The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 05, 1917, Image 7

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| HAVE A NEW STOCK OF
t Thermoid Brake Lining
THE BEST ON THE MARKET.
ALSO RAYBESTOS
Brazing and Welding
of all metals by the oxy-acetyleng’ process.

Always carry a complete assorfment of sizes in
Michlen and Goodyear Tires
JUST RECEIVED A LOT OF BICYCLES


H. A. BARR, Mount Joy, Penna.
BOTH PHONES AUTO HIRING
Barr’s Garzze & Repair Shop





GOOD FURNITURE
Is the only kind I sell— Furniture that is Furniture
Rockers, Miprors, Hall Racks,
Extension and Other Tables,
Davenports, China Closets,
Ia Fact Anything in the Furniture
Line.
Embalming

Picture Frames, Ladies’ Desks,
Kitchen Cabinets.
Undertaking and
H. C. BRUNNER, : MT. JOY











. BAKER
T HE LUMBER & COAL
q Both Phefies
savings MOUNT. JOY, PENNA.
0 f t o-d ay | Sole Agent for Congo Roofing.
s No 1 Cedar Shingles always on hand,
providethe ; | Also Siding, Flooring, Sash, Doors,
luxuries of Blinds, Mouldings, Laths, etc.
Pr: or Agent for Lehigh Portland Cement,
Be Roofing, Slate and Sheet Iron.
Sav ng i : Estimates quickly and cheerfully
Stamps now. made on Building Material and aN
kinds of Concreting work. :









Furniture
BE


need of furniture call and see me.
Repairing and Painting a Speclalty.
Special Attention Given to Remodling Antique Furniture
WEST MAIN ST.,
D. H. ENGL y MOUNT JOY, PA.
R He 7


water in huge cans.
NEWS REVIEW OF

Crush Teuton Legions at
the Same Time,
Pope’s Peace Proposals Discussed
—President Wilson Regulates
the Prices of Coal
in America.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD.

they did last week, for Bri
vigorously renewed the attacks be

The British hurled themselves
ta


edo ok
| will continue the furniture busi-
ness on the second floor of the Eagle
Building, with a complete and up-to-
date line of all kinds of furniture.
' Prices are very reasonable. When in
Kook eke ook ooo Rake

Right Styles Always-
—THE- ze
WINGERT & HAAS HAT STORE
NEW FALL HATS
CAPS AND GLOVES
Right Prices Always
144 North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa.
JOHN A. HAAS, PROPRIETOR



|
EA IE
{ PRINTING |

dvertisers
will find this
paper an excellent
E medium in which
= = || to display their
£
Exceptional Facilities =
Enable Us to Guar-
aniee Our Work
 
fl
unm snip E bargainsand make
theirwants known

I
The kind you ought to have
and when to have it, that
is when you really need it.


We have contracted the habit
of satisfying our customers.
Our work is of the highest
quality and our services are
always at your instant dis-
posal. We are especially pre-
=
P
EB
E pared to turn out letterheads,
E


billheads, noteheads, state-
ments, folders, booklets, enve-
lopes, cards, circulars, and
many other jobs. Come in
see us next time you
need something in
the printing line.
mmm


HIS OFFICE
is the place to have |
your printing done, no | 1,
matter what kind it may be,
Ru mmmsmnmds LOOT
i ’ “
$2 a bushel, it is learned.
more. In Alsace there was lively
1
ing. At the same time the Italians
were carrying on a monster offensive

Plava to the sea. The Austrian def

ses were leveled by a terrific artil
fire, mew crossings of the Isonzo were
forced, and Cadrona’s troops advianc
considerably on their way to Tri
despite the difficulties of the terr:
Wednesday the British
tacked fiercely in the Ypres regi
after a bloody combat succeed
taking important positions alon





hard in an effort to take the ric
fore,
Germans Resist Stoutly.
The Germans have massed immense
numbers of troops at the points of at-
tack and are resisting desperately and
making almost continuous counter-at-
tacks, but up to the time of writin
they had been unable to regain any of
the lost ground.
All the allied armies took great num-
ners of prisoners and guns and inflict |
ed terrible losses on their hard-fight-
ing opponents, and they themselves
lost many men, for the attacks were
delivered with rather less than the
usual regard for life. In Flanders and
France the tanks played a large part,
fronts the aviators were ex-
active and bold. The Ital-
introduced one novelty. When
and’ on all
traordina



assaultii
were preced

ans i
General Pershing and other Ameri

can officers wer present at

battle of Veréua.
Disturbing f#iews Frem Russia.
The week's pew
 

rather disquie t-
ed to Americ: a
S Te ‘ 1 it f
t ble
] 1
ess immedi
r Sh n« We
{ { 1 - } i t
\'S sl i { oe 1 ir
s he SRO s furnisl t
uss P
 
A A A INININININE NINN NIN NIN NIN NI NIN INI NIN INN IAIN INNIS NINN NIN NININS NI NINININI NI NIAI NS NINN NNN NIN LNAI NI NS III III III
READY TO FIX WHEA AT PRICES

price paid by the
ition for the portion it bu
wheat crop prol
 
 

In recommending a pr
mittee will take into consideration the
fact that the producer must receive
nough to stimulate production next |
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
1—Sallors lined up on the grounds of Camp Hingham, the recently opened naval training camp near Boston.
2—General Christodoulos, commander of the Greek armies that are acting in conjunction with the allie S.
ing a 12-inch disappearing gun in one of America's coast forts.


gan n | the industries of the West, including
if their leaders
was met promptly
| rest of a lot more of. the gang
| great strike fizzled out miserably.
sooner was this trouble passed than the
| forced the Slavs back toward that city. |
At the south end of
THE PAST WEEK manians still are making valiant efforts
(
machinists and boilermakers, employed
fans or of their desire to keep
fighting the common
d, but it seems that They ¢

British, French and Italians!
called on to quit. This of course would
put a stop to vast amounts of g

ac les that contront States mediators got busy ¢
eral thousand men stopped work, but
sia also are Fe a crisis. " them either pledged Secretary
FIERCEST FIGHTING OF WAR
ness men and dismissec
about to meet in Moscow,
President Cuts Coal
Having started Mr.
the food conservation campaign,
Russia's Military, Economic and Po-
litical Troubles Are Disturbing—
; | ments and other neces
and the Socialist
pressing coal problem,

several weeks had
various state ad-
Having studied the pro-
figures Sippied
the trade commission,
excepting only
Civilians far from the seat of war
wondered why the allies did not deliver
their smashing blows at the kaiser at
the same time, giving him no oppor-
tunity to shift his troops from one
front to another, instead of taking
turns in hitting him. That is just what
h, [French
and Italians all began offensives that
developed into the most furious bat-
sued an executive order f
| tive scale of prices for bituminous coal
| at the mines in nearly all coal produec- |

prices in some instances are more than | {ists is being made under the joi
auspices of the Commi
try of the General Medical Board «of
 
scale is subject to change when a meth-
1e¢ fuel supplies
the Council of
( mmittee f 1
tles of the war so far. The Anglo to them has be
French forces near the Belgian coast ; .
Veterinar
the enrollme
perts

speakers of the different parties in Ger- |
the previous week and pushed forward.

 
inst
the defenses of Lens and forced their
way further into the outskirts of that
coal center, repulsing all counter-at-
General Petain's men attacked
along the Chemin des Dames, and then
delivered a series of smashes at the |
Germans in the Verdun sector, taking
the twin summits of Dead Man’s hill
and other strong positions that the
rown prince had held for a year and
as to offer autor | producers and jobbers and set a limit |
. the State
but that
a, too, as was expected, a

0, adopting unanimous-
 
 

: an’ ission in Washington.
inst the Austrians along the entire Japan s Missio 2 g
Julian, Isonzo and Carso fronts, from




 
uspicion that the

not on a commercis
 
German Poison Gas in America.
every hospital in the Stat
hand, down to the most mint
A complete list of all prospective camp
| sites for convalescent, reclamation, de-
ases emitted by t
all the other trai
erica are not grow-

 

neutral countries of Europe—so-
the ;
though no country
Ypres-Menin road. A little further |
north, in the blood-soaked Langem:arek-
Frezenberg sector, they hit the enemy
ize.
known as Hill 35, where the Irish made
a gallant but losing fight the week be-
ten
 
s so painful to their pocketbooks
re being gathered in
several more rabid paj
en denied the use
  

furn
part


nuing to buy their fuel | and probably even larger if nec


  
serts that the wo
ble value the
partm


premier is popula
 
 

list 1 movement in Hu

  
is in complete har-






»d forward




 





STATE'S MEDICAL
FORGES LISTED
Data About All Hospitals, Doc- |.
tors, Dentists, Pharmacists
and Veternarians.

CAN ANSWER INSTANT CALL
i ern Pennsylvania
All Allied Professions Are Included—
Can Supply Government with
Anything It Needs on Mo.
ment’s Notice.
‘Harrisburg
One of the departments of the State |
Committee of Public Safety of which
comparatively little has been heard has
favorable
quarters

dre iWn comment
nature from the


Surgeon General of the United States!
Army. This is the Sanitat Medi-
cine and Red Cross Depart which ;

was commended for its work in cata
loging and classifying information con-
cerning the medical and
sional and institutional resources ol
this State and organizing systems
through which they may be made avail-
ble for emergency use by the Medical

Department of the United States! ac
Army.
One of the department's first activi-
ties was to compile and index complete
data relating to every Pennsylvania
titution and


esslion
organization, i
in the field whose capacities, opera-
1

tions or personne
applied to war time service. Probably
the most comple collection of data in
veterine phar-
macists and 3g jn 7 nsylvania
that has ever en collected is now on
hand at > headquarters of the com-
mittee. These lists do not include all


regard to denti



the members of these professions
however, and every effort is being
made to list them all,

Each dentist on the list is asked to
%
submit a report of all the surplus stock
¥» has on hand that the government

may call for when needed. is in-
cludes all dental apparatus, instru-
A com-
plete survey is made of each man on
the list. This includes not only his

training and experience, but he is
classified according to his specialty.
They are divided under different
groups, such as exodontists, ortho-
s, crown and





dontists, pyhrrea exper
bridge work speci:
surgeocws.
tractors and

Practically the same thing applies to

| the veterinarians. The survey of den-


tee on Dent

itional Defense, the
ety and the


es The State
co-operating in
the veterinary ex-
us dental

 

listing all physicians in
n completed as yet,
plete classi
sts is far ad-
various languages
The

not bee
  

he lists can spea
re is an elaborate trip-


te card index system covering
1 28 An

qual
this will w

laboratories witl

dations for the mae U
instru-
experi-

ort of drugs, medi
or in which to cond
would be a matt
search to name ev
ry in the State that could fill the bill.
Complete information regarding

labora-

 

 
tion, or mporary hospi-

ion, isol
tal camps is also on hand The de-
tailed information covers th i
tion, ownership, condi
fo: Tf
water,

 


ads and public
ighting and sewage fac
In this way the government
a tract of land


rvice, up to ¢
 
F. P. Raymond




  


r ers
Yy W gone
After 2a Grade Tr
T P Se o
a 3 3
ar v
S
Soa
Sur es 92-Foot Fa
Ww A \ B
Y x s g
x s
S i e


could in any way be



me
promising to lower the cost of living
+
there.
| penetrati










now
way
the ? end of the year, the revenue from
tl Is source being turned into the State
Treasury by the automobile division
every
$3,000. The revenue from licenses is



IE
PENNSYLVANIA
BRIEFS
SHINE
Curbstone markets are being agi-
N wn and Conshohocken,
prices of foodstuffs are much
higher than quoted for the first curb-
one market ‘n Allentown,
C. E. Carothers, chairman of the
Milk Commission, is a practical farmer
and raised his own cattle in west-
SUH
HIG



B. J. Bowers, superintendent of the
Johnstown school gardens, says that
interested directly in the work are 650
| school children, together with 350 chil-
dren from outside the schools and pa-
trons
There are fifteen vocational schools
in Pennsylvania
Alleging that her earning power was
permanently impaired by injuries sus-
tained when g lley car, two years
180, hit a taxicab in which she was rid-
i Miss Ava M. Riest, daughter of J.
Frank Riest, a former hotel man of
Yor} led suit for $20,000 damages
e York Railways Company.
Milton women say they will boycott
10-cent milk
egheny county rotten egg dealers
will be arrested.
Out of eighty-two men so far exam-
ined in the selective draft at Brad-
d but sixteen have passed and been
cepted,
The American Car Company, at Mil-
on, will spend $30,000 for shower
aths, bubbling fountains, etc., for
employees.
For the first time in four years a
detachment of State troopers is on
duty in the Hazleton region, after auto
speeders
Dr. Edgar G. Mi
First Lutheran Churc








for
r, pastor of the
, Columbia, has


{ been given two months’ leave of ab-
0 engage in gospel service for
county is perhaps the only
in Pennsylvania that has two
election districts in which the Repub
lican and Democratic voters met in
joint session and named candidates for
the primaries—at Marysville and in
Oliver county.
Royersford and Spring City girls
y red into a popularity contest
Phoenixville maids.
Jurgess Bloomhall, of Conshohocken,
has put the ban on carnivals, because
» ent


of the trouble they occasion.
Given kerosene in mistake for med
icine, an infant son of George Foote,


isle, died.
Speeders to the number of 23, near
Thompsontown, were fined by Squire

ameron.
Work that will cost $44,000 has
rted on improvements to the indus-
trial building at the Danville Hos-
3 the Insane.
of the nearby vale
ioned the Hazleton

farmers
 
Council and the Chamber of Com-


to create a curb market,
Te resulting from a splinter
one of his feet caused the
leath of Edgar Reightnouer, a Potts-
 

town boy.
Company I, National Guards, left
Reading for camp at Mineola, L. I,
without any demonstrations.
Dr. G. R. Fetherolf is Reading’s

new milk and meat inspector, and
succeeds Dr. H. B. Roshon, now a
second lieutenant in the army.
Grief over his wife's death is sup-
| posed to have caused Samuel Frees,
62, for years janitor at
Station at Port Clinton, to hang him-
at the Reading

Suspicion aroused by his offer to
for $95, a stranger
from Finla and it was then
tained the car was the property
tus M. Reiss, Friedenville.
In spite of the fact that the licenses
issued at the State High-
ment are good only until


I an automot

1
ay runs between $2,000 and
and away beyond expectations this
ra has broken out in Con-
near Hazleton.
nuch damage to the
chestnut farm at
: 4 county.
hers called in the draft at
ceived notice to appear be-
I board, and none







“men scart
 

girl telephone oper.
per cent. larger av erage
is asked of Pennsylvania

off by cancella-
will be han-



planted
potatoes
s five











I x or direct 1erit-
was
signed at
fired at
Midvale
The