- PACE TH FOUR CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. GT FOR, TH! CHILDREN IN BELGIUM | AND FRANCE | : | 1 Penny here A penny stick of candy or a lolli-| pop in America is a bun in Belgium and France. Those are the countries where there are hungry children who need bunh worse than you need candy. And if every little American in every state in the Union would not spend that daily penny for candy ANY DAY, buns with sugar on them could be given to the hungry children over across the sea, and they would become fat, and healthy and happy like yourself. Now that sounds like magic, and magic it is—white magic, of the very finest kind. As magic is quite diffi- cult to understand, you will have to read every word of what follows in order to see how the trick is done. You see, the story of how an American lollipop can turn into a Belgian bun—just like that—is very much like the story that ends with “dog won’t bite pig, pig won’t jump over stile, and I can’t get home to- night!” Let's pretend that we have come to nice part at the end, where the pig finally jumps over the stile and the old lady gets home, all because the cat, way off yonder, began to eat the rat. In this story it’s the lit- tle Americans, who begin to save on lollipops, and the S300 O11 fl | RRL NG Pll HL) 1 OOO OO ee On a Cash Basis r, Childyen! means a Dun Over thew | that bun that finally | tr — Special Attention Given to REMODLING ANTIQUE FURNITURE D. H. ENGLE, LSS " LUMBER -COAL RT ( GR SITY RL DR lands safe in the hands of the boys and girls over there. Here’s the way it goes: If American children say NO to that lollipop that they used to eat every day, the man who makes that lollipop out of sugar will tell the man who sells the sugar that he doesn’t need so much next time; the man who sells the sugar will tell the man who brings the sugar from other countries in ships, that he needn’t bother to load up so much sugar next trip; the man who brings the sugar from foreign countries will soon find that he doesn’t need so many ships, and then he’ll say to Uncle Sam, “Here’s a ship you DO need, and I don’t need.” And Uncle Sam wil take that ship, and fill it with wheat, and perhaps some sugar, and one thing and an- other, and send it over to Europe WITH war ships and destroyers, to protect it, od the first thing you know, sugar coated buns, made out of American wheat, will be disap- pearing into the mouths of little French and Belgian refugees— All because YOU little Americans said “NONE TODAY” to the lollipops and candy, and started white magic reached across the Atlantic ocean! 1010000 0 0 Furniture I will continue the furniture business on the second floor of the Engle Building, with a complete and up-to-date line of all kinds of furniture. Prices are very reason- able. When in need of furniture call and see me. Repairing and Painting a Specialty West Main St., MOUNT JOY, PA. JOE 1101 Owing to the fact that two of my sons have been called to the service, and the scarcity of help, | will, beginning Monday, July 29, do business on a STRICTLY CASH BASIS ONLY. F. B. SADDLER GR OFF MOUNT JOY, PA. IODLOLLLDOLLDOLOOLODLLLOOOOOODLOOLOOOOLDDLOOLODOOLDLOOLT Apply Now For Hunters License $1. Henry G. Opposite Post Office 15 Carpenter MOUNT JOY, PA. For Quick Results Try Our Wanted, For Sale and For Rent Column RE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. » INFORMATION FOR © OUR FARMERS TRACTOR DEMONSTRA- TION PROGRAM The first State Tractor Demonstra- tion which will be held by the Penn- | sylvania Department of Agriculture | on the grounds of the United States [ Army Quartermasters’ Depot at New Cumberland, near Harrisburg, on { September 19, 20 and 21, promises to be the most exhaustive test that | has ever been given tractors in this country. It will serve manufacturers a chance to show the thousands of farmers who are expected from all eastern States an opportunity to see | farm tractors working under real eastern conditions and records will be kept that have not heretofore been attempted. Many tractor manufacturers have already sent word that they will participate and it is expected that thirty or more machines will be en- tered. There are over two hundred acres that will be plowed, rolled and seeded to wheat and the entire opera- tion will be done with tractors and tractor drawn machinery. The plowing will start on Thursday morning, September 19, at 11 o’clock and continue without interruption until 5 o’clock that afternoon, when tractors will be taken to headquar- ters for refilling of fuel and oil in order to measure the amount con- sumed. On Friday morning the tractors will resume plowing at 8 o’clock and continue until noon, when they will again return to headquar- ters and be refilled, so that accurate records of fuel and oil consumption can be made. On Friday afternoon starting at 1:30 o'clock the fitting of the land will take place and at 5 o'clock the tractors will be called off from work and the amount of fuel and oil necessary for this work will also be recorded. Official observers will be assigned to each tractor to follow it through the entire periods of work. On Saturday the tractors will be set to plowing at 8 o'clock in the morning and continue until noon with the afternoon period allotted to fitting the land and seeding. The tractors for each plowing period will have land assigned them according to their rated speed per hour, number of plows and the width of plows pulled. Most of the land is level with sod, wheat, oats and corn stubble fields to be worked. There is also plenty of rolling land which will give an excellent chance for the tractors to show their efficiency at this kind of work. The executive committee in charge of the demonstration consists of Secretary of Agriculture Charles E. Patton, E. K. Hibshman, State Col- lege, and T. D. Harmon, Jr., of Na- tional Stockman and Farmer, Pitts- burgh. The Field Manager will be David Beecroft, Directing Editor of Automotive Industries, New York and his assistants will be Professor R. U. Blassingame, State College, and W. R. Douglas, Chief, Tractor Division, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS The Bureau of Markets of the Pennsylvania Department of Agricul- ture has been receiving many letters of late relative to the sale of farm products to the Government and many of these refer more especially to hay, straw and grain. The Bureau is getting a list of supplies required by the Government each month and will endeavor to keep farmers and dealers posted as to the needs of the Government. Steps are being taken to put the farmer, firm or organiza- tion in direct touch with the Quar- termaster’s Division. At this writing the Quartermaster’s Division is ask- ing for bids on large quantities of po- tatoes and onions to be delivered at the various camps throughout the United States and are to be put up in one hundred pound bags or barrels as specified by the Quartermaster General. It will be necessary for farmers, dealers and organizations desiring to sell to the Government to learn the requirements of the Gov- ernment as to grades, standards and packages. The Bureau will attempt to get all of this information and be pleased to furnish the same to anyone who makes inquiry. It is to be hoped within the next few weeks to have something more definite to offer the farmers relative to the best plan for making sale of farm products. In the meantime, closer organization is urged. It will be much easier both for the Bureau and for the Government with an or- ganization than with the individual farmer. E. B. Dorsett, the former Director, has again taken charge of the work and will be pleased to assist in every way possible. GETTING GOOD SEED WHEAT Many farmers are now asking where they can send and get a few bushels of good wheat to sow. “To such it is good advice,” says D. H. Watts, farm adviser for the Pennsyl- vania Department of Agriculture, “just now with existing traffic con- ditions, to go to their best local farm- ers and secure needed seed of variety already tested out as to soil and cli- mate adaptability. “If there is some cockle in the seed it may be passed through a good modern cleaner and greatly im- proved, There is some hesitation as to sowing wheat that is a year old, but to this I would say that if well kept in a dry bin, not too much in one bin, and it was in good condition when threshed, it will do to sow, using slightly increased rate per acre. We have just germinated old wheat from two bing with a good showing of plants. USING | STATE BOYS AND GIRLS AT HARVEST “Just now much anxiety is ex- pressed by many apple and potato growers as to how they can gather these crops in before bad weather comes,” says D, W. Watts, farm ad- viser of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. “The writer has been advocating systematic and careful utilization of the less muscular help, women, boys and girls, in this work that need not be so severe as to in- jure health. There are some women and boys and girls in the teens who can do this work more cleverly than the average man and often just as rapidly, provided light, convenient ladders and vessels are provided in case of the apple harvest. “A strong man should load and un- load the tubers from the wagon and keep empty vessels in the field for the pickers. In apple picking the wide-at-the-top ladder should be avoided. The one where both side pieces merge into one at the top is best.” GETTING RID OF FLIES “The ugliest thing that I have found around among the farm homes this summer is flies,” says Mrs. Eugenia G. Benn, farm adviser of the Pennsylvania Department of Agri- culture. “As a consequence I want every woman to fortify her home with an approved fly trap before the ! first fly comes out of its winter quarters next March. The time will come when flies are as much a dis- grace as bedbugs. They only breed in filth so their very presence indi- cates unsanitary conditions. One of the hardest things I have had to do lately is to eat at a table where some three to five hundred flies had come in from the fifth outside and been roosting on the eatables. The most intelligent and thrifty farm women do not allow such conditions to ex- ist. “Start now to get your trap made of galvanized wire screen, made the size of a piano stool, supported by a galvanized frame whose legs lift the screen frame from the floor one and one-half inches. A galvanized wire screen cone fits inside, with a small hole in the top. The trap must be large and attractive bait 1.,ust be kept underneath or no flies a.e caught. The fly goes underneath to eat and when he is filled he does not know enough to crawl back out but flies to the little hole in the top of the screen cone and is confined in the compart- ment above. I have -caught easily three quarts of flies in my trap in a season. The early flies are the ones to cateh, which prevents breeding. Vinegar and molasses, cheese and fish or meat trimmings or other ‘fly relishes’ are the best bait and use plenty of it. It pays. If you have not one of these, plan now to have one for your back porch in the early spring. I will be glad to furnish more detailed descriptions on re- quest.” A NEW INDUSTRY IN THE SOUTH Castor beans have not been generally grown in the United States but the present war has developed this like many other industries. It was found that castor oil, which is extracted from the castor bean, is the only lubricant that can be suc- cessfully used on the aeroplanes. To meet this important demand the government placed contracts during the present season with farmers thru the Southern States for the planting of 180,000 acres of these beans. The minimum contract was for one thou- sand acres but the contractor had, the right to sub-let any portion of his acreage to his neighbors. The yield is usually from 15 to 30 bushels per acre. This crop can only beproduced successfully commercial- ly in tropical and sub-tropical eli- mates. It is only grown for orna- mental purposes in the North. It is easily killed by the frost, but in warm sections it is a perennial and grows to the height of forty feet. The government contracts are un- der the control and supervision of the Bureau of Aircraft Production, War Department. A large corps of inspectors have been appointed with home offices at Jacksonville, Florida, and inspection work will start at once as the beans are beginning to ripen and ready to be picked and hulled. This is an infant industry and is largely in the experimentai stage: but the consensus of opinion is that cas- tor beans can be grown successfully in the South on ground that will produce corn and cotton, and when well understood, will be more profit- able than either. THE DOG FLEA The human flea, dog flea and cat flea, strichtight flea or chicken flea and the rat fleas (which are carriers of bulonic plague) are the principal fleas with which we have to deal in the United States. Of these the dog Aea, which infects both dogs and cats and sometimes bothers humans, is the principal flea that causes trouble in Pennsylvania. Many complaints ac- companied by specimens are received by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture and almost without ex- ception they are the dog and cat fleas. There are four stages in the life of a flea—the egg, the larva, pupa and adult. The small, ovoid, creamy white eggs are deposited among the hairs of the host, but are not fasten- ed. They fall out upon mats, rugs, carpets, or material in the dog’s or cat’s bed, and require from two to twelve days to hatch. The larva is a minute worn-like creature, white in color, and active, which feds upon animals and vege- table debris, including the excrement of adult fleas. They shed their skin two or three times before becoming full grown. Four days to several months are required for this stage. The pupal or resting stage is passed in a silken cocoon, and the insect may remain in that condition from three days to more than a year, de- pending on conditions. The time required for the life cycle varies from seventeen days to over a year, depending on the weather. The winter is spent in Pennsylvania in the papal stage. Control: Keep dogs or cats clean. One way to remove the fleas from the pets is to rub or dust them thorough- ly with pyrethrum powder. This must be thoroughly worked through the hair. This stupefies the fleas, and they will drop from the animal, and can be brushed up and burned. The bedding upon which they sleep must also be thoroughly cleaned by sweep- ing, shaking, or (better) soaking with gasoline, so as to kill all stages. Brushing and sweeping alone are in- sufficient, as the insects burrow down into the fabric and cannot be re- moved easily. . Washing the animal with a saponi- fied solution of coal-tar creosote pre- paration, several of which are on the market under the name of ‘stock dips,” will kill the fleas. Leave the animal in this for five or ten minutes before removing. In the case of a cat, which has tender skin, wash the dip out with plain soap and water to prevent burning. Several strong carbolic dog soaps on the market are quite effective when used frequently. Kerosene emulsion is also effective. Shave two ounces of laundry soap in one quart of boiling hot water, and when the soap has dissovled, and the water brought to a boil, remove from the fire and add two and one-half pints of kerosene. Agitate violently with an egg-beater to thoroughly mix it. If soft water has been used, and the work well done, the oil will not separate from the water. Free kero- sene would burn the skin of the ani- To use, dilyte to make five gal- mal. lons. To clean the house when fleas are abundant, as frequently happens, re- move the carpets and rugs, clean them thoroughly—collecting the dust and burning it, because in this way the eggs are caught and destroyed. Serub the floors with hot soap suds, or drench with kerosene or gasoline, being careful to have no lights and fires around. Use of quantities of in- sect powder will aid in subduing the pest. Strong sulphur fumes (which tarnish metal surfaces) may be used under certain conditions. Another way. is to scatter five pounds of napthaline flakes over the floor of a room, and shut it tightly another room. In this way the five pounds can be made to treat a house and will not be expensive. STATE AGRICULTURAL NOTES It is estimated that the sweet po- tato crop in the State will be about 92,000 bushels as compared with 110,000 last year. Pasture land is estimated at only 76 per cent. of normal condition as compared with 83 per cent., the ten- year average. The apple production in the State promises to be 4,000 bushels in ex- cess of the crop last year. The potato crop is very disappoint- ing throughout the State and vege- tables in general have suffered from the extended droughts. Three days of plowing, disking, rolling and seeding wheat will give | farmers a splendid oportunity to see real tests of farm tractors at the State Demonstration at Harrisburg, September 19, 20 and 21. { PA | Columbia National Bank, In- dianapolis, Indiana _. Says: We were bothered quite a little” by rats in_ owr basement, destroying your RAT-SNAP very thoroughly, we ar€ pleased to report that we are ne longer bothered with them. Four sizes, 25¢, 50c, $1.00 and $3.00, Brown Bros., Mt. Joy, Pa.; H. S. Newcomer, Mt. Joy, Pa.; G. Moyer, Mt. Joy, Pa. tf ORPHANS’ COURT SALE 0 VALUABLE REAL ESTATE On Thursday, September 26, 1918 Will be sold at public sale, on the premises of Tract No LErRy Wednesday, September 18, 13 Waiting For 'iou With Good Stocks Of Fall Clothing When last Spring we came out in an extensive adver- the prudent tising campaign saying that Suit-buying thens on part of the public would be a most wise and thing to do we were criticised by some ho “knew bet- ter.” There would be no such advance and scarcity as we predicted. 3ut our words HAVE come true— and those who prof- ited by taking our advice are thankful, while those who passed it by are regretful. Prices have jumped, and, while we claim second place to none in our ability to sell reasonably for good quality, the figures on our Suits now run from $20 to $55. It is no one’s fault in particular—but of the whole war situation in general. And again we say that that man is wise who BUYS NOW AND FREELY. Prices have not reached their zenith, by any means. Groff & Wolf Co., 26-30 North Queen Lancaster’s Fastest Growing Store OOOO OOOOOOOO0O0000000000000000000000000000000D0DODLLN SHOES--Officers A ), $7.00 and $7.50. SHOELS--In Cherry, C 00, $6.00 and $7.00. sivuav€ 11 sald Kast Hanover town- ship, adjoining lands of A. B. Shuey, other lands of Isaac Hauer estate, and Alvin Cassel. Containing about six acres. The improvements on tract No. 1, consist of a two story frame dwelling house containing nine rooms, thirty by forty-five feet, in good condition; a new frame Bank Barn, 45 by 76 feet with double wagon shed at- tached; one pig stable with corn crib attached; and other necessary out- buildings. . The buildings are located central- ly on the farm, There is running water on the premises that can be reached from every field on the farm. A good meadow for pasture contain- ing about six acres; one well of nev- er failing water, and one spring of never failing water; a good orchard and a variety of fruit trees; the soil is fertile and in a high state of cul- tivation. All the land of this farm with the exception of the meadow is under cultivation. The improvements on Tract No. consist of a two story frame dwelling house containing nine rooms, with a one story summer house attached; one stable; one pig sty, wood house and other out buildings. The land 2 Sale to commence at two o’clock p. m,, when conditions will be made known by ELMIRA HAUER, HERMAN E. HAUER, Administrators of the Estate of Isaac Hauer, deceased. R. J. Emerick, Auct. E. E. McCurdy, Atty. LR SI I I a) EEE. ®ecccessccoe EERE I BRP SR AN dgesn’t carry a whitch as an ornament. e carries it for a date-keeper—and if his wath doesn’t help him keep his dates, he doesn’t want it. Our /watches are de- pendable date-keepers— they stay on time—and will Help you keep your date; whether it be with the ' factory whistle or the; President. They're abgolutely reliable. THey’re made by watch- makers whose reputa- tion for highgrade work is well known. Why not drop in and let us show you one of these guaranteed date- keepers? We'll not ask you to buy—you’ll ask us to sell. Al PEERY CEE (ZZ EERE EERE RE ER EN EIN tes eee 10 LC POG 0V0090 9000000000000 0009900 000000000004 Sobbbdetdi tari III XI IER DASA teaitt thd LEiL4%0 obi 32 22222232222 NE bdr dddlil li 22 XR AAI IITA IXXRIIXEX POPC OCC 0 9006000000004 RA i AAA L131 NORTH QUEEN STREET LANCASTER. PA. YX 232244000000000000 trad aaa iAdisdsid ATTENTION Sd ald dah is in a high state of cultivation, 001 0 10 1 1 O00. it i Fl 0 11 J. B. BUSSER Sales Agent For Ford Cars Two good second-hand Ford touring cars can be seen at the Garage. Rapho and Penn Townships Garage and Salesroom Manheim, Pa. — Old Shoes Made N ew | Don’t discard that pair of old shoes until you first see whether THE OR RE they can’t be repaired at a nominal cost. Bring them here and you'll be surprised how reasonable I can make them look like new. That isn’t the only surprise you'll get either. My charges are very OPEN EVENINGS, reasonable. H. Laskewitz MOUNT JOY, PENNA. East Main Street 101 O10 D114 HOTT 10 1 Having re-rented the yards I now occupy: 1 will soon be ready to serve you with ‘Good Clean Coal At Kight Prices Don’t get your next Winter's supply until you see me. Albert StricKler nae Sop Ras MOUNT JOY, PA. Farmers! Tobacco Growers teen We have for Sale a fine lot of to- bacco rape. Cguld be bought for half price. Don’t fail to call at The Columbia Junk & Hide Company 715 N. 5th Street COLUMBIA PENNA. Also do not forget to bring along your junk and hides. for twenty-four hours. Then sweep it up, and spread it over the floor of sept.18-3mos. £3 £2 » Auto Repair Shop & Garage 510-12 N. Cherry St, Lancaster Pa, : Two Good FORD CARS For Sale | One Touring and a Truck Also Extra Good Speed Roadster § WE REBUILD TRACTORS FOR FARM USE OUT OF YOUR OLD AUTOMOBILE AND CHARGE OL GE YOU ONLY FOR THE WHEN WE FURNISH THE MACHINE FOR THE TRACTOR THE PRICE RANGES FROM $200 TO $500. Bell phone 2227-J. Ind. Phone Y