livery, such pnsent com- nodify ances, trated 7 0 w = = = = ) : J \ PAGE FIVE New Fall Styles Just Arrived From Lhooms Ings, irs; nples All per Another freely the pel Case Elegant Small per Flemish pel Belmar ladies’ f von Dark Outing dresses same styles as vd. Outings, while they last, per vd Ge choice patterns, per yd Se patterns These goods look like broad “oe ‘ . . . 10« Black, Black gnd White and Light SC Srersucker Ginghams Regular 125¢ 10¢ 1se or street dress, looks like wool 10¢ English suit 15¢ proof Poplin, dark colors per vd. 25¢ part wool Popla Cloth, per Cras ne dee ee a a 2050 patterns for October now in stock. to lay eggs, feed Rust's Egg Producer S. B. Bernhart & Co. East Main Street, Mount Joy EVERY POCKETBOOK WILL WELCOME THE NEWS that our big Reduction Sale is now on. For now, with our prices cut to a fraction of the former size, each dollar will GO FURTHER—bring you much more REAL SHOE VALUE. And of this be assured— every shoe we offer, regardless of the extremely low price, is genuine- ly good. Nome but serviceable, honestly made as well as stylish shoes are sold by us. J. G. KEENER West Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa. ° 11 1 OO 8 = IF" 11 left at yotir house today It is soon time for house cleaning and if you want to 10 HAVE YOU TRIED MAGIC KLEENER If not will youtry thetrial size There is nothing to equal it FOR CLEANING CLOTHING of Grease or Tar Spots, Cleaning Colors on Men's or Ladies’ Coats clean the woodwork or “prighten up the furniture Use a little of the trial size I left yold so that you will be convinced that there nothing better, For House Cleaning We can sell any quantity you want at a very reasonable figure. ve It a Trial B wiE 1 a 011101 1000 0 0 18 ne Boe. REE | through the residential park.—Los Ane | of Malaga wine, 2, THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. | IS DEMAND FOR ORANGEWOOD Trees Sacrificed for Building Sites In San Gabriel Valley in California. The sale of orangewood is a new and profitable industry, which is being developed by the owners of Michlile linda tract in the San Gabriel valley, The wood ig being cleared from builds ing sites in the subdivisions and it is being sold for $22 a cord. It is sald to be used in the manufacture of manicure implements The orangewood harvest is somes thing new in real estate tracts [78 ually wherever an orange tree grows it 1s something to be cherished and protected, but at Michillinda there are whole groves and some of them must be sacrificed to allow space for builde ing Through a remarkable orchard syss tem established by the former owners of the Michillinda site many of the choicest building lots now afford a gelection of orange, lemon and tans gerines. Thus the builder may estab lish his home in a grove of semls tropical trees, where he may select hig breakfast grapefruit or orange as WB hangs on the trees outside his dining room window, Already the orangewood which has been sold from this suburb has nets ted more than $2,000 and this from trees cut for the drives and streets geles Express, REAL FOUNTAIN oF PUNCH Provided by a British Officer in 1694 for the Entertainment of Six Thousand Guests, Some of the papers have recently devoted attention to the origin of punch, that famous seventeenth cen tury drink which has long lost (ts popularity in this country, though 18 still survives to some extent in Eue rope Owing to its with rum one might easily have ima. gined tkat punch originated in the West Indies. In fact, however, {it actually came from the East Indies and the name is said to be derived from the Sanskrit “panscha,” five, on account of its five ingredients—arrak (afterward rum), tea, sugar, lemon | and hot water. The most magnificent bowl of punch | the world has ever seen was probably | that provided by the Right Hon. Ed- ward Russel, who, when commanding | the British forces in the Mediterran. | ean in 1694, entertained 6,000 guests | at Alicante, where a large marble | fountain was filled with the liquor, | the ingredients being: [ h Four hogsheads of brandy, a pipe | 500 lemons, 20 gal intimate connection lons of lime juice, 8 hogsheads of was ter, 5 pounds of grated nutmegs in | welght, 300 toasted biscuits and 13 | hundredweight of fine white sugar. The depth of 9,780 meters to which the founding line of a German sure vey ship is said to have sunk in the | Pacific ocean near the Philippine Islands is some 1,000 meters deeper | Deeper Than Highest Mountain. lo | | than the previous deepest sounding. How They Got It Harrisburg, Sept, 8, 1912 Twenty-eight residents of Chester Hollow County residing in Cedal Paoli, Duffryn Mawr and Malver stricken with typhoid lever I1roi drinking milk served them in bottle filled along the route, I'hat is the story of the local epl demic of typhoid fever along the Main Line just outside of Phila felphia that the State Departmen ol Health History of which has been fighting, the furnishes a mosi striking picture of the awful pen alty of receiving milk bottles from infected homes and filling them wit! out having them thoroughly disii fected An elderly widow living near Ce dar HoNow, fever early in July She was the hecame ill with typhoid first bottle customer along the rout of Paul Mace, a milk man living near Williams Corner on the water Creek This shed of Pickering woman's domestic water supply wa dipped from a spring, the over-flow of which was used by some Hungar ian and Italian families in Bid deson’s row in Cedar Hollow The foreign families also bought loose milk from Paul Mace, Cedar Hollow being the second stop along the route driven by him each day. Mace admitted having filled man hottles along his milk route The Department's representative found hin with but seven quart bottles In the milk house when ready to serve twenty quart route the day the sale of milk was | prohibited Mace's milk route ex tended through three townships and | three towns, a total of some forty citizens patronizing him Today 28 of his customers are sorely afflicted with typhoid fever and 15 others have probably contracted it Paul Mace served what his cus tomers believed to be a good milk, and vet, strange to say, a number of them knew that he filled milk | bottles along his route, and the: mtinued bottles, a | him, knowing that the little while before, were the neighbor's door step collecting | { dirt from the roads, probably having heen poluted by dogs and cats, dirty milk tickets of money, and that they had been carried with dirty fingers inside. just hefore being filled and handed to them for family use. The physicians were slow in re porting their cases It was not un | til a number in a limited area ex ited hoth the Medical profession and the lay public that the State officials were called to take charge ( onthirzk of the fever State Health Commissionel Mh Dixon, immediately de Medical Joseph Scatter Samuel G tailed County Inspector ol Chogter County Dr rood. the Chief Medical Inspector 0, | cnstomers along the purchasing milk from | ! | standing on | tleloleoleosoborieefofoosfsofosforfefedofofeofososfsfoe fot forfededofodeooossfofoedefedoiscdeososfofodeoudsouoooieed dodosrfofoofodosdrobdodeododosesetode erodes dof de bode eds deede dep de bd Eb bb Eb EE SESE EE SE oe IIT II ETAT RITA FO STII MAYEN 12 | Of the total water surface of the | the Department from Harrisbure | globe, 145,000,000 square miles, about | and pre ntati 0 he Engi one-third stands more than three | coring Di o1 1¢ istan miles above the bottom of the sea. | and. te rr dow ver no bl but until now no part of the great | Pontln: With fe oceans has been discovered deep |" In of Ini enough to submerge Mount Everest, | hours aft the arrival of thls carp But if there is no mistake about this [it was pret lefinitel determ depth of 9,780 meters (32,088 feet) | that 11 the nts h 1 | the world’s highest mountain could | fover and ti havin be sunk there until its highest peak | disease were Tr was 3,000 feet below the water's level, | Panl Mace The deepest soundings have all been gee : | made in the Pacific; 23,250 feet is the | tion was made Af record of the Atlantic, in proximity | tl } the to the West Indian Island of St. |conditior A f from u Thomas; while the oh sea only | tor jot eno evidence | averages 300 feet, or about one-tenth | ~~. ant for the epide the maximum depth of a icy waters - Ueriv vans rite B00} | of the Arctic ocean, i I id ; , CP Su I S 1 mad ind Sensitiveness of Blow-Fly. hi dl of It is well known, says Knowledge, vs { ni ; that the blow-fly (Calliphora vomit | n 4 N er oria) has an extrordinarily keen sen | ©! d I pitiveness to the odor of flesh, detect- | t1 de ’ | ing it from a distance. Xaxier Raspail | fir ect ) 1 | has made some observations on the |, remises « wid rapidity with which the flies find a | . 4 (, I : bird has just died and he main ' | that they do not alight a s¢ 1 be [ ; X : fore that. .An aj ctic pigeon that re looked dead, bt t n- | A visited. A mi ¢ 1g | 1 beside two othe i en | of ) ( killed, was left he I+ flies were on the dead birds just be- | Fore} 1x 1 side it. The instinct not to lay eggs | °° in anything not quite dead seems to pra : mn owl | be strongly developed But Raspail |i Per nam fillir roes on to draw the hazardous conclu- | milk bottle alon the route sion that in the article of death an | handing them in at the next house animal gives off a volatile something | 7 { with small capital, oy | of infinite subtlety, which serves as . Zoid a clue to the fly. ed b BOLE Ban i phe hae customers, and practiced a sort of = economy that means sicknes ind She Knew. death The city girlie, on her first vacation Poor Mace is paying the penalty in the country, was sitting at the side : : ; . of his own dangerous custom He | | looking at the first full moon she had | yet how horribly sweetly sad is the | thing to sit on!” of the first beau she had ever had, ever seen in a perfectly clear sky. “Billy,” she squealed ecstatically, “how perfectly delightfully dear, and music of those toadstools, out there in the woods!” “Why, darling,” breathed William, who had been in the country before, once—*“you can't mean ‘toadstools.’ The noise you hear is being made by crickets.” “Of course,” answered the city girl —*“you know what I mean. I get the names mixed up. I knew it was some- Hane seni = if isereneestrsraiiin Who Wants a Job? Last week we 1 printed lot of posters for contractor George Sou- ders, who wants fifty men to work on the state highway at Gap. Wages, 18¢ an hour and a good American cemmissary. ort a Woody New York by a gang of feminine Wilson was mobbed in admirers. [It must be his fatal beauty. now lies in the West Chester Hospi tal sick with who lived with him is very ill in the sagie hospital with this disease, and his hired man lies on a cot nearby also suffering with typhoid fever. Ee ——— Look Out for This Fake! The people of Lancaster county are warned rainst a young man who is soliciting alms and has been found to be a fake He has been: cirenlating through the rural sec- tions, principally visiting the Men- nonites and Dunkards He ‘is a tall well-built yveung man, very much sunburned, wears fairly good clothes, a brown shirt and brown slouch hat He tells a pitiful story of the death of hig mother in a dis- tant city, of his long and wearisome travels a foot, and then asks for money to assist him in purchasing a railroad tick gathered in quite a lot ef cash ——— A isin Reaa t Bulletin. Mt. Joy et It is said he has typhoid fever, his aunt! TTT III TT I TIT PIETY IY ETT PTY YOY TTY PIO PRY Wednesday, Sept J es i EAA opYRIGHT BY, crmann cel A Prominent Feature in Our Autumn Opening Exposition September id, 19 and 20 i WILL BE THE FASHION DISPLAY OF NEW STYLES IN GARMENTS, GOWNS AND MILLI NERY ON Living Models FROM SEVEN-THIRTY TO TEN O'CLOCK, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, SEPT. 19. \T OUR EVENING RECEPTION, SEPT. 18 AND AGAIN FROM TWO TO FIVEO'CLOCK, A CONCERT WILL BE GIVEN WEDNESDAY EVENING AND THERE WILL BE PIANO STORE BOTH EVENING AND AFTERNOON, MUSICAL AT" 'RACTIONS IN THE WE BID YOU WELCOME—COME! FRY ARS LW OC TT nN 0) 1 0€ | pr : 2% i 7 ) oe Ci wp.N fo ojorjoeeoforforfosfosi dhsfocfocfocferiorieieciesfosfocfeforfeciesooforioctsofsofeeforfectectoofecfocferfosfesfororferocfe cfeofoce Advertise In The Bulletin . —————————————— MIM UUUUAUU How Abo ut CALENDAZL GA . el th ied oedr IN Ming t ave I~ “7 + oo trv ~1 ‘ the tinest assortment | Alendars ever shown in town, We have anything from the cheapest lo the novelties best, Among them are from some of the foremost manufac- : turers in this and foreign countries. If interested drop us a card and we [RASA wW will call with samples. Our prices are way below others. THE BULLETIN : East Main Street, Mount Joy ALOACEAE AbAAbAdd0bbbbbbbbbabblbiuiiotillbbbbdbbbbdbbbbbbbbbbbbbbdbbbbbbbbhbbbbbblb dba bbinbd bb bbhhbddht bball es \ TRB ’ ), N