ed nt IEEE EE REE. i little of the trial size : = " . a - i » » a * . i b » » s » » Give It a Trial 1 East Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa. 211 AS AO O10 HAVE YOU TRIED MAGIC LENE If not will you try the trial size left at yotir house today ? There is nothing to equal it FOR CLEANING CLOTHING of Grease or Tar Spots, Cleaning Colors on Men’s or Ladies’ Coats It is soon time for house cledning and if you want to elean the woodwork or brighten up the furniture tse a I left!yotli so that you will be convineed that there is nothing better, For House Cleaning We can sell any quantity you want at a very reasonable figure. Eas ness RE 0 URE Fees ee 88 Ee nN REE EE 21 Wes: 24th Sires, New York. i) Rr great pleasure in saying a word of comme endation for La 8 Reston Il continue to wear La Resista suit me perfectly and form fcundzeion for my gowns Yours sincerely S. B. Bern hart & Co. THINGS WE DO In addition to the multitude of things we sell everyday, we always have one or more Specials for Friday and Saturday. will ‘make you take notice. Y WOMAN!" SHOULD*WEAR LA RESISTA CORSETS SAYS LAURA NELSON HALL STAR OF THE GREAT MORALITY PLAY “EVERYWOMAN* — Lite are the latest invention of a French Corsetiere. Spirabone is used exclusively in the La Resista. Spirabone stays are zs flexible as the human body. Allow the bending of body in any direction at the same time affording perfect support. Styles for every Figure. FOR SALE BY 8. Bernhar blo, MOUNT JOY, PA. This week’s specials of the finest CLOCKS, ETC., to be found in any first-class jewelry store. My line cannot be exceeded, much less equalled in this community. The best way to be convinced is to call and see for yourself. REPAIR WORK OF ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY. S. H. MILLER, ...:.5 - . § MOUNT JOY, PA. 0 A | West Donegal, $2,240.83, I’m Rzady for You lines of JEWELRY, WATCHES, I AN ICEBERG 10 AEPORTE This Assertion Made By Saloon Steward. po HEARD TWO LOOKOUTS TALK “No Wonder First Officer 8hot Him- self,” Sald One—Says Money Was Paid Crew Of Lifeboat. New York.—Three warnings that an | iceberg was ahead were transmitted from the crow’s nest of the Titanic to the officer on the steamship’'s bridge 15 minutes before she struck, accord- ing to Thomas Whiteley, a first-saloon steward, who is in St. Vincent's Hos- pital with frozen and lacerated feet. Whiteley reached the Carpathia | aboard one of the boats that contained, he said, both the erow’s nest lookouts. | He heard a conversation between | them, he asserted, in which they dis- | cussed the warnings given to the Ti- tanic’'s bridge of the presence of the iceberg Said Officer Was Warned. “I heard one of them say that at 11.15 o'clock, 15 minutes before the Titanic struck, he had reported to First Officer Murdock on the bridge | that he fancied he saw an iceberg,” said Whiteley. “Twice after that the | lookout said he warned Mr. Murdock | MRS. JOHN JACOB ASTOR. that a berg was ahead. I can’t re- member their exact words, but they | were very indignant that no attention was paid to their warnings. One of them said: ‘No wonder Mr. Murdock shot himself.” “I saw the iceberg. It was very large and to me it looked black, or | rather a dark gray, instead of white.” Called It “Money Boat.” Whiteley in telling of various ex- periences of the disaster that had come to his knowledge said that on one of the first boats lowered the only passengers aboard were a man whom he was told was an American millionaire, his wife, child and two valets. The others in the boat were firemen and coal trimmers, he said, seven in number, whom the man had promised to pay well if they would man the lifeboat. They made only 13 in all. Was Thrown Into Sea. Whiteley was thrown into the sea. “I floated on my life preserver for sev- eral hours,” he said, “then I came across a big oak wardrobe with two men clinging to it. I hung on to this till daybreak and the two men dropped off. When the sun came up I saw the collapsible raft in the distance, just black with men. They were all stand- ing up. I swam to it, almost a mile it seemed to me, and they would not let me aboard. “‘Tt’s 31 lives against yours,’ they said, ‘you can’t come aboard. There's not room.’ “I pleaded in vain and then I con- | tess I prayed that somebody might die, so I could take his place. It was only human. And then some one did die and they left me aboard.” “By and by we saw seven lifeboats | lashed together and we were taken off in them.” A ——— That Essay Contest With the advent of the commen- | cement season in the country high {schools the members of the classes | to be graduated are thinking of the |essay contest inaugurated by the Lancaster Autombile Club. For the hest three commencement essays on {a good roads subject the club offers prizes of $15, $10, and $5. The sub- ject is one with an educational value and its treatment will be attended with interest and profit. It offers a charge from the hackneyed topics that have done service year after ! year and appeals by its novelty and the opportunity which it gives the writer in showing his or her skill in | treating one of the leading practical and economic question of the day. Last vear’s winner in a similar con- test aws a young lady. Fhe only con- | dition governing the contest is that the essay submitted be the one pre- pared for the commencement ex- ercises by the contestant. Full in-! formation in regards to cmpeting | for the above liberal prizes can be | obtained of Walter R. Markley, Lan- caster, Pa. ———— a — Orphan's Court Business Judge Smith in Orphans’ Court filed adjudications in the following estates: Anna Johnson, Marietta, | $614.3 Frederick Struck, Colum- ! | bia, $737.31: Henry H. Peffer, Mt. Joy Borough, $800: Philip Fisher, ! THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. SURVIVORS FAKE REPORT Say 2.340 Persons Were Aboard and 745 Saved. New York. The following state ment issued by a committee of the surviving passengers of the Titanic was given the press on the arrival of the Carpathia: “We, the undersigned surviving pas- sengers from the steamship Titanic, in order to forestall any sensational or exaggerated statements, deem it our duty to give to the press a state. ment of facts which have come to our knowledge and which we believe to be true. “On Sunday, April 14, 1912, at about 11.40 P. M, on a cold, star-lit night, in a smooth sea and with no moon, the ship struck an iceberg, which had been reported to the bridge by look- outs, but not early enough to avoid collision. Steps were taken to ascer- tain the damage and save passengers and ship. Orders were given to put on life belts and the boats were low- ered. “The ship sank at about 2.20 A. M. Monday and the usual distress signals were sent out by wireless and rockets fired at intervals from the ship. Fortunately the wireless message was received by the Cunard steamship Carpathia at about 12 o'clock mid- night and she arrived on the scene of the disaster at about 4 A. M. Mon- day. “The officers and crew of the steam- ship Carpathia had been preparing all night for the rescue and comfort of the survivors and the last mentioned were received on board with the most touching care and kindness, every at- i tention being given to all, irrespective of class. The passengers, officers and | crew gave up, gladly. their staterooms, clothing and comfcrts for our benefit, all honor to them “The English board of trade pas- sengers’ certificate on board the Ti- tanic allowed for a total of approx- | imately 3,500. The same certificate called for lifeboat accommodation for approximately 950 in the following boats: “Fourteen large lifeboats, two small- er boats and four collapsible boats. Life preservers were accessible and apparently in sufficient nu nber for all on board “The approxima number of pas- sengers carried at the time of collision was { “First-class, 330 second-class, 320: third-class, 750; total, 1,400. Officers and crew, 940 [ 1, 2.340 “Of the fore about the follow- ing were rescued by the steamship Carpathia: | “First-class, 210; second-class, 125: | third-class, 200; officers, 4; seamen, 39; stewards; 96; firemen, 71; total, 210 of the crew The total—1775 saved—was about 80 per cent. of the maximum capacity of the life-boats. “We feel it our duty to call the at- | tention of the public to what we con- sider the inadequate supply of life- saving appliances provided for on modern passenger steamships, and recommend that immediate steps be taken to compel passenger steamers ( to carry sufficient boats to accommo- date the maximum number of people carried on board. The following facts were observed and should be consider- ed in this connection: “The insufficiency of lifeboats, rafts, etc.; lack of trained seamen to man same (stokers, stewards, etc., are not | efficient boat handlers): not enough officers to carry out emergency orders on the bridge and superintend the launching and control of lifeboats; absence of searchlights. “The London Board of Trade rules allow for entirely too many people in each boat to permit the same to be properly handled. On the Titanic the boat deck was about 75 feet above water and consequently the passen- gers were required to embark before | lowering the boats, thus endangering the operation and preventing the tak- ing on of the maximum number the boats would hold. Boats at all times should be properly equipped with pro- visions, water, lamps, compasses, lights, etc. Life-saving boat drills should be more frequent and thor- oughly carried out and officers should be armed at boat drills. The statement was signed by Sam- uel Goldenberg, chairman, and a com- mittee of some 25 passengers. AS TOLD BY OTHERS. Graphic Deserintions Of Scenes Fol. lowing the Crash. Statement of Robert W. Daniel, of Philadelphia: “I had just left the music-room and digrobed and was in my bunk, when there was a terrific crash. The boat quivered and the lights went out. In the darkness I rushed on deck almost naked. There seemed to be thousands fighting and shouting in the darkness, and then they got the storage bat- teries going and this gave us a little light. Captain Smith was the biggest hero I ever saw. He stood on the bridge and shouted through a megea- phone trying to make himself heard The crew obeyed his orders as quickly as could be expected. Five minutes after the crash everybedy seemed to have gone insane. Men and women fought, bit and scratched to be in line for the lifeboats. I got a black eye and a cut chin in the fight. Then Cap- tain Smith seemed to get some order and the passengers were sent to fore and aft on the big boat.” “There was a frightful pounding noise throughout. I saw men praying, also struggling to get to the rail Prayers and cries followed. Women who had been in the music reom, | where a concert had been in progress, were still dressed in evening apparel and wore diamonds. Other women had just got to their bunks and were in night attire. All rushed with one object, to get to the boats. Captain Smith remained on the bridge trying to make himself heard. He was still | shouting when I last saw him. As the passengers got into the life boats | women were thrown in and they did not move, and an officer jumped in te command. The boats were swung from their davits and let down inte the * water, Hundreds, it seems, did not wait for the boats They aw there was no chance and they jumped over: ard," None Dreamed Of Danger. Dr. Henry W. Frauenthal, 783 Lex ington avenue, New York, also de clared all of the women on board the Titanie were thought to have been safely in the boats before the order of the men to take them came "When the ship first struck,” he sald, “none of us dreamed of the dan ger we faced. All who had been asleep after the first rush into the cabinways and to the decks returned to their cabins, to dress. “But when the word came that we were sinking and the lifeboats were ordered over the side the panic was fearful. From all sides came shrieks and groans and cries, and it seemed as if all the devils of hell had been let loose “Just now I am so thankful to be alive that my appreciation of the horror is dulled. I am only afraid that when 1 recover from the first shock it will come back to me again, and I would rather have gone down with the boat.” Another of the survivors who would have embraced death more happily than safety was Mrs. A. O. Horveson, whose husband, who was connected with the Peabody Company, went down with the Titanic. With her hus- band, Mrs. Horveson had been in Buenos Ayres on a three months’ pleasure and business trip, and, re- turning by way of England, had thought it would be great fun to help the Titanic make her maiden trip. “We were so happy,” she cried, with tears streaming down her fac». “We had thought it such a lark to come back home on the Titanic. But now there is nothing, nothing left in this world. T can’t stand it.” And, broken completely down, she hid her face in her hands and could say no more. Only Baby Left Of Family. Jane Smith, one of the English nurses employed by J. W. Allison, of Ontario, who brought Baby Smith through the Titanic disaster, came down the gangplank with the nine- months-old baby boy wrapped in her arms. He was all that was left of a family of father, mother and two chil dren. The oldest child was a girl three 3 old Miss St 1 said: “It was shortly be- fore midnight when I went into the room where the baby was sleeping to see if he was all right I had just got ten into the room when I felt a slight rasping shock The machinery sud denly stopped. I ran to Mt on’s stateroom nearby 1 an | him and Mrs Allison of us went on decl At fir we saw noth uns 1 Allison made light of e the engines were ta 1 1. We thought that every thing v 111 We went below and in a fe minutes an officer came and told us that the ship was sinking I up the baby and went on deck [ found a bedlam of con en and children and throwing them fusion. The men were grabbing wom into the life boats. They had to tear many women away from their hus- bands. I was suddenly picked up and thrown into a life boat We were im mediately lowered and two men rowed us away from the ship HEROCS MET MOB Titanic Sailors Beal Back Frenzied Men. Might Have Killed Women and Chil- dren In Struggling Mass On Steerage Deck—Sailors Brave- ly Attacked Mad Men. New York.—Humble heroes who went to their deaths aboard the Ti- tanic fighting a frenzied mob of armed brutes attempting to crowd women and children from the lifeboats were the British sailors and petty officers of the Titanic stationed on the steer- age deck, late stories of the disaster state. Up from the stokehole a blackened, frantic crew surged upon the steerage passengers when the flood rushed in about the boilers far below and car- ried alarm to the scores of men who fed them. Armed with the tools of their trade, stoking bars, shovels, ashpan hoes and levelers, the stokers and coal passers stormed the line of steadfast sailor- | men guarding the boats then coming down the sides from the upper decks and loading into them as they were | halted at the steerage deck the wom- en and children there. Manhood met brutehood undaunted, however, and honest fists faced fron | bars, winning at last the battle for | BEAUTIFUL CHRISTMAS CARDS to | acquired and desired customers. | | See us about the printing of them death with honor. Tale Of Horror Told. No tale of the final hour of the great steamship exceeds in horror that pieced together by Dr. Lengyl Arpad, a Hungarian, and steerage physician of the Carpathia, from the stories he gleaned as he bent over the bruised, the scalded and the frostbitten men and women who had been rescued from the steerage of the Titanic His account cleared up many state- ments of cabin passengers which have seemed contradictory, told where the shots that were fired came from and explained the shrieking which many had attributed to the doomed and drowning. Beyond Control At First. “Piling up to their deck, shouting and crying, dragging their bundles, the steerage men and women were at first beyond control. Sailors went among them telling them the ship had struck the ice, but was not in danger, and they grew calmer. Just as the boats | began to come down fron the upper | deck the steamship listed heavily to starboard, and the steerage passengers were piled up against the rail. This renewed their terror and they fought to extricate themselves. “Despair took possession of them, | because the first and second boats lowered past them were not stopped | at that deck and neither was half | filled. They believed they were being | deserted. “When the first boat was stopped at the steerage deck everyone surged for- | “pecial Prices to Parties, Festivals, | [ iarietta Street Frpreofeslecorforiosfociooeojot | Wednesday, April 24, 1912. ward to get into it, the men forcing | themselves to the front and none of | them, so far as they told me, thinking | of anything but his own safety and | his precious bundles One woman rescued could talk of nothing but the ‘beautiful goose liver and cheese’ they bad torn from her “The first boat stopped was filled with men before the sailors could in- terfere. They had a battle to drag | out the men and let the women take | their places Stokers Start Panic. “This great pani: seems to have be- gun when the stokers rushed up from below and tried to beat a path through the steerage men and women and through the sailors and officers to get into the boats. They had their iron | bars and shovels and they struck down all who stood in their way. “First to come up from the depths of the ship was an engine oiler. From | what he is reported to have said I think perhaps the steam fittings were | broken and many were scalded to death when the Titanic listed. | “Right at his heels came the stok- ers. The officers had pistols, but they could not use them at first, for fear of killing the women and children. The sallors fought with their fists, and many of them took the stoke bars and shovels from the stokers and used them to beat back the others, Then it seems, from what the survivors told me, the officers thought of firing in the air. “Many of the coalpassers and stok- | ers who had been driven back from | the boats went to the rail and when- ever a boat was filled and lowered sev- eral of them jumped overboard and swam toward it, trying to climb | aboard. Several of the patients I had said that men who swam to the sides of their boats were pulled in or climbed in.” A MONUMENT TO BUTT. John Hays Hammond Starts Project To Erect a Memorial. Washington.—A national memorial monument, to cost at least half a mil lion dollars, and for which Congress will be asked to appropriate $200,000, will be erected to the memory of Major Archie Butt, aid to President Taft and hero of the Titanic disaster, according to plans started here. John Hays Hammond, who was inti nted with Major Butt, is mately qu me of the f originators of the move- ment, which has the heartfelt co- operation of tl P1 lent It inderstood that in addition to pl n by Con » the ill be giver n tunity to contribute to the memory of en yppor PpOl the military hero, and belief ig ex- pressed that $300,000 additional can be raised. oar der Read the Mt Jov Bulletin. et Me on the Bridge and We'll Have a Plate of the Best Iee Cream in Town RT ZELLER’ S All Flavors at All Times. TO RRs Suppers, Etc Mrs. GC. H. Zeller MOUNT JOY. OKE UP] YOU have to keep puffing a cigar to get | the good of it. Same with a business. An effective way to Puff Your Business just now is to SEND | i i HARRY WILLIAMS } BARBER shaving Massaging Hair Cutting Razors Honed Shampooing Toilet Waters & singeing Shaving Soaps Tinadhoeit Agency For Elkhorn Laundry Opp. First National Rank MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA “forfocfeofecforjoefocfocecferiocfocionfococtocfocieoterior Jusfarfosfe soup 0 Terms ‘ioderate. Bell Telephone CHARLES S. FRANK AUCTIONEER Fipdeekocdooforfootorteforfodpofodeaootociororferorforte MOUNT JOY, PA. Prompt Attention given to Sales of | Real Estate and Personal Property. ! | Reference: Jonas I. Minnich. MAKES EATING A PLEASURE S130) ) AIDS DIGEST ION (59 2 wu " m wn = ow ve ww ® " = n |} [| =m = ” = B® clean, modern, bakery at mw = ® = = = = Have you seen the 1912 Magic Electric Cleaner as yet? If vou have not, it would be advisable to see it work, before you buy any other make of electric cleaner. Have you heard of an elec tric cleaner which sells at the same price or begins to do the amount of work of the M Aqlc, which 1s guaranteed tor five (5) years? Let me demonstrate the machine to you and it will show you things that you never before would have believed. Why not make house cleaning a pleasure instead of DRUDGERY? ‘The Woman Who Uses One Is The Best Advertiser Send for catalogue C. 0. BRANDT Agent for the 'Bissel and Magic Electric Cleaners bunzen aUSer's ; TIP-TOP : BREAD: You are invited to visit our Prince and Clay Streets, Lan- aster. M. C. BILLETT, Agt. Delivery—Monday, Wednesday and Saturday 1 OO - BLANKETS WE SAVE YOU TWO PRO- FITS ON WOOL HORSE BLANKETS BUYING DIRECT FROM THE MAKERS, IS THE WHY? OF IT. PRICED ANYWHERE FROM $1.00 TO $10.50. FINES™ STOCK LAP ROBES IN THE COUNTY, FROM $2.50 TO $25.00.. EV- ERYTHING FOR THE HORSE AT BOTTOM PRICES. FULL STOCK OF VETERINARY MEDICINES, MAKER OF ALL KINDS OF HARNESS Fdward Kreckel LANCASTER, PA T00-R-TST Trunks at Half Price. Great Bar gains. On The Square = yi Ri You want the oil that gi a full, white flame—never flickers Zz —no soot—no odor. % c : Triple refined from Pennsylvania Crude Oil, Family Favorite Lamp Oil Costs little more than inferior grades. 4 Sob ENE SERRE RRR ER Your dealer has it in original barrels direct from refineries. WAVERLY OIL WORKS C0. Independent Refiners PITTSBURG, PA. Also makers of Waverly Special Auto Oil and Waverly Gasolines. FREE 2. iF abouwt on. Read The