PAGE SEVEN Feeding Stuffs ground and unground, were recently | tested at the Maryland Agricultural t n to prove thelr comparative { il It \ppeared that nd { ol 1 I't 1 i th he mn n i WW A SPECIALY OF “CHOP FEED" E. 8S. MOORE Deal cr in Coal, Lumber, Grai: Feed, Hay, Straw, Slate, Salt, Cement and Fertilizer large stock of Feed constantly on hand Highest cash price paid for grain Est'mmetes o bumber and Mill Work a Specialty FLORIN, PENNA. | RESOURCES OF AIASKA Wi rantee its q lity, It is made ) lear n No dirt or ru 1 t Your tock will tl \ on It YOU WILL GET TEN CELEBRATED i's. & H. Trading Stamps {WITH EVERY DOLLAR'S WORTH OF COAL PUR |} CHASED FOR CASH AT aR ik COAL and Mount Joy, Penna Sete agent for Congo Roofing. No. 1 Cedar Shingles always on hand Also Siding, Flooring, Sash, Door , Blinds, Mouldings, Lath, Etc. Agents for Alpha Portland Cement. Also Roofing Slate gistimates Quickly and Cheerfully made on all kinds Building Material Telephone No. 833. Opposite Old P. R. R. Depot Summer Hats Straws of Every Variety PANAMAS, BANKOKS, JAVAS, MILANS, MACKINAWS, FEATH- ER WEIGHT STIFF AND SOFT HATS, C/ OR ALL PURPOSES,— ALL AT BOTTOM PRICES. C—O SRA Wingert & Haas 44 North Queen St., Lancaster Pa. fF. H. Baker's LUMBER YARDS What's Wrong? Your Ey hy ; Probably you need glasses. Call in and let us examine your eyes i o" They may be the cause of your headaches Our optical department can supply at very low prices, eyeglasses and all cases. specuacles in EXAMINATION BY A GRADUATE OPTICIAN FREE PIROSH & SIMMONS Jewelers and Opticians 20 North Queen Street. Next Door to Shaub & Co. Shoe Store LANCASTER, PENNRA. 3 o + i % * & * % 0 + > : Ll 10 JE 1) I Fo 1) OC is Engle’'s Furniture Warerooms x s u u u MOUNT JOY, PENNA. B = s = arcs} Pe Dee 3 GOOD HOMEMADE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY B UPHOLSTERING DONE TO ORDER = | Poplar Lumber for sale in lots to suit the purchasers py = 4 R = = — DoF Po Tre 3 i ’ a Undertaking and Embalming , CE 0 1 | THE GRAIN HOUSE OF THE EAST ESTABLISHEl 1887 (Members Chicago Board of Trade) BROE ERS PENNSYLVANIA BUILDING, Chestnut and 15th Sts., PHILADELPHAA the poison and prevent inflamma- | tion, swelling and pain. Heals burns, boils, ulcers, piles, eczema, cuts, bruises. Only 25 cents at S. B. | Bernhart & Co’s. STOCHS-BONDS—- INVESTMENTS 80 SECONDS . 2 MINUTES Rhicago Board of Trade. Any Grain Market in Americs ancastergdBranch 220-2 nolworth Rlda and high-gr: used on ( ply fore. T HE BUL L KE T IN, MOUNT JOY, WO NG U7 LD [IV ¢ AA wddress made by Secretary I ed at Los Angeles or 8 n cisco for $5 or $6 per ton, it will drive the Interior Fisher at Chl- rican Min Zz congress has beer pub- hed in pamphlet form it is a valuable contribution to current lit- erature, and deals with the Alaskan 0 before the Ame problem n a candid, careful and statesn manner, and d 5 with the fre the standpoint of one w made a close and prok in tion of A ka during his lengthened Visit there Sect H. Br ['n « f fc Alaskan tu I g 1 fore exe ng the Bering river fie Secretar isher was preceded there mining and railway construction; by F. W. C. Whyte, who for years has rail- way construction department of the Anaconda Copper Mining company; by T. H. O’Brien, who has conducted the coal operations of the Copper managed the coal mining and Queen; by George Watkins Evans, coal mining engineer of experience in the northwest states, and by Sumner S. Smith, who is a mining engineer and Inspector of mines for Alaska Secretary Fisher, in his speech, said: “At the very outset | wish to express the high opinion 1 have formed at the remarkably large and fine body of people who have become permanent residents of Alaska There is a substantial percentage of vigorous, law-abiding, law-respecting men and women of the highest type of American citizenship. The total popu- lation is about 65,000 persons. They are entitled to a territorial govern- ment.” Wonderful Scenic Beauty. Secretary Fisher further says: “I found Alaska a country of wonderful scenic beauty, which in itself will in future years be one of its greatest financial assets. From all the infor- mation I could gather 1 believe it to be a country of great mineral and agricultural possibilities; Indeed, should go further and say a country of great mineral and agricultural prob- abilities, needing development, ready for development, and inviting develop- ment, but held back chiefly by inade- quate transportation facilities and in- adequate laws.” Secretary Fisher further says: “What Alaska needs more than all elge is a trunk-line railroad from the ocean to the great interior valleys of the Yukon and the Panama opening up the country so that its future de- hi velopment may really be possible “The vast interior valleys are cov- 3 and can sheep, and ered with luxuriant gr be made to raise cattle even grain, if proper seed and proper methods are experimentally developed agriculture. But agricul- nent cannot go forward by scientific ture develoy ) where the local markets were small Secretary Fisher finds the coal de- posits of Alaska to consist of the an- thracite and high-grade bituminous coal, which is found so far only in the Bering river and Matanuska fields. No anthracite coal has as yet been found anywhere else on the Pacific coast, and but little high grade bituminous coal, or high grade coking coal. Ex- cept for coking coal, anthracite coal bituminous coal Alas- ka cannot command the fuel market. There are great quantities of lignite and low-grade bituminous coal throughout the Pacific northwest and British Columbia. Much of the bitu- minous co 271 mined on Puget sound is of fair ) ste le and fit purp< the and hand] Alaskan coal are tion It 1 clear the low grad oal will not be for smelting ores or 1 aking tee and for these pur- es Al a coking coal will hold the et Insect Bite Costs Leg 2 L BEAR & A Boston man lost his leg from WILLIAM ® CO. the bite of an insect two years be-| . To avert such calamities fre n | stings and bites of insects use Buck- len’s Arnica Salve promptly to kill ‘Alvertigllin the Mt. Joy lletin ho J. A. Holmes, director of the of mines; by L. T. Wolle, an sr of large experience in coal aming pt those ot compete with it But oil flelds of roads con- coal can shed, barn and nearly $6,000, all other coal from the market for do- mestic use One ton of anthracite coal contains as much heating force as two tons of bituminous coal In the New England and Middle tates no racite coal is used tor Cordova on Prince William Sound, 200 up the Copper River to the za copper field ¢ Alaska 1 from £ Mata- and the Yukon, but zed seventy-one miles ward, and the pioneer 1, the White and Yu- gauge, which is mostly in British territory / railroad onstruction was stopped when Alaskan coal lands were withdrawn from entry. The direction of the Alaska Northern offer to sell or practically to give their road to the government if it will assume the out- standing bonds amounting to $4, 600,000. “It is generally and erroneously con- sidered that Alaska is uninhabitable on account of the cold. Southern Alaska and its cities, Juneau, Sitka, and Wrangel, are in the same latitude with the north of Ireland and Eng- land, and the south of Scotland. The thriving city of Cordova is on the same latitude as Norway, Sweden, Petersburg, and the winter range of the thermometer i8 higher than in Washington, D. C.” Secretary Fisher favors a system of leasing the coal lands of Alaska on the Canada-Yukon territory system of an annual rental of $1 per acre for twenty-one years, 5 cents per ton roy- alty on the coal extracted and not more than 2,500 acres to be leased to one applicant. The Cordova Chamber of Commerce, which at the time of Secretary Fisher's visit, disapproved of a leasing system for Alaska coal lands, has since reconsider ts ac. tion It expresses its conf ( i Secretary Fisher and avows its ap- proval of any policy that ill secure prompt action in some direction that will promote development, COUNTRY OF VAST WEALTH Enormous Resources of Mexico Only Await Development, Says an Observer. Gustav Langenberg, the well-know German portrait pair New York a few d course of a trip aroun spent several months in Indi: about a year in Mexicc “1 truly think, berg, to a reporter ‘das L.and der Zul has not been throu about the enorm of that country. Intendi a flying visit, 1 remained almos year. “All that Mexico needs—and she needs it badly—is an efiici railway system and about twenty the mileage it has now. If all those rich deposits of gold, copper, silver, etc, can be brought within reach of a rail- Yas Mexico will be one f the ealthiest countries in the world s great mistake they made, though, they let President Diaz 3 idero family are merely politi- x for their « » to see the United States ous natural r I would li take possession of Mexicc Herr Langenberg | 11 thro Africa ar I t rst artists who pa the Hm if A inter } a ‘A g ] Be r th ¢ e the a , 80 Al s ha 5 sel w est. Sudder one of whether he would lerr LLangenberg é 1 the prospe He left his easel and s paint-box find the lion, but when 1is paintbox was empty. House and Barn Burned Sunday afternoon laid In ruins the dwelling house and barn of Jacob Brubaker, on the Lancas- ter, Petersburg and Manheim pike, little less than mile north of the Dillerville school house Not only did the flames consume the tobacco tents and some of the furniture, but they cremated livestock as wel The loss is between $5,000 and Wednesday, 10 1912 | bbb db bb dlesleodoaeofonfeeecloifoifeceofedfofoifosfone cielo eden NEW YOR KER INVE In Two Sections, Hung on Hinges eesfeefenderfosdosde foe foteoadeafosfesfesdeodesdedeoeforfeefeeteateafeadesds dreds deed efesioriesfosiesioolodofosfocfocfosioriocieciesforforfofocfecforfofecfoofecfororiecie sfscfecfeceofesfosdocforeciesfocfosortecfecfocforferts ge ogee gect pests 1x to a PERCH SPACE FOR CHICKENS Should Be Allowed As a general rule, s feolesfoofosdosfoodesforieefeefesfooorforforfonfortecfertecfonfenionts 3 Perches should be Ui Watt & Shand Ii Every Women Knew the Full Worth of the 19¢ and 25¢ White Flaxon and Linariesat 15ca Yd. I'here we ot be one yard of the entire 5,000 left here this even lor w declare mos emphatic uly that they can not be dupli cated inywher t anything near this price And the same thing applies to these 25¢ Lorraine Voile Tissues at | 1-2¢ a yard, Now, we know that this same material is sold everywhere else at Lv vard; but we were fortunate enough to secure these at half- price---hence this otfer, In vddition to these exception al econome- ies, the Wash Goods Store offers a number of other specially low pt ced materials, of whieh the following only snggests: 5¢. White India | nen, 30 nches wide, 17 v yvard | : J 17¢. 40-inch Persian Lawn, 25¢., Imported Irisl ime | AI Di { a bargaina 12 1-2¢, a yard 1t1es, hive different patterns 12 | 17¢ Figured white Dress goods 15¢, a yard . | in short lengths, 12 1-2¢. a yd NY sho ngths, | sa Y( ¢ Inportant Nainsook, 36 | ye inches wide ) vard 1 h TC \ ! Thy C. a yard, | 7¢. Century Cloth 40 inches i ) 4 ‘ i \ | 1 19¢. White Striped Madras, { wide, a very servicealbe, plain ) | iche wide i \ ht | ' | fabrie, 12 1-2¢. a yard. Colored Wash Goods Oc. Silk Poplin HH inches 1 5¢. Figured Foulars, w hil wide, all shades, 29¢. a vard these last, Sc. a yard, Je. Silk Eolienne 27 inches 12 1-2¢. Ficured Lawns, a wide, all poplar colors, 29¢. a great variety of patterns, 11¢ vard a yard ye. Plain and Figured Pon 10¢. Figured Lawns, fifteen ogee, 32 inches wide, 17¢. a yd. patterns to select from, 7e¢, a } : vard. 25¢. Irish Dimity, good as Jar ortment of patters, 19¢. a yard Natural Linen 27 inches 19¢. Mercerized Poplin, all wide, all-linen, 12 1-2¢. a yard popular shades: 27 inches wide 12 1-2¢. (Colored Linens while they last 8c. a yard, 12 1-2: -< Corner Square and E. King Sts. 11 ly, Toe pededooesedodoosfodosnfedofoooonfodofodoforosfodsobofodofooofefods esos Hinged Perches and Dropping Board. you entire satisfaction. All goods Del ARE YOU BUYINC YOUR Grocery Needs Where You Can Get The Best Quality at The Lowest Prices? You caneanswer this question correctely after you have ex- | amined and compared our prices with what others ask and 4 tasted the quality of our goods which are guaranteed to give LHP gs 2 #s as 0°C1 SD NO 4 $ § al ay be g fo pS i Ain, i H. G. Mount Joy, Penna. BELL PHORE chickens of any kind is te feed CT ee SS Bile 00 0 LEER RRR Re Make Your Porch Comfortable To Make It Cool—Screen it with VUDOR PORCH SHADES. Their extremely moderate price makes the popular with every one who can afford a porch at all. FOR SOLID COMFORT—Get a ( ck, for out- door sleeping or lounging it has no « SUMMER FURNITURE— A few minut nspection of our large and varied line will supply many bright ideas and sugges- n well as lowest prices I rockers, set- ees swings and any other [ I ¢ rattan hop - 2D Wala i My "a I’, LAA & I Yers LANCASTER, PA. Western] 125-131 East King S FRE RNE BE RELI EEEAERSENERE » Columbia pike WE UPHOLD THE HIGH QUALITY OF OUR ICE CREAM new flavors and dainty service. the latest dishes, sundaes, with og tural fruit flavors. If you cannm get your wife to come with you: take a quart to her. Try us on and then you can say you have ly tasted good ice cream. Order § time; it will keep for hours, becs it is the right kind Lewis Siller « S00 OR It will me It | in your mouth, it 1s sg cious. Call on us and try ou