A quality and 100 1 S. H. Miller WATCHES Cloeks, Jewelery and Spectacles Repairing in al] its Branches. Also electrical goods of all kinds. Electric light globes sold & Ex- changed for Edison Electric Company. Report all Electric light trou- ble to me which will have prompt attention. East Main street MOUNT JOY, .:- PENNA 5) my | de IF IT ISN'T AN EASTMAN IT | ISN'T A KODAK richness that appeal to the most fastidious For Christmas and All The Happy Days to Come THE KODAK GIFT CASE Containing Vest Pocket Kodak, with Kodak Anastigmat Lens. Hand carrying case of imported fin- ish leather shade of soft brown that is in perfect harmony with the deep blue of the silk lined container. PRICE $13.00 satin in a Other Kodaks from $6.00 to $74.00. Brownie Cameras, $1 to $12.00 Sold by W.B.BENDER BARBER €ast Main St, Mount Joy, Pa. WE HAVE EVERYTHING FORTHE \MATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER CONESTOGA TRACTION CO. LANCASTER, ROHRERSTOWN MT. JOY AND ELIZABETHTOWN DIVISION Schedule in effort J: ary 1, 1914. We tward—Leave Lancaster, 4:00, 5:15, 9:15, 10:15, 11:15 a. m.; 3:15, 4:15, 6:15, 6:15, 7:15, m. Elizabethtown, 5:45, ¢ 10:45, 11:46 a. m.; 12:- 5, 4:45, 5:46, 6:46, 7:46, 8:- 12:30 a. m. Additic nal car daily except Sunday leaves M t / 6:15 m., arriving at Lar Satur S hour leav- neaster 5 a. m., to 7:15 p. Mi unt Joy from 7:16 a.m. » car will leave Lancas- and 5 p. m.; leave Eliza- and 11:45 p. m. 3a 1 If hour from Nov. 1, leaving Lancaster m. to 7:15 p. m.; leave Mt. 45 a. to 8:15 p. m. cars If hour from .ancaster . m.; leaving to 8:15 p. m. > ¢ s Lancaster at 8:15 a. m leaves " Blizabethte ywn 7:30 a. wing Saturday yaily except 00000CeRR® 2 |ErVe We are Always Prepared to Pure Spring Water ICE: IN ANY QUANTITY at Moderate Charges Very Don’t fail to see us hefore plac ing your order this year Bro J. N. Stauffer Mount Joy. Pennu DPOOPOCCOO®AB® 0OeReeeeRe® For a Good Clean Shave Or a (lassy Hair Stop at H.J. WILLIAMS TONSORIAL PARLOR W. Main St, Agt Viount Joy For Middietown La W. M. HOLLOWBUSH NOTARY PUBLIC Attorney-At-Law 48 West Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa Days at Lancaster, Monday and Fri day at No. 52 North Duke Street. Goce ametoo QQEEEOOEEOOOOOO D. B. KIEFFER & CO’S. 12th Annual Closing Out Sale for 1914 HORSES MULES & COLTS ; nu {Friday at LETZ =iz%%ex FEED MILLS Give Letz Mills a trial and you will never use any other kind. They are the fastest-working, essicst-running Feed Grinders made, and cost you least for gasoline. Grind Oat Hulls, Alfalfa, Hay, Corn with Cobs and Husk, Wheat Screenings and all Small Grains fine at a single grinding. Buhrs sharpen themselves. One set grinds 1000 to 3000 bushels. We can furnish you the right size Letz for your engine’s horse- power. See us about it at once. H. S. Newcomer .. Eastern Distributor MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA er fesforferfesecfocfosfesfecfecforfosfosfecforfesfecierioreciorfects DRINK SINOCK WATER SODA ofesforfefecfecfocinfocerfoferfosiocfecfoctscurfofosfeciorforfosforfofociorterfociecfocfe Advertise In “The Bulletin” of > | oh | composition of elofeedualesfoddurfoofesdisfesfesderd ob THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. : : ETT ETT ET HA SUBSTITUTE FOR GASOLINE Is More Powerful and Costs Only Two Cents a Gallon A test of a new chemical pre- paration, which was concluded on Indianapolis and which =| was concluded under the eyes of | the American Automobile Associa- tion, and consisted of a run of 1,030 miles, was declared to prove that a | substitute had been found for gaso- 3 line and at a price of two or three On Friday, December 4th, 1914 » cents a gallon, with the added ad- 9:30 A. M. at the Farmers’ Hotel, M. Snyder, Proprietor. m Yaniage thst the new fig coul) be ®™ carried in the form of a powder, to B® which water is added as needed. At Middletown, Pa. = ow mic vee mi m hours, 32 minutes and 4 seconds from the time the test was started We will sell the following Live Stock—100 head of best ship- = on Thursday until it was completed ped Western Horses and Colts, shipped direct by W. M. Tove, - at nightfall. The actual running who advises us that he has taken the greatest care in selecting a time for the total mileage was 18 this bunch of horses and colts, and has bought only (the best H hours, 24 minutes and 4 seconds, an that grow.) The kind that have the size, shape, bone, muscle MB jverage of 55.95 miles an hour, The and conformation to themselves, and will mature write and make gg average amount of the new fuel ® heavy drafters, all purpose horses, farm chunks, carriage horses - used in the test was only 46 gallons = and drivers. These colts range in age from 1 to 5 years and ='to the 500 miles, while under simi- u weigh from 1,000 to 1,400 pounds each. lar conditions it takes an average a 100 to 150 head of acclimated and commission horses and mules, of 53 gallons of gasoline to the 500 » consisting of the good, big finished draft horses, general business miles, according to the past trials. = horses, farm chunks, single line leaders, all purpose horses, car- The fastest lap made in the test B riage horses, livery horses, fancy drivers and speedsters. wias the next to the last one, driven = Also a lot of high dollar horses The 57 variety Kind of all B by Ted Collier, head tester for the @ classes. These horses range in age from 5 to 12 years and have a Marmon Company. That lap was 3 them weighing up to 1,600 pounds each. 50 head of good, big a made in 2.21, an average of 62.85 |£ mules. consisting of mated teams, single mules, single line leaders, = miles an hour. The first 100 miles work slaves and unbroken mules. These mules range in age from = of Thursday's test was made in 1 2 to 12 years. By run of commission horses and mules. One well ® hour, 49 minutes and 9.8 seconds, an drillers outfit, complete, B® average of 54.85 miles an hour. The Sale to commence at 9:30 A. M. on Friday, December 4, 1914, s d%er a Barnes, Wig wag r—— With Joe Dawson In the last 500- when conditions of sale will be made known by a mile Decoration Day race, and Col. o 9p a lier was his relief, D. B. Kieffer & Co. » Attomobile Mah Cirery declar- . dé a 2 fast be Hime made With the hew I ee, Sapsoiay BD was used, E10 TOD Car] G. Fisher, who is a member # of the company that proposes to . . m manufacture the new fuel, said that Save Money and W ork With 2 the engine would be taken to pieces 5 and thorough examination of all its Thi | t ti | H t parts made to determine the only a 1S n erna ona dasves er n remaining question—whether the ac- > ® ids used in the manufacture of the = Eu ine 8 fue] are or are not injurious. Judg- 2 g ® ing from exterior appearances, he & m does not think they are. B ——————— m With the completion of the tests, =. Buy and use an I. H. C. tank-cooledq engine, and before you “ it is the plan of the promoters of ® have used it for long, you will have noted how many separate pg hg fuel to begin marketing the = litle sowress of enn there are in “ig operdiion, I. H.C. engines pm Frank Fanning, Philadelphia man- ® are throttlegoverned, keeping the regulation down very close to the B® ager for the Marmon Automobile B exac power needed. Besides, as soon as an I. H. C. engine is mw Company, predicted the complete = opped, fuel and attendance costs cease; and no time and fuel is mM Success of zoline and said it would & )st in the starting. You will save much, too, because I. H.C. ® be only a short time until automo 8 cpgines run on various fuels, the cheapest or most convenient, : bilists oud he using the new pre: |& : @ paration instead of gasoline, and la I. H. C. engines are simple in construction, easy to care for. getting it at 2 or 3 cents a gallon. 3 Pais a removable. The dealer will not allow you to lose a. Mr. Fanning spoke authoritatively, = time waiti a new part, if you should need one. There are for he was at Indianapolis, and wit: ® B® nessed some of the experiments, @ many features of design, material and construction that it will @ Lonceining his pisonal observa = interest you to know, because they mean economy and depend- @ tons of the new motor fuel, Mr. = able operation u Fanning sad: : ! Bb ‘Observations of zoline in use bs When you are ready to examine an I. H.C. tank-cooled engine, = justify the conclusion that it will B he 1. H. C. dealer will be ready to show you. He will give you =u prove a substitute for gasoiine, to a catalogue, or we will send you one if you drop us a card. =m be had at much cheaper rates and w giving the same results as gasolne. 3 B The first public tests were made a « | ! | H C | i = year ago. * International Harvester Co.ol America 2 “oi « wou so per cont. was & a er. There ate two simple ingredi- b INCORPORATED =e added, and to this two other = = ingredients, which are a secret of 8 HARRISBURG, PENNA, % John Andrus, who discovered the . 8 formula, It can be made very cheap- 1 OE RRR om ny ly, probably for a cent or a cent and a half, and sold for two or i Ca ii . ij a i > three cents. “At Indianapolis I saw it in use. It was tested in an engine of a high- : . | power car, diiven fourteen miles at | The OnlyFeed Y | the state of sixty miles an hour. An- . oo RoE drus was given buckets of water to . . : ° ; : : 2 which he added packages of zoline. ALTE EIRAT TR TER ETB nen bs . g car maintained a speed of sixty WwW YT] ATE miles an hour. It was decided to give it a more thorough test in a 1,000-mile run. This has been done his week.” You needn’t Liave trouble when you come to : os view the experiments grind wet feed. We have a line of Feed Grinders | with interest. In view of the recog that will handle it at the same speed as dry. nized fact that water itself will not are curious as to the the mixture, Sam’l prominent chemist, burn, chemists P. Sadtler, a connected with the Franklin Insti- {tute and the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, said: “To my notion zoline is probably | obtained by decomposing water and | bringing the gases in contact with | other chemical gases, possibly hydro- carbon gas. Water will not burn, so that it must be the chemicals which |are added to the water which are responsible for the results accredit. ed to zoline.” re Aer eee Marriage Licenses B. Bender, Lititz, and Mar- Herchelroth, Marietta, Wilson H, and Lillian M. township. Ruth S Joy town- Ruhl both of Eshleman Mount Johnson John E Forney, Rapho and both of Dp. Roy E Barbara K | | township. { shi West Earhart, Donegal, and Mount Joy Shelly, Mount Joy Tschudy, of Ginder of and Mary M. Hiram 8S. | township, | West Donegal township. — ctl 4-H Use the Telephone | We have both phones at our office. When vou have a news item call the Bulletin office on either phone. We to take the news and neighbors will be in print. will be zla( Cra oe vi glad . 24 our ~miliarize us with HOME HEALTH CLUB By Dr. David H. Reeder, Chicago, Hl. Baby's Demands: —It is astonishing to all mothers to see what other people’s babies will go through and appear to be perfectly happy and healthy while her own precious dar: ling seems to require most exacting care and even then colic, constipa tion, colds, croup and all other kinds of baby ailments appear to afflict it on every hand. How often we hear say, “l don't see how Bejones children are always out in all kinds of weather, wet and cold, as well as dirty, eating all kinds of foods and yet they seem to be well, while if my children so much as get damp I have to be up half the night with them.” Yes, there is some that, children are healthy, according to allowed a free outdoor life or not, but as a matter of fact the other mother says much the same thing about your children. She has her worries and cares and her nights of anxious watching of which you know nothing. Children, especially those we may safely call babies, must be looked after carefully and should not be allowed to play in a wet yard carly in the morning during the fall days, unless it's little feet are securely protected from the wet grass by substantial rubbers. A cold con: tracted during the fall may, unless and promptly treat- become chronic in its catarrhal condition become tu- adenoids, polypus, deafness or other all too frequently because the child a fond mother it is that Mrs. in all rugged and whether they truth are properly treated ed as nature established well and a that may cause tonsils, that are simply bercular, enlarged ailments neglected makes no special complaint. Diseased tonsils are frequently the source of infection which later on causes the terrible deformities of articular rheumatism. [In some cases, however, such deformities are caused by neglected teeth. While vet a baby the habit of thoroughly cleansing the mouth and teeth the first thing in the morning and the last thing at night should be formed. Iixamine your child's teeth, throat, nose and ears frequently and if there is any sort of discharge or puslike secretion, treatment should be promptly applied. I will cheer- fully make specific suggestions for individual cases if write me fully about it. aerials HABIT—A CURE OR A BLESSING —— Little Talks on Health & Hygiene by Samuel G. Dixon you that “Man is. 2 habit” permitting us to conclusions. We are with bad habits liberally sup- Someone said creature of draw our own perfectly familiar Even if we were not plied with conscience, teachers and moralists have said enough to fa- this side of the question, Fortunately there are good habits and they are often a blessing thinly disguised. Our general health and well-being depends largely upon the character of our habits. Regularity partakes something of virtue, This is especially true when it pertains to eating, sleeping, la- bor and recreation which covers the daily prog.am of the majority of mankind. In the pr mitive state it was impossible for our ancestors to eat regularly. The hunte might be successful and again he might not. Perrods of enforced fasting were followed by corresponding ov- erindulgence when the chase was successful. The demand for food at regular intervals was the first stim- achiev- day ulus to civilization. We have ed a state where three meals a are possible to the most of us In gratitude we should strive for mod- eration, knowing that in a few hours food will be forthcoming. Sleep is the great reswrer of both body and brain. Irregular hours of result in an more rest upon turn reacts favorably upon the hu- economy. Regularity in the periods of rest make for even tem- per and physical stability. Labor to achieve worthy accom- plishment must be steady and per- severing, The habit of work is a necessity for one who would realize his ambitions. Even in our recreations the ma- jority of us are better for a cer. tain degree of system for otherwise it is apt to become a case of over | or under indulgence. Tt is the same with our bodily | functions— temperance and regulari man tv are conducive to obtaining the maximum of efficiency for the long- est period of time. Excessive fric- tion and rust are equally hard upon machinery. The formation of good habits in the care of the teeth, bathing, daily eating, sleeping, exer- and living in fresh air will go toward making the doctor’s vis. it less evacuations, cise far frequent. A ——— - Learned men tell us that in Latin «eff means something the {rniteq Stales its altof ther different. Tt the word “to eaxt™ In meals to eratch ground like blazes to oho mething 5 eat, re ED ee sf bseribe £21 a Mt. Joy Bulletin Wye print all th, nett to print. read the B J excessive strain | the nervous system which in| » DOOOO000O00000: HOS OOOO OOCCOOOGOOOOOOOOO OCOD OOODOOOOOOODOOOOOOODOOOLLLOODODOODODOOO Wednesday, Novemfer 25, 1 DOOOCOOOSOE WATT and SHAND] Corner S juare and E. King Sts. hancaster, Penna. WOOL BED BLANKETS 1-4 BELOW REGULAR PRICES It's the quality of each and every one of the Blankets offered which makes this sale so wonderful Every housewife that needs Bed Blankets will save quite a few dillars by buying at this sale now, $4.00 full size Wool Bed Bianke's, the greater part of them wool, and the biggest value we've ever offered, at, a pair, $2.98 $4.50 full size Wool Blankets; made especially for hard wear; in gray or tan, and bound with a neat mohair binding; Sale Price a pair, $3.25 $3.00 single bed size Wool Blankets; come in gray omly, and woven for service; Sale Price, a pair, $1.98 $3.50 single bed size Wool Blankets; unusual qualities — if vou want a good, warm, serviceable Blanket for a single bed, and vou want it cheap, here is your chancea pair, $2.50 $5.00 Extra large size Wool Blankets, which weigh five Ibs, and have just enough cotton woven into them to ig shiink- ing when washed, are in this sale, at, a pair, $3.50 $4.00 Fancy Wool Blankets; full size and in six different col- ors: beautiful plaids: a very rare bargain at, a pair, $3.00 $3.75 Wool Plaid Blankets, in a ful] double bed size, and a lot of new color combinations; Sale Price, a pair, $2.93 $3.50 Wool Plaid Blankets, in a single bed size, and a re markable value for this price, a pair, $2.50 Sale of Table Linens cannot be duplicated that the following prices: Damasks; 172 Damasks, that wholesale today at all linen Fine, rich grades of cannot be duplicated Handsome, new patterns, in Bleached inches wide; $1.25. $1.50 and $2 .00 70-in. All-linen Bleached Damasks, very special $1 a yd. 70-in. Alllinen Bleached Damasks, new designs; 75¢ and 85¢ a 61-in. Alllinen Bleached Damasks; dozens of new patterns; 50¢ a yd. 70-in, Mercerized Damask, extra value, 50¢ a yd. 66-in. Mercerized Damask, beautiful new designs; 39¢ yd. 60-in. Mercerized Damask, worth more than 25¢ and 29¢ a yd. Tremendous Array of New Napkins We're headquarters for the best qualities and laigest vari eties—to say nothing low prices. See the two special] values All won at $1.25 and $1.50 a dozen. we are offering Also thos: $2.50 and $3.00. if you want to be sur prised, both as to size and quality. The grades at $3.50 a dozen are also remarkable values; in size 24x24. Other grades even up to $10.00 a dozen. i " um Bu = B n TE ERE EEE EE USAT ERR AN NE a ST Ca Winter (Millinery line of PLUSH the NEW- at Low- and stylish exceptionally fi e Just received an AND VELVET HATS for ladies and children. Also all EST STYLES IN FEATHERS AND VELVET FLOWERS est Prices. FLORA DRABENSTADT East Main Street Mount Joy, Pa. Why Piy ‘High Prices FOR FURNITURE, CARPETS, RUGS AND DRAPERIES WHEN THIS STORE OFFERS YOU THE CHOICEST TYPES AND STYLES AT A SAVING THAT IS WORTH WHILE YOUR CONSIDERATION See this wonderful assortment of beautiful new goods and se cure your share of the savings of the inexpensive location. This huge store is brimful of suggestions, both practical and artistic, for the complete furnishing of every room in fhe home. Comparison and selection are very much simplified by the fact that we offer you the largest assemblage of up-to-date Furniture, Carpets, Rugs and Draperies in the city. As we make home furnishing our sole business, we are natural ly in a position to give you the best services at the lowest prices obtainable. Yostenhorger, Maley & Myers 25-131 East King St. 0 0 3 0 vo ee eB a tb LL Ye otesTostese stele oderts BST jeslesiecier Paperposienr rn | BBE |n |S * AUTOMOBILE SUPPLIES - ‘ - a) +. a | ® Automobile Casings which averaged 6,700 miles. | = |8 When in TROUBLE, A STEAM VULCANIZING PLANT is at | your service, | |= Genera] OVERHAULING time is rapidly approaching. Irre {@ spective of name or make 1 will take a back seat for nome, in | Ls |m efficiency. |@ 70 test Gasolin ting Oils o * 2 $ : * Barr's a NEW HAVEN 3 ps a to - i LANCASTER. PA 3 1 J a; eo HER Salt Si Esti | > WRNAIIDOOOOO0O0OO00O0GOHOON OOS OK
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers