PAGE SIX THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Wednosday, Mey 13, 1914 1 mE | i [ miles an hour will arrive at a station DANGEROUS SPRINGS AND SWEET CLOVER = " | n L {500 miles away. But storms are not WELLS The Kansas Experiment Station in m| bs KY Ly ; : Mill ’ | Ba 1 & | railronl trains. They travel in an — a recent publication makes it plain | halle . 1 ers RB J sastanly direction, but they do not little Talks on Health and Hygiene that sweet clover, a hitherto neglect- oy | In i 6 ji He ravel due east. Their speed is lia- by Samuel G. Dixon, Commis- ed plant, despised as a Dbernicious Jewelry Store = uU § I | ble to change, and they are affected sioner of Health weed, has very considerable agri- 5 i r 3 . i ; a | : g the presence of other storms, by reer cultural value, It is stated that “as ‘ . ro ountain ranges, large bodies of wa-| It is indeed a modest property own- a soil improver it is unexcelled; for Speut arrangement fully patented [here are a number of . and many other things which er who will not boast of his well, Pasturing purposes it has consider . sein v ! : 2 ; “« 99 : WATCHES n Mrs. Aselin Was Restored to make weather prophesying the com-| The coolness, clearness and general able value; and as a forage crop it Pure Olive Oils on the cl 1 d ™ Health by Lydia E. Pink plicated science that it is. The | excellence of their water supply is a ean be utilized to good advantage market t I All the pure ockS an = hho’ ta hi skeleton of the science however, is | favorite topic of conversation with where alfalfa or red clover can not y. J 1 haus Vegetatie B those “highs” and | 5 op peer "be successtully grown olive oils, however, are not ewe ery =| ~ [the progress of those “highs” and |thousands of people. be s ess y gl 3 . , Compound. ‘lows” eastward across the country { One half of our eight milli Pe Attention ' is called to the fact * . . . : : = | x | “lows ¢ é d S > «| é ight million Penn- he Byes tested and all kinds of 5 mere This progress is caused by the | s sylvanians depend upon springs or that there are several varieties oi First Quality olive oils! GLASSES FITTED = | Minneapolis, Mi ‘After my little | shape of the earth and the well- | wells for their water supply and from sweet clover, of which the common Simply to know that you are #@ | one was born I sick with pains in | known fact that hot air rises, The |now on for the next four or five White sweet clover and the large bi- dleo sieotiica) g00ls such as B| rere 2 % Which the [tropical sun in the regions along | months the other half of our citizens ennial yellow sweet clover are the buying an olive oil marked | ELECTRIC 1R0NS, WMO3: BNE Socios 7) were | the Equator heats great masses of | on their vacation trips or half holi- most important. The white vairety is “pure’’ 1s not enough. The ORS, FLASH LIGHTS, np UM tion, I suffered a |i: Which rise and drift toward days in the country will find them. generally to be prefered for farm fact that an olive oil is pure BATTERIES, ETC. Bl great deal every {the North and South Poles. As the selves depending upon water from PUrposes, although the biennial yel- | { Bl £4 monthandgrew very | earth revolves from west to east these sources. low is sometimes proieped Where bay | does not necessarily imply that z #7 { thin. I'wasunder the | these masses are carried along with| When investigations are made by production is desired.” Sweet clover ’ * a {doctor’s care for two | it at the same speed. But, as is also | sanitary experts the water of many Is adapted to a wide range of soils, | it 1s fit for human con- S. H . Miller mn long yo Wighont [well known, the Equator revolves | of these wells and springs has time and while it does best on good soils, | sumption. There are several . aft ne 2 | oY much faster than the poles, which [and again shown pollution, which it will make a satisfactory growth on . : : East Main street | an ue. are practically stationary, in much | means that they are positively dan-| Very poor soils. different grades of olive oils, = | Ee a : s | oS . vi tha . ps, hoal oar, 3 . y . . ir y i a , rly | . . MOUNT JOY, -i- PENNA § got Lydia E. Pink. | the same way as the rim of a wheel) gerous for human consumption. Un- Ea 2004 sod 2d iin regardless of their purity. w = | ham’s Vegetable Compound. After tak- | revolves faster than the hub. There- | fortunately may appear clear and be handled it ma es a fair quality | ! 009 G08 UY | joe the third bottle of the Compound I | fore, these masses of air, revolving agreeable in taste when it contains bay which may in many cases be Cannadiat the oisce 3 There 1s but one grade of > rrr - | was able to domy housework and today | at the same rate as the Equator, be- | sewage organisms which may cause Substituted with advantage for the nne rt 0 Iv pro- li il that should over be GO TO I am strong and healthy again. I will | oip ag they approach the poles, to typhoid fever or dysentery when tak- more valuable alfalfa and clover | ction ify fialy olive 0O1 : answer lettersif anyone wishestoknow | | 0 ch faster than the earth be-| en into the system. hays. In actual nutritive constitu- used for table use or for medi- W.B.BENDER East Main St, FOR A GOOD SHAVE STYLISH HAIRCUT REFRESHING SHAMPOO or anything in the Barber Line. Half The Secret ot Good Pictures Is The Film / See That Yours 1s the Ea man N. C. Film The Word “KODAK” on the Spool End Identifies the Genuine. Steam Laundry HAIR CUTTING Agent for Standard SHAVING Joseph B. Hershev Tonsorial Parle: Three Chairs. No Waiting Agent for the Middletown Steam Laundry. Goods called for Tuesday and delivered Friday. East Main St. MOUNT JOY Terme Moderate. Bell Telephone CHARLES S. FRANK AUCTIONEER MOGUNT ded t Prompt Attention given to Sales ef Read Estate and Personal Property. Steam Vulcanizing By Experienced Hande SPEED VULCANIZING COMPANY NORTH WEST CORNER ORANGE AND PRINE STREETS Lancaster, Pa. All Work Guaranteed, Quick Service. By sending your work to us you will notice the difference in mileage snd decreased maintenance cost. Repairing of all kinds done oa inmer Tubes and Sasings at reasoms- able prices. 000 ooobeo00e Weare Always Prepared to serve Pure Water ICE: IN ANY QUANTITY at Moderate Charges. Don’t fail to see us before plac- ing your order this year. J. N. Stauffer & Bro. 8 Mount Jovy. Penna. BX SO00000O6 (@) DN Vers BYR) @) QR) OOOOOOOOOOOOO Or a (Classy Hair (mt Stop at H.J. WILLIAMS TONSORIAL PARLOR Main St, Agt For Middletown Laundry Mount Joy EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Hstate of ELIZABETH F. RICK- B@CKER, late of Mount Joy Borough, deceased. Letters Testamentary on said es tate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make Iim- mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, re siding at 50 % Duke St, Lancaster. Mount Joy, Pa. | { pound, bes orbs, | 628 Monroe St.,N.E., Minneapolis, Minn. “Old Reliable” about my case.”’— Mrs. JOSEPH ASELIN, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- | made from native roots and contains no narcotics or harmful | and today holds the record of | he st successful remedy we If youneed such | a try it? 1's ills he d + ydon't y« j vd ho slightest doubt | the VL, Pini ham’s Vegetas= bl 7 ul with helpyou,write | to Lydia 1. Pinkham Medicine Co. | (confidential) Lynn, Mass, for ad= vice. Your letter will be opened, | read and answered by a woman, | and held in strict contiaenee. 1S DONE { | HOW IT | | Tells How They Fore-| cast the Weather One of correspondents writes: Will our you please how the weather forcasts are made? | shortest and simplest | telegraph. The To this the answer is: By weather forecaster does not look out window and guess. He is not weatherwise like the. old salt who scents the approach of a storm with- out knowing how. To the signs by which the ordinary citizen decides whether to take his umbrella with him er leave it at home, he pays no attention... Give him his telegraph wires and he can make his predic- tions as accurately in a windowless cellar as on the top of New York's skyscraper. of the highest | comes more { from | centre of | west winds mean clear | pressure tell me through |grom the News Letter, in simple language, | the only available place is up. rises it neath them. movement west to east, of the a movement which marked the nearer gets to the poles. This, of course, does that the wind always blows from the west. The current | that direction, ause innumerable the winds we feel, for instance, direction. disturbance be- one not mean great eddies which are Into a the air rushes Thus, if is to sure area, every the the west of us, wind as the air rushes toward this | center; when the storm has reached | {and passed us on its easterly way | ; | | we will have westerly winds. For | it is common to say that weather. that flows into the area obviously Since it is point of the this reason The air low- somewhere. compass, As it cools and contracts. In the moisture it contains is have rain, That we are likely to. It can not be too emphatically that there are many things to be considered which may make exceptions to the most fundamental] rules. In regard to temperature, everyone has noticed that rain in winter means warm weather, in summer cool weather. This arises from the fact that heat travels more easily thru clear skies than thru clouds and moisture. In the daytime heat reach- es the earth from the sun; at night it leaves the earth to be absorbed in every process the condensed and we is, stated The individual sees the clouds or ‘the rain sweep over a field a mile ! his house and knows that the will be on him in a few min-| With the aid of the telegraph weather man sees the storm it is a thousand miles away, and not only this storm but every other one in the country. He knows in what direction and at what speed each is moving, and can thus calcu late with reasonable accuracy the ap- proximate time when it will reach place in its route private from storm utes. the when any Twice a day, at 8 in the morning and 8 in the evening, reports are telepraphed to Washington from 200 observer. stationed in as many dif- ferent localities in the U, S. and Canada. In these reports the observ- ers do not volunteer their personal opinions about what is going to hap- pen. They confine themselves to a plain statement of the actual condi- tions at that particular moment, the pressure, or weight of the atmos- phere, the temperature, the direction and velocity of the wind, the amount of rain since the last report, and so forth. From this information the Weather Man of the United States is made up, showing the conditions that prevail in every part of the country. Since there are two maps for each day it is obvious that by comparing them the forecaster can keep track of the course and progress of both storms and periods of clear weather. From that, the next step is to predict what sort of weather wil] prevail for a day or two in any given locality. This map is the basis for all scien- tific weather forecasting. A glance at it will show that it is divided into “high pressure areas’ gure areas.” These technical | terms used to describe the regions in | which the weight or pressure of the atmosphere is great (high) or small | (low). At sea level the barometer which is used to measure this weight, wil] register 30 inches conditions of the atmosphere. it registers more than this, say 30.5 r 31, the pressure is “high” when 295 or less, “low.” In this way are height of a column of mercury in a | barometer indicates the weight of the air just as, in a thermometer, it indi- cates the temperature. Low winds, high pressures, and rising cool, clear weather. For a reason to be explained later, these “highs” and ‘“lows,” as are called, travel in a general direc- tion from west to east. The fore- caster notes their progress on the! map, and then predicts the time of their arrival at any specified point. If they traveled, like a ship steered | by compass, an exact course to the | east, and if they moved invariably at the same speed, then ther fore- gsting would be a simple sum in ar- jthmetic, like calculating the time when a railroad train ruhning 50 rain, settle on a near-by mountain | and “low pres- | | under normal | When | the | pressures usually mean strong | temperature; they | [ Mrs. the atmosphere. In summer, there- | fore, the days are longer than (the nights, the eaith is being heated | for a greater part of the 24 hours than it is being cooled. In conse- | quence, the clearer the weather and | the it is for heat to travel, | the hotter it grows. In winter the re- | verse is true. The cooling time is | longer than the heating, and the clearer it is the colder it grows. Thus the pressure of the atmos- phere is the key to the weather, aft- ecting the three vital questions of rain, temperature and wind. Many things may create an area of low pressure and many things may influ- ence its career when once it has been created. But there are certain genera] rules based on the principles already outlined. The weather maps tell the forecaster the conditions of the last few days, the telegraph tells him of the conditions at the moment, and with this information he is able to predict the conditions for the im- mediate future from a standpoint very different to that of the amateur observer, however exeprienced, who can form an opinion only from the signs visible to his unaided eye. It may, in fact, be said that no accu- rate forecasts for more than a few hours in advance are possible unless | the prophet is able to study a series | of observations covering a wide | range of country a few they have been taken. For its weekly forecasts, indeed, the United States Weather Bureau has reports not only from this country but from abroad and at sea as well. when easier re ee ell ee DON'T BE MISLED Mount Joy Ci tizens ‘Should Read and Heed This Advice Kidney trouble % dangerous and loften fatal. { Don't experiment with something {new and untried | Use a tested kidney remedy. | Begin with Doan’s Kidney Pills. Used in kidney troubles 50 years. | Recommended here and every- | where. | The following statement forms con-| | vincing proof. Mrs. William Morning, E. High St., | Elizabethtown, Pa., says: “For {several years I was troubled by weak kidneys. The kidney secretions were | | very annoying and I had a severe | {pain across my back that kept me in| {migery. I learned of Doan’s Kidney pills and got a supply. They gave me positive relief. I use. them now occasionally, when my back gets] tired and my kidneys arn’t acting as| {relieve me.” . Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t Isimply ask for a kidney remedy—get | Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that] Morning bad. Foster-Milburn | Buffalo, N. Y. ——- ——— Co., Prop., Will Add 62 Offices The T-story Woolworth Building at Lancaster wil] be made an 8-story building, the work to be soon begun/| The cost will be $36,000. There is thus a constant | atmosphere from | flows in | but surface conditions | low pres- | the | we will have an easterly | c must go | coming in| hours after | No well should be located near a cesspool, privy or barnyard where | the drainage from these places can reach directly or indirectly by seep- |age thru the water bearing strata. In a limestone country there is particu- lar danger of sewage or animal wastes which find their way thru fis- sures in the rock and may re-appear many miles away in some subterrane- an stream which serves as a water supply. Open are to pollution and al wells particularly liable wells should be -arefully walled and covered to pre- vent surface and direct drainage from contaminating them. The close proximity of possible sources of pol- lution .should be sufficient to place any well or spring under suspicion. Unfortunately many property own- | ers who strive to keep their houses ind grounds in a clean, sanitary condition overlook this vita] factor. | The cost of a water tight stone or | cement covering which will deflect drainage from the well or the sink-| [ | { ing of a new well in a safe locality | is vastly more economical than a| single case of typhoid fever. A A | HIGHLY PROFITABLE FARMS Farm management surveys are | now being conducted in a good many localities in this country. In nearly all of them it has been found tet from 2 to 5 per cent of the farmers | are making very handsome incomes. | A study of these highly profitable farms with a view to finding wherein | they differ from ordinary farms | brings out some very interesting re- | lations. The farms may be divided into | three classes. One class consists of highly specialized farms, where the farming is not only of the most in- tensive character but is of large magnitude. Highly successful farms of this class are found only in those] localities that possess dstinct advan- tages in the matter of markets for perishable farm products or very dis- tinct advantages in the matter of soil and climate, Another class consists of farms producing products of exceptional quality, They are mainly farms on which very high-priced live stock are produced. These farms are scattered more or less throughout the county and are not numerous anywhere. There is, in fact, not room for a large number of such farms in any see- tion. The third class consists of farms that are organized types of live- stock farming, but which are both very large and very well managed. It is this latter class of farms which appears most commonly in the Mid- | dle West, where there is not room for | very many highly specialized farms. {In New England fruit and truck farms, as well as farms devoted to the production of the highest class of breeding stock, stand out very promi- nent amongst the highly profitable | farms. While the highly specialized farm represents the possibility of great profit, it frequently also represents the possibility of heavy losses on ac- | count of the tremendous fluctuation lin production, and consequently in prices, of the products of intensive | farming. In the greater portion of the country the great mass of farm- ers must gain their livelihood from | the ordinary field crops and the com- mon types of live stock, The sur- veys clearly demonstrate the fact that in general farming the size of the farm is a very important factor. | | The farm should be large enough to | give the working force available to the farmer a maximum of productive labor throughout the year. | | Ea — { | Maytown Case Nonsuited In Common Pleas Court the *suit of John P. Albright vs. Jacob/ Beiger, | was attached. Albright live@! 1D May- { town, and when he moved t lork in | 11911 he leased his property to An- { | drew Albright. However, Ziegler took, | possession of the property, the own-| | ership of which was in dispute, and | they should and they never failed to| installed a tenant. Albright then sued | | for possession. ‘ 3 | The Court allowed a motion for a non-suit, A | | Fleisher's Dates | County Siperintendent Pieisher | will meet wofld-be teachers om the | | following dates” June 2, Conoy, Don- egal and Mount Joy at Elizabethtown. | | Examinations begin at 9 o'clock and | ! are open to the public. ents it is pract tle, sheep, this purpose may be profitably grown on very poor and rough land. other crops. cially | ; ! humus content of the soil. | roots, add much huinus | decay, able depth ically equal to these. It makes an excellent pasture for cat- horses and hogs, and for For quick results in improving the soil sweet clover is superior to most | Its ability to thrive well | on soils lacking in humus or other- | wise badly run down makes it espe- adapted for this purpose. Like alfalfa, cowpeas, and other legumes, it has the ability to obtain nitrogen from the air by means of the nitro- gen-gathering bacteria which live in roots of the plants, tubercles on the thus adding much nitrogen to the soil fn which it grows. der for When plowed un- green manure or allowed to land this crop is a building up the The large penetrate deeply, break layers of the soil and thereto when they thus improving the physical condition of the soil to a consider- the depth of ing. Sandy as well as heavy clay | and hardpan soils, which would not | otherwise produce satisfactory crops, | may be so improved in texture by growing sweet clover for a few years | remain on the very efficient one in which up the lower below plow- | | that they have become quite pro- | ductive. | A weed has been defined as a | plant which has not yet found its | | proper use. In view of present know- | ledge of its possibilities sweet clover | ran no longer be regarded as a weed. | | FOR JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME | COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA | | wie sjeojs