The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 18, 1954, Image 4

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Everybody In This Locality Reads The Bulletin
Get It At Booth’s'
TOBACCO
MUSLIN


2 and 3 YARDS WIDE

First Come—First Served
\;










60 GUERNSEYS
AT AUCTION
Thurs., Mar. 25 — 12:30 Noon
AT THE SALES PAVILION, 6 MILES EAST OF LAN-
CASTER, PA. |
2 Bulls — 50 Cows — 8 B. Heifers |
All will be fresh or heavy springers by sale time. An op-
portunity to buy cattle of proven quality with high test. If |
you need to raise your test, now is the best time to buy. !
Prices are the lowest in many years.
Everything T. B. and Bangs Certified. Majority Vaccinated,
SALE MANAGED BY: FOR CATALOGS WRITE
PENNA. GUERNSEY BREEDERS’ ASSN.
P. O. BOX 491 HARRISBURG, PA.
PUBLIC SALE
OF VALUABLE
REAL ESTATE and PERSONAL PROPERTY
SATUR., MARCH 20, 1954
AT NO. 413 NORTH HANOVER STREET, ELIZABETHTOWN.
PENNA.
LOT OF GROUND 60 by 170 thereon erected a
2% Story BRICK DWELLING
with six rooms, bath and pantry. Hot water heat:
TWO-CAR BRICK GARAGE
This is a very desirable piece of real estate at a good location.
Property can be viewed by calling Elizabethtown phone 704-R
and making arrangements with Wiiliam D. Balmer.
HOUSEHOLD: Magic Chef gas range, eight piece dining
room suite, small corner cupkoard, three piece living room suite,
occasional chairs, other chairs and rockers, Strech Zeidler up-
right piano and stool, bureaus, wardrobe with drawers, double
beds, one with spring and mattress, one single Simmons bed with
spring, one single bed of Bird's eye maple with spring and inter-
spring mattress, sectional bookcase and desk combination, drop-
head sewing machine, Wicker sewing stand, radio. card table,
other tables, Hoover sweeper with attachments, 9 by 12 ft. rug,
throw rugs, hall runners, electric floor, table and boudoir lamps,
clocks, pictures, books, sheet music, electric Mixmaster, toasters:
electric iron, linens, bedding, dishes, pewter ware, cooking uten-
sils, Speed Queen washer, tubs, lawn mower, garden tools. and a
lot of articles too numerous to mention.





Sale to commence at 12:30 P. M,, real estate at 2:00 P. M.
when conditions will be made known by
Walter Dupes, Auctioneer .
Landis & Garman, Clerks Nellie 0. Balmer
10-2¢
na UO. ie
Truck Farm Equipment and Household Goods
SATUR.,, MARCH 27, 1954
At Chiques Truck Farm, 1 mile east of Marieita, at Gas
Station on Lancaster Pike, Route 340. °
GARDEN TRACTOR
Garden Sprayer, Weed Burner, 30 Hotbed Sash, Window Sash.
Lumber, Locust Posts, Garden Tools, Power Emery Wheel and
Buffer, Bag Truck, Large Grease Gun, Platform Scales, Spring
Scales, Butter Scales, Iron Water Trough, Hand Crop Duster, 500
Celery Bleachers, 100 Bushe’s 1st and 2nd Grade Potatoes, Pic.
nic Tables, Roofing Slate, Large Umbrella for Farm Machine, To
bacco Lath, Wrenches and other Tools, 3.000 tomato stakes. 30-
gal. Hot Water Tank, Irrigation Outfit, 700 Feet of Skinner Pipe
and ‘Oscillators, 1% and 2 Inch Pipe, Copper Tubing, Galvanized
Pipe Fittings, Oscillation Garden Sprinkler, German 8 Mm. Rifle,
Muzzle Loading Gun, 16 Gauge Shot Gun, Ford Pickup Truck,
2-Wheel Trailer, Steel Bed with Rack, Like New;.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS SOME ANTIQUES
Frigidaire Refrigerator, 2 Electric Ranges, One Ap't Eize: Kit-
chen Base Cabinet, Sewing Machine, Chairs, Rockers, Music Cab-
iiet,, 2 Small Tables, Large Table, Buffet, Antique Table, Chest,
China Closet, Book Case, Bedroom Suite, 2 Double Beds, Single
Bed, Breakfast Set, Egg Stove, 2-room Space Heater, 3-Heat El-
ectric Hot Plate, Porch Glider and Chairs, Steamer Trunk, Porch
Swing, Linoleum Rugs, Axminster Rug, Throw Rugs, 2 “Serta”
Mattresses, Feather Pillows, Comforts and other Bedding, Coffec
Table, End Tables, World Atlas, Cameras, Antique Carved Mahog-
any Parlor Cupboard, Floor Lamps, Table Lamps, Dough Tray,
Electric. Train Table, Wardrobe, Cooking Utensils, Dishes, Milk
Strainer, Iron Pans, Ice Cpeam Freezer, Glass Containers, Crocks
and Jugs, Quilting Frame, Rug Frames, Decorated Wood Box,
Spinning Wheel, Bureau, Studio Coach, Sunbeam Mixmaster, Au-
tomatic Record Player and Radio, Books, Electric Irons, Ironing
Board, Clocks, Meat Benches and many other articles not men-
tioned.
Sale to start at 12:30 Sharp when terms will be made known by
Parke Shaub, Auctioneer NO AH A. SENTZ
Refreshments Served. No Hucksters Please. 11-2¢!

A
{ A’l that certain 2% story brick


THE


FARMER’S MARKET
Used Cars
1952 Plymouth 4-door, Heater.
1950 Chevrolet 2-door, R & H
1950 DeSoto, 4-door, R & H
1946 Dodge, 4-door, R & H
1953 Dodge, 4-door, Heater
1950 Plymouth, Bus. Cpe, H.
Bros.
SALUNGA
Good Used Cars
1953 Plymouth Belvedere Sport
Coupe
1951 Pontiac Sedan Cp.
1948 Pontiac 2-dr. Sedan.
1947 Pontiac 2-dr. Sedan
1947 Plymou h 4-dr Sedan.
1940 Dodge Coupe
1940 Dodge 4-dr. Sedan
1939 Chevrolet 4-dr. Sedan.
Eli Ament
Your
DeSoto -
Dealer
MT. JOY, PA.
Phone 3-4264



 
headquarters for value
PUBLIC SALE
REAL ESTATE- LANDISVILLE
Saturday, March 20, 1954
iwelling, Church Street, Lan-
lisville, 8 rooms, bath, hot wa-
ter heat, Garage, Authority wa-
ter. Lot fronts 36 feet on the
east side of Church street, adja-
cent to parsonage of Church of
God. Depth of lot about 185 ft.
Sale to be held on the premises
in the village of Landisville at
2:00 P. M.
AMOS B. NISSLEY
Executor of Estate of
Anna N. Nissley.
Elmer V. Spahr, Auct.
Samuel S. Wenger, Att'y. 9-3c
PUBLIC SALE
Sat, Mar. 27
Near Mt. Joy on the State
highway leading to Manheim at
Stauffeitown, near Thome's
store.
Entire lot of household goods
and some antiques as following:
Old bureau, barroom chair, 4
old chairs and stool, bedstead & |
spring, sewing machine, drop- |
leaf table, chest, two 9x15 lino- |
leum dugs, one 9x12 rug, elect-
ric refrigerator, two oil heaters,
two 50-gal. drum of kerosene,
ooking glass, extension table,
radio, porch furniture, dishes,
lamps, a lot of new quilts, gas
range, kitchen utensils, ete.
Sale at 12:30 p. m.
Mrs. Rose Ressler
C. S. Frank, Auct.
New FARM - Used
MACHINERY
NEW IDEA-PAPEC
JOHN DEERE
TRACTORS
J. D. - “A” with cultivator
J. D. - “B’s” with Cultivators.
J. D. - “M” with cultivator
Case - Model V. C. (Special)
SPREADERS
Oliver Tractor Spreader
(Rubber)
N. I. Horse Spreaders on steel
or rubber
Excellent used Disk Harrows
Mowers, Spring Harrows, Side
Rake, Plows, Grain Drill, Lime
Drill, 12A Combine, etc.
MT. JOY, PA.

For Health's Sake
USE
for your gardens, meadows
and farm crops.
“Rock Phosphate
and Granite Dust”
Abram B. Stauffer
ROHRERSTOWN, PA.
Phone Lancaster 40767
10-3¢
USED FARM
EQUIPMENT
®
1 - A. Farmall Tractor
1 - C. Farmall Tractor
1 - H. Farmall Tractor
1-F14 Farmall Tractor
1-F20 Farmall Tractor
1-200 H. Spreader
3
J. B. Hostetter & Son

M. L. Gainer, Clerk. 11-2¢

Patronize Bulletin Advertisers.
W. MAIN ST.,MOUNT JOY
Bulletin Ads Pay Big Dividends.


| CASE FIELD DAY
Thurs., Mar.
See The
CASE DIESEL 500
pulling 5 - 14 in. bottom plows in action.
THE NEW S. C.
with contour plow.
THE NEW
with moun
ALSO OTHER MACHINERY IN ACTION
! C OME ONE
PLACE -—— ROY KAYLOR'S FARM, !; MILE NORTH OF
LANCASTER COUNTY FARM DINER
25 — 1:00 p. m.
CASE TRACTOR
Drive it yourself.
VAC 14
ted plow.
COME ALL


Black Hawk
10% CASH
DURING
@ Construction
@® Lusy Operation
A PROFITABLE


THE MOST ACCURATE PLANTER IN THE FIELD
Built for a Lifetime of Dependable Planting
IN ORDER TO MOVE OUR INVENTORY
BEFORE THE BIG SPRING RUSH
Lancaster County
Corn Planter
DISCOUNT
Farm Calendar
COST OF LIGHTING — The
initial cost of fluorescent light-
ing usually is higher than that
of incandescent, Sanna Black,
Penn State extension home
management specialist, reports.
But the operating cost of fluor-
escent lighting is lower. It gives
between two and three times
more light for the same wattage
GROWING UP — When a
child is young,
means pleasing his parents,

H. S. Newcomer & Son |
3-3361 |
10-2c |
| cooked,
“Natural Fertilizers” |



MARCH
@ Accurate Performance
® Extra Fealures
INVESTMENT


| Main St,
by doing things against their
will he is cutting the apron
strings and growing up, Mar- |
suerite L. Duvall, Penn State

extension family life specialist,
reminds parents.
UNDERCOOY CERTAIN
FREEZER FOODS—Meats and |
vegetables that are headed for |
the freezer in stews, spaghetti |
sauces, and similar combina-
tions should be slightly under-
Marjorie Wormeck, a
Penn State extension nutrition
specialist, says. 5 |
ALTERING PATTERNS —
Buy patterns in the size that is
nearest your bust measurement,
recommends Margery Bessom,
Penn State extension clothing
specialist. If alterations are nec
essary, it is easier to alter the
waist and hips.
WHERE TO STORE — Lug-!
gage needs to be stored in a dry
place. Outdoor tools and equip-
ment, such as porch furniture,
also need a dry spot for storage,
according to Doris Conklin,
Penn State extension home
management specialist.
EE {
|
EVANGELISTIC SERVICE |
TO END SUNDAY "
Services which
have been held at the Church
of God, Landisville, since Mar.
10 will end Sunday evening,
Mar. 21. The Singing Shepherds
of Wilmore, Ky., are the guest
evangelists.
to boost

Evangelistic
There is no betler way
your business than by local news-
paper advertising.
FURNITURE |
REFINISHING
BEAUTIFUL KNOTTY PINE
REPRODUCTIONS
LENHERT'S
Cabinet Shop
MARIETTA, PA.
Phone 6-2581 8-tf
BULLER'S
BEAUTY SALON
Florin, Pa.

Spring Specials
$10 Cold Waves
and Machineless $8.50
$8 Cold Waves
and Machineless ... $6.50
Toni's Given $5.00
Open 9 A.M. to 9 P. M,
Phone Mt. Joy 3-4339
10-tic

sALUNG,
FEEDS
|
S. H. Hiestand & Co.
Coal - Feed - Grain
MT. JOY REPRESENTATIVE
M.L. GAINOR
35 W. Donegal ‘St.,
Ph. 3-5803
8-tfc
as filament bulbs.
|
ip : |
if being good |
he |
may feel when he is older that |
| spread because


THE
|
|


\

He Can

NS eer
agers or ND 5
THF
ig

oN

Solve It

Penna. Game
Commission
Weekly Letter
With the possibility the spring
fire season may come early this
year, the Game Commission ap-
peals to landowners to refrain
from burning off fields
woodlots. Leading agriculturists
say the custom is unnecessary,
that it damages soil fertility.
| Game officials point out that a-
side from the dangers that ac
company burn-offs ground fires
have a disastrous affect on wild-
life during the nesting season,
and they destroy needed cover.
Fires that get
especially those near woodland
often become
conflagrations. They may burn
over great acreages of good tim
berland, destroying many wild
creatures and their homes, even
buildings of the landowner who
awesome
areas,
| started thgm.
Hungry Deer Steals Corn
From Auto
Carl Holt, a Somerset County
deputy game pyotector,
that last February when he re
turned to his car after distribut
ing corn ,in a special wildlife
refuge near Somerset, he
to see four deer feeding on corn
in the open trunk of his car
Bears On The Move
bear yield in
reports
was
The
point
greatest
of square miles remains
of a natural
food shortage.
The take of bears in some of
the eastern counties has risen
quite steadily in the last few
years. Pike, Lackawanna and
Monroe are now classed with
the leaders. Also, several coun-
“ties long considered outside the
true
“bear country” made a
most creditable showing in the
last season, low though the ov-
er-all kill was. Leading this ca-
tagory was Clearfield County.
Others thought to be too far


OLIVER SAGER & SON

Ditch Digging — Septic Tanks Installed
Fuel Drainage — Footings — Grading
Hauling — Top Soil and Fill
And Light Jobs

R.D. 1
PHONE

ELIZABETHTOWN
345RS


nn RAR
0 rion wi i ohh
and |
out of control,
( south to be in the bear range
| were: Clarion, Huntingdon, In-
| diana, and Mifflin Counties.
| . ‘ iy
| Ducks Go For River Rides
| 1 «
| Raymond E. Holtzapple, a
| Snyder County
| »
| “While
reports: making a pa
|
|
|
amERIcAN way | Sale Register
Saturday, March 20—On the
premises on Church Street, in
the village of Landisville, a lot
of ground 36 ft. by 185 ft., on
which is erected a "215 story
brick dwelling, with conveni-
ences and garage, by Amos B,
Nissley, Executor of Estate of
Anna N. Nissley, Elmer V,
Spahr, Auctioneer.
Saturday, March 27, near Mf.
Joy, on the state highway to
Manheim in Stauffertown; Pub-
lic sale of entire lot of house-
hold goods; sale at 12:30 p. m.
Mrs. Rose Ressler; C. S. Frank,
auctioneer.
Saturday, March 27-— Public
sale of {truck farm equipment
and household goods at the
Chicques Truck Farm, 1 mile
east of Marietta, at Gas Station
on Lancaster Pike, Route 340.
| Sale at 12:30 by Noah A. Sentz.
Good Friday, April 16th—At
Borough limits, Mount Joy on
the road leading to the Mt. Joy
cemetery. Annual Community
| Sale, 200 head live stock, imple-
{ ments, household goods, ete.
{by C. S. and Leo P. Frank. Sale
at 12M. Aldinger and Wagner,
Aucts.
|
|
| the
game protector, |
trol along the Susquehanna Riv-|
er this winter I observed hund-
reds of wild ducks on the river.
They were mostly mallards and
blacks, with some mergansers
“The ice was moving and the
fowl appeared to enjoy
on the eakes. It was
riding
see from 6 to 12 ducks on
ice cake. They would ride to :
point then fly
back toward Selinsgrove.’
near Dundore,
Foxes Reported Few In
Pike County
at an
ally low ebb in my district,” r
ports Game Protector John H
“Foxes are exception
Lohmann, Milford, Pa. In sup
port of his statement he
“John Flader, professional
fox trapper who formerly trap
ped between 80 and 100 foxes
| annually was successful in tak
| ing only 9 - 2 grays and 7 reds
in the past year. Other fox
hunters and trappers herecabouts
report that foxes arc
Traps Catch
When there i an unusual
scarce
Box
Big Animal
common to]
one!
etl eee
County To Observe
Wildlife Week
A. Kitch, president of
County Conservation Club,
today that local
plans are being made for parti-
cipation in National Wildlife
Week, to be observed March 21
to 27
National Wildlife Week is a
nationwide educational cam-
paign, he said, sponsored an-
nually by the National Wildlife
Federation and its state and lo-
cal affiliates. Purpose is to focus
John
announred
| . .
public attention on problems of
| natural
resource nianagement
{ and the pressing need for better
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
i ler pollution
| conservation
| special theme for 1954 will
The
be
practices.
| water pollution control.
The National Federation has
announced these six goals, or
objectives, in water pollution
control
1. Promotion of adequate wa-
laws in every
state. Some states have them,
| many do not.
)
2. Adeguate appropriations
| for state pollution-control ag-
encies. It is estimated that about
5 cents per
person Per year
| (based on total state pollution)
wildlife occurrence in Columbia |
wnty, Game Protector Mark
Ce
| L.. Hagenbuch, of
gels wind of it. Here he reports:
| “Each winter, animals other
than rabbits are taken in box
| traps during the rabbit trap-
1 1
Bloomsburg
|
|
|
| ping program. This one was no |
dently banged the trap against
a stump, breaking the door and
releasing its head from
trap’!
A Montgomery game protect-
or, Donald L. Croft,
“One of my rabbit trappers was
confronted with "a problem
while there was snow on the
ground this winter. Deer rolled
the traps over, trying to get the
apples used for bait out of
them.”
ea dll Beit ves
POST-KOREA VETS WANTING
COMPLETE INFORMATION
ON THEIR ELIGIBILITY FOR
KOREA GI BILL EDUCATION OR
TRAINING SHOULD CONTACT
THEIR NEAREST vA A
REGIONAL OFFICE


NE Los LOVe
Se


For full information contact your nearest
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION office
reported: |
1s sufficient.
Adequate sewage treat-
ment facilities in every coms
munity.
4. Adequate waste preven-
tion or waste treatment by ev-
ery industry. Additional
where industrial waste
problems have not been solved.
5. Prevention of silt pollution
re-
search
| through soil conservation prac-
{in a few of the northcentral
counties of the state. But a| exception. Along with the usual
study of recent-vear bear kills | ¢ats, opposums, skunks, squir
in Pennsylvania shows these | Y€ls and weasels a rabbit farm |
popular game animals have | © Opera Mr. Clarence Glide- |
spread east, west and southward | Well of Unity ville, caught a
| considerably. Last fall the dis- | deer. Judging from signs in the
persal was unusually there rust have . been
quite a show. The critter evi
the |
tices
6. Adequate appropriations
for the research and cooperative
programs of the Water Pollu-
tion Control Division of the U.
S. Public Health Service, as au-
thorized by the Taft-Barkley
Act of 1948.
—- We ee

NEW REPORT RATES

|
i
|
| agement,
PASTURE PROBLEMS
A new progress report, “Pas-
ture Improvement and Mainten-
ance Suggestions” just publish-
ed by the Agricultural Experi-
ment Station at the Penna. State
University, is stirring consider-
able interest among farmers’ of
the State, Dr. M. A. Farrell, the
station director says. The new
Progress Report No. 109 is av-
ailable free, through county
extension agents, or direct from
the station.
Using numerous sketches and
illustrations, the 20-page report
covers every phase of soil man-
fertilizer uses, seced-
| ing, and the grazing or clipping
of pasture crops. It also contains
a check-list which permits far-
mers or students to actually
rate their pasture program
practices.
Progress Report No. 109 was
prepared in an easy-to-read
style to embody numerous sci-
entific findings of several ex-
perimental projects which re-
late to the general over-all topic
of pasture improvement and
maintenance, it was explained,

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