tios, 50 Gents Lear. &8iz Months, 25 Gents. " — p—— Single Copies 2 cents, Sample Copies Free. Legal Advertising 10 cents per line cach insertion Entered at the Post Office at Mount Joy as second class matter MARKS LEFT BY CIVIL WAR. Trip Through Country Affected by Re- bellion Recalls Many Excit- ing Incidents. The great battle fields of the South de not, as a rule, lie along the railways This is especially true of the Wilderness, that bloody scope of country where Grant and Lee contended forthe mastery in the eventful spring of 1864, writes Thomas C. Harbaugh, in Four-Track News. A jaunt through this region to- day 18 both pleasant and exciting, for the battle flelds there remain just as the ermies left them, torn by shot and shell and, here and there, marked by tablets and monuments appropriately inscribed. It isa pleasant ride by rail from Wash- ington to quaint old Fredericksburg on the Kappahannock, where Burnside, one December day, left 12,000 of his men be- ¥}ve the impregnable confederate en- trenchments on Mayre’s Heights. Fred- ericksburg, with its narrow streets, ita #hot-torn houses, its great national and sonfederate cemeteries, and the home and monument of the mother cf Wash- fmgton, interests ene from start to nish She war left its mark there, and the hor- rid autograpk of Mars will long resals visible on the old city. A¥es of Married Couples. A curious correlation between the ages of husband and wife appears to have been established in the course of the recent investigation of the in. heritance of physical qualities by Prof, Karl Pearson. Prof. Pearson’s results, published in Biometrika, may be briefly summarized: “These data have shown that there is a very definite correlation Between the degrees of loagevity of hus. dand and wife. Things take place as If men destined to live to old age, marry wemen of similar vitality, while short. fived men generally marry short-lived women. There has been an unconscious selection from the point of view of gen eral vitality. This follows clearly from the study of the age of decease of a great number of couples, taken from grave. yard Inscriptions.” The influence of grief upon the longevity of the surviving partyer is not taken into account. sree Qe f MILTON GROVE. Most of our farmers finished fall seeding and have made fine progress in other fall work, The Jacob Young mansion at Cherry Hill School has been repainted and looks very pretty. i Peter White of Chiques Hnll, in his de- lining years is regarded one of Rapho’s ADO Ory abethtown. rop of sweet keason, and the t 75 cents per laying pipes Fry’s resi- djoining M. t of her t Eris- p-in-law sister, ended Miss ear fl the 0 you Lil pon mamuel. The many friends of Miss Carrie Mach- mér were pained to hear of herdeath. The funeral was held in the village church on ®, Monday afternoon. Interment in Man- i heim cemetery. i MASTERSONVILLE. Benjamin Stauffer is the happy father of a little son, Mr. Waughtel of Manheim, papered two big rooms for H. 8. Hollinger. A. S. Brubaker’s house is being nearly in the near future, Jere Hackman and wife have gone to Philadelphia to buy » large supply of fall and winter goods. Miss Carrie Ginder who is staying with Rev. Gerhart’s at Annville, is at home on a vacation for one week, A number of farmers in this section are taking advantage of the moonlight nights by getting a lot of men together, to cut corn till ahout midnight. peat | RHEEMS' STATION. Mrs, Jacob W, Hershey is again able to attend to her household duties as usual. andis Bros. received two carloads of ped on W. L. Heisey’s siding this week. German Baptists will hold their annual lovefeast at this place November 5 and 6, Jacob Killian has purchased the Joseph Coble residence at Anchor, near this place for $900, Daniel Shank, one of the most successful farmers in this vicinity, residing on the Abram Forney farm, will move to his own arm near Elizabethwown, April 1, 1907, The last report is no trolley for 1006, All le options have been extended to eight mths hence, Beveral wagers were made by ghristmas the cars would pass MPORTED JAPANESE FANS, of four very attactive Japanese fans y the Chicago & North Western sent to any address securely receipt of 10 cents to any post R. M, Johnson, Gen’l Agt. hut 8t., Philadelphia, Pa. completed and he expects to take possession | # the use of the best cough cure, X | Kemp's Balsam | | No cough is too trifling serious to be treated by th method, and the right method is which is This famous preparation cures {§ 5, colds, bronchitis, grip and mption in its first stages. | ion of the throat and bron- | tubesisim ately removed | by the use of Kemp's Balsam. J { | Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50¢C. | + ne PETRIFIED MILK IN AUSTRIA. Is Made Into Knife Handles, Pipes and Billiard Balls—Proof Against Fire. According to the ald adage, “there 1s pothing new under the sun,” but petri- fied milk, if not new, is probably une known to most people. Skimmed milk is what is used in making this “milk- stone,” as it is called. By a chemical process the casein is precipitated and the yellowish-brown powder thus ob- tained is mixed with formaline, form- ing a hornlike substance which is the “milk-stone.” This substance, with various admixtures, forms a substitute for horn, turtle-shell, ivory, celluloid, marble, amber and hard rubber. Hand- les for knives and forks, paper cutters, erayons, pipes, cigarholders, seals, mar- ble, stone ornaments and billiard balls are now made of skimmed milk. The in- solubility of galalith, its easy working elasticity and proof against fire make ft very desirable. Already 20,000 quarts of skimmed milk are daily used for the purpose in Austria. Migration of the Goldenrod. The Pacific slope has flowers of its own, but eastern people there some- times long for even the weeds of thelr old home. A Pennsylvania-bred wom- an, visiting in New England in the spring, sald she wished that she had some goldenrod at her home in Wash- ington. Amid all the luxuriance of that western state, where they raise roses by the bushel and cherries by the ton, ghe missed the yellow plume of the wayside weed of the other side of the Rocky mountains. So when the frost wage out of the ground her host dug up a clump of goldenrod roots and sent them to her, and now they are sprout Ing near the shore of Puget sound, the first plant of the kind in that part of the world. It was in just this way that many of the common garden flower were introduced into America—the eeeds were sent by friends in the ola world. ‘Work for Unruly Youths. Hundreds or boys from the Denver $uvenile court will be sent into the sugar-beet flelds near Longmont, Col, to work this summer. The boys will fie sent out in parties of 25 each, in charge of a probation officer, and will be equipped with tents and camping yuifits. They can eara from $1.20 to 3 =~. | #4 per day each. gll known cream- | in buying to- | KOREAN CHARACTERISTICS. People of the Hermit Kingdom Re- semble the Chinese of the Six- teenth Century. The Koreans are more like the Chi- nese than the Japanese, and they used to hate both the Japs and the Rus- sians with equal cordiality, reserving whatever affection they possessed for outsiders for the Chinese. In size they are much like these continental neigh- bors, and in appearance I imagine they greatly resemble the Chinaman of the sixteenth century; in other words, the Celestial as he was before the Manchu invasion. Previous to this change in dynasty the Chinese did not wear pig- tails. They shaved the top of thei: heads and drew the hair from each side up so that it covered the bald portion, tying it in a knot on top. The Manchus, however, were a tribe of pig- tails, and they forced the peor'a luey had conquered to adopt thc same cus- tom. Korea being out of the beaten path-seresm¥liost escaped the edict, and its people still adhere to the old customs. In fact, for many centuries the waves of invasion from the north have passed them by, and they have, end do, ask only to be let alone and to be allowed to run their own affairs Their motto is, “Korea for the Xo ” | reans. EACH COLOR TO ITSELF. How the Whites, the Reds and tht Blacks Get Along in the Cherokee Nation. The race problem in the Cherokes nation is solved to the general satisfa. tion of the three races concerned and the intermediary mixed blood, says the Kansas City Journal. In the location of homes the Cherokee fullbloods and negroes are mostly in settlements, The intermarried whites largely arein towns and territory contiguous to each other The Cherokee speaking citizens much prefer to associate together. In the nation there are 80 schools at, tended by fullblood Cherokee children and 17 by negro children. The negre blood schools are not se by legal re quirement, but as a corollary of thei preference to live near each other. The Cherokee and negro do not intermarry or soclally mingle. Two seminaries and an orphan asylum are attended by full bloods and mixed bloods only, the col ored high school by negroes only. In the incorporated school districts whites and Indians attend the same schools, and race prejudice and undue feeling on either side are being lost in fellowship and friendship cultivated in the class room and on the playground Both sides are better satisfied In the combined schools than they were when they were kept separate. Fullblood seem to mingle as freely with white renters and their families of good char acter as they do with mixed bloods. Of the 38,600 citizens of the Cherokees nation the best statistical information gives about 8,500 fullbloods, 8,200 inter. married whites, 22,800 mixed bloods and . 4800 freedmen. A small amount of money spent for advertising in a home paper with a large circulation, will triple itself, Try us and be convinced, ¢ “Don’t imagine you stoop-shouidered because you & ing old,” said a Chicago physiclan to 8 friend recently. “Old pegople do not stoop because they are old, but they get old because the} oop. The stiffen. ing of the tissues, which is the sign and accompaniment of age, Is warded ofl by exercis Self-indulgence in eating end in drinking is the sure road to senility. “1 have often been surprised and gratified to find that regulated move. ments of the neck and upper truncal muscles, employed for the purpose of accomplishing something else, resulted In a conspicuous improvement in hear- ing, in vision, in cerebration and, as 2 consequence, in betterment in cerebral circulation, also in sleep. Persons who habitually maintain an erect position In standing or sitting are stronger than those who slouch. A person who stoops and allows the shoulders to sag down and forward and the ribs to fall back toward the spine shortens the ante- posterior diameter of the thorax any- where from two to five inches. The lungs, heart, great vessels and other {important structures in the thorax can- not live, move and have their proper being under such circumstances.” Wherefore, the proper thing for per sons who are not so young as once they were {8 to brace up, dress young and feel young. Sitting “hunched up” over a fire won't da. NOVEL CHURCH ORNAMENTS Scythes Form Odd Decoration for Chapel Interior at 8t. Mary's in England. At first sight the scythe is a strange ornament for a church, but there 18 nothing incongruous in these curious agricultural implements as seen in thea parish church of St. Mary's, at Horn- castle, in Lincolnshire, says the Chris- ¢jan Age. Thirteen of these blades are nailed above the door in the north chapel. At one time the blades num- bered 40 or 50, but owing to rust and decay many of them have been lost. Each of the scythes is about a yard in length. The general belief is that these blades were placed in the church in commemoration of the zeal of peasants who wielded them in defense of their faith in the rebellion known as ‘Tha Pilgrimage of Grace,” which had its rise at Louth in 1536. When the people saw the ruins of their churches and ab- beys they rose in revolt, and, arming themselves with the instruments of husbandry, such as the scythes, they went forth to encounter the enemy They were beaten and dispersed, but io the eyes of their countrymen they wero heroes, and the rude implements with which they fought were deemed wor- they of an abiding place in the old church where the peasants had wor- shiped. RADIUM IN MEDICINE, fiapeoted to Work Marvelous Hesuls in the Treatment of Cancer and Blindness, The Anglo-Indian Review g&es marizes an interesting account of tha Ry Pe ee and long, strong fil blankets, purchased high prices. Always are made of firm, hard and storm—made for horse comfort and owners profit. Wherever a horse needs covering—in stable, street, or race track —no blanket equals the extra-warm, close-woven, 5A HORSE BLANKET. Your local dealer buys the long- wearing 5A Blankets direct from the factory, and can therefore sell them cheaper than dealers can sell inferior Buy a 5A SQUARE BLANKET for street use. Buy a 5A Bias GIRTH BLANKET for stable. Made by WM. AYRES & SONS, * rd twisted warps, ling, to resist cold through jobbers at look for the 5A Stay under Straps. Philadelphia, Pa. MISS STAHRS SCHOOL FOR GIRLS $2 N. Duke St., Lancaster™ PENS Septem! er 20. Primary, Intermediate @nd College Pre- paratory work. ‘The School certificates to Wellesley, the Woman's College of Baltimore and Dick nson. ALICE HILL BYRNE, ALICE WEBB STOCKWELL, Sept 20-06 Principals. “Bi 1 WISE PRLLOW” If you reed a Gas or Gasoline Engine buy it direct from the factory and not from a Sub. agent. Capital Gas and Gasoline Engines are positively made without any packing. They dont have a clock spring or sprocket wheel for an igniter. The genuine Capital is made only by » possible future applications of radt ym. The area where success is prac tically assured is at present not very large, but in the medical fleld it is a) ready fulrly extensive. In the work ing of X-rays and in the marvelous re sults achieved in the treatment of can- cer and blindness we have every hops for great and universally benefiting results. In its industrial applicator we are somewhat restricted by the extremely limited supply of radium available, but it is stated that a smal fraction of an ounce, properly em ployed, would probably provide a good Nght sufficient for several rooms, and would not require renewal during the present century. It has been calc ated that the energy iLiored up in om gramme radium is sufficient ts raise 500 tons weight a mile high. As dunce would, therefore, suffice to drive 8 b0-horsepower motor car at the rats of 80 miles an hour round the world His Theory. “If 1 were a rumor,” said the poor but honest young man, “I would probably be able to win the heiress in a walk.” “Why do you say that?” queried the dense friend. “Because,” explained the other, “a rumor soon gains currency, you know.” ~—{hicago News. Pelyandric Race Dying Out. The race of Todas, in India, which practices polyandry (one wife having two or more husbands), which was 100,000 strong a century ago, has dwin- dled to 101 persons. HBP HLH HSB ORS 2 Weare Always Prepared to serve 2 Pure Spring Water ICE: IN ANY QUANTITY at Very Moderate Charges. ~r a fod od od Lo 3 od & oF 0, We are now fully equipped to furnish the Finest Kinds of Bullding Stone Ballast Screening or will crush them to order any size, Gives us a trial order, J. N. Stauffer & Bro. FSH SSSBSHBBIBHHVBBOUD o& & od Le od od Le 10 od od od Oo o od Lo oo & Mount Joy, Penna. & & lofatatateletofotototolole: AE | ONE {AD A Save, Certain Revie for Supprrssrn MeneTruation, 8 NEVER KNOWN TO FAIL, Safe! Sure) Speedy | Satis. 8 motion Guaranteed or Money Refunded. Sent prepaid BS for $1.00 per box, Will send them on trial, to be paid for when relieved, Samples Free, If your druggist does not have them wend your orders to the UNITED MEDICAL CO., BOX 74, LANCASTER, PA. ¥ Sold jn by Mt Joy J, 0, Grol and E, W, Garber : Stockholders’Ins & SHH GLOSS BSE SFOS SHH HOGEOBSROSEOUH BRB SRELD pector Reports & HOO RASGSSGSGS0SESRE BEB BBR IRB ORE C. H. A DISSINGER & BRO, 400 Hellam St.,, WRIGHTSVILLE, PA. <0 ok > #0-0-000-0000000000000 000000 @. 3. Wiley | Lo > > Justice of the Peace i on the Progress of the I? joi Int ti ab 1 t C 2 Conveyancer i rnational Lumb m m ; %# International Lumber an evelopement Company and Scrivener 0% #] y @ i The Stockholders of this Company recently elected one of ¥ Spictal. Mention: Gloen to the £0 their number, Dr. Andrew S. Stayer, of Altoona, Pa., to goas % : £5 their representative, to their Mexican plantation and make a Collection of Rents 4% . . . - ik full report on its development. This report is now ready. Your Patronage Solicited $58 . £5 Dr. Strayer says, in part : 2 Office: 2 aie : & To THE STOCKHOLDERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL LUMBER oF Main Street, Hlorin, Penna, on AND DEVELOPMENT COMPANY : 0-0-0000 0-0-0-00-00-0-000-0 00-0000 5 : & 0DGO000C0BS0 00000 bi 1 believe that the dividends on the whole capital stock of this Company, as & ow guaranteed, can be paid for years to come from the timber now standing in the xing 9 oO) Jorest on this estate. No one not having ridden through these forests and Lk Shire S Mcat Market & viewed the timber can form the least conception of the amount there is there oF Rear of Nissleys Tobacco Warehouse x. and in computing the value of this fabulous amount of timber you must take {ok into consideration that it is of much more value than woods used for the same LF FLORIN - PEINIVA. 2% purpose grown in the temperate climate. If there were no other source from {3 A = which to draw dividends, I would feel perfectly safe in saying to you that > W. Ww. SHIRE, Prepr. V2 you need have no fear on this subject, as the guaranteed dividends can be ISTE CTE, 0 paid from this source alone, but there are many other sources of dividends. F ; is, 10k Principally among them is & & HENIQUEN & 32 There is no doubt about the value of this product. T have carefully ed 2% studied this subject and cannot find any reports or estimates that give thenet oF 5% yield per acre at less than $50 or §60, except in the literature of the Company 5 hi while all the estimates given me verbally in Yucatan and Campeche place the oo figures much higher. Ten thousand acres planted to heniguen would produce Lo Ga © a ten per cent dividend; 20,000 acres planted to heniquen would produce a 20 oF 5 -, 25 per cent, dividend, and so on. (Preparations made to rapidly plant 12,000 £ . Lo acres. Over one million plants growing and six millions contracted for.) & Dealer in Fresh & Smoked or 5 END LIVE STOCK % Heats, Tallow, Lard, &e. ww Besids wocd and Leniquen, large amounts of money will be realized from the sale of cattle, horses, mules and other $F live stock grown on the Jestatc, The expense of growing these is limited to the wages of afew cowboys who look {F x i Te The Only Place to Get {oF after them, ok Ck aK 1 2 RUBBER, ETC. 3 Good Bread, Cakes, Buns, &e. bo There must be at least in the neighbor hood of 500,000 wild rubber trees, of all sizes and ages, large numbers of which ok ” Se i AT TTR are now ready for tapping. Later on, if the same plan is pursued in extending the planting of rubber from year to year Scholing’s West End Bakery i% and the yalue of rubber Keeps on increasing as it has in the past few years, thousands of dollars will be turned into the © 0k treasury from this source, besides the large profits to be derived from bananas, dyewood, the gathering of chicle from the [0] Mount Joy Penna #5 zapote trees, the gathering of the rubber from the wild rubber trees scattered through the forest, aud from the profits OF ** derived from selling goods from the Company’s stores to the thousands of people who will reside on this plantation. Be- For a Neat and Clean * ides those above mentioned, there are smaller amounts of money coming in from many other sources. The system ad- £0 Shave. Hair Cut or Shen 00. 0010 3% opted on the plantation is such that really nothing is touched gf hendead that Joes not produce a ak. F Fo . ’ "poo, g i xe In presenting to you this report of the first inspection, I feel that my descriptions are inadequate and that I. have not 4x 8 hed done 9 ih to this great property, but have the intense satistaction of knowing that I have been able to bring to you the o Joseph Hershey ; {© information that ought to satisfy you; that your investment is entirely safe and destined, without a doubt in my mind, ih Successor to W. W. Strasbach. 3 % to bring to you a life income. I regret that my fellow- stockholders could not have been present to see for themselves oF le A #, what Ihave seen. June 22, 1906. (Signed.) Avprew s.sraver & | Hine Tonserial Parler Th Every investor should read Dr. Stayer’s Yoport fiom paver 10 “OYer: CLL D.C 10% East Main Street, Mount Jou, Pa. 2 x very person interested i ife i u ave a full knowledge of the I. L, . Co's pr ition, & very person interested in a life income should have g! 0's proposition & : WANTED: by Chior zo wholossle and mail Or. 3 Mite . . phi: er house, assistant manager ( o The Company Guarantees 8 per ct. Dividends payable semi-annually. Has paid 18 per ct.since Apr. 1,05 for this a adjoining Oy 0 i. : f $3 § 2 3X ) i pekly; expe 2 od Much larger dividends are estimated on full development of the property. Dividends have already been paid as fod advanced. Work Slonsant I ey a follows: July 31 1906, 2 per Cent. extra ok No investment or experience required. Spare Re y y ; 3 5 time valvable. Write at once for iull particulars o> April 1, 1905, j per cent. {giuaranteed) and Iyer cent. extra. January 31, 1906, 2 per cent. extra. and enclose self-addressed envelope. Address, {oF October 1, 1905, & per cent. (guaranteed) > per cent. CEA ~-—_ ~~. April 1, 1906 4 per cent. guaranteed, {0% GENERAL MANAGER, 13¢ E. Lake Shethinane 0) Po rie, . July 18-10 - iF s..: : 3 DR £0 Eas # A Dividend of 4 per cent. will be paid to Stockholders of Record October I, 1906 = me & & || LEBANON FOR 2 This dividend is paid from profit realized from the Comlshare. In a short time the price will be ir creased. Over £5 VALLEY SALE +i. panys’ merchandising stores and from the sale of mahogany 5,145 share holders now; stock selling fast, At the present x and other lumber. There have been 11 carloads mahogany rate it will not be long until all is sold and the opportunity & “FINEST IN THE WORLD” © and Spanish cedar shipped to the Umnfted States inthe ocean|is gone. Act at once if you wish to obtain shares at par and ok #3 steamship VUELTABAJO, owned and operated by the participate in the dividends payable Oct.1, Write to-day & Send, Rutter L Rutter Lebanon “* management of this Company. for free copy of Dr. Stayer’s report—a large ' and handsome for List y Penna. {0k Stock is now selling at par, and costs $5 per month per|booklet illustrated with over forty photographs. [0] July 25-2mos & & i Int tional Lumb d Devel t Co. & & 4nternational Lumper an evelopmen O. 7 |ABNER M. HERSHEY. ro aig & AUCTIONEER 1 H. J. MILLER, Resident Manager, 526-528 Woolworth Building, Lancaster, Pa. & |™Mount Joy, Penna. Lk 20k Special attention given to calling all kiwds of rea. estate and personal property sales. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Charges moderate, Drop me acard HAVE YOU TRIED the new Quick desserts that grocers are now selling? They are justly termed “Easy to Make” as all ingredients are in the package. Zhree complete pro- ducts—D-Zerta, Quick Pudding and D-Zerta Perfect Jelly Dessert at roc per package, and D-Zerta Ice Cream Powder, 2 packages for 25cents. A trial will convince you how easy it is to have the finest desserts with no labor and little expense. Crystal Springs DAIRY! fresh Oream and Milk Delivered Daily ExceptjSunday. Special Orders Solicited, We Invite Inspeciion. ‘e Solicit Your Trade. HE. E. ZEROEER NOTARY PUBLIO. WwW. M. HOLLOWBUSH ATTORNEY-AL-LAW, 48 West Main Street, Mount Joy, Penna. Days at Lancaster, Monday and Friday, at No, 562 North Duke Stree WINDSOR HOTEL Between 12th & 131 Sts., gn Filbert St, Phila, Pa, Three minutes walk frorg the Reading Termi- nal, Five minutes walk from the Penna. R. R. Depot, European Plpn $1:00 per day and upwards, American Plgn $2.00 per day. FRANK M, SCHEIBLEY, Manager 00000000000 009000000000000000000000¢ Special Sale of Pianos and Organs. rn ou? z Kirk Johnson & Company HEverything Musical 24 West King Street, ; Largegt Dealers Between Phiad ephia and Pi fy burg Advertise 2 Bulletin 90060 Many People Have Taken Advantage of Our Write for Special Bargain List and Special Plan of Payments. LANCASTER, PA or call wp 836 A. The . . Ludoscope A Moving Picture Machine for the house- hold. Something new and produces at a small cost, with excellent effect, moving pictures from discs provided by the man- ufacturers. It is simple in its operation and can be handled by anybody. . The price of the device, with six pictures is Only 50c; Extra Pictures 15¢ a half dozen Full Line Photogra- phers’ Supplies “ W.B.BENDER Shaving Hair Cutting Shampooing E. Main St.,, Mount Joy. Agency for Standard Steam Laundry CHOICE HAMS Let us furnish you with some Ohoice Ham for your dinner, It is finer than the ordinary and remember, no small picnic hams either. Must be good or I will return your money. One purchase will make}gou a regular customer. Don’t forget tl I have rented the slaughter house recently used by Mumma & Detwiler where I will doall my own killing. Always have a big supply of Beef, Pork, Bausage Pressed and Prepared Ham, Bologna, Dried Beef, &o., &c, Call and be convinced, H. H. KRALL East Main 8t., Opposite Post Office, MOUNT J hd PA