The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 13, 1917, Image 3

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A TEN MILLION RESPOND

VETOES BILL FOR
10 PRESIDENT WILSON'S CALL HREMEN'S RELIEF
But Little Trouble Encountered as Young Men Between
9 5 « r a . . . . .
21 and 30 Years Register —Organized Opposition
oO
to Conscription Conspicuously Absent.
———————————
Reports From Governors Throughout | activities of the
Country Indicate That Enrollment | Asscciation rece
Co-uperative Buying
Is In Excess Of 10,000,000. | ent ot gla men, growing out of
. | threats of armed resistance on-
Quict Reported Everywhere. earinti ; Shoe bv om
| scriptions, the registration was car
ried out withcut a hitch.
10,000,000 |
Washingtcn.—More than
ng themselves
Americans enrolled
sday for war service.

{not completed at 9 o'clock and




Registration day, with but a few! Governors of Ohio and Michigan were
V of preparation, saw the first | authorized to order the pells in each
ni / census ever taken in the Unit | city to stay open until all were reg
ed States completes without a single | istered, ;
untoward event of consequence. In Cleveland a shortage of registra-
oh m tnhond of the nation obeyed | tion cards developed during the day,
i 11'a pall « y Tr ro } i .
t President's call and volunteered en | and until more could be printed reg
nm setting at naught all the schemes | isters were instructed* to take the
and plotting ¢f German sympathizers | names and addresses of applicants and
end the few cranks who have agitated | to canvass them at their homes
2 salns TegisuaLion. It remains but | No Hint Of Slacking.
to select the men who are to go to | > . i
the front | legistration day developments were
: i 4 :
ind ! summarized by ti 201 3
From virally every slate. renssnr: | i by the committee on pub
[lic information in the following state
| ment:
Nearly 10,000,000 Americans of
anterpHiss joiliary age registered for service in
I Lhe army agains srmany. The regis-
In some precincts the late comers tration J 25am Soman The regis
- ati ras a plishe a fashi
forced officials to keep the polls open | : geomplished mi a fashion
| measuring up to the highest standards

1ges came to Brigadier-Gen-
Provost Marshal-General,
Roles al supervising officer of the great

l rowaer,
until long after the 9 P. M. closing | America Ti
: % | ericanism. y ; o 3
hour set in the regulations. General Fone to thy ik i 0 youns nen
i] ot: 3 Lhe registrat aces =
Crowder authorized them to keep open |, ; Teguauon .p ces ore
| thusiastic; there was no hint of a
as long as men wisned to enroll them-
| slacking spirit anywhere, exce in :
selves. T p oi i, 4 ere, except in a
Te The result will be further io few cases where misguided persons
delay the transmission of returns, how- (had be
ever. 12 een prevailed upon to attempt
| to avoid their national obligation. The
The early reports, showing a full |
Ti li op = | Government officials, who had pro-
turncut all cver the country, indicated fesvod the hisnast confid in ihe
that the estimates of the Census Bu- Ss gheyt confine :
yatriotism of the young men of the
reau as to the number of men within ! y = a

io ve eeply gratifi : he
he specified age limits would be veri- [ag id w Be. deeply gratifisg = ti
fod by tha cadnl. Whence? parts [TOSI it transcended their highest
: dha ae, Ye “| expectations.
figures were authoritative the esti ; ?
mates checked closely. Conspiracies Fail.
A typical message received was that | “From every state reports were re-
idaho: “Registration will be 100 ! ceived showing that the sporadic con-





it,” it said. ‘Spontaneous and | spiracies to thwart the first step to-
murmur or incident.” i ward the mobilization of as large an
tuation was so clear and the | army as the country may need to bring
I nse so ready throughout the | the war to a victorious conclusion had
co y that Governors of 46 of tl} failed utterly. The Department of
48 states had sent similar assurances | Justice had a tremendous machinery
lonz hefore registration had closed, | ready to cope with these conspiracies,
and the other two were close on their | but it proved to be unnecessary. Late
heels this afternoon the department had not








 
\ feature of the registration was the | received a report of a single arrest,
1 of hundreds of thcusands of | and the only arrest officially reported
make any reply to the ques- | to any governmental body occurred in
“Do you claim exemption?” Even | Virginia, where one man who de-
n yorted that they had de. (nounced the Government and the flag
I men with obvious ; promptly taken into custody.
p! es and those whos is report came to the office of the
G( are certain to keep ther rovost marshal, General Crowder.
declined
to make such a
Apparently they have entered INDIANS RESIST LAW.
into the very spirit ¢f the law. ER
They are content to leave the question Navajoes Drive Registration Officials
tion to the exempticn boards From Reservation.
no claims to make, but are



 
3 Sih % X .. | Flagstaff, — Navajo nd me
r to do their share, whatever it : :
: | drove an Indian agent and other F
Is | eral officers off the Government Rr 3
|
here,

  


Many Yet To Register. | vation 109 miles northeast of
i 1 supplementary ! when the latter went to re he
st Tuesday's registra- | Indians under the War Army Selective
Li continental United Draft bill, according to advices reach
St Hawaii will rec- | ing here. The Federal officers feared |

Indians would the warpath
be
on dates



 


iting men to the 20 on
iater, and the rcll of Americans |if further attempts were made to
now abroad, who are beseiging | register them, it was reported.
§ 11 around the world for reg rn
i s, will add to the great | Utes Take To Hills.
1i The State Department was called | :
3 oe | Ignacia, Col.—Ute Indians on their
ug additional cards by the thou- | Bi 3 > a
> | reservation near here refused to regis-
x : : | ter under the Selective Draft act and
eleventh-hour rulings were | ot
: it 4 i spent most of the day dancing war and
fo necessary. The system devised | 3 oF .
bear” dances in native costume.

General Crowder of invoking

by the
jolitical machinery of the naticn In rr
Datel mune y ofsthe en; om MOUNTAINEERS REGISTER.
the task worked with a smoothness :
hat spoke of perfect ¢9-0 ati 7 4
: polte of iperfec 3% RETA ign by No Trouble In the Tennessee and Vir-
state, county and municipal officials.
Free Yet To Enlist. ginia Districts.
Bristol, Tenn.—Twelve hundred and










ral Crowder made it clear, how- | | : pe
¢ that registration acted as a bar nineteen registered in Bristol Tues-
a t no man who wished to enlist day. A considerable percentage of
in ny, navy or marine corps. | the men claimed exemption from lia-
An Who enrolled himself Tues | DL tO military service for various
da; whose patriotic impulse bids {Leasons. Reparts Fo over -Hipper
him step into the ranks now and not | Tennessee and Southwest Virginia in
lection day, will pass from the | dicate that there was no opposition
registration lists automatically, A man | Whatever to the registration. In the
may ke his choice as to the part of | mountain sections, where it was
the .t national army in whieh he | thought that there might be hostilities
will serve—regulars, National Guard to the registration, it is reported that
or selective army. . | all men between the ages registered.
| Two hundred members of a local fra-
ards malled by men absent
to the

Many i :
3 ternal order marched in a body
from their home precincts failed to ‘ :
show the present address of the indi | polls and registered amidst the cheers
BI Ww 1¢ Pres Ld S ] -
unl | of a huge crowd.
Four Arrests Reported.
Only fcur arrests were officially re-
porteit o the Department of Justice—at
vid
CONVICTS TERRORIZE JOLIET.
| Fire Buildings and Attempt To Escape
Hamilton, Ohio; Hartford, Conn.; | Prison
Richmond, Va., and at a small place |
near St. Louis. | Joliet, Ill.—After one prisoner had
Quieter Than Election. | been killed, eight severely injured and
: | several others hurt during three riot-
| reports showed that the reg- !

i ous outbreaks at the state prison by a



  



Istratic : 1 without even such ex i thousand convicts, a rainstorm drove
eiting dist s as mark a general | yo 155t 200 of the mutineers to the
political election. Reports were slow | qeqngyge, although they had stubborn-
in ving into the Department of Jus- | 1u refused to move before the bayonets |
t ich was gratifying to officials | op national guardsmen who quelled the |
be it indicated ack of trouble, in | suthreak. Fires set within the prison |
view of the strict instructions -sent fyi gings destroyed the prison yard
e ere to report trouble instantly | pyjlqings, entailing a total loss of
to gion. | $200,000. Several other buildings
Cards Ran Out. | were damaged by the flames.
There was some delay in Gary, Ind. {
Chicago dXstricts because |
had to be stopped to
I nting of more cards, reg-
exceeding all expectations.
where the Government's
of the anticonscriptien




le





in Jersey City in 1862, and in January,
1863, was attached to the South
lantic squadron;
i the attack on Fort Wagner, in
| ber, 1863.
Septem-

Inve

tors” and plain “slackers” kept their
sentiments well concealed and at-
tempted no disturbance.
Federal, State and city authorities,
police and members of the Home De-
fense League, who were prepared for
No Disorder and Every Evidence Of
Willingness Shown.
—Without a semblance of
600,000 NEW YORKERS ON ROLL.
New York i

and with every evidence of | any emergency, had little to do except
; to serve, approximatel¥ |help the hard-working registers, who
New York’s sons went to | were literally overwhelmed in many
ation places and inscribed ! precincts by long lines of young men


 
2 g
mes uj the nation’s roll of | presenting themselves for registration.
1 The entire city seemed 10 | Thousands of potential soldiers had to
1 nsed the significance and stand in line for hours awaiting their
: f the day. ts, anti- | turn, but they endured the long wait
: nists, ‘“‘conscientious objec- | philosophically.
ntly led to the indict-
Cleveland and Detroit reported to the
War Department that registration was
the
The monitor Weehawken was built |
At- |
she was sunk during |
Goveraor Brumbgugh Says
Sproul Measure Doesn't
Provide Extra Fund.
IS A VITAL
TAX ITEM
Says Legislature Has Failed to Pro-
vide for Revenue to Take the
{ Place of the
Is Proposed to Pay.
Income It
Harrisburg.
| Covernor Brumbaug vetoed the
| Sproul Senate bill prov ding that the
entire proceeds of the State tax on
premiums of foreign fire insurance
| companies shall be paid to firemen's
relief organizations in various mu-
nicipalities. The Governor, in the
course of a long message, says the
Legislature has failed to provide for
revenue to take the place of the in-
come which it is proposed to pay to
| the municipalities for the firemen.
Under the present law half of the
proceeds of the $400,000 tax goes to
the organizations, the balance being
paid to the State fire insurance fund.
The Governor says the creation of
the fire insurance fund was an im-
portant economic measure for
State government, nd that the tax
is a vital item in the creation of the
fund, which it is expected will amount
to $1,000,000 in a few years.
would be the height of folly to compel
the State to carry its insurance and
at the same time remove from its
treasury the fund dedicated to this
service,” says the Governor.
‘bill is a direct attack upon the State
insurance fund. Due
fact was conveyed to the responsible
representatives in the Assembly,
they were urged, in case they wished
to dedicate all this income, to make
other fiscal provision to carry out the
law's mandate in the matter of the
insurance of its own property from
the fund. Such provision was not
made.”
The House bill to
method of distribution of
legislators for this session's closing
was approved by the Governor. The
effect of the bill will be to make $200
immediately available and $100 at the
end of the session.
The Governor also approved the
House bill to increase from $12,500
to $30,000 the amount of relief that
may be paid in the Pittston poor dis-
frict.
change the
salaries of

| Money for State
The question
Highways.
that will be decided
by the Legislature is whether or not,
considerir. + the scarcity of men and
the high prices of materials, the State
Highway Department appropriation


 


bill, carrying 316,647,049.38, shall pass. !
| Frank B. Black, State Highway Com-
| missioner, asks that the bill, which
| was cut approximately $2,000,000 in
I | committee, be passed in its present
| rorm. He says the money will be
| allowed to lie in the 7 if reas-
| onable bids are not receiv for high-
way cons work. Recent bids,
ected, ran about $45,500
| whica were
r ago concrete roads
a mile, while a

| were being constructed at $16,000 to |
~ 3 |
| $17,000 a mile
| The items of the appropriation
| measure as it now stands are: Auto-
mobile leense fees for construction,
maintenance and repair, $6,000,000;
constructicn and improvement of high-
ways within borough limits, $7,000,000; |
Commonwealth's share of State-aid

roads, $2,000,000; condemnation of toll
roads, $500,000; dirt road deficiency, |
$1,142,043.38, and damages to property
caused by construction of State roads |
$5000. |
Commiss

Black, in pointing out |
that the license fees will amount to
$3,000,000 a year, says virtually all
of this amount will be used for main-
ner


State highways and the average cost
per mile is $300 a year. Six millions |

of the $7,000,000 item, he says, will
be used on construction work and |
$1,000,000 on borough highways con-
necting roads improved up to the bor-
ough limits.
A 2) per cent increase in bids he
helieves would be permissible under |
existing circumstances. He considers
$20,000 a mile for concrete road fair,
and says the department will build
concrete roads for the present. The
purchase of toll roads will be on a
fifty-fi.ty basis, the counties affected
and the State paying for them
Bills Passed Finally by S Senate.
Bills passed finally by the Senate
included:
House Campbell bill regulating the
sale of drugs.

House bill increasing salaries of
i County Commissioners in some of the
{| smaller counties
Bills Passed Finally by House.
Bills passed finally by the House in-
cluded-
Amendments
agreed upon by
Boroughs
Establishing salaries
cers in Philadelphia.
Providing for inspection of
| in nurseries and imported
to the borough code
the State League of
of police offi-
all trees
into the




State, under direction of the Secretary
| of Agriculture.
Amending sales act of 1915 by pro-
viding for suit for failure to deliver
| or pay when sales are made on instal-
| ment plan
| Increasing salaries of Luzerne Coun- |
ty Commissioners and Controller to
$5000 per year.
Regulating appointment of Assistant
County Solicitors
Fixing compensation of first class
township Treasurers when acting as
Tax Collectors.
Authorizing second-class townships


to make connections with sewer sys-
tems in adjoining municipalities
Giving Poor Directors right of emi-
nent domain for for buildings
or for farms
Regulating payment of taxes en
seated lands owned by joint tenants

PENNSYLVANIA
BRIEFS
SHI
Dr. A. A,
master at Carlisle,
sealer of weights
(Cumberland county.
Two ambulance units, made up
students from the Pennsylvania State
x
IN]
=
=
=
-
= E
n= —
z =z
z Z|
Thomson, former post-
has been appointed
and measures
of
College, have been mustered into Gov-
ernment service for early duty ia
France.
A Bureau of Entomology has been
established at Carlisle through the
activities of the Chamber of Com-
merce, W. R. McConnell heading the
| five experts in charge.
A peremptory mandamus has been
issued by Luzerne County Court, or-
dering the Verhovay Aid Society head-
quarters moved back from Pittsburgh
to Hazleton, designated by the char-
ter.
Suit for $10,000 has been brought
by Mrs. Rose Brandle at Altoona
against R. J. Javitz, who drove the
automobile that killed her husband
and C. J. Potts and H. G. Irvine, trad
ing as a garage company.
Hereford has an epidemic of
typhoid fever.
Berks prisoners hereafter will wear
blue suits, stripes having been aban: |
doned.
Fifteen
doing the
of
on
Reading are
the Archer
Boy Scouts
farm work
| farm at Flying Hill, Berks county.
the |
“rt |
| Butcher's
Deer have made their appearance in
the Perkiomen Valley, four near Green
Lane and two at Itinland, all quite
tame.
Hogs are selling at $20 a hundred
pounds in Skippack township, and at
cattle sale, in Salfordville
suckling pigs brought $7 each.
Owing to increased business at the
| Cochranville post office, the salary of
“This |
Postmaster Herbert Albright is to be
| increased $100 a year.
notice of this |
| ment of the Nurses’ College
and |
| the Pennsylvania Railroad
tenance, as there are 10,000 miles of |
the commence-
of the
Allentown Hospital, when 11 nurses
received diplomas, it was announced
by Dr. C. D. Schaffer, the chief sur-
geon, that the use of the college had
been tendered to the United States as
an emergency hospital during the war.
Secretary Baker wired the thanks of
the War Department.
Newtown Chapter of the American
Red Cross is making a strong effort to
increase its membership.
Chester’s subscriptions to the Liberty
loan aggregate $800,000, and will short-
In connection with
| ly overreach the million-dollar mark.
By the annexation of “East Souder-
ton” to Soudertown borough, the latter
population has been increased 400.
Margaret Thompson, a gypsy maid-
ten dollars.
Employees at the Weber planing
mill North Wales, who were on a
strike, have been granted an increase
of 21, cents an hour.
Cheltenham Township
sioner Charles W. Bosler
for the use his employees
acres of land, near Ogontz,
for tilage.
The revenue
the Lancaster district were
919.99, the largest in the
the office. They are double
April and three times those of
1916. Corporations paid $158,184.84
and individual $78,530.40 tax
Dr. Arthur R. May,
veterinary physicians
vears a leading politician,
Springs, is dead, aged 79.
Dr. Albert T. Poffenberger,
years chief medical examiner
in territory
2d
Commis-
of

May in
31,0
history
receipts for

of
those
income
the lead
many
BON
one of
and
yt
ing
ng
ing
Sr., for
28

from Williamsport to Harrisburg, die
at Sunbury, aged 54.
The Delaware & Hudson Railroad
for
or
| similar to that which existed in south-
[ ern
has raised all fares on its Pennsyl- |
vania division.
Seventy-two of Pennsy’s Altoona |
shopmen have been accepted for the
Army Engineer Corps.
The plant of the Raby-Hinton Com:
pany will be moved to Carlisle from
Mechanicsburg soon as a new
building can be erected.
as
BE]
| court.
Dr. F. K. Martin, of the National
Defense Council, tells Pittsburghers
the tardiness of doctors to enlist in
| the medical corps is the worst re-
cruiting drawback.
The District Attorney of Mercer
county has informed managers of the |
different fair associations in ths |
county that no automobiles will be
allowed to be given away at the fairs
this year.
The board of managers of the Brad-
ford County Agricultural Society,
will |
conduct the annual fair in September |
at Towanda. Some time ago
it was |
suggested that the fair be abandoned |
because of the war, but it was voted |
down.
Postmaster Craig, of Mercer, has no- |
the vicinity of Mercer borough that
highways must be put into proper con-
| tified supervisors of four townships in |
dition at once, else the rural mail serv- |
ice will be discontinued upon some
| of the roads in that part of the county
Scranton saloons have doubled
prices on all mixed drinks and cut
down the size of beer glasses.
Lock Haven people complain
cause Renovo people go to that
on early trains and buy all the
sirable things in the markets
he
town
le-
before


Lock Haven’'s prospective purcl
are out of their beds. Renovo
miles from Lock Haven, but the I
pering of the county seat’s stock of
vegetables and produce will likely con
tinue despite the protests, unless
Lock Haven’'s folks can inure them-
selves to the habit of early rising,
at least on market days.
Mont Clare residents want
lights on the new canal bridge
The congregation of the Presbyter-
ian Church at Parkers Landing hag
extended a call to Rev. J. M. Brice-
land, of Butler, to fill the vacancy
in the pastorate of the Parker Church,
made vacant through the resignation
of Rev. Maxwell Cornelius. The con-
gregation offers a Seley of $1500 a
vear, with four weeks’
H. Carothers,
sealer weights and measures,
been notified to quit, and a new 1
will be appointed by the new Repub-
lJican Board


S.
¢ has
oi nas

not
electric |
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
of |
| generations.
{ the
| mao. The region was densely popu-
lated, and Machu Picchu was its cap-
| ital.
Lack of timber, the prevalence of |

| en, was arrested in Chester and sent |
| to jail on a charge of swindling Frank |
| Ellis of
| common,
has procured |
several |
prepared |
uncommon.
. | use
or |
May, |
| stones that weigh over fifteen
| 1s
| who succeeded in equaling
DS unts. {
an |
| pr

HIN CITY OF INCAS
Ancient People Created Wonders
of Architecture.
Ruins Found in South America Dis
close Amazing Facts Regarding
Vanished Civilization.
Amazing and absorbing interesting
facts concerning the builders of the
wonderful city of Machu Picchu, the
ancient Incas, are given in a com-
munication to the National Geograph-
fe society by Prof. Hiram Bingham,
director of the Peruvian expedition of
1015, sent out by the society and Yale
university. The ruins of this great
center of a vanished civilization was
discovered by Professor Bingham and
his party after they had been lost for
ol

The buildings of Machu Picchu,
writes Professor Bingham, had an |
elaborate system of highways through-
out this little known and almost unex- |
plored country, which lies between
Urubamba valley and the Apuri- |
heavy rains during part of the year,
and the ease with which stone might
be procured early led to the develop- |

Kodak and


CLARENCE Sci
MOUNT JOY. PA:


























Tae
Supplies
Get a Kodak without letting
your pocket know it.
Ask for a Kodak Bank and
see how easy it is to get a real
camera with spare dimes.
W. B. BENDER
Mount Joy, Pa.

ment of stone as a building material, | =
Strength and permanence were se- |
—_——

cured through the keying together of
irregular blocks. The upper and low=
er surfaces of these stones were fre=
quently convexed or concaved, the
convexity of one stone approximating
the concavity of the adjoining stone.
In constructing their walls the pure
arch was not evolved.
Buy A Maxwell

Their pottery is marked by simple
and graceful lines, bearing a striking
resemblance to that of ancient Greece
and resembling in its simplicity and
utility some of the modern vessels at
present in use in French kitchens,
Owing to the extreme moisture of the
climate, the remains of cloth are very
few; but we know that the Inca peo-
ple actually did arrive at a high de-
gree of skill in the manufacture of
textiles through their ability to pro-
cure the wool of the alpaca.
Their surgical tools were probably
of bronze or obsidian. Surgery ap-
pears to have been practiced to a con- | IT not only sell cars, but I am prepared
siderable degree, if one may judge | II sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying cars.
by the large number of trepanned | |service Sundays or night time as well as during the day.
skulls that we have found in caves
within a radius of 25 miles of Machu
Picchu. In some cases the cause of
the operation appears to have been
disease; in others evidence leads us
to the conclusion that the operation
was intended to relieve pain caused
by wounds received in battle. Since
the favorite weapon of the Inca peo-
ples was the sling, and clubs were
it is not surprising that the
skulls of many soldiers should have
a trial. I also handle the

needed the relief that came from
skillful trepanning. In the art of war
they exhibit skill in defense rather
than offense. Fortifications construct-
ed with salients and re-entrant angles |
so as to admit of lateral fire were not |
|
They had no machinery and did not |
iron steel. They used levers |
and inclined planes
|
. They also made |
out of which they | Bell Phone
or
huge fiber ropes,
constructed long suspension bridges. |
They thought nothing of handling |
Y si rf
blocks of
upwards. Indeed, there are numerous

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 niarket. It is by mo
means & new car, but one that has been tried for years and has provea
satisfactory. Any one in the market for such & car will readily be oon-
vinced of its merits after a demonstration which will be cheerfully given.

petent mechanics employed. IK your car needs attention, give this garage

Studebaker
One of the Best Cars of That Class
BRUBAKERY

stone weighing five tons and | Mount Joy, Pa.
——
to take care of the people to whom
I am at your
None but com-
ARAGE
Marietta St.


tons,
which were fitted together with a skill |
that has amazed all beholders.
Most unfortunate was the failure
the Incas to develop an alphabet,
even some form of hieroglyphic
of

Mexico and Central America. It
remarkable indeed that a people
the an-
cient Egyptians in architecture, en-
gineering, pottery and textiles should
have fallen so far behind in the de-
velopment of a written language. This
the most serious obstacle that
stands in the way of our learning more
of that enterprising race.

“Set Steady.”
chewing gum
She was a
vigorously
witness in
She
and
was
audibly.
ALBERT STRICKLER
Bell Phone at Residence and Yards
 
 

























“What is name?”
lawyer.
“Minnie.
your asked the |

>
We Are Always Prepared to Serve
“Minnie what?” { ° |
“Minnie Moore.” Pure Spring Water
“Minnie, tell the jury all you know | {
sbout the character of the defend- |
ant?” | i E !
But, after much discussion by law-
yers, the question was overruled and |
the following asked: |
“Were you at your home last fall on |
election day?”
The witness, however, angrily |
shook her fist in the face of the digni- |
filed jury.
“Now,
a-goin’
to
IN ANY QUANTITY
At very Moderate Charges.
Don’t fall to see us before
placing your erder this year.
J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
MOUNT JOY, PA.
GARDEN THEATRE
you all jest set steady. I'm |
to hurry about this. I'm
a-goin’ answer that first question
before I say one word about that last
one,”
{
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|
|
4
PIPPI PI 0000000000 PPP O OOO


Found Her Name.



“I say, old fellow,” confided the |
bachelor to his friend, “I'm going to | --FOR--
be married, and for the life of me I |
don't know what to call my wife's
mother. ‘Mother-in-law’ is too big a ! Clean
and ‘mother’ would be too *
Tell me, what do you do?” Ent t ; t
‘Let me see. Oh, yes, I remember. / er ainmen

year I called her,
and after that?”
after that it was easy—we both
‘Say.’

“Well,
“Oh,
Charles S.Frank



1 her grandmamma.”"—Harper’s
i | |
AUCTIONEER
i
"Ow Much? MOUNT JOY, PA. {
London children get some quaint | |
Prompt attention given to the Calling
of Real Estate and Personal Property
Sales, Terms Moderate. Bell Phone
views of life. An instance of this re-
cently occurred {in an East End Sunday
school, where the teacher was talking
about Solomon and his wisdom. |
“WwW hen the Queen of Sheba came and
v and fine raiment before
on what did he say?” she asked |
SS |
One
jp
}
The Sevcik School for Violin |
SEMI-TONE SYSTEM
IRA C. EBY
West Donegal St, Mout Joy, Pa. |

1
Se

who had evidently |
in ch matters


ain
Suc
h I
mptly T pi
«Ow much d'yer want for the lot?” |
Krall's Meat Marke Market
I aiways have on hand anything Is
the lire of
SMOKED MEATS, HAM, BOLOGNA
DRIED BEEF, LARD, BTC,
Also Fresh Béef, Veal, Pork, Mutton
H. HL. 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 nfust be right.
A SHARE OF YOUR BUSINESS
S8QLICITED.
Charles Ricksecker
West Main St, Mount Joy
SIGNS
Wood, Meta! or Muslin
R. F. Eshleman
BELL PHONE.