Just Ordinary Horse Sense tells a man that he must be careful in feeding his stock if he wants to et the best results, But it is not al- ways 80 easy to get the right kind of feed. We are Feed Specialists and not only know just what your we find it Ad C0 At HINTOGTIFTT your service, sir, E. S. MOORE Deal er in Coal, Lumber, Grain Feed, Hay, Straw, Slate, Salt, Cement ! , and Fertilizer A large stock of Feed constantly on hand. Highest cash price pald for grain i Estimates on humber and Mill Work a Specialty FLORIN, PENNA. ta saact YOU WILL GET TEN CELEBRATED 'S. & H. Trading Stamps i EVERY DOLLAR'S WORTH OF COAL PU R | BA ¢ CHASED FOR CASH AT COAL and Sv = J \ 0S IS Mount Joy, Penna, Bele agent for Congo Roofing. No. 1 Cedar Shingles always on hang Also Siding, Flooring, Sash, Poor . Blinds, Mouldings, Lath, Etc. Agents for Alpha Portland Cement. Also Roofing Slate estimates Quickly and Cheerfully made on all kinds Building Material Telephone No. 833. Opposite Old P. R. R. Depot SPRING HATS OUR STGCK OF HATS AND C APS FOR SPRING IS COMPLETE. Here you will find Hats for all Men and for all tastes. no larger stock in the city from which to select, and none better for the price. a aa 44 North Queen Se Lancaster Pa. ho AWE 1 JBN 0 OO 11 NY we n s u x u = « A Stitch in Time . i a - = : Saves Nine . W Now is the time to have your auto adjusted and have it in n shape for the summer's run. Expensive breaks often occur on ac- mn count of a loose screw or some part being worn which should be a replaced. By having this done you will not only save money but = will also save trouble. o We are also in position to paint your car. By having this a done it will look practically as good as new. . We have both phones and will be glad to give you our assist- a i 2 ance when needed. u } a = E 2 un “1 Landis Bros., Rheems. 11 101 OO 1 = = 2 Ho Engle’s Furniture Warerooms MOUNT JOY, PENNA. » y re Pre ee ET EO OT 4 UPHOLSTERING DONE TO ORDER re a Poplar Lumber for sale in lots to suit the purchasers <$ Bn Undertaking and Empaling § EE 10 i 1 1 ET Bam RTE RN THE GRAIN HOUSE OF THE EAST ESTABLISHED 1897 WILLIAM L. BEAR & CO. (Members Chicago Board of Trade) BROERE ERS PENNSYLVANIA BUILDING, Chestnut and 15th Sts, PHILADBILPHIA | STOCHS-BONDS— INVESTMENTS 30 SECONDS 2 MINUTES Chicago Board of Trade. To any Grain Market in Ameries Lancaster Branch 220-226 Woolworth Bldg. i stock ought to have, but hunt until | F. H. Baker's LUMBER YARDS Wingort & Haas A00D HOMEMADE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY } THE THE BEST PROOW a ———— [ Mount Joy Citizens Cannot Doubt It, Doan Kidney Pills were used they cured The story was told to Mt, Joy residents Time has strengthened the ev dence, Has proven the cure permanent The testimony is from this locality The proof convincing Charles Gochenaur, 8S. Prussian St.,, Manheim, Pa., says: “I believe that a strain was the cause of kidney | trouble in my case My back [most of the time and was very weak. secretions were profuse again the flow was The kidney at times, then | symp- scanty and there were other [toms of kidney complaint in evi- dence. When a friend advised me to [try Doan’s Kidroy Pills, 1 did so and [ before I finished the contents of one | box, I was cured.” (Statement giv- en October 25, 1907.) No Trouble Since On January 27, 1910, Mr, laur added to the above: “Nothing has happened during the to change my high opinion of Doan's Kidney Pills. 1 | have had no recurrence of my former | complaint whatever.” For sale by all dealers. | past two years cents. Foster-Milburn Co., New | York, sole agents for the United | | States. | Remember the | and take no other. ——— ee { i Catching Up. Retiring for the night, a tiny maid. | en climbed into her mother's lap and kissed her on both cheeks. Her man | ner being rather more effusive than usual, it was suspected that condes- sion would be forthcoming. That was | the fact, mot long delayed. | “Mamma,” said the child, “I've been naughty. I'm afrald the angels have marked my name in the Big Book as | & bad girl.” | “I hope not, dear,” the mother ro- | plied. “What have you been doing?” “It’s something I haven't done, mam- ma,” the little girl explained. “I have gaying my prayers.” | “Why, dearie,” | gently, “that is really ‘serious. What shall we do about it?” “I've been thinking it over, mam ma,” the small delinqueat said, “and made up my mind to say ‘Our Father’ and ‘Now I Lay Me’ every night until] I catch up with my prayers.” Mr. Henry James’ Style, That a James sentence is as long aa another man’s par aph rouses a chastened mirth in a receiver for the London Globe—and he proc is to burlesque thus the style of the author of “The Outcry”: “If we, greatly and indeed almost, as one might say, pre | were, as we In | and with the | sumptuously daring, | this paragraph attempt, i full consciousness of ultimate and, in | | fact, inevitable, not to say disgraceful | failure, looming ahead on our mental horizon, to imitate the literary, per | haps the too literary, as one may de | | scribe it, without undue or, in a man. ner of speaking, journalistic extrava- Her mistress (who has received a broad hint that an extra “hevening me, Mary, that you want to go out with a young man this evening. Is it urgent? Herself—No, mum. it ain't. He's my own gent.—The Sketch. Bree Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used ex ept on prescriptions from reputable physici they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure vou get the genu- ine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Tes- timonials free. Sold by Druggists. Price 75¢ per bottle. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, — Ee The Communion Cup Condemned The unhygienic communion cup was condemned in a resolution adopted Tuesday by the New York East Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church in session in | Brooklyn. The resolution provides | that pastors may, in their discretion, {use individual cups. — — GE een For Rent From September 15, a large stone mill property recently occupied by the New Standard Hardware Werks. three floors and attic, good water power with two turbine wheels, would make a suitable tobacce ware- house, storege house or machine shop. Apply to S. R. Snyder, Mt. aes Shooting Swan James Shank of Marietta, shot three swan and crippled a third. The largest weighed 173% pounds. James Lewis also ~ | The day previous a flock of 77 was | seen on the river at Washington Boro. ee ——,,.®,.RPHSrS ESE eT ©ouo For Sate Several good Building Lots front- ing 95 feet on South Barbara Street, | Mount Joy and extending in depth of that width 154 feet. There is a good | stable on these lots that could very | sasily be converted into a double dwelling. For further particulars apply to Lewis Seeman, Mount Joy. tl Gp MR Read the Mt. Joy Bulletin. ached | yochen- | Price 50 | name—Doan’s— | gone to bed for two weeks without | chided the moter, | | gance, style of Mr. Henry James, wa { should indubitably come to grief. That author walks his pavement | | alone.” Pronunciation. hoff” will be welcomed)—Cook tells | as the damage | Hall's | shot a fine swan. ! BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY. REMEDY FOR LIVER TROUBLE Generally Caused by Indigestion Brought on by Irregular and Im proper Feeding of Fowls. Generally speaking, Iver troubles follow acute Indigestion. This Indi gestion may be brought about by im regular feeding or being fed on one kind of grain too long, dirt and sour feed, with a poor supply of grain. Ta withhold the feed a long time and then allow it in over amount is one of the most fruitful sources of diges. tive disorders. Drinking water which has been contaminated with filth, or which has stood In a warm place or in the sun- shine until it has become putrid; ex- posure to draughts, cold rains, or damp roosting quarters, particularly during the molting season, are all con- ducive to Indigestion. If any one of these conditions sure rounds your fowls, change them, put. ting them in light, dry houses and giving them wholesome, nutritious food. In very bad cases give daily five grains of rhubarb and every day one grain of calomel. Give them plenty of grit and charcoal. Char- coal {8 one of the best purifiers for the system of either fow!, animal or | man The liver Is one of the most im- portant organs of the body, furnishing | Mle, one of the principal digestive fluids. It also assists in some of the | most necessary chemical changes which occur in the blood. It is there- fore an easy matter for it to become deranged from the causes that pro- duce indigestion. Inflammation of the liver 1s quickly followed by death unless immediate relief can be given. The symptoms are a yellow appearance of the skin and yellow or glightly bloody evacua- tions. One of the chief indications of this disorder ig lameness, especially of the right leg, and when this shows itself you may be pretty sure that inflamma- tion of the llver is going on. The treatment of birds so affected is not profitable unless they are very valu- able for breeding or exhibition pur- poses. The remedy is one-half to one grain of calomel to begin with, foi- lowed by 20 grains of Epsom salts and 2 grains of bicarbonate of soda after 12 hours. Napththol or benzo-napthol may be given twice a week to disin- fect the intestinal canal, the sick bird is considerably improved, give green food, tonics of raw beef, and allow the bird free ex ercise In the open air. The disease is not contagious, but the cause that produced it in one bird may affect the whole flock FOUNTAIN IS SELF-FEEDING Water Tank for Large Fowls Easily Can Be Made Out of Gallon Vegetable Tin Can. When I made a drinking fountain for large fowls out of a gallon vegetable tin can. Ome end was melted off, and a hole, b, punched in the side within 8elf-Feeding Drinking Fountain. two inches of the top. It was then filled with water and a milk pan in verted over it and turned upside down. Water will flow in pan till it reaches the hole in the cam, says a writer in the Farm and Home. Using a deep pan prevents getting it full of dirt. Nationality of Eggs. Is it possible to tell the nationality of an egg by inspection? The ques- tion is raised in acute form by the evi- dence given by the prosecution of a Lancashire, England, firm for selling Russian eggs as Irish, which resulted fn acquittal. The experts varied, as even experts will. One confidently pronounced the eggs in question Rus- slans nearly five weeks old; another said they were second class Russians; a third specified the south of Russia. On the other hand, experts for the defense were equally positive that no- body could tell the birthplace of an egg from external examination. One witness sald that when eggs were bad their nationality was indeterminable. On the whole, one is bound to come to the conclusion that the average pur- chaser of eggs must take their nation- ality upon trust. Science of Feeding. The feeding of fowis has become a8 much a science as has the feeding of deiry or beef cattle. Poultrymen have their balanced rations for their fowls. They feed especially for egg produe- tion, growth and fattening purposes. The farmer too often feeds for con- venience and relies on corn to produce all the above requirements, hence the poor resuits on many farms. ‘Variety 1s the spice of life” in the poultry yard as well as with Humans. Will Open June 1st Mr. and Mrs. Samuel R. Seabold, of Lebanon, ready to open the Inn on the first of | June. They expect a big season this | year. Last year they could have | used 40 more rooms had they had | them. The officers camp of instruc- tion opens June 2, to close June 7, and many of the attending officers will be quartered at the Inn. | while a coin is refused because it is | category of fables. who conduct the Chau- | tauqua Inn at Mt. Gretna, are getting | [Try them. Let the joy of better feel- | (ach, liver and kidneys. PA CHEETAH HUNT IN I} NIA | Sport Was Once Very Popular English Residents--Is Not tare Beast bidloaloilblalaividledaiisiot d d T Sesdefeterdeteieleieteimind dei deed dei The cheetah hunt which the vices roy witnessed recent at Hyderbad reminds one that che an extremely popular sport w Ine. dian princes In former days, although the Initiation of European forms of these times ah huntly was \ sport has done much In to rob it of anclent It was practiced both by Hindu and Mohammedan chieftains over the greater part of India, for the cheetah even now is not a rare beast, and a | century or so ago must have been common enough. Another animal! used In the same way by Indian nobles was a sort of lynx, spelled variously as *“shoe- goose,” “syahgush.,” But this was used much more rarcly than the chee- tah, However, it was not only In- diang who indulged in this form of sport. It was enjoyed and practiced by Europeans as well in the days when they were content to abide in India for fifteen years at a stretch and when they lived a I'Indienne in a way unknown to modern times. More than one of the Company's nabobs kept their own cheetahs, which were fre- quently presents from friendly chiefs. It may easliy be imagined that chee- tah hunting was very good sport and welcomed by the servants of the Company as an excellent substitute for the coursing which was familiar to them in England and which, like the cheetah hunt, has vanished be fore the spread of games such as ten- nis and golf—Madras Mail. vogue CHINAMAN WAS TOO CUTE Suspicious of Wedding Cake Sent Him by Englishman Who Owed Him Money. An Englishman who was appointed to an important nost in China got mar ried soon after. Among the recipients of the usual little card boxes contain. ing a piece of wedding cake was a Chinese merchant with whom the bridegroom had an outstanding ac- count for goods supplied. After the honeymoon, one of the first persons the newly wedded hus. band met was his Celestial creditor. “And how did you like the cake?” said the Englishman, laughing, after the usual congratulations. “Ah, ah,” returned the Chinaman, with a cunning leer, “me no such big fool to eat him, sah. ,Me put cakee in fire. Jurn him up. He, he!” “Oh, that’s too bad,” said the Eng- lishman, very much hurt. “You might have tasted it, at least, out of com- pliment to my wife and myself. Why didn’t you?” “Me too clute, sah,” said the Celes- tial, with the same winning “You owe me monee, sah; sendee poi- son cakee; I eat him; I die; you no payee up. Houp-la! He, he, he! §¥ know you Ingleesh!” smile, DD oD IPP or vi oionfevfeofesferjey Testing Coins. “There goes another man suffering from degeneration of public manners,” sald the clerk in gan aggrieved tone. “I gave him five pieces of silvee in mak- ing change, and he tested every one of them to see if i¢* was counterfeit right before my eyes. It is only late ly that people who buy have got rude enough to do that. Clerks always did it with coin that customers gave them, but th was a prerogative of the trade. For the customer to assume the same privilege is a usurpation of an- cient rights. The worst of it is most people nowadays are pretty good Judges of bad money, and every little counterfeit. The only way tradesmen can teach customers the respect due them is to turn their own backs when testing money. That has always been the custom in England. No tradesman | over there would dare fillip 2 coin un- der a customer's nose, and as a con- | pequence no customed has ever taken | that liberty with him.” | et ear—— Toole ode slo ode ode ole odes oleoleoteTerTeetoele ote stools ote sleet ao als ele abe ae abo Bs 8 Boul. 8. 0. 0. 9 0 SR RT RNR EY Bruce and the Spider. | Apparently the little fireside story about Bruce and the spider is in the So eminent an au- thority as Sir Herbert MaxweM says in | “Robert the Bruce:” “What is the evidence to be found In support of it? Not in the writings of Barbour, Fordun or Wyntoun, those most nearly contemporary with Bruce and least likely to suppress a circum- stance so picturesque and illustrating so aptly the perseverance and pa- tience of the national hero under des- perate difficulties. “No; nothing is heard of this adven- 2 oleae ol ols oo oe 2 TTT oojoeienrefooforiodorfonieefe A A Wednesday April 17, 1912, sr - sofederferferioddevindonisdodooirdedeciododfodoodeddede Wfosieforiooler "t Watt & Shand Eh —— ———————————————— a a Great Sale of “First Quality” White Lined Enamel Cooking Utensils All the year ‘round we sell great quantities of this White Lined Enamelware at standard prices, and it carries full value at every Once or twice a year we hold sales of Enamelware—the kind of white lined enamel Cook- price. grade, ‘first quality as you would naturally expect the Watt & Shand store same high ing Utensile, to sell. Great Sale Started on Tuesday Many of The Prices Are 1-4 to 1-3 Below The Regular It will be at least another six months before you will be offer- ed anything like such values again, but NOW the choice is FULL and RICH. good one for you to take advanta ge of, and the If a new cooking ute usil is needed, this occasion) is a advantage 18 one that will keep on counting every day you use it. 2 39¢ Berlin Kettles, 25c. | 36¢ Coffee Pots, 29c. bc Coffee Pots, 42¢. | 59c¢ Dish Pans, 42c. t6¢ Ten-quart Pails, 36e. {9c Berlin Kettles, 34c. 69¢ Berlin Kettles, 52c. { 59¢ Rice Boilers, 47c. 32¢ Four-quart Covered 39¢ Two-quart Milk Kettles, Buckets, 25c. 25. 25¢ Two-quart Covered 75¢ Tea Kettles, 55ec. Buckets, 19c. 25¢ Coffes Pots, 13c. | 32¢ Collanders, 23c. | 5¢ AND 10¢ COUNTERS BAKING DISHES, 34c. | We call these tables bar- Regular 75¢ & 873 Values | gain accumulators, because it Fhese are all covered, and | is upon these tables we group are brown and white lined; | the odds and ends of higher- priced china for quick rid- dance. Come in and look over not more than 100 in the lot, but regular T7Hc¢c and 87% | quality Special tomorrow at the collection now. 24c. | Welsbach Gas Mantles, 3 10¢ Earthen Pie Dishes, 5c. for 25c. Upright or inverted. Corner Square and E. King Sts. yn United States Electric Shoe Repairing Co. While You Wait On Short Notice Repairing You can get your shoes repaired {for a small sum a good job at that, work that is guaranteed, on very short notice. For every fifteen minutes disappoint- ment we will pay $500 Try us and be convinced. New and modern machinery installed Jan. 17,1912. Harry Yoblonovitz DONAVEN’S OLD STAND MOUNT JOY, PENNA. Don’f Forget The Place, Donovan’s Old Stand ture till long after Bruce and his comrades had passed away, and then : Ji It makes its appearance in company | _ with such trash as the miraculous ap- | ® pearance of the arm bone of St. Fil- | g lan on the eve of Bannockburn, and |= worthy of just about as much consid- » eration.” = So goes another of the venerated |g legends of childhood. | ® | a Stevenson's Keen Comment. |B The hit that “Treasure Island” made | is one of the most pleasant episodes | ® in literary history. I story that | @ Gladstone got a glimg f the book a at Lord I »bery’s house, and spent! the next day hunting over London for a a second-hand copy, good enough | ® to be true. Stevenson's owr mment ® on his suc s is 1 lheaded, if poi ed: “This gives one str the o of how very bad f RR books th WwW K 0 |= qd to nil 1 or bot iS bag to print al i hat '® oring i er ee eet re |S = Puts End to Bad Habit, Things nevxer look bright to ome with the blues. Ten to one the trou- ble is a sluggish liver, filling the sys tem with bilious poison, that Dr. | : | King’s New Life Pills would expel. | & Best for stom- 25c at S. B. ings end the blues. = Bernhart & Cos. A A ns Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. |S SE ERT ll EEE 1A 0 1 » = a = = = = = n ® a w a ® ® = . a % Automobile Sore] Here is a'Splendid Collection of Cars For:You to Select From Reo, R. C. Hupp, Premier, Firestone Columbus, Velie, Oakland. [1 We are also in positien to quote you on delivery trucks and carry a variety of second-hand cars. Also carry the largest stock of auto supplies in this end of the county. We have just closed a contract for oil which enables us to sell you oil at wholesale prices in quanities of five gallons and upward. We have been using this oil for four years and know it to be good. Your patronage solicited. Landis Bros., Rheems. Do not fail to look them over. 5 ROT