The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, September 28, 1910, Image 4

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660000

be bo
Stable Blanket that Stays On


This is no empty claim, but an actual fact.
Rubbing and
place a SA Bias Girth
the horse's back
and
wulling in the stable can’t mis-
Blank et—once it 1s on
the orirths clasped.
[Like all other
5
the “Bias Girth”
1s worth
HORS
BLANKET
more than it costs.
Extra material, good weaving, and careful cut-
ting, stitching and finishing give solid wearing
quality to every 5A “Bias Girth”
Blanket.
No similar article on the horse-goods market
gives such genuine horse protection.
Your
dealer buys these and other 5A blankets from
the factory direct and
ponding saving.
sells you at a corres-
Ask him for 5A blankets.
For street wear, use a 5A Square Blanket.
Be sure to see the 5A Stay under Strap.
WM. AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia, Pa.


2.89.9 .00 0...
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Round=~TriP
Rate
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PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
Personally-Conducted Excursions

NIAGARA FALLS
October Sth,
$0.30 From Mount Joy Pa.
Poole oeol ool ates te te tL.
BRT
1910




SPECIAL TRAIN of Pullman Cars, Dining Car, and Day Coaches
running by the fo
Picturesque Susquehanna Valley Route *
Tickets good going on Special Train and connecting trains, and good of
returning on regular trains within FIFI'EEN DAYS, Stop-off limit »
allowed at Buffalo returning. be
Illustrated Booklet and full information may be obtained from ee
Ticket Agents. x
J. R. WOOD GEO. W. BOYD oe
Passenger Traffic Manager General Passenger Agent. *




FALL
ALL THE NEW SHAPES
FOR MEN, YOUTHS AND BOYS,
OOME, LOOK THEM OVER.
AND SHADES
ARE
HAT
IN FALL HATS AND CAPS,
HERE.

Wingert
& Haas
£44 North Queen Btreet, LANCASTER, PENNA.

BF'ruit
Trees
By Spraying Them
With Scalecide


We have scalecide for sale
in any quantity or we will
spray all your fruit trees
with our new Sprayer at a
very reasonable price. Will
guarantee good results.


- I. 1. Greider &Co.


Save Your For Sale

of the Most Desirable Corner
Building Lots in Mt. Joy.
50 feet on Delta St., extend-
One
Fronting
ing in depth 170 ft. on Columbia
Ave On rear of lot facing Colum-
bia Ave., is erected a
Two Story Frame
BUILDING
with annex 12x15 ft.
There is water and gas in the build-
ing. The building could be con-
verted into a dwelling and a double
house could be built on the corner.
26x23 ft.
How Much Will You Give For It?
If desired easy terms will be given.
What will you give in exchange?
Address,
Ralph H. Sheaffer
Muhlenberg, St., Reading, Pa.

936
FRENCH FEMALE
MADAME DEA acs remus
A Sawr, CxeraIN Rxrixe for SUPPRESSED MENSTRUATION,
NEVER KNOWN TO FAIL. Safe! Sure! Speedy ! Satis-
= ion Guarauteed or Money Refunded. Bent prepaid
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 send your orders to t
UNITED MEDICAL €O., nox 74, LancasTen, Pa.
Sold in Mt. Jox by E. W, Garber & J. C. Groff

Farmers’ Column
|

INFORMAYION
FRIENDS
VALUABLE
OUR SUBURBAN
How to Cure Chicken Pox—=The
fits in Raising Hogs—The
ing of Trees
Feed During the
Cowpea &
just how
soll up
to know
the
interesting
a crop benefit
grows and
capacity In
30 hy Increasing
which It
the oil by
live on the
added supply of
increase
Eis
the cow pe
on which it
{ productive
[place it does
nl of nitrogen
{from the alr to
wmeteria which
lof the plant his
Initrogen serves also to
[growth of the plants as well
| riching the soil during its growth
| We are in the molting season
Bran fed twice a day with skimmilk
will help the feathering process
One eighth of linseed meal and seven
eighths of millet, spoiled
Kaffir Sced moistened with
good feed to give on
Plenty of fresh green
given when the birds are
and one meal should be main
wheat A more uniform
when the fowls are
confined in small pens each accom
modating six or eight; but, of course,
it is only the fancy fellows who can
potter around in this way Each
would then secure a proper share of
food—a thing especially important at
this time to hurry up the molt
One of the results to be
reducing the head of a tree or cut-
ting back the limbs when it is trans-
planted is that it will afford less sur-
wind, and the trec
the first
the sup
transfers
means
skimmilk
alternate
food
is a
days
must be
penned,
lv whole
molt is obtained
face to catch the
will not be thrown down or bent over
before the roots will get well estab-
lished in the soil. In a large pro-
portion of apple orchards, either old
or young, one can tell at a glance the
direction from which come the most
prevalent high winds, as all the trees
lean away from it It is almost im-
possible to entirely prevent this
where there is no hill or wood to act
as a windbreak to protect them, but
by planting them leaning a little to-
ward and windy point and keeping
the tops well pruned the trouble can
be lessened so that it will not amount
to a deformity in the orchard.
There are two directions from
which profits may come in raising
hogs. The first of these, at least
the first in the minds of most men,
arises from high prices at selling time
The second, which is really the most
important, is in more economical
methods of production
Observation of a number of farms
leads to the belief that not half the
farmers who are engaged in raising
hogs know half as much as they
ought to about how to raise them
cheaply.
There is the example of a
who, having little inclination
out money for feed, turned his pigs
on to grass and let them hustle for
themselves. As soon as oats were
harvested he began to feed them
sheaf oats and opened up to them the
farmer
to lay
oats stubbles, in which there was a
reasonable growth of clover. These
pigs were perhaps a little leggy
They did not show deep bodied hog
form, but they did show strong mus-
cle and bone development, and when
finishing time had come they had
put on flesh more rapidly than any
crop of pigs this farmer ever had on
his place. They also developed
bony structures that carried them to
market in good shape.
Undoubtedly pigs grown in this
manner may be marketed at a much
less percentage of cost than in any
other way.
Chicken pox, which is a very in-
fectious disease, usually appears a-
mong the younger chicks first, lat-
er spreading to the older ones.
When the first symptoms are discov-
ered among the flock the first thing
to do is to provide a separate house
for those chickens affected—in other
words, to isolate them Then dis-
infect the henhouse from which they
have been taken thoroughly with
coal tar, after which disinfect the
house which they have been put into.
It is necessary to use the disinfectant
upon the fowls as well as upon the
house.
Wash the head and face of each
one with a strong soapsuds made by
using soft water and carbolie soap.
Do a thorough job so as to soften the
the scabs on the face. After this
anoint the head and face with car-
bolized vaseline. Feed the whole
flock a mash in which a teaspoonful
of epsom salts has been dissolved
for each six hens in the flock and
repeat this dose once a week as long
as the disease appears in the flock
Fowls which have been infected will
show the disease after the separation
has been made, but as fast as it ap-
pears take the sick fowls from the
flock and put them in the hospital.
If the disinfecting is thoroughly
done and sick fowls are carefully at-
tended to the disease will be con-
quered in two or three weeks. Be
careful about carrying infection
from the hospital to the house where
the well fowls are being kept.
-—
Be.
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed condi-
tion of the mucous lining of the Eusta-
chain Tube. When this tube is inflamed
you have a rumbling sound or imperfect
hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
Deafnesg is the result, and unless the in-

flammation can t: iken out and this
tube restored to normal condition,
hearing will be ¢ ved forever; nine

cases out of ten are 1Ised by C ‘tarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed condi-
tion of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cu by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for ulars fre
F..J CHI l & CO, “Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggis
Take Hall's F: Fin
tion.





"Pills for constipa-
—— i G ———
Lecture in the
Church
In compliance with the request of
members and friends to deliver his
lecture; ‘Stop Grambling and Laugh
a Little,” Rev. Egge has fixed Thurs-
day evening, Oct 6th, as the time.
The lecture will be all that the sub-
jeet implies and while you may have
to smile when you hear it you will
realize that it is full of wholesome
truth and helpful thought expres$ed
in a cheerful, happy way.
The Lecture Committee will ar-
range to accommodate the people
with tickets and all are asked to pat-
ronize the project.
BN ——.—
Talk 1s Cheap
When you can get a telephone in
you house for $12.00 a year. Call
up the Columbia Telephone Company
and they will tell you all about it.
——— Rr

Popular Evangelical

Subscribe for the Bulletin.
FOR
Pro-
Plant
in an Orchard=The
Molting Seasons
increases Its
roots
the
as en-
alfalfa or
gained by

~~




SUFFERING
FOR YEARS
Cured by Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound
| Park Rapids, Minn.—*“I was sick for
years while passing
through the Change
of Life and was
hardly able to be
around. After tak
ing six bottles of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com.
pound I gained 20
pounds, am now
able to do my own
work and feel
qwell.”— Mrs. Ep.
LA Dou, Park Rap-


ids, Minn.
Brookville, Ohio.—
and extremely nervous. A neighbor
recommended Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound to me and I have
become regular and my nerves are
much better.” — Mrs. R. KINNISON,
Brookville, Ohio.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotic or harm-
ful drugs, and to-day holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases we know of, and
thousands of voluntary testimonials
are on file in the Pinkham laboratory
at Lynn, Mass., from women who have
been cured from almost every form of
female complaints, inflammation, ul-
ceration,displacements, fibroid tumors,
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,
indigestion and nervous prostration.
Every suffering woman owes it to her-
self fo give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound a trial.
If you want special advice write
M rs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for ity
't is free and always helpful.
“I was irregular
The Home Paper
How many country newspapers, dai
ly or weekly, there that could
live six months if they had to depend
upon the income derived from sub-
seriptions? Very few of them could
expenses, They must depend
upon their advertising and jobwork.
Yet some people are unreasonable
enough to complain that there are
too many advertisements in the paper
and others care so little for the wel-
fare of the local papers as to send
their job printing out of town.
What is a newspaper? nt
is a board of trade, a trumpet of the
town’s advantages, a history. It is
a policeman, a chaperon, a defender
of your rights and a board of health.
It is an advisor if in the
hands of an honest man. It warns
vou against frauds It rejoices with
vou when you are glad and mourns
with you when you need a comforter.
It is the guardian angel of your mor-
il, intellectual and physical health.
It sticketh than a brother.
Do you help to support your home
?—Danville (Pa.) News.
rel GC
Mildew
are
make
local
honest
closer
newspaper

and Red Spiders
A Schuykill county business man
wrote Professor Surface, State Zoolo-
gist, In reference to the condition of
rambler rose vines,
leaves to curl.
The Prof.
mildew on his
ind which causes the
He requested a remedy.
replied as follows:
“You can prevent mildew by spray-
ing with boiled Lime-Sulfur Wash, or
with sulfur alone stirred into water
or by dusting with sulfur in the morn
ing when the leaves are damp with
dew, or you can spray with an ounce
of sulphide of potassium, or an ounce
of sulphite of soda, dissolved in each
gallon of water. It seems that sul-
fur, or the sulfur compounds, in any
form, are practical species for mil-
dew. With mildew, red mites or red
spiders are almost always found, and
sulfur either in liquid or dry form,
or in compounds is one of the best
remedies for the red mites. Thus
the application of sulfur, either dry
or stirred in water, or in some of its
chemical compounds dissolved in
water, proves to be an efficient rem-
edy for both mildew and red spid-
ers.”
reset Gemeente
For Sale
Two-Cylinder Maxwell Runabout
and 2 Cylinder Buick, five passenger
Touring Car, both in good condition
with tops.
LANCASTER AUTO. CO.
sep21-2t 215 N. Prince St., Lanc.
— A Eee
Subscribe for the Bulletin.
Pa

For Sale
The following articles of the Elk-
horn Laundry, Mount Joy, Pa.
Upright steam boiler, about 8
horse power, with new steam gauge,
$20.00
Delivery wagon and harness, $20.
Combined bosom and hand ironer,
$8.00.
Band Ironer, $4.00.
Fan, $3.00
Stationary wash tub, $1.50
Heater, $1.25.
Dry room stove, $1.00
Pulleys, shafting, hangers and
belting, $20.00
Any of these articles will be sold
separately. Address:
RALPH H. SHEAFFER,
936 Muhlenberg St.,
Reading, .a.
0000000600
We are Always Prepared to serve
Pure
Spring
Water
ICE:
IN ANY QUANTITY at Very
Moderate Charges.
Don’t fail to see us before plac-
ing your order this year.
J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
Mount Joy, Penna.

 


Best Time to Plant Trees
Following Information given by
Prof. H, A. Surface, State Zoologist,
Harrisburg, to a Supreme Court Jus-
tice, will be of Interest to all who in-
tend to plant fruit trees:
“Il ean say that I am certain from
experience, observation and study,
that It is best to plant the pome
fruits or apple, pear and quince in
the fall of the year. This, of course
should be done late in the fall, and
care should be taken to use trees
that are matured In the nursery
rather than those from which the
leaves had been stripped while yet
green and thrifty I would prefer
trees from which the leaves dropped
naturally
“The stone fruits are best planted
in the early spring, if the soll is in
proper condition and the planting
well done, By this I mean, that
one should avoid planting when the
goil is so wet that it will cake or pack
around the roots of trees, which is
liable to be the result of very early
spring planting.
“If trees be kept dormant when
in storage, they can be planted very
late in the spring, but the chief ob-
jection to this is, their lack of growth
during their shortened summer In
the fall one has more time, the soil
is in better condition, and planting
can generally be done with more
care than in the spring time. The
date of spring planting does not de-
pend so much upon the condition of
other trees in the vicinity, or plants
of the spring, as upon the condition
of the trees planted as to dormancy.
It should be a truly dormant tree,
or, in other words, one in which
growth has not started.”
The Wintering of Bees
State Zoologist, H. A. Surface, re-
plied as follows to a beekeeper, who
wrote to him concerning his colonies
of bees:
“Your hive of bees which makes
comb but does not fill it with honey,
needs to be fed. They, of course,
find it necessary to make the comb
before they can store honey. They
made the comb about the time of
the honey flow there. You will not
be able to carry them through the
winter if you do not feed them. Your
cheapest and best food is white sug-
ar dissolved in water. If you wish
to stimulate bees to increase in num-
bers, and make a strong colony of
young bees for wintering well, it is
advisable to use two parts of water
and one part of sugar, and feed about
one-half pint of this to the bees each
evening, continuing this for a month.
This will give an artificial nectar
flow, which will make the bees in-
crease rapidly.
“If your colony is strong, and you
merely want to feed them for winter
stores, it is sufficient to use equal
parts of water and sugar, and give
them any amount you desire at any
one time. When they have taken
up enough to make the total weight
of their stores about thirty pounds,
they will have enough for the winter,
This is called feeding for winter
stores, and where so much is fed at
once it does not build up a strong
colony like feeding for increase or
stimulation does. If you feed slow-
ly to stimulate the increase of bees,
vou should be sure that they have
at least thirty pounds in the hive
when the cold weather sets in and
the bees are ready for winter.
“The sugar can be dissolveed in
hot water, and the syrup allowed to
cool before feeding. It should not
be fed hot, as this will injure the
bees.
“It will be all right to delay your
feeding for stores until about the
time of the first frost which kills the
blossoms, or even after that, as there
is a possibility that the fall flowers
mdy furnish enough nectar to carry
the bees through the winter.”
eel Cee
The Lancaster General Hospital
Picturesquely placed upon a beau-
tiful highway of Lancaster stands one
of the monuments of the forethought
and liberality of our grand county
and city—the Lancaster General Hos-
pital. Every citizen of this commun
ity is doubtless familiar with it and
every visitor in our midst should
have a view of it. Its location upon
North Lime Street between James
and Frederick upon a half block of
terraced ground is ideal for its pur-
pose; for though removed from the
noise of trains and traffic it is not
far from the heart of the living, pul-
sating city with its trains and trol-
leys.
Two wings with rooms and wards
for patients are connected by a main
administration building. Yet such
wing may be shut off completely if
need be by fire-proof doors. Every
possible facility for prompt and ef-
fective service that could be provid-
ed has been supplied and the new
south wing has just been finished
and in part furnished, by the inter-
est and generosity of former patients
and friends of the Hospital, altho
the endowment and furnishing is not
yet complete. The central or ad-
ministration building contains the of-
fice and reception room.
The completion of the (south or)
Women’s Wing of the Hospital has
just been accomplished, largely thru
the work of the goodly women of both
county and city. Some of the rooms
and sun-parlors have been endowed
or equipped for work by Auxiliaries,
Societies and thoughtful persons, but
others remain to be provided for by
the generous friends of humanity,
although the Board of Directors trust
ing that the liberal hearts of our
people will aid in such a splendid
work, for the good of all have made
themselves responsible for the en-
tire furnishing in a uniform manner.
The Women’s Wing is furnished
with arrangements for the treatment
of rheumatic and other allied ail-
ments with Turkish bath outfit in the
basement.
The main floor is designed for the
medical and the second floor for the
surgical cases among the women and
children. The upper most floor is
designed for the maternity cases and
the little children. The whole in-
stitution will well repay a visit on
Oct. 3rd when the wing will be op-
ened for use.
Al ANI
The Printer’s Dollars
The printer's dollars—where are
they? A dollar here and a dollar
there, scattered over numerous small
towns all over the country, miles a-
part—how shall they be gathered to-
gether? Come home, ye truants to
your father’s house—ye’re wanted!
Come here in single file, by column
or platoon—so that the printer may
send you forth again, to battle for
him and vindicate his credit. Read-
er, if you discover a stray dollar a-
round your premises, carefully send
him home, for he is ours. We
wouud ask you to search diligently
to be sure you haven't a couple of
printer’s dollars sticking about your

clothes.





“It 1s astonishing,” remarked a
well known authority on diseases of
the skin, how such a large number
of people especially ladies, are by
attractively written advertisements,
induced to purchase some one of the
so-called Beauty Creams now
market, not knowing of course
gre-
many
on the
that they mostly contain oily or
asy substances that clog the pores of
the skin and are, for that reason, the
very worst thing that they could pos
gibly use. My treatment of Black-
heads, Pimples, Blotches and all e-
ruptions of the skin, are as follows,
and has invariably proved very suc-
cessful; 'Wash the face carefully ev-

——

= Hear the
Jf
own piano.
PLES, BLACKHEADS, (cad §
OUICKLY CURED.
ery night before retiring with warm
water and a little oat meal tied up In
a small cloth bag, then, after drying
well,
and perfectly harmless prescription:
which can be filled at any drug store:
Clearola § oz.,
ounces,
face as often as possible during the
day, but use night and morning any-
way,
face at least ten minutes, then the
powdery film may be wiped off. Do
not
time after using.
simple treatment you will soon have
a clear Brilliant Complexion.
PIANOS
Hear the Wonderful “AUTOTONE.”—
i THE FAIR
: See Our
best Player—Piano in the world.
“ELECTRELLE.”—
playing instrument which can be attached inside your
The new style EDISON
TALKING MACHINES will be shown.

Bi,
use the following inexpensive
Ether 1 oz., Alcohol 7
Use this mixture on the
remain on the
allowing it to
for some little
By following this
wash the face

10 110
When You Visit
mm!



Exhibit
1

The
The self-
11101
and VICTOR


24 West King Street,
Kirk Johnson & Company
Piano and Organ EXousco
LANCASTER, PENNA.


= OF OUR REPAIR DEPARTMENT.
greatest Cut in prices ever offered.
just half the present marked prices.
fifty cents.
= SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE REBUILDING AND
Bm TUNING OF ORGANS AND PIANOS.
Porch Rockers at Fifty Cents
on the Dollar
It’s about time for us to store away our remaining stock of Porch
Furniture, but before doing so, we are going to make the last and
There remains all told about sixty pieces; mostly one of a kind.
Rockers, Arm Chairs, Settees and Swings—these you can buy at
Move lively if you want to buy $1.00 worth of Porch Comfort for
This cut ends with Monday Evening.
H. B. MANBY IN CHARGE
=
ATL










Hoffmeier
HOTEL McGINNIS
The undersigned having remodeled the
old Mooney Hotel, adding a number of
sleeping rooms, bath, etc., is now prepared
to entertain transient and regular guests.

Restaurant
in connection with hotel where he will
serve in season.
40 & 42 Bast King St. Lancaster
MOUNT JOY
Saturday Evening, Oct. 1st.
High Class MOVING PICTT!
EDUCATIONAL AND INSTRUCTIVE.
AS MANY LAUGHS AS A FARCE-OCOMEDY.
ALL THE SENSATIONS OF A MELO-DRAMA.



Brothers


HALL

LES


Saturday, Big Double Show, 10 Cents


For a Neat and Clean
Shave, Hair Cut or Shampoo
Go to
Joseph Hershey
Fine Tonserial Parlor

East Main St., Mount Joy, Pa.

Oysters and Clams in every style,
Turtle Soup, Etc.
Private dining room for ladies.
J. VW. MS aa


PROPRIETOR.
All 30 private’ Di.
Prof, 6. F. THE
Sixih St EL. 535 North
Suteiphia, Fe xin
on GERMAN TREATING Pig guaranteed
eure for § Specifie Blood Polson ° oul% can’t cares
senses, E:
Tost M: rains, Losses,
(ay ening” SEE yasicqesle &
 



















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