Fee bide } eed Bt rb EE SD Cent ery E111, 2 Securit; When that Certificate of Deposit which pays you only 3 1-2 or 4 per cent. Interest comes due, bring or send it to this bank and get FIVE per cent Interest with over One Million Dollars Security. ofesle ols SonToofoade: Teoh ole atunto oleate se oun afeoTe sBueTocToauets Bode 12 Fesoctisds obs oF 2 Le a am pm— cy Teefoctes! Ing i U Maytown, Capital £50,000 M. R. HOFFMAN, President. nob Aavinw i Ul HUY LUT [ ‘enna. Surplus $50,000 N. F. AENTZ, Cashier — = ———— Josdoetonos ddd ddd dododeedodoste satisfactory. 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. —— service Sundays or night time as well as during the d None but com- petent mechanics employed. I your car needs attent! give this garage a trial. I also handle the One of the Best Cars of That Class Duy If You Want a Car That's Tried and True Ihave taken the agency for the Maxwell Automobiles, which is one of the best equipped and easiest riding cheap cars on the market. It {s by no means a new car, but one that has been tried for years and has proven I not only sell cars, but I am prepared to take care of the people to whom I sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying cars. I am at your BRUBAKERS GARAGE Bell Phone Marietta St. Mount Joy, Pa. ALBERT STRICKLER Bell Phone at Residence and Yards HTT TT Sv vm mn HHT TR PPE bbb bbb ddd bd DISTINCTIVE |i ls -» i » x i P ’ i j% rinting, : ; : Eo ob : i . . ia En A mmm { {moms 1% . . ie . . * ii q Printing that will : this Paper 3 attract attention and i 3 put your advertising 3 ort ————————— opofefeifeileipfo foo ded Pod de de dededede de dofe edd in a class by itself— printing thatcontains originality in con- ception and excel- lence in its execution — this quality of originality and in- dividuality character- izes all the printed k we turn out, Job Printing We are equipped to handle any kind of Job Printing, and when it comes to Service, we can only refer you to our customers or ask that you give us a trial. | proposed civil mot 4 a Jacobs, well-known 1--Mlichel Monroa on camouflage. Washington 2—Belgian soldiers crossing one of the many canals in their country artist, who is lecturing at the officers’ training camp at Fortress in a ferry barge. 3— Americop scldiers in France loading a train with their equipment. 4—F. Trubee Davison, son of H. P. Davison, na- tional il ANNAN NINN NPN INI NI NIN NS NSN NEWS REVIEW 0 THE PAST WE Food Control Bill, President Extraordinary Powers, Now Is Law. GETTIKG AFTER PROFITEERS ir I | Lil fm uw 5 -— Government Predicts Record-Breaking Corn Crop—German and Russian Ministries Re-Formed—Elihu Root Returns With Cenfi- in the Republic. dence Russian By EDWARD W. PICKARD. > 8 e last Wednesda t on the food con- gned by Wilson, v adopted re was § President and is now the law of the land, a law | conferring on the president tremen- dous powers over the food and fuel supplies of the country, and designed to protect the people from extortien. Sixty-six senators voted for the bill 1 seven a t it. Those who per- ted in their obstructionist tactics to were France, Gronna, Hollis, La Follette, Penrose and teed. Sherman and Gore both were paired against the bill. The law i fon provisions. the end rdwick, con 1s drastic prohibi- foods re of d beverages or to im » pur president will be ndeer for military stilled rt distilled spirits for bevera and the em red to comia 1 liquors now held in restrict the poses distillec pt bond and to regulate or use of foods im the manufacture of wine and beer. The senate also adopted the con- ference report on the food survey bill, 1 and stimulate production information adminis- designed to the country food and thus the tration’s food control program was at last to give resources, completed. Ccal Prices and Profits. Coal prices are causing a great stir, especially in the Middle West, and in Illinois the state council of defense advised Governor Lowden to seize the mines because the not sell at what reasonable profit. The governors and councils of 15 Middle West States were asked to meet in Chicago to confer on relief measures. President Wilson last al visit to and the justice to urge the hastening tion to curb high prices, and made it operators considered a was defense made a federal week persor the trade sion department of of ac- evident that he intends to do every- thing in his power to stop the exact- ing of exorbitant profits. The war this by industries board followed up { ing that American producers war necessities to America’ allies would be permitted to only reasonable profits, provided t 9 11 selling the allies must rectprocate in sel to the United States and to one an- ther. The president, moreover, has said that the prices to the public » made the same as to the govern- ment. Record-Breaking Corn Crop. Cheering ne came out of the de- of agriculture in of the August crop report, mn 3 pr z July to the exte s, and gen belt data on which the report since the Cé ance still further the farmers. record be breaker, but the report of a )p of more els of wheat and 83,000,000 rye. food control law the fix ( the sale by on would | AAA farmers of nitrate of soda from Chie | rout and in some instances the Teutons | Giving the | as fertilizer. Every state is asked to plant as large an acreage to be used dtrector of the Red Cross, who was seriously injured when his airplane fell into Long Island sound. were thrown back. General Korniloff, who succeeded Brussiloff as generalis- in wheat and rye as is possible with- | simo, says the first stage of the war is out upsetting proper farm practice, | over and the second stage has opened, The experts in Washington say that ; and intimates that the Russian armies while fertilizer may be scarce, there | will yet give an excellent account of ill be no short » of seed, farm ma- themselves if British and French offi- chinery or transportation facilities. cers are sent to help drill the mil- On Thursday Provost Marshal Gen- | lions of men under arms. They will eneral Crowder issued the regulations | need this help, he says, if they must for calling the National army to the | meet the massed Germans instead of colors. The first 200.000 are to be the comparatively weak Austrians. called up to September 1 and sent to | On the Western Front. | | cantonment camps by September 5. | Actigities in Flanders during the The government the fi week indicated that the allies were | of the mobhilizatio le- | following their usual course—attack, | brated througho the cou in or- | consolidation of positions won, and der that the citizen soldiers may be | preparations for another attack. The fit ly honored. heavy rains hampered operations con- | Some Antidraft Riots. | siderably, but the British made many Ta r the country as a whole, the | trench raids and toward the end of exemption boards having mighty | the week their artillery fire increased tle trouble in carrying out th.ir du- | to a tremendous volume. vMeanwhile, ties in the drafting of the National | the Canadian troops pushed up. close srmy., Part of Oklahoma and some | to Lens and had that important coal | | districts in the Southeast, however, | center nearly surrounded. are glaring exceptions to this rule. | The German resistance in the coastal Serious riots have occurred and bands of draft armed selves and taken to the woods. But they are being captured by the score and subjected to the proper punish- ment. Much of the trouble is stirred up by the I. W. W., and by certain resisters have un-American publicists who argue con- stantly that American soldiers should not be sent abroad to fight, but should be kept at home to await the invading Germans after they have whipped the entente allies. Among those arrested last week by them- | | region is powerful, for the command- | ers of course realize how dangerous to them is the turning movement. Along | | the Chemin des Dames the crown prince continued his attacks, all of able Frenchmen. which were beaten off by the indomit- | In the Asian fields of combat there | was little doing last week, but it was | planning an attempt to recapture Bag- | dad. General Maude’s Mesopotamian army, however, is now so strongly en- the federal agents was Dr. Fritz Berg- | trenched that it has little to fear, | meier, president of the Volks-Zeitung | the same may be said of the British of St. Paul. On orders from Washing- | forces in Sinai, which also have ays after the | on charges of to be held ton he was put in jail ing disloyal utterances, Wilson until President lease. He is an enemy alien. Canada also is to have a drafted the Canadian conscription bill | having been passed by the dominion rliament. Under its provisions 100,- 000 men between the ages of twenty and thirty-two years will be drafted, and it is the expectation of the au- thorities that they wlll be in training by autumn. German Ministry Changes. Chancellor Michaelis remolded na pa imperi: desire, or that of his masters, but the many changes aroused no semblance of t in the empire. On the contra they are commented on by the liberal and radical press with dis- ssatisfaction, and no one who has talked for publication has given them his approval. They offer no hope for parliamentarism or any other marked change in internal pol- far as can be seen, the trust and di icies, and so war 'v of Germany is not likely to be red. Doctor Kuehlmann, who has succeeded Zimmermann as foreign | secretary, is supposed to be opposed the rm |. submarine warfare, but Doctor Helfferich is retained as the representative of the imperial chancel- ~, and as he is ambitious and power- it is feared he will more than coun- valance Kuehlmann. peace to ruthless Germany's latest suggestions having met with the disdainful recep- v deserved, it is unlikely that 1 proposals will emanate some time, Sev- of Bonn univer- 1ed a petition urging the nt never to make an- iser for ~afessors peace offer. ot Has Confidence in Russia. ier r last week succeed- cabinet coalition the pledges of all fac- S ! would support him. He hs r reforms, and also that discipline and t be restored. That ues will win out and f Elihu Root who has just returned from his mission to Pe The isorders there, he 81) I 10t ¢ ingly serious and are not typical, and the loss of morale he is sure is only tem- the arm) ice of the Russian ce of the Germans 1 and Bukowina is stiffening, and though in zeneral the retreat continued, it ceased to be a ly the resist: troops to the adva and trians in Gal directs his re- the | and Prussian ministries to his support of the fleet. European dispatches say lieve the war will last through the winter and spring, at least, and that the policy of the allies will be to ham- mer away at the Teuton lines contin- ually and wear the enemy down as | much as possible until America on the field in full strength. Then the advantage of numbers will be with them to so great extent that victory by force of arms will be in sight. American Troops to Russia? Senator Lewis of Illinois | of American Russia, which would be surprising in view of the fact that Russia now has under arms more men than she can | handle effectively. The Sammies now in France are proving themselves quick pupils and have won the praise and ad- miration of the British and French offi- cers who are instructing them in the methods of modern warfare, They are happy and eager to get into action but are wailing for American tobacco. In England {is another big contingent of American troops—made up mostly from the operating and construction divisions of American railways. They will be ready to rebuild and operate the roads in France and to fight, too, if necessary, and in preparation reported that General von Falkenhayn, | now German commander in Turkey, 18 | S and | the that the high military authorities in France be- | gets | declared last week that the next big contingent | troops would be sent to | this are receiving Intensive training in | { a peaceful English valley. The navy department has made an- other change of policy, dropping the construction of the small U-boat chas- | ers and concentrating on the produe- tion of which are to turned numbers. They destroyers, out in great | seem to be the most efficient enemy of the submarine. Argentina, dissatisfied with the prog- ress of negotiations growing out of the sinking of the Argentine steamer Monte Prot rerman submarine, has sent a iptory note to Berlin, de- manding a cles ind final reply within a reasonable time. Liberia, which some time ago severed relations with the central has now declared war ¢ st them. This, like the ge- gido by a ( pere powers, be | tion of Siam, means that the diplomat- | ic representatives of the small nations have made up their minds as to which group of belligerents will gain the ulti- mate victory. What perhaps has an- gered Argentina most is the recent dis- covery of an extensive German espton- age system. too, has decided to | her lot with the allies and the cabinet resolved to declare war on Germany and Austria-Hungary; the assistance of the great oriental nation is far from negligible. China, ee NNN I I III NI NINES NANI NINN INI NINI NI NI NINN NINA Pe PLENTY OF FOOD FOR PARIS Also will Be Arundan French Capital During Next Winter. Coal in the } Paris.—France abandoned her 1Z n. The taken to mean in many quarters that the Ribot govern- new move 1s ment has the war situation so well in | band that it will not be necessary to raft French . citizenry between the | of sixteen and.sixyy for war work. | sured and that food supplies will be War work will remain voluntary in France. The dark economic cloud accompa- nied by sinister rumors of a bad win- ter to come, following the fuel short- of 1916-17 also has been shunted age to an Inconspicuous place on the hori- | zon. Paris has the word of the prefect of the Department of the Seine that the great metropolis will not feel the | pinch of either hunger or cold during the coming winter. This official an- nounces that the coal supply is as- pa op) To 1 plentiful. The conditions which caused | Parisians to stand in line before food | emporiums and coalyards will be fore- stalled, he declares, thereby emphasiz- ing that France is suffering no great amount of worry over the ravages of German submarines. Another piece of good news ema- nates from the ministry of commerce to the effect that Parisians will soon be supplied with “national footgear” | and “national cloth” for clothing. This promises to be a real boo for modest | purses. 3 | cast in | | | | | he dR SE All Stove Troubles Fade Away Before This Pipeless Furnace J Stoves end base-burners arg trouble 0 makers, work makers, expensg makers. id = There's the trouble of setting them up in § 4 the Fall and taking them ddwn in the 4 Spring, with unsightly pipes disfiguring H the home six months out’ of twelve. i There's the work of bringing in coal and taking away ashes, with the extra work caused by the dirt and dust that fills the rooms. There's the expense of buying several stoves (becausq one is not sufficient to heat a home), the expense of maintaining three heating units, and the expense of replacing furnishings which and dust. You canbuy a ere damaged by dirt 3 3 A Home Ventilator Furnace The Original PATENTED Pipeless Modcl Manufactured only by the Homer Furnace Co., Homer, Mich. for little (if any) more than you pay for a good base burner, yet it will give you furnace perfection. The heat will be distributed evenly throughout the house—and ’) plenty of it. No small registers scattered about, no wall flues to invite fire danger, y no cold air drafts, no pipes in the rooms, no space wasted, no trouble to install, no bother at any time, no heat in the cellar. A ‘Home Ventilator” in the cellar, one 4 combination hot- and cold-air register right abové it, and the heating system io complete. Write or telephone us for more particulars, | G. MOYER, Mount Joy, Penna. , Read the Booklet “From Pig to Pen® 4 Fasts Concerning The Home Ventilator Furnace An announcement made by competition would indicate that a DEC- LARATION OF WAR had been made on all types of furnaces by the one they are'handling, and if thif article were allowed to go unheeded, the result would be that possibly many people would be mis-led into purchasing some furnace other than the HOME VENTILATOR, being under the impression that they were geiting the original. We take pleasure in informing the people of Mount Joy and vicinity that G. Moyer of your town is prepared to furnish you with the HOME VENTILATOR FURNACE, which has been on the market for the past seven years and is absolutely the ORIGINAL PATENTED PIPELESS FURNACE using the combination hot and cold air register. TAKE SPECIAL NOTICE—Mr. G. Moyer has copies of patent pa. pers, both of ours’ and compefition, which will easily show that the HOME VENTILATOR FURNACE was in use and PATENTED LONG BEFORE ANY OTHER FURNACE of this type was HEARD of. A LITTLE HISTORY-—Bac¢k in 1910 when the only furnace was the old pipe job, Mr. S. D. Stromg, President of the Homer Furnace Com- pany, Homer, Michigan, congeived the idea that if a furnace could be made which would satisfactorily heat residences, stores, churches, school houses, etc., and at the same time save the heat which was being wasted in cellars by pipe furnaceg, a ready sale would be found. Against the advice of older and more experienced furnace men, he perfected and manufactured a few HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES. The result was a REVOLUTION IN THE HEATING WORLD. Farmers, who here- tofore could not have furhaces because their vegetable storage would be spoiled, bought “HOMERS,” installed them in the vegetable cellars, heat- ed their houses so much cheaper than with stoves, and so much more sat. isfactorily, that since that time THOUSANDS OF HOME VENTILATORS HAVE BEEN SOLD, from Maine to California, and from Florida to Can. ada. 8 IN > Now—when other manufacturers saw the enormous strides made by THE HOME VENTILATOR, there eyes began to open, and from the sickly grin they tried to maintain they were brought up against the solid fact that to SAVE THEIR BACON, they MUST manufacture something as near the HOME VENTILATOR as possible without infringing on the rights of S. D. Strong. SMALL MANUFACTURERS sprung up trying to get a foot-hold in the pipeless world, but the HOME VENTILATOR has been too long established and had too big a start to be affected, and the sales of the Homer Furnace Company still lead by many lengths. IN THE LAST FIVE MONTHS, 4000 HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES HAVE BEEN SOLD TO RESPONSIBLE DEALERS. DON'T BE DECEIVED into buying an imitation of the HOME VEN- TILATOR FURNACE. Don’t let other manufacturers experiment at your expense. When you buy, buy the ORIGINAL. Five minutes com. parison will convince you. Weigh the 24 inch fire pot of the HOME VEN- TILATOR (when we say 24-in. we mean inside measurement) then weigh that of any other furnace of the same size. Result? About 40 percent. in favor of the HOME VENTILATOR. The HOME VENTILATOR is equipped with heavy galvanized casings throughout; no flimsy black inner casings to rust out, and which are good only as talking points, and the buyer pays for these talking points by getting a lighter furnace. The HOME VENTILATOR FY¥RNACE is sold under a guaranty to do the business or no sale, and every casting is guaranteed for five years, ex- cept the grate, and our reason for not guaranteeing this is that some- times a careless user will allow ashes to accumulate underneath, and same is liable to melt out. However this happens only rarely. After manufacturing HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES for seven years, our repair business will not amount to $1.00 a day, which we judge is a fair evidence of the durability of our castings. Our modern plant at Homer, Michigan is equipped to manufacture 9000 furnaces per year, and enables us to turn out a furnace which is a joy to the installer, and castings second to none. Remember— G. Moyer of Mount Joy is prepared to furnish you with the ORIGI- NAL PATENTED PIPELESS FURNACE, and the one from which all others of this type are copied either directly or indirectly. BUY THE “HOMER” and be safe from infringement proceedings. 15,000 in use. For further information call om G. Moyer, Mount Joy for | The World's Greatest fire BLACK BOB SERVICE AND MILEAGE I3 WHAT TELLS—INVESTIGATE 5000 MILES GUARANTEE BLACK BCB TIRES KEPT IN REPAIR UNTIL WORN OUT— FREE OF CHARGE. Mzasfactured by McCREARY TIRE COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA Seid by L. P. Heilig, Mount Joy FURNITURE OF QUALITY We Will Show You How To Secure Splerfdid Qualities and Handsome Styies At Savings Wel Worth Your While A number of the newest and finest things are now being put on exhibition for the first time. Opr ‘collection of Bed-Room Furni- ture, showing Period styles, if all the different kinds of wood, is well worth seeing. The safhe is true of the Dining-Room, Living- Room and Library. OUR INEXPENSIE LOCATION and our facilities for handling Furniture, enablg’us to offer exceptionally low prices at this time. Westenberger, Maley & Myers. 1254131 East King Street, Lancaster a Ly J ; i so aaa i... —————