The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, November 11, 1914, Image 7

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ne Price to All
BUICK
Sold Strictly On It’s Merifs/
CC ROCOOO0C HE
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self, ever mind a any dealer pramises you, you owe it to your-
7 to find out wht the Factory Guarantee is on the automo ile
4° Propose buying’ and you should insist on this guarantee being
ads a part of contract you sig when purchasing an automo-
Pile. {
Some automphile manufacturers give no guarantee at all. That
Is one of the refisons why some dealers must offer you special in-
ducements and (gigcounts to sell thei cars.
Inyestigate The BUICK Guarantee
Lan aster AutomobileCo,
830203 WEST KING STREET.
0000
>. YRO000000O0O0
ROOO000
DOOOOON
DOOOOOOOT
LANCASTER, PENNA.
DOLOOOOCO00O0
/
€/ largest and only strictly firs class fireproof garage and
ghop in Lancaster City or Coumty.
|
/
DOOOC
merc
Are You Undecided
where to buy your bill of Lunmber
at the prices we are quoting for
HIGH GRADE LUMBER
well
as ev
for interior or exterio
the
the
1 building,
work, from
; wits: Pi
foundation to Shingles on you
roof.
Coal, Lumber, Grain
FEED, HAY, STRAW, SLATE, SALT, CEMENT AND FERTILIZER
np
RY
4 large stock of Feed constantly on hand. Highest cash
grain
Estimates of Lumber and Mill Work a Speciality
_ FLORIN, PENNA,
THE
EVICE THAT FOILS FORCGER
Authenticity of Paintings Now Car Be
Fixed by New Methods of
Photography.
Important indeed is the news that
one Dr. Laurie, a London professor of
chemistry, has discovered a method
of photographing pictures that will
enable him—and other people—to de-
clde with the certainty hitherto lack-
ing whether they are or are not the
works of the men to whom they have |
been ascribed, the New York Times |
states.
Every true art lover knows the
grinding apprehension he is constant-
ly in lest by some sad chance he
| imagine merit in a picture that only
pretends to have been painted by a
great artist. Hardly one critic of any | [
| eminence or authority has failed to
| make this cruelly humiliating mistake |
| at least once, and one of them is
| tie masterpiece, Dr. Laurie declares |

erything that is included
r
Timber { n your
r!



Jo the only Kad 1 sello-Perviiure thet Js Vaalbure
oekers Mirrors
Picture Frames Ladies’ Desks
& Other Tables, Davenpor
a Closets, Kitchen Cabinets
/
In fact anything in the Furniture Line
ndertaking and Embalming
S1Q

quite enough to embitter a lifetime. |
Given a single unquestionable authen- |
that he can decide infallibly that an- |
other is or is not by the same hand.
This will raise are criticism to a
new and high level—that of the re-
celving teller in a bank in judging
money—and enable us all to know,
not guess, what pictures to admire
and what to scorn.
WOULD BOYCOTT ALL EGGS |
New York Housewives Are Si
Over the Way Prices Have Been
Advanced.
New York grocers expect to be get |
| ting $1 a dozen for selected white eggs
| before the end of the month. The ordi-
| nary “fresh” variety again defied Mrs.
Julian Heath and the Housewives’
league recently by going up another
cent a dozen in the wholesale market.
| Storage eggs advanced half a cent.
.
refrige
| They r
| A special
| such a boycott.—New
is in the
| tria.
price paid for |
|
| neighborhoods”
If so, all you have to do is to look | for
in the “best residential
are charging 80 cents
“fresh” eggs.
There is no indication of cheaper
fresh eggs at present, but holders of
rated eggs in Chicago have been
pressing sales.
Washington market has the
pressure. Eggs labeled ‘“fres ad-
vanced from 45 to 48 cents a dozen.
r are about a week o nd. A
t . ds aler 3
hour e
Retailers
felt
| Washing
didn’t believe an
being received.
The Housewives’ league has been
asked to advise all its members to
stop buying until prices tumble.
recommended
York Sun.
24-
eg
committee
Largest Ice Cave.
The largest ice cave in the world
Dachstein mountains of Aus-
It is one of a group of grottoes
discovered not very long ago and not
yet thoroughly explored. The ice
| cave, because of its unique character,
has,
| tention than the others.
given more at-
This latter
however, been
{ is 6,500 feet long and there are some
and otherwise remarkable
It is a rare occasion,
ice is not making in
| enormous
| ice formations.
indeed, when
= | this cave and a cessation takes place
t|
C. BRUNNER
MOUNT JOY. PENNA
YOU WILL GET TEN CELEBRATED
FH. Baker's
Coal and
LUMBER YARDS
Mount Joy, Penna.
Sale agen
Siding, h, Door, Blind 8, Mouldings, Laths, Etc. Agent
tland Cement, Roofing Slate and Sheet Iron.
cheerfully ma deon BUILDING MATERIAL anda
CONCRETING WORK. Both phones.
Estima
Roofing No. 1 Cedar Shingles always on hand. Also
11
hAIINIIIVLOLLLLLLLL000000000000CO0I0000
LL HATS
THE NATTY SHAPES FOR YOUNG MEN,
STAPLE STYLES FOR THE MORE CONSERVATIVE
MEN ARE HER
LLLOOOOOOOO0OOOOOO0OO0OOOOOOOOOOO
Hall Racks
AIO
| only when a prolonged spell of warm
rain penetrates into these depths,
| when the ice shows a slight tendency
| to melt. The cave consists of ona
| great hall with icy walls and ice dome
covered with grotesque forms. One
I of these halls, for instance, known as
Parsival Dome, is 396 feet in length,’
| 231 feet in width and 116 feet in
height, which is notabie for the re-
markable formations, but the largest
hall is known as King Arthur’s Dome,
which is 660 feet long, 330 feet wide
and 100 feet high. There is an un-
| derground river of ice passing through
| the cave and at its foot is a lake.
| Some rocks found in the river bear
| indications of having been brought
| down to these depths from the Cent.
| ral Alps.
Raising Sheep Without Water.
Grazing sheep on a range entirely
destitute of water is a recent innova-
| tion, due to the increasing demand for
| forage and the efforts of the forest
officers to find a place on the forest
ranges for all the stock that can safely
be admitted. The area on the Nebo
national forest, in Utah, which has
now proved usable by sheep is high
and rocky, a portion of it being above
timber line, and it has neither springs
nor streams of sufficient size or acces-
sibility to be used for stock watering
purposes. The grazing season lasts
from June 15 to October 31, and during
this period of four and a half months
the animals do not get a drink.—The
Argonaut.
Home-Made Silver Polish.
Some of the bought silver polishes
are very destructive. A harmless and
effective home-made preparation con-
sists of half a pound of whiting sifted
into a bowl, to which are added two
ounces of spirits of turpentine, one
ounce of spirits of wine, half an ounce
of spirits of camphor, with one table-
spoonful of household ammonia. Mix
the ingredients thoroughly and bottle.
In polishing apply liberally to the sil-
ver with a soft cloth or brush and
then allow it to dry, after which rub
off with a soft cloth and polish with
chamois.
Coals to Newcastle.
"Even though crude oil and gasoline
are being largely substituted for coal
as a source of power in Seward Penin-
sula, Alaska, 14,405 tons of coal were
imported in 1912, In spite of Alasl
great coal resources, not over 2
were mined in the entire ter
1912. Alaska is sadly
statute allowing her
coal, under adequate
Jnited States (Ceeological Bulletin,
her, own
From tha
to mine
terms.—
- —— a —
A New Cattle Remedy
Nearly every one who is directly
or indirectly interested in cattle is
disucssiag the mouth and foot di-
sease ad how to fighg it. Atten-
tion is' called to a new jnfectant
that igg dust comj into Wo It is
4 csenta-
noe A 0
and
| only to the executive officers of a ship,
{ much by the ordinary thief as by se-
ples against theft in such cases.
| martial and probable expulsion from
| the service. To the honor of our ser
| All
GUARD SECRET CODE R0OY%!
Signals to Be Used py Navy in Tin
of War One of the Most Close
of Secrets.
Few things are so jealously guarded
as the secret code baok of the United
States navy. It is & book of signals—
not the ordinary “wig-wag” signals i
used in the daily direction of the fleet |
by a commanding officer—but a code |
of signals to be used solely in time of
war and in the presence of an enemy.
These secret code books are issued
who are enjoined to protect them
against theft by every possible means.
These books are threatened not so
cret emissaries of other governments
who desire to obtain knowledge of
what our battleships would do in time
of action. Governments have no scru-
The loss of ons of these secret code
books by an officer, unless explained
to the entire satisfaction of the secre-
tary of the navy, would mean court.
vice, no officer has ever yet been
brought up charged with loss.
The books are bound in heavy metal
covers, so that in time of threatened
capture they may be thrown over
board, sinking at once to the bottom
of the sea, and thue avoiding seizure.

BEST TO EMPLOY BOTH HANDS
Should Cultivate Ambidexterity |
as a Precaution Against Pos-
sible Accident.
At a pinch we shall most of us find '
ourselves ambidextrous, with the left |
| hand ready tc do what the right has
And many of us are left-handed
Per-
done.
(in parts) without knowing it.
sonally I deal the cards and fix my
buttons with the left hand, being in |
most other matters right-handed. But
the two hands should certainly be en-
couraged to supplement each other.
It takes only a fortnight or so for the
right-handed writer to write with the
left hand, and Miss Evelyn Sharp
achieved it when her right arm was
threatened with writers’ cramp.
We are all born, I imagine,
hands of equal strength and sk
the balance should be maint:
practice. A curious instance of am-
bidexterity is that of Mr. Townsend,
the art editor of Punch. His drawings
are done with the left hand, but his
letters are written with the right. He
is left-handed as a billiard player, but
right-handed as a card dealer. And
when he plays crieket he is a left-
handed bowler, but a right-handed
batsman. Vhen you have achieved
such ambidexterity you might cut off
your right hand without offense.
London Chronicle.
with
Annals of the Fiji Kings.
Tanoa, Cacobau’s father and great-
grandfather of the present Ratu, was
one of the most villainous of all the
kings who ruled in Bau. The history
of his atrocities makes professional
ogres like Nero and Catherine da
Medici appear like martyred saints.
At his death his son, Cacobau, who
succeeded him, strangled his father’s
five wives, his own mother among
them, in accordance with the custom
of the land. Later in life, Cacobau
embraced the new lotu—Christianity.
From the date of his conversion he
committed no more outrages and dis-
carded all of his wives save one, whom
he married with the church ceremony
when both were baptized. His son
Ratu Abel did not look very favorably
upon the new religion, and mixed very
little with foreigners, yet no charges
of cannibalism or other cruelties were
laid at his door. The present Ratu
Kadavu is a well-educated man, and
with his cousin, Ratu Pepe, attended
the University of Sydney.—Christian
Herald.
Ruthless Gathering cf Plants.
Several species of British plants,
including some of particular beauty
and renown, are in danger of extine-
tion owing to ruthless gathering.
Opinion seems to be divided as to
whether or not the appropriate rem-
edy is to be sought in state protection.
Although many wild birds and other
members of the animal kingdom are
now commonly protected by law in
civilized countries, there are few pre-
cedents for the state protection of
wild plants (one of the few being the
case of the climbing fern in the
United States). The education of
public opinion on the subject and
other protective measures have been
undertaken by a committee of the Sel-
borne society. One proposed remedy
is the establishment of plant and fern
sanctuaries, or at least gardens set
aside in different localities where
every rare British species might be
carefully preserved and perpetuated.
Nobody but God.
When Representative Mann, Repub-
lican floor leader, rose to object to a
certain Democratic bill he remarked
that his opponents had forgotten their
pledges. Their performance, he said,
reminded him of a little boy who
memorized an inspiring poem to be
delivered at public exercises
given in the town school.
“Nobody knows but God and me,
began t tle boy, advancing boldly
”»
( yout God and me.”
Again there came a pause, and
jquirming,
It was
life
mutable im, ai
“And : ki
Rehoboth av Herald.
She Trusted Until—
A good sister who was somewhat
tardy in her attendance at church
on Sunday morning explained it by
saying that her horse had run away.
“You shouldn’t let such little things
detain you™ reproved the pastor,
“dpu should trust in the Lord.” “I
did.” she roilied, “until he belly
then I jug 3.
ha
but God.”—=
WS
R
ji
| war selly shule loan.
vatich
BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
Wednesday, Nov

PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH
What Shwilkey Bumblesock Has To
Say This Week
Vel doe bin ich viter—un dere
miset aw in konsideration nemma
des der Brumbach elect war letshta
wuch. Es mocht mere of koars gore
nix ows vaer Bresident, Governor ot-
ter Mayor is fom Pickelville, mer
laeva usht about es same, Mer vel-
la yetz oll huffa des oll de poli-
tishuns des elect wara, mocha gute-
net recht Ich wase a pore des fer
shure guty sin ower ich wase apore
des ich sel net glicha sawga date
devaga.
Well about es aenshich ding es
mich gsute hut on unsera eleckshun
Ich bin marick
froe des de lite do in Mt.
Joy—eny how a lot fonna gleicha
progress, Yessiree. Now mindtI tell-
yu—se vella bessera kinner; feel |
shmaerta kinner un konsht dich
aw druf ferlussa des mer se
du
usht
greega.
Yetz
no

gepts en
de kinner
grasera shule hous |
nimy veter |
olavile dena. Wy |
olavile |
ous em |
draw.
dawler loan is
giffy letshta Din-
oll
unsera
breicha
hucka
shts
room draea
de
noner ve se
daet glawva won s e
vela misa
se
denk usht amole
douset
shtoop ga
Selly tzaea
darich gonga ve
en
der gooka fer
shtick
kennet
tzu
shdawk un
shule |
blooma
en grose
house long ep de paeshing
rous kuma neck
Ich
es besht
Freyore.
hop sheer
seller loa is des |
shtettel
hut
ding on
nemont
tox des
doe im
defore
es kusht
may shule
es
Heed Thic
Kidney +»
often fatal.
Don’t experiment
new and untried.
Use a tested kidney
Begin with Doan’s Kidney
Used in kidney troubles
Recommended here
where.
The following
vincing proof. |
Mrs. William Morning, E. High St., |
Elizabethtown, Pa. says: ‘For |
several years I was troubled by weak
kidneys. The kidney secretions were
very annoying and I had a severe |
pain across my back that kept me in |
misery. I learned of Doan’'s Kidney |
Pills and got a supply They gave
me positive relief. I use them now |
occasionally, when my back gets
tired and my kidneys arn't acting as
they should and they never failed to |
relieve me.”
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get |
Doan’'s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. Morning had. Foster-Milburn
Co., Prop, Buffalo, N. Y
et reel
WHY MOUNT JOY MERCHANTS
SHOULD ADVERTISE IN THE
BULLETIN
DIE
with something |
remedy.
Pills.
50 years.
and every- |
statement forms con-
The amount you pay the publisher
for advertising includes a great deal |
more than space.
It covers careful composition,
good printing, free delivery and
reaches the reader in a form which |
assures attention, |
It reaches these people at the |
most opportune moment—when the
careg of the day have been laid aside, |
when the reader sits down, leans
comfortably back and spreads out |
the paper to learn what is going on. |
Reading of what is going on is |
done with the mind in a receptive
state—the ideal time and the ideal
condition in which to create desire.
The Bulletin is the ideal medium to |
use in effecting that result.
BR ————..
NOT RAISED TO EAT
Chickens That Cost $2.73 Per
Pound
of Elizabeth-
sold a Light Bra
reckoned by
pound. He
three b'rds
Fair $63.00,
hig
Mr. Hollinger
town,
cock
cost
Jos. D.
recently
bird, that
$2.73 per
that he
the Lancaster
that he has in
months’ old
breed that
pounds, the
results are
Hollinger must
feed
sO, sold
for
yards
of same
cockerels 10
3-4 pounds, If
account, Mr
superior
some six
the
wel
pullef
taken into
be
using a
im I I BT f
York
of Marietta
the York |
hearing in that |
Mariettian Arrested
Edward M Jones,
has been committed
county jail
city
peace,
wife,
York.
to
for a
on a
as preferred by his
with a daughter in
which w
who lives
———— ——— S————
Then and Now
The bid fashioned girl who used
| to afraid that she would show
| through, now has daughter who
{| wonldn’t think of going out until
e is certain that you can read a
ewspaper through her skirt.
JeoTeoleoTootooteeTootoctoeeoe nts cte atone ale le Pe Baul. oS 3
since |
and |
charge of surety of the]
FEED
YOUR CHICKENS DON'T GET
HALF ENOUGH TO EAT
# you do not feed
The PARK & POLLARD
GROWING FEED
No Magician in the Arabian Nights could
‘produce results any faster than this feed.
From 14 oz. when hatched to
10 Ib. weight at six months is
nothing unusual on this ration.
TRY IT at our expense;
Your money back if it does not do beiter than they claim.
$1000 IN GOLD looks good to any one. Ask us for the 1915
almanacs which just arrived and see the particulars. Don’t miss this
chance to share in this distribution.
Raise Them Without Milk
Why throw away money by knocking them in the head or
selling them for a dollar or two at birth when they can be raised or
vealed WITHOUT MILK at a fraction of the cost of feeding milk.
You profit both ways selling the milk and still have the calyes.
The Best Milk Substitute to Use is
the market—-the standard
it and cannot say
qual to 100 gallons mil Try it on your ca



Stehman, Mount Joy
rrr ECCT ———


EEE EE aan a Sl... Tm
cusmmmome
Seleofeeiredeioodeofordedulndolefecfeofudafooiofodofededefofoodedodefoiedofoinfrdeid did bbb bbe oboPR
Fall and Winter Footwear
This is the time to give your footwear some consideration. In
shoes and rubbers. I have footwear for every member of your fam-
ily that will give you good returns for your money, Just try a
and for yourself.
Old Shoes Made New
If they
pair see
Does that old pair of shoes of yours need repairing?
throw them away; but bring them around and
The cost will
Store open evenings.
are bad don't
going
and let them. only be trifling and they
will
me repair
give you months of service.
Harry Laskewitz
MOUNT JOY, PENNA
EAST MAIN STREET

Toole oTe elo ste Toate Bo ate ote Le oBe at,
Ra a a RL TTR
oh
EA
oe
ki
Je
of
Je
ge
og
ecocirefonfoafestosdodorietorodsctortefortes
- ee
do
&
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oe
3
&
oe
He
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efeofesferienorforiortenferforfosfecfenactociosfonfecononiocgontorfosfooforterfesfecorforforforfosfesfesfectonfecforfonferfecfeaeciecicfectosfocfode
fary E. Smith's, West tnd Ca
MOUNT JOY, PA.
o&
My oyster sandwiches are fine. Call and be
convinced
oysters by the pint or quart All Telephone orders receive
prompt attention
| CONFECTIONERIES, CIGARS AND TOBACCO
{ IND. PHONE 8428B.
Served in every style.
Choice

Todededododdorirdeodeddioodededeoddodedefeodrdefodededodedodededodedefordedeforfedorfuoodordrodfodoe

hma
weight, | =
states, al- |


Nove Time is Here
giving the stove,
these
range or heater ques-
Vhen it »comes
you, e have
resume you will
€ sideration cool Au
shing heat, th
finest line of
Othelle and Sunshi ne Rapges
store and let us ‘tell you of
the
at’s just where we can
DOOCON0O00000
.
>
COOO0OCO0K
at our
vot most
see us.
this town Ca
advantages. Last, ¥
Drop in and
wn in
noteworthy, very
their many
moderate prices.
|
| BROWN BROTHERS
Successors to J. H. Biohl
|
| West Main Street, Mount Joy, Penna,
| €
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