The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 11, 1917, Image 3

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ARMY
ISSUED
Govern Work of
Boards Made
Dihlia
f ublic.
EON ITS MERITS
Bs and Impartial,” Is Final
fon of President Wilson
Class Exemptions Will
Be Permitted.


:N WHO ARE EXEMPT
ers of United States,
ates, territories and District of
olumbia,
Ministers of religion and stu-
dents of divinity.
Persons in military or naval
cervice of United States.
Subjects of Germany and all
aliens who have not taken out
first papers.
County or municipal officers.
Customhouse clerks and work-
men in arsenals and navy yards.
Pilots, merchant marine sail-
ors,
Married men with dependent
wives or children,
Sons of dependent widows,
sons of dependent, aged or in-
firm parents, or brothers of de-
pendent orphans under sixteen
years of age.
Men morally deficient.
Members of recognized relig-
ious sect existing prior to May
18, 1917, whose creed forbids
participation in war.
eee
*.

see


See.
L000.

»
»
Kl


BOONE

Washington.—The drafted armies of
the United States will be drawn with
“the least inequality and personal
hardship.”
President Wilson, in issuing regula-
tions for the working of the draft,
urged upon every member of every
draft board “impartial and fearless per-
formance of the delicate and difficult
duties intrusted,” in order that “our
armies at the front may be composed
of men free from sense of injustice In
thelr mode of selection.”
To Fix Date for Board Meetings.
In the near future a date will be set
‘hy Brig. Gen. Crowder, provost mar-
shal-general, for the meeting and or-
ganization of the boards. At the same
time it is expected that the selection
regulations will be promulgated so
that the process may be put under way
without delay. The present intention
is to cail the men selected to the col-
ors about September 1.
All Forces on Equal Footing.
Presid


nt Wilson's statement fol-

“The regulations which I am today
nusing to be promulgated, pursuant to
iy direction of the selective service
law, cover the remaining steps of the
plan for calling into the service of the
United States qualified men from
those who have registered; those se-
ed as the result of this process to
with the regular army, the
mal guard and the navy, the fight-
erces of the nation, all of which
are under the terms of the law
in a position of equal right,
and responsibility with the
rs of all other military forces.
regulations have drawn
* to the circum-
the whole country and pro-
stem vi ich It is expected will


ititute,



riembe
“The been
wilh a needs and
 




1 the least ineqnality and per-
sonal at Any system of select-
ing men of military service, whether |
voluntary or involuntary in its opera-
tion, necessarily selects some men to
bear the burden of danger and saeri-
fice for the whole nation. The system
here provided places all men of mili-
tary age upon an even plane, and then,


tion which neither favors the
nalizes the other, calls upon
site number for service.
Urges Boards to Act Impartially.
oa suecessful operation of this
lav and of these regulations depends
necessarily upon the loyalty, patriotism
and justice of the members of the
boards to whom its operation is com-
mitted, and I admonish every member
by a select
one nor p
the requis

1
ne
of every loeal board and of every dis- |
trict board of review that thelr duty
to their country requires an impartial
and fearless performance of the deli-
cate and difficult duties intrusted to
them. They should remember as to
each individual case presented to them
that they are called upon to adjudicate
the most sacred rights of the individ-
ual and to preserve untarnished the
honor of the nation.
“Our armies at the front will be
strengthened and sustained if they be
composed of men free from any sense
of injustice in the mode of selection,
and they will be inspired to loftier
ts in behalf of a country In whic

ef-













THE MOUNT JOY


high public functions perform them
with justice, fearlessness and impar-
tiallty.”
Methods of Making the Draft.
Upon organizing the local boards
will take over from the registration
boards all registration cards, which
they will- number serially and lst for
posting to public view, Then, after
having been advised of the method by
which the order of lability for service
shall be determined and of the quota
to be drawn from its territory (minus
credits for enlistments in the Natlenal
Guard or regular army), each board
will prepare a list of persons designat-
ed for service in the order of their lia-
bility, post the list, give it to the press,
and within three days send to
each designated person by mall.
As the men so notified appear the
boards first will make a physical ex-
amination in accordance with special
regulations to be provided, bearing in
mind that all persons accepted by them
will be re-examined by army surgeons.
If the physical examination is passed
successfully, then comes the question
of exemption,
Those Entitled to Exemption.
Persons who must be exempted or
discharged by the local board Include:
Officers of the United States, of the
notice
states, territories and the District of
Columbia ; ministers of religion, stu-
dents of divinity, persons in the mili-
tary or naval service of the United
States, subjects of Germany, all other
aliens who have not taken out first
papers, county or municipal officers,
customhouse clerks, workmen In fed:
eral armories, arsenals and navy
vards, persons in the federal
designated by the president for
emption, pllots, merchant marine sall-
ors, those with a status with respect
to dependents which renders thelr ex-
clusion desirable (a married man with
dependent wife or child, son of a de-
pendent widow, son of dependent, aged
or infirm parent, or brother of depend-
ent orphan child under sixteen years
of age), those found morally deficient,
| and any member of any well-recog-
| nized religious sect existing May 18,
1917, whose creed forbids participation
in war and whose religious convictions
accord with the creed.
Man or Wife May Make Claim.
Claims for exemption because of de-
pendents may be made by the man
himself, his wife or other dependents,
or by a third party who has personally
Investigated the case. A claim made
by the husband must be accompanied
by supporting affidavits signed by the
wife and by the head of a family re-
siding in the same territory. A claim
by the wife or a third party must be
accompanied by two supporting affida-
vits signed by heads of families. Sim-
ilar rules govern claims on the grounds
of other dependents when the depend-
ents or third parties being authorized
to file claims with supporting affidavits.
In each case the board must be satis-
fied before It grants exemption or dis-
charge that the dependent or depend-
ents actually are supported mainly by
the frults of the man’s mental or phys-
ical labor,
Local boards are required, subject to
appeal, to pass upon claims for exemp-
tion or discharge within three days af-
ter the filing of affidavits.
Must Decide in Five Days.
District boards must decide appeal
of proofs and thelr decisions are final
If the ruling of a local board is af-
firmed the person in question stands
finally accepted for military service.
In passing on claims for exemption
on the ground of employment in neces-
sary industrial and
pations the district boards raust be con-
vinced that the particular enterprise
affording such employment actually is
necessary to the maintenance of the
| military establishment of national in-
terest during the emergency.
idence ost also establish,”
the regulations say, “even if the par-
| ticu iustrial enterprise or particu-
lar agricultural enterprise is found nee-
sary one of the above purposes,
| that the continuance of such person
therein is necessary to the maintenance
thereof and that he cannot be replaced
by
stantial material loss and detriment to
the adequate and effective operation of
particular industrial enterprise or
agricultural enterprise in which he is
engazed.”
May Designate Certain Industries.
Later the president time



|
| “The e
1
iar

os for
the
may from
classes of industries that are necessary
and the district boards will be so no-
tified. It will be the duty of each
board, however, -to ascertain the avail-
able labor supply for such industries
outside the men called for military
service and to take the result into con-
sideration in determining such things.
“If, in the opinion of the district
board,” this section of the regulations
concludes, “the direet, substantial, ma-
terial loss to any such industrial or ag-
ricultural enterprise outweighs the loss
that would result from failure to ob-
cases within five days after the closing |
agricultural occu- |
another person without direct, sub- |
to time designate certain industries or |

service |
ex- |

SENT 1075 BILLS
T0 GOVERNOR
Legislature Just Before Ad-
journment Rushed Through a
Flood of Measures
VETOES KILL THREE BILLS
There Are Now in the Hands of the
Governor 696 Bills—Some Vetoes
and Some Measures That Have
Been Approved.
—Harrisbhurg.
which adjourned
Brumbaugh 1075
bills, a number which were recalled
by resolutions of the two Houses.
There are now in the hands of the Gov-
ernor 696 bills. Exclusive of the re-
cailed bills the action of the Governor
has been as follows: Approvals of gen-
eral bills, 226; approvals of appropri-
The Legislature
sent to Governor
ations, 42; vetoes, 81.
Governor Brumbaugh announced
vetoes of two bills providing for in-
creases of salaries, and also of the
bill providing for a change in levying
of taxes in townships for highway
lighting The vetoes were the first of a
series expected to be made by the
Governor.
In vetoing the House bill providing
for increase of salaries of clerks in the
office of the Recorder of Deeds of
Philadelphia the Governor says: “Such
salary matters ought to be determined
by the local authorities who know the
facts, and not by the State,
the obligation to pay; why not the
right to determine salaries? The State
fs not liable for the increased cost of
this service; why should it decree the
increase? It is a local matter.”
The Governor also vetoed the bill to
increase salaries of county officials in
Luzerne and Lackawanna counties and
says that it is not manifest why thesa
officials should be singled out fer the
increase. He says the bill as drawn
is not equitable, and that
protested against the measure.
is no evidence that better service
would ensue,” adds the Governor.
In his veto of the township light
tax bill the Governor says to change
the plan now existing would be an in-
fringement upon rights, and that in
his opinicn the present law is all right.
A change would work an injustice.
closes with this remark: “Any
that discourages where it should en-
“There



abl
courage laudable est ishment of
owned homes is not good law.”
The Governor announced his ap-
proval of the Powell “war garden”
bill, which makes it a misdemeanor,
punishable by not over a year in
prison, or $100 fine, for anyone to
steal, remove or destroy any Seed or
plant sown or planted in gardens
The Governor approved eight other
House bills, including the following:
Forbidding power-driven vehicles
from going over bri at the rate
of more than six miles an hour.
Requiring filing of certificates with
Secretary of the Commonwealth by
all persons engaged in business under
assumed or fictit'ous names.
Giving poor districts rig to
land for buildings or farming
poses, and providing means of
ing damages there!
es






take
pur-
pay-
ht

tion of mortgages

 
 
 


 

 
Validating satisfa
I >roviding for construction of pub-
lic improvements in Philadelphia on
the unit
Providing for changes in State high-
way routes in Montour county.
Amending public rovements
eminent domain June
1 1915, by excepting
certa damages
Bis street or
Regulating ele
tore nship commissioners, and pro
am d whereby Courts may
electi districts.
State Treasury Strong.

tain the military service of any such
person, a certificate of discharge may
be issued to him X X X.”
Certificates of exemption
necessarily be permanent. They may
be revoked with changing conditions,
or may be granted only for prescribed
will not |



fe
the citizens called upon to perf
periods.
A A A A A NIAAA ANSI NSN NIN NINI NING NI NII NII NIN I INI LNPANI NIST NINN ities |
Wasted Time. |
We don’t miss the little here and the |
little there. Yet in a year the amount
of time wasted is enormous. Learn- |
ing that he was always called to din-
ner several minutes before the dinner
was really ready to eat a certain man
started and wrote a book in the spare |
minutes between the call and the ac
tual dinner time. It only shows how |
we waste time. If you want to be
among earth’s benefactors you will
begin now.,to conserve your tlme- and
use to profit.—Exchange.




Agricultural Education.
Agricultural education is one of the
essentials to the betterment of country
life. The pervading thought im this
movement is to add dignity to farm-
ing by placing it on the high plane te
hich of right it has ever belonged.—
Exchange.


Getting Theirs.
arley—“Here's a prominent wom-
ing the bachelors an awful call-
nl’ Meekton—“That’s right. We
i&d men oughtn't to get all the |
aris.”
\
5
\
AF
 

{
|
Earth Grows Slowly Now.
In the early days of its history the |
earth grew rapidly by the addition of |
meteoric matter. It is still growing in
the same manner, scientists say,
though scarcely to an appreciable ex-
tent, for the mass of me#eoric matter
added yearly is reckoned to be only
20,000 tons. In the course of ages the
larger planets have swejst up practic-
ally all the fragments o? the original
disruption, and the only available
source of supply of me<¢eoric matter
seems to be brought by comets.


Pleasantly Surprised.
a long car ride Betty arrived
home of a friend, with whom
After
at the
she had lunch. She ate heartily, for
she was hungry. After lunch her
hostess asked if she had had enough
to eat, to which she replied: “Oh,
ves, I had more than I expected.”

Where You Are.
You need not say, “I want to get
away from my daily business or from
my domestic concerns in order to show
my faith.” No, no, stop where you
are and show it.—D. L. Moody.

|
| $2,688,234
| the
| Stern


8 the fund
in
general
receipts
J11



of the State Treasury du ring th
month of June were greater than the
total balance in all State fund
June 30, 1916, according to re
the past month just closed
financial condition of ate has
not been better for several years for
the total balance of all funds now
is $7,360,795, while a year ago the
total balance was $2,204,922. At that
or the

time the general fund,
capital of the Commonw
$1,095,380. The general
last August got below
mark
While the receipts
menth were heavy,
in the general
payments also were
$2,382,796 was paid out


ance
the $1,000,000


during the past
amounting
fund alone,
large and
of this fund.
| The total receipts for the month were

$son.0n and the payments were
{ $150,000 in excess of this amount, be-
| ing $2,985,494

For Elasic Contracts.
rumbaugh
approved the
Philadel-
the unit
Governor B
bill, which mits
phia to award contracts by




system. The meas .
drafted by C So or ie
an amendment to Bullit Charter

act, under which h was required
to appropriate the tota sum involved
in the construction of a public im-
provement before the contract could
be let.
The Stern bill permits contracts to
be awarded for a portion of the pro-
posed improvement.
Cat's Estate Shifty.






Deputy Attorney General Horace !
W. Davis has written an opinion in}
reply to a question of John Ritenour,
superintendent of the Western Penn-
sylvania Humane Society of Pitts-
burgh, whether a t is property, to
the effect that gent search has
shown but one State in whi at
is considered “a thing of
Various States, he says, ha e list ed
bees, when mot in a wild state;
deer and dogs as property, but have
not included the cat, except in Com
mecticut
whose in- |
terest is remote and whose knowledge |
of the facts is scant. The counties have |
people have |
He |
law |
 


to |
ULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.







PTR
PENNSYLVANIA
BRIEFS
FSR Ine
The managers of the Bradford Coun-
ty Agricultural Society decided
to abolish horse racing at the Towanda
HiinRn
TE

nave
fair this year. Half of the net pro-
ceeds of the fair will be turned over
to the Red (ross Society.
Allegheny Mountain coal operators
who have been retailing at Hollidays-
burg at $2.60 a ton advanced their
price to $3 a ton to meet the supposed
minimum rate fixed by the
States Government, to the indignation
of thousands of consumers.
After years of idlene the plate
mill of Potts Brothers, Pottstown
went under a new ownership. The
Nagle Steel Company, which also oper
ates mills at Glasgow, Seyfert and
Rahway, N. J.
Potts mill property and reconstructed
it.
Ss


law regime by Sunday closing.
|
| Board will haul its coal from the
| mines.
War-time conditions have cut the
attendance at Pennsylvania State Col-
lege summer session for teachers to
645, against 1104 last year.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Women’s
division of War Relief, Altoona, hgs
forwarded 200 soldiers’ kits to the
Ninth Regiment of Engineers.
Because so many parents have been
imploring him to spare their sons, B.
W. Wilde has notified Governor Brum-
baugh he doesn’t want to serve on the
Hazleton Draft Exemption Board.
The Mennonite Home at Frederick
is caring for 13 aged people
The Pennsylvania railroad east of
Pittsburgh has dropped the use of
white lights in signals.
Jesse Williamson, Jr., of Philadel
phia, a social leader, was sentenced
to serve between eight and 24 years’
mprisonment for embezzlement.
A class of 127
Ir
ilr
i
was gaduated from
the Lancaster High Schools, the larg-
| est in the history of the city.
| Two hundred companies for home
defense will be organized by the State
| organization of the Patriotic Order
| Sons of America.
John C. Kerr, McKeesport, was ap-
pointed a first lieutenant in the medi-
{ cal corps of the National Guard and
| assigned to field hospital No. 4.
The new moor truck company for
| the National Guard, organized at Lan-
caster, was inspected by Major R. S.
| Williams, United States army.
| Bridgeport Councii will act upon
frequent and long blocking of cross-
ings by Reading Railway trains.
The eight paroled prisoners who
are tilling the soil at the Montgomery
County Home are delighted with the






 


dri g near Chamber
three runaway
proached the horse


latter broke an
Mrs, Martin in front
utter bar, 1
 
severed her
ankle and foot badly
lin county women are
hay fields.
It is a dangerous pr
give a soldier whisk
| osky, of Homestead,
he was arrested and
costs , according to
right





onel Kemp, commandin
legiment. Informati
| Lieutenant Harry Foss, of Company L
|
| Potatoes have fallen from 90 to 49
{ cents a peck in Altoona
| A flagraising without band or
| speakers and with three smallpox pa-
| tients as audience was held at ti
| Municipal Quarantine Hospital, near
Hazleton.




Citizens of Hazletor
| boys of Battery A Thir
| Field Artillery, Bo
| French language in
service in .the near
| J. B. Horning, of
a flock of 35 hens tI
January 1 to May
Altoona bakers
aid conservation of
The Public Service C


fined ten Scranton jitr operat
$100 each for ignoring an order
cease their service
Defense Guard
for grifling.
burned up all
$2800
The Narberth Home
obtained 40 rifl
Having inadverten
but ) of the fe
after years of thri
of Brinkerton,
can’t make good h
to hide money
| night, and forgot
early to get break
Plymouth Country (
add about 100 acres
below Norristown
has





2s


L188
the

C

tract




 
A recruiting tent ted
on the public square, get
100 volunteer national guardsmen
A Mexican laborer road
camp at Reading, the
President of the Uni and
the entire country n a
Reading police «
As a result of Ly
of paris green, i
suicidal intent, Mi Lammey,
19, of West Naz 1tmeal, ter county,
died within 24 hours.
United |
has purchased the entire |
West Hazleton has instituted a blue |
Not receiving a bid, Altoona School
change and the ste says they
are doing good work.
Berks county farmers of the potato
belt, when visited by speculators last |
week, who offered them $2 a bushel
for their potatoes in the autumn. re-
fused to enter into any game of specu-
lation.
Hawley Quier, John G. Rothermel
| and Charles S. Richardson, prominent
Reading young men, have arrived in
France as r s of the Princeton
Unit. Quier i »f an army auto- |
mobile.
| Alien women Inomers are doing
farm wi ne
There is g
for the
Lower
borough of Marcus
cludes Trainer and
| Young Mrs. Irvin
horses of a mower
{ ments in
WHERE TARLETON IS BURIED
American Tourist Discovers Tomb of
Dashing Officer Who Won Fame
In Revolution,


What became of Major Tarletgo aft.
er the Battle of Yorktown? Ixcept
for a very few people, says A. GG,
Bradley in the Nation, everyone in
England has forgotten the very name
of the young cavalry leader. But many
persons in America must have won-
dered what became of the dashing sols
{ dier, and how it happened that in the
| long years of war that shook England
and Europe his name never once ap-
peared.
When Mr. Bradley, in a leisure hour,
entered the fine old fourteenth century
village church at Leintwardine, in
Herefordshire, he did not think that
the bare, unseated chapel promised
| much of interest; indeed, he was just
turning away when in a far corner and
partly concealed by ladders, buckets,
he caught
The
the cleaning of the church,
sight of a lofty mural monument.
lettering on it ran as follows:
“Near this place are deposited the
mortal remains of Sir Banastre Tarle-
ton—Baronet General in the Army—
Kalght Grand Cross of the Order of
the Bath, Governor
Tweed, Colonel of the Gallant Sth
Hussars—He represented his native
town of Liverpool for seven Sessions
and closed his distinguished career in
this place Jan, 25, 1833.”
In 1798 Tarleton was sent to Portu-
gal, but was very soon recalled at his
own request, and with that exception
he never saw a shot fired after York-
town or served anywhere abroad, al-
though England was constantly fight-
ing until Waterloo. He got promoted
regularly, however, for he stood well
at court and was a member of the
prince of Wales’ circle.
|
|
bility nor to the landed gentry.
was the son of a Liverpool merchant,
an unusual origin at that time for a
dashing cavalry officer and the best
horseman, according to good authority,
in the British army. He had entered
Oxford and had studied to become a
barrister, but gave up classics and the
law for soldiering and a commission
at twenty-one years of age. He had a
genius for the training of men and
officers and for rapid and successful
strokes.
On returning from America,
ever, he turned from soldiering to poli-
tics; he lost no time in entering the
house of commons, and sat for his
native city of Liverpool for 20 years.
He became a major general in 1794, a
lieutenant general in 1801, a full gen-
eral in 1812, a baronet in 1815 and a
G. C. B. in 1820. He
full colonelcy
succession and was for some
how-

ears governor of Berwick. He ap-
parently retired with his wife to
Leintwardone for the last years of |
his life,
files.
The seclusion of his gorgeous tomb,
behind the cobwebs of a disused aisle,
| glves a final touch of mystery to the |
romance that early associations with |
Virginia have connected with Tarle- |
tpn’s name.—Youth’s Companion.

Weloome the Birds.
Are all the beautiful birdhouses that |
were made last winter now in place
and occupied? Let us give a glad
welcome to all the birds that can be
Induced to live near us.
realizes the benefit these little crea-
tures confer. The work they do in
preserving our crops and fruit from
the ravages of insects needs to be
told again and again. Besides this
great use, the happiness they give us
with their songs and their beauty is
not to be told or measured. Many a
heavy heart has been cheered and com-
forted by the robin's friendly “cheer
up, dearie, cheer up” as he flits ab
a home. Robins love to be frier
and other birds which
human Have you in
rd a di water for th
and bathe
If not, put
and observe how gladly



love
your
1 to drink
one there,
there are
iety.
sh of
soc
I
 
in?

Some Birds Are “Sprinters.”
Birds with short, wings, Uk
the king bird, quail and ruffled grouse,
are sprinters; those with a wide
stretch of wings are “distance
ners.” Bi of the first class attain
their bursts of speed through their
very rapid wing stroke; birds of the

square
run-
ds

second class have sustained powers of | |
ght, but get under way more slowly.
All the gallinaceous fowl are sprint-
They take wing like a bullet;
their wings make a loud, whirring
sound. The quall or ruffled grouse can
gain full momentum within sixty feet
of rising; the wings beat from five to
seven times a second. The quail cov-
ers from forty-five to fifty feet the first
second away from the gun; his wings
flash like a rapidly revelving wheel
The wings of the ruffled
until the sound can be heard 200 y
away.
fi

ers.

roar
grouse 1
ds
Arabs Not Much Changed.
The Arab is physically and i
tually as virile as he ever wg
perficially he unrecog
former self. early

is
In


the


 


 
 





Abbasid caliphate, not only 1
Arab world prosperous, but we hav
records of an elaboration of Jy
ment and a complexity of stra-
| tion which Youd astonish > who
are acq ted w social
and litions under which
Arabs live
First Principles.
“Do you think that recruit wiil
ever learn to be a soldier?” asked
commanding officer.
“Well, acquiring the founda-
tions,” responded the drill sergeant.
“He had not been in ca a day be-
fore he was putting up a howl about
the food.”
Won the Bet.
“How did you come out on your bet,
old
1at bet?


’ n't you remember? You said as
vou were leaving the club last night, |
‘IT bet I'll get tha dickens from my
wife.”
”
“Oh, T won.
planks and other articles necessary to |
of Berwick-on- |
Tarleton belonged neither to the no- |
He |
also held the |
of several cavalry regi- |
lived there quietly and did not
mix with the neighboring county fam- |
Not everyona |
it is made use |


ARR ————: a ———
CLARENCE NS
MOUNT JOY, PA




ASK
GAR)
Th
 
LUMBER -COAL




Kodak and Kodak
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.


buy A Maxwel
—_— J



a trial. Ialso handle the

1
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Bell Phone

If You Want a Car That's
Tried and True
I have taken the agency for the Maxwell Automobiles, which is che of ¢
best equipped and easiest riding cheap cars on the market. I{ is by
means & new car, but one that has been tried for years and has provem
satisfactory. Any one in the market for such e car will readily be con
vinced of its merits after a demonstration which will be cheerfully givel.
I not only sell cars, but I am prepared to take care of the peoples to whem
I sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying cars. I am at
service Sundays or night time as well as Guring the day. None but
petent mechanics employed. I your car needs ajlention, give this garige


Studebakes
BRUBAKERS’ GARAGE


Mount Joy, Pa.






































Marietta St.



ALBERT STRICKLER
Bell Phone at Residence and Yards









 
 

























Pee +000
®
+ We Are Always Prepared to Serve
Pure Spring Water
ICE
IN ANY QUANTITY
At very Moderate Charges.
Don’t fall to see us before
placing ysur order this year.
J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
MOUNT JOY, PA.
GIO PPPPPPPI PIPPI PIPPI OPPO Oe
4

GARDEN THEATRE
-FOR--
Clean
Entertainment

Charles S.Frank'
AUCTIONEER
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Prompt attention given to the Calling
of Real"Estate and Persona! Property
Sales. Terms Moderate. Bell

SPP
Phone |



Krall's Meat Ma
I always have on Hand an
theAiine of ;
SMOKED MEATS, HAM, BOLOC
DRIED/BEEF, LARD, ETC. §
| Also FresK Beef, Veal, Pork, My
H. H. KRA
- =: SEO
PLUMBIN
Tinning and Spout
THAT'S MY BUN
Aleo all kinds of repair work
description. Work must be
A SHARE OF YOUR BUSH
SOLICITED.
Charles Ricksec!
West Main St, Moun
SIGNS
Wood, Meta! or
R. F. Eshle
BELL PHONE.
 



















LY
The Sevcik School for Violin HCHESTERS
SEMI-TONE_S¥STEM
IRA C. EBY
West Donegal St., Mourt Joy, Pa.