The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, April 25, 1917, Image 5

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W. L. DOUCLAS
"THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE"
$3 $3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8 ALS WMEN.
Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas
I" shoes. Forsale by over ©9000 shoe dealers.
_ The Best Known Shoes in the World.
W- L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot-
tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and fM
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes, The fi
retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San [|
Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the [i
price paid for them, {
The quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more |
than 4o years experience in making fine shoes. The smart
styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America.
They are uipped factory at Brockton, Mass.,
> made in a well-e
by the highest paid, skilled s oemakers, under the direction and
all working with an honest
supervision of experienced men, .
make the best shoes for the price that money










1
determination to
can buy,
Ask your shoe dealer for W. I.. Douglas shoes. If he can-
Boy supply you with the kind you want, take no other
make, Write for interesting booklet ex laining how to
et shoes of the highest standard of quality for the price,
y return mail, postage free.
LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas
name and the retail price
stamped on the bottom.


: 7
IEE WARE OF [y
A SUBSTITUTES {
Best In the World
$3.00 $2.50 & $2.00
President 4 W.L. Douglas Shoe Co.,
185 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.



‘STEER RETARDED IN GROWTH
|
Stunting an Animal as Result of In
sufficient Food May Be Only
Temporary Condition.
Live stock products are the result
of growth. By far the largest part of
Increase in animals is the result of
growth, The younger the animals the
rreater the growth impulse. Many


Man’s greatest responsibility is wom-
an—and she never lets him shirk it. night by his snoring he usually tells
you that he didn’t sleep a wink.
FRUIT LAXATIVE



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 label, showing it is
Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The
Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron |
builds up the system. 50 cents. |
—— “California Syrup of Figs” can't
harm tender stomach,
liver and bowels.

A red sunrise, with clouds lowering |
later In the morning, indicates rain.
[
|

Every mother realizes, after giving
her children “California Syrup of
| Figs” that this is their ideal laxative,
| because they love its pleasant taste
 


{4 | out griping.
| When cross, irritable, feverish, or
| breath is bad, stomach sour, look at
LICK IT-STOCK KET the tongue, mother! If coated, give a
teaspoonful of this harmless “fruit
For Horses, Cattle, Sheep
and Hogs. Contains Cop-
peras for Worms, Sulphur
for the Blood, Saltpeter
for the Kidneys, Nux
Vomica,a Tonic,and Pure
Dairy Salt. Used by Vet-
erinarians 12 years. No
Dosing. Drop Brick in
feed-box. Ask yourdealer
for Blackman’s or write
BLACKMAN STOCK REMEDY COMPANY
CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE |
BREATHE FREELY. Are your Nostrils CLOGGED?
NAZ-UP gives relief, Powder inhaled
thru nostrils. No equal for CATARRH,
HAY FEVER, HEAD COLDS, ASTHMA, etc,
| If your druggist will not supply
you we will send a box postpaid |
on receipt of $1. SAMPLE FREE,
nse,
’s BE CORvINCED at our ex;
ruggists: Write for Agency Terms.
P | THE NAZUP CO."
405 Law Building Baltimore, Md,
5 PARKER'S
: HAIR BALSAM
A tollet preparation of merit.
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
88 For Restoring Color and |
i Beauty toGray or Faded Hair
50c. and $1.00at Druggiste.



A ma
STOCK
A
foul, constipated waste, sour bile and
eo
els, and you have a well, playful child
again. When its little system is full
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.
eat
EX
When starting, a locomotive puffs
{five times to one revolution of the
| driving wheel,
“CASCARETS ACT
Luxurious Wavy Hair ON LIVER; BOWELS
Send dime for trial package of Luxatone Ng sick headache, biliousness,
ff o for b f 8 full . . .
a, ob lu sgn | bad tosie or constipation
by morning.


 

jurious substances. Van Ack Co.,
950 Rogers Avenue., Brooklyn, N. Y. |
Note: Wanted one woman in every town to act |
as representative. Pleasaut work — good pay. |
Frost Proof Cabbage Plants |
Barly Jersey and Charleston Waksfleld, Succession
and Flat Dutch, 500 for 81.25; 1,000 for €2.00; 6,000 at §1.50,
f.0.b. here; postpaid 35¢c per 100. Satisfaction guaranteed,
SWERT POTATO PLANTS—{mmediate shipment.
Nancy Hall and Porto Rico, 1,000 to 9,000 at 82.00; : :
10,000 up at 81.50, £. 0. b. here. Tomato planis at §1.35. | Purgative Waters?
Bgg and Pepper plants at $1.50 per 1,000, f. 0. b. here. |
Postpaid 4c per 100. D. F, JARISON, SUNSERVILLE, 8, . Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
~. | Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg-
{ulate the stomach, remove the sour
land fermenting food and foul gases,
{take the excess bile from the liver
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh

| passageway every few days


Colored Laborersand Track men as section
hands; also Pati Makers, Molders and
Carpenters. ricklayers experienced on g :
oie fire brick or red brick construction. | Solyem asi matter and poisons
Steady work. Good wages. Apply in person | '3 the bowels.
to BETHLEHEM STEEL CO., Sparrows Point, Md. |
— — | feel great by morning. They work
| while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
TREES! TREES!
Commercial Orchardist — ask for our list of |
Yariciseo! peach, sn) apple trees. Mr. Farmer, | only 10 cents a box from your store.
you want a home orchard. We can supply you | Mill
with anything needed. FRUIT and SHADE | Mi ions of men and women take a
TREES, all classes. Ornamentals in SHRUB- | Cascaret mow and then and never
| have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
BERY and EVERGREENS. We yet have 50,000
PEACH and APPLE TREES SPRING 1917.
| Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
THE MOUNTAIN VIEW NURSERY CO.
Catalog Free. WILLIAMSPORT, MD.
PATENTS Watson E. Coleman,
Patent Lawyer, Washington,
D.C. Advice and books Sree.
Bates reasonable. Highest references. Bestservices.
Bugville Athletics.
Bettie—Hey, you grasshopper, if you
W. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 16-1917. | else will.

For Hang-On Coughs, Colds
After a man has kept you awake all |
FOR SICK CHILD
| and it thoroughly cleanses the tender |
| little stomach, liver and bowels with- |
| with Cascarets, or merely forcing a |
with |
| Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
|and carry out of the system all the |
A Cascaret to-night will make you

Died of Premature Old Age!
How many times we hear of com-
paratively young persons passing away
when they should have lived to be 70
or 80 years of age. This fatal work is
usually attributed to the kidneys, as,
* when the kidneys degenerate, it causes
auto-intoxication. The more injuri-
ous the poisons passing thru the kid-
neys the quicker will those noble or-
gans be degenerated, and the sooner
they decay.
It is thus the wisest policy, to pre-
vent premature old age and promote
long life, to lighten the work of the
kidneys. This can be done by drink-
ing plenty of pure water all day long,
and occasionally taking Anuric, double
strength, before meals. This can be
obtained at almost any drug store. You
will find Anurie more potent than lithia
for it dissolves uric acid as water does

Clarksburg, W. Va.—“Since I was
a little boy at home I have known of
Dr. Pierce’s medicines. They were
taken by nearly every member of my
family with good results, and I myself
was greatly benefited by the use of |
the Golden Medical Discovery. I had |
caught a severe cold which settled on |
my lungs and in my bronchial tubes.
I could not seem to get rid of it and
the Discovery completely cured me |
and restored me to good health. I |
have also taken the Pleasant Pellets |
for sluggish lver, constipation and |
biliousness—they are fine. I am al- |
ways glad to recommend Dr. Pierce’s |
remedies.”—John Biby, 30734 Jackson |
St.
Golden Medical Discovery, the herb- |
al tonic, is made up in liquid or tablet |
form and can be obtained in any drug
store. It contains no alcohol or nar-
on the wrapper.

sugar.
|
cotie, and .its ingredients are printed

The Great
Vegetable
Remedy
Carter’s Little Liver Pills |
For Constipation


wine Small Pill |
Gon Zor Small Dose |
signsture - Small Price ,
i
|
{
Puts You
Right
Over Night



Colorless or Pale Faces

usually indicate the absence of Ironin
the blood,
a condition which will be greatly helped by
Carter’sironPills | |


i
|
|
|
|
enter in the jumping events nobody
|
i
|
|
|
|
| there is nothing for them to do re-
factors influence the tendency of an
animal to grow. Among these are age,
| condition, gestation, lactation and the
quantity and quality of food. A given
amount of food will produce more
growth on a young animal than on the
same animal at a later age. All the
growth factors influence the young an-
imal much more powerfully than older
animals.
| If an animal's food supply is insuf-
ficient for normal growth, the animal
| vine be retarded in growth. If this



laxative,” and in a few hours all the |
| Well-Fed Hereford.
undigested food passes out of the bow- |
treatment is continued for a long time
| the animal may become permanently
stunted.
Stunting an animal as the result of
| insufficient food may be only a tempo-
rary condition. An animal does not
lose its capacity to grow as the result
of stunting. I. B. Mumford, dean of
cites a feeding test at the Missouri ex-
periment station in which an animal
that had been stunted by poor feeding
gained 841 pounds during the second
year,
quired on this steer stunted during the
first twelve months. A steer that had
500 pounds during the second twelve
months, and this gain was more expen-
steer. The amount of grain required
| to make a pound of gain on the well-
fed steer was 9.8 pounds.
It is certain that stunting an animal
even for so long a period as twelve
months does not destroy its capacity
to grow.

| GAINS MADE FEEDING LAMBS
| Result of Test at South Dakota Station
to Determine Value of Alfalfa
and Prairie Hay.

The best gains ever secured at the |
South Dakota experiment station in
| feeding lambs was in an experiment |
to determine the comparative value
of alfalfa and prairie hay with the
same kind of a grain ration.
The grain ration consisted of a mix-
| ture of 100 pounds of oats, 100 pounds |
| of shelled corn and 25 pounds of oil |
meal.
| Each lot was started on one pound
| per head of the mixture daily, and in-
creased until they were receiving twc {
and one-tenths pounds per head of |
grain daily, and what hay they would
eat,
The average daily gain per head for
the lot that received the alfalfa hay
was .51 of a pound, while with the lot
that received the prairie hay, the aver-
age daily gain per head was .38 of a |
pound.
DAILY EXERCISE FOR STOCK |

Horses and Mules Should Be Given |
Run for an Hour or So in Lot |
Adjoining Stables. |
Horses and mules should have good |
daily carding and regular exercise. If
|
|
move their shoes and give them a
| run for an hour or so in a well-fenced |
| lot adjoining the stables.
The best and safest fence for pas- |
ture is of stout woven wire, rail or a
combination board and smooth wire.
Barbed wire should not be used, as it
is dangerous. |
Provision for Admission of Maximum
Amount of Light in Barn Should
Not Be Overlooked.

No barns or shelters for any kind
of animals should ever be constructed
without making ample provision for
the admission of the maximum amount |
of sunlight. Such buildings should
have a southern exposure, if possible.
This will provide extra warmth in the
winter time and the sunlight which is
thus permitted to enter the building
will destroy many disease germs.
Unprofitable Proposition.
If a man is not careful to keep the
lice down on his hogs, he is simply
feeding lice instead of hogs, which is
hardly a profitable proposition.
Necessity for Sheep.
Roots, turnips especially, are almost
{ a necessity to the profitable handling |
of sheep.
Exercise for Brood Sow.
|
The brood sows should have ex- |
| ereise if they are expected to do well |
at farrowing time,

the Missouri College of Agriculture, |
to such an extent that it weighed only |
200 pounds at twelve months of age, |
Only 5.6 pounds of grain for |
each pound of gain made were re- |
| been generously fed during the first |
twelve months of his life gained only |
sive than the gain made on the stunted |
MOST PROFITABLE SIDE LINE
Cost of Raising Turkeys Is Small
Where Free Range Can Be Given
—Some Important Factors.

For those who are favorably situ-
able side line can hardly be found.
Given plenty of range where the tur-
keys can find grasshoppers and other
weeds and grasses, waste grain, acorns

profits large. Grain and stock
are particularly well adapted to turkey
most of the turkeys are found. Little
ing turkeys in confinement, and where
| 1t has been tried the results have been
| discouraging.
sential to success in turkey raising.
| In selecting turkeys for breeding,
ated for raising turkeys, a more profit- |
raising, and it is on such farms that |
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
{
|
| 34% @35¢; fresh gathered firsts,
insects, green vegetation, the seeds of |
|
| fresh gathered, storage packed firsts, |
|
|
|
| THE MARKETS
NEW YORK.—Wheat—=Spot strong;
No. 2 hard, $2.47% f o b New York;
No. 1 Northern Duluth, $2.36%; No. 1
Northern Manitoba, $2.333 f 0 b New |
York.
Corn—No, 2 yellow, $1.49% ec i t |
New York. |
Oats—Standard, 79@79 Ke,
Butter—Creamery higher than ex- |
tras, 46% @47%c; creamery extras (92 |
score), 46@46%; firsts, 44% @45%;
seconds, 43@44c.
Eggs——Fresh gathered extras, 36%e;

38@
34c; state, Pennsylvania and nearby
Western hennery whites, fine to fan-
cy, 36% @36; state Pennsylvania and
nearby hennery browns, 35@36%ec.
Cheese—State, fresh, specials, 20@ |
26%c; do, average fancy, 24% @25c¢. J


He’s fteliing her that nothing he
received from home brought more
joy, longer-lasting pleasure, greater
Dressed Pouitry— Chickens, 23@ | 2 i 3
| 80c; fowls, 20@27c; turkeys, 18@3dc. | relief from thirst and fatigue, than
Chicago—Bulk, $15.90@16.30; light, i
and nuts of various kinds, the cost of |
raising them is very small and the |
farms |
| 15.85;
| has ever been done in the way of rais- |
Plenty of range Is es- |
the most important factors to be con- |
sidered are vigor, size, shape, bone,
| The body should be deep and wide, the
full.
( and of a clean, healthy appearance.
strong, well-made skeleton is shown
The head should be of good size
strong toes, It should be the aim of
| every turkey raiser to have a flock of
though
purebred turkeys, even they


i
A |
| by thick, sturdy shanks and straight, |
arly maturity and color of plumage. |
| back broad and the breast round and |

45¢
§15.45@1


mixed, §15.65@16.35; |
heavy, $15.65@16.40: rough, $15.65@
pigs, $11.75@14.60.
Cattle—Native beef cattle,
13.25; stockers and feeders, $7.3
$9.25@

UV
10.60; cows and heifers, $5.75@11. |
i 0 $1 THE FLAVOR LASTS


ewes, $9.15@12.40; lambs, $12.10@16. |

 
RIGLEYS
She slipped a stick in every letter
PHILADELPHIA Wheat - No. 2
dS No: 2. Sogtlom 84 and mailed him a box now and then.
; rejected
$2.21@ Naturally he loves her. she loves
iye—No. 2 Western, in export ele- him, and they both love WRIGLEY’S.
vator, $1.83@1.88 per bushel; small
lots of nearby rye, in bags,
$1.30@1.45, as to quality.
Corn—Carlots for local trade, as to
location. Western, No. 3 vellow, $1.48
@1.50; do, No. 4 yellow, $1.46@1.48:
quoted at
| do do, No. 4 yellow, $1.44@1.46: South-
 
| ern, No. 3 yellow, $1.48@1.49.
Oats—No. 2 white, $764@77%c; |
standard white, 75% @76%c;: No. 3
| white, 7414 @75%c; No. 4 white, 73% |
| @T4%ec;
sample oats, 70% @71%ec.
Butter—Western, fresh, solid-pack-
{ ed creamery, fancy specials, 48¢: ex- |
tras, 46@47¢c; do, extra firsts, 45¢; do,
44@44%c; do, seconds, 42@
3c; nearby prints, faney, 45¢; do, av- |
rage, extra, 46@47c; do, firsts, 44@
; do, seconds, 42@43c; special
| fancy brands of prints were jobbing
| at |
<)
52@55¢.
Eggs—Nearby firsts, $10.35 per
i standard case; nearby current receipt, [*
| $10.20 per case; Western extra firsts,
CHEW IT AFTER EVERY MEAL
Keep them in mind
Three of a kind






national parks,
There are now 17
a of a good resolution is |
A man’s ic


|
i : 3 one that will stretch.
i Yin Hj “0 willing $10.35 per case; do, firsts, $10.20 per | . | Nature contributes the SubSiancun.
wn | 7 ; m til [My case; fancy selected, carefully candled | | Spring provides the opportunity. Wright's
din VU pas jit NS ei 7 = ra 3 : : y or ay joan ed i } | Indian Vegetable Pills present Nature's
{ | Jit i eggs were jobbed at 38@39c per | gifts to ald Nature's work, thus produce
| dozen. | s & y | ing the faen] Spring Tedicine: They are
{ . RY y | tonic as well as laxative. Adv.
| Bronze Turkey. Cheese—New York, full cream, mies . 4
The male fancy, held, 28c¢; specials, higher; do,
are sold at market prices.
at the head of the flock should by all
means be a purebred of the best type
| obtalnable. The male is one-half the
entire flock, and by continually select-
ing the best females of a similar type
and mating these with a purebred
| male, one can soon have a flock of uni-
formly large, early-maturing, strong-
boned, long and deep-bodied turkeys of
the same color.
Fifteen turkey hens can safely be
mated to a vigorous tom. If 25 or 30
hens are kept, two toms should not be
| allowed to run with them at the same
time, but one should be confined one
day and the other the next. When
two toms are allowed to run together
during the mating season they figh
badly and the stronger does practically
all of the mating.


chickens to lie about the premises or |
in the brooders and of throwing them
over the fence for the hogs to eat, are
decidedly bad, and directly responsible
for large losses each year by causing |
and distributing disease, writes M. IH.
Becker in Farm and Home.
Burning is the safest and easiest
method for disposing of dead fowls.
The coal-burning brooder stoves will |
take care of any losses among small |
num- |
bers of fowls are kept a small laundry
flocks and where considerable
Give as Much Mash as Fowls Will |
Clean Up in Ten Minutes—Scat-
ter Grain in Litter.
Feed as much mash food at each |
meal as the fowls will eat up in ten
minutes, and remove any that remains, !
Give as much grain as they will work
hard to scratch out of a deep litter.
More feed than this is wasted, and
spoils the appetite of the fowls because
| it is constantly before them. |
' SUNLIGHT IS BIG ESSENTIAL |

Sprouted Oats for Hens.
Sprouted oats make the very best
| of green food for chickens in winter,
! and they are easy to prepare.
A peck
of oats will make enough for one day’s
feeding for a thousand hens. You
can use more or less in proportion to
the size of your flock.

Isolate New Purchases.
New purchases should never be per-
mitted to mingle with healthy flocks
without challenge. They should be
kept to themselves for such a length
of time as may be necessary to prove
that they are not the carriers of some
infectious disease.
High Price for Eggs.
Market eggs are going to be scarce
and high-priced next season as many
farmers sold off their hens last fall

when the price was attractive. That's |
like killing the goose that laid the
goiden egg.
Feeding Alfalfa.
fe rule to follow in f
in the dry mash
1 by measure as you de
scrap

eding a



iS to use only as

of meat or
“sb

fair to good, 27T@27 4c;
14@22c.
Live Poultry—Fowls, as to quality, |
26@28c; 18@20c; old
chickens,
do, part skims, |
stag
16@17c;
soft meated, 24@25¢; ducks,
gy roosters,

roosters, sprir
as to size
old, per
per pair, |
pigeons,
and quality, 22@24c;
pair,

R8@30c; do do, young,
20@25c.

| fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus-
| trous and beautiful as a young girl's
Uruguay contains 7.942.212 cattle.


BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Make it Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur-
iant and Remove Dandruff—Real
Surprise for You,
The occasional use of Roman Eye Balsam
at night upon retiring will prevent and re-
lieve tired eyes, watery eyes, and eye siralm,
Adv.

Fogs indicate settled weather.
Send 10e to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel,
Juffalo, for large trial package of Anurie
for kidneys—cures backache.—Adyv.

Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf-

BALTIMORE ~Wheat —— April No. | after a “Danderine hair cleanse.” Just You cannot fan away a fog.
2 red, £2.30% neminal; spot No. 2 red, try this—moisten a cloth with a little = —
r 9D a TOR . A :
No. 2 red Western, | panderine and carefully draw it
i bag lots of Southern
lelivered, at $1
31.40 for goo
2 vellow :




ol a cargo of No.

n,
quotable at
Car lots of No. llow corn, on spot,

r domestic de are





| Danderine dissolves every particle of
| you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
WHAT IS
LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA
A DIGESTIVE LAXATIVE
CATHARTIC AND LIVER TONIC
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
doubled the beauty of your hair.
 
Besides beautifying the hair at once,
dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig-
MAY APPLE ROOT
3! } 0: 6@76%c; : %
DISPOSE OF DEAD CHICKENS No Z orates the scalp, forever stopping itch: | y+» wos is not a Secret or Potent Meds
— os NG. 3 Western, SUSGUSLAS: ing and falling hair. cine but is composed of the following
| Practice of Permitting Carcasses to No = go a HSE % 84 4% No. oo | But what will please you most will | ¢ld-fashioned roots and herbs:
Lie About Premises is Poor One $1221 58: bastors sa to aualitv | be after a few weeks’ use when you CASCARA BARK
—Burning Is Best. dentin. Sit 8 will actually see new hair—fine and | BLUE FLAG ROOT
and condition, $1.50@1.70. | i! RR . |
The practice of allowing dead| Hsy—No. 1 timothy, $18.50@19; | JO7RY at frst—yes—but really new | BHUBARS ROOT
practice of allowing dea %a de. SEGAL Ne 5a $1: | hair—growing all over the scalp. If BLACK ROOT
NO, 2 G0, 1(.00@1d; INO. « y 9 ¢ |
|
16; light clover mixed, )@17; :
a > of it, surel et a 25 cent bottle of
No. 1 do do, $16@16.5 Zdodo| Ob Sursy £ | SENNA LEAVES
1 Knowlton’s Danderine from any store | D PEPSIN
$13@15; No. 1 clover, | and just try it. Ady, AN 8 1.8
No. 2 do, $13.50; No. 3 do, $8@10. Tx : InLAx-Fos the CASCARA is improved b
Straw—No. 1 straight rye, $15; No. |
2 do do, $14; No. 1 tangled do, $11@ |
12;
1 wheat, $9@9.50; No. 2 do, $8@8.50;
No. 2 do do, $10@10.50; No. |
No. 1 oat, $9.50@10; No. 2 do $8.50@9.
Creamery, choice, 44@45;
good, 42@43;
Butter—Creamery, fancy, 46@46%c:
Creamery,
Creamery, prints, 45@ |
{ for infants and children, and see that it
| Signature of

the addition of these digestive ingredi-
ents making it better than ordinary Cas-
CARA, and thus the combination acts not
{ only as a stimulating laxative and cathar-
| tic but also as a digestive and liver tonie,
| Syrup laxatives are weak, but Lax-Fos
| combines strength with palatable, aro
matic taste and does not gripe or disturb
the stomach. One bottle will prove
LAX-Fos is invaluable for Constipation,
Some women find that a new hat is
a good cure for a headache.
important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
Bears the


think that the joke is on the girl.
Live Poultry—Chickens—OIld
4 lbs and over, 25c;
hens,
do do, small to
stove or air-tight heater set up in the | 47. Creamery, blocks, 44@46; Md. FY | Indigestion or Torpid Liver. Price 50c.
feed house or tool room will prove | ang Pa. rolls, 30@31: Ohio rolls, 30: | In Use for Over 30 Years. ———
very satisfactory. | W. Va. rolls, 30; Storepacked, 29@ | Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria |
| rh Ee 30; Md., Va. and Pa. dairy prints, 30@ | BE RE 3 {
PREVENTING WASTE OF FEED | 31. Men who have been crossed in love
|
— |
GETS AT THE JOINTS From THE INSIDE
Kill the Flies Now and Prevent
medium, 35; do 90 White Leghorns, | 0. A DAISY FLY KILLER wildo t.
23@24; old roosters, 14; winter, 2 | Kills thousands. Lasts all season. All dealers |
RHEUMATISM
{ Ibs and under, 32@35; young, large, | or six sent express paid for $1. H. SOMERS,
smooth and fat, 28@30; do poor, 150 De Kalb Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y. Adv. Lumbago or Gout?
rough and staggy, 22@23. Ducks— Take RHEUMACIDF to remove tr ecanse
¥ all is ot tav
Young Pekings, 3% Ibs and over, 22@ The ball is the oldest toy. and drive the polson from the system.
{
aT “RHEUNACIDR OF THR INSIDE
Why buy many bottles of other Vermi-

23; do do puddle, do do do, 21@22; do bo § y ! PUTS BHEUMATISN OF THE OUTSIDE”
Co TIIRGAY 3 3 91/99: « Mn o fuges, when one single bottle of Dr. Peery’s tA i
muscovy, do do 21@22; do smaller, Vermituge "Dead Shot” will act surely snd At All Druggists
Jas. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distribztors
Baltimore, Md.
Pigeons — Young, per pair, 35:
Guinea fowl, as to size,
promptly? Adv.



Lay not burdens on any but thyself. |
35.
@45.
—Maryiand,

Wanted
| | Western Canada Farmers require 50,000 American
Farm Hands

Pennsylvania
c; Western fi
ia firs
Southern firsts, 30@31.


and |
 

West Virg


farm labourers at once. Urgent demand sent out for farm
help by the Government of Canada.
Good Wages Steady Employment
Low Railway Fares
Live Stock



PITTSBURGH, PA.

_ Sheep—Prime wethers, Jie Pleasant Surroundings Comfortable Homes
10.75; culls and common, $4.50@7:
No Compulsory Military Service
Farm hands from the United States are absolutely guar
anteed against conscription. This advertisement is to sa
cure farm help to replace Canadian farmers who have en-
listed for the war. . :
A splendid opportunity for the young man to investi
gate Western Canada’s agricultural offerings, and to do so
| at but little expense.
| 3 Only Those Accustomed fo Farming Reed Apply
5, $10@10.35; veal calves, $144

Hogs—Prime heavies, $16.45@16.50:


MO.—Hogs—Bulk
and butcher
5.30@16; pig






tle—Prime fed steers, $12.25@ . v . . a.
essed Deef steers, $10@ For particulars as to railway rates and districts requiring labour,

cow . or any other information regarding Western Canada apply to
 
5,_$3@13; stock: | J. P. JAFFRAY, Cor. Wainut and Broad Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
~ $7.50@11; bulls, | Canadian Government Agent
$7.50@10; calves, $8@18. |




 
 































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