a THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. 4 — MT. JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Pro’r. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $1 A YEAR Six Months...... 50 Cents Three Months. ...25 Cents Single Copies. .... 2 Cents Sample Copies ..... FREE ntered at the post office at Mount soy as second-class mail matter. All correspondents must have their eommunications reach this office not later than Monday. Telephone news of importance between that time and 12 o'clock noon Wednesday. Chan- ges for advertisments must positively reach this office not later than Mon- day night. New advertisments in- serted if copy reaches us Tuesday night. Advertising rates on applica- tion. MILTON GROVE Isaac G. Kopp was a Ww :-end orator yn ¢ 1 rr patch at Rheems Irs. Fanr of Cherry Hill, spent » Mr A Grosh 1 1 x Mem \ BB. ( \ par ir. ar Mr Supervisor E Beverly, by his smili rount day. Dauson She: fe guest with his n- Lean Gantz and family )a Sunday. : . Harvey Hoffman and fa Mount Joy, spent arents, Mr. and offman. ; 5 - Harry S. Weaver, a Milton Gr product, now of Donegal 1 i spent Sunday with his father, Weaver. Mr. and Mrs. entertained on parents, Mr. and Clayton R. Gibble Sunday the latter’s Mrs. Henry G. burg, passed through here last week on a professional trip. Reg. Assessor Harvey D. Wittle completed the census In the Milton Grove precinct that comes under the compulsory school law. ie Grosh, who had an austere to note has convalesced V entering the emergency hospital. Mrs. Ada Melchoir and family. Pleasant view; Quuday morning. two noted fishers along brother Willie, spent a day able fish. Allen R. Gibble, Mr. bethtown, in the former's roadster. illumed our streets part of the past week. Dr. and Mrs. Winfield Thome and son Walter and daughter Jean of Mount Joy, spent Friday even- ing with the former’s brother, Dr. "A. J. Thome and family. Mr. and Mrs. I. G. Kopp, ren- dezvoused at the domiciliary of his son, Levi M. Kopp and spouse, down : the everglades of lower Rapho township, over the Sabbath. Red squirrels, so reported are un- usually plentiful in the groves bor- dering the Conewago and Furnace + Hills and back of what is known as tr the Muckle Swamp, near the Rifle nge. 2 Messrs. John Rasp and son Oliver, “Aaron R. Gibble, LeRoy Wittle, A. 8. Holwager, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Grosh, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey D. Wit- tle, Ira Heisey and Irvin G. Hoff- man were the Milton Grove aggrega- tion at Mount Joy on Sunday. Greiner of Manheim. Dr. Bishop, the hog and dog manipulator, who hails from your | affliction of lumbago, we are glad without Mr. and Mrs. Claude Grosh spent Saturday and Sunday in Baltimore, as the guests of the former's sister, A. Curt Good, wife and mother- in-law, Mrs. Fanny Shelly attended the United Zion Children service at Merchant D. S. Mankin and wife, Jontractor H. Wagner and spouse, all esteemed citizens of Harrisburg, Sundayed with F. B. Grosh and fam- a N oseos Gingrich Thome and his the eddies of hickies creek angling for season- and Mrs. John Rasp and son Oliver took an early Monday morning spin to Yaa au Clayton R. Fry, of College Ave., Elizabethtown, who is a ruling spirit in Mount Joy township pedagogies, the concluding raced with lightning speed to the | and succeeded in saving the rescue almost suffocated and poisoned child. The teacher training class suc- ceeded in making a fine record in so much that all the members who took the examination a few weeks ago passed successfully with fine averages The last meeting was held on Wednesday evening after the regular meeting during the re- vival services at Chiques, nll SALUNGA Miss Mary Eshleman of Mount Joy, spent Sunday with the Peifer family. Mrs. Amanda Herr spent a few days with her son, Christ near Iron- ville ; Miss Wevodan of Harrisburg, nt few days with Miss Ruth spent a f Lancaster, l ier sister, Mrs. Reu ; . R. D. Raffensberger is spend he « it Elizabethtown, call- r 1 Lal y Willi e y W. G. Ke I if 1 Mrs s 1 1 Ss St hi Mz 1 El S r, Mrs Reac er y 1 ) ndis in Sunday sherger I er Peters Mrs. Jacob Hershey of Petersburg, John Garber of near Lizzie Stauffer Mrs. “To Mr. and Mrs. bias Rheems, and Mrs. and Mrs. Henry Baer. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Herr on Sunday | Mr. and Mrs. Elra | Mann and sons Marvin, Cyrus and i Ira, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mann and | son Robert, Mr. and Mrs. John New- comer and son, Vernon and Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Herr and children John, Jacob and Catharine. Childrens’ Day was observed in the M. E. Church Sunday night and taking things all in all was a suc- cess. Miss Strickler, the Superin- tendent reins things without any ostentations display but handles them with a firm hand and a cordiality that appeals to old and young. Mr. James E. Kendig after finish- ing his four year couse in Electrical Engineering at State College, spent a few days at home. Last Friday he returned accompanied by his sis- ter, Miriam and aunt, Miss Peifer, who will take in the commencement exercises which were concluded Monday. Miss Miriam Kendig returned Thursday from Philadelphia, where she attended the commencement exercises of the Philadelphia school of Design for Women, the Class- Day exercises of Drepel and also the Kolb—Danner wedding. While she was away she was re-elected teacher of Art in East Hempfield township. Mr. John Spangler, who four weeks ago was taken to the General Hospital in a generally broken up condition, reports that he is out of splints and has only to learn over again the art of walking to be as good and gay as ever. So may it be, and may the greatness of modern surgery be heralded over the land on to the end of time. SPORTING HILL Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Vogel, of Lan- caster, spent Sunday here with his mother. Mrs. Harriet Balmer of Manheim, spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives here. Mrs. Benj. Horst and daughter, | Arline, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. | Martin Horst. | Mrs. D. M. Nissley, daughters | Mary and Elizabeth, spent Wednes- | day at Lancaster. | entertained MASTERSONVILLE The Mount Joy township school board raised the salaries, giving an advance of $5. Mr. and Mrs. David Gibble and ily attended the Heidelburg feast on Tuesday. Ir. and Mrs. Jonas Koser and sons, and Mr. and Mrs. Dutt, of | nheim, called on F. Y. Koser’s. | Potatoes are already affected with | blight and if people do not attend | to them in time we will have a short erop. The revival services at Chiques | Church closed on Sunday evening. | One soul turned from his sinful | road. Lillian Becker took the examina- tion for a teacher’s certificate at Elizabethtown on Saturday and passed successfully. Samuel Fasnacht who was injured in a runaway last week is improv- ing. The injuries are not quite as jerious as the rumor recorded Charles G. Becker no epr she Wear-Ever Aluminum the Monitor Sad-Iron Co. eanvass Manheim and Rapho ip. Charles G. Becker A chosen principal of the Milt High school for the i y The school will open on Septe third. Clinton Geib, one of the of the Chiques Church attend the annual meetix ta, Kansas, left on M Harvey Stauffer, the othe left on Thursday. Monroe Ruhl found a rye stalk his field measuring 8 feet and 2 the head of rye was 6% rw r delegate, the two children of Elias sllinger were playing one day last; sek, the older one poured coal | : down the younger’s throat and most ocated child. Miss Beulah George spent several days with her sister, Mrs. Ezra Boyer, at Bismark. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wickenheiser | spent Sunday with Benj. Spangler | and family near Sun Hill. { | A Springs, helped her mother with the | Ss | some time in the {| daughter, Mrs. J. W. Geib Mrs. John Nissley and daughter | Dorothy of Columbia, visited her | mother several days during the | week. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Garman and | daughter Margaret attended the! Love Feast on Sunday held at Shearer’s. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Stauffer, of E. Petersburg, are the week in the home of mos Sumpman Mr. and John Pyle an f Sunday in length. This is a record for Mas Amos Gibble | tersonvillee. What section can beat home. 2 Let us know. Mrs. Monroe Waser, of Silver | couring last week. Mrs. Mary Gibble is family spending of her Mrs. Amos Gibble is home from a xd Snyder, Mr. | Bachman Rehrer, Mr. and of Salunga, spent Sunday with Mr. | f Salunga, sj 3 N ball Wrightsville were defeated by that old free silver score of 16 team goes to Hershey. { three week’s pleasant visit to friends in the middle western states, Mrs. Frank Shenk and children spent Monday in the home of Harry Ebersole near Bachmansville. We will be satisfied Hon. Presi- dent with what you give us to do. Anything just to spoil some of Bill’s plans. LOCUST GROVE The Farmers Letter to the President The potato crop has a very promising appearance around here at this present writing. Mary Jane Neideigh and sister, Ruth were callers at the home of John Greenawalt on Sunday. Mrs. an and daughter of Florin, Saturday evening and Sunday her daughter, Mrs. Milton . Francis G. Neidigh, who operates the Carmany estate back of Florin, called to his mother, Mrs. Alpheus N h last } Jace Habecker of er |} 1 : n 1 Wi civ T+ } Q u un ter h, W ir I'} And We rn and all. We tu too An’ answering to the call. Your Auntie Sam is making Jam For all the boys to eat, And when she gets her dander up You know she can’t be beat! { She's bossin’ all the folks about, The farm’s no home at all. s just a mobilizing camp For answer to the call. ive | It So Woody dear! ye need not fear The country’s coming strong You can hear the factories whistles, You can hear the dummy’s gong, You can hear the crops a-sprouting, You can hear the seedlings say, We're marching every-where, We'll do our bit to-day. Your Uncle Sam says “Here I am,” We're marching every where, We are planting beets an’ bayonets, 0, we've hay seeds in our hair! But we're marching to the music Of a lasting peace for all, With our reapers and our muskets We are answering to the call. HE SHOWED THAT SURGEONS KNIFE LEFT BAD SCAR GOEBEL SUFFERED GREAT PAIN, WHICH AVAILEP HIM NOTHING TOWARD ' RE. COVERY There are scores of residents of Erie who are familiar with the con- dition of Louis Goebel, the well- known carpenter and all have sym- pathized sincerely with him in his sufferings. Mr. Goebel exhibited an ugly cross-like scar on the outer surface of his abdomen. “That is what the surgeons did for me. I was in the hospital for three months. They thought I had gall stones in my bladder, and I was told that the inflamation substances had overflowed to my stomach. “They operated on me. Yes sir, cut me open, and after all of that suffering I had no results from the operation. “I have been unable to work for a long time. Nearly everybody who knows me, knows that I am telling the gospel truth. Yes sir, this Tan- lac has done what the knife couldn’t do for me. I have used one single bottle of Tanlac and I feel like a new man. I am improving every day, getting my strength back. I expect; to continue taking this Tan- lac and I'm going back to work be as$lS 1 | ® | with millions of bu! Brother, what a s? Ul hen the enemy brings D O YOU know “curtain of fire’ ’ 1 1S WwW ‘up thousands of pieces of artillery, great cannon firing i i SNe iTXhe E lls as large as a i ig i.) ood, bodv. one of which explod > -~ TV ey h rr rd Ware 2 Ing among iive nunarea cl could kill them all---other smaller guns firing shrapnel, i § ] lets scarcely less destructive-- hundreds of thousands of shells, all exploding along a certain line, until there is a real wall of explosion, a wall of death to be passed. And our boys are going in—in where they use curtains of fire as you use matches—go- ing in with high hearts and a laugh—and OUR boys will go THROUGH—some of them, Brother, you can’t go with them. You are too old, or you have too many dependent on you, or you can’t pass the examination, or you are needed in your present work to keep the wheels of business moving at home. you don't want to lacker, do you®? But there is something you CAN do, and MUST do, some- thing that everyone of MUST do. and that is subscribe to the Liberty Loan. The na- tion must have $2,000,000,000 us NOW. There are bonds of $50 $100, $500 and upwards. They pay 31% per cent. and are the safest investment that has ever been known. They ax first mortgage he weal f the nited States ate | l 1 ) 1 alt ur- in s 1e’s f them will go 1d they’ll [ “There’ll be a 1 the Old Town To- night’’ just as they did at San- tiago, because that’s the kind of stuff that’s in them. What kind of stuff is there in you brother? We want you to go in now. The nation needs your help—very badly. Are you going to hang back? We don’t believe you would know= ingly be a slacker. You'll do your bit if you know about it. And you know about it now, and the call has come—the nation needs you to do your bit today. What Will You Say? In a day or two ‘days or three days people will begin to ask you, “Have you subscribed to the Liberty Loan yet?” And any real American with the stuff in him that is Amer- ican stuff will and can say, “You betcha! Yes sir! You betcha!” This is an enormous war loan issue. Two billions, $2,000, 000,000, is needed now—im- mediately. The banks have subscribed liberally. But the people must take the bulk of this loan. The bank’s money must be used, as always, to sup port merchants, factories, far- mers, so that crops can be rais- ed,food stuffs prepared for the market, and all business go on as usual. You Want Your Job, Don’t You? Brothers, you don’t want bus iness depression, we know. You don’t want factories close ed down, shops closed up men opt of work, old people dnd little children with- out enough to eat—the very poor starving. We know you n’t, but you haven’t realized ao the danger yet. But we are war AT WAR—and dan- ers go hand in hand with war be separated from Americans in 3ST bi these bonds, a ew month’s time you will see uy 1 further flood tide of prosper 3 that $2,000,000,000 is spent ON TOP of our present active business and this com- munity, and every worker in it will share in the business vie- tory you have helped to win. as How to Do It. If you have a bank account go to your bank and subscribe. Your first payment need be only 2 percent. of the whole and the balance in four pay- ments up to August 30. If you buy a $100 bond your first payment need be only $2. If you have no bank account go to your employer and sub- scribe through him. You can buy a $50 bond and pay $2.50 a week to him until all paid for There is no excuse for your NOT doing your bit—and ev- ery one will know it. Do your bit NOW. Subscribe for a Liberty Bond before the day is over. And when any one asks you, show him the receipt from your bank or boss and grin, and say ‘“You betcha, friend. You betcha,” like a regular Ameri- can who did not wait until the last day or un- til he was nagged into it but who VOLUNTEER ED-who didn’t hang back a minute when his country called. .yThe First National Mount Joy Bank ~Jhe Union National Mount Joy Bank soon, This Tanlac has done more for me than everything else com- bined, and I have taken, I guess, bayrels of medicine. It’s certainly like a miracle.” ventured by Misses lough, of Carlisle, and Sallie Bliem, of Pottstown. Miss Bliem’s paper was read by Miss Rose Yost, of Lancaster. Toasts to Mr. Grimm were offered by Miss Amelia C Jane MeCul- TOURISTS HELD RE- UNION AT FLORIN Tanlac is now sold in the drug | store exclusively by Dr. W. D. Chandler, where the premier prepa- ration can be had. rn A Al A Birthday Party Mr. and J Miller | gave a Lost at Wrightsville Ben Groff, who succeeded Eddie [iller as manager of the local base team, took his aggregation to Saturday where they to 1. Saturday the t Columbia iss Reminiscences; Miss Edna of Steelton, read a compen What “Ads.” Prophesies appropriate ver by Miss Cora Snyder, of Millers- burg; to the Bunch by Miss Villette Kinsman, of Philadelphia; to The Brides by Miss Mary D. Kohler, of Lancaster. Songs composed by the party as well as lively yells inter- THE HOME OF MR. AND MRS. H. H. ENGLE WAS THE SCENE OF A BRILLIANT AFFAIR SATURDAY of Mr me Mis HH rsed the numbers of the pro- was the scene of : : Saturday. ening dinner was followed by a v rain which drove all pers ev upon the t: Misses 3 RF apo Ma e Bliem, 2: Cor , and Anna Stauffer, Wit- s, Joseph Brack Kin- er; H: Gilbert, Mille urg; Amos C. r, Kinzer; C. Chester Hoover, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Engle; Mr. an ler, Rowenna; Mr. and Mrs. Amos S. Hess, Gap; Mr. and Mrs. Al. Ot- to, Herndon, and Mr. and Mrs. Yager, of Northumberland. W. Good, Lancaster; William Strick-! ler and family, and Miss Edith! Bentzel, of Mount Joy; Mrs. Phares Snyder, of Lititz; Mrs. H. L. Wal- | embers of the group were born; Miss Iva Albright, Rowenna; | 1 Garraty. zer and con- T . the mem- 1 ded in jest. western tone " Miss Ruth narrated Garraty, dium of 0 the m Kern, of Philadelphia; to Mr. Hoo- | George | | Miss Lelia "7hetstone, Mannie | Choice, Miss Rose Yost, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Yeager, Northumber. land, and Mr. and Mrs. J. Kimber Grimm and family, Lancaster. REGISTERED MEN CAN VOLUN: TEER BEFORE DRAFT BEGINS Capt. W. F. Harrell, Chief of this recruiting district with headquarters Ter at Harrisburg, received orders from For Economy Sake the War Department, and has so As a measure of economy, the advised the postmasters in his dis- Post Office Department r qaests| ich that men between the ages of the public to use stamps of the! 4 chnty-one and thirty-one who were highest denomi ed ~ duly registered will be given per- 1 Inission to enlist as volunteers be- ~~ fore the actual draft begins. How- EGAL SPRING Mrs. M ice DON Mr. and < Mrs. D. A. Fack-| by Mr. and Mrs. ! x Elmer Brickerville, and Miss Esther Ruhl, Ruhl of Mr. and Mrs. Rhine Smith, Mrs Amos Drace and daughter Alice, Viola Schroll and Mrs. Lizzie Camp. bell of Elizabethtown, were the ests of Mr. and Mrs. chroll. Cyrus | J ever, man is drafted, his right to volunteer immediately ceas- es F the date the draft is re- ceived a man is immediately in the service of the United States Army, once a ron d not to appear at the time and > designated is to be considered from the United States be dealt with ac- Men anxious to enlist and being drafted have con- beer quiri at the re- r station if they would be al- v to ine 5th. Thr swers the qu " ——— eee WAR LOAN IN SILVER WOULD MAKE 36-MILE FREIGHT A mathematician has figured that the $7,000,000,000 which Uncle poses to borrow to finance ur but in the war would be re- duced to silver it would fill 4,380 ‘battleship” coal cars of 100,000 pounds capacity. ., Going further, he calculates that if those cars were placed in line in one train jt would extend 36 miles in length, and eighty-four of the large locomotives would be required to move it. —_—— Read the Bulletin. &
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