The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 18, 1928, Image 2

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PAGE TWO


THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18th, 1928

MT. JOY BULLETIN
MOUNT JOY, PA.
J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Propr.
Subscription Price $1.50 Per Year



Six Months ..... 75 Cents
Three Months ...40 Cents
Single Copies ....3 Cents
Sample Copies ..... FREE
Entered at the post office at Mount Joy
as second-class mail matter.
The date of the expiration of your sub-
scription follows your name on the label.
We do not send receipts for subscription
money received. Whenever you remit, see
shat you are given proper credit. We
eredit all subscriptions on the first of each
month,
All correspondents must have their com-
munications reach this office not later than


Monday. Telephone news of importance
between that time and 12 o'clock noon
Wednesday. Changes fur advertisements
must positively reach this office not later
than Monday night New advertisements
inserted if copy reaches us Tuesday night.
Advertising rates on application.
The subscription lists of the Landisville
Vigil, the Florin News and the Mount Joy
Star and News, were merged with that of
+he Mount Joy Bulletin, which makes this
t aper’s circulation about double that of the
ord.nary weekly.
EDITORIAL
A “GRAND OLD MAN” PASSES
America’s “Grand Old Man” is
dead; and never overcrowded ranks
of those who really know how to
get the utmost out of life are de-
pleted by the passing of Chauncey
M. Depew.
Here was a man who made
speeches for Lincoln, but who had
come over into our day with a
viewpoint at 93 years of age that
held to shame that of many men
but half that age. Dephew was a
man old only in body; his spirit was
as young as the new day and as
its contributions to the happiness
of mankind.
Chauncey Depew was an old man


in whose companionship young
men delighted. That is about as
fine a tribute as can be paid one
whose age approached the century
mark.

THRIFT DEFINED
Thrift should not be confused
with miserliness. Thrift is merely
the valuable quality of being able
to spend money wisely and well,
not foolishly. Wise investments
make for sound business, and
greater business. Wise spending
makes for better produets in all
Yines, and increased products. The
miser is one who dislikes spending
‘money no matter how worthily. He
3s one of the greatest enemies of
progress.
The amount of money that is
hidden in a sock under the floor-
board, or buried in the back yard
3s growing less. Instead, it is de-
posited in banks and circulating
in order to produce many times its
face value.
EXPLOITS WITH THE RAKE
April is a month that calls on
the citizens to get out with their
rakes and give the long hair of
the home grounds the combing that
it needs. Raking up the yard is a
very useful and cheerful exercise,
and many citizens would be worth-
ier residents of their home town if
they used this implement with more
vigor about now,
Nature creates a steady product
of refuse in the form of dried grass
and leaves that create an appear-
ance of disorder and decay. The
home place with these accumula-
tions look like the boy who has for-
gotten to brush his hair.
The old grass keéps the young
shoots from coming up, and delays
the progress of that silky looking
lawn you would like, which would
make you home look 50 per cent
better. It is astonishing how
much refuse you can dig out after!
the winter season. Better get
busy, Mr. Householder, and the
improved appearance of your home
will be ample compensation.

THE COLUMBIA BRIDGE
The cobwebs of opposition to the
meeded bridge between Columbia
and Wrightsville have been removed
and there is nothing to hinder an
orderly procedure to get the work
ander way,
The financing of public utilities
has been mostly done, if not by
direct orders, thru methods dictated
by the high priests of the money
oligarchs of Wall Street instead of
in the interests of the common
people, as Abraham Lincoln would
do if he were guiding the ship of
State in these days. We can judge
what he would do by the things he
did when President and in his earl-
ier life. His heart was for human
welfare and as he freed chattle
slaves he would not now sanction
economic hondage for present and
coming generations just as little as
he would consent to pay the Shy-
lock holders of gold 385 per cent
interest during the crisis in the
Civil War. Then he issued the
greenbacks, which saved the Union
and for a short time defeated the
schemes of the profiteers.
The estimates for the bridge
are placed at $3,000,000, and Lan-
. caster*and York county are each
, 0 raise half the sum, $1,500.000.
The constitutional way (U. S.
Constitution) and that used by
Lincoln, during the Civil War,
would be for the Secretary of the
Treasurer to issue to each county
$1,600,000 in legal tender money,
take bonds of the counties as se-
curity for that amount and let
them repay it in installments until
the full amount is returned to the
treasury, when the bonds would be
returned ard the bridge freed from
toll the same as the highway. By
that method a lower toll charge
‘gould be esablished, .or, if the
higher rate vere charged, it could
sooner be made a free bridge.
Another method would
es of credi in denominations
units equalling a dollar, 2 units,
mits, 10 units, 20 units and the
of half a unit, a fourth, a
perhaps one twentieth,
ent of % nickle.
issue $1,500,000 re-
3 would cir-
for each ceainty to issue certi- | spend his money here,
RHEEMS
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Klugh, of
West Donegal announce the birth
of a bouncing baby boy, who shall
be known as Morris, Jr.
Mrs. Alida Greider and the Mar-
tin Cope family are quite busy ar-
ranging their flower farms located
along the state highway at Rheems.
Chester Rehrer the famous paper

hanger and room decorator from
Elizabethtown transacted business
at the Rheems Post Office last
Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gerlach
flitted into the new brick house
built by J. L. Garber along the
trolley road east of Rheems at the
Colebrook road.
William Hess and force of con-
tractors from Elizabethtown, com-
pleted two artistic jobs at Rheems
in a very short period of time.
Church of the Brethren held
their regular evening services at
their Rheems church last Sunday.
In the morning they worshiped at
their Florin house with a large at-
tendance.
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Kraybill, of
Mount Joy, and Mrs, A. S. Bard,
of Rheems spent last Sunday after-
noon at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
E. E. Risser, at Lawn. Mr. Risser
has been confined to the house
with illness the past m.nth,
The Rheems quarries and the
Heisey Bros. Sand & Stone Quar-
ries are in full operation with a
large demand for crushed stone to
make necessary repairs to the mud
roads and for concreting founda-
tions for new houses and extensive
improvements at various places.
Charles Ricedorf, the Rheems
farmer who was in the 450 bushel
of potatoes per acre class in 1927,
contemplates reaching the 600 bu-
shel class for 1928 by making
special effort in preparing the soil,
planting certified seed on eleven
acres of sod that he plowed last
fall,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Lehigh
entertained the following guests
at their home at Rheems last Sun-
day: Mr. and Mrs. Christian Wittle
and children, Mearle and Loretta,
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Ebersole and
«on Kenneth, of Elizabethtown;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rudisill, of
Dover, Pa.,
| A pleasant birthday surprise was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Lehigh at Rheems in honor
of Mrs. Ella Lehigh, tendered by
the young women’s Bible class of
the St. Paul's United Brethren Sun-
day school at Elizabethtown, with
Harry Hoffman, Mrs. J. W. Fearn,
Miss Mary Fuller, Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Lehigh and daughter, Mary
Ellen,


Better Grab This
[f there is any one who wants a
good paying business in this section,
here it is. A large limestone quar-
ry with house, barn, crusher, horses,
trucks, all tools, etc., now in opera-
tion to be sold. Possession any
time. Don fool around if you are
interested, Call phone or write Jno.
E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. Phone 41R2. tf
rel AE rece
Grow A Ton Litter
If you have a litter of pigs or
several litters nominate one or all
for the 1928 Keystone Ton Litter
Club. Your county agent will help
vou and give you some good feed-
ing combinations for profitable
pork production.



{ culate as currency and be cancelled
whenever received for toll and
when all would be paid in the
bridge would be freed.
EVERYBODY BENEFITS
The proposition of “trading at
home” has been too often constru-
ed for the help of the merchant a-
lone. There is no great economic
fallacy. The merchant may gain
the first or primary benefit; the
result may show up first in his
own cash register; but by no means
is the “business man’ the sole heir

of local patronage. We are all
“business” people. It is a broad
term, and includes those who toil
or add anything to the total of hu-
man welfare.
The merchant, the banker, the
farmer, the house wife, the teacher,
the preacher, the lawyer, the doct-
or, the laborer, the contractor, in
short—*‘the butcher, the baker, the
| candlestick maker” are all in the
same class when it comes to making
Mount Joy what it should be. Set
any one of these trades or pro-

fessions going and all the rest are
benefitted all the way down the
line, If one prospers, the others
he deals with or pays wages to are
helped accordingly. It means more
savings, more bank deposits and
more business,
We are living in an age of keen
competition with the big cities.
That the large city has its advant-
ages and accomodations, all will
admit. But it has its disadvant-
ages. If life is to survive in its
fulness, and richness and culture
in the suburban and rural sections,
and smaller cities and towns of
this country, the economic side of
| the question must be given first
consideration. Without economic
{ prosperity all would have to move
out,
The business of the people here
| is to do business here, if it can be
{ done with reason and propriety.
| And we believe it can. Every doll-
ar spent in town makes it that
much easier for the other fellow to
and so on,
like any other cumulative dividend.
Investing in your home town is
like getting compound interest,
with the privilege of cashing in on
the principal. Tt may not be pos

Each i sible to supply every need at home
but a good policy is to try “home”
first.
the following members present:
Mrs. Anna Ebersole, Miss Lizzie
Ebersole, Mrs. Fannie Hostetter,
Mrs. Ben Shaeffer, Mrs. Harvey
Eshleman, Mrs. Wm. Aldinger, Mrs.
Elmer Herr, Mrs. Harry Hershey,
Mrs. M. Gemberling, Mrs, Wallace
Brocht, Mrs. Harry Bishop, Mrs. |

1

ELIZABETHTOWN
Mr, D. L. Heisey, local contract-
or, who was removed to the Gener-
al Hospital, is improved at this
writing.
On Friday evening the Junior
Choir of Christ Reformed church
rendered a very pleasing musicale
in the social room of the church.
A dramatic cantata, in nine
scenes, entitled “Joseph,” will be
presented by Elizabethtown College
Chorus, in the College Chapel, on
Thursday evening, May 6th.
“Taming of the Shrew,” is the
title of a popular play to be given
by the Senior class of the Eliza-
bethtown College on Thursday and
Friday evenings, May 10 and 11.
The meeting of the Society of
Farm Women No, 6, which was to
be held at the College Chapel,
April 21st, showing the Scenes of
Pennsylvania, has been postponed
for the present time.
Bids for the erection of the pro-
posed new high school building in
this borough, will be received by
the Board up to May 14th, 1928,
at which time the bids will be open-
ed and the contracts awarded to
the best bidder.
Twenty-five new members were
proposed at the last meeting of
the Friendship Fire Company, aec-
tion on the applications will be
taken in May. The celebration of
the 50th anniversary of the Char-
tering of the Friendship Fire Com-
pany, No. 1, of Elizabethtown is
being planned.
Eugene Halk, alais Eugene Sou-
er, of town, is being held in the
county prison awaiting a hearing
SALUNGA
C. M. Bell, of Bloomsburg, the
driver, and John Kane, Jr,
York, the other occupants

escaped with minor injuries.
William J. Reitzel of Salunga, is
in a fair, condition
Side Sanitarium, York,
an automobile accident



lacerations on the face and head.
| before Justice of the Peace Elwood
{ Grimm, charged with the
of an automobile.
| police for the last six months.
An overheated stove
lieved to have caused the fire at
the home of Harry Greenberger,
East High street, Friday morning.
Friendship Fire company No. 1 re-
sponded to a call and succeeded in
of Knauertown,
car when it skidded and hit a pole, week end guests
larceny Betty J f Manheim;
Halk, ho ie 20 Sey jean 0 anheim;
years old, had been sought by the June,
mnths, |John Ginder
pipe is be- | Elizabethtown; Mr.
MASTERSONVILLE
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer T. Keim, of
and Mr. and Mrs.
of
at the West pethtown College will render a pro-
following gram
i north of Brethren on
York. He is suffering from a pos- at 7:15 P. M.
sible fracture of the skull, and has My: anid
at the Chiques Church of the!
Sunday, April 22nd |
| Mrs. Abner
{ entertained on Sunday:
'Mrs. Allen Hoover;
L. Lutz
Hollinger |
Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs.
and children, Ralph and
Mr. and
bel Hollinger and daughter,
of Lebanon; Mr. and Mrs.
and Earl Ginder, of
and Mrs, Dan-
Eshleman, of near Chiques; Mr.
extinguishing the blaze before great '
done. The
tenanted by John Long.
| The following program was rend-
jered by the High school Literary
Society Friday afternoon: Song,
school; reading of the minutes,
| secretary; spelling bee, in charge
| of John Greenberger; piano solo,
Louise Ulrich; scientific report,
| William Downs; humorous selec-
| tion, written by John Sloat, render-
(ed by Lydia Wagner; cornet solo,
Samuel Zarfoss; original story, Leh-
(man Otis; recitation, Mary Blough;
music, girls’ trio; original poem,
{Martin Engle; gazette, editor; col-
lection; critics remarks, Mr. Bals-
baugh; song; adjournment.
damage was
house is
Stanley and Anna,
Mr. and
and Mrs. Lester Snavely and child-
ren, Anna Jane, Betty Lorraine
and Eugene, of near Manheim.
Mrs. John Heisey was surprised
on Monday evening when the fol-
lowing friends and relatives gath- |
ered to help her celebrate her
birthday anniversary: Mrs. Emma
Becker, Misses Lillian and Verna
Becker, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Fahne-
stock, Mabel Fahnestock, Manheim;
Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Shelley and |
sons, Elwood, Herbert. Marian and |
Milford, of White Oak; Mr, and
Mrs. Landis Beckley and children, |
of Penn; Mr.
and Mrs. Eli Geib and daughters,
Orpha, Florence and Emma; Mr.
and Mrs. Abner Hollinger and
children, Mildred, B. Carl, J. Law-
rence and Wilbur, of near Chiques;
Mrs. John Ginder and
Ginder, of Elizabethtown;


Carl
FALMOUTH
Mrs. David Keener
tives in Middletown.
of the R Ss ith, k : Mrs. H E. Prescott visited her
py Smif, * of gig Mary Sister, Mrs. Harold Myers, in Mid-
| Smith, dletown.
The Misstonary.. Band Mr, and Mrs. W. H. Shuey, of
New Cumberland,
Walton, Saturday.
Harry Horst has
’
S. B. Martin.
The waters of the
at this point.
this vicinity Sunday.
visited rela-
visited G. W.
returned to
Philadelphia after visiting his bro-
ther-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Susquehanna
River and nearby streams are high
Many tourists visited
Wonderful Opportunity
A young man started a garage in
1923. He was quite successful and
today has a concrete building 40x76
including a 5-car show room, work
shop, office, etc., with complete and
modern equipment and accessories.
Also a private garage, 2% story
brick dwelling with all modern im-
provements on same lot, Business
includes Chevrolet agency. Entire
proposition will be sold and pos-
session given within 15 days. Own-
er will walk out and new man im.
Price very reasonable and goed
reason for sellng. If you want a&
paying business here’s a snap. Call,
phone or write Jno. E. Schroll, 41R2
Mount Joy. sept14-tf,
Revival services at the United NO iii
Brethren church were brought to a
close Sunday evening. The exer- Observe Forest Week
cises were well attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
and children,
ger,
Cadet Jay A. Hawthorne, of the
School Ship,
phia; Mrs. W. G. Hawthorne and
daughter, Joyce, of Bainbridge,
visited on Sunday with Mrs. Haw-
thorne’s mother, Mrs. A. S. Brinser.
James Robb, Kenneth Scott,
John Herbert, Richard Deichler,
Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Deichler,
Harrisburg; Mrs. Jane Stees, of
Elizabethtown; Sanders Eckman,
George Eckman, and J. W. Smith,
of Lancaster, were week-end guests

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Becker and
son Mervin, of Lebanon;
Mrs. Samuel Nissley and children,
Orpha and Samuel, Jr.,, of Florin.
REAL
Brubaker (ed as
Harold and Thelma,
of Bellaire, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam- | promote forests.
'uel Risser, of Elizabethtown, were should shirk.
guests of Mr, and Mrs. M. F. Metz- |
Annapolis, Philadel-
of
April 22 to 28 has been desigmat-
American Forest Week.
Everyone can help conserve aad
It is a duty nome

of Mr. and Mrs, A. C. Smith.
The Ladie’s Bible Class of ‘the
United Brethren Sunday school
was entertained at the home of
Mrs. A, M. Shoemaker, Saturday.
Mrs. Ruth Kohr presided. A breif
literary program was featured with
readings and music. During the
social hour. Refreshments were
served to the following: Mrs. Kohr
Mrs, Emma Coyle, Maud Coyle,
Mrs. A. E. Cobaugh, Mrs. Alice E.
B. Welty, Mrs. Amelia Minnich,
Mrs, Jane Seiders, Mrs. RE
Kauffman, Mrs. Mary Horst, Mrs.
G. W. Rutherford, Edna Ruther-

Mr. and ford, Mrs. Andrew Orendorf, Mary
(Myers, Mrs. E. D. Ebersole aad
"Mrs. B. R. Fink.
ESTATE
BARGAIN BULLETIN








BELOW YOU WILL
DWELLING HOUSES
No. 230—A beautiful frame
house on Marietta St., Mt. Joy.
corner property with all conveni
ences, fine garage and price right
No. 257—A large brick house in
East Donegal, only 100 steps tc
trolley stop. Property in fairly
good shape for $3,500,
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, electric lights, gas, ete. New
garage. Price $3,500.00.
No. 308—A frame
Marietta street, Mount Joy.
to a quick buyer.
No. 314—A very good brick dwell
ing on New Haven St., Mt. Joy,
electric lights, bath, etc., corner
property.
No. 320—A fine frame double
house on
Cheap
dwelling house in Florin, new 8
years ago. Modern in every way
with garage, etc. Rents for $20
and $25. Price is only $5,600. Will
sell one side for $3,000 or other
side for $2,600.
No. 321—A fine new 6-room
brick house on West Donegal St.,
Mt. Joy. Price reasonable and pos-
session given in 30 days.
No. 322—A beautiful
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 Pequea.
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, etc.,
for only $2,600.00
No. 337—A fine new
West Donegal St., Mt. Joy, all con-
veniences and in best of condition
No. 339—A good 2% story
frame house on Main street, Florin
best of shape, 2-var garage.
Ne. 341—A fine home along the
trolley at Florin, all modern con-
veniences. Priced to sell.
No. 342—A fine dwelling on New
Haven street, Mt. Joy. Here is a
11l-room
No. 3848—A 21% story frame
dwelling, 6 rooms and bath, electric
lights, slate roof, 2-car stable, cor-
ner property. Also lot large enough
for double house. Both front on 175
ft. on Marietta St. Mt. Joy.
No. 349—An 80 ft. front on
Donegal Springs Road, Mt. Joy.
New 8 room brick house, all mod-
ern improvements, Included is an
acre tract in rear.
No. 358—Lot 40x200 at
with new b5-room bungalow.
Florin
Has

house on|
good home nicely located and cheap |
FIND LISTED ANYTHING FROM A BUILDING LOT TO A $25,000 MANSION, FARM
light and heat.
$3,600.00.
No. 355—A lot 50x200 ft. just
outside Mt. Joy Boro, new 7-room
house never occupied, garage, good
well of water, ete. Half of money
can remain. Possession at once.
Will sell more land with property if
purchaser desires. Here's a worth
while proposition.
Nos. 359-360—A very modern
frame double house on Delta St.,
Mt. Joy, all conveniences, each side
has garage. Property rents for $70
per month.
No. 365—Fine corner propert;
and lot adjoining, at trolley lin
| house has all conveniences, large
lawn, fine location. Want to seu
to settle estate.
No. 367—A fine and modern
dwelling on West Donegal St., Mt.
Joy, all conveniences and quick
possession. Price low.
No. 368—A T-room newly built
and modern home on Marietta St.
Mt. Joy. Corner property, modern
in every way, 2-car garage, very
reasonable in order to sell.
No. 370—A 13-4 acre plot in
Mt. Joy with a good house, all mod-
I ern conveniences, hot water heat
| 3-car modern garage. Possession
| any time. Price about two-thirds
of present day construction.
No. 8371—A newly built house
along trolley at Florin, all modern
conveniences and price only $3650.
for a quick sale.
No. 372—A newly built 6-room
brick house, brick garage, all mod-
ern conveniences, possession any
time. Priced to sell. Residential
section—Donegal Springs road.
No. 3756—A b-family apartment
Dandy home for
house on North Barbara St., Mt.
Joy. Investment shows 20%. Must
sell.
No. 376—A fine modern dwelling
on East Main St., Mt. Joy, all con-
veniences, will sell with or without
a 20-car garage in rear.
No. 8378—A very modern and

| to-date, and nicely located for only
| $5,500.
No. 380—A 7-room brick house
New Haven street. Good con-
| dition and priced to sell.
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
| hilly, large double house, fine for
poultry. $650.
{
newly built home at Manheim, up-'
J.-E. SCHROLL,
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
house, barn, large shed, poultry
houses, ete. for only $1,500.
No. 275-—14acres, 2 miles from
Mt. Joy, gravel soil, frame house,
barn, etc. A dandy truck farm.
Don’t miss this. Price. ..$2,200.00
No. 3083—Truck farm of slightly
over 2 acres at Florin. An ideal
place for trucking and poultry.
No. 338—A 2 1-2 acre truck
farm near Hossler’s Church, brick
house, slate roof, good water, abun-
dance of fruit. Cheap.
No. 852—A dandy truck, fruit
and poultry farm of Jacob Stauffer,
near Sunnyside School, in Rapho
township. Here’s a snap for some
one.
No. 364—Six acres 19 prs. land
on outskirts of Mt. Joy, semi-bun-
galow house, all modern conven-
lences, 9 poultry houses, abundance
of fruit, will sell with or without
poultry equipment. Here’s a fine
Proposition, as a truck or poultry
arm.
MEDIUM SIZED FARMS
. No. 210—31 acre-farm near Mar-
ietta and Lancaster pike, good crop-
per, lots of fruit, excellent tobacco
and truck farm. Only $4,000.
No 260—A 38-acre farm at
railroad station 6 miles from York.
12 room brick house, bank barn,
tobacco shed, 2 lime kilnes, ete.
An excellent proposition. Price
$20,000.
No. 278—30 acres of sand land
near Green Tree church, good soil,
bank barn, 11 room house, fine wa-
ter, fruit, ete. All farm land. Price
$9,500.00.
No. 300--18 acres of best lime-
stone land in heart of East Done-
gal, extra fine buildings in Al
shape, best small farm I offered in
years. Located on macadam high-
way. Price only $8,500.00.
No. 851—A 60-acre farm along
state highway east of Middletown
in Dauphin Co. Here's a very cheap
farm for some one. Let me show
vou this bargain. .

No. 329—A 35-acre
sand land near Chickies
shedding for 5 or 6 acres
farm of
church,
tobacco.
|A good 1-man farm cheap.
LARGE FARMS
130 acre farm, 20 acres wood-
land, good buildings, only 1% miles
from Middletown, priced very low
for a quick sale.
_ No. 138—An 8l-acre farm of all
limestone soil, in East Donegal, 11-
room stone house. barn, tobacco
shed, 6 acres meadow, 3-4 of money
can remain.
No. 144—A 125 acre
best land in Lane. Co.
ings in Al shape, Located on
state highway and near a town.
Don’t need the money but owner
does not want responsibility.
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.
No. 179—A farm of 107 acres of
best limestone land in East Done-
gal, good buildings, running water,
neadow, ample shedding for tobacco.
No. 201—104 acres in the heart of
East Donegal tobacco district, fine
farm of
All build-
buildings, shedding for 12 acres of
obaco. This is a rea! farm.
No. 233—A 65-acre farm in the
heart of East Donegal, good build-
ings and land. Price right.
No. 274—A 120-acre farm of
best limestone soil, near Newtown,
14-acre meadow, good buildings, in- |
cluding brick house, can hang 12
acres tobacco, best of water. No
better tobacco yielder in the
county. Price...$135.00 Per Acre.
No. 323—A 68-acre farm in Mt.
Joy twp., half a mile from Mt. Joy.
Price very reasonable.
No. 357—A farm of 112 acres
of gravel soil, good house, barn,
tobacco shed, silo, running water,
33 acres woodland, Price reason-
able,
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. 324—A good general store
stand located on the square in a
good country town. Excellent pat-
ronage. About a $15,000 stock.
Rent is $30 with a long lease.
NO. 325—A good garage, dwell-
ing, gas station and a car agency
5 Nerieha Only $3,000.00. Don’t
elay.
NO. 326—A General Store, post
office, dwelling, et:. Only store in
a country town. Here’s a good go-
ing proposition.
No. 334—A fine brick business
stand and dwelling on East Main
St., Mount Joy, ol
established; ci-


UN
OR BUSINESS. IF YOU DON'T SEE LISTED JUST WHAT YOU WANT, CALL OR PHONE, AS I HAVE
OTHERS. HERE ARE SOME OF THE BEST BARGAINS IN SMALL FARMS I HAVE EVER OFFERED.
gar, tobacco and confectionery, pos-
session any time
| No. 376—A 20-car garage cen-
trally located in Mount Joy, will
sell with or without a modern
| dwelling with all conveniences.
| No. 374—A 6-room house and
store room, owner now doing a
| nice electrical business. Will sell
| property, business, stock, etc. Good
large stable. Wonderful opportun-
ity for young man,
BUILDING LOTS
| No. b7—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.
i- Nos. 298-299—Two 50 ft. lots on
{ South side of Columbia Avenue.
Mt. Joy.
| No. 306—Fine building lot front.
ing 45 ft. on the east side of
Lumber St., Mt. Joy. $500.
i No. 310—A 40-ft. lot on Walnut
St., Mt. Joy. If you want a cheap
lot get busy.
| No. 835—Lot 100 ft. front and
540 ft. deep on concrete highway
between Mt. Joy and Florin.
| No. 347—One 60 ft. building lot
| on west side of highway between
Mt. Joy and Florin for $750.
| No. 366—A choice building lot,
| fronting 70 ft. on Marietta St.,
| Mt. Joy and about 80 ft. deep. Cor-
| ner lot. Cheap.
No. 377—Four 50 ft. lots on the
east side of North Barbara St., Mt.
i Joy.
JUST LAND
No. 319—A plot of about an acre
or more of ground in Mt. Jey,
A good investment for someone.
FACTORY SITES
No. 10—A tract fronting 107
it. on the P. R. R. siding in Mt.
Joy has many advantages and cen-
trally located. One of the best
in the town.
No. 279—A large tract covering
one entire block along Penna. R. R.
siding in Mount Joy. A wonder
ful location at a right price.
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-
eral bear pens on farm, Game
such as bear, deer, pheasants, grey
and black squirrel, porcupines, ete,
Ideal hunting camp, Price 32,500.00.
LE. JOY
AAT