The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 31, 1915, Image 3

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    PAGE THRER
MRS. WILLIAMS’
LONG SICKNESS
Yields To Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Elkhart, Ind.:— “1 suffered for four-
®een years from organic inflammation,
1female woakness,
pain and irregulari-
ties. The pains in
awful bearing down
feelings, was de-
pressed in spirits
“/-4 1" | and became thin and
: ¥) SV. < |palewith dull, heavy
eyes.
#ors from whom I received only tempo-
rary relief. I decided to give Lydia BE.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair
trial and also the Sanative Wash. Ihave
Bow used the remedies for four months
and cannot express my thanks for what
they have done for me.
‘If these lines will be of any benefit
You have my permission to publish
shem.”” — Mrs. SapiE WILLIAMS, 455
James Street, Elkhart, Indiana.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native rootsand herbs, |
contains no narcotic or harmful drugs,
and to-day holds the record of being the
most successful remedy for female ills
we know of, and thousands of voluntary
testimonials on file in the Pinkham
laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to
prove this fact.
f you have the slightest doubt
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
pound will help you, write
LE. Pinkham Medicine Co.
niidential) Ly nn,Mass., forad-
Your letter will be opened,
land answered by a woran,
l held in strict confidence,
fd
Wound Up in Bank uptcy
1 A. K. Kauffman knitting mill
at Manheim was sold by
( H I Jiemesd
fer for
residence to
A
2” Nu
o
&
Each Person Scad
"Ill Reeely
I had six doc- |
Trustee jc.
FERTILIZING AN ORCHARD
A Lancaster County Man Meets
With Great Success
The owner of a State Demonstra-
tion Orchard in Lancaster County,
who pioduced a magnificent and
valuable crop of fruit this year, after|
having successfully - followed the di-
| rections of the office of the State
Zoologist, wrote to Professor Sur-
face, at Harrisburg, giving details of
the vaiue of his crop, and added, “I
claim it is nearly all through know-
ledge received from your office.”
He further asked if his trees need-
ed commercial fertilizer, and if so,
how much per acre and what kind
should be applied? As Professor Sur-
face had seen this orchard during
the summer and knew of its thrifty
condition he was able to give a
definite reply as follows:
“A great many of your trees are
growing so well that I doubt if they
need much nitrogen, Some potash
and phosphoric acid might be useful.
I am really of the opinion that if you
would apply ashes over your orchard,
; which contain potash and lime, and
then grow crimson clover sowed
about midsummer, you would get
results you ought. Remember the
plan thus would be to sow ashes
over the orchards at the rate of one
|or more tons per acre at any time
between now and the time you wish
[to plow in the spring, and then keep
{it cultivated with a spring tooth har-
or disc harrow, or later in the
season a smooth harrow until mid-
and then saw crimson clover
remain until
later
crimson clover
| row,
| summer,
letting it
without cu'tivation
year. The will
humus and nitrogen for the soil, and
next
this
grow
early
spring
will do away with the necessity of
buying this most expensive element
of fertilizer, If
I
plication of acid phosphate and pot-
you cannot
oshes readily recommend an ap-
about equal parts of each,
sowine from 600 to nn
ahead with
as
more per acre. ooine
and
cultivation and erimson elover
herein guegested, Also. Teme
that some further prunine will stimu-
ite the further grow of vour
roallvy fear
and cherry trees, but certainly not
on the peach tiees wnen they are as
sl10Lg as yours.”
——
BIG TIME AT HERSHEY
It Is Estimated That 50,000 Will At
tend Conference
Between 40,000 and 50,000 per-
sons, fiom all parts of the United
States, and a small proportion from
scattered parts of the g.obe, will
spend Saturday and Sunday, June 6
and 7, in Hershey Park, attending
the annual International Conferenge
of the Church of the Brethren, pre-
dicted Rev, I. W. Taylo:, pastor of
the Brethren Home, Neffsville, and
who is chairman of the committee
on arrangements,
Rev. Taylor met with his commit-
tee Saturday at Hershey and started
the work on the conference pro-
gram. The meetings of the confer-
ence, which commences on June 3
and ends June 10, will be held in
the new auditorium now in course
of erection, which will seat 6.000.
The members of the committee,
all of whom were in attendance, are
Rev. I. W. Taylor, Neffsville; Rev.
S. H. Hertzler, Elizabethtown: Rev.
G. W. TFalkenstein, Elizabethtown;
Rev. John Herr, Myerstown. Leban-
on countv; Rev, Jesse Ziegler. Roy-
ersford. Monteomerv countv: Rev. J.
H. Longenecker and Rev. J. OC.
Zoocke, both of Palmyra.
Last June the convention was
held in Seattle, Washineton. ana
was attended bv a large number of
delegates from this county.
Haste makes people
waste
Some
lot of «
obtain !
or hel
poundg or ©
mher Ve


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wer to the Lucky Billiken Puzzle,
™... (Whether Answer Is Correct or Not).


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1ct be in ou
year a postrnarl later
IMPORTANT NOTIC
Write your address clear
r
F
o
Winter Piano Co.
111 EAST KING STREET,
LANCASTER, P
Howard M. Eldriq
3
., Manager.
a

r hands by ten o'
than that hour.
ly and distinctly,
iirst Choice:
> ae ry
D amona Ring
IER
SS
THE BULLETI
STOOP SHOULDERS
Little Talks on Health and Hygiene
by Samuel G, Dixon, M. D., LL. D.
| Atlas bore the weight of the
‘heavens upon hig head and hands,
according to a Greek myth, but those
of mankind who carry the burden of
life, too often let it rest upon their
shoulders. Stoop shouldered men
and women by the thousands are to
be found among the followers of
sedentary occupations. Nine out of
ten when the subject is mentioned
will square away their shoulders
and say, “I'm getting a little care-
less’ about that.” Then they make a
momentary resolve that they will
brace up and overcome the fault.
and one that has a distinct bearing
upon health there ig no question,
No system of physical culture is
complete which does not
and deep breathing. one ‘of these is
impossible without the other, In this
lies the chief ill effect of stoop
shoulders,
To maintain good health we should
use our. lungs to their normal
capacity at all times. The proper
purfication of the blood through
oxygenation requires ample breath-
ing. Drop your shoulders forward
and then try to take a full breath;
see how impossible it is to do so in
that position. Breathing with the
shoulders forward and the breast
bone depressed is only partially ac-
complished. The lower portion of the
lungs cannot be emptied and instead
of receiving a supply of fresh air
they will be filled with re
To work sit or walk
sidual air.
day after
the
re re et Ge ere
In the sprine
the
£1 1
man’s
young
hard to concentrate.
-
fancy finds it
* tt
will have his
the marines.
.
Gen now
chance
Carranza
to tell it
* *
to
*
In slack business New
York lawyers can always depend up-
on Thaw,
times of
After a lively race for a husband
many an heiress marries a run-down
nobleman.
» = * *
Wealth has its penalties. You
never hear of a poor man spending
money for dyspepsia tablets.
. . . .
People regarded en-
forced neutrality
now beginning to see in it a valuable
who recently
as a handicap are
{ asset.
4

Name .
Street and No.
A.
#6 sss 0tsscs0r0rs0sss0arensne
See sr vrs sevenss ae
Cityor Town....cv0sse. State. ...... | %


|
ww |
WISE wp
ship commander should
long
of
included in hig orders a
and carefully prepared list
“don’ts.”
*
Cermans sg Ti
revered the
believed
s
serting that Carl Schurtz
is also
but it 1
that he mislaid his hyphen
Fatherland
oon
after landing,
* *
. *
It is estimated that the 63rd con-
gress emitted 20,000,000 words. But
perhaps all that verbosity was a
safety valve by which the country
was spared many foolish acts.
include
exercises which teach erect carriage
N, MT. JOY, PA.
pa
=
THE §
0 EL
We Stand
Whether
Q"
11 {E011
Wednesday, March 31, 1915,
EO
TORE WHERE
QUALITY COUNTS
Back of Every Sale
It Be For $1 or $1000
ALITY governs the purchase of every dollar's worth of marchandise that en,
ters our stock. Quality that we can guarantee, such as will give to the custo-
mer the kind of satisfaction he or she has a right to expect, also the kind of quality
that will serve as a lasting advertisement for the Donovan Store.
“Nothing cheap” ever
enters this establishment; nothing that does not measure
up to our fixed high standard of quality. Everything must be dzpendable--quality =
first, then price then our guarantee. Everything is exchangeable within a reason-
|
able time. No sale is considered a sale until entire satisfaction is assured.

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Successors to Williamsons and Foster & Cochran
32-38 E. King St,
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Lancaster, Penna.
BoE oa Eee mE nee eR EE EEE


HOME HEALTH CLUB
By Dr, David H. Reeder, Chicago lil,
and Medic
quently stated
Food
been
tracts or serums
glands of such an
found
human being
the effect is not
but apparently permanent.
vestigations, however,
that a mueh more
1alg have
a
similar
in
cas-
effect upon g'ands
in
only
the and many
favorable,
My in-
have proven
certain effect
es
12nd more dependable in lasting ben-
_ ®t hottaw
ART AR A ——e
found thiu a
of in herbs,
fiuils, 1008, ls and
really er
nuts,
beiries and
time nineteen
fallen, which is
Total snow
last year
been an
y. The
1ined on
time
efit
scienulc
ue
is LO
celts
use
e:8
d
ersonal ex-
glands
to on
nae
th of
Jrcenart
"A ehncatate thar will ha STERN 2: had “" lone
Naw 3 3 X h (ee who will proseenta
3 inst the prisoners who are or then
’ : the jail of the maid
‘onntv of Laneaster, are to be then
and there to nrosecui2 against them
A Wet Winter as shall he just,
The past winter which has just. Dated at Lancaster, the 22nd day
closed according to the almanac, was of March, 1915.
an unusually wet one. From Novem:
oamA mare fattanine
vefeh vourselt and “wateh i+ erow »
in
tn a.
PN EBY, Sheriff