tverybody, Everywhere, Reads The Bulletin 75 P.B. GUERNSEYS at PUBLIC AUCTION Thurs., April 22 — 12:30 Noon AT THE SALES PAVILION, 6 MILES EAST OF LAN- CASTER, PA. 2 BULLS - 30 COWS - 18 BRED & 25 OPEN HEIFERS 46 VACCINATED Sale includes the dispersal of the herd owned by T. L. Gus- tin, Holicong, Pa. Some exceptionally nice foundation heifers in sale. If you need to raise the test of your milk, the best way to do it is to buy Guernseys - at the present time they are selling cheap. 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 Saturday, April 24, 1954 On the premises located in the Borough of Elizabethtown, at No. 213-2132 North Market Street. LOT OF GROUND 60x200 {t. thercon creacted a 2% STORY FRAME DWELLING covered with asbestos shingles, containing six rooms bath, lavatory on first floor, fireplace in living room and also in cellar, hot water heat, new oil furnace. Also 2-STORY BLOCK & FRAME 3-CAR GARAGE WITH SHOP AND OFFICE ON FIRST FLOOR, SECOND FLOOR APARTMENT containing four rooms and bath, hot water heat, oil furnace. Between the two buildings is a 1000 gal. oil tank buried in yard which furnishes oil to both properties. Also at garage 285 | gal. gas tank to go with property. Both these properties are in good condition Properties can be viewed any evening after 6:00 P. M. dur- ing week beginning April 19th. Also at the same time and place a lol of couple seasons will be offered for sale: Two-piece living room suite; living room table; RCA television set with 21 in. screen; breakfast set; Gibson 8 cu. ft. refrigerator with freezing unit; Kelvinator Automatic Electric Range; kitchen cupboard; metal cabinet; sofa hide-a-bed; blonde cedar 12x12 rug and rug mat; throw rugs; desk; electric floor and table lamps; mirrors; curtains; drapes; electric iron; ironing board; El- ectrolux Cleaner; G. E. Cleaner; single metal bed with coil spring and mattress; double Hollywood bed with spring and mat- tress; chest of drawers; electric American Floor Sander, 8” drum; 5” electric disc edger; Remington Typewriter; filing cabinet; 5 newlife-preserver cushions; dishes; cooking utensils; porch glid- er; 2 metal porch chairs; baby scale; nursery rocker and swing; ladders; Maytag Washer; 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 by HAROLD KLING and DALE L. PEIFFER 14-3¢ Three Tioga & Potter Co. Sales COMING UP!!! SAT., APRIL 17 at 10 A.M. HUGE FARM SALE COMING UP AT THE KOUTERICK FARM (formerly Hughes Farm) LOCATED ON RTE. 15, 1 MI. N. OF TIOGA. Saturday, April 17 - 10 A, M. Farms are sold, S0 MUST SELL 143 HOLSTEINS 7 colored Animals - (100 Cows & Springing Heifers - 40 Heifers 6 to 18 mos. - 3 Herd Bulls. Majority purebreds and a few have papers. 60 cows fresh since Oct. - 40 due now and until grass. 4 Tractors and all equipment in good condition. Wcitch for post- ers and listings of this sale - it may be one of the season's lar- gest sales! M. W. KOUTERICK IS THE OWNER. WED., APRIL 21 at 11 A.M. DAY - DATE - TIME - PLACE OF THE TURNBULL AUCTION IS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 AT 11 A. M., 1% MILES OFF RIE. 84, LEADING FROM LAWRENCEVILLE TO ELMIRA. SELLING 44 CATTLE Ali Holsteins but 8 J-D “B” Tractor - J-D Baler (new last year) and full line of equip- ment. Saddle Mare. An excellent 279 A. FARM with new 36x 100° QUONSET TOP DAIRY BARN, 9 ROOM FARM HOME with separate 3 Rm. Apt. 4 Rm. Tenant Heuse. All living quarters modernized throughout with central heat, baths, etc. If you are looking for a farm, located on a hard road - excellent water - gently rolling land 175 A. fillable, Come inspect this one!! Can be bought for much less than cost of buildings alone!! Watch for posters and listings of MR. & MRS. TOM TURNBULL'S SALE. SAT. APRIL 24 at 1 P.M. BLOOD-TESTED HERD DISPERSAL AT THE FORMER ROWLEY FARM, NOW THE MILLER FARM, LOCATED JUST OFF RTE. 49, 10 MI. W. OF WESTFIELD, 22 FROM MILLS AND 4 FROM ULYSSES. Saturday, April 24 at 1 P. M. SELLING 45 HOLSTEINS With Individual Charts 18 cows fresh in last 60 days - some with calves at side. 14 ng 2 yr. Heifers. 8 Heifers (2 to 12 mos.). 4 Young Calves. | is Sire. These are not just tested cattle, they show milk! Case Tractor - Case Baler - Case Combine and all equip- ment. Don’t miss this one!! MR. AND' MRS. GAYLORD MILLER, OWNERS. | Tear this schedule out to remind you of these | Good Sales by | | | Rumseys’ of Westfield, Pa. and furniture used a Walter Dupes, Auctioneer Landis & Garman, Clerks chest; | THE FARMER’S MARKET Food Fair Offers No-Mess Paint Pail!” Six Scholarships High school seniors from Lan- | caster county will be eligible to apply for the scholarships es- tablished at the Pennsylvania State University ‘by the Food Fair Stores Foundation, Dr. C. 0. Williams, dean of admissions, said today. The scholarships, which will provide $250 to each of six freshmen at Penn State next Fall, will be awarded on the basis of ‘civic interest, lead- ership, and scholarship,” al- though financial need also may be considered. | Applications for the scholar- ship must be filed to May 1 and must be prepared on forms pro- vided by the Dean of Admis- sions at the University, Dean Williams pointed out. Final sel- | ection of the students will be! made by the Senate Committee | on Scholarships and Awards at | the University. In establishing the scholar-| ships, Louis Stein, president of Food Fairs, Inc., explained that | “we are very happy to make: available six scholarships for! the young men and women of | Pennsylvania at the Pennsylva- Here's a no-mess paint pail for the amateur home decorator! It’s a gal vanized steel pail with a wire stretched across the top and fastened to the the pail. Large quantities of paint can be mixed in the pail, too, without nia State University for the | Fall term of 1954 through the | pail’s handle attachments. The wi Food Fair Stores Foundation. | remove excess paint from the brush, “I believe the encouragement | danger of spilling. of young people io CONES ol Many an amateur home dec- tural and professional activities |...) has found there's more in schools of higher education is one of the obligations which industry must assume in the communities which it serves.” Students from the public schools or parochial schools in Harrisburg and 13 counties of the State will be eligible for the scholarships. The counties are Berks, Bucks, Chester, Cumber- land, Dauphin, Delaware, Lan- caster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Mont- gomery, Norhampton, York and Philadelphia. ANNUAL Community Sale to painting than meets the eye. After making a mess of self and the surroundings, he wishes he'd never started the job! discovered they can avoid such dy, no-mess paint pail. It’s easi- ly done by stretching a wire a- i ized steel pail, fastening the wire to the pail’'s handle attach- ments. paint is removed from the brush by using the wire, not the edge'of the pail, thus letting the . | him- | tead of the pails edge, is used to hus letting the paint fall back into paint drip back into the pail in- stead of running down the out- side. | Such a pail is excellent for | mixing a large quantity of paint too. It is big enough to prevent | | spilling and eliminates the nec- | Many novice decorators have a problem by rigging up a han-| cross the top of a clean galvan-| During the decorating, excess’ i turpentine essity of using more than container for mixing the paint. | If one of the new rubber-base paints is utilized, it is easy to galvanized steel pail clean wiv. vater. Oil-base paint can be removed from the pail| by using a cloth moistened with | In either the | pail should be cleaned immedi- | ately after painting has been fin- | one | wash (he case, ished and excess paint has been emplied back into the can. Homemakers ‘Day Planned The annual Spring Homema- kers' Day is to be held Tuesday, April 27, in Lyte Auditorium of the Millersville State Teachers College. A cordial invitation to attend this meeting is extended to all rural and urban women by Yvonne L. Cook and Ruth Anne Bowman, Extension home economists of the Agriculture Extension Scrvice. The feature of the day will be a talk and demonstration by Mary Stuvesant of New York on ‘How to Be More Charming’. Good Friday, April 16 At the borough limits Mount Joy on the road leading to the Mount Joy Cemetery. 200 Head of Livestock IMPLEMENTS AND HOUSE- HOLD GOODS, Etc. WANTED All kind of shoats, cows, heifers, bulls, etc. We will buy your entire herd. If you have any household goods, implements, or Poultry vou want to sell we will sell it for you. Let us hear from you and we will adv, same. Sale at 12 M. PHONE 3-5521 C. S. FRANK LEO P. FRANK PUBLIC SALE OF VALUABLE PERSONAL PROPERTY Thurs. Eve’g., April 22, 1954 In the Borough of Elizabethtown at 25 South Spruce Street. Consisting of sewing cabinet, form chairs, 2 overstuffed chairs, two occasional chairs, 2 plat- daybed, 2 Reed chairs, three 9x12 ft. rugs, 8x10 ft. rug, throw rugs, radio and record player, | record cabinet, desk, 2 single beds, springs and mattresses, doub- | sewing projects. le bed spring and mattress, three bureaus, wash stand, clothe tree, boudoir chair, wardrobe with drawers, Bengal gas stove, Kelvinator refrigerator, breakfast set, buffet, coal oil heater, rock- ers, drop-head Singer sewing machine, small stands, end table, el- ectric floor & table lamps, electric fan, electric iron, electric toast- er, Eureka sweeper, mirrors, spice box, pictures, bedding, linens, curtains, dishes, and cooking utensils and a lot of articles too nu- merous to mention. Sale to commence at 6:30 P. M. made known by when conditions will be Walter Dupes, Auctioneer Garman & Kraybill, Clerks Samuel W. Heisey, Exccutor Annie M. Heisey Estate OLIVER SAGER & SON Ditch Digging - Septic Tanks Installed Field Drainage — Footings — Grading Hauling = And Light Jobs Top Soil and Fill R.D. 1 ELIZABETHTOWN PHONE 345RS5 11-tfe | | | | | | | She is the Good Grooming Con- sultant of one of the old cosmet ic firms and is well qualified to | talk on this subject which is | dear to the heart of all women. | Mrs. Lewis Cauffman, of Ox- ford, will give a demonstration and talk “Flower Arrange-| ments.” Her talk will be of in- terest to most homemakers be- | cause she will use the kind of containers found | on materials and in the average home. | Special speaker for the after-| noon will be The Rev. John M. | Gordon of the First Presbyter-| ian Church who will speak the subject, “Strengthening Fa-! mily Living.” This sylvania theme for ers’ Day. Mrs. Lindley Jackson of Quarryville will furnish violin music. Other music will be fur- nished by music students of] Millersville State Teachers Col- | lege. Group singing will be led | by Mrs. John Stoner, of Quarry- | ville R1. A fashion day's program is he Penn- Homemak- show will end the | Included will be| garments made by many wom- | en of the county who were in extension groups which carried A furniture display will in- clude chairs which have been cancd, pieces which have been refinished, and slip covers. The morning session will be- gin at 930 with Mrs. Lloyd Nolt, Mt. Joy Rl, as chairman, The afternoon session with Mrs. Almus Shoemaker, Christ- iana, will close about 3:30. Mothers of pre-school child- ren old enough to walk may | leave them at the play school] being held in the kindergarten of the Training School. Infor- mation be obtained from | the women selling tickets for the luncheon. Reservations for the children must be made with these women. Anyone wishing to attend the luncheon to be served at 1:00 should make reservations with Mrs. Glenn Longenecker, Eliza- bethtown R3 and Mrs. John H. Nissley, Mount Joy R1 or the Agriculture Extension’ Office. mr — il may There is no better way to boost your business than by local news« paper advertising. OI. Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. | Heisey Sale Register Saturday, April 17,—1:00 p. m. by C. J. Heistand, Jr., Dis- persal including 40 cows, 12 bred heifers, 13 open heifers, 9 weaned heifer calves, at Key- { stone Holstein Sales, Inc. Barn, east of Mount Joy. Saturday, April 17—at 10:00 a. m., public sale of 143 Hol- steins, at the Kouterick Farms (formerly Hughes Farm locat- ed on Rt. 15, 1 mi. N. of Tioga by M. W. Kouterick. 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 geods, ete. by C. S. and Leo P. Frank. Sale at 12M. Aldinger and Wagner, Aucts. Wednesday April 21, — 1% miles of Rt. 84, leading from Lawrenceville to Elmira. A public sale of cattle, imple- ments and real estate. Sale at 11 A. M. by Mr. and Mrs. Tom Turnbull. 99 Thursday, April 22 — public sale of personal property at 25 S. Spruce St., by Samuel W. Heisey, Executor of Annie M. Estate. Sale at 6:30 p.m. Walter Dupes, Auct. 90 Thursday, April 22 — 75 P. B. Guernseys. Sale includes dis- persal of herd of T. L. Gustin, Sale at 12:30 Noon at the Sales pavilion, 6 miles cast of Lan- caster. Saturday, April 24 At 213- 213% N. Market St., Elizabeth- town, Pa., real estate and furni- ture used a few seasons by Har- old Kling and Dale 1. Peiffer. Sale at 12:30 p. m. Real estate 2 P. M. Walter Dupes, auction- eer. Saturday, April 24 Blood tested Herd Dispersal at the for- | mer Rowley Farm, now the Miller Farm, located just off of | | Rt. 49, ten mi. west of Westfield Also implements. Sale at 1 p.m. by Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Miller owners. —— | Friday, April 30, — The com- | plete dispersal of the Walter S. | Kreider Herd. Also a group of local consignments and Cana- | dian cattle. Sale at 1:00 p. m. at | the Keystone Holstein Sales, | { Inc., Barn, just east of Mt. Joy. | —————— | Saturday, May 1, at 314 South! Spruce St., Elizabethtown, pub | { lic sale of personal property Sale at 12:30 p.m. by Charles M. Eshleman. Walter Dupes is the auctioneer. meen | Saturday, May 8-public sale! of personal property at Choco- | late Ave., Florin, by Joseph A. | Eshleman. Sale at 12:30 p. m. | Walter Dupes, Auct. | Friday, Oay 14—at the Key- | stone Sales Barn, east of Mount ! Joy, the Weyhill Farm Dispersal consisting of 62 head of Hol- | steins. Sale at 1:00 p. m. Saturday, May 15, - public | sale of real estate in Salunga, | consisting of a 2% story brick dwelling on the Harrisburg Pike. by Dorothy M. Hoffman, executrix of Jacob G. Minnick estate. Sale at 2 p.m. Elmer V.| Spahr, Auct. | 28, | home of yi SIX INCHES OF TOPSOIL Ih has been said that “Civili- zation rests on six inches of top- soil.” This is not just a dramatic statement. It is a fact of nature. These six inches are all that stand between us and famine. Many conservationists . believe that before this country was settled by whites the layer of topsoil was nine inches thick. | Three inches—one third of the | original deposit-—has been lost forever, through floods, winds, | erosion, and destructive forest and agricultural practices. Here is why soil conservation is as important a need as this nation knows. The federal and local governments have natur- ally played an important role in the conservation movement. Benj. F. Garber ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. Phone 702-J Life Insurance Co. Home Offices COLUMBUS FARM BUREAU Metval Automobile Insurance Co. Mutual Fire Insurance Cov ANA gALUNG4 FEEDS S. H. Hiestand & Co. Coal - Feed - Grain MT. JOY REPRESENTATIVE But the success or failure of ne MLL kL. GAINOR movement is determined at level of the individual farm. Each acreage of farm or forest presents different problems. | Each requires different treat- | treatment. The experts in and out of government can provide | invaluable advice and other as- sistance—but they can’t do the] job that is the individual farm owner's and no one else's. A comparatively few ago agriculture lacked the tools for effective conservation and improvement. Now it has thase tools and they are marvel ously swift, economical and ef ficient. The tractor and all the come industry years soil | other machines that from the farm equipment make relatively would have been impossible the past. We can, save that six on which civilization Auxiliary To Hold Public Silver Tea The Mount Joy Branch of the what in casy ny and must resis, Lancaster General Hospital will | hold its annual silver tea April 2:00 to 4:00 p. m. at ] < the Mrs. C. Musser | Jay 214 Marietta Avenue. The tea is open to the public 35 W. Donegal St., i Ph. 3-5803 8-ife USED FARM EQUIPMENT 1 A. Farmall Tractor C. Farmall Tractor AND CULTIVATOR H. Farmall Tractor John Deere B. AND CULTIVATOR ene of oot 1-F20) Farmall Tractor 1-200 H. Spreader David Bradley Tractor Spreader Used Garden Tractor with proceeds to go to the Gen eral Hospital linen fund J. B. Hostetter & Son Mrs. Frank Walters, Jr. is the general chairman of the af fair. I OS ee Bulletin USE S1CO Patronize Advert nu MANHEIM R. WwW. MAIN ST., MOUNT L1s g in the Bulletin. JOY Stimulate your business by adver- atronize Bulletin Advertisers. Robert Fry D. 2, PA. Air Compressor Work Rock Drilling, Concrete Breaking, Etc. Excavating and Grading Cellars, Trenches, Etc. Rocks and Trees Removed MOUNT JOY 3-4753 Be i