Both the highest and the lowest points above sea level in the Unit- ed States are in California, PUBLIC SALE Of Very Desirable Real Estate, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5th, 1951 On the premises four miles East of Flizabethtown along macadam road leading to Manheim near R's- say's Church, in Mount Joy Town- ship, Lancaster County, Penna. A 2% STORY DOUBLE FRAMF. DWELLING containing six rooms on each s'de and summer house attached. Frame and stone | bank barn equipped with water | bowls, and space for 26 head of cattle. Frame corn barn and tobac- co shed with stripping room in cel- | lar, can shed six acres of tobacco. | Frame wash house and garage. 16x 20 ft, poultry houece, Electr'city and water in all buildings. Farm con- taining 47 acres and 81 nerches of sandy and ironstone soil ven acres of pasture land w'th s of water and never-failine snrino. Orchard containing thirty fruit trees, All bu'ldings good Premises can be viewed during week previous to sale, Sale to commence at 2:00 O'clock condition. anytime in P. M. EST when conditions w'll be | made known by MENNO H. PISSER ESTATE | Christian S. Risser, Ex. A. C. Alspach, Attorney Walter Duves, Auct. D. L. Landis, Clerk 37-3 PUBLIC SALE SATURDAY, OCTORFR 6, 1951 at 1:30 P. M. The undersigned will offer at nublic sale all that certain farm located on the road leading from Salunra to Silver Soring in East Hempfield and West Hempfield Townships, containing 17 acres and 52 perches, more or less, having erected thereon a LARGE FRAME DWFLLING HOUSE combination barn and to- bacco shed, chicken house and garage. And the following personal prop- erty: . Bedroom suites, beds, chest of drawers, old fashioned bureau, rockers, cherry table, extension ta- | library table, kitchen chairs, chests, side board, flour chest, doughtray, sewing machine, crocks, jars, jugs, iron kettle, tobac- co lathe and baler and other house- hold goods. Sale to be held on the premises. Terms and conditions by HENRY S. KOLP, Adminis- trator of Eiflizabeth M. Kolp ble, couches, and the heirs of Henry M | Kolp, deceased. Elmer V. Spahr, Auct. Arnold, Bricker & Beyer, Attorneys am ; 36-5 'D. L. Landis, Clerk LEGION AUXILIARY WILL | CFLEERATE 25th ANNIVERSARY | The twenty-fifth anniversary din | ner of the Walter S. Ebersole Post If you want a notice on your sale 185 American Auxiliary, | inserted in this register weekly | will be held at the Post Home on| pom now until day of sale. ABSO- Tuesday, October 9th, at 7:00 pm. | LUTELY FREE, send or phone us your sale date and when ready let us print your bills, That's Legion Charter members and past presi- at ner. An offering, to help defray ex- dents will be honored the din- penses, will be lifted | ——— | i A en ~~ a Friday, September 28 At the Iodine is obtained chiefly from | Bulletin office on East Main street, ' ‘ ith a 2 wv | ke Ip or ashes of burnt seaweed. a lot of ground with a 212 story Frame Dwelling House known as 28-30 West Doneaal street, Mt. Joy, TT ~ of Vo PALE te ‘by Harry P. Royer. C. S. Frank, Nr bid | Auct. Sale at 7:3) p. m to he held TUESDAY FVFN'G. OCT. 16, 1951 On the premises located at 11- | Saturday, Sept. 29—In the village 113 South Mount Jov Street. in| of Landisville, East Hempfield the Boroneh of Elizabethtown, Pa. | Two. a 215 storv frame dwelling, A 21» STORY { barn with garage. Christie Derr | FRAME. Slate and Metal { Hawthorne, Catharine Derr Fogie | RUTLDING and Richard J. Derr, Owners, Rich- orepied ps fore dwelling {ard J. Derr, Exor. of the will of ove th an | Annie R. Derr, decd. C. S. Frank, | apartments, each containine three | ton rooms ane bath and including as Auctioneer. — range and antomatic water heater. | 5350 Meters installed for electricity and Friday, Oct. 5—~Four miles east | gas consumed in each apartment. of Elizabethtown on the road lead- | Prorverty can be viewed the week | ing to Manhe'm, near of October 8th bv making arrange- ments with the owner | Sale to commence at 7:02 P. M,, FST, when conditions will be made | known bv | | | house, frame and stone bank barn, [ corn barn, tobacco shed, farm con- tains 47 acres and 81 perches. By | ser, Ex. Walter Dupes, Auct. Sale | C. G. HELLER | Phone: E-town 251-J jat 2P. M, Walter Duves Auct. | | D. L. Landis, Clerk 39-2 Wednesday, October 10--114 mi. Bin PUBLIC SALE cast of Flizabethtown on the road OF Renl Estate leading from Manheim road to | WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1951 | Colebrook, a 2!2 story frame dwel- { ling, fram2 bank barn, 2-car con- | On the vremises located 1'5 miles | Fast of Elizabethtown by-road | from Manheim to Colebrook in Mount Jov Township n 9 Caroline E. Good and Levi S. Good. road Walter Dupes, Auct. Sale at 2 p. m. leading Sale Register| you are | the cheapest advertisingyou can get | Risser’s | Church, a 2'% story frame double | Menno H. Risser, Christian S. Rig- | crete garage and other buildings by | | The Good Old Days By Ona Freeman Lathrop HE OLD FELLOWS sat on the concrete wall that bordered the | court-house lawn, The sun broiled down warm and golden, but the | « Minute autumn air was ! : cooi, The one in Fiction the clean striped | shirt and blue suspenders high- serge hitched his er, “Times ain't what they used to be when I was young,” he asserted to the man next him. “Prices ‘way out o" sight, all sorts of machinery to dp the farm work, young folks kitin' around in cars—why, when 1 was a young buck you took your best girl for a buggy ride behind a pair of fast bays, or you went to | Funk's Grove or the Mackinaw tor a day's picnic and it didn't cost you a cent, Nowadays my grandson wouldn't start out on a date without i five or ten dollars in his pocket!" | He looked up the street, “Yep,” the other one agreed, tilt- { ing his straw sailor back and tuck- | ing his blue shirt into his shiny | grey striped trousers. “Things move too fast for me. We don't get | through one war till we're startin’ | another one, and them politicians { down in Washington are runnin’ | the country to the dogs. Now when | McKinley was in--" A girl switched hy in white | shorts and a striped jersey. His sentence hung in mid-air, | | Lancaster Countv, Pennsylvania. | S—————— Ty hin | A 215 STORY ae Saturday, Oct. 13—In Cook Twp. 20 el : lose PEORS J FRAME DWELLING iid | Camber land Co., 215 miles from | o cars whizze ron e containing seven rooms and i | Pine Grove Furnace, 10 acres of | Square, their tires slzzing on | summer kitchen. Frame bank barn | Land, with a Hunting Lodge, two | the hot asphalt, The city busses with tobacco stripping room, im- | rooms, Spring, Delco elec. system, | lined up in front of the drug plement shed and corn barn attach- | good road hv R. S. Frey. Sale at | store, ed. Two car concrete block garage; | 2:30 r. m. Edgar F. Funk, auct. | They shook their heads sadly. frame milk house; frame wash and | es | The first one kept peering out | butcher house: pig sty; two poultry | Saturday. October 13 — At the | Washington street toward the depot. houses sufficient for 200 hens. Space | Bulletin Office on East Main street, Ito house three acres of tobacco and |in the Borough of Mount Jov, Pa. stable room for 16 head of cattle. | A corner property fronting 74 feet | This farm contains 37 acres and 115 | more or less on Main street by 147 Sandstone soil, no rocks. | feet deep, with a 214 story frame perches | Six acres pasture land with two | double dwelling, three-car garage, cba v x7 | to be sold as one property by Aaron streams of water. Good Well of | one ] Ne wer ® | H. Metzler. C. S. Frank, Auct. Sale water on premises. | at 7:50 1. ™ Property can be viewed at any |° VD. time. Sale to commence at 2:00 o’- | i | Tuesday, Octcber 16—On the clock P. M. EST when conditions will be made known by CARCLNE FE. GOOD and premises 111-113 South Mount Joy { St., Elizabethtown, 215 story frame building, occupied as 4 family apt. LEVI S. GOOD. ng, Elizabethtown Phone 528-R-2|by C. G. Heller. Walter Dupes, | Walter Dupes, Auct. 38-3 | Tuesday, October 16—On Anchor ELIZABETHTOWN, PA, Snyder - Martin Chinchilla Ranch OFFERS YOU Real Chinchilla Fur Bearing Animal | It is not a rabbit. You will want to own several pair and get started in the VISIT OUR RANCH ONE MILE EAST ON MANHEIM ROAD Rcad, 2 miles southeast of Central Manor and 2 miles south of Wash- | ington Boro, a farm of 71 acres with a story frame house, bank barn, | and other buildings, also 1 acre of land with a 1'5 story frame house with garage, chicken house, etc. by DN Cre $28,000 the first year. BIG FARM MACHINERY SALE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1951 11:30 A. M. Near Elizabethtown R. D. Phone 442-J-2 30 NEW AND USED TRACTORS Large and Small, and Cultivators CARS AND TRUCKS Lot of Corn Pickers, No. 226 J. D.s, 2 M’s, 24th, One- and Two-row New Ideas, Self-propelled M, H, R.D. 2 THE 2 &y Pa. business. Wood Bros., Case, G.I.'s & others Lot << A SS... = UNION THERE IS STRENGTH |< cial planning now and it will pay off late us=—about loans cr cay of Field Choppers, Blowers, Bind- ers, Silo Fillers, Grain Drills, Plows Disks, Harrows, Wagons, Side Rakes, Mowers, Hay Loaders, Field | Sprayers and Dusters, Spreaders, | Huskers and Shredders, Iron Gates, Locust Posts. | At 2:00 P. M, 200 HOGS, all | breeds; New Hardware and Tools. | | Farmers and Dealers, bring in your Tractors, Corn and Seeding Machinery — anything you have wanted. Next Sale Saturday, Oct. 20, 1951 | G. K. WAGNER, Sale Manager | Heisey, Diffenbaugh, Horst and Wagner, Aucts. { INVEST IN MUSSER Summer is a good time foi cleaning up odds and cuds 27 : ® LEGHORN CHICKS and small jobs. And it’s a good tiie | a . ® to think about the busy fall and the | a long winter ahead. Do your finaa- LL | © HEAVY DARK | BROILER CHICKS on. Come in and talk wiih - a r on. Come in aud t wii Place your order How other bank for free delivery. | | | | | I services that will Lo beipicl. | Musser Leghorn Farms | MOUNT JOY, PA. Phone 3-4911 Yih EE THE = | MOUNT Joy p, A | FOR REAL GOOD “= " PRINTING Tre BULLETIN | AND NOTE THE DIFFERENCE SE | Isaiah M. Schock. Edgar Funk, auctioneer, sale at 2 p. m. Tuesday, October 23 — On the premises 348 South Mark:et St. | Elizabetatown, 212 story brick — | dwelling, two-car garage, Frame 4 | shop, 8x20 ft. by LeRoy Wolgemuth | Walter Dupes, Auct. Sale at 7 pm. | York's increased bus fare to 10 | cents netted the company a gain of | 39-2t | | the station, | ‘“Yeah, this is a crazy age! You see new houses springing up over night out in the new additions. Look like | freight cars sprawled all over the lots—no upstairs, no cellars! Fancy gadgets in the kitchens. Give me the old days and not such a fast pace!” The other one queried, your name and where do you hail from?” “Well now, that’s a long story.” He shifted te the other hip as if to tell it, then grinned. “But nobody's interested in it nowadays, so I never tell it. I'm Clem Mason. Lived here all my life, and hope to die here. I've watched this town grow from a cross-roads, ard hardly been across the state line. And you?” HE OTHER FELLOW’'s eyes narrowed as if he were seeing faraway places. “Name's Jed Whit- Went to Chicago once. Lived out in | | the country till my wife died last | | year. I like the town, but nothin seems as good as it used to be. Too much bustle and rush.” There was a long silence while they watched a cab maneuver in and out of traffic. A woman driver and the usual delivery trucks were double-parking and gumming up the works, Horns blasted and women scurried across the crossing. “Yep,” Clem answered, his eyes still squinting up the street watch- { | | | | ) | | | | | | | { Their conversation was forgot- ten for a moment as a girl in white shorts and a striped jer- sey walked past. Times sure had changed. ing for something, ‘give me good old days. A fellow could saun- ter down to the harness shop or the livery stable to chin a bit and not be in danger of his life. Nowadays I just sit here and don't try to navigate very far, Hate to even ride around with my grandson in the car. Too dang dangerous!” He eyed the corner anxiously. } “You're right,” Jed answered. | ‘Nothin’ much to do, either. | more chatauquas or medicine shows. No camp meetin’s. | | { | | A swank blue convertible drew up to the curb. A sporty young fellow leaned out and called to Clem. “Hi, Gramps. I've been out to the airport and I got your plane reservations and your puilman tickets. Everything is all set.” Clem got up hastily, He looked at Jed apologetically. “My son in Washington, D. C. has sent for me to come down and see the sights. He's paying all my expenses or I'd never go. Can we drop you off any place?’ Jed rose too. “Nope, I've got my scooter-bike parked around the corner and I'll just put-putt back to my daughter's. There's a good television program comes on pretty soon that I never miss.” James Madison agreed to declare war on Great Britain in 1812 if e- lected president, By IRA MILLER Farm Electrification Bureau Farmers aren't getting soft—just more sensible, That's why an increas ing number of chores are being hane dled these days by power machinery; much of it electrified. Not only does such equipment make farm work easier, it also shortens choring time and helps to increase production. “What’s | comb, Traveled a bit in my day. | the | No | Bi storage In becoming “production line” con= scious, farmers are following the lead set years ago by city industrial plants. Prime examples of this trend can be seen in the way many farms ers now handle the lifting and mov- ing of heavy loads. Much of this work is being turned over to elec trically operated unloaders and ele vator-conveyors. One of the newest industrial appli= cations being put to use on the farm is the wagon unloader, Such wagons, generally, are equipped with either a drag conveyor or a wide canvas belt —the latter covering the entire wagon bed. When used for hay, such wagons may have a false sliding front-end gate which is pulled back to push the load off the rear of the wagon. Grain and corn “unloading wagons” have a tight bed, with sides sloping toward the center. The unloading mechanism, operated by motors of Wagon unloaders, conveyors prt to use en farm to i IT TOOK SOME DOING—but he: to remove onions from wagon to elevator for transportation to building. most types of field produce, includ- | | | chien von from Y% to % horsepowsr, uses fron 1 to 2 kilowatt hours of power | per each 100 tons moved, When | wagon unloaders aie used In con nection with elev tors or conveyors harvested crops can be moved from the wagon directly into storage bin feed grinders or elsewhere Portable inclined plane conveyors have many uses farm | elevator on th movin They are capable of re’s a wagon unloader rigged vp ing grain, ear corn and baled hay It has been estimated that one of these devices, operated by a % horse- power motor, can elevate ear corn faster than two men can shovel it into the receiving hopper. They re- quire motors of from 3 to 2 horse- power. On the average, they use about %% kwhr per 100 bushels of grain elevated. A number of farmers also have auger elevators. These time and labor saving devices are used to move small grain into or out of trucks from side bins of granaries or other ground storage places. Operated by motors of from 1 to 2 horsepower, they use from 5 to 7 kwhrs for each 1000 bushels of grain handled. All of which would seem to indi- cate that the days of the familiar scoop shovel are nearing an end on the farm. Mortuary Record! (From page 1) | 400 North Lime street, Lancasier, Saturday morning, years, Deceased was October 2, 1945. He was at | Buinbridge Jan. 12, 1880, being a| son of former Sheriff John H. My- His of He was aged 71 | bedfast since | born ors, wife was a daughter prominent | of j and | Mr. | attorney I the Commonwealth. { four children survive. Myers was a secretary His etta. and former wife | Mrs. John Longenecker. | Mrs. Elizabeth H. | sixty-four, wife of John G. Longe- necker, Elizabethtown R2, died on | Thursday at the Lancoster General She was a daughter of | | the late William Alice Hide Baum and a member of the United Christian Church at Campbelltown. | In addition to she | | is survived by four children: Mrs. { Katie Wells John C. Longe- | | necker, koth Elizabethtown; | Longenecker, i Hospital. and her husband and of = { Ruth, wife of Leroy Templin, and | | Marlin E. Longenecker, both of E- R2. great a Raymond | Elizabethtown RI, Funeral services were grandchild- | and of Ten grandchildren H. Baum, also lizabetht-wn | ren, two brother, survive, held Sun- | day afternoon in Shank’s Union | . . . church with interment in the ad- joining cemetery. PY Ensen: Dr.G.M. Bingham (From page 1) He is a close student of National | | | [ | { | - | | and Intertational affairs and will | “a | have a most timely and instructive | address. [It is expected there | large attendance of members and to this nationally known lecturer. Dr. Bingham will also speak the Lions of will be a | guests hear local topic same evening at the Club meeting with “America Today”. ic hc his One horsepower is the power required to lift 33,000 pcunds one foot in one minute. | J the late Col. James Dufly, of Mari- | * ) gy or Modernization Can Be Fun JP OOM modernization can be a pleas- =% ure. With ihe right materials and sound planning, one can completely transform a room at a cost that is sur- prisingly low. See Low up-to-date and atiractive the room is in the illustration. lis former plaster walls, badly cracked, were covered with rigid, touzh panels of Masonite Presdwood. This permanent dry wall material takes any desired finish. Available in pancls four feet wide and in lengths to 12 {eet, Presd- wood goes into place quickly minimum of fuss and bother, with a is aR WBE ie Look at the neat, spacious wardrobe in the corner. There's another just like it at the other side of the room. Each was made of Presdwood. Incidentally, this is a room for twins—with two of everything including even a two-seater desk. A convenient sun-seat, the for a small radio and books, beds and the paneled ceiling are other features of this modernized room. It’s really amazing what a transformation can be made with good materials, ordi- nary carpentry and some time, energy and ingenuity! Ee bed shelf the twin tools JURY FAVORS ESTOCK IN SUIT AGAINST S. LCCKARD A Common Pleas Court jury late Wednesday afternoon returned a | ening. | | | SEEMS AS THOUGH WE'LL | The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, Se ptember 27, 1951—1 News From Florin (From Page 1) several days in the New England States. y Mr. Mrs. George spent Tuesday at Neffsville Mr. and Mrs. Raiph Mumper family. Master James Musser of Stauf- | fertown spent the weekend with his | grandmother, Mrs. Adah Eichler, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller of | Rheems called on the latter's father Mr. Samuel Shelley Wednesday ev- Mumper with and and Miss Daisy Hossler spent Monday | at Allentown at the funeral of a relative, Rev. John H. Gable of the Gloss- attended | { brenner E. U. B. Church the Eastern Penna. Conference be- ing held at the Penbrook E. U. B. | Church this week. —-—— WANTED: Neat, white reliable woman for cooking and downstairs work. Sleep in, good home, good wages, Hess Nursing Home, Mount= ville 5-9409, 39-3t NEW MODEL KODAK: Tourist" camera, Flash ghutter & Telifinder $27.00. For service buy cameras at Victor Klahr's, Direct dealers. Mid- dletown, 39-1 WANTED Exper‘enced gas station attendant. Good working conditions, 8 Hr. day, 7-day week, Salary, plus commis~ sion. Inquire D. H. Bowers, Clear- view Esso Servicenter. 38-tf WANTED TO RENT: Unfurnished house or apartment. 2 or 3 bed- rooms Christian family. Best ref- erences. Write P. O. Box 404, Col- umbia, Pa. 37-2tp FOR SALE: Used Estate Heatrola. Very good condition. 8-room size. | ALWAYS HAVE CHISELERS | With jobs plentiful nowadays, a total of 1,151,284 obtained by chiselers | jobless insurance funds during Ap- was fraudulently from state ril, May and June. That's our pay | | for giving men money they never earned. evict il lisesi kept in At boy's football Lancaster when a woman it fell to return a her vard. She refused it, so | the boy's father took one of her Phone Mt. Joy 3-5254. Mrs. Isaac | Metzler. 37-tf BARGAINS: Used pianos, Spinet [styled pianos and new pianos. Ac- | cordians, 120 Bass ladies models. Used. Very reasonable. Cash or | terms. : DAVID HESS MUSIC SHOP 106 North Market Street | ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. | 39-tf | FOR SALE: Two metal Hamster Pens. Call Mount Joy 3-9661. 23-tf | FOR SALE: Building Lot, 62x156, | on South Market Street, Mt. Joy. | Contact E. E. Brown, phone 34 19-t Phone 605-J porch chairs. : | | Limestone Limestone deposits are found in New York's Adirondack mountains, the Hudson and Champlain valleys west to Buffalo. Most important use to which limestone is put is in the manufacture of cement. Drive Safely Safety experts recall that in one out of every seven fatal traffic acci- dents last year, the weather was re- ported as having been rainy, foggy, or snowing. Such a toll means you have to see danger to avoid it. Belgian Congo Uranium is only one of the Bel- gian Congo's many useful minerals. Each year from the Katanga area and elsewhere comes an average of 150,000 tons of pure copper, plus tin, cobalt, industrial diamonds, zine, coal, manganese, and precious metals. Keep Eggs Cool Winter eggs may be held at too warm a temperature. Do not store them in the kitchen or too near the furnace. In the absence of a special- ly built egg room, partition off a cool part of the house cellar for the purpose. Fly’s wings vibrate 330 times a second. CLASSIFIED Rates for classified advertising in this column are: 3 lines or less, minimum ...... 35¢ Over 3 lines, per line .......... 10¢ Each add. insertion, per line .... 8c | NOTICE: Belts made, buttons and { buckles covered. Vivian Brown, { Phone Mt. Joy 3-4501. 38-tf | HELP WANTED: | ette and store. Inquire Kulp’s Lun- I cheonette and News Stand, Mount Joy. 38-tf gelist and family urgently need a and in a belt extending from Albany | HOME TO BUY OR RENT: Evan. | | PEACHES: 15 varieties in season. | Elam S. Hess, Mount Joy R2. Phone 3-4641. 33-tf | | MILLINERY - Feathers & Veiling. | Baby Gifts and Novelties MARGARET-JEAN SHOPPE 19 W. Donegal St., Mount Joy, Pa. Dial 3-9373 Buttonholing 37-tf | FOR SALE: Asphalt Tile for kitch= | en, bathroom or basement. Install it yourself. 5¢ each. We rent cut- | ters. Mt. Joy Tile & Linoleum Co., Mt. Joy. Phone 3-3492. Open eve- 20tf | nings. | WANT TO LEARN A TRADE? | Every young man should have | scmething to “fall back on” when | he gets older—he should be ambi=- | Alterations | | | | tious enough to learn a trade. If there is a chap like that around | here, who is willing to learn, he | can get a position at this office. He | must be 16 years old. If interested apply THE BULLETIN tf Mount Joy, Pa. ANTIQUES: Will pay high prices for antignes of any description. Mr. | Hart, 161 N. Charlotte St, Man heim, Pa. Phone 407. 2-24-tf FOR SALE: LEGHORN BABY CHICKS, R.O.P. sired, Penna. U. S. | Pullorum clean. A. C. Mayer, Phone 3-9826, Mount Joy, Pq. 49-tf | Typewriters, Add. Mach’s., Cash | Registers, Check Writers, Safes, | New & Used. J. M. Engle, 411 East { High St, E-town. Ph. 14J. 8-18-tf [FOR SALE: Brick Warehouse, { cement floor, 1800 sq. ft. lot 155x | 180, Delta St.,, Mt. Joy. P. O. Box | 85, c/o H. J. Ri, Mount Joy. 35-tf | | | For Luncheon- WANTED: One Warehouse Man and One experienced truck driver. Apply Wolgemuth Bros. Ine. Florin. 33-tf 5 or 6 room home. Country prefer- | 38-4t FOR SALF: Simmons Metal Bed, | Spring & Mattress. Library table. | Aoply 104 Fairview St., Mt. Jov or | Phone 3-5282. 38-2 WANTED: Housekeeper for two adults. Make home there. Apoly at 123 N. Spruce St.. Elizabethtown, or phone 548-W E-town. 38-tf | HOUSE FOR SALE: 1% story | Brick, insulated, new oil burner, 5 | rooms & bath, | | | | red. Box 303, Annville, Pa. [ finished basement, | |in Florin. Phone Mt. Joy 3-5739 af- | verdict in favor of Stephen K. Estock of this place, in the amount of $1800 | " - ; in full settlement of his claim Wish to thank my friends and relatives for the many cards and $2,319.70 against Samuel Jeard. | : Lockard, | flowers I received during mv re- trading as Lockard Hotel, Colum-|cent illness. Edward Pennell. 39-1p bia. Estock, cabinet maker and bar | WILL CARE FOR CHILD, aged 3 designer, sued Lockard for the $2,- | to 5, at my home while mother works. Mrs. Henry Schneider, Hen- 219.70 claiming the Columbia hotel-| ry Street Mount Joy. as un+| pop SALE: ter 5 p. my or Saturdays. 38-tf 39-1t man owed him that much Tan. colored The bill was submitted by Estock | Hendrix, F. Donegal St., Mt. Jov. for work he had done on Lockard’s | Hotel while it was undergoing ren- 1949 MERCURY STATION WAGON ovations. with: radio, heater, The jury was that it| Like new. Cost over $3000. Bargain informed must find a verdict for Estock in| at $1325. Call Mt. Joy 3-5331. 39-1p | INTERIOR DFCORATING: Florin, Pa. 39-tf the amount of at least $1190, be-| FOR cause that much Lockard admitted | Call Farl C. Brubaker, he owed the claimant. | Phone Mt. Joy 344949. The dispute for the most part | FOR SALE. Boys’ All Wool Suit— centered around the formica item |chubby size - 14. Phone Mt. Joy in the bill presented by Estock. = or call at 116 W. Main. 39-1 a I WISH TO EXPRESS my sincere Exactly 174 years ago today Lan- | thanks to all who have so kindly caster was the capital of the United | remembered me with prayers, vis- Stites. |its, cards, flowers and gifts during — > 0 — my stay in the hospital and at home. May God richly bless every- one of you. Mrs. Ray Myers. 39-1 Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. A kitchen | paid balance of a bill for $3469.70.| range in good condition. See Oscar | 39-2 | overdrive, Tires | | | | WANTED: Old Magazines, News- | papers. I buy all kinds of scrap liron, also sell stove wood. Guy D. | Spittler, Phone 3-5573 Mt. Joy. 34-tf FOR SALE (The Former Kern Property) AT 10 EAST MAIN ST. MOUNT JOY, PA. B v ADAM H. GREER 542 N. 2nd Street, Columbia Or Any Realtor 24-7¢ | WANTED—Dead or alive Automo- [ biles, any make, any model: also | Scrap Iron, Batteries, ete. Prompt | service given. H. B. Shank Auto | Wreckers, 74 N. Poplar St., E-town, | Pa. Phone 191-W or 38-W. 8-tf | | NEW & USED CARS { Buy Your HENRY J. KAISER | From BENJ. J. STALEY | Immediate Delivery Trade & Low Financing STALEY'S GARAGE Florin, Pa. Phone 3-5951 11-tf EXECUTORS’ NOTICE Estate of Annie B. Ricksecker, | deceased, late of the Borough of | Mount Joy, Lancaster County, Pa. | Letters testamentary on said es- | tate having been granted to the un- | dersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- | mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same, | will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned | W. L. KODER, West Main St., Mt. Joy, Pa. SILAS K. STONER Marietta St, Mt. Joy, Pa. Executors William R. Howard, Att'y 5-6t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers