THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA, he ory at Manufactured by The House of Quality COLUMBIA, PA. HOTEL MCGINNIS 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 Mount Joy, Penna. ROBERT H. HOKE PROFESSIONAL UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER Sunday and Night Calls Responded to Immediately. Bell Phone MOUNT JOY, PA. ‘Great New CASE 40" Fras 0m. 2. nT Model Agency in Your Own : a= Locality Our agents are making big money Any reliable farmer, or aggressive man can dothe same. Case products are known asthe beet in every farming district—Case agents find it easy to sell cars because of this. One Cass agentin a neighboring county of Pennsylvania made in a fewmonths a Cash Profit of $1904.00 Don’twalt, Don tlosethisagency. Wrlte forthe won derful Case catalog and pez-ticulars atonce. Address J. 1. Case Representatives, P. O. E454, Lancaster, Pa. YOUR NEXT Williams—The Barber Agent for Manhattan Laundry West Main St., Mt. Joy, Pa. FOR HAND-MADE HARNESS GO TO R.D.RAFFENSBERGER SALUNGA, PA. Ask tosee samples of our busi- nesscards, visiting cards, wedding and other invitations, pam- phlets, folders, letter heads, statements, shipping tags, envelopes, etc., constantly carried in stock for your accommodation. Ge. our figures on that printing you have been thinking of. New Type, Latest Style Faces PRINTERS’ INK HA been respon- sible for thousands of business successes throughout the country. Everybody in town may know you but they don’t know what you have to sell. TT ——— Advertising Will Help Yon | cluding some undesirable kinds. | types ones, | be covered and kept from contamina- | tion. | is a jet device, | sprays of cold and hot water and of | steam are successively forced into the | can. | forced into the ec | the brush machine, in which cans are | | | | { | were | teria in each can, | 4,600,000. | modern washing machine | bacteriologist { was found that less than 200,000 bac- | were no undesirable types. | to 10 inches. CARING FOR GANS PREPARE CORN LAND IN THE SOUTHEAST ADAPTED TO SOUTH ATLANTIC STATES. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) Nothing will do more to economize the labor of tilling corn land and to prolong the good effects of tillage than the presence of an ample quantity of | humus In the soil, says Farmers’ Bul- letin 729, of the U. 8S. department of agriculture, which deals with corn cul- ture In the Southeastern states. All land, the bulletin points out, intended for the profitable cultivation of corn | should be stocked with humus as soon as possible. This can be accomplished by growing as preparatory crops le- gumes such as cowpeas, velvet beans, vetch, the clovers and beggarweed. By the use of such crops and the incor- poration through this means of vege- table matter, the capacity of the soil | fo hold moisture is much increased | and, In addition, a part or all of the nitrogen necessary for the corn is ob- state of cultivation, at first only that part which previously has been broken may be turned and the rest of the depth loosened with the subsoil plow. This will be most efficient when It is made to follow in the furrow of the turnplow. In succeeding seasons the land may be turned deeper, the in- tity of vegetable matter incorporated | in the course of the last preparation. When a soil of the required depth has | been established the turnplow may be run from 6 to 8 inches deep and the subsoil plow only as often as seems | necessary to prevent the formation of a compact layer. | Plowing is best done when samples | of the soil crumble readily in the hand. This condition, however, frequently does not last long enough for all of { the land to be prepared. By thorough- ‘ly pulverizing the surface with Fig. 2 ESPECIALLY VALUABLE tained. Manure is of the greatest value , in this connection, but in the cotton | belt at the present time so few ani- mals are kept upon the majority of | farms that the supply of manure is in- considerable. Another factor of great importance in enlarging the capacity of the soil for | moisture is the depth to which the land is plowed. The most advantageous depth, it has been found, Is from 8 If the land is in a poor ON STEEP HILLSIDES. disk harrow as soon as it is dry, may be greatly extended. Types of plows well adapted to the soils of the South Atlantic States are shown in Figs. 1 and 2. Fig. 1 {llus- trates a disk plow that reverses so that the furrows may all be turned in one direction. able on steep hillsides and in places where it is necessary to avoid open fur- | rows. Thorough Washing and Sterili- zation Is Necessary. DIFFICULT JOB FOR FARMER Dairy Division of Department of Agri- culture Points Out Advantages of Having This Work Performed by Dealers. (From the United States Department of Agriculture.) In justice to the farmer, milk dealers should give considerable attention to the question of washing the cans be- fore they are returned. If the cans are allowed to go back unwashed to the farmer, it Is a very difficulty task for him, with his limited facilities, to clean them. In a circular letter recently sent to milk dealers by the dairy division of the departmert, i. was pointed out that bacterial counts made from cans which had been washed and rinsed in the ordinary manner showed that there from 300,000 to 18,000,000 bac: with an average of If 10 gallons of milk were put into one of these cans there would be added more than 100 bacteria to each cubic centimeter of the milk. That is to say, this is the least num- ber that would be added. Whereas, it was pointed out, with a little steam- ing these same cans could have been rendered practical®y sterile. Bacterial Counts. One dealer who recently installed a employed a It ¥ to test the results. and among them Bacterial counts of cans treated by a less effi- cient steaming device which this deal- er had formerly employed ran as high as 20,000,000 bacteria to the can, in- teria were in a can, There are a number of different | of cleaning machines on the market. The aim of all the efficient however, is the thorough clean- sing with washing powder and water, | rinsing, sterilization with steam, and | rdpid drying. After this the can should One of the simplest of the machines by means of which This type also is equipped some- times with a drying attachment by means of which a draft of dry air is can. Another type is brushed out with washing powder and | water and then rinse® After washing they may be steamed by a spray of | Sow CLOVER SEED IN SPRING | | steam. { In Some of the largest machines are] fitted with powerful pumps, the cans an inverted position being run through the machine and sprays of seap and water, rinse water, hot wa- ter, and steam successively forced into | them under considerable pressure. They are then dried in the same ma- chine. | Drying Is Important. The drying of the cans is an import- ant factor, for it not only leaves them soil and two pounds alsike per acre make the best mixture. in a much better condition, but it tends | to prevent rust. The cover also must | not be neglected. It is as important | that it be as thoroughly cleansed and | sterilized as the can itself. It can un- til the latter is quite dry. In the in- terval the can should be kept in a clean place where there is no dust or contamination. On the farm, cans, pails, and other utensils may be sterilized very efficient- | ly with an inexpensive sterilizer which is fully described in Farmers’ Bulletin | creased depth varying with the quan- | the the | period for efficient work with the plow Keep Young Just as well be young at seventy as old at fifty. Many people Zier Picture, Wis a Story” suffer lame, bent, aching backs,and dietressing urie . nary disorders, when a little help for the kid- neys would fix it all up. Don't wait for gravel, dropsy or Bright's disease to get a start. b Use Doan'’s Kid- = h ney Pills. They ave helped thousands, young and old. They are the most widely used remedy for bad backs and weak GR in the whole world. KIDNEY DOAN'S "eiiis 50¢ at all Stores Foster-Milburn Co.Props. Buffalo,NY. always use Stearns’ Electric Paste Full directions in 15 languages Sold everywhere—25c and $1.00 U.S, GOVERNMENT BUYS IT ADVICE TO THE AGED Age brings infirmities, such as sluggish bowels, weak 15 s and torpid liver. Tut's Pills have & specific effect on these organs, stimulating the bowels, gives natural action, and imparts vigor to the whole £y tsem. An Automatic Signal Device Badly needed on the market. Can market at small . dohm W, Stachnick, 1014 E, Lafayette Av., Baltimore, Hd, Sweat Potato Rips $1.75, Nancy Hall Jia ood foros on orders for 10,000. H. L. FUNK, Pine Castle, Fla. Light Responsibility. “I thought you said Dubson could be depended on in an emergency. Yes- | terday his house caught fire and he got so excited he couldn't turn in an | | alarm.” It is especially valu- | “I failed to explain the kind of em- ergency I meant. If you should ever want to stoop over and tie your shoe- lace, Dubson could be depended on to | | hold your hat.” 748. This bulletin may be obtained up- | on application to the department. { FALLING HAIR MEANS DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE | Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent Bottle of Danderine Right Now—Also Stops Itching Scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy hair is mute evidence of a neglected | scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. | There is nothing so destructive to | the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair | of its luster, its strength and its very life; eventually preducing a feverish- | | | AIR DRAINAGE IS ESSENTIAL | ness and itching of the scalp, which | No Farm Crop Can Endure Wet Feet | —If Land Is Not Worth Draining It Is Not Worth Keeping. Air drainage is as essential as soil drainage. It is not always the high places that are free from frost. Fre- quently there are pockets among the ! hills where crops and fruit suffer late | in the spring and early in the fall from the ravages of the frost despot. On low lands there also seems to be places which frost apparently avoids at un- seasonable times. These locations have well-established boundary lines which are known to people of the community. No fruit can endure wet feet. This principle obtains In all farm crops. If your ground is not worth tile draining, | it Is not worth keeping, much less es- tablishing g it to fruit. ‘DAIRY PRODUCTS iN DEMAND Only Way New Districts Can Be Sup. plied Is by Breeding Up Herd by Use of Good Bulls. The great demand for dairy prod- ucts has caused the price of good dairy cows to be very high. Reports from associations of dairymen show that | from a picnic.” it is impossible to buy first-class dairy | cows at even $80 a head. With such a demand for cows in old dairy dis- tricts, there will be few good cows moved into new dairy territory. So, the only way new districts can be sup- plied must be by breeding up the com- mon stock by the use of good dairy | bred bulls. son Clover Brought in During Fiscal Year 1915-16. Only about one-half as much alfalfa seed and less than one-half as much | erimson clover seed were imported dur- ing the fiscal year 1915-16 as during | either of the two previous years. Less than vetch seed whereas 2 ed in 1914. 70,006 pounds of hairy were Igported in 1918, ,000,000 pounds were import: | When Light Snow Is on Soil, or Honey- combed Over Is Considered Best Time to Work. The best time to sow clover seed is in early spring on a light snow or when | the ground is honeycombed all over. will then work down into the and be covered. Four to six pounds of medium red The seed | which Is so beautiful. | ance of abundance; | gloss and if not remedied causes the hair roots | to shrink, loosen and die—then the | hair falls out fast. A little Danderine tonight—now—any time—will surely save your hair. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any store, and after the first application your hair will | take on that life, luster and luxuriance | It will become | wavy and fluffy and have the appear | an incomparable | softness, but what willl please you most will be after just a few weeks’ use, when you will actual- ly see a lot of fine, downy halr—new hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv, | More to the Purpose. “Register gloom!” bellowed the movle director. “You look as if you | were going on a picnic.” { “I don’t understand your meaning,” answered the screen star, haughtily. “Hang it! Try to look the way peo- ple do when they are coming back CLEARS AWAY PIMPLES Does Cuticura Ointment—Assisted by | Cuticura Soap—Trial Free. On rising and retiring smear the af- fected surfaces gently with Cuticura | Ointment. Wash off in flve minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. When the skin is clear keep it so by | using Cuticura for every-day toilet and nursery purposes. Free sample each by mail with Book. | Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. Ly LESS IMPORTATION OF SEED | About One-Half of Alfalfa and Crim- | | FREE ask Murine Eye as Ce., Chicag i Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. Probably an Idle Rumor. “What effect will this shortage of dyes have?” “I don't know.” “But what do you hear?” “Some say it's going to throw a lot of brunettes back on the matrimonial | market.” TO KILL RATS AND MICE. | demands made by heavy milk produc- | ed by nutrition experts at the Ohio ex- | quantities of milk, | ages in milk production. ECONOMY OF FEEDIN G GRAIN ON PASTURE Forage crops make cheap pork, be- cause they permit cutting the grain al- lowance to the minimum. A system of management which will furnish for- age through the entire grazing season should be planned early. Rye and bluegrass will furnish pas- ture early in the spring, and may be followed by alfalfa or clover, Hogs have been turned onto alfalfa at the Missouri College of Agriculture early as April 10, although it will usu- ally be several weeks later before it is ready. Clover will usually be ready as for pasture during the last half of May. These crops must be seeded the | year previous to that in which they are to be grazed. Perhaps the best | spring-sown forage Is dwarf essex | rape, or a mixture of rape and oats. | Rape may be seeded for hog pasture | as early as the ground can be worked of June, in six the first pasturing half of May should be ready for to eight weeks. Hogs which have been pastured dur: ing the grazing season on crops al ready mentioned may be finished by allowing them to hog down corn and soy beans, These crops may be grown together or in separate fields, If grown in separate fields, they should be arranged so that the hogs can have the run of both fields at the same time since the two crops make a better ra- tion than either alone, Experimental results at the Missouri agricultural experiment station ow that, on forage, it required an average of 3.18 pounds of grain to produce one pound of pork, as compared with 5.11 pounds, the average from five dry-lot feeding trials conducted under similar conditions, This would mean a saving or sh of 38 per cent in the amount of grain FINE PASTURE LAND AND WELL-KEPT BARNS. at the rate of six pounds per acre. When the season is favorable, it will be ready for pasture during the last half of June. Sorghum will furnish a considerable amount of forage during the hot, dry time of summer when other crops are not growing well. If sown the latter With worth 10 cents a the average return per bushel of corn fed to hogs grazing on forage was $1.84, With at the same price the average return per bushel of corn fed in dry lot was $1.10. These results emphasize the of feeding grain on pasture, hogs fed. pound, hogs economy MINERAL MATTER IS ESSENTIAL FOR COWS Ordinary Rations Do Not Contain Sufficient Amount of Mate- rial for Milk. Dairy cows ordinarily cannot digest from rations of the usual character sufficient mineral matter to meet the | tion. This conclusion has been reach- periment station after two years’ in- vestigations with cows ylelding lage These specialists also say that even when the common practical rations are supplemented with large amounts of calcium carbonate and bone flour, the cows still give off more lime than they can digest from their rations. To meet this demand for heavy milk pro- duction the cows must draw upon the mineral substances of their skeletons. Further attempt Is being made, by the use of more readily soluble lime salts, to learn whether a cow can ab- sorb as much lime as she gives off during heavy milk preduction, The results obtained thus far em- phasize the value of leguminous rough- Without lib- eral allowance of such feeds the loss of minerals from the bones becomes excessive, and predisposes to disorders SPREAD THE MANURE | Several Good and Substantial Reasons for Condemning Practice of Piling It. H. T. FRENCH, Colorado Agricul- tural College, Fort Collins, Colo.) A common practice in farming sec- tlons is still followed, that of hauling manure from the yards and stables to the field, and instead of scattering the manure, placing it in piles. There are several reasons why this should not be done; first, it offers a breeding place (By mice and other vermin. Second, and more important, there is a consider- able loss in the effect of the manure by leaching and unequal distribution of its fertilizing ingredients. Wherever the piles are made the ground will receive more than its share of the fertilizer and other portions will not get a fair show. It Is a mistaken notion that much of the fertilizing value will escape in the alr if the ma- nure is spread at once. The soil will catch the melting snow and rain, and even soil. also, and that is in the economy of spreading the manure direct from the wagon as soon as hauled to the field, rather than to handle It again of nutrition. spreading from the piles. ConsTRIGTION OF INDIVIDUAL HOGHOUSE 10" SHIPLAP CLEAN, WELL-VENTIL ATED HOG SHELTER. Farmers will find the individual hoghouse shown in the sketch practical, since it is easy to build, and can be moved from place to place readily on the skids provided, writes W. E. Frudden chanics Magazine. The frame is built 78-inch strips. Three A-frames give tl cross braces are notched into them. It door at one end, and ventilating doors frame is covered with siding, shiplap, o heavy planks. The construction provid | of the ends, as shown in the lower detail sketch. of Charles City, la., in Popular Me- up of 2 by 4 inch stuff, braced with 1¢e main support to the house, and the is 8 feet long and 6 feet wide, with a on the sides and the other end. The r plain 74-inch boards. The floor is of es for ventilation spaces at the gables The side doors are hinged | at the top and can be raised and set under props fastened to the ends of the | If your eyes smart or feel scalded, Ro- | man Eye Balsam applied upon going to bed is just the thins to relieve them. Adv. Equivocal. “I wonder what Smith meant by his double-edged remark?” “What was 1t?” “He sald if I wanted to get a dog badly, he would give me a pointer.” Sore Eyes - Granulated Eyelids, Fges inflamed by expo sure to Sun, Dust and Wine | quickly relicved by Murine & EreRemedy. No Smartirg, just Eye Comfort. As Druggists or by mail 50c = Bottle. Murin Eye Salve in Tubes 25c. r Book of the Ent house, permitting the air and sunlight ient to clean. Fenders should be built around the inside, to enter freely, and making it conven- about 8 inches above the floor to protect the young shoats. Pd INI NINN did Stick to One Variety. Where a quantity of any vegetable or flower is to be grown year after year, it is well to find a strain of the | seed that does the best under the local is found. eee { Have You Many Hogs? | Are you making provision for ecar- rying through the winter all the live stock you can handle? Many a 1 | can testify as to the profita thi Srop. bleness of r winter { apply with | conditions and tie to it until a better | { Irish pot: {| TREES, all classes. Protect the Trees. | To prevent mice and rabbits bark- | ing trees take soft axle grease or lard | | FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS with a little tar mixed with it and a paint brush. Transferring Swarms. Transfer and comb bee trees to movable frame warm days early in May. swarms from hives on Don’t Neglect Potatoes. Do not neglect the planting o toes. ff sanrin the valuable constituents from | dew will carry some of them into the | The third reason is important | it | DIRECT FROM WAGON BILIOUS, HEADACHY. SI “CASCARETS" Gently cleanse your liver ands.’ sluggish bowels while you sleep. Get a 10-cent box. Sick headache, biliousness, dizzl- ness, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath—always trace them to torpid liver; delayed, fermenting food in the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged in the in- testines, instead of being cast out of the system is re-absorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes cone gestion and that dull, throbbing, sick- ening headache. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess | bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poisons in the bowels. A Cascaret to-night will surely straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep—a 10-cent box from your druggist means your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months, Adv. Not Her Job. He was a young subaltern. One eve- the hospital had ning the sister in just finished making him comfortable for the night, and before g oft duty asked: “Is there anything I can do for you before I leave? Dear little Two Stars replied: “well, yes! I should like very much to be kissed good night.” Sister rustled to the door. “Just wait till T call the orderly,” she said. “He does all the rough work here.” London Opinion. aaggers, looked uv ing. “How “He can have a steely p from the b can a may fa i.ei’'s Drawn a wean d Crook. rooked,’ “He was & rems wed the Oid Scou peaking of one of his “As a boy he was so crooked slugs in enemies, that he used to put telephone his own savings bank.” Add Querulous Queries Why is it that a man will insist up- on getting the la enny in change from a newsboy, yet wiilingly tip the barber for merely doing work which | he is hired to do? for flies and insects, and a harbor for | ing: | and f.0.b PATERT |W. N. To Clean Hearthstone. When whitening a hearth or step dip the cloth in a drop of milk and rub over after applying the hearth- stone; this prevents the white from coming off, : Apparent System. “Is this hospital run on the homeo pathic system?” “No; what makes you think so?’ “lI notice that bloga nurse has a light-headed patient.” — Ea - a For | Horses Horsemen agree that Yager's Liniment is the tk best and most eco- nomicalliniment for general stable use. For strained ligaments, spavin harness galls, sweeny, wounds orold sores, cuts and any enlargements, it gives quick relief. _A 25 cent bottle contains four times as much as the usual bottle of liniment sold at that price. At all dealers. YAGER’S INIMEN GILBERT BROS, & CO. Baltimore, Md. Have RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? Take RHEUMACIDE to remove the cause and drive the poison Irom the system. “RHEUMACIDE ON THE INSID PUTS RURUNATISN ON THE OUTSIDE" At All Druggists Jas. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distributors Baltimore, Md. Relieves and Remedies CONSTI PATION | Take a tipwtake a" TA TREES! TREES! Commercial Orchardist — ask for our list ov varieties of peach,and apple trees. Mr. Farmer, You want a home orchard. We can supply you with anything needed. FRUIT and SHADE Ornamentals in SHRUB- BERY and EVERGREENS. We yet have 50,000 { PEACH and APPLE TREES SPRING 1017. THE MOUNTAIN VIEW NURSERY CO. Catalog Free. WILLIAMSPORT, MD, Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield, Succession ‘lat Dutch, 500 for £1.25; 1,000 for $2.00; 5,000 at §1.50, -here; postpaid 35¢ ver 3: Sal ‘elation ngeuraat 10406 hp a2 81 50, f. 0. b. hi 1,000 for $1.35; Egg and Pepper pl ants 0 1 : 1.000, for $1.50; 5.000 and up at 5 b. re. Postpaid dlc perivl. D.F. AR = ETL 5 C. Watson E.Coleman,Wash- ington, D.C. Books free. High- est references Best results. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 15--i8 | | 1 i . [ L [ f ] { 3 x E « « q . 1 | F C Ro 1 ; t i t 3 i 4 } i 8 % 1 : v v 0 b t a b & : ¥ 4 C 2 b i w a $ p [=