CRE BENBET AS » A large stock of Feed constanly va hand. CI OMOOOGOOOOHONGOOOUOMW MWS CLAREN ‘Farmers Column e) 5 hd MOUNT Joy, Li Fly Tine Is Here FINE LEATHER BUGGY FLYNETS, $2.00. $2.25. $2.50. $2.75, $3.00. $3.50. $3.75. CARRIAGE AND EXPRES 8 FLYNETS, $2.50 AND $3.00. HEAVY LEATHER TEAM NETS, $2.50, $3.00. $3.50. $4.00. YELLOW AND ELACK C AND $1.50. ORD TEAM NETS, $1.00. $1.25 WOOL AND COTTON COOLING BLANKETS $1.75, $4.00. F. B. GROFF Harness and Horse Clothing, i MOUNT JOY, PENNA" ROBERT H. HOKE PROFESSIONAL ALL WORK RECIIVES a EBT oe Undertaker and Embalmer MY PERSONAL ATTENTION Bell Phone {SRS Sunday and night calls responded t® immediately West Main Street At D. H. Engies MOUNT JOY, PA. DL just order paraffine from your ocer. Always ask for ‘Parowax ” — we urge you. Its purity, its dust- proof package, its extra- refined quality, prove its fitness for sealing your fruit jars, your jellies and jams. Box of 4 big cakes 10 cents, The Atlantic Refining Co. FR E8 THR: 1h i i: = i 1] Ni \ lL {fy if [I (i Are You Undecided where to buy your bill of Bamber? If so, all yeu have to do is look at the prices we are quoting for HIGH GRADE LUMBER as well ag everything that is in- cluded in building, for imterior or exterior work, from the Timber in your foundation to the Shingles on your roof. J. N. HERSHEY Dealer In Coal, Lumber, Grain, FEED, HAY, STRAW, SLATE, SA LT, CEMENT AND FERTILIZER Estimates of Lumber a FLORIN, Highest cash price paid for grain nd Mill Work a Speolalty PENNA. A Straw Hat For Every Man We never were beiter Sennit and Split Straws in French Palm and Porto Rico hats, Panamas, $3.50 £5. $6 neady at the seasom’s start. soft and stiff finish, $1.50 to $3 $1.50 to $2 Plain shapes, Brown and White, $1.50 to 2 Wingert & Haas 144 North Queen St, Lancaster. | VERY VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR THL FARMERS to Build a Nest From the Hen Herself—Controlling the Currant Worm—The Enemies of the Alfalfa Plant—Feeding Calves Learn How | Milking | larger cows require a much than is | necessary for animals. | They should have access to a good | clean water supply at least twice a | day. The best supply quantity of water growing is well water | pumped into a tank or trough, fail- | | ing this | At no time of | ing more unpleasant [ing the time when pastures are | short and the flies are troublesome. | Now is the time when it pays to have supplemental forage cropg and | to darken the stables and keep the | cows inside during the hottest part | of the day. | ing the winter is less difficult to contend with than the hot sun and flies during the summer. A young duck eats much than a chicken of the same age, but it grows much faster and is ready | for market much earlier, so that it | costs no more to raise a duck than to raise a chicken. After ducks get their growth they can be fed as cheaply as hens and during laying season, when ducks are averaging a pound of eggs a week, do not need any more feed than do the hens. Twelve Pekin duck eggs weigh ag much ag 17 hen’s eggs—a little more than two and one fourth pounds. After a calf is four weeks old it can get along very well on little or no milk if you are short. Make a gruel out of a variety of feeds, say cornmeal, oil meal, middlings, bran, ground oats; mix them all together and cook a kettle of it, about the consistency of gruel. At first feed a pint of this in three quarts of warm water, increase to a quart of the gruel. In addition, give the calf clover hay and ensilage if you have it; in fact, any roughage you happen to have. Also begin to feed it cornmeal and ground oats as soon as it will eat. a running stream ig best. the year is dairy- work than dur- Sour soil and alkali are enemies of alfalfa. Most sour goilg are sandy soils where the drainage is good and the lime hag been leached out. They can be sweetened by adding ground limestone where this pro- cess is not too expensive and leach- ing lessened by incorporating plenty of humus in the soil. done by applying stable manure or plowing under green manure in the form of growing crops, etc. Alkali soils usually are badly drained and can be corrected by supplying this factor. It ig not waste alfalfa seed on sour or alka- line soils. If they cannot be cor- rected, raise some other crop. The usual difficulty in control- not discovered until they have been working for some time and have at- tained nearly full size, when they are hard to kill The New York State School of Agriculture, at Al- N. Y, is to spray the bushes thoroughly with arsenate of lead and water during the first warm days in May, being careful to see that all the lower branches are covered with the poison, ag thig is where the young worms begin to work. Repeat the spray in about two weeks and again in one week if necessary. If spraying hag Leen neglected and the worms appear about picking time, dust the leaves thoroughly with fresh white helle- bore. This will lose its strength after a few hours’ exposure to the air and will not poison those who eat the fruit. Next time you find a nest of eggs which a hen has stolen away, take a lesson in the proper architecture of such a structure. It may save a few broken eggs or a poor hatch the next time you proceed to set a hen in' your own clumsy, human fashion. The keynote of the stolen nest is its flattened, shallow design. This is the way nature has de- manded it should be constructed to give the best result. How different from the deep, hecllowed out con- traption into which so many people pile the eggs they expect Biddy to transform into downy chicks. A nest to prove satisfactory should be shallow enough to permit a hen to turn her eggs properly. It should be flat enough to permit the newly hatched chicks to lie where they are when released from the shell in- stead of sliding down into the bot- tom and having the top of them. rr ee EA A rome Struck Their Team A milk wagon, ! mules driven by T. J. { town, accompanied by | PoE Kinderh yok, Was hifting engine Frank Smith, struck by a about unday morning at the P. and R.| and Mill streets, | was hurled | | the Rich warehouse. sh |S | crossing at Fifth | Columbia. The wagon 25 feet and both occupants thrown out. Witnesses of the mishap went to their aid and found) that Smith sus- ; tained a badly cut{ right arm and that Barton was al§ cut by glass {from broken mill bottles. The mules escaped injus Both men ! were treated at the Columbia hos- were : i pital \ THE BULLETIN, MT, JOY, A THOROUGH TEST One To Convince the Most Skeptical Mount Joy Reader The test of time is the test that counts, Doan's Kidney their reputation hy The following case is Mount Joy residents convinced The testimony is proof complete Testimony like thi nored. Mrs. Frank Conrad, W. Main St., Mount Joy, says: “It would be hard to tell all the misery I endured from kidney ailments. I had near- ly every symptom of kidney trouble | and was daily growing worse. There was a constant, dull pain across my back that made my housebork a burden to me. I had chills and diz- zy spells. The least bit of work | tired me out and I had a continual feeling of lassitude. I had taken {but a few doses of Doan’s Kidney Pills when I felt better. As I continued using them, I improved rapidly and today am in good Pills have made effective action, typical. ghould be confirmed, the be ig- cannot The cold weather dur- | health.” (Statement given October 26, 1907.) On January 24, 1916 Mrs. Conrad said: “PDoan’s Kidney Pills have never failed to give me great bene- fit at alr times and I cannot speak too highly of them. I always keep nore | having / This can be | worth while to ling currant worms is that they are | them on hand in case of necessity.” Price B0e, at all dealers. Don’t | simply ask for a kidney remedy | get Doan’s Kidney Pills, the same that Mrs. Conrad hag twice publicly | recommended, Foster-Milburn Co. Props., Buffalo, N. Y. THAT NEW TROLLEY LINE Proposed Line Between Manheim and Hershey Looks Like a Go The promoters of the proposed | trolley line from this place to Her shey announced that the proposed line has progressed so far that there is but one “if” in the way. From indirect but authoritative sources it hag been learned that M. S. Hershey will lend his moral and financial support to the project { which assures its building “if” the promoters will secure an agreement for a right of way with every prop- erty owner at a fair valuation. The line has now been laid out from Hershey to Brubaker’s four miles from Manheim and the route from that place to Manheim will be taken up tomorrow and finished in short order. So far the promoters of the road find that the property owners are decidedly reasonable and not only offer their property at a reasonable price, but many of them stand | ready to invest to the extent of | their means in the project. smernsm s Gp fsmn Coming Events July 27—Excursion to Bethany Or phan Home, Womelsdorf. Aug. 1 to 10—United Brethren Campmeeting at Mt. Gretna. August 5—Auto and Aeroplane ex- | hibitions, Middletown fair grounds. Aug. 2 to 12—Stoverdale camp- meeting. August 5—F. &. S. excursion to Wilk low Grove. Aug. 8 to 18—Stoverdale camp. Aug. 16 to 18—Middletown (fair. Campmeet- | Aug. 16 to 24—Geyer’s ing. Aug. 22 to 29—Hillsdale campmeet- Aug. 28 to Sept. 2—Granger’s Pic nie, Williams Grove. Sept. 4 to 8—Lebanon fair. Sept. 12 to 15—Hanover Fair. Sept. 18 to 22—Carlyisle fair. | Sept. 19 to 22—Allentown fair. | Sept. 19 to 22—Grants fair. Sept. 26 to 29—Lancaster fair. Oct. 2 to 6—York fair. etl Eee _ Oldest Carpenter in County John Keener, residing two miles north of Mount Joy, is doubtless the oldest carpenter in Lancaster county. Fifty-six years ago he assisted in erecting the large frame bank barn, on the farm of Mrs. Elizabeth Mis- semer. Although Mr. Keener has almost reached the four score year limit of his age, he still clings to the trade he likes so well and knows so efficiently, working at it even in the heat of the summer, as he informed us on Sunday, that he was on the job the day before. He said he is willing to stop work as soon ag the people will let him. memes ATs Letters Granted Amos R. Herr, of Mt. Joy town. ship was granted letters of adminis- tration of the estate of Jacob D. Brubaker, late of Elizabethtown. Emma A. Shelly, of Rapho town- ship and Maggie F. Young, of Mt. Joy township, were granted letters of administrationship of the estate of Mary Keener, of Mt. Joy town- ship. res eG Meet A Very Good Record eggs roll on | | ceived from all parts | sylvania | that, in the first six months of the | THESE MEN WERE FORTUNATE | nt vear ; were carried without loss Escaped With Bruises When Train | drawn by two | Barton, New- | 9.30 o'clock | £ Reports which have just been Te- show | Railroad System passengers | of the life | one of them in a train 92,380,184 t is read by so many people New Industry For Marietta Marietta is to have a new in| justry in the stripping which will give employ- ment to about thirty persons, men | at the start. The lo- in all probability, be in | shape of a and women, cation will, SP C— Virginia Negroes Brought North Two carloads of colored men from Virginia were brught north last week to work on the Pennsylvania railroad tracks. One carload is to be housed at Landisville and the other at Royalton, where shacks are being built. PA. Wednesday, July 26, 1916. PENNSYLVANIA DUTOH. What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To DON'T FORGET “"— When you need any- thing in the line of neat and attractive TRADE-MARKS and copyrights obtained or no fee. Send model, sketches or photos and brief description, for FREE SEARGH 2 and report on patentability, 96 years ex EW Send 2-cent stamp for KLE" » full of patent I ore w.B BooKL forLIe > PAGES 11 a line 18 before applying tof a EAD P D. SWIFT & CO. NT LAWYER 303 Seventh st., Washington, D. Cc. De Nei Sort Inshoorance Mister Drucker; Ich hob yusht ga- larnd os widder ebbegs nei im gong is. Es beed duch olles we unser fulk oladawg en forshrit mocht. Der karl wu g'sawt hut. Es ig niks nei unich da sun shtarbd in da dum- heit mit kolt im klana dorm, de weil os ar feel blaseerlilrer der nei waik farecka het kenna mit appendixie im hospittel. De letsht nei runzel os rous kuma is akordin tsu da tseitinga is de Shofleit Konstipashun Law. Des is en nei sort inshoorance for aksident und der gleicha. Ich hob de patick- larg nuch neet ous-g’funna ovver wun’s shoft we inshoorance uf ma mon sei lava, don will Ick niks mit tsadu hovva. Se froga de dumshta socha os mer denka kon. Edlicha vawra fsurick hov Ich mei lava in- shoora wella und ains fun da kum- pany era karlg hut mer'n bobeerli g'shickd, g’shickd, und vnsht far der wunar will Ich der shreiva wos druf wawr und mei. Des ig wos se g’froght hen: I Wun arsht du gabawra? We Ich gons kla wawr, ovver Ich meind nommy wos tseit. 2 Wos ig dei hondwark? Mado- dist uf Sundawg, und darna gruba dorich de wuch. , 3 Husht du seilava fever g'hot Yaw, Ich "hobs guld-mine fever gadicht g’hot pawr yawr tsurick. Ich bin ovver gute ga kured. 4 Husht du anicher hartz dro- ovel g'hot aw, ovver tisdder. Ich g’hiert bin hut’ mich nimmy gabod- ard. 5 Dusht du shmoka? Yaw, abowt tswonsich sei-shunga olle winder, Und so hen se mich gons dorich’s kotakism ganumma. Bis Ich fortich wawr mit is shun en bid’ra g’sh- mock in meim moul gawest un’s wawr mer shtarblich ivvel gons rum. Far’'n fackt, ts wawr da Polly bong Ich shnop druf ed de policy kumt. Ovver mei hen de policy harly en wuch im hous ghot bis mei hawr widder gawokso sin uf meim kup und mei hussa wawra tsu eng mittes ivver der diagram. Blen- di leit sin g’shtarva dorich de gons nuchbershoft ovver’'s wzwr ken sign os mer geilava en dawler tseega uf uf meinra policy. Edlichamol, uf- kors, hov Ich en karbunkel g’hot uf da owet seid, udder farleicht der kreds olsamol, os mer der duckder grickt hen. Ovver eb Ich rishda hob kenna far en besta weld, mit em duckder sei hond uf meinra puls ud- der in meim drivver gatsoga. On da namlich tseit, dort wawr der Simmy Fedkessel, dar is ol ufa- molmol shdeif und kolt warra mit kulramorbis mitera policy far tswa dousand inshoorance unich em Kku- pa-kissa., We ar saif gablcnzd wawr is de witfraw Fedkessel g’'shwind on de offis mit da policy. Der suphin- tendar wawr en wachhartzicher mon und hut se draeshta wella. “Es ig duch gans tsu shlim os do dei lewar mon farlawra husht, hut ar g’sawt. Yaw sawgt se, sel ig bei- grimes grawd der waik mit eich menner; der kent’s gawr net shtan- da wun en awrm weibmensh en chance hut awenich geld mocha. Nou, Ich wase ufkors net we’s is mit dara nei Shofleit Konstipashun inshoorance. Mei lawyer sawgt de bower kuma net unich de law. Es sheind unser law-mochar rechla uns bower og shofleit. Far heitigs- dawgs is gowert en bizness und en brofeshun und en sientifick ding. Du konsht anich ebber froga os niks farshdaid fun bowera und sel is wos ar sawgt. Ich selver, bin net absolootlis hoor derfun, abodich uf da sientifick seid. Far de ursoch, doh yets hut unser mawd pawr hunert wunza g'funna in meim bedt. Don hov Ich noch Shtate Kolletsh g’shrivva wos tsadu. De ondwart wawr Ich sul Paris green broveera, sel ware der sientifick waik. OI- recht. Ovver nou hoy Ich shun dreimol derfun ganumma un’s hut beim dihenker nuch ken dreck ga- of the Penn-| bod | srovided we { Minnich, auct. ree teen GR TER weer mem SALE REGISTER A FREE notice of your sale is in ssrted here for any leagth of time, | print yowr sale bills Pony wom bees wiv Se swe ThedPs dale rm yp toot of slwesteg devin. WewdPy Supt Bowser ln oitond li i, yw i nS wo peeved Tag atithur of testa. ety be Sinton fe ema Duke cout fo sou th tony and loony aan. ' Mae - FOR SALE BY M.S. BONKF ESTATE 52 E. Main St, WE CAN FURNISH A HOME WORTHY OF THE FAIREST JUNE BRDIE Next to the Affection For Her Husband, the Young Bride Centers Her Thoughts and Interests On Her New Home and Its Furnishings. You may travel the country over and not find a stock of Furniture, Carpets and Rugs to compare either in beauty or price with the delightful and magnificent assortment of the new Spring Goods now on display. Our Inexpensive Location Saves Our Customers $10,000.00 An- nually. Bed-room Pieces, Bureaus, $9.00 up; Chiffonieres, Brass Beds, $12.69 up; Eight-Piece Suits, $35.00 up. Dining-room Pieces, Buffeis, $18.00 up; China up; Serving Tables, $8.00 up; Extension Tables, $10.00 up. Living-Room Pieces, and Wicker Odd Pieces, Westernberger, Maley & Myers 125 and 127 E King OL, LANCASTER, PA. $6.50 up; Closets, $15.00 $7.50; Chairs, An endless assortment of Mission, Oak at real bargain prices. Clearing Out Sale Oxfords and Pumps At Very Low Prices SPECIAL--Good Rubber Heals at Only 25 Cents Per Pair Repair Work a Specialty Harry Laskewitz EAST MAIN STREET MOUNT JOY, PA. STORE OPEN EVERY EVENING Bell and Independent Telephones This is excellemt advertising becaus surely bring the buyers: Friday, July 28—At the ion stableg in Mowat Joy, 50 f cows, some stock bulls and of shoats, by C. S. Fran Kk. former Saturday, July 29—At his sale and | exchange stables, Mt. Joy, an express load of Ohio and Indiana horses, colts and mules by Mr. Ed Ream. Frank, auct, Friday, Aug. 4—At yards in Mount Joy, their usual good lot of fresh cows, springers, heifers, stock bulls and some shoats by J. B. Keller & Bro. Aldinger, Auet. their stock DOOOTOOOIOOIIIODOO0 > POOOOOOOOODOOOOOONOS GOOD FURNITURE Is the only kind 1 ssll—Furaiture hat 's Furaitwe Rockers, Mirrors, Hall Racks Picture Frames Ladies’ Desk Extension and Other Tables Davenports, [China closets Kitchen Cabinets Fact Anything in the Furami- ire Lime | E UNDERTAKING And § EMBALMING
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers