eh 7 JHB GAR 3 irkting Chan « Zhe Mhhol Manufactured by The House of Quality COLUMBIA, PA. ees ee ees eee HOTEL McGINNIS Mount Joy, Penna. East Main St. Restaurant and Lunch Bar OYSTERS IN ANY STYLE CLAMS IN ANY STYLE DEVIL CRABS TURTLE SOUPS In fact everything in season, Private Dining Room for Ladies. J. W.McGINNIS PROPRIETOR ROBERT H. HOKE PROFESSIONAL UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER 8unday and Night Calls Responded to Immediately. Bell Phone MOUNT JOY, PA. Great New CASE 40’ % ¢ Traian ® 5 $1190 Ged 2 Agency in Your Own —dmsmEnR = Locality Our agents are making big money ABy reliable farmer, oraggr an Cage products are known 2 dlsitjct—Case ager r Zz g county of of this. One Case ag Pennsylvania made in a fewm a ® Cash Profit of $1904.00 | Don'twait, Don tlosethisagency. Write forthe wone derful Case catalog and pz-ticulars atonce. Address J. 1. Case Represcatatives, P. 0.E454, Lancaster, Pa, | { Williams—The Barber Agent for Manhattan Laundry West Main St., Mt. Joy, Pa. THE FAMOUS CHINCATEAGUE OYSTERS 36 CENTS PER QUART Groceries and Provisions ERANT BROS MT. JOY ST. MT. JOY, PA. FOR HAND-MADE HARNES R.D.RAFFENSBERGER SALUNGA, PA. 3 2 ® Calal aD! A ER PT RSI RA ATARI Fos Ai OU don’t leave your rig in the &3 middle of the road and go to a fence- post to read a sale bill do you? Then don't expect the other fel- low to do it. Putan ad in this paper, then, regardless of the weather, the fellow you want te reachresds your announce- ments while seated at his fireside. If he is a prospective buyer you'll have him at yoursale. One extrabuyer often pays the entire expense of the ad, and it's a peor ad that won't pull that buyer. An ad in this paper reaches the people you are after, Bills may be a necessity, but the ad is the thing that does the business. Don’t think of having a special sale without using advertising space in this paper. POSTE OneExtraBuyer § at a sale often pays the entire expezse of the ad, Get That Buyer | troduced for evening gowns. 3 | SOUTHERN SEASCN BRINGS OUT UNUSUALLY LARGE DISPLAY. vere Tailored Coat Show Little Change From Those of Last Winter, The Southern season always brings out a certain number of spring tailored suits, but this year there is an unusu- ally large display. particularly new or startling about the advance spring tailored costumes. For the conventionally severe tai- lored coat the accepted lines promise | to be very much like those of the win- | ter season. As Is generally the case in the spring the Norfolk suit, although often hav- ing little in common with the Norfolk except its belt, is much on view, espe- cially in the collection intended for y or sports wear. the suit coat semi- there is fitted This varies in length from hip to finger tip length. Some of the new models hip length with the front of the coat open to show the waistcoat in Breton or Louis XIV style. fanciful tailored costume of black in revealed a pearl gray waistcoat roidered in silver. This coat had a belt of the material and pockets posed below the belt. There are also a few ht models, elaborately embroid- ered or braided. The spring frocks multiply daily. A lovely model recently noted was of navy blue and navy blue and green checked material. The serge formed the upper part of the gown, which fastened down the side with froggings, meeting a skirt of navy and green The collar and cuffs were braided. Great vogue.is predicted for braid trimming. An interesting model noted Is of navy cloth and black satin. long, straight fourreau opening over a black satin front is braided on the waist, and at the neck, while the edges are trimmed with pieces of wide gal- are of A A str serge checks. loon, pointed at the ends and posed one above the other. At the waist similar pieces of galloon are arranged | to allow a satin sash to slip under | them. This sash is tied at the side and | braided at the ends. For more dressy frocks there is pre- dicted a return of the vogue for taffeta. This silk is also much in demand for trimmin and combined with gS geor- | gette crepe and voile. Frocks of satin are much in vogue. Black satin intended for dress wear was appliqued with designs of Indian cashmere in medallion form with me- tallic embroidery on bodice front and cuffs. SPRING WALKING SUIT = | Here is a spring walking suit, plait- ed in the front, and cut on military | lines copied from the service uniforms | of Uncle Sam’s soldiers. In this model | the skirt is lower than the 1916 styles, | substantiating the contentions of the | leading fashion experts that skirts had reached the high altitude limit and would steadily go down in length. | A Curtain Hint. glass always rots the bottom of the curtain before the upper half is near worn out. So this spring, whatever new curtains you get, make them with hems of equal size at both ends. Each time before they are taken down to wash, mark the bottom with a thread. Then when they are put up again, put that end on the pole. This is a very little trouble and |i lengthens the life of a curtain con- | siderably. g Silk Net in Orchid Colors. § Silk net in orchid colors is again in- It does not appeal to the world as anything original, but women are eagerly accept- ing gowns of it when they present a combination of six or seven colors of tulle arranged in panels or superim- posed in layers. New dance gowns, | however, are of silk net arranged in |} voluminous drapery over excessively narrow satin skirts. One of the sue- cessful gowns is of white tulle over |: pale yellow satin, with the barrel ef- leet got thrsugh puffs of tulle which Y SPRING SUITS There is nothing | 1d rippling around the bottom. | The with the faces they frame. | | | show a striped border. support immense, but fragile, pockets | The hot sun shining through the | of yellow crystal beads which are sup- | | ported from the shoulders by neck- | [laces of the same beads, giving almost | | fruit carried by the Italians, which arg | { swung from their shoulders with gayly colored ribbons. | hem of the skirt to an irregular line cuff of self-colored faille, narrow at the shoe line and extra wide at the | { knee line. with rows of dull gold galloon. cut a lemon in two and put it into the { put them in clear water after being washed with a cupful of strong tea or purpose and do the work to your own satisfaction. He W s————— NOVEL SPRING HAT | A spring hat of novel design em. | broidered with darning cotton. The | crown is a spool form made of cotton net and val lace. Two pasospras are at. | tached to the hat at the apex of the | crown and arranged to droop at each | side, It is finished with a rope of] fuchsia colored velvet held in position | with rhinestone slipper ornaments. The | model is Edna Goodrich, the theatrical star. \COIFFURE TO SUIT FEATURES Individuality in Hairdressing Is Be- coming More Pronounced—Modi- fied Casque New Style. Individuality in hairdressing grows more pronounced. Some really artistic coiffures, enough on present lines not to look odd, are curiously in character | If a girl has one or two slightly eastern fea- tures, she seeks to accentuate them. Has she large, dark eyes, a Spanish | comb matches up. No Marcel wave kept in its pristine se- | verity, One has the hair waved, ta be sure, then proceeds to comb it out | just enough to lose the artificiality. There is no headdress newer than the modified casque, rising a bit higher on the top of the head as it is drawn toward the back. The tendency to a thin waved forehead fringe and to little tendrils which wave into curls in front of the ears is an addition to the hairdressing of those who go in for more elaborate coiffures. These are | so unaccentuated that they are not noticeable at a little distance. They are very far from the exaggerated | curves of hair sometimes seen, and | serve to soften the face and also to show a bit of hair below the hat crowns, which are pulled so far down | over the forehead. | PAPAL HAT iS NEW DESIGN Brim Is Cut Into Two High Points in Front and Back—Tendency Shown Toward Exposing the Hair. | longer is the | The papal hat, called the miter, has been launched in Paris. It fits the head snugly and the brim is cut into two | high points of even height, back and front. One is in Vatican purple satin, heavily embroidered in oxidized silver | thread; another is in black satin, em- | broidered in dull gold threads, with a flat bit of ruby-colored velvet embroid- ered in the front brim. All-white hats have been launched | for the early spring High | shapes of white straw, trimmed with | irregular groupings of stiff white wings are favorites. White satin hats | trimmed with black wings have moder- | season. ately wide brims. | All hats are worn straight across ! the eyebrows; the tilt has almost dis- appeared. The headband is small and | shows the hair at sides and back. The | t was worth only 50 cer Gir y THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA, FUT ATE FOR SEK Cin “California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stomach, liver and bowels. Every mother realizes, after giving her children “California Syrup Figs" that this is their ideal laxative, because they love its pleasant taste end it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowe!s with- out griping. When cross, irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless “fruit laxative,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bow- els, and you have a well, playful child again. When its little system is fuil of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic—remem- ber, a good “inside cleaning” should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep “California Syrup of Figs” handy; they know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 50- cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups printed on the bottle. Adv. Canada has 0528 waterworks svs- tems, costing $123,0€0,000. CLEAR YOUR COMPLEXION While You Sleep, With Cuticura Soap and Ointment—Trial Free. On retiring, gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment, wash off {n five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water, and continue bathing a few | The influence | minutes with the Soap. of this treatment on the pores extends | through the night, Free sample each by mail with Book. | Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Bostcn, Sold everywhere.—Ady. Warm friends are more plentiful in | summer than winter. To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every 2], showing it is Quinine and Iron in a less form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cents. Credulous people, like musical in- ments, are frequently played upon. Sore Eyes, Blood-Shot Eyes, Watery Eyes, Bticky s, all healed promptly with night- iy applications of Roman Eye Balsam. Adv. | TIME TO PAY FOREIGN DEBTS Coins of Most of European Countries Are Worth Much Less Now Than Before the War. ruble fis of Russian more than 51 Now it is worth less In peace days a worth a trifle American money. than 28 cents. Before the war an Italian lira was worth a shade under 20 cents of Amer- less cents aoney, and now it is worth 1 14 cents. 1 debt In Russia or Italy e to pay it. Three ye nd dollars would only "1,945 rubles in Petro will wipe off a debt of a thousand dollars debt of only reas today it for indulgi when our American dc Ss In Euro 'd, in Philadelphia Ledger. 820, intere Strong Proof. new millinery shows a tendency to- 1 ho. Thev must YON Of ‘hat ward exposing the hair, after seasons She—They must be engaged. That's | her fourth dance with him this eve- | of covering it. Gold and oxidized lace is arranged in butterflies and bows on evening hats. | The wearing of a picture hat with a low gown at a public place in the eve- ning has returned to fashion. | Sport hats are made of colored felt with a rough surface, trimmed with a cross-stitch in black worsted thread, | usually running up the high erown in straight lines, ning. she dances. He—That’s no sign. -Isn’t it? You don’t know She now | i ee raed l | In Cuba tobacco is planted, grown | United States in 1915 produced » tons of lead. Stiff wings are taken up by the mil- | liners for high turbans. New Umbrellas. The latest umbrella shows a tiny watch in the strap handle. The con- servative umbrella is disappearing. | Colored umbrellas are the vogue, and | the leather strap handle the height of style and convenience, The newest umbrellas are seen either with leather p handles or white flat handles just touched with the color of the um- brella. Purple is the favorite though green, navy and burgundy are | also used. Many novelty umbrellas shade, the effect of the baskets of flowers and | New Barre! Skirts. | One of the new barrel skirts is made n a most peculiar and attractive man- er; it is of beige chiffon, both bodice | ind skirt laid in fine plaits. From the ibove the knees there is an immense The top of it is outlined Laundering Curtains. If you want curtains to be white oiler with good suds; if wanted ecru 1 tan stocking. Both will answer the ay Have You Ever Suspected that the cause of various annoying ills might lie in thedaily cup of teaorcoffee? A sure and easy way out § | of coffee and tea troubles is to shift to Instant | Postum There's no caffeine nor anything harmful in this delightful, pure food-drink — just the nourishing good- ness of wheat. Postum has put thou- sands of former tea and “There’s a Reason” 4 of | peach orchard need to be taken into | but in | this ft | than and gathered in 90 days. | | the av | find it to Ris { unimportant for their fruit. | appears to | poses, but it is unimportant in com- 3 Is to start with a handicap that may coffee deinkary on the continue throughout the life of the | prevent loss of moisture. Road to we lvi e. orchard. The purchase price of a poor of one of high grade, but the economy / ~ | FOUR DIFFERENT GRADES OF NURSERY STOCK. (Prepared the United States Depart- | chase. Everything else costs substan- | | " ment of Agriculture.) [ tially the same as for a high-grade | Cherry trees do not thrive well as | tree. Real economy consists in pay- | | a rule where the summers are particu- | ing reasonable prices for high-grade | | trees. If only a definite amount can | be expended for trees, it is better to | secure a small number of good, strong, well-rooted, well-formed trees than to more than any other they are | | | | | buy a larger number at the expense of | | { | | | | grown but little in the South, and to | the limited extent they are planted in that part of the country the best suc- cess Is attained at the higher alti- quality, An altogether desirable tree tudes. is difficult to describe, especially as! different planters have different ideals. | The desirability of a tree is not meas- | ured by size alone. While a small, in- | ferior tree should be avoided because | | northern commercial | it Is not likely to grow well even when | districts. | planted under favorable conditions, a | The leading varieties of sweet cher- | very 1arge, overgrown tree is scarcely | ries are less hardy than the better. Unless handled with extreme | known sour sorts. Their endurance of care, the largest grades do not endure cold corresponds more nearly to that | {ja check incident to transplanting as tures the widely grown sour cherry | varieties approach the apple varieties commonly in the apple-producing | larly long and hot. For this 5 | | | | { | In their endurance of low tempera- | | | | which are grown best- | of the peach. It may be doubted well as thrifty medium-sized trees. whether sweet cherries as a group In the past, two-year-old trees have endure long, hot summers any better | poop planted, as a rule, by cherry | than the sour sorts, possibly not so | growers, but there is evidently a grow- well. | ing preference for trees that have | Locations for Cherry Growing. In selecting a location for cherry | growing—that is, the general region or | commuaity in which the enterprise is to | In be developed—fruit growers should ! | realize that as the fruit is very perish- | able, quick transportation to market is | | essential, and also refrigerator service | [ If the fruit is to be shipped long dis- | | tances; and, further, a relatively large tures, the winters are very trying be- | | crew is required to handle the fruit | .,uce of the limited supply of moisture | properly. Large orchards therefore!poiy in the soil and in the atmos should not bee located where it iS | phere. In the middle latitudes and practically or economically impossible | \ }Larever the winters are comparative- | to assemble and care for the requisite | 1v mild fall planting generally is pref- | labor to handle the fruit properly. | erable. | Sites for Orchards. | One factor in spring planting needs, | The “site” is the exact piece of land | to be observed with special care. The occupied by the trees. The same gen- | buds of cherry trees swell and start | eral factors which require considera- | into growth very early. If they start tion in selecting a site for an apple or | to any considerable extent before the trees are planted, a high percentage of, failure is likely to occur. Therefore, particular pains should be taken to hold the trees in a perfectly dormant | condition until they are set out, very | made only one season's growth in the nursery. Season for Planting Trees. regions where the winters are severe and trying, spring planting is | advisable. Such conditions occur in he North, where the temperature drops very low, and the Great Plains area, | where, in addition to low tempera- account in choosing sites for cherri important of factors local climatic conditions. s thrive on a wide r Most these il and Peculiar Superstition. If fake teeth could talk, they would | tell strange tales, A farmer's wife at. tributed her good luck with a certain kind of delicious cooky for which she was famous to the fact that the mold with which she always cut out the cookies was a set of false teeth willed to her by an aunt who, in Ler time, { had been able to cook to beat the | band, Success crowned hep culinary efforts because she this woz weird and unwieldy erescen “of worn- out teeth. Thus doth superstition lead us captive! a — “Meticulous.” The use of the word “meticulous” in the sense of “particular,” may be un- derstood by the following definitions, which we quote in answer to a re quest for the citation of authorities: Century Dictionary, “timid: over-care- ful;” New Standard, “over-cautious;” Oxford Concise, “over-scrupulous about minute details.” The word is from the Latin “meticulosus,” “full of fear,” the derivation being from ‘metus,” “fear.” That's Why. “Myers is a changed man since he | bought that place in the country. When he lived in the city he used to be ¥ too lazy to hang up the pictures when he moved from one apartment to an- other, but now he's always pottering about his house and grounds, making some improvement or other,” “Maybe he’s trying to fix the place up so he { can sell it again,” for coughs, colds, pleasant to take and sure to help when needed. hoarseness; Hale's Honey Of Horehound and Tar A tonic, expectorant and laxative, Contains no opium nor anything injurious. Sold by all druggists, Try Pike’s Toothache Drops Relieves and Remedies CONSTIPATION Try @ Box—10 Taps 10c.— AllDruggists & ~take a “Ea ip rT K J Logicai Result. “What a pretty girl “Yes, and lots of men are trying 1 iQ 1 Sile iS | get the chance to ring her.” | BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR | Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur iant and Remove Dandruff—Real Surprise for You. Your hair becomes light, wavy, flut- fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus- trous and beautiful as a young girl's after a “Danderine hair cleanse.” Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and in just a few moments you have Ss, provided the soils early planting usually being the wisest | doubled the beauty of your hair. d. There is, perhaps, no plan. Jesides beautifying the hair at once -, TO itiv s" {13 sg3 : . ~ 3 : i more sensitive to the ill | Handling Nursery Trees. | Danderine dissolves every particle of 247 S Pi orlv 0 i y 0d ar re n - id eToets of a poorly drained soil than I'he trees should be unpacked im- | dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig- he cl ‘ i norts Thorrv- 13 3 3 p the cl In ma important cherry) mediately after delivery and every pos- | orates the scalp, forever stopping itch. v \ vor 3 rovailir ‘ne gr . 2 : p . : growi egions the pre kn types of sible precaution taken to prevent the | ing and falling hair. soil are rather ht—sandy, sandy |, ts fr re OMing. drv Inless : fae RE ry roots from becoming dry. Unless the But what will please you most will loams, and other light loams—com number of trees is so limited that im- : FE es Tarr itivet . ny : 5,3 i be after a few weeks’ use when vou monly underlain with a more or less | pegigte planting is possible and the | wi actuall hair—fine and in svrfiied Leh Rolla oliathnalar | pe tf nplt] 1m 5 Dos: * “= | will actually see new hair—fine and ey subsoil. Such soils character- | {jhe for doing it is at hand, they ~ the areas bordering the great lake the most important commer t of the Rocky mountains | should be heeled in. For this purpose a thoroughly well-drained place where the soil is mellow and deep 1s required. A trench sufficiently wide | and deep to receive the roots is made, and the trees are placed in it. | In covering, the soil should be | worked among the roots sufficiently | | to ill all the spaces between them. It [a large number of trees are to be heeled in, they are usually placed in closely adjacent rows. Where this is | done, the trees in one row may be where are loca The temperature its in- ‘nee on the geographic distribution factor in of cherry growing has been mentioned, | relation to local wetor also retjuires consideration. Cherries blossom comparatively early, the sweet sorts earlier in most cases the sour varieties; therefore, s that are subject to spring frosts its conditions | ing the usual blossoming period | covered with the soil which is removed | in opening the adjaceat trench. -< Propagating Cherry Trees. The details of propagating cherry are of little direct importance to | will usually advantage to buy trees | Trees that are tied in bundles when | t received must be separated before they are heeled in. Preparing the Land. | troq t 2S grower, as he n i Z | Bromo Quinine can be ta The ideal preparation of the soil for | causing nervousness or ri downy at first—yes—but really new hair—growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it, surely get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any store and just try it. Adv. Both salt and fresh water fish are caught in Lake Maracaibo in Vene- zuela. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrintion males weak women strong, sick women well, no alcohol. Sold in tablets or liquid.—Adv. The man who publishes the fact that he takes himself seriously is inviting he derisive ha-ha ! The Quinine That Does Not Affect The Head | Because of its tonic and laxative effect, Laxative n by anyone without in the bead. There from a le nurseryman. Trees | cherry trees consists of deep plowing | A i aE We GioTRY are proj lding on seedling | yq thorough pulverizing with a ham | —, BL row, and are|yow or cultivator. The preparatior | There are no professional female commonly ing either as| should be hardly less thorough thax | divers. It is impossible to talk under one or two year old es. { for corn, potatoes, or other hoe crops | “Water. uch the ave EFOWEr | Though various compromises on this = i has occasien to piopagate cher {ideal may be possible without def Pure blood is essential to Good Health. rees himself, the kind of stock on tng the ends in view, any temporary, | Garfield Tea dispells mp ies, cleanses h his trees are propagated iS a |gain through a course that falls short | the system and eradicates disease. Adv. Tr of importance to him. {of a thorough and deep working and wo kinds of stocks, the ms haleb t finine o e soil wi sually be m [ fining the soil will usually be more and 4 use, Turkey has put bakeries under gov- ‘ronment rule. i mazzard, are in common than offset by the results that follow. | > two distinct types of cher- | mE | ries, which are of value for stocks but STRAW IS GOOD FERTILIZER | The mahaleb is used much more ex- | i tensively than the mazzard, and for | Rich in Potash, Nitrogen and Phos- | the sour varieties it generally gives| Phorus—Supplies Needed Organic fairly good satisfaction. While the | Matter to Soil. mahaleb is much used in propagating sweet cherries, growers who have studied the matter carefully are close- ly in accord in their conviction that the sweet sorts give much better re- sults when grown on mazzard than on mahaleb stocks. The mazzard stock increase the vigor and | Straw stacks are too valuable to be burnea. According to figures supplied by the chemistry department of the Nebraska College of Agriculture, the fertilizing value of wheat straw is $2.60 and of oat straw $3.10 per ton for the potash, nitrogen and phos- length of life of trees propagated on it |[Phorus they contain. This is entirely In comparison with the mahaleb stock. | over and above the value of the straw The common wild “bird” or “pin” |in supplying organic matter to the cherry has been used to a limited ex-|Soll. All straw not used for feed or tent in some sections for stock pur- fbedding will pay big dividends on the labor of hauling it out. parison with the others mentioned. Trees for Planting. Corn in Dry Regions. The selection of trees suitable for| In dry regions corn cultivation is planting is fundamental to the success more essential and requires more good of an orchard. To plant a poor tree judgment than in most other sections. The primary object of cultivation is to Kezping Bees Inside, Bees wintered inside should be kept at a temperature of about 45 degrees. tree may be a few cents less than that of the transaction ends with its pur- Rest Those Worn Nerves “Every LIRR Picture Ossian Tells a rind = Story*? Don't give up. When you fee! all unstrung; when family cares seen ‘no hard to bear, and backache, dizzy , ad. aches, queer pains and irregular action of the kidneys and bladder may mystify you, remember that such troubles often come from weak kidneys and it may be that you only need Doan's Kidney Pills to make you well. When the kidneys are weak there's danger of dropsy, gravel and Bright's disease. Don't de. lay. Start using Doan’s now. DOAN’S is" 50¢ at all Stores Foster-Milburn Co. Props. Buffalo NY. on
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers