PAGE FOUR IHE B LE I'LN, IOUNT JOY, PA HUSHED NIAGARA FALLS. The Roar of its Mighty Waters tilled For a Day only « ein h I" the mighty fa enced thi Currey th: fa! Lt the leleteieteeteteide C THE SHEPH! Once Shee tioed sine p farmin wen pra eth ’ I times and thle prot tock indus me of 1 seally loge thelr teeth; hence they hould be fattened 4 period il sold be we thi to the best bunch is as CARE OF THE Hand! ng STALLION. the Stud Ani. mpress dito 1 not required H. McKin While on a e highly cise re ns of inated » } 3) the the opposit most r and full of iiscovered rson to tell sition he matter whether he blind or paralyze By process not well understood they ws when we are about to fall and giv as the consciousness of being in any position assumed Steeplejacks and other workers on igh buildings who finally r merve and are afraid to go very far above the ground have lost part of their sense of equilibrium. KExami what pe isin n some pecul mations by physicians in such instances | have shown that thelr semicircular glands were diseased. by this means that the existence of a sixth sense was dicovered.—New York World. Crushing. The English judge, Parry, in his book “What the Judge Saw” tells this story of a very masterful counsel who was not afraid to put even the bench in its place sometimes. On one occa sion he was arguing a case when the judge asked for his authority for a eertain statement, “Usher,” counsel called out in his most rasping voice, “go into the libra gy and bring his lordship any ele mentary book on common law!” Spider's Thread. The thread spun by a spider is so excessively that a pound of it would be long enough to reach around the earth. It would take pounds of ft to reach to the moon and over 3.000 pounds to h to the sum But t« get a thread long enough to reac mearest star would require half a Bon tons fine ten strete *h the mil Cases pear here ington a yeument p less tl i. . what ‘ritz— Well he teacher home Anal | 100K that these lose their It was largely | being 1d the at the may twelve fed raw hours and thing 1 wa be after whicl aur, ive loes ot linseed o \ x 1 Vhen pur gati 3 but o1 for consi fly except in of 1 procurable, h yuld be fed a able quantity cumstance few wd little linseed me: a week It is sometimes a stallion sheds better he Is groomed between Bes Ons Any intelligent formed horseman better than | this. If a lLorse do well and feel well it Is essential that his skin be in | good condition t all times, whether he | ts working or idle, and this cannot be | uniess regular Srooming is given eason- | oats, as cir ther feed of bran, with a mand root with a | three t claimed that | spring it il two or imes | n the breeding | and well in knows is to Rye Pasture For Pigs. The use of rye as a pasture crop on | the farm can be made to serve a double | purpose. [It will furnish green succu-| lent feed in late fall and early spring, | when practically all the other crops | | are dormant, thus keeping the hogs In| | a thrifty, healthy condition. A second | big advantage of rye is that it can be | grown as a catch crop on stubble fields | or will serve to utilize waste places o1 unused lots. Winter rye has a wide | range of adaptability. It will thrive | under almost all conditions of climate, | soil and rainfall. In the south it often furnishes green feed through the entire winter. In the northern region it is| the last green feed of the fall and the| first to reappefy in the spring. Often | it remains green all winter under a| blanket of snow, and as soon as the] spring thawing has occurred it is ready | for pasturing Shoop Water. Water for the lambs is of more portance than Is sometimes th t | When the d liable to be not drink an indication some. Wha ly, and no water it dr as ir mail as I« is shortsig it fresh un ws are heavy in late fal nuch water that they nee nporia that the windov dows sun cai ee — Famous Stage Beauties with horror on Skin or Erup- Pimples. ey don't have them, nor will any pne, who uses Bucklen’s Arnica ralve. It glorifies the face. Ecze-! ha or Salt Rheum vanish before fit. cures sore lips, chapped hands, | b3ins; heals burns, cuts andj s. Unequalled for piles, On-| c at S. B. Bernhart & Co's. a — rs O-_.,oy>z2ai)pffd)d! tions, Blotches, Sores Pubscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin i How have LIOWD sa I'he oO to do unity ottled {OME Le { faction throug kidne nation with one fron mont HE colds likely worse OLUn chin body, will very You ALTH caught? mia results A surface ot the may |man hard on the farm or allow a cold 0 omething to ed You have noticed day, I the he | 1 + the blood your 'anywl comes in how jnestion to out doar from develop but have you pro iwrd 0 A raw’ old ol on body Isn't it true earty meal ol 18 often el { I i | 1 re ymew hat thal XDD SD 0) 9H E "man-who-cares" =) year when every! A 3 As a rule the j one continual round of likes to be well dressed at all times, but if there is one se; dy wants to be dressed a little better than ordnary, it 1s at | us Yuletide, when happiness and good cheg ev erywhere inners, parties and social gatherings— everybod is dressed in Now, your pleasure will be greatly enhanced if you are dressed up » new | “The same price the world over” Anywhere you go, youll find nobody better dressed than you will. You'll of place when you meet friends wearing $20 to $25 suits— your STLEPLUL you hold your head a little : higher, if anything. And the best part of it hs, it costs you $3 to $8 less—a cash savy of § buy both a suit and an overcoat. What a lot of happiness and pleasure you 4 can give to to those you love, with that money you save in buying STYLEPLUS CLOTHES! Think of the nice gifts you can buy with it. Come in today and select your STYLE- PLUS suit, and a STYLEPLUS overcoat, too, if you ] one—both guaranteed by the makers. If you don't care to take them with you or have them delivered now, we'll lay them aside for you uptil Christmas Eve. We store 1n to —we are h to impress on you that no othe sells STYLEPLUS CLOTHES e exclusive agents. NEE 0 ET EE 0 11 EE