- WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1927 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. JED 1) 10 100 JULY REDUCTION SALE Be Sure to Get Your Share of These Bargains At BISAdOP’S 30 West Main St. MOUNT JOY, PA. WOMEN'S OXFORDS LOT OF LADIES’ OXFORDS $3.98 and $4.98. $1 25 a pair Good Year Welt Were Now LOT OF MEN'S AND BOYS’ CANVAS SHOES 4 © $1.75 Reduced sizes. Mostly all from $3.98 to $2.50 a pair SPECIAL Women’s One-Strap Pumps $2.50 + pair LADIES’ ONE STRAP PUMPS A LOT OF LADIES’ AND CHIL- DREN'S CANVAS SHOES With Crepe Soles from 98c to 98¢ to $1.60 pair at pair SRE) A Wonderful Bargain I have just been given the sale of one of the “most value for the money” realty bargains I have ever offered. Read this over carefully. 18 ACRES BEST LIMESTONE LAND With buildings second to none. This ideal farm is located half a mile north of Maytown, along the macadam highway leading to Elizabethtown. Large frontage on highway. Farm divided into four fields, all level land, good cropper. The buildings, which are in most excellent condition, are’ 9-Room Frame House and Summer House, all under slate roof, good heating plant, large front porch, open lawn, Bank Barn for 8 head, concrete forebay, Pig Sty, dandy Poultry “Houses, New Garage, excellent water, Two Fruit Orchards, an abundance of Berries, ete. All Buildings newly painted. This farm is located in the heart of East Donegal township and is one of the best and most beautiful that I have ever offered. The buildings could not be duplicated for $10,000. This is an excellent tobacco producer and can hang one field of a crop. Here comes the shock. The Price is Only $8,500.00 = and half the money can remain at 5 closest investigation. Jno. E. Schroll Phone 41R2 MOUNT JOY, PA percent. Will bear - LOUDON WO » General Electrical Repairing Bell Work Repair Washing Machines All Kinds 3 Electric Fans of Vacuum Cleaners Electrical Lamps Equipment Prices Reasonable. All Work Done Promptly. Work Called for and Delivered D. W. STRAYER MT. JOY, PA. 113 Fairview St. - Abandoned Farm Why the number of abandoned farms in Pennsylvania is steadily in- creasing is worrying vania Department of Agriculture to the point where it has started a special inquiry through its census enumerators to ascertain the princi- pal causes. Some of the officials of the de- partment are of the opinion the a- outcome of workings law, They are of the opinion that many of the farms never were suffic- iently rich to contain “pay but should have been left in timber. | Others believe failure to use fer-! tilizers systematically has been an | important contributing cause. Soil! was permitted to be “worked out” | and necessary chemical elements | were not replaced. | A third group contends that farm taxation has reached the point where taxes are confiscatory, and the farmer is surrendering rather than continuing to fight uneven odds Records in the "department show all may be partly right. The sur vey’s purpose is to establish exactly what the facts are. All that is known definitely thus far is that in the last six years the number of farms which have been abandoned in Pennsvlvania has doubled. Each year finds an additional 100- | 000 acres, which had been under | cultivation the year before, deserted ! with little growing but weeds. | 13,162 Farms Idle | The latests records of the Depart- | ment on the subject show 13,162 | Pennsylvania farms either were un- | occupied, or were idle but occupied | by persons not engaged in agricul- | ture. In other words, one of every fifteen farms of the State has ceased | to function. It shows that 1,164,000 acres for- merly under cultivation, are unpro- ductive now. This is one acre of every fourteen acres of farm land. | Were these 1,164,000 acres un- der cultivation and of average fer-| tility and accessibility, they would be worth $89,628,000, for improved land operated fog farm purposes is estimated to be worth $77 an acre. | | | | A history of some of the aban- doned farms appears among scat- tered records of the Department. They show that total abandonment a very slow process, or astep taken with much reluctance. An- notations of reasons show some eco- | nomic condition brings the condition to pass, | The records show 1S farms in vary- | ing degrees of abandonment. | They show 5,643 farms have been | entirely abandoned, the farm houses vacant, the fields unplowed. These farms, estimated to contain 500,000 ‘acres, have passed into history as actual farms, for agricultural oper- | ations have been discontinued and | probably will remain so. In many instances, the dwellers of the farm- | houses who tilled the soil, have gone to cities in search of more remun- erative employment. There is another class containing | 5,911 farms at the last recording and estimated to contain 506,000 acies. These are partly operated. rangement, On 1,608 other farms, 148,000 acres are under operation, but not | by persons living in the farm houses. The dwellers either are retired or work in nearby towns. At least, they are non-agricultural inhabi- tants. The Department’s that, or records show exclusive of housgs on partly fully operated farms, occupied by non-agriculturists, over 13,000 farm houses approximately 6.6 per cent. of the total number in the State—which once sheltered fami- lies engaged in agriculture, are now vacant or occupied by persons not engaged in that occupation. Where Soil Is Thinnest The geographical distribution of abandoned farms would see mto in- dicate that where the soil is thinnest or where the farms are nearest in dustrial centers, abandonment in- creases unless the farms are adja- cent to good roads connecting them to profitable city markets; and that | where soil is richest and specialized crops are produced by intensive farming, the greater proportion of farmers retain their grasp on the plow-handle. In the range of counties that sweeps through the wooded and rocky hills of the Northern Tier across the antracite belt, and into some of the industrial counties a- long the northern part of the Dela- ware Basin, the highest proportior abandoned farms is found. In twenty counties, one farm of every ten is vacant, idle, or occupied by persons not engaged in agriculture This proportion, fifty per cent. high er than the average for the State. | is found in the district including McKean, Elk, Cameron, Potter, | Clinton, Tioga, Lycoming, Bradford. | Sullivan, Susquehanna, Wayne, Lack- | awanna, Wyoming, Luzerne, Schuyl- | kill, Carbon, Monroe, Northampton and Lehigh counties. of the conuties immediately north and northeast of Pittsburgh, per cent. of all farms are falling into disuse. Some are industrial counties. This district includes Beaver, Lawrence, Butler, Clarion Armstrong, Jefferson and Indiana counties. In the grape section, Erie, Craw- ford, Mercer, Venango, Forest and Warren counties, the percentage is the Pennsyl-: dirt” | 1 | The next highest percentage is in| ual, is very good There 8.8 !The straw will also be Situation In Pennsylvania Being Studied Number Has Doubled in the Last Six Years; Taxation Blamed By Many For Fact That One of Every Fifteer Lies Unoccupied 7.2 approximately aban- doned. percent. Although the ‘large central sec- (tion, with many mountains and [many rough mountain roads, might |be expected to rank high in aban- donment, only 6 per cent. of the farms there are idle. | The southwestern section, ineclud- ing Allegheny County, and all coun- bandonment represents the natural ties south and southeast to the east- of economic lern Somerset County border, has an average of 4.5 per cent. abandoned. This same percentage holds for the southwestern counties, which include the premier agricultural county, Lancaster, and her fertile neighbor, Berks, and counties which have- a rich market supplying produce for Philadelphia, Abandonment has been slowest in the counties skirting the Maryland line, from York on the east to Bed- ford on the west. There only 23.7 per cent. of the farms are aban- doned. This is the principal apple and peach district of Pennsylvania. Although the record of abandon ment has been grouped by districts in the Department's effort to locate the percentage fluctuates in counties ‘within each district. Department officials are not as yet repared to place a finger on any yne cause or group of causes for forsaking the family farm, Why They “Go To Pot” One of the probable reasons may be a figure hidden away in a statis- tical table which the department prepared for another purpose. It causes, the shows that the gross income of Pennsylvania farms averages be- tween 20 and 25 per cent. of the capital investment. farmer has bought fertilizer, tivated it By the time the and distributed planted his seed and cul- afterwards, pruned his orchards, bought and repaired his machinery, repaired his buildings, paid his taxes, taken his chances with crop failure or damaging storms, harvested his balance, paid shipping costs to market, shared with his tenant or paid costs of farm labor, he finds his net return considerably less than if he left his farm “go to pot” and secured em- ployment in a factory or mill, Inability of aging farmers to get laborers willing to work for farm pay, or to get tenants to operate his farm, while industries pay a higher wage, is another probable cause. I has been listed as the chief cause on a number of the reports which the Department has on file. Another item in another statisti- cal table bobs up to explain why some other farmers give up the ghost. The city motorist rolling along well kept farms along concrete high- ways does not realize that when the 1925 census was taken, three of ev- ery five farms were on unimproved dirt roads and that their inaccessibil- ity to market made their lot harder. In a number of instances refusal of tenants to spend money to ford ize another man's land is reflected in reports that the land was abandoned for agricultural purposes because of low fertility of soil. Farm taxation has occupied the aftention of the Department, which looked for results from a legislative General made In many cases the persons who lived Assembly. The commission a report, but no action was aken, leaving the task to ‘the State in the houses on the farms, have | Tax Commission which now is out left, making arrangements with | ,¢ existence, nearby farmers to till a part of the| pow wages on farms, compared «oil on shares or some other ar- with higher wages in industry, how- ever seemed to form the chief reas- on the farm, which prompted ab probably are best des- cribed by the following excerpts ta- ken at random from Depart- ment’s files of reports on abandoned farms, The reasons the tenants eave task are: for leaving The motives andonment the owners and for quitting their chosen “Short help”; “Low on secure tenants’; soil”: for and ing n ctory’’: old and ean’t get ten ants’’; 5 ano farm and left the v nt one v price for products”; “Poor dings and in need of tenants” Machinery costs | are too high”; “High wages for la- bor"; “Principally for better em- plovment”’ “Out-of-the-way farm-- back from the road”; “Planting for- est trees”; (From Bedford County report); “Rundown and unproduc- tive”; “For speculation— building lots”; “Make more money else- where’; “Fire damaged building, re- pairs cost too much for returns”; “Bad roads--inconvenience”; “Prices too poor to make living”; “Land- lord’s terms too hard”; “Fewer hours elsewhere”, Although the abandonment situ- ation is regarded as serious, i culure in Pennsylvania is far from “going to the ” Ninety-three per cent. of Pennsyl- vania’s farms, or approximately 200,000, are still hard at work turning out food on more than 16,- 000,000 acres. They contain land worth 8$555,- 145,549; buildings worth $615,026,- 005; machinery and implements val- ued at $140,652,293; and livestock worth $149,878,423. A Geen, Very Fine Wheat The wheat crop thruout this seec- on, although a little later than us- . The stand is ex- cellent and heads are well filled. good as the stalks are quite tall. Mr. Samuel Reinhold, near Breneman’s School, gave us two stalks that are 66 and | 67 inches tall. A A The Mt. Joy Bulletin $1.50 per year. The Bulletin is always prompt in the delivery of (all printing. dogs. costs only Ordinarily he is. For Fall Court (From Page One) | Clayton Shenk, Mt. Joy township. John A. Fornhoff, W. Hempfield township. Common Pleas, Oct. 10 Adam Schlossman, West Hemp-' field township. i Ross E. Keller, Elizabethtown. Joseph Tanner, Conoy township. Richard W. Lever, West Donegal ' township. George F. Shultz, Marietta. Albert B. Barr, W. Hempfield twp Common Pleas, Oct. 17 Monroe Gibble, Mt. Joy twp. Ralph M. Nissly, Rapho township! John Rahm, Sr., Mt. Joy. Henry H. Eby, West Hempfield township. Samuel Eby, Salunga. | Miles Backenstoe, Mt. Joy. Stuart Litzberger, Manheim. Amos Risser, Mt, Joy township. Samuel G. Erb, Rapho township. Frederick B. Smith, Conoy twp. Harvey J. Brandt, Manheim. ! Amos H. Gish, W. Donegal twp. | Elmér Strickler, Mt. Joy township. ' THE FARMER { Much has been said, and much more will be said and written be- fore November, 1928, about the poor farmer and his discontent. Pol- iticians are allowing crocodile tears to roll down over plump-jowls they pour out sympathy for farmer in his troubles, and draw| heartbreaking pictures of the dis- tress in the corn belt and in the dry farming States. / Peculiarly encugh, everyone ap- pears to be more wrought up about as the the plight of the farmer than the farmer is. From the diversified, farms of Ohio through the corn] belt and up into the great wheat growing district, the farmer is tuck- | ing the legs of his overalls into his | brogans, settling his old hickory hat! on his hard old head, and chewing | a straw while the plow turns over the richest land in the world. He isn’t satisfied. He never has] been satisfied. He has been through a period of inflation, of deflation, of high land prices, of low prices for | his corn, his wheat, his cattle, and! his hogs. He has fed $1.25 corn into sixteen-cent pork. He has gone through drought, through flood,’ through bool weevil, corn-borer, | wild grass, cyclone, and hail, thru rust and pest; and, instead of grow- | ing discouraged, he climbs into the. old flivver, chugs to town, renews] the mortgage at a higher rate of in-| terest, has Maw sew another patch! on the seat of his overalls, and re-! turns to the plow. His faith in the land, his faith in the country, his faith in the future, may have been jarred, but it is not broken. | Jurors Are Drawn | commodated. Local Doings Around Florin (From Page One) accompanied a number of other guests to Mt. Gretna where they! spent from Friday to Monday. | Mrs. Kate Winters returned to her home here after spending two weeks at Manheim, as guests in the | family of her son, Charles Winters. | The contractor is making good | progress on the Peris building which | is being erected in the east end of | town. The third story is now under | construction, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Geyer, Mr. | and Mrs. Harvey Geyer and children | spent the last week at Altoona as guests in the family of Mr. and Mrs Wm. Bennett. Mr. sition at Moose’ ed the general s Schaadt, in this place. Mr. Forney will take charge tomorrow, Thurs- day. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dick and Miss Esther Mumma, of this place, and Misses Naomi and Sarah Dick, of Lemoyne, visited Mr. and Mrs. Wal ed his po- and purchas- ter Myers, at Greencastle over the week end. C. S. Wachstetter’s entertained these guests over the 4th: Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Shickley and son, Stan- ton, and Miss Florence Chase, of Glenolden; the Misses Rosetta and Mary Shickley, of York, and Harry Hess, of Lancaster. | Gentlemen's After Shaving Powder c Is specially made for men’s use; it's a creamy tint that cannot be seen when used , and it’s only very slightly perfumed—in fact it’s’ a man’s tale. Every man should have a can handy. E. W. GARBER The Store MOUNT JOY, PA, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Garber and two daughters, of town; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Garber, of Blain, Pa., and Mr. Paul Diffenderfer, of Mt. Joy, returned from a week’s trip to Oxford, Md., where they caught 175 fish, consisting of ecroakers and spots. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brooks, on the J. S. Carmany farm, west of town, entertained these guests Mon day, July 4th: Mr. William S. Wil- son and five children, of Wilming- ton, Del.; Mrs. Linthurst, Miss Mary Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Wolgemuth and three children, of this place. —— —- —— Bridges Surely Pay During the first year figures just made public claim that 7,863,000 vehicles crossed the Delaware river bridge, at Philadelphia, paying $2,- 100,000. Guess such facts accoypnt for great effort private individuals making to build Columbia, the are a river bridge at License Rush Continues The rush for fishing licenses con- tinued in the ‘county treasurers’ office. One man applied for a hunt- er’s license but he could not be ac- He sends his daughter to the State Nor:al, his son and | somchow, through lean years and| fat, he manages. He raises his tribe | in the fear of God and in the re- spect of authority. to college; Politicians and orators hint dark- ly that he is a bad business man. Business methods with him are simple. His golden rule is to give good measure, his debts, “get as rate on the | pay | interest possible, low an mortgage as and as high a price for the things he grows as the miller, the drover, or the stockyards will pay. He knows it enough; but, having become accustémed to that, he doesn’t complain much—under- standing that, in spite of interfer-| ence by middlemen and agitation by! isn’t prices or to lend him money as tem- porary and believes that his remedy is either to produce at less only expense or to sell at greater profit. He was educated in the little { country school. His ‘mathematics did not raise him into the realm of] unknown quantities, and he is apt| to think that the multiplication table as it was right. The! fact that most of his problems | recent years have been in substrac- o has not convinced | and tion are out of existence. | He is not satified with conditions. is wrong and of conditions— the last economic force to be re-ad- But he is not discouraied, He to complain—at least laid by, the hay wheat tion and division him that addition multiplica- | He knows something that he is a victim justed. nor is he complaining much. hasn’t time until the corn is made, and the Until then the politicians his complaining. harvested. must do Now comes the president of the Northwestern Railroad, himself an After a careful survey of the entire district covered by his railroad, he says that 70 per cent of the agricultural population are for Coolidge. He says that almost 70 per cent of those in his district] —which is the one that has suffer- ed most—believe that the McNary-| Haugen _bill was impractical and] that it would not'have helped them. In other words, the old, hard- headed farmer isn’t fooled. He got wise to the patent-medicine fakers, the lightning-rod swindlers, the get- rich-quick confidence men long ago and politicians attempting to catch him by the same methods make small progress with him. He is too busy plowing to listen. Next winter, around the stove, he may have time to let them sympa- thize with him.—Liberty Magazine. rw locates Ross Bros. umbrella factory at Lancaster, had a $20,000 fire Fourth of July morning. Iowan. politicians, the law of supply and : ay : He 3 : ; demand will at length prevall, He, wy, we are rendering hasn’t much faith in legislation to : “aid” him. He has been “aided” the people of our neighbor- so often from the political stump hood a distinctive service in that he is wise. Besides, he figures, our location. We that God helps him who helps him- a self, and regards any effort to fix are making it our aim to Do Your Neighborhood Banking With Us BAY FOLKS THE HEAT FOLKS ARE BLUE BLOODS, THERE IS NO MIXTURE WITH THE SLATE OR STONE FAMILIES IN OUR FAMILY TREE YES SIR, WERE FFFs=— FIRST FAMILIES OF : THE FOREST Have you ever noticed -the imprint of a leaf on a piece of coal? You'll find one sometimes, a silent reminder of the pre- historic forests from which coal came, Think of the sunshine and centuries of fresh air that must have been absorbed by these forests before they were finally buried! That is the coal we offer vou: wood mixed with con- centrated sunshine and oxy- gen, and pressed for thous- ands of years! No wonder it burns so well. Call the HEAT FOLKS for good, clean coal Danie! M. Woigemuth 151R4 ‘ 174R6 FLORIN. PA. serve those who pass our way. our neigh- get When you are in borhood call on 1 and nr v DD Money Barrels. First National Bank MOUNT JOY, PENNA. $125,000 $229,000 one of our Cap. tal Su wrplus for you THERE'S A SURPRISE in store here thi One of aren) week. | our customers was asked the other {day which had the sweeter dis- | position, blondes or brunettes. “My | wife’s been both and I haven't cooooocog 2 $5.75 Rey Sunday 5 Uxouno Excursions 2 TRIP Atlantic City SUNDAYS July 17th, 31st August 14, 28 SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN Via Delaware River Bridge Standard Time 7:00 A. M. Eastern Leaves Mt. Joy Returning, leaves Atlantic City (S. Carolina Ave.) 6:05 P. M. Pennsylvania Railroad Permanent Waving Genuine Edmond Process $10 EXPERT OPERATORS Milady Beauty Shoppe 70 Main St, E. MT PY Pa | noticed ed. It's easy to tell the difference in - I DAYTON | bound any difference,” he answer- is at tires, be Such superiority admired. Stop Young's Tire Stores 130 East Main Street MOUNT JOY, PA. 11 North Prince Street LANCASTER, PA. to CIGARS, CIGARETTES, AND MAGAZINES Of All Kinds TOBACCO HOME-MADE SOUP By Pint or Quart ICE CREAM, PIES, CAKES AND CANDIES STUMPE’S RESTAURANT 48 East Main Street Advertise in The Bulletin. If you want %o succeed-—Advertise