in the Stores quality comes first, last and foremost, our supreme public has come sales, and this is stocks at all times. Our low prices mean rapid double assurance of the freshness of our Visit one of our Stores this week-end and prove to your own sat- isfaction that it Pays to Trade— Where Quality Counts and Your Money Goes the Furthest! A Worth While Prune Sale! Our Regular 15s Extra Large Santa Clara Our Regular 10c¢ Large Santa Clara PRUNES PRUNES 3 lbs 25c¢ 2 lbs 25¢ An exceptionally fine lot of prunes, grown, ripened and packed in Sunny California. Eat more Prunes for Health's Sake! VICTOR BREAD Loaf 6c Big, Golden Brown loaves with that Home-Made taste. REGULAR 9c LINIT pkg 6¢ Fabrics starched the Linit way look almost like new. GOLD SEAL FLOUR 12 Ib bag 63c For better baking use Gold Seal Flour. A bag convinces. Gold Seal OATS 3 pkgs 25¢ Sweet Tender PEAS 2 cans 25c RICH CREAMY CHEESE Ib 29c Serve Baked Macaroni and Cheese—very tasty and nourishing. Large Florida ORANGES doz 25¢ Selected fruit. Thin skin and very juicy. Quality Canned Fruits and Vegetables! Asco California Peaches ...... “a big can 29¢ Fancy California Peaches ......... big can 23¢ ASCO California Cherries .......... can, 23c, 33¢ ASCO California Apricots ........... tall can 15¢ Fancy California Apricots ........... big can 23¢ Hawaiian Sliced Pineapple ......... can 19¢, 30c Hawaiian Crushed Pineapple ........ can 19¢, 23¢ Hawaiian Pineapple, (broken slices) ..big can 25¢ ASCO Crushed Corn... venue can 17¢ ASCO Sifted Peas ........ can 20c, 25¢ ASCO Sour Brout big can 12%%¢c Cooked Sweet Potatoes .............. big can 18¢ MOUNT JOY, PENNA. ©® —" @ PORE!