The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 21, 1917, Image 3

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“-»s To Make Military And

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URGE DRASTIC
WAR MEASURES
Naval Training Compulsory
DRAFT POWER FOR GOVENOR

In All Institutions of Learning in This
Commonwealth Every Pupil Over
the Age of Twelve Years Would
Be Trained, If Bill Is Passed.

Harrisburg — Representatives
Thomas F. McNichol and William T.
Brady, of Philadelphia, introduced |
drastic bills in the House, providing
for compulsory military or naval train-
ing or instruction of all boys more
than twelve years old, and glving the |
Governor the right to draft citizens
from the National Guard or naval
militia.
The McNichol bill provides that for |
the purpose of maintainingthe National |
Guard and naval militia at the stand-
ard of efficiency required for public
safety the Governor may at any time
call for volunteers or order that a
draft be made to make up the com-
plement of the National Guard or
naval militia.
The act provides that the Governor
shall direct his order to the mayor
of any city, or burgess of any bor- |
ough or town, specifying the number
of men required, and mayors or
burgesses shall draft the number of
men specified, or they may accept as
volunteers as many as are required
by the Governor.
The Brady measure provides that in
all public, parochial and private |
schools, seminaries, colleges and uni- |
versities, and all institutions of learn- |
ing in this Commonwealth, every pu- |
pil over the age of twelve years shall
be required to undergo military
instruction and training for one-half
day during each week of every school
term, unless physically disqualified.
These instructors must have passed |
an examination before the Board of
Military Instruction, and the board
shall arrange encampments during
the months of June, July and August
which shall be attended by the pupils
of the schools and colleges. The en-
campments shall each last a week
and the expenses shall be borne by
the State.
After the “Demon Rum.”
Three more bills affecting the liquor
traffic, each of them diffeffrent, were
introduced in one day. : One, intro- |
duced by Senator Croft. of Montgom-
ery, would make drastic changes in
the present method of granting and
governing liquor licenses. The bill
would transfer from the Courts to
the County Commissioners the power
to grant, renew, transfer and revoke
liquor licenses. if passed, it would
“become effective on July 1, this year.

It provides for an increase in the
salaries of County Commissioners and
grants the right of appeal to Court
when licenses are refused. It also
specifies that licenses s 1 be re-
stricted, one for each 1000 of popula-
tion, and that no new licenses all
be granted until this ratio is reached.
Any license-hplder who has violated
the law within the year must be re-
fused a renewal.
A bill which would make Pennsyl-
vania dry in 1918 was introduced by
Senator Snyder, of Blair. It would
bar the sale or manufacture of in-
toxicants, except for medicinal and
sacramental purposes.
A local option bill providing for a
local option election in each county
every three years was introduced by
Senator Smith, of Crawford. who also
offered a constitutional amendment
proposing prohibition.
Slash Deficiencies $263,970
The House Appropriations Commit-
tee cut $268.970.68 from the deficiency
bill, which was presented carrying
$25,000. 1 were as follows:
public grounds,
$75.000; fire mar-






 

Printing, $76.



$29.800; educs
shal, $20.000: agriculture Live
Stock Board. $40500; forestry. $7500;
mines, $2500; highways, $6320.67;

fisheries, $1000; House of Represen-
tatives, $4500.
An increase of $842.18 was allowed
the Board of Censors for expenses
thanking him for the offer of
students, all with military training,
who have volunteerd to serve in case
of war.
Allentown be
count of high price, farmers are de-




 


Representative Stadtlander,
legheny, introduced in the House, at
Harrisburg, a bill increasing the pay
of jurors in Philadelphia and Alle-
gheny counties from $2.50 to $3.60 a
day.
At Harrisburg, Representative
Neary, Philadelphia, presented in the
House a bill providing that executors
or administrators shall pay funeral
expenses out of first moneys received.
Acting on the knowledge that chil-
dren were imitating grown-ups in man-
ipulating punchboards, the Monroe
County Court has declared them gam-
bling devices.
Derry Township School Board, in
Mifflin count, has broken ground for,
a $10,000 addition to its high school
building.
J. T. Riden is at the Lewistown hos:
pital, recovering from serious injuries
| sustained when his automobile was de-
{ molished by an electric car.
A bill requiring all vehicles except
agricultural machinery to display
lights from one hour after sunset un-
til an hour before sunrise was intro-
| duced in the House at Harrisbur by
Representative W. W. Mearkle, Al-
legheny.
From the altar to the operating
table for appendicitis was litterly
what happened to Frank Hottenstein,
of Sunbury. Hottenstein was wedded,

to M
grove.
Stanislaw Kosilesky, 16, a young
musician of Shenandoah, lost his life,
crushed between two mine cars, and
Felix Souch and Joseph Zubasky were
dangerously injured, at West Shenan-
doah Colliery, by a fall of coal
Falling on ice, Morris Jackson, of
ss Berdessa Rebuck, at Selins-
| Red Hill, was seriously injured.
At Mifflintown Harry Tyson, mana-
er of the Bell Telephone system, was
working at the top of a pole when a
wildcat appeared at its foot. Tyson
was anchored at the top for some
time, when the cat was scared away
by fellow-workmen.
Dr. Bertha Lewis, member of a
prominent family and a noted worker
for suffrage and in welfare movements
was instantly killed at Bryn Mawr,
when she was thrown out of a hired
touring car in a collision with a motor |
coupe.
Because the ground is frozen too
hard to bury them, unlicensed dogs
in Bradford county ordered shot by
the County Commissioners have been |
respited.
f
President Wilson and Governor
Brumbaugh have both written A. W.
Roberts, colonel of the cadet regiment
at the Pennsylvania State College,
2,300
On complaint of residents, Chief of
Police Thomas and Officer McCreary
raided the “Peace Be With You” Club
—colored frequenters of a cigar store |
in Division street, Jenkintown.
Stepping from a curb, Louis Betha,

was struck by the touring car of Chas.
P. M. Jack, president of the Chester
Ship Building Company. Betha died in
Chester Hospital in ten minutes of a
fractured skull
Mr. and Mrs. Caleb F. Fox, of Beth-
eliyn, Ogontz, have presented to the
officials of the Abingten Memorial
Hospital a $5,000 check to be used to
endow a bed.
A verdict of second degree murder
was returned against Thomas Thomp-
son, charged with killing Homer Rey-
nolds, at Milton, by a jury in Northum-
berland County Court at Sunbury.
Pottstown has adopted a seven-mill
tax rate.
A break in the four-inch water main
at the plant of the International Bag
Company, Bethlehem, at night flooded
the concern.
Angered becz
vcotted potatoes on ac-

1ing to bring them to the city.
7 to work at the Bethlehem
steel plant, was struck by a locomo- |
tive and injured internally.
The Loyal Order of Sparrows, one |
of the many zoological secret socie-
ies in Allentown, has achieved a |
incurred. membership of 2300.
rm— | It has been discovered that throug
Bills Introduced. a mishap while returning from the
Woodward, Allegheny, proving that
all State printing should bear the
union label of the Allied Printing
Trades; fixing the salaries of mem-
son Labor Commission,
and providing that all institutions con-
trolled by the Commonwealth pur-
chase available supplies from commis-
gion; the salary of the chairman is
to be $7500 and the members $5000
each.
Jenkins, Philadelphia, limiting
height of fences in suburban districts
of Philadelphia to four feet, except

on spec I
A measure providing a system of
es for barbers, hii a
State of five examiners, to
be app by the Goveraor, was
introduced i the House by Mr.
Black. Dau The bill provides for
examinations for barbers for licenses,
to be held June, September
iladelphia, Pitts
ishurg and Erie.
provi liz ng for a
ners on “uniform

State licer



 


Warren, fixing terms of :
Vv
eealers of weights and measures to


four ye {
Bever, Philadelphia, codyfying laws
mited partnerships and
amending existing laws concerning
partnership jility; requiring that
the State and all counties and public
institutions controlled by them shall
purchase s and building ma-
terials from State correctional insti-


 

relative to I


Smith, Philadelphia, regulating pur-
ase of and contracts for supplies |
Philadelr
pausaman
to Rea
ppropriating $25.- | V
for erection of bronze



plovment as special policemen at the
Bet!
burgh district suffered because of the
insufficient supply of natural gas.
plant of the Jeanville Iron Works
are enthusiastic over the prospect
that they will be called upon to make
shrapnel for the United States instead
utions. a of Russia.
| the Governor, Sproul resolution pro-
| administration passed the Senate. Tq el
iq | vote on the resgd !
19 against,
Mexican border, Russell Kneller, an
Allentown soldier, is suffering with
two broken ribs.
Ray Duffs, of South Bethlehem,
while oiling a machine at the Beth-
lehem Steel shops, suffered a frac- |
tured right shoulder, squeezed between
the machine and a column.
The Allentown Grange has ap-
point ed a committee, headed by
‘Squire P. S. Fenstermacher, the Le-
gh member of the State Board of

Agriculture, to establish public mar- |
kets.
Herman L. Deitrick, 44, of New-
berry. committed suicide by cutting
his throat with a razor.

George DelLozier, Andrew Daly and
William H. Taylor, Muhlenberg Col- |
lege students who flunked their
exams” recently, have ben given em-

ehem Steel Works.
Thousands of persons in the Pitts |
Schuykill Court has ordered that
he old stone almshouse be torn down |
and a modern structure erectad in |
its place.
Raymond Snyder, 15, was awarded |
first prize by the Presbyterian Sun- |
day school at Hazleton for not miss- |
ing a session in eight years.
Men employed in the munitions
Opposed bitterly by the friends ok]




iding for an investigation of the State
tion was 29 fo





| PENNSYLVANIA |
BRIEFS |

"PENNSYLVANIA
STATE [TEMS
Nearly frozen ont fis cut ravenous because
of the cold weather, rats attacked
young pigs owned by George Emig, of
Carlisle, and chewed their ears off.
John Chittick of Plumstead township,
who claims he raises potatoes at 19
cents a bushel, says that if anybody
would like to cover it he is willing ta
wager $50 that he can raise potatoes
at that price.
The gross income of Yardley for
the last business year totaled $22,109,
58, of which $18,000 became available
from the sale of an issue of bonds
and $9,906 was expended on streets
and highways.
The puddlers’ shanties at the Lessig
Iron Works, Pottstown, were destroy-
ed by fire.
A sneak-thief stole six bags of corn
from Ira M. Schantz's corncrib, near
Macungle.
Aenos Bianto, of Norristown, was
fatally burned at the kitchen stove
in her home.
Sheriff Nagle has levied on the per-
son of Benjamin H. Wambold, a Sal-
ford farmer, for $2,000 indebitedness.
Joeph A. Price has been appointed
Jusitce of the Peace in Lower Salford
township, succeeding I. T. Haldeman,
Assemblyman, who resigned.
The Boy Scouts of Sellersville have
united in a campaign to protect birds,
and every Scout has agreed to build
one or more bird houses.
An Elkins Park woman, Mrs. Elsa
Walters, will receive a bequest of
$1,000 from her late employer, Mrs.
Freda Schloss, according to a clause
in Mrs. Schloss’ will, “in recognition
of 18 years’ of faithful and satisfac-
| tory service.”
| The explosion of a frozen water-
back in the home of David Bishop,
Pottstown , blew pieces of the kitchen
stove through the ceiling to the
| second floor, and Mr. and Mrs. Bishop
were injured and the house set on
Mrs. Margaret Coughlin, mother of
John J. Coughlin, Shenandoah’s new
postmaster, fell on the ice while going
to church and fractured her right hip.
{ She was taken to the State Hospital.
Struck by a motor truck, William
| Finkenbinder, Newville, suffered a
broken leg.
Divorced three days, Grace Motto,
Hazleton, took out a license to wed
Frank Albao, Berwick.
A second transmission line from
Warrior's Ridge to Lewistown is plan-
ned by the Penn Central Light and
{ Power Company, Altoona.




| youths of wayward tendencies. Schuyl-
kill, four, and Lackawanna, six.

| lated $3,937.19 in four years and has
nine retired instructors on the list.

|
|
| Checks cashed for Albert Willis, a
| farmhand, near Newville, have proved
to be worthless, and he has left that
section.
severly scalded a five-year old daugh-
ter of William Bailey, Centre town-
ship, Perry county.
The Bradford's County Dairymen’s
League was organized at Towanda
electing F. W. Gerham, Wysox, presi
dent; John Cooney, Troy, secretary;
S. W. Terry, Wyalusing, treasurer, R.
H. Fleming, Cowley, organizer.
An unusual funeral was held in
the basement of St. Barnabas‘ Episco-
pal Church, Reading, in memory of a
lonely sparrow, with seven boys as
mourners, whose companion the spar-
| An overturning boiler of hot water
|
|
|

| row had been on the adjoining play-
ground. The sparrow froze to death.
Playing with fire while her mother
was preparing dinner, Susie Gerlack,
aged 4, of Ormrod, was fatally burned.
Martin E. Kern, vice-president of
the Penn Counties Trust Company,
Allentown, who last year bought Glen
Island, New York, for $1,500,000, has
| just sold the property to the Novaia
se the housewives of |} ¢
tealty Company, at a profit of al-
most $1,000,000.
Outside of the real estate, which
| includes a valuable home in Allen-
Chris. Backas, of South Bethlehem, |
town and a plantation on the Isle
of Pines, the estate of Char
Matcham, of Allentown, mec
engineer and one of the pioneers of
the modern cement industry, leaves
 
hanical
| $400.227.56 for distribution among the

heirs.
Twelve-inch ice was cat from the
Angelica dam in Berks County.
A kitchen will be added to the
Humane Fire Company’s house,
{ Royersford, by the efforts of the
| Ladies’ Auxi



Simon P. Romig, of Hancock, suf-
| fered blood-poisoning, after a rabbit
had bitten him.
Eisenlohr & Bros. have started a
tobacco factory in Old Zionsville, and
Albert H. Sterner has been appointed
foreman.
The Norristown branch of the
Pennsylvania Woman's Division for
National Preparedne has decided to
mak
Christiana school ildren contribu-
ted $13 to the Belgian relief.
Despite the cold weather, robbins
have made their appearance in West
ter.
Mount
Semina









Lutheran Theological
will rec 5,000 from Mrs
Nicum, widow of the Rev. John Nicum,
of Rochester, N. Y.
To produce enconomical feed for
‘ows, and thereby keep down the cost


of running a dairy in Bucks county, !
Lee S. Clymer, of Reigelesyi sug-
gests to the Bucks ccunty Farm
Bureau that farmers be urged to grow
alfalfa.
The Hampden, Marion and Key-
stone Fire companies, Reading, have
voted to increase the wages of their
drivers from $16 to $18 a week.
Bryn Mawr Community Centre girls
have organized the “Junior Girls
Club,” for self-government and to as-
sist in financing, cooking, sewing and
other classes at the centre.
Haverford Township Commisssion-
ers have voted a pay increase to mem-
bers of the police force from $70 to
375 a month. 3
Two little bears, born at the Re
‘ng zoo, Jeers killed by the moth









THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.

WASHINGTON
CELLO EIEP POOP POOPIE PPL PIIIIE

What figure more immovably august
Thea that great strength so patient and so
Calm i on ood fortune, when it wavered, sure,
‘That mind serene, impenetrably just,
Modeled on classic lines so simple they
That soul so softly radiant and so white
The track it left seems less of fire than light,
Cold but to such as love distemperature ?
some deem, be the force
That drives revolving planets on their course,
Why for his power benign seek an impurer
His wasthe true enthusiasm that burns long,
Domestically bright,
Fed from itself and shy of human sight,
The hidden force that makesa lif
And not the short-lived fuel of a song.
Passionless, say you?
But to sublime our natures and control
To front heroic toils with late return,
Or none, or such as shames the conqueror?
That fire was fed with substance of the soul
And not with holiday stubble, that could

What is passion for
n,
Unpraised of men who after bonfires run.
Through seven slow years of unadvancing
war,
Equal when fields were lost or fields were won,
With breadth of popular applause or blame,
Nor Janna nor damped, unquestionably the
Toc Ted to be reached by flaws of idle
Soldier and statesman, rarest unison;
High-poised example of great duties done
Simply as breathing, a world’s honor worn
As life's indifferent gifts to all men born;
Dumb for himself, unless it were to God,
But for his barefoot soldiers eloquent,
Tramping the snow to coral where theytrod,
Held by his awe in hollow-eyed content;
Modest, yet firm as Nature's self; unblamed
Save by the men his nobler temper shamed;
Never seduced through show of present good
By other than unsetting lights to steer
New-trimmed in Heaven, nor than his stead-
mood
Moss rulast, far from rashness as from
Rigi da ne with himself first, grasping still
In swerveless poise the wave-beat helm of
Not tored then or now because he wooed
The pupular voice, but that he still withstood;
Broad-minded, high-souled, there is but one
Who was all this and ours, and all men’ Ss,
—James Russell Lowell.

] CPP r Ir 000500000000 000000000000
FAMED OLD CHURCH
ago there was




and Afticth annive
completion and opening of St.
’aul’s chapel in Trinity parish, in the
York, and Trinity
tegral part of
parish was an in-
the Pabished church
aa called St.
at the corner of Cliff
It was in No-
vember, iy that the vestry
erection of a second chapel in the par-

George III was denounced
Luzerne county must care for 288 |,









THE MARKETS

Nein)
NEW YORK-—Wheat—Spot steady;
No. 2 hard, $1.94; No. 1 Northern Du-
luth, $2.05; No. 1 Northern, Manitoba,
$2.04% f. 0. b. New York.
Corn—No. 2 standard, 68@68%.
Hay—Irregular; No. 1, $1.15; No.
0
95¢.@$1.05; ‘No. 3, 90@95c¢c.; shipping
70@90c.
Butter—Creamery higher than ex
tra, 46@46%c.; creamery extras (92
score), 45@45%ec.; firsts, 37% @44c.;
seconds, 35@37c.
Eggs—I'resh gathered, extra firsts,
47@47%ec.; firsts, 46@46%ec.; refrig-
erator, seconds to firsts, 41@42%ec.;
nearby hennery whites, fine to fancy,
50@51c.; nearby hennery browns,
48@49c.
Cheese—State, held, specials, 25@
25%ec.; do, average fancy, 25c.
Live Poultry—Chickens, 21@21%
fowls, 23@24c. Dre


20@34c.
PHILADELPHIA. —Wheat — No.
red, $1.77@1.82; No. 2 Southern re
$1.75@1.80; steamer ee 2 red,

1.78; No.’ 3 red, $1.73@1.78; rejected
A, $1.60@1.74; rejected . $1.65@1.70.
Rye—No. 2 Western, in export ele-
vator, $1.40@1.45 per bushel; small
lots of nearby rye, in bags, quoted at
$1@1.20, as to quality.
Corn—No. 2 yellow, $1.14@1.15;



(OF:
standard white, BT %@080.; No.
White, 66% @67c.; No. 4 white, 65% @
661%c.; sample oat 3, 621 @63%c.
Dutter- Western fresh, solid-packed
Ss, 47c.; extra,

creamery, fancy special
5@46c; do, extra firsts, 42@4
firsts, 38@3%e: do, second, ;
ladles, 29@31c. backing stock,
28c.; nearby prints , fancy, 48¢; do, av
erage extra, 45@46c.; do, fir
42c.;





at 51@54c.
Eggs—In free cases, near
46¢c. per dozen; nearby fi


per standard case; nearby current re-
Western ex-
xtra firsts,
$12.90 per
ceipts, $12.90 per case;
tra, 46c. per dozen;
$13.05 per case; do, fir


case. Fancy selected fresh eggs were
jobbed out at 48@51c. per dozen.
Chesso~Noy Yor, f n
good held, 25@25%ec.;
@21c.

Live Poultry—Fowls, as to quality,


at he age of seven-
Altoona teachers’ fund has accumu- | thrilled thousands with his pa-
not be generally known that
{ doors, on each side of the church,
entrance porches.
quently stoned up and canopied pews
erected in their places, :
| of Southern white cc
$1.09 per bushel. Car lots of No. 3
vellow corn for domestic delivery,
| ar ots y at $ ) ushe inal
hurch was burned and St. are quotable at $1.12 bushel nomina
came the principal church of the city,
| the north door was closed first and a
canopied, elevated pew
| decorated for the king's representative
y, the governor of the prov-
in the place of
Governor, until a new place was pro- |
, and then for a short time on the |
+ the rebuilding of |








St. Paul’s Chapel.
Trinity church, it does not appear that
he ever again attended St. Paul's.
der, then, is the place where Washing-
, ‘Lady Washing-
. as she was called.
some three or four
years ago, an aged man, who said that
he used to sit with the
schoolboy tribe o:
ord that the general
were wont to
Lady Washi igton’
drive up Fair stre’t to church, on Su
days, in a coach gud four;
was a never-failing delight to him and


21@23c.; roosters, 15@1T7c.; sprin
chickens, according to quality,
23c.; White Leghorns, accordi
quality, 20@22¢; ducks, as to
quality, 20@24c.; geeze, 19@22¢
pigeons, old, per pair, 28@30c.; do

young, per pair, 20@25c.

BALTIMORE. — Whea
No. 2 red,
steamer No. 2 red Western, spot, at
RL
Corn—The small parcels of Scuth

spot, closed

ern corn offered from day to day are
readily taken. Sales of a small lot


'n delivered, at
on spot.
Oats—Standard, 65%; No. 3, white,
65c.
Rye—No. 2 Wester 3
No. 3 do, do, $1.50 nominal; No. 4 do
do, $1.49 nominal; bag lots, as to
quality and condition, $1.20@1.35.
Hay—No. 1 timothy
do, $17@17.50; No. 3
light clover mixed, $10.5

ery, export, $1.5



 




do, $15.50@16; No. 2 do, do, $13.50@
15; .1 elover, § No. 2 do, $13@
14 3 do, $8@9.
Str: No. 1 straight



No. 2 do. do, $13: No. 1
do, $10.50@11; No. 2 do, do,
3 No.
7 “No,
good, J6@37cC.;








“= Leg
h old hens, 4 g over
2 small to medium, 20c¢.; ol
r and 1
Youn 1scovy and n 19 3.
do, White Pekings, «do, n
runners, 19c.; puddle, choice, t




ona + do,
and
16@17c.
fat
, 19@

 

poor, -crocked breast,




young,
small

ctock. 10@11
| Live Stock
KANSAS CITY, MO.—Hogs
11.85@12 2 F¥, -
yackers a , s11.90@ >
ight, $11.60@11.90; pigs, $10@11.35.
Sieep—Lambs, $12.50@14.40; year
lings, $12.25@13.25; w rs, $10.50@
11.50; ewes, $10@10.80.
C therns steady to weak.
Prime fed steers, $11.25@12; dressed
beef steers, $9@11; Western steers,
$8@11.50; Southern steers, $6.50@
9.50; cows, $5.50@9.50; heifers, $7@
11; stockers and feeders, $7@10.75;
bulls, $6.50@8.50; calves, $7@13.


  

tt on


ttle






PITTSBURGH. — Cattle — Prime
wethers, $11.25@11.80; cull and com-
mon, $5@6.50; lambs, $1050@14.85;
veal calves, $14.50@15.
1.ogs—Prime heavies and mediums,
$12.85@12.90; heavy Yorkers. $12.70
@1280 licht Yaprors $11.7 3


sed firm; chick-
ens, 19@29c.; fowls, 18@24; turkeys,


3A Autographic Kodak
Making Pictures Post Card Size
Price, $22.50
KODAK
A gift you know they want.

Made in factories where hones{
workmanship has become a habit, sold
by ‘a store you have learned to depend
upon,
Kodaks from ........$6.00 up
Brownles from....... 1.25 up
W.B. BENDER
Mount Joy, Pa.


No.
3 yellow, $1.13@1.14; No. 4 yellow,
$1.11@1.12; No. 5 yellow, $1.09@1.10.
—-No. 2 white, 68% @6Jc.;


uy A
If You Want a Car That's
Tried and True
I have taken the agency for the Maxwell Automobiles, which is one of the
best equipped and easiest riding cheap cars on the market. It is by no
but one that has been tried for years and has proven
Any one in the market for such a car will readily be con-
vinced of its merits after a demonstration which will be cheerfully given.
but I am prepared to take care of the people to whom
sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying cars. I am at your
e Sundays or night time as well as during the day. None but com-
If your car needs attention, give this garage

, 39@
do, seconds, 35@36c.; special
fancy brands of prints were jobbing

extras,
Ss, $13.00
means a new car,
I not only sell cars,
petent mechanics



axwell



tudehaker /
Cie of the Best Cars of That Class
BRUBAKERS’ GARAGE
Bell Phone
Mount Joy, Pa. |






Marietta St.





.B. CLING
ALBERT STRICKLER
Bell Phone at Residence and Yards 1” z


MT.JOY, PA.


PEP 4200000900000 000 000004) |
*
+ We Are Always Prepared to Serve
Pure Spring Water
ICE
IN ANY QUANTITY
At very Mcderate Charges.
to see us before
placing your order this year.
: J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
MOUNT JOY, PA.
PEP PPPPIP EGP IC OL VL VSO
GARDEN THEATRE
PIPPI PPP PPP0000000000
PEI IFPVP0 9000000000009 000009
SP 000900


Entertainment

SPEND YOUR VACATION
IN NEW YORK
You can see morein N
one week than any ‘place in the
iy must know how,
“RNOW HOW
One full week of “Sight Seeing™
will show you everything worse
while in the big city
covers hotel accomodationg
cost of sight seeing
theaters, roof gardens, eta
v oy all your carfare






Krall's Meat Market

| always have on hand anything In
the line of
SMOKED MEATS, HAM, BOLOGNA,
DRIED BEEF, LARD, ETC.
Also Fresh Beef, Veal, Pork, Mutton,
'H. H. KRALL
West Main St, Mount Joy, Pa.
Bell Telephone,

PLUMBING
Tinning and Spouting
THAT'S MY BUSINESS
| Also all kinds of repair work of every
description. Work must be right.
A SHARE CF YOUR BUSINESS
SOLICITED.
Charles Ricksecker
West Main St, Mount Joy
SIGNS
Wood, Meta! or Muslin/
R. F. Eshleman
BELL PHONE.
DACHESTER SPILLS








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