The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 26, 1917, Image 8

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CLA
RENCE SCHO

.
()78



Five Per C
 
v.





{With Security
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.

4 !
of 4
id : ‘
: Maytown, | enna.
Ld
I Capital $50,000 Surplus $50,000
4 M. R. HOFFMAN, President. N. F. ARNTZ, Cashier
i






~ Buy A














a trial. I also handle the
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 market. Jf is by no
means a new car, but one that has been tried for years and has proven
ay satisfactory. Any one in the market for such a car will readily be con-
Yinced of its merits after a demonstration which will be cheerfully given.
1 2qt only sell cars, but I am prepared to take care of thefpeople to whom
1 sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying girs. I am at your
service Sundays or night time as well as during the ddv.
petent mechanics employed. If your car needs attenyon, give this garage

p<
8
None but com-





Bell Phone

of the Best Cafs of That Class
BRUBAKERS' GARAGE

Mount Joy, Pa.
Marietta St.



















Wr cr
UHH BUNT
DISTINCTIVE
Printing.
ERR.




A

[ Printing that will
attract attention and
put your. advertising
in a class by itself—
printingthatcontains
originality in con-
ception and excel-
lence in its execution
— this quality of
originality and in-
dividuality charadter-
izes all the printed
work we turn out.


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We
ndle any kind of Job
and when it
are equipped to
ha
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ng,
| comes to Service, we |
HM can only refer you to |
our customers or ask |
that you give us a trial. !
|

BASSO LEED ESD fod dee Ssdsododnd oalsdocirets dere Toadeettecte ds Fodhodsdodeded. te Bl 2 2 2 5 2 5 8 2.2 8 2 8 a0
| munition plants, railro

1—Quays of the Russian j
Gen. W. L. Sherrill, Admiral Gle:
hand grenade throwers in a first


ves

NEWS REVIEW OF
THE PAST WEEK
Government Finally Closes Down
on Industrial Workers of
the World.
"MANY RAIDS AND ARRESTS
Italians Continue Victorious Progress
Toward Trieste—Germans Take
Riga and Great Naval Battle
in the Gulf of Finland
Is Expected.
By EWARD W. PICKARD.
It war industries hampered, its dig-
nity outraged and its patience ex-
hauBted, the government of the United
States arose in its might last week and
beggan the process of squashing the dis-
r@putable and disloyal Industrial
Workers of the World. In more than
“a score of cities, mostly in the middle
and far West, their headquarters and
printing offices were raided and great
quantities of material The
department of justice prepared for this
rried it out
seized.
action secretly and ca
swiftly and skillfully, and is now ready
to have the leaders of the organization
indicted if the documents taken war-
rant this. In some cities many arrests
were may
started under the new espionage law,
made. Prosecutions be
or any one of several other laws,
Two of the things that caused Uncle
Sam to get after the I. W. W. were the
preaching of sabotage—the wilfull de-
struction of property—and
“stickerettes” designed to obstruct en-
which
the use of
listing, were plastered all over
the
of misusing the m
ter advocating
and forcible resis
cerning the carr)
country. They are also accused
Is to send out mat-

treason, insurrection
ance to the laws con-
the war.


ing on of
The documents seized show that the
I. W. W. was planning a nation-wide
which, it up
and lumber
mills, and the sabotage advocated was
to be practiced in connection with this
strike would tie
hoped,
1


| strike.
| stantly supplied with funds from Ger- |
There is a well grounded belief that
the leaders of the I. W. W. are con-
man sources, but the great mass of its
members no doubt are merely ignorant
and misled creatures.
The national headquarters
of the
| Socialist party in Chicago also were
| ta
raided and books and papers seized.
“Big Bill” in Eclipse.
Another “prominent” opponent of the
government—William Hale Thompson,
the mayor of Chicago—came a cropper
last week. In defiance of the orders of
Governor Lowden, he compelled the
police of Chicago to give protection to
a meeting of the pacifists who had
been barred from Wisconsin, Minneso-
and other states. Thereupon the
governor sent troops to the city to pre-
vent repetition of the offense, the city
council of Chicago formally rebuked
the mayor, the agents of the depart-
ment of justice began inquiries into
his conduct with a view to his indict-
ment, the press and people of the
country denounced him, and his in-
fantile boom for the Illinois senator-
ship collapsed utterly. He did not go
to the Kankakee fair, where that boom
was slated to be started. It is difficult
to write of Thompson, Mason and oth-
er still more prominent foes of their
country in printable language. Those
who combat the government's war ef-
forts “give aid and comfort to the
enemy” and exasperated loyalty won-
ders why they are not subjected to the
penalties prescribed by the law against
tres

1S0n.
Great Victory for Italians.
When the Italian armles on Tuesday
stormed and captured Monte S }
they took the
their v





s barring


moveme
iy
Austr

prob
 
1 compel the

ns to evs

A A A A ANS NI NII NI NI NI NI NII NIN NI PPP
Ne A A NINN NNN NINN NI NINN NINES NI NINN NII NIIP NPN NINN
READY FOR WAR'S HARDSHIPS
Boys of 1917 as Respcnsive as When
Duty Called the Youth of Both
Sides to the Civil War.
 


“l can't get them car get
them I can’t get 1p in the
me 1g
If ever a bugler had a harder
han 1 the one who blew reveille a
} today he
t
( I ant at 5:30 a. m.
hasn't been heard from and the
going old refrain fits the situation.

fore-
Riga, captured by
Gen. Eli. D. Hoyle cheering the parade of New York's draft ariny. 8
line trench setting the fuses In their grenades.
and
| line of
|
Ld
the Germans, 2
| mino by Cadorfa’s forces. In fact, a
general retirement of the Austrians on
that front was predicted. In the bat-
tles on the Balnsizza plateau the Ital-
jans captured immense quantities of
[
arms and munitions, for the enemy fled
in haste and disorder. Nearer the
I coast, the fortress on Monte Hermada
still held out against furious attacks,
keeping the Italians from advancing
{ on Trieste by that route.
| Riga Taken by Germans.
| has fallen, the kaiser rejoices
war-to-victory party in Ger-
argument. But this,
Riga
and the
many has a new
like the Galician affair, is rather a
cheap victory over a disorganized
army, and was expected. The Russians
have retired beyond the River
fighting fairly well as they went, and
the fierce bravery of the Battalion of
Death enabled them to prepare a new
resistance.
ied ”" otro AAA
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT J OY, PA,
Coionel Roosevelt, Charles 1d. Hug
} public is in the throes of
prin Seba

AA AAA ASN ANI AIA NINN NIN AS NINN NIN NINN NAL NI NIN NIN NIT NII NI NIN NS NS NING NIN NINN INL NT NIN Nd 5 PANINI NIN NS NINN
boats. Now the South Amer n re-


way strike which is certainly fomentec
and financed by Germans. Thousands

of workmen have qu nd there has
been destruction of property

serious
and considerable rioting.
From “an
American port” comes an |


exciting story of a concerted attack |
by seven German submarines on a |
fleet of 22 allied merchantmen west-
bound. Four of the est of the |
steamships were sunk by torpedoes,
but the guns of the others destroyed |

three of the U-b« The battle took

| place 30 miles off the coast of Ireland.
Aa, |
The taking of Riga gives Germany |
command of the Baltic and
lies open for an advance on
but it is not at all
the
te
vay
Petrograd by land,
certain will
Russian capital. The route is long and
through difficult country, and the a
isa
compie


the
the kaiser go on to

 

Organized Labor Loyal.
labor in the United
determined to assert its loyal-
ty, met last week in Minneapolis, to-
gether with many radicals 1 Social-
ists, and formed the American Alliance
for Labor and Democracy. Under the
leadership of Samuel Gompers, Frank |
P. Walsh, John Spargo and others, the |
Organized
States,

delegates declared the new organiza-
tion firmly back of the armed forces of
the government in their fight for “a
| victory which will mean the coming |
{ of the greatest world democracy ever
vantages of pos Petr
might be offset by such an extension
of his lines just as winter is at hand. |
At the time of writing, it appears like-
ly that the German Baltic fleet will
battle
is believed
meet the Russian sea forces in
in the Gulf of Finland. It
the fortified island of Osel at the head
of Riga and the port
Zu the entrance to
Finland, cannot hold out
Gulf
of the

which
the Gulf of
Reval,






 






of
dreamed of.” Definite reports have
been circulated that laborites are plan-



| ning to cripple v us industries by
strikes, especial the fuel industry.
These reports, Mr. Gompers declares,
do not relate to the American Federa- |
tion of Labor.
well sub
The Bi
vote ©
They are, however, too |

antiated to be ignored.
ish trades union congress by
2,804,000 to 91,000 declared
the |

itself opposed to participation in
Stoekheim and taken

CONEress, this,
with the refusal of many countries to
| grant passports to delegates, probably
long, and the Russian fleet thus is like-
ly to be cooped up under the gu
Kronstadt, the great fortress tha
tects the port of Petrog 1
Part of the German fleet already has |
been sighted at the entrance to the
Gulf ¢ and.
(i y's offensive a nst Russia |
app s to have been timed to coincide
with an expected counter-revolution
planned to restore autocracy in Russia
The plat, however, was uncovered and
many arrests of nd dukes and oth-
ers have been mi
General Alexieff, former commander
in chief, and General Vassilkovski,
commander of the Petrograd garrison,
agreed 1 sday that: the fall of Ri
 
did not t aten Petrograd and was of
ioral but not strategic importance.
On the Western Front.
 
 
ill result in the en andonment
| of the gathering in the Swedish city.
Pope Preparing Second Note.

Not wholly discouraged by the fail- {
Pope Benedict |
d proposal for the |
Ribot,
irne battlefield, de-
requisite in any
France
Alsace-Lorraine,

peace note,


ng a secon
of the war. Premier
ng on the 3
that a
acceptable to
 
peace |
the

was
restoration of


The German press continues to heap
abuse and ridicule on President Wil- |
son for his reply to the pope's note,
| declaiming loudly against his demands |
{ that the government of Germany be
In France and Flanders the week |
brought little change in the positions
of the opposing mies, though the

fighting was uninterrupted. The Brit
ish deluged the German lines in Bel-
gium with shell fire that indicated an-
other drive, and there were reports
that Crown Prince Ruprecht was pre-
paring ecute “strategic
retreat” [the Courtrai-Thourout line
and thus give up a strip of territory
east of Ypres from ten to twenty miles
deep.
fo ex another

10
This would help the allies on
their way toward the German subma-
rine Zeebrugge and other
ports on the Belgian coast.
bases at


The Germans made several air raids
on England, killing a number of per-
sons, especially at Chatham, and one
of their U-boats shelled Scarborough.
The British exhibits some un-
easiness lest the Germans have “got
the jump” on the allies in the matter
of increased air forces. The United
States, however, is coming fast in this
respect, building machines as rapidly
as possible and training a big army of
aviators, here and abroad.

press
Again on Thursday night the Ger-
man aviators devoted their attention
to the French hospitals behind the
Verdun lines, bombarding them for six
and a half hours and killing 19 soldiers
who already were severely wounded.
If a cablegram from Shanghai is to
be China is about to enter
into active participation in the war.
The Twenty-fourth army corps, com-
posed of 15,000 picked troops from the
northern provinces, is said to be mobil-
ized for immediate departure for Eu-
rope, probably through Siberia to the
iront to the Russians
The corps includes
of engineers offi-
‘ed by Chinese graduates of Ameri-
and an aviation corps
d by American and French air-
These troops would be the first
fal
believed,
eastern assist
and Roumanians,
several companies


Nao
college
   
nghis Khan, 800 years ago.
time ot
 
Argentina two weel was rejoic-
ing over a supposed diplomatic victory
over Germany in the matter of U-
There no n clocks in
were



ks where 280 (
barrac
ro boys ar

10is and sout
from northern Ill
 
consin counties passed


timepiece has for the city sleeper.
I who
urned over for their accustomed
Officers had to rout out
severa

“forty more winks,” but it did not t
long them their ¢
dressed and washed ready for break-
fast. Young America generally has an |
Ke
 
to get into


democratized before peace can be |
ade with it. But the reichstag ma-
jority is insistently demanding just

about the reforms the president con-
siders essential.
Dispatches from Switzerland say the
central have determined on
the partition of Poland. According to
the plan, Germany is to take about
one-tenth of Russign Poland to rectify
her frontier, and Austria will annex
the remainder, unite it to Galicia and
proclaim the territory the united king-
dom of Poland, with Emperor Charles
It is to have its own par-
liament, but its foreign policy, finances
and army are to be controlled by Aus-
trina. This plan does not please Hun-
gary, because that country thinks its
influence will be lessened if the em-
pire becomes a triple kingdom.
powers
as its king.

Led by President Wilson and mem-
bers of the senate and house, and es- |
corted by thousands of soldiers and
sailors, the young men of the District
of Columbia selected for service in the
National army paraded the streets of
Washington on Tuesday, and similar
parades took hundreds of
cities and towns. Next day these men
of the National army began Streaming
place in
from all points of the compass into
the 16 cantonment camps built for
their training and instruction. They |

are the first 5 per’ cent of the 687,000 |
men selecied by the draft. l
The long wrangle in the senate over |
war profits taxation ended in the de- |
feat of the high tax group and the
adoption of the finance committee's
provisions for a total levy of $1,286,-
000,000, or about a third of this year's
war and normal excess profits. This
would make the bill total $2,522 000.
000.
passed
war credits bill
night the house
the big
Thursday
unanimously
| authorizing $11,588,045,460 in bonds |
and certificates. Every effort of a
{ group of Republicans to limit Secre-
t in Europe since the |
bonds not


tary McAdoo’s control over these is-
sues Ss de
 
ited, but an amendment
man Cannon was adopted,
from taxes interest on
in excess of £5,000.

by Co
exempting


and as

appetite ans have
passed upon these first arrivals in
 
camp and
fit the 1
satisfy the 1
Each
woven v
unced them physically

i
nicers were prepared to
food. |
< Iron cot with |
imself. Over |
with straw. oq
desires for

re spring
bag


1S a


straw, and
of
there w
that uld not be conducive to the
kind of comforts to which a lot of |
these boys have been accustomed.
it does not take
to
Id be sharp ends

$d : + :
eicn imagination


Wi












ie |
Shed
al

 

PAL
||
nt
All | fit iN]
All Siove Troubles Fade Away
Before This Pipeless Furnace
Stoves and base-burners are trouble
makers, work makers, expense makers.
There's the trouble of setting them up in
the Fall and taking them down in the
Spring, with unsightly pipes disfiguring
the home six months out of twelve.
There's the work of bringing in coal and
taking away ashes, with the cxtra work
caused by the dirt and dust that fills the
rooms. There's the expense of buying

 
 

SE
 
ie 50 TN
 

 


 

 

 
 












4 several stoves (because one is not
4 sufficient to heat a home), the expense of
& maintaining three heating units, and the |
bi . expense of replacing furnishings which §
By are damaged by dirt and dust. You canbuy a §
{ Home Ventilator F f
5 ome Ventilator Furnace |
FS The Original PATENTED Pipeless Modcl f
x 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
fumace perfection. The heat will be distributed evenly throughout the house
plenty of it. No small registers scattered about, no wall flues to invite fire dan
no cold air drafts, no pipes in the rooms, no space wasted, no trouble to install,
bother at any time, no heat in the cellar. A "Home Ventilator’ in the cellar,
combination hot- and cold-air register right above it, and the heating syste:
complete.
Write or telephone us for more particulare,
G. MOYEK, Mount Joy, Penna.
Read the Booklet “From Pig
HEI CRA


ERT
a ch
e that a DEC.
An announcement made by competition would indic
LARATION OF WAR had been made on all types of gfurnaces by the
one they are handling, and if this article were allowed to go unheeded,
the result would be that possibly many people wowld be mis-led into
purchasing some furnace other than the HOME VENTILATOR,
under the impression that they were getting the ori
We take pleasure in informing the people of Mgnt Joy and vicinity
that G. Moyer of your town is prepared to furnish@you with the HUME
VENTILATOR FURNACE, which has been on the #market for the past
geven years and is absolutely the ORIGINAL PATENTED PIPELESS
FURNACE using the combination hot and cold ai¥ register.
TAKE SPECIAL NOTICE—Mr. G. Moyer s copies of patent pa-
pers, both of ours’ and competition, which w easily show that the
HOME VENTILATOR FURNACE was in ge PATENTED LONG

BEFORE ANY OTHER FURNACE of this type was HEARD of.
A LITTLE HISTORY—Back in 1910 wh the only furnace was the
old pipe job, Mr. S. D. Strong, President off the Homer Furnace Com-
pany, Homer, Michigan, conceived 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 furnaces, a ready salefwould be found. Against the
advice of older and more experienced fufnace men, he perfected ani
manufactured a few HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES. The result was
a REVOLUTION IN THE HEATING WORLD. Farmers, who hers.
tofore could not have furnaces becausef their vegetable storage would be
spoiled, bought “HOMERS,” installed them in the vegetable cellars, heat-
ed their houses so much cheaper that with stoves, and so much more sat.
isfactorily, that since that time THC USANDS OF HOME VENTILATORS
HAVE BEEN SOLD, from Maine tg California, and from Florida to Can-
ada. &
3 Now—when other manufactiffers saw the enormous strides made by
THE HOME VENTILATOR, thegg eves began to open, and from the
sickly grin they tried to maintaifi they were brought up against the solid
fact that to SAVE THEIR BACON, they MUST manufacture something
as near the HQME VENTILATOR as possible without infringing on the
rights of S. D. Strong. SMALL MANUFACTURERS sprung up trying
to get a foot-hold in the pipel@ss world, but the HOME VENTILATOK
has been too long established and had too big a start to be affected, and
the sales of the Homer Furnfice Company still lead by many lengths. IN
THE LAST FIVE MONTHS§ 4000 BOME VENTILATOR FURNACES
HAVE BEEN SCLD TO SPONSIELE DEALERS.
DON'T BE DECEIVED into buying an imitation of the HOME VEN.
TILATCR FURNACE. n't let other manufacturers experiment =t
your expense. When you buy, buy the ORIGINAL. Five micutes coum.
parison will convince yo Weigh the 24 inch fire pot of the HOME VEN-
TILATOR (when we sayf24-in. we mean inside measurement) then weigh
that of any other furnage of the same size. Result? About 40 percent
in favor of the HOME JVENTILATCR. The HOME VENTILATOR is
equipped with heavy gflvanized casings throughout; no flimsy black inner
casings to rust out, and which are good only as talking points, and the
buyer pays for these falking points by getting a ligliter furnace.
The HOME VENTILATOR FYRNACE is sold under a guaranty to do
the business or no safle, and every casting is guarantccd for five years, ex-
cept the grate, and pur reason for not guaranteeing this is that iome-
times a careless usef will allow athes to accumulate undegneath, and same
is liable to melt out. However this happens only rarely.
After manufagturing HOME VENTILATOR FURNACES for scven
years, our repair pusiness 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 manufacturs
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 ail
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


 












=
The World's Gredtest Tire
BL.LACK BOB
IS WHAT TELLS—INVESTIGATE




SERVICE AND MILEA
5000 MILES GUARANTEE
BLACK BOB TIRES KET IN REPAIR UNTIL WORN OUT—
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Y TIRE COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA
Seld by
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el






 

We Will Show You How To Secure S td Qualities and
Handsome Styles At Savings Worth Your While
est things are now being put on
exhibition for the first time ur collection of Bed-Room Furni-
ture, showing Period styl#s, in all the different kinds of wood, is
well worth seeing. e same is true of the Dining-Room, Living-
Room and Librar
OUR INEXPENSIVE LOCATION and our facilities for handling
Furniture, able us fo offer exceptionally low prices at this time.




\
A number of the newest and

 

Maley & Myers
Street,
Vestenberger
125-131 East King Lancaster, Pa.













{Ger
’
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1