PAGE SIX THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JCY, LANCASTER CO., PA. By Charles Sughroe Western Newspaper Union WEDNESDAY, OCT. 27th, 1926 " The MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL Foolish Nooz" WORLDS SMALLEST PICTURE POIPER ALONZO SNOXLLE, WHO ALWAYS TRIES TO BE THOUGHTFUL, WENT HOME TOTHER NIGHT WITH A BIG BUMEH OF ROSES IN HONOR OF KIS WEDDING ANNIVERSARY, OMY T® LEARK FROM HIS WIFE TUAT “THE EVENT WU SYILL THREE WEEKS AWAY MT, PLEASANT, iA HERBERT WHIFFRLE, AUNOVYED BECUZ MIS WIFE USES TH REAR VIEW MIRROR YO POWDER HER NOSE AND GETS IT OUT OF POSITION, UP N' THROWS rr QUY OF CAR &, (7 i | Simm ho AY MISS IMA SAPP 1S MAKIN QUITE A SUCCESS OF NURSING. "NO WONDER" SNAPS OLE CAP CRABB, "WHEN “TW' PATIENT KNOWS ONY CHANCE OF GETTIN RID OF IMA S$ 0 GY WELL.” JO PAVIESS COUNTY, WAS SO HECTOR HILF, TWE AAOST CAUTIOUS MAN IM WAYS WHILE CROSSING “THE RAWROAD “THAT HE RAN HEAD-ON INTO ANOTHER CAR WHICH WAS COMING ACROSS TH' CROSSING BUSY LOOKIN' BO™ JIM WHOOPS TH! DRUGGIST, SEZ THAT BETWEEN MIXING SODAS, MARKIN' GOLF BAUS, SETTING IN WINDOW GLASS AND PUTTING FILM IN CAMERAS, HE CANT SEE WE EVER STUDIED PHARMACY THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN LANCASTER ingert & Haas at Store & Gloves d styles that y trouble Hats, So many kinds you will not hav in being suited. JNO. A. HAAS, 144 N. Queen Lancaster, 3 > & HAR £ V Wie = a Y Our Cows on a Ful edule This is the time to put your dairy condition to produce all the milk they can next fa gd winter, when prices are highest. Every pound of Haro fed now will be paid back at a premium with milk ifjjater months. Put your cows today, on a full Larro ratfg, and they’ll start the heavy milking season in cond tion to work on full schedule. Now— IR DANIEL WOLGEMUTH FLORIN, PENNA. 11 EO Are Ready Bushel and Up A fanny > > = < B= ee = & Rn Sweet Cider 30 gals. up. : Fairview Orchards FLORIN, PA. he Haircut er 10 Days formula for good looks 2 j= pe) ¥ oo fond foe RRR RRR ol | E. B. MILLER J.-D. M SLATERS PUT ON AILLER ed IN ROOFS PAINTED IH REPAIRED MILL Phone 38R2 Furniture ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FKURNI- TURE lL CARPETS? QUA SERVICE MAKE FOR SATISFACTION. WE AS OF ALL THREE WE ARE DEPEND WESTENBERGER, MALEY © RRS 125.131 E. King St., 6 O'Clock Closing Saturdays Lancaster, 0 » 0 5 ors Health Clb WEEKLY LETTER “TTER WRITTEN EX. PRESSLY FOR THE BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H. REEDER SANITARY SURVEYS: From time to time the Home Health Club has been called upon to make sani- tary surveys for farm buildings, factories and even villages. Not long ago one of these requests came from a rural home where there had been a great deal of sickness without apparent cause and it is a most instructive study to seek out the underlying cause and a very gratifying thing to be able} to remove that cause. The climate | in that locality is typical of the central states and the that rich, black loam, heart of a practical stock and grain farmer, As usual, where this black soil is found, the land is almost heavy rains come water so slowly that moist for long periods. necessary to successful farming and all of the farm had been suc- cessfully tilled, except acres immediately surrounding the house and barns. In the barn yard I found the Milch cows and other cattle wad- ding in a slimy mud that was part- lv made up of rotting straw with horse, hog and cattle manure mixed in. The land seemed to be so rich that the manure had not soil is level. When the in the spring the the ground is kept cattle and accumulation of should be and the wallowed in the everal years. barnyard hogs was the well. Not very deep, as it was dug when they first settled there and an abundanc of splendid, ele: oft, iter ha been found withou pen of digging ver; I did not dri f it. I ha g od nose and it wouid have | | | { { | | { | foet leep and had never been | clezned. The well was 36 feet deep {and was a very natural drainage { for the vault as well as for the { barnyard all water from the well {to be boiled before using and even then the well must | I ordered | | | : 5 quick as a new | | | | one could be driven and properly safeguarded. | The new well for the be 100 feet away from the and 50 feet from the barnyard An asceptic tank or receptacle [ well | house, driven on opposite from the barn and the pump installed in the | The women as they had al- comp lled to carry 180 feet fT 1 Pl ins, than three six cents in postage. Be CALF WITH TWO HEADS LIVES HALF AN HOUR | i ~ A Guernsey calf with two heads | iwas born Thursday at the | Arthar Meyers, of Myerstown. The calf lived thirty-five minutes. heads were perfectly formed and protruded from the neck like a slingshot fork. half dozen times, ing at once and the noise ing the sounding of two horns. ers declared he will have the body mounted. {Ree AUTOISTS KILL DEER ON STATE HIGHWAYS | calf’s As Milton Kester was driving along the highway near Beach Hav- en, he ran into a herd of four deer. two buck and two doe, that ran out in front of his machine. The deer came out so suddenly, that one large buck was killed, the machine swerving off the road and into a pole and turning over. Qe A regular service of flying phy. sicians and dentists is to cover thousands of square miles of in- AAR kh dk RR he kk dk Rd hk kk ek kk dk dk kk kk kk kk A | accessible country in Australia, which delights the | surface of the | remains in pools or runs off | Tilling is | about ten | stock | been hauled to the fields where it | At one side of the | be filled up just stock only to! old one | fence. Chloride of lime in liberal | quantities was thrown into the privy vault and it was then filled | | up. was built for the privy and another | that side of the kitchen. | stables of | Both | The calf bellowed a | both mouths open- | resembl- | Mey- | A BLACK BABY WAITS IN VAIN By J. ROY MARTIN Florin, Pa. Ah! There's a sad, sad heart some- where tonight, And no doubt you wonder why So, I'm going to tell you about it, But I hope you will not cry. ‘Tis a story from real life, dear reader, A tragedy, by the way, (And perhaps there's a little black { kitten { Which now does not frisk and i play. This faithful cat, and her little black kit, Lived so happy together. But, you can’t figure “sure” modern days, Especially this kind of weather. In order to bring home a mouse each night Coins with fate she was tossing, | {And she met her doom on a foggy night, Upon a railroad crossing. |As I gazed on that prostrate, life- less form, My heart was pierced by a thorn |For, I thought of | kitten Awaiting for her next morn. | How could this sad news be broken | to her, “Mother faithwul to So she could know why see more Mother—her the end”? she’d never i very best friend. No more will this mother each morn, To that cottage by But, Baby still waits for her Not knowing wher Not stay. return the way, just the same 'e Mamma can Perhaps it is well that she know Of t ody such as this, |And forget ill about that dear mother, And live on in perfect bliss And nightly now as I hear this kitten, With its plaintive mournful ery, I wonder wonder so very much, h eature must die. Maybe its the lot of all living thing ’S Some real sadness for to know, (And some hearts are ac hing with grief tonight, There by the fireside’s glow. No doubt a suggestion is due, richt here, Regardless of how it Who knows but that they meet again, In those Grounds”, yunds, may both “Happy Hunting This may not folks, They may not care to feel sad, Especially in this fast age of ours, With most of us “pleasure mad’. appeal to present day were delighted with this | But, perhaps Grandma, While busy Mav feel with her ‘nittin’, sympathy and real passion— For—this little com Slack Kitten. Popular Russian Dish Elaborate and Tasty Of Russia’s many national dishes, Solyanka is perhaps the most popular. This is a much more prep- Hun- 1 ash. It is rich and pi- nt without being elaborate 1» than Vienna snitzel or unduly heavy or most Slav dishes. 1 housewife of cooked beef, veal, either singly or in 2 pounds of boiled cab age, 1% teaspoonful flour, 1 onion, 2 pickles, 10 olives, 10 pickled mush- rooms, a few truffles and 4 pound butter. The onion and cabbage are chopped fine and fried in butter until soft. The meat is cut into thin slices. Then the cook butters a deep pudding dish, making it inch deep with alternate layers of meat and cooked cabbage. The top layer should be of, cabbage; and on this is placed slices of pickled mushrooms, olives, truffles and pickles. White sauce or brown beef sauce is then poured over all and the dish is baked in an oven for one hour and served hot in the same pudding dish, with a sprinkling of chopped parsely on top. asy, as are To make it the Russiar akes 2 pounds ham or chicken, combination, } ———— Em Choose Right Storage Squashes, pumpkins, and | potatoes need a dry location, but tween 50 and 60 degrees. in the furnace cellar are good plac- es to store these vegetables. rrr tl Qn Foods ordinarily pure and whole- some such as cheese and sugar will, if confined in an air-tight space, generate gas which becomes dang- erous to humans. these | Crepe Paper, a ‘oll = 81525¢ Masks and Half M 5-10-15c¢ that little black | cannot | 80055925533 some aged and gray sweet | falso need to have a temperature be- | Shelves | Kolor Fast Carpet, 36 in. wide, per % 36 in Rag Carpet, yard 25 and 35¢ pieces Notice to the early Christmas Shippers, who Hy Gift each week from now until Christmas from a Just received a large assortment of German Fa Green and Amber Glass Ware, consisting of Sandwi Bon Dishes, Fruit Dishes, Etc., each 75¢ 83 East Main Street OE iE = E 5 = |] = = = DRUG ST! ORE = TAN B® = | EB 2 a no " 2 ® B n 8 m = u | = = for the fam- a box A wonderful boX ily. Try it. You’ every week end. J. S. AUHN EXPERIENCED _TIONEER e on Saturday after- Phone 76R2 | trial will prove the truth of our statement. Best Healing COAL heat, whether can buy. A Pound for pound, Baker's Coal will give you moi ned in furnace, stove or grate, than any other coal yo OR SALE 500 Léshorn Pullets Hatched in May d beginning of June. and DAIRY FEED of Mt. We have the TIOGA FEEDS, PO FOR SALE. Will deliver Joy and it anywhere the vicinity orin, Phares Wolgemut MOUNT JOY, PA. ! Fea i i 2 2 3
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