The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, December 07, 1927, Image 3

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, trolley at Florin, all

OWL-LAFFS

|
0
TA
[ae
TA
—————
El a]
ds
—
PE —y
=|
bs
BY
O. W. L.

(On With Laughter)
————

5
If I ever wisted for a loos: brick
or a lot of stae
Sunday cvening.
most miserable
it was on
After we had the
day of weather to
date this winter, 2 f=llow came up
town thru the sleet, rain, snow anil
wind and was whistling,
the End of a Perfect Day.”

Of course I guess the
are all full or he
ning at large.
asylums
wouldn't be run-
From the price of eggs nowadays,
poultry must have formed a trust
but with all that the fowl business
continues,
A certain family here had com-
pany Sunday night and as a part
of the entertainment they tuned in
“This is


>



One of our young fellows who
owns a $3.50 Ford is now saving
his money to buy a $10.00 license
between this and January the first.
Over at Darrenkamp’s the other
evening Abe Haines said—“I'm go-
ing home.” Some other fellow asked
him why and Abe said—*‘“Because
I live there.”
At one of our restaurants a
customer said—‘“Do you charge for
the water in this coffee?”
The clerk said—*“No
thrown in.”
that’s

The only difference between a
gambler and an unsuccessful busi-
ness man is that the gambler knows
his oats and the U, B. M. owes his
notes,
one of our
I asked flappers if
she was a sailor's sweetheart. She
said—*“Not me. I don’t like salt
l with my mush.”
Roy Sheetz was telling the fel-
lows that after a man serves ten
years in the air service he is retir-
ed as a colonel but I believe that
after three years most of them re-
tire as angels.
They tell me a
boy who went home and told his
mother that his dad was the best
swimmer he ever saw. When the
wife said he couldn’t swim a stroke
the kid said—‘“Well he may not be
able to swim much but he can stay
under water longer'n any ome I
ever saw. He dove into the creek
at noon today and hasn’t come up
for air yet.”
story about a


\
Some of the hunters were saying
that it was so very cold in the
camps last week but Art Burrell
said—*“When it gets so cold that
you must take the thermometer into
the house to keep it from freezing
you can talk.”
A fellow with a $15 second-hand
car went to Roher's garage and was
trying to fill several old tires with
air. Joe Henderson asked him what
he was doing and the chap said—
“I'm putting new air in these tires.
The old air must be worn out be-
cause it won’t hold the tires up any
longer.”

teachers back at
heard Monday:
ents hash Bacon.”
“That’s nothing;
ways roast Lamb.”
my pupils al-

Florin, has a tough time of it.
Every time he thinks things are go-
ing smoothly he gets another job
and goes to the wall,
Two fellows up at Lee’s: “Pretty
little girl you was out with last
night.” “Yes, she was pretty little.”

Funny how times have changed. A WISE OWL
There was a time when girls wore Tei ————
their stockings out at their knees “WINTER”
but now they wear their knees out B;
of their stockings, C. WILBUR GROFF
: Elizabetht . Pa.
But at that any considerate mot- atowh, a
orist wiil give a woman half of the
road if he knows which half she
wants,
Winter has come with her train of
cold weather,
This is the season we cuddle
to-gether,
She’s taken
our trees,
And made the young
their knees.
I heard a lady ask another how
to make a marshmalirw float and
she said—*“You don’t have to, they
will anyway.”
the leaves off all of
ladies cover
irl in the Junior 5 :
pase no dl] dress | Take for instance the garden things
and when complimentea upon it|, T3re
That were lately present are no
longer there,
Soon we will have
snow,
That causes the band so’s that
nothing can grow.
she said—*“Yes, One day my mother
S ight ke it.”
sat up three nights to make i the wold bitter

A fellow went to Charles Gar-
ber’s tonsorial parlor recently and
said—“Do I need a neck shave?”
Charles said—*‘“No but your face
needs a haircut.” It makes us get out our overcoats
now,
And no longer

Some of the people who thought permits us to wipe


“It’s a disgrace the way my stud-
Al Fike, the paper hanger up at |e! in a clean,
> THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
This conversation between two | DEALERS ADVISED TO LEAVE
school was over- | INSPECTOR’S STAMP ON MEAT
| ei
An efficient inspection service is
| maintained by the United States
Government to assure the meat
buyer that he is getting a sound,
wholesome product that was prepar-
sanitary meat-pack-
ing establishment, Meats which pass
) the rigid Government inspection
| are marked by a stamp “U. S.
| Insp’d & P’sd.” “The stamp is ab-
| solutely harmless,” the United
| States Department of Agriculture
| declares in commenting on reports
| that dealers frequently cut it off
of carcasses and also retail cuts
of meat. The marking fluid is a
vegetable coloring material made
of approved ingredients and is as
harmless as fruit juice. The inspec-
tion stamp is put on all wholesale
cuts of inspected beef, veal, pork,
lamb and mutton, and is the United
States Government’s assurance that
the meat was from a healthy anim-
al and was preparel iin a strictly
sanitary manner. The Government
inspectors first examine the live
animals and follow through each
process of preparing fresh meats
or meats products for market,
This protection, which the United
States Department of Agriculture
provides under authority from Con-
gress, enables consumers to disting-
uish properly inspected meat from
that which was not slaughtered and
prepared under such a safeguard.
Consumers, therefore, should re-
quest dealers not to cut off the
inspection stamp, since its removal
destroys the official assurance as to
the meat’s wholesomeness.
ee an erm



their radio. After listening to a they were buying orange groves in sweat from our brow, When building a grandstand
variety program for over an hour I told Hod Mumma it would be | Florida about a year ago are re-| These are the signs that tell us|engineers must make allowance for
the guest said—*“Don’t you ever|fine if he gave modern dancing to have gotten lemons. the year, ‘the weight of excitement’ or the
have to change records on that|lessons and he said—“I wouldn't Are you an Elk? Joy to you all! Cause Winter is| additional strain given when excit-
machine?” like that, It’s a shaky business.” I Moose be. here. ed spectators jump up and down.
| Loi I antl
"i











BELOW YOU WILL
OR BUSINESS.
FIND LISTED ANYTHING FROM A BUILDING LOT TO A §25,000 MANSION, FARM
IF YOU DON'T SEE LISTED JUST WHAT YOU WANT, CALL OR PHONE, AS 1 HAVE
OTHERS. HERE ARE SOME OF THE BEST BARGAINS IN SMALL FARMS I HAVE EVER OFFERED.
DWELLING HOUSES
No. 230—A beautiful
house on Marietta
corner property with all v
ences, fine garage and price right.
No. 257—A large brick house in
East Donegal, only 100 steps to
trolley stop. Property in fairly
good shape for $3,600.
No. 263—A large frame corner
property in Mount Joy. This is an
ideal business place. Priced to sell.
No. 284—A 9-room frame house
on West Main St., Mt. Joy, steam
heat, electricslights, gas, etc. New
garage. Price $3,500.00.
No. 308—A frame
Marietta Mount Joy.
to a quick buyer.
Rv good brick dwell
ing on New Haven St., Mt. Joy,
electric lights, bath, etc., corner
property.
No. 320—A fine
dwelling house in Florin,
years ago. Modern in every way
with garage, etc. Rents for $20
and $25. Price is only $5,600. Bet~
ter grab this.
No. 321—A fine new 6-room
brick house on West Donegal St.,
Mt. Joy. Price reasonable and pos-
session given in 30 days.
house on
Cheap
frame double
No. 322—A beautiful 11-room
brick mansion dwelling in Florin,
very modern in every way. All
conveniences. Possession in 30 days.
NO. 327—A 7-room frame house
with all conveniences, at Peqguea.
Also garage 16x21. Fine location.
Ideal for club. Only $3,500.
No. 330—A 6-room frame house
No. 206 East Donegal St., Mount
Joy. slate roof, electric lights, ete.,
for only $2,600.00
No. 337—A fine new house on
West Donegal St., Mt. Joy, all con-
veniences and in best of condition
No. 339—A good 21% story
frame house on Main street, Florin
best of shape, 2-car garage.
No. 340—Lot 180x185 on con-
crete highway between Mt. Joy
and Florin on which is one of the
finest and most modern dwellings
I have on my list. Must be seen.
Price below present building cost.
Ng. 341—A fine home along the
modern con-
veniences. Priced to sell.
No. 342—A fine dwelling on New
Haven street, Mt. Joy. Here is a
good home nicely located and cheap
. No. 344—Beautiful frame dwell
ing on West Donegal St., up-to-the-
minute in repair, all conveniences.
Priced to sell.
No. 348—A 21% story frame
dwelling, 6 rooms and bath, electric
new 3!
| lights, slate roof, 2-car stable, cor- | Mt. Joy, gravel soil, frame house, ( diana Co., 75 acres farm land, bal-
frame ner property, Also lot large enough
St., Mt. Joy. for double house. Both front on 175
conveni £5 on Marietta St. Mt. Joy.
Donegal Springs
jacre tract in rear.
|
i
with new
$3,600.00.

No. 349—An 80 ft. front on
Road, Mt. Joy.
New 8 room brick house, all mod-
ern Improvements, Included is an
No. 353—Lot 40x200 at Florin
5-room bungalow. Has
light and heat. Dandy home for
No. 355—A lot 50x200 ft. just
utside Mt. Joy Boro, new 7-room
ouse never occupied, garage, good
vell of water, etc. Half of money
an remain, Possession at once.
Vill sell more land with property if
urchaser desires. Here’s a worth
vhile proposition.
No. 3566—An 8-room frame dwell-
ing and store room on West Main
street, Mt. Joy, large frame stable
for at least 4 cars. Good location
and property in good repair.
No. 3568—A good brick house on
West Main St., Mount Joy. Large
enough for two families.
Nos. 359-360—A very modern
frame doublbe house on Delta St.
Mt. Joy, all conveniences, each side
has garage. Property rents for $70
per month.
No. 361—In Florin, Lot 60x200
feet with very cozy 6-room house
water in house, electric lights, con-
crete walks and porch, extra lot of
fruit trees and shrubbery. Priced
to sell. Possession any time between
now and April 1st.
TRUCK FARMS
No. 107—An 8% acre tract of
land in East Donegal, near Reich's
church, frame house, tobacco shed,
barn, etc. $4,000.00.
No. 183—2 acres and, rather
hilly, large double house, fine for|
poultry.
No. 184—13 acres of sand and |
limestone in Rapho, frame house,
good bank barn, fruit, running wa-
ter. 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.
No. 270—A fine truck farm of a
 



few acres near Milton Grove, good
i large shed, poultry
LH onal 500.

miles from
i ter, fruit, ete.
barn, etc. A dandy truck farm. |ance timber, good buildings, young
’
Don’t miss this. Price...$2,200.00 | orchard, fine water and close to mar-
: i £ £ slightly | kets, schools and churches.
or Pr oe Fors AY Sioa | No. 179—A farm of 107 acres of
place for trucking and poultry. | best one in East Done-
: | gal, good buildings, running water,
PRL me 2-acre tract in Mt. neadow, ample shedding for tobacco.
10-room frame house | y
frame stable. ete.. for only $2,000. |. No. 201—104 acres in the heart of
No. 352—A dandy truck, fruit]
East Donegal tobacco district, fine
buildings, shedding for 12 acres of
and poultry farm of Jacob Stauffer, |i pa qo.
This is a real! farm.
near Sunnyside School, in "nN; "o33 A g5.acre farm in the
township. Here’s a snap for SOME | heart of East Donegal, good build-
one. | ings and land. Price right.
No. 364—Six acres 19 prs. land | No, 274—A 120-acre farm of
on outskirts of Mt. Joy, semi-bun-| pest limestone soil, near Newtown,
galow house, all modern conven-|j4 acre meadow, good buildings, in-
iences, 9 poultry houses, abundance | brick house, can hang 12
of fruit, will sell with or without | acres tobacco, best of water. No
poultry equipment. Here’s a fine |potter tobacco yielder in the
proposition, as a truck or poultry | county. Price...$135.00 Per Acre.
farm. | No. 294—An 85-acre farm of
gravel land, barn and tobacco shed
MEDIUM SIZED FARMS | Fike new, brick house, new silo, new
No. 210—31 acre-farm near Mar- | try house, only 2% miles north
ietta and Lancaster pike, good ¢ropb-| or" Mt Joy on hard road. Price
per, lots of fruit, excellent tobaceo | gg 5,
and truck farm. Only $4,000. | *"No. 323—A 68-acre farm in Mt.
No 260—A 38-acre farm at|y, yup “half a mile from Mt. Joy.
railroad station 6 miles from York. Price veoy reasonable,
12 room brick house, bank barn, | Naso Farm of 112 acres

tobacco shed, 2 lime Kkilnes, ete. | o gravel soil, good house, barn,
An excellent propesition, Price; hacco shed,
$20,000. | 15 acres woodland,
No. 277—25 Acres gravel and |
sand "land near Sunnyside School,
7 room frame house, barn, tobacco BUSINESS STANDS
near Green Tree church, good soil, | buildings, contracts, ete.
bank barn, 11 room house, fine wa-
$9,600.00. stand located on
stone land in heart of East Done
gal, extra fine buildings in Al
shape, best small farf I offered in
years. Located on macadam high-
way. Price only $8,500.00. | at Marietta.
No. 351—A 60-acre farm along delay.
state highway east of Middletown, |
in Dauphin Co. Here’s a very cheap | office, dwelling, etc.
farm for some one. Let me show!a country town.
you this bargain, ing proposition.
LARGE FARMS
No. 138—An 81-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. 144—A 125 acre
best land in Lane. Co. All
ings in Al shape, Located on
state highway and near a town.
Don’t need the money but owner,
does not want responsibility.
ronage. About a
ry now in operation including 63%
| acres land, house, barn, crusher,
horses, 2 trucks, all tools, orders,
ete.
a money maker.
farm of No. 334—A fine
build- | stand and dwelling on East Main
St., Mount Jgv,
| gar, tobacco
‘session any
No. 362

















A
warehouse

No. a farm in Ip-
| J
a. \
\
silo, running water, tween Mt. Joy and Florin,
Price reason-|
) able. |
shedling. Gool water. For ai Ng, g3—The entire concrete block| No. 363—A 13-acre tract of
quick sale will take...... $4,000.00 |.) facturing plant of J. Y. Kline | woodland in West Hempfield twp.
No. 278—30 acres of sand land at Florin, together with all stock, | Very low price for a quick sale.

y Price very low. |
All farm land. Price | NO. 324—A good general store!it. on the P. R. R.
5 the square in a|Joy has many advantages and cen
No. 300--18 acres of best lime-| goood country town. Excelient pat- |
$15,000 stock.|in the town
Rent is $30 with a long lease. |
NO. 325—A good garage, dwell-|one entire block along Penna. R. R.
ing, gas station and a car agency!siding in Mount
Only $3,000.00. Don’t
NO. 326—A General Store, post |
Only store in!16x26 ft.
Here's a good go0- (small business.
No. 332—A large limestone quar-!

Better grab this quick as its]
brick business |
, old established ci-{ eral bear pens on farm, Game
S- | such as bear, deer, pheasants, grey
{and black squirrel, porcupines, ete.

lights, steam heat and R. R. siding.
Lot adjoining included. Price low.
BUILDING LOTS
No. 57—A b-acre tract in the
boro of Mount Joy, fine large lot
and would be a money-maker for
trucking or speculating on build-
ing lots. su
No. 163—A fine building lot on
East Main street. Price right.
No. 171—Large nunber of build-
ing lots between Mt. Joy and Flor-
in. I can give you any number
of lots at any location. at almost
any price.
No. 297—A 50 ft. corner lot on
Columbia Ave., Mt. Joy. Price $350.
No. 306—Fine building lot front-
ing 45 ft. on the east side of
Lumber St., Mt. Joy. $500.
No. 310—A 40-ft. lot on Walnut
St., Mt. Joy. If you want a cheap
lot get busy.
No. 335—Lot 100 ft. front and
540 ft. deep on concrete highway
between Mt. Joy and Florin.
No. building lots on
west side of concrete highway be-
tween Mt. Joy and Florin. One 60x
200 ft. $600. Three 40x200 at $15
per foot.
JUST LAND
No. 169—A 15-acre tract be-
A real
investment to some speculator.
No. 319—A plot of about an acre
more of ground in Mt. Joy

or
|A good investment for someone.
FACTORY SITES
No. 10—A tract fronting 107
siding in Mt.
best
trally located. One of the
No. 279—A large trdet “covering !
Joy. A wonder-
ful location at a right price.
No. 345—A plot of ground along
the railroad with concrete building |
Fine for storage or]
No further use.
. I also have a number of proper-
ties that owners do not care to
have advertised. If you don’t find
what you want in this list, call and
see me. I have it.
HUNTING CAMPS
No. 262—A tract of 125 acres
of farm and timber land, house,
barn, ete. Half is farm land. Sev-




An ideal
hunting camp. Price
Ba’ 00.00. :
DR. MOHLER PROMISES WAR
ON LIVESTOCK PARASITES
Parasites injure livestock on the
farms and ranches of the United
States probably to the extent of
hundreds of millions of dollars an-
nually. This is the conclusion
reached by Dr. John R. Mohler,
Chief of the Bureau of Animal In-
dustry, United States Department
of Agriculture, after reviewing the
evidence collected by his bureau.
“The inroads of parasites, especial
ly the internal kinds,” he says,
“constitute a livestock problem of
great importance. Losses from par-
asites have been tolerated too long
and accepted too complacently. The
livestock industry can not afford
to let this situation continue, espec-
ially when certain parasites are ex-
acting more and more tribute—
more and more blood money.”
As important pests Doctor Moh-
ler mentions the nodular worms at-
tacking sheep, which have been so
troublesome in the South and now
are spreading to the Middle West;
the liver fluke in the Rocky Moun-
tain States and on Pacific coast;
the kidney worms so widespread in
hogs; stomach worms in sheep;
round worms, tapeworms, and lung
worms, and the better known, be-
cause more obvious, ticks, lice, and
mites. The only way in which
these parasitic losses can be stopped
Doctor Mohler believes, is through
thorough and painstaking research
work to reveal the life histories of
the parasites and discover points at
which they can be attacked most
successfully. This research should
then be followed by campaigns of
education among livestock growers
for practical application.
As an example of the enormous
reproductive capacity of some of
the parasites, Doctor Mohler says
intes-
more
a female round worm in the
tines of a hog may produce
than 25,000,000 eggs.
These parasites do injury, as is
commonly supposed, by sucking the
blood and by inflicting pain and ir-
ritation which interfere with the
animal’s rest and feed. But the
injury does not cease with this.
Some parasites produce poisons.
Others make openings in the flesh
and tissue which allow bacteria to
enter. At times the accumulation
of parasites in the body may be so
great as to prevent the lungs, the
kidneys, or the alimentary canal
from functioning as they should.
That the parasites are causing
concern to stockmen is indicated by
the number of inquiries received by
the Department of Agriculture. The
experts of the department have de-
vised as excellent system of sanita-
tion for control of round worms in
swine, and Doctor Mohler says “we
are planning to augment the pres-


ent force of workers and to pro-
vide means and facilities for more
research with the hope of finding
better methods for checking the
inroads of the more serious para-
sites for which present control
methods are not fully effective.”
co —

CHILDREN’S GARMENTS
BEING MADE AT HOME
Women who might be a little
doubtful of their skill in making
their own clothes or those of other
adults in the family nevertheless,
make many garments for children.
Some interesting points in this
connection were brought out in
the course of a survey of home
sewing practices carried on by the
Bureau of Home Economics, United
States Department of Agriculture.
Among some 2,000 farm women
who returned the questionaire,
approximately half reported having
no children under 15 years of age,
but many women said they made
garments for children even when
they were none of the family. Mere
speculation might suggest that pos-
sibly a number of women get much
enjoyment out of making pleasing
garments for little people, or that
those to whom sewing is a means
of artistic expression find this an
outlet for energies they hesitate to
apply to adult garments.
The figures brought out by the
survey, however, are confined to the
economic reasons for home sewing
for children. As the highest per-
centages of women making each
garment are foun either in the
$1,000 to $1,999 income group or
the next above it, $2,000 to §

it would seem that considerable
thought possible if the
home,
that
for
be cut from
elonging to
savings are
children’s clothes are
It must be borne
many articl Foi
children’s
parts of
large




* persons, So that by

remodel



time and labor to


more than 75 per cent of the







en were remodelir garments for |!
some member of the fami N
doubt large i
one for the children,
In all income g 1
of women making s cloth
5 decreases as he com-
munit words, |
fewer women
rural districts
ren, perhaps
ection of clothing
in the price range t
ere ee nA eee
A few breeds of poultry, the Bar-
red and White
Rhode Island Red, White Wyan-
dotte, and Single-Cpmb White Leg-
horn, are kept do b greater exten
than all othg nd varieties
combined, its of
U. S. De
say, that
bine ecg
all oth
gaing
been
othe














using her |
does | &
wom- | 2

Plymouth Rocks, |
PAGE THREPF
New Code Makes
Definitions Clear
REGISTRATION OF MOTOR VE-
HICLES DISCUSSES FIRST
THREE ARTICLES OF NEW
LAW FOR AUTO RE-
GISTRATION
If the Commonwealth of Pennsyl-
vania were to swear in a policeman,
clothe him in robes of authority
and place a shield on his brest, yet
fail to instruct him just where his
jurisdiction lay and over what he
was to exercise his authority, it
would be rather a ridiculous pro-
ceeding, The same could be said
about the Vehicle Code if it did not
contain careful and thorough de-
finitions of the vehicles it is to reg-
ulate, This has been the chief fail-
ing of the present and earlier leg-
islation purporting to regulate
motor vehicle licenses and traffic.
Every vehicle, whether or not it
be propelled by motor power, steam
or horse-drawn is a given definition
and a place in the Vehicle Code.
Subsection (a), defining ‘Vehicle’
includes every device in, upon or
by which any person or property
may be drawn upon a public high-
way with the exception of traction
engines, tractors, steam shovels,
road rollers, agricultural machin-
ery, devices moved by human pow-
er or used exclusively upon station-
ary rails or tracks. The very import-
ant provision is made that a bicycle
or a ridden animal shall be deemed
a vehicle.
A motor vehicle
cle herein defined which is self
propelled, except traction engines,
steam shovels, road rollers, agricul-
tural machinery and vehicles which
move upon or are guided by a
track or travel through the air.”
This last leaves out airplanes.
is “every vehi-
Dealer Is Defined
Dealers’ License Plates may be
used by “Any persons, firm, cor-
poration or association engaged in
the purchase and sale of motor ve-
hicles, trailers, and semi-trailers
who has an established business.”
Abuse of dealers’ plates under the
present law was frequent because
the law did not provide an effective
means of regulating their use.
A significant definition is that for
an Intersection, This is “The area
embraced within the prolongation
of the lateral curb lines of two or
more highways which join one an-
other at an angle, whether or not
one such highway crosses the
other.” The definition will come
into play often in enforcing rules
of the road, which forbid passing
at an intersection and make certain
other provisions.
Careful distinction is drawn be-
«ween Business Districts and Resid-
ence Districts, for the purpose of
certain 1egulatory measures, part-
icularly relating to speed within a
ouui-up section,
I'o be termed a- Business Dis-
trict fifty per cent or more of the
Irontage contiguous to the highway
for a distance of 300 feet must be
occupied by buildings in use for
business.
A Residence District must com-
prise a stretch of 300 feet or more
closely built up with dwellings and
buildings in use for business.
: When parked, a vehicle is stand-
Ing upon any highway taking up or
setting down passengers or merch-
andise,
Should any provisions of the
Vehicle Code be held unconstitut-
ional, neither the Code as a whole
nor any other provision will be
affected by the judgment.
Titles Diminish Theft
No drastic changes are made in
the title provisions, although the
old act as a whole has been repeal-
ed and supplanted
clear cut
which
by an orderly,
procedure is Article II,
prescribes the manner in
which vehicles shall be titled, It
simply takes the entire Common-
wealth out of the stolen car market.
Cars titled in Pennsylvania are not
easily disposed of in other states,
especially in those operating under
1 title act. For that matter the
regular broadcast of flyers and re-
ports made by the Bureau of Motor






Vehicles cover the United States
so that the thief st devise a
clever scheme’ to obt even flimsy
title paper for the sale of his loot.
More foreign-owned cars are re-
stored to their owners by Pennsyl-
vania each month than are stolen
is this Commonwealth and recover-
S are wary
a Pennsyl-

vania Certificate of
Article III is
the title procedure

related to
voted to
ufacturer’'s
led



efaced engine
serial numbers



nformation for
person in whose
| custody the vehicle is found or the
{ supposed owner. The vehicle shall
be retained in the court's custody
i until the person arrested shall have
| been found guilty asd the fines and
| costs paid.
If the ownership of the car is
hot established to the courts satis-
action, it may be confiscated and
sposed of, the proceeds to be
ged in paying the fines and costs
prosecution. Balance! remaining
paid to the State Treasury.
Sios is made that if the

x d and file i
| the arrest of the



is title to ‘the vehicle, it wd
eturned to, him,
owner shall appear and estab-



i
EB