ole cfocfoofesfoofesfecfosfeciecie PAGE SEVEN B0VLLOO0020000000 <Q One Price to All BUICK Sold Strictly On It’s Merits Never mind what any dealer promises you, you owe it to your- self to find out what the Factory Gua antee is on the automobile You propose buying and you should insist on this guarantee being made a part of the contract you sign when purchasing an automo- bile. Some automobile manufacturers give no guarantee at all. That is one of the reasons why some dealers must offer you special in- ducements and discounts to sell their cars. [nvestigate The BUICK Guarantee Lancaster Automobilelo, 230-238 WEST KING STREET, LANCASTER, PENNA. The largest and only strictly figst class fireproof garage and repair shop in Lameaster City or County. Are You Undecided where to buy your bill of Lumber? to do is te look at the prices we are quoting for If so, all you have HIGH GRADE LUMBER as well as cluded in building, for exterior work, from on your roof E. S. MOORE Coal, Lumber, Grain, CEMENT AND FERTILIZER A large stock of Feed constantly on hand. Highest cash price paid|"@ng¢ls or sugar beets had better | for grain . Estimates of Lumber and Mill Work a SpeciaMty FLORIN, PENNA. 300D FURNITURE Is the only kind I sell—Furniture that is Furnitmre Hall Racks Ladies’ Desks pxtension & Other Tables, Davenport China Closets, Kitchen Cabinets In fact anything in the Furniture Line Rockers Mirrors Picture Frames Undertaking and Embalming C. BRUNNZR MOUNT JOY. PENNA YOU WILL GET TEN CELEBRATED a S.&H. k WITH EVERY DOLLAR'S WORTH OF COAL PUR t. H. Baker's Coal and JMBER YARDS Trading Stamps | Ei 0 Mount Joy, Penna. Sale agent for Congo Roofing. No. 1 Ceder Shingles always on hand. Alse Siding, Flooring, Sash, Door, Blinds, Mouldings Laths, Etc. Agents for Alphus Portland Cement. Also Roofing Slate. Quickly and Cheerfully made on all kinds Building Material Telephone No. 833. Oppesite Old P. R. R. Depot. Estimates A 0 D100 OR : New Spring Styles We're ready for you as soon as you want to look them over All the New Shapes and shades in Soft Hats, $1.50 to 85 Derbies, $1.50 to $3.00 Caps for all purposes, 50¢ 1 $1.50 in gert& Haas en St., Lancaster. J {| everything that is in- Interior or the Timber |, the hotbed, not only testing the | Seeds and in your foundation to the Shingles | 1 RES RRR B| preparation for the welder. It will i ine car. The THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY. PA. PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH. GARDEN | Farmers Column = Little Talks on Health & Hygiene by | What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To | Samuel G. Dixon, M. D., L. L. D Say This Week VERY VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR THE FARMERS — Plan a garden, Some of the Buttermilk an Excellent Feed for the World's greatest thinkers have found | Hogs—Common Cows can he Made diversion and More Profitable—Proper Féed for gardens If your Brood Sows—Other Interesting cultural space is limited to a twenty Notes foot back yard do not be discouraged. inspiration in their control of agri CH It is even possible to transform an]! Some hens have a tendency to lay unattractive flat roof into a garden. others. It pays The possibilities of exercise and pro- and give them fit to be derived from the cultivation | small plot, are greater jon fat faster than to search these out more wheat, oats and buckwheat in Of even a [the place of so much corn and corn | than one might think. The use of the spade, the hoe and smoking tobacco, the the rake prove the equivalent of | stronger the better, placed in the | many of the gymnastic exercises]! {bottom of each hen's nest is a good | which everybody concedes to be bene- thing to drive away vermin, | ficial and few people take. In ad- | | Windows in a poultry house should | dition to the advantage of exercise! ILetshta Mitwuch bin tech am8le | slide back and forth | in the open air it is a keen satis-' gonga fisha un hop en ortlicha bully! muslin tacked on the [faction to the vast majority of men gute tzite kotta. Husht du si laeva | isa simple | and women to see things that they!|gafisht fer trout? Now ferluss dich | the wndow ' have cultivated grow and mature, !druf sel is gshpos. stormy days | The practical benefits derived from| So es de kals visa usht ve draw | jand nights, and as result have the tillage of a little garden are(tzu gay will ichna oll fertzalo ve ich | healthier hens, usually exceeded by the aesthetic but|se fong. Es aersht ding es mer dua! | Aftew handtuls of millet seed scat- in the hurly-burly of every day life mus is en grick finna des fish drin | [tered occasionally among the litter | perhaps we weigh as of too little im- hut. Sel is uft mols ortlich ferdaript | opportunities for the hot tzu dua. Won mer de fish amole | appreciation of the!fint de no gates loas. : difficult to tell how Mer mus of koars grosa shwatzy | be the effect of warem hova shunsht bisa de fish net. | {Mer dut de warem uf en guter { products. | Some dry be made to easily. With | outside of the slide, it | matter then to leave | open, except on very will induce hens to scratch for it for | portance our [hours at a time, thus affording them | cultivation and exercise and contentment. { beautiful. It is There is no getting by the fact | far reaching may [that thoroughbred fowls are the most | some slight effort at beautification. preferable to keep. The eggs are | (more uniform in size and color, and | [likewise the chicks, wherefore they ; Canadian North West sent back are more attractive and salable. | home for a few packages of flower | gabissa. Iver a wile bin ich a ven- | While not in use for hatching, the seed and with such time as he could|ich shlaferich wara un es necksht | machine may he used for testing spare transformed the surroundings: ding es ich gwist hop, hov ich gshlo- | be placed in the sand, | Of his mean little one room station. fa Ich hop gadraumt des ich about | covered and kept moist. Keep the | Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, president | en millyone fish tzana hop om mime | temperature up to about 85 degrees, | Of the road was making a tour of in- hoka room un entlich land the seed will germinate in a | spection and when he reached this|aens fon de fish seller Even when it is in use | litile garden spot in the then un-|moul. kucht un se hen net Ich hop dot |seed should | short time. : : * : | Years ago a boy station agent of a shtifer hoka; den shmist mer in de L railroad traversing the plains of the grick un de no wot mer bis se bisa. | for hatching, seeds may be tested by | cultivated wastes, he asked to see| Ich hop gore kadichtich rous ih from him the | tzooga un sel is es letsht es ich may placing them between damp cloths in | the boy and learned | As a result the dafu mint—de no hov ich fot gshlofa. a plate, setting the plate under the story of his garden. egg tray in what is known as the | next year all agents of this road | Ich hop a pore mole gmaent des {chicken nursery. Plants thus germ ' Which stretches from the Atlantic to|ich viter en bise hop eppas hut ols |inated in sand may be transplanted | the Pacific received packages of | gore dunners on my line gatzupt, ay instructions to plant mole des es de gons bisness sheer utilizing those ' flowers around every station and the ous my hent grissa hut. custom then begun has ever since, {heilich—hockel—hinkel seed for vitality, but so tested. A good ration for brood sows is | continued. corn or maize, 80 per cent. and good The cultivation of alfalfa hay, 20 per cent by weight. { more of back yard may not result in| —aer hut der fish gfressa des ich rous | Sometimes sows will eat enough al- | anything of this sort but should prove gatzuga hop un der hoka war druna falfa hay if it is placed in racks in | @ healthful, restful and profitable, im hols fesht. {the pens. If they will not eat enough ! diversion after the labors of the day Well now du in this way, it is a good plan to! for the busy man or woman. [grind it finely and feed it with corn- | Nree——— fut stores | meal in the form of thick slop. The’ futer noch hetsht seller hundt long ferrist my line un der hundt a 2 lgadrawga hen, His Case Will Come Up in Court | Ich war ous This Week for Trial {hame. Ich daerf net the tourteen-year Tom Katunzy vella ga fer trout ep Der Tom sawgt: “Shwilkey, shure net won mit to $2,000 mere gaesht un won du umgfare for his ap-|dusht shmise ich dich by gut in de Arnett | 8rick.” Ich fertzale eich not be made a part of the regular | ration, but fed as a conditioner; for such purposes they are excellent. The amount does not make so much difference. If you have plenty of fthem, throw over what the sows will |clean up readily after they have had | weeks ago, was admitted {other feed. It will not be necessary | bail Saturday morning to cut the beets or mangels. | pearance in court this week. From a careful investigation we | was brought into court on a writ of find that our common Cows are | habeas corpus. He was originally ar-|tzrick kuma capable of producing a much larger | rested for manslaughter and released vield than is secured from the aver- | on $1,000 bail. The district attorney rT Tan age common cow in the state. During | considered the crime to be of a high- OUR BIGGEST WHEAT CROP the past decade we have always had | er grade than manslaughter and di- Government's Estimate or 1914 Pro at the University Farm in the dairy | rected a complaint of murder to be duction Is 551,000,000 Bushels herd, a number of common cows; | preferred. The case was then trans. A record-breaking winter wheat cows with no dairy heredity. | ferred to court for their opinion as crop is in prospect this year, the De vield from these com- | to whether it was a bailable offense. partment of Saturday | was similar to that which last, | coroner's inquest and hearing. pound, is | district attorney to $60, for | least a case of second degree murder April 1 condition for the Vivian Arnett, old colored boy, accused of the mur-|long. | | | , | i { der of a foreigner at Billmyer several du shlofsht fer | ollas won mere Shwilkey Bumblesock | that is, | The average mon cows, for Agriculture estimating twenty three yearly | The testimony frecords, is 5,000 pounds of milk, and 222 pounds of butter; valued at 27 cents per morning that the yield may exceed 551.000.600 presented at the bushels. The condition of the crop The April 1 was 95.6 per cent of a normal, contended that at or much better than the aver equal In round numbers butter alone. The average vears receipt | had been made out. The court de per common cow in the state is $46.- | cided that the case was a bailable The area planted last 10; which shows that the average! one and fixed the amount of bail at 36,506,000 acres, and with a compara- cow is yielding $14 less per annum | $2,000. Constable Steigerwalt went tively good winter, it is believed the might easily yield if given ' his security percentage of a been an she the same care and feed as are given omewhat the cows at the University Farm, THIEVES OPERATE BOLDLY the EE pa rmilk when free from water for washing the butter, makes Make Attempt to Loot Cash Drawer big 08s The great at Landisville Hotel ai coming from the et to deter er is con- nrice price buttermill 5 fre water For sow ha ” : iP ny y nia om osiy sina qu If at : ng 1 woul » Ie H breakfast on he ration ur four nw is particularly good pigs as well ag fattening hogs arrows at this college fed an finished on rmi A good ratio that are nursing pigs of an age when no trouble will be had from secour- 1 ing. would be as follows Cornmeal | pcs immediately 21 t Was one part; bran, two parts with but- Dixon of Huntingdon Andrew termilk, three to four pounds for each Catalogues In Parcel Post vas best man. Miss Mary Beck of mixture usher After the buttermilk afford a for fattening hogs pound of grain Corn and The post office was advised by the nheim was very good ration | osta] department that catalogues in cere mony the invited guests partook For growing DIS the form of books may be admitted of the wedding supper from a well it. might be of advantage to make a!:. + \ ivileges of the parcel post laden table newly-furnished slop of shorts and buttermilk, and whether they home of 1 Mrs. Brubaker. feed corn on the ear besides = A ere Will Make Chains Our townsman bound in paper or have a more The} ill be at tI to their fr substantia vinding Domestic rates at tl above-na 1 address after rates apply for all mail except books Apri Cuba, Mexico and T -se ex-Burgess Frank |to be sent Canada Dissinger, will, in a few weeks start | the Republic Panama. EE a me Mule Sinks Into Earth a new industry in the borough, that Reuben Sipling, the tenant farmer Autos For Son and Daughters on the farm of John H Marietta started of chain making He will use part Miller a short of the shop occupied by the late firm Aaron He retired farmer, re- distance above of Dissinger and Garman, Mountville smiths, in which he will install the |his son and two necessary link bending machinery in 1914 mode black- | siding at has presented plough daughters, with a mules Shortly after o'clock the five-passenger Ford tour- le ad mule sank into the earth and ecipients of his gifts was buried. The hind legs industry and we are John Herr Manor succeed. —Elizabeth- | Mrs. Phares Garber Chestnut Hill left with t front feet protruding town Herald | and Mrs. Harry Musser, Mount Joy with only t head striking above TTT maw ——— —— — he ound. It is thought that a hol- almost be another new township: went down firsi ind the mule was hope to see it The war is over. THe federal There musi have been alot of ugly low formation of limestone gave way government is to establish ga big re- | women before the drug stores began and caused the cavein. The mule was serve bank in Richmond, the of the Confederacy, { plexion but was geatched stightly. / | De no bin ich ower wocka wara un | twenty feet or jamole. Dot war mime oremer hundt | {usht tzana sella dot room dopa. Ep ARNETT RELEASED ON BAIL |8ate hame so shtarick es si bay ene y gshlofa un bin aw! fergessa ich un der | | Friday and was using three capital | selling all these first aids to the ecom- extricated with considerable difficulty | ® i Hl CI UREA OE OT Tr Wednesday, April 22, 1914. 7 7 7 GROWING FEED YOUR CHICKENS DON'T GET HALF ENOUGH TO EAT # you do not feed The PARK & POLLARD GROWING FEED No Magician in the Arabian Nights could ) “ produce results any faster than this feed. From 114 oz. when hatched to 10 Ib. weight at six months is nothing unusual on this ration. TRY IT at our expense; Your money back if it does not do better than they claim, We have added to our line of stock, RYDE'S CREAM CALF MEAL. Takes the place of milk at half the price. Put up in 25 and 50 ib bags. Protein, 25 per cent,; Fat, 5 per cent.: none on the market. BRANDT & STEHMA 0 1 EO "nm =u " i - . = . Business Directory of Lancaster County New Farm and Fiber, 6 per cent. Second te FOR SALE BY MT. JoOVv » PENNA CE TIO R, nemt amole | # warem ins! @ Our Representatives Wear This Badge The publishers of the old reliable FARM JOURNAL, of Phiia- delphia, are preparing to publish the illustrated FARM AND BUSI- NESS DIRECTORY OF LANCASTER COUNTY, giving the name, post-office, rural route, and telephone connection of every farmer in the county, all arranged under post-offices, and a classified BUSINESS DIRECTORY, including all business houses in the county, arranged under the proper headings. With the Directory is given a complete ROAD MAP of the county, with each road NUMBEREDto show the exact location of each farm, as given in the !) ectory This Directory will many interesting PICTURES of fine farms, thoroughbred churches and public imstitutions, schools and pupils, portraits of prominent people, etc. * The names and necessary information about farmers are being secured by PERSONAL CANVASS of the 10,835 farms in the coun- ty. This Directory and Road Map are so useful to farmers that from our experience in other counties we can guarantee that the Directory will go into at least SIX THOUSAND HOMES of Lan- caster County, where it will be constantly usedby farmers and business men for the next five years. The Farm Journal Directories give information which makes them indispensable to every farmer and business man in the coun- ty. They are an immense improvement over other directories, con- taining what most publications do not give, First, they give the names, addresses, telephcne connection, and other important information abeut farmers, secured by PER- SONAL CANVASS from the farmer himself. This canvass of country districts is so costly that most directory publishers can- not afford to make it, and therefore lists of farmers published are in nearly all cases copied from the agsessor’s lists. The classified BUSINESS DIRECTORY includes every busi- ness house in the county, whether in city or country. In other directories the names of houses in the cities and large towns on- ly are usually given. These features, with the Road Map Directory an indispensable hand-book for business man in the county. If you are not sure that correct information has been given to one of our canvassers, please send it direct to our main office. make the Farm Journal farmer and FEL 0000 0 every live WILMER ATKINSON COMPANY Publishers of Farm Journal WASHINGTON SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA JL FE RERE RR RE SRR SREP 2 L] = " BREeERE REE RE 3 EEE ERIE ER ER Mr. Farmer CR 7 3 A ~ Fa rd Spring Is Here 1 VV ef 2x. $2.50 add oY E10) 1 6 OO ————— a... Frank B. Groff T he North Marke treet Saddler HAH REE ERR RE EEA RE E88 R RRR NE EERE EEE REE RR EE NEY ERR Everybody is Invited To My Grand OPENING DISPLAY JAP n= Spring & Summer Millinery Stylish Shapes in Hats For Ladies & Child~ ren, Mewest Colorings in Ribbons & Flowers - FLORA DRABENSTADT East Main Street Mount Joy, Pa. af BE UE EE : NR
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