The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 15, 1931, Image 6

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PAGE SIX
bout This Time!
 

[HE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
BY HITT





HITT. AND Bult wasn't Around Claiming Any New Relations So He Left A
HEN! FRITZ. WHAT KIND



WELL- | ANT MUCH OF A
,] JUDGE FRITZ- BUT |
SHOULD SAY - HE LOOKS
UKE A CROGS BREED BEF


 
 
MAKES WH

INTERNATIONAL CARTOON CO NY.

FAR ENOUGH - DOT
TO DER BOTH OF US


ADVICE TO THE
TORLORN-
ere
DEAR.
WHAT (S$
TUE BEST WAY TO
L&T RID OF A
CHARLEY- HORSE. ?
BLL ROUSE
WERSTER. ©RONYY
MO.
HOOK- (T UP WITH
A NGHT- MARE
teen
A RELATION







THE TIME TO BUY ANYTHING |
CHEAP IS WHEN THERE IS
NO DEMAND
TODAY, REAL ESTATE, LIKE
MANY OTHER THINGS, IS NOT IN
DEMAND AND AS A RESULT YOU
CAN BUY BETTER VALUES THAN
AT ANY TIME DURING MY CAR-
EER AS A REALTOR.
IF INTERESTED, CALL AND I
WILL PROVE THIS ASSERTION.
HERE IS A PARTIAL LIST OF MY
OFFERINGS TODAY.
DWELLINGS
No. 314—A very good brick dwell-
on New Haven Street, Mt. Joy,
lights, bath, etc, corner
ng
electric
property.
No. 337—A fine new house on
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-car garage.
No. 343—A very fine and modern
brick dwelling in residential section
of Mount Joy for much less than
cost of erection.
No. 359—A fine frame double house
on Delta St, Mount Joy. Will be
sold worth the money. All conveni-
ences and garage on each side.
No. 416—A brick house, corner
property at Florin, 8 rooms. All con-
veniences, will sell right.
No. 417—Good Corner Brick House,
Mount Joy, all conveniences, 3-car
garage, too large for present owner.
No. 418—Fine Bungalow on Choco-
late Ave., East Donegal, 8 rooms and
bath, open fire place.
No. 419—Beautiful modern Brick
dwelling, all conveniences, along state
highway in East Donegal. Don’t build,
buy this and save money.
No. 420—A 7-room frame house on
Marietta St., surroundings open, prop-
erty in good shape. A dandy place
for retired rural man. It has 4 poul-
try houses, garage, stable, etc.
No. 422—A frame double house in
Florin, one side has conveniences, oth-
er side lights and water, frame stable,






























ete. In good shape and will sell
cheap.
No. 349—An 80 foot front on
Donegal Springs Road, Mount Joy.
New 8 room brick house, all mod-
ern improvements. Included is an
: acre tract in rear.
No. 353—Lot 40x200 at Florin
with new 5-room bungalow. Has
light and heat. Dandy home for
$3,600.00. ©
No. 355—A lot 50x200 « feet” just
outside Mt. Joy Boro, new 7-room
house never occupied, garage, good
well of water, etc. Half of money
can remain. Possession at once.
Will sell more land with property if
purchaser desires. Here's a worth
while proposition,
No. 365—Fine corner property and
lot adjoining, at trolley line, house
has all conveniences, large lawn, fine
location. Want to sell to settle es-
tate.
No. 368—A 7-room newly built
and modern home on Marietta Street,
Mt. Joy. Corner property, modern
in every way, 2-car garage, Very
reasonable in order to sell.
No. 371—A newly built house a-
long trolley at Florin, all modern con-
veniences and price right for a quick
sale.
" No. 372—A newly built 6-room
brick house, brick garage, all mc yd-
any time.
section—
ern conveniences, possession
Priced to sell. Residential
smaller house.
No. 414—About an acre of ground
with 6-room house with lights and
bath: also frame stable. In Mt. Joy
Will sell right or exchange for
boro.
TRUCK FARMS
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 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. 270—A fine truck farm of a few
acres, near Milton Grove, good house,
barn, large shed, poultry houses, etc.,
for only $1,500.
No. 275—14 acres, 2 miles from Mt.
Joy, gravel soil, frame house, barn,
ete. A dandy truck farm. Don’t miss
this.
No. 352—A dandy truck, fruit and
poultry farm near Sunnyside School,
in Rapho township. Here's a snap for
some one.

MEDIUM SIZED FARMS
No. 210—31 acre-farm near Mari-
etta and Lancaster pike, good cropper,
lots of fruit, excellent tobacco and
truck farm. Only $4,000.
No. 300—18 acres of best limestone
land in heart of East Donegal, extra
fine buildings in Al shape, best small
farm 1 offered in years. Located on
macadam highway. Price right.
No. 329—A 35-acre farm of sand
land near Chickies church, shedding
for 5 or 6 acres tobacco. A good 1-
man farm cheap.
LARGE FARMS
No. 381—A 124-acre farm of best
limestone soil, excellent = buildings,
| 99_acre meadow, water at house and
barn. Price $145 per acre and 3 of
money can remain. Here's a dandy.
No. 384—A 106-acre farm of gravel
and limestone land in Mount Joy
township, stone house, big bank barn,
good water for only $120 per acre.
Nicely located.
No. 412—A 100-acre farm along
Marietta and Lancaster pike, large
meadow and excellent pasture. A
good farm.
SURVEY REVEALS
RESERVE TIMBER
(From page 1)
Thirteen million two hundred
thousand acres are reported to be
the area of forest land in Pennsyl-
vania. This, it was pointed, out, is
47 per cent, of the total land area.
By far the major part of this area
was found to be in adjoining strips
of forest in the mountain and pla-

teau regions, which comprise 11,
489,225 acres. Isolated forest areas
50 acreas or less in size amounted
to 1,716,775 acres, or less than
one-seventh of the total.
The forests of the State were
found to contain 13,477,060,000
board feet of mature or saw log
size, and 126,361,759 cords of
cord-wood material, The amount of
saw log material seems large ex-
pressed in board feet, but when
converted into cords is equal to
37,436,227 cords or considerably
less than the trees of only cord-
wood size, Staley said.
Four Classes
Four board classes were consid-
ered in the survey, according to
the kind and size of trees and
forest growth, These ranked from
land devoid of practically all forest
growth to that carrying mature
forests. The growth on the State's
entire 13,206,000 acres of forest
land was divided as follows:
Class I, 200.668 acres on which
the forest tree growth is complete-
nothing growing ex-
briars
ly killed and
cept bracken, huckleberries,
and weeds.
Class: 11, . 1,565,508 acres on
which are found scrub oak, fire
cherry and aspen, with sparse and
small growth of other tree species.
Class HI, 17,594,418 acres on
which the more valuable forest tree
species are growing, up to dia-
meter of six inches.
Class 1V, 15,407
a
3,7 acres on

which are growing trees of mer-

BUSINESS STANDS
No. 334—A fine brick business stand
and dwelling on East Main Street,
Mount Joy.
No. 376—A 20-car garage centrally
located in Mount Joy, will sell with
| or without a modern dwelling with all
St, Mt. Joy.
No. 404—A very good brick building
one story about 50x100 in Mt. Joy.
Corner property.
No. 406—Frame Office Building,
Show Room, Garage and a Dwelling.
| Here is a real business proposition
cheap. The entire lot buildings
for only $6,000.
No. 423—Bungalow type house and
business stand, on Main street, Florin,
of

corner, no better location for res-
taurant, gas station, etc. Is priced to
sell.
BUILDING LOTS
No. 285—A corner lot fronting 80
ft. on Donegal Springs Road, extend-
ing in depth to trolley line.
No. 306—Fine building lot fronting
45 ft. on the east side of Lumber St.,
Mount Joy. $500.
No. 310—A 40-ft. lot on Walnut St.
Mount 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.

Donegal Springs road.





























































 

Mt. Joy, 6 rooms,
lo ft.
be
deep
seen
all conveniences, t 296
possession any time. Must
to be appreciated. 3 car garage.
No. 392—A large brick house, good
repair, large frame stable, acre of
ground, on concrete highway near Mt.
Joy. Price very interesting.
No. 397—One of the former Mount
Joy Development Co. houses on W.
Donegal St. Mt. Joy. All conveni-


ences. Price very low.
No. 399—An Acre of land with
§-room brick house, frame stable
2-car garage, etc. Wonderful loca-
tion. An unobstructed view of the
Susquehanna river and land fronts on
Susquehanna Trail.
No. 400—A good frame dwelling on
Marietta street. An excellent buy for
any person living in rent.
No. 405—A frame dwelling, corner |
property and will sell for only $3,000. |
No. 408—Lot 40x200 ‘on concrete |
highway, at Florin, frame house, al
modern conveniences, hot water heat,
oil burner, 6-car garage. A very]
good property at a reasonable price. |
No. 409—A dandy corner property |
along trolley, very modern house, all
conveniences, sun porch, garage, etc.
Can be bought worth the money.
. 411—A fine stucco bungalow on
Chocolate Ave. all modern conveni-
ences, garage for two cars. A dandy
place to live and a good buy.
No. 413—A dice frame dwelling in
Mount Joy, corner property along
trolley. A very good cheap home.

No. 376—A fine modern dwelling
on East Main St, Mt. Joy, all con-
veniences, will sell with or without a]
20-car gar in rear. |
No. 382—A 2-story frame corner
property at Florin, tin roof, cement
cellar, Florin water, etc.
No. 385—A ver) modern corner
property in Mount Joy at trolley, nas
all conveniences and in Al shape.
Also gars
No. 386—A 2'%-story frame house
adjoining No Prefer selling |
these two as a unit
No. 390—A dandy bungalow on|
West Main Street,
btiilding
St, Mt.
Corner
No. 366—A choice
{ fronting 70 ft. on Marietta
{Joy and about 80 ft. deep.
lot. Cheap.
No. 377—Four 50 ft. lots on the east
{side of North Barbara St., Mt. Joy.
| No. 401—Two lots of ground each
| fronting 45 ft. on Columbia Ave. Mt.
| Joy. Lots adjoin, are on corner and
an excellent building location.
A double lot 80x200 on
Mount Joy.


No. 4
| Marietta St.,
JUST LAND
| No. 387—A plot of about 2!2 acres
of land along trolley at Florin, has a
frontage of one block. Price reason-
able.
No. 388—A plot of ground containing
about an acre at Florin. Priced to
| sell.

HUNTING CAMPS
No. 262—A tract of 125 acres of farm
and timber land, house, barn, etc.
Half is farm land. Several bear pens
on farm. Game such as bear, deer,
pheasants, grey and black squirrel,
Ideal hunting camp.


MOUNT JOY, PA.

AND
slate
WHY BUILD NOW? BUY
SAVE—Have a T7-Room House,
roof, vapor heat, hot and cold water,
Frame Stable, Garage, Four Poultry
Houses, lot is 80x200 ft. and can sell
you two additional lots if! desired.
Price only $6,700. Better investigate
this before you think of building.
See J. E. Schroll, Mt. Joy. marl8-tf

lot, |
han
not
chantable size and
I per cent. of the stand
| than 6 inches in diameter.
{ Twenty-two per cent.,, or
tically, one-feurth of the
growth in the State is large enough
more
is less
prac-

conveniences. {to be cut for the market, and 77
No. 374—A 6-room house and store | per cent. of the forest growt his
room, owner now doing a nice elec-| comprised of tree containing m1a-
trical business. Will sell property, ' terial of only cordwood size. The
business, stock, etc. Good large gtable! 1 of sine for 0
Wonderful opportunity for young man. | Unk fa Ze Io the pur-
No. 403—Frame Building 30x60, 3 Pose of this forest inventory does
stories with wing 28x30 and another | NOU imply however, that all timber |
building 24x30. Wonderful business | that is classed as merchantable
stand. Lot fronts 80 ft. on Donegal | st 1 be marketed.

rms Sif
| SOLDIERS’ TRAINING CAMP
AT MT. GRETNA WILL BE
| ABANDONED IN 1932
i (From page 1)
| Space for combat firing and artil
| ters practice; safety in both types
jof firing; land available at low cost;
of all units of the
be
rail facilities made
the camp can be laid out
room for assembly
division; roads can constructed
economically and
available;
advantageously; the site is removed
from populous districts.
The State ‘Military Reservation
Commission comprises the Governor,
William G.
commanding officer of the
Guard; Adjutant General
David J. Davis; Brigadier General E
C. Shannon, of Columbia; Brigadier
General Edward Martin, Washington
and John Longacre, of
Harry I McDowell,
Major General Price, of
Chester
National
two civilians,
nd
)
Lancaster, a 3

{ Sharon
Advantages Listed
In favor of the present site the re-
port and
{ MON y
|fer of the
listed the improvements
pent on it, as well
as
Federal to
the
at
Mt.
good
tradi-
there
were
space
too
fire;
government
$145,000 for
available
favor

contribute nearly


not be
Also in
healthfulness,
facilities and
h will
the new site. of
t
Gretna was its
transportation
men training
Gretna
valuable to
the Mt.
listed criticisms that it
an artillery range
limited for infantry
roads were poorly laid
tures were all temporary;
the land was valueless for
vers because of dense
proper drill grounds had received
little attention and the camp had
been laid out without provision for
future expansion.
All these defects, the
said, would he overcome at the
tibns
site
lacked
apd was
combat
out; struc-
much of
maneu-
underbrush;
Against
for
Commission
new
location,
tl AG
Jungfrau Mass of Flowers
Whether
ling the
will be, am:
of
de
rom Interlaken.
the 1d flow
anything
you are cending
Junefian f
da or

ou zed at

Ww

which are
grow in our shelt


f iat is what
you call
or bunitor
ete ee el Ape
Subscribe for The Bulletin

Patronize Bulletin Advertisers
Patronize Bulletin Advertisers
50 |
an of-{
forest |
|
{


How the X-Ray
Thousands of lives are saved from
tuberculosis every year by means of |
an instrument which was developed |
through an accidental discovery in|
the laboratory of a German professor |
of physics in 1893. The X-ray—that |
penetrating light which is the eye of |
the physician—was discovered when
William Konrad Roentgen was called
away suddenly from his work and left
his desk in disorder.
This is how it happened: Roentgen
had been studying the green light
given out by a new type of electric
bulb. When he was interrupted, he
placed this lighted bulb on a book
which contained a large antique key,
used as a bookmark. By chance, there
reposed beneath the book and key a
photographic plate holder.
When the professor later exposed
the plate and developed a picture, the
shadow of the key appeared.
Today, the doctor uses the X-ray
in many ways to discover signs of
disease. It is one of his principal
aids in the discovery of tuberculosis.
As tuberculosis still kills mor
young persons in the first decade of
maturity than any other diseace, thc
X-ray has come to be an instrument
responsible for the saving of thou-
sands of lives.
Tuberculosis associations are call-
ing attention to the fact that tubercu-
losis is “The Foe of Youth.” These
organizations urge the use of the
tuberculin test—a harmless skin
reaction—on. young people, especially
those in whose homes there is a case
of tuberculosis. Those who show that
they are severely infected should have
an X-ray of their chests.
Laennec’s Discovery

The stethoscope was invented by
a young doctor of Brittany, Theophile
[.aennee, about 125 years ago. One
day, while he had charge of a very
fat girl in a Lospital in Paris, he was
much put out because he could make
no d'agnosis. She was in great dis-
tress and panting for breath, but Dr.
Laennec could not get at the cause
of the trouble. The thick layer of fat
blanketed the sounds of the chest.
That afternoon, the young medico
took his usual stroll through the Gar-
dens of the Louvre. Debris lay scat-
tered about, the result of one of the
several upheavals of the French revo-
lution.
On a pile of timbers, he noticed
two or three boys bent over one end
of a long beam of wood with their
ears pressed tightly to it. At the
other end, another boy was lightly
tapping the beam. Of course, these
slight sounds traveled with little re-
sistance along the beam, much to the
amusement of the youngsters. To
them, this crude telephone was a
jolly toy; to Laennec, it was the solu-
tion of his problem. He turned on
his heel and hurried back to the hos-
pital.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15th, 193%


=
7


3 ~~ cannot
lessen its COLD.

Striding into the ward, he snatched
up a paper-backed book, rolled it into
a tight tube, and to the amusement
of the nurses, placed one end of this
tube to the girl’s chest and his ear
to the other. The sounds he wished
so much to hear came through even
more clearly and crisply than he had
expected.
Laennec did even more than this for
medical science. He taught that
tuberculosis is contagious, though the
germ was not discovered until 80
years later.




Baseball Days Are Here




diamonds are beginniz
rame; picked studer
ng for places on t
ASEBALL
ica’s at
where are strug
sounded by tube
that these davs of stress, requiring
or



ulosis and health associa

|
1g to resound with the clamor of Amer- |
its in high schools and colleges every-
he teams. A note of warning is being
i vlvania during April
d include plenty of
 




rest and nou ing food to avoid the ain. It is pointed
out by © zat’ons financed by the Christma le that “Tuberculosis
s the foe of youth” and the chief cause of death among young adults.


A Dollar Dinner for Four


O your thrift dinners ery out
“thrift”’—or do they look so
attractive and taste so good that
no one can guess the cost? It’s all
a matter of careful planning.
First, get an appealing menu, like
the one given below; second, pre-
pare the foqds, carefully; third,
deem them worthy of your pretty
china and table covers. Then
you can say with sincerity to vour
casual guest “Do stay for dinner!”
Menu
Veal Loaf with Carrot and Pea
Sauce, 39¢
Fried Potatoes 6¢
Mashed Turnips 8¢
Dressed Lettuce 10¢
Bread and Butter 8¢
Baked Pineapple Pudding 26¢
Demi-Tasse 3¢
Veal Loaf with Carrot and Pea
Sauce: Remove wrapper from a


7-ounce can of veal loaf, cover
with boiling water and boil for
fifteen minutes. Remove meat
from can, placing it on a hot
platter. Make a sauce of one and
one-half tablespoons butter, one
and one-half tablespoons flour
two-thirds cup milk and the liquor
from an nce can of carrots
and peas. Add the carrots and
peas, season to taste with salt and
pepper, and pour over the veal.
Baked Pineapple Pudding:
Cream three tablespoons of butter
and four tablespoons of sugar, add
one well-beaten egg yolk. Add
one-half cup of dry crumbs and
one-half cup of crushed pineapple
Fold in the stifly-heaten egg
white. Pour into a buttered bak-
ing dish and bake in a slow oven
325 Segrasy for twenty to thirty
minutes. erve wit -
cup of thin cream.* i; ousfourth
S-ou
 
\ sn
NORGE
ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR
No matter how hot it geis inside cornédrs are rounded for
in summer there is a refresh- easy cleaning.
ing cool spot in the kitchen For unfaili o refrigeration
where Norge is owned. for years and Years to come
...see the Norg » before you
buy. Fim by Norge
Norge has the
simple, powerful, conipact re-
Corporation, Detraijt, a divi-
sion of Bore-Warndg, origin-
frigerating mechanism. The
ators of free wheelin
Norge cabinet is especially
ICD
WY wy AN aN
designed for convenience. Its
WITH ROLLATOR
shelves are waist-high and
T. F. McElroy
they are arranged to accom-
FLORIN, PENNA.
modate all shapes of food
OOOO 3
SS SR
\. SPECIAL
ARM RELIEF
|
f
|
|


|
|
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«




OOOO OOOO OOOO OOO

oy
ILO





~
%
We are now edyipped with the following machinery
so that we may befger serve our farmer friends—
\
A COLD PROCESS MOLASSES FEED MIXER
To make better feeds at less cost.
A HAMMER MILL AND AN ATTRITION MILL
For grinding your grain\and ronghage to obtain the
greatest feeding value frown it.
MAGNET
on and metal which is
AN ELECTR
To keep all feed free from
dangerous to stock.
A ROUGHAGE GRINDER
Giving the opportunity to grind arm roughage and
mix it into the feed, saving the prike of shipped filler
feeds.

GIVE US A TRIAL
FLORIN, PA.
If Better Feeds Are Made We Can Make Them
Phone 151R4 Mt. Joy


CLARENCE SCHOCK
MOUNT JOY, PA : 30