The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 08, 1953, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    
\
«The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday. October 8. 1953
Dr.H.C Killheffer


Tree Service
Optometrist




MANHEIM |
163 S. Charlotte St. { SAWING, PRUNING
Telephone 5.3376 | AND SPI VIN
Al SPRAYING
Mon. & Wednes. 9.5:30 an
Tues, Fri. Sat, 7.9 P. WM, il
"an Tues. Fri. Sat, | B. B. IBACH
1:30-1:00, 5 : ‘ + y
0.26 P. M | 139 S. Main St., MANHEIM, PA.
ELIZABETHTOWN
16 E. High St. Phone 5.4616
Telephone 24.F
|
| x oe
It’s Time To Buy An
A —
ELECTRIC LAUNDRY DRYER
SEE THE
KELVINATOR DRYER
SEE US AT THE FARM SHOW
Lester E. Roberts & Son
PHONE 3-4132
47 EAST MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY. PA.



Imported
HOLLAND BULBS
Tulips — Crocus
Daffodils — Hyacinths

H. S. Newcomer & Son, inc.
PHONE 3-3361 MOUNT JOY, PA.





 



_
SICO
ROFIT


P S


Ap









 
 

® True Draft
® Economical
® Rugged
@ Lightweight
® Maneuverable

Puts corn in the wagon — not around it!
GATHERING CHAINS guide stalks into snapping rolls. FULL
FLOATING SNOUTS adapt to all types of ground conditions.
Adjustable for low corn, easily raised or lowered. CORN SAVER
delivers the small amounts of shelled corn to the wagon. Oper-
ates off any one-twe plow tractor with a power take-off.

Lancaster County
iW Farm Bureau Co-Operative Ass'n
FARM MACHINERY DEPARTMENT
DILLERVILLE ROAD -



| Weekly Letter Smallest Potato
Penna. Game
Commission
Modern day
go afield in the
1953
Hunting hours are 7 am
m. daily, except on
The season ends at 5 p
Oct, 24
third staté-wide
season in the Commonwealth,
[Legal bucks will be those with
Penn
seasons
first of
sylvania's deer
Sunday
This will be the
bow
urday,
special
2 or more points to one antler
or with an antler 3 or more in-
ches long without points, meas-
uring from the top of the skull | 1imit
as the deer is in life.
The
to own
1653
hunter is required |
wear a ‘regular’
bow
and
hunting
| special archery licenses.
latter costing $2.00, may
purchased only at the
ment of Revenue, Harrisburg. |
The same special archery licen-
se permits the holder to hunt
legal the state's two |
archery preserves. One is in |
Sullivan County, near Central, |
the other is in Forest County,
Kellettville.
In Pennsylvania's first sepa- |
rate bow and arrow season for |
male deer, in 1951, 5542 arch-
ery licenses were issued and 33 |
legal bucks were reported slain
by bowmen. Last year, 8446 li-
| censes were issued and 24 horn- |
ed deer were reported taken by
[the bow and ardow method. If
| the history of the growth of the
sport in other states is any in-
| dication, many additional arch-
ers will seek bucks this Octob-
er in the Keystone State.
license
game in
near
|
A large percentage of bow
| hunters question they will see a
legal target in range, or have
the ability to bring it down once
sighted. Many say being out in
the invigorating autumn days
colorful foliage is re-
enough. It is the fer-
| vent hope of avid bowmen,
| however, that ground condi-
tions will be damp, so that they
| may realize the added thrill of
stealthily stalking their quarry
within striking range In the
| 1952 bow season conditions un-
were so crackling dry
use this
among
payment
| derfoot
| it was impossible to
| method successfully.
The so-called duck season op-
5p. |
to 5 P| August, the State
and a peen reduced
The |
be | than in
Depart- | have more than 2 geese (snow
Crop Forecast
Harrisburg, Oct. 1 — Potato
growers of Pennsylvania suffer-
ed a decline of 1,200,000 bush
Robinhoods will | els or six percent in their 1953
[crop during the dry and hot
weather the last three weeks in
Department
fol-
| of Agricultude announced
m. Sat- | Federal-State surveys.
JRain of early September aided
growth of tubers in some late
planted fields, but the State
[mergansers, 1 a day or in pos
session,
The daily and possession
on coots remains at 10
and 10.
The daily limit
per day. This season’s possession
by 1 bird, or 2
however, is 4 one more
'52 .A hunter may not
on geese has
limit,
geese excepted) in a straight or
mixed bag a day, or 4 in posses-
| sion after the first day.
The daily and possession lim-
it on brandt is 6 and 6. double
last year’s limits.
There is no open season this
year on snow geese or swans.
Waterfowl shooting on the
Delaware River between Penn-
syvlvania and New Jersey, and
the western bank of Pennsylva-
nia within 100 yards of the high
water line, shall be from Nov.
6 to January 4. inclusive.
estimate of 13,200,000 bushels the western part of the State. potatoes are grown commer-nearly 308,000,000 bushels com-

as of September 1 is for the|In the northwest early Cob- | cially, including Pennsylvania, pared with 280,000,000 last
smallest crop ever grown in|plers were about half a crop the estimate is for a crop ofyear.
Pennsylvania, the Department | In northeastern counties the set v

I thirds of the 1942-51 average | prematurely, Some repodted |
19,466,000
——
Cobblers were a failure, Vines
and rapidly in the]
Leigh-Northampton
were so far |
production of bush
dried carly
important
els.
Except in
where

te |
\
Nag
Potter county
many potatoes are | area, Some fields
for State seed certifica-|advanced that rains would not |
said. was light and tubers small.
A potato crop of this size, if| Throughout the central and | ‘
realized, will be eight percent | western counties heat and £ a Prd
below last years and about two | drought ripened the potato crop 3»
} —
wo .
| ’ P=
as 4
 

grown
tion, crop conditions was re- | be beneficial,
ported as poor, especially in In the 29 states where late |
OPEN EVENINGS |
During Farm Show

As a convenience to the many folks who will
be in Mount Joy during the Farm Show, Wed-
nesday, Octoter 14, through Saturday, October
17, our store will be open evenings until 9 P: M.
Stop in and look around—See our large selec-

Much...
for so little!
READ YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPER
tion of tires and appliances atreasonable

prices
GEO. W. LEAMAN
E. MAIN ST., MOUNT JOY PHONE 3-9351








| ens at 12:00 noon, October 15.
| The fededally-set waterfowl
| regulations and those on other
| migratory game birds are not
broadcast generally, as are
| those governing small and large |
| game hunting. Therefore the
i following reminders.
hunters in this
have a
Waterfowl
state are required to
1953 Pennsylvania hunting 1li- |
cense and a migratory bird |
| hunting stamp to hunt ducks,
| geese, coots and brandt. The $2
| federal stamp is available at
| post offices. This stamp is not
| required in hunting sora, galli-
| nules, woodcock, Wilson's or
| jacksnipe or doves.
Sunday hunting for migra-
| tory fowl or other wild game
| is not allowed in Pennsylvania.
On Oct. 31,
waterfowl,
may hot be
woodcock
migratory
| then in
| hunted before 9 a.m., the open-
| ing hour of the small season.
This year, except the first day
of season and Oct. 31, the daily
hour
season,
| starting time is one-half
| before sunrise, as formerly. But
the closing time has been exten-
ded to sunset, one hour later
fhan last year.
The season on ducks, geese
and costs runs from October 15 |
| to December 12, inclusive. On
brandt the two-week season is
October 15 to October 29, in-
clusive.
The two-week season on
Wilson's or jacksnipe extends
from October 2 to 16, inclusive.
Hunting hours are the same as
for ducks. The daily limit is 8, |
the possession limit 8.
The woodcock season extends
from Oct. 2 to November 10, in-
clusive. The daily bag is 4, and
8 are allowed in possession af-
ter the first day. Hours are the
same as for ducks, with a 9 a.
m. starting time on October 31.
The daily bag limit of ducks
will be 4 this year, with a pos-
season limit of 8. One wood
duck may be included in the
daily limit of 4 ducks, but only
one may ge in possession.
These limits do not include
mergansers. The season .on Am-
erican and’ red-breasféd merg-
ansers pairs ~ with that on
| ducks, with a daily and posses-
| sion limit of 25. For hooded
1 pt
| Stimulate your business by adver=
| tising in the Bulletin.
and |
through
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
{


A Last Drink — A Last Drive

The party's over—Bottoms Up! Let's get going!
.« For thousands of men and women—children and pedestrians, too—
that has been the beginning of the end. On the highway at night, where the
road curved and the hazy driver drove straight ahead, there was another
“Bottoms Up!” and the end of the last drive.
It's hard to convince a person who has had a few drinks that he
shouldn't drive. Alcoholid stimulation engenders a false confidence in his
ability. In reality, his reactions have slowed down, his perception and judg-
ment lowered—driving alertness gone. In a later stage the road blurs, lights
blind as he fights drowsiness, loses contro].
: Seldom is he endangering his life alone. He is also endangering the
lives of those traveling with him and others on the streets and highw ays. In
35 states 166,179 drivers lost their licenses in 1952 for drinking and driving.
Thirty-five per cent of all revocations are brought against drinking drivers.
=. If you have been drinking, either let someone else drive, leave your
car and call a taxi, or stay where you are until your senses clear. Stay off
the road! 8 : : :
“Hy Don’t kid yourself into a “Bottoms Up” drive—it can be fatal!
OO EBB EE EEE, * |
®
JA\




G0
PEO 3 TE:
00RD BBB BBE