The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 23, 1924, Image 6

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1 PAGE SIX
MICKIE, THE PRINTER’S DEVIL
FE HIP Loy

2


WHY ‘HE GAY GAS %
HE CHEERFUL CHATTER %
THE HILARIOUS HOORANS?


PAW BOLGHY
MAM A OO PIECE
SET i
oF
Eo’ J
oi
a



Mickie Has to Dry "Em



WE'W ONY MAFYO he |
WASH DISHES
OMCE A WEBK


3 oe





















































k
WILL END THAT TIRED, RUN-DOWN FEELING.
ENERGY—FEEL YOUR VERY BEST AGAIN!
In his private practice Dr. H. S. Thacher demonstrated that
Symptoms as Indigestion, Gas on a Sour Stomach, Belching,
Colds that Hang On, Sick-Headaches, Constipation,

result of a Sluggish Liver—and that relief in such cases comes
normally again .
Why This Gives Relief
When working as Nature intended
your Liver does three things necess-
ary to keep you feeling your best.
First, it purifies your BLOOD, every
\ drop of which passes through your
§ Liver every fifteen minutes. Second
fiyour Liver furnishes the essences tha
tlare essential to perfect DIGESTION.
pid, your ‘Liver supplies the secre-
jons Nature uses to lubricate your
lGntestines so that your Bowels can
honove naturaly, gently and regular-
ipy every day. When your liver be-
‘omes sluggish it cannot do these
hree things; consequently, you suff-
Wy from one or more of the symp-
aioms described above.
to Physicians for thier
erties.
Liver
tipation—to

improve Digestion
your veins.
Clip the Coupon Below!
. health-building vegetable
you.
Share It With Family!
Just to prove to you that you CAN
WO.
nati away FREE liberal trial size
ttles of Dr. Thacher’s Liiver and
ood Syrup. It isa syrup of PURE-
ber,
This Coupon is Good for One Sample Bottle of
FREE! miicuees Tver axp 5100p syrup
if ppresented beforé the supply for free distribution is alrleady
given away. ead the full details aove, then act at once, as this
 

they are not completely satisfied.
offer is limited. Get a trial size now by presenting this coupon ta
W. D. Chandler & Co., West Main St.,, Mount Joy.









&
|
« $GOOD FURNITURE
Is the Only Kind | Sell—Furniture That is Furniture
Rockers, Mirrors, Hall Racks,
Picture Frames, Ladies’ Desks,
Extension and Other Tables
Davenports, China Closets,
Kitchen Cabinets,
In Fact Anything in the Fur.
niture Line
UNDERTAKING
and EMBALMING

MOUNT JOY, PA.
BOOOOOOO00C00000
=
11 SPECIAL SEASHORE 3 EXCURSION
CITY
inesday, July 30; Sunday, Sept. 14
SPECIAL TRAIN via DELAWARE RIVER BRIDGE
AR-Rail Route to the Seashore :

 














Eastern Excursion
Standard Time Fare
Harvishurg ................ 5.50 A. M. “$4.00
Stabiton 5.56 A. M. 4.
RENE des vv + reeves iin 6.02 A. M. 4.00
OH DR A 6.08 A. M. 4.00
Elisabethtown ............ . 627 ALM. 4.00
Rigems ....... TR 6.33 A. M. 3.90
Mount eres nave BAR 7
Landigville .............. .. 6.490 A.M. 3.78
See eaves . 702 AM 3.78
tie City ........Arrive 10.05 A. M. we
Returning, feave Atlantic City (S. Carelina Ave) 6.15 ’. M.
Pennsylvania Railroad System
©The Sthsidard Railroad of the World :

Fy a
NT JOY. PA
I eral
po
rea
|
ol
IS YOUR CHANCE TO PROVE THAT TONING UP YOUR LIVER |,
BUILD YOUR: |
SELF UP! WIN BACK SOUND DIGESTION, STRENGTH AND ,..mnted fo
such
g, Dizziness, |
Pimples, that Tired |’
Feeling and a general Run-Down condition of the System are often the
quickly
when the Liver is froperly Cleansed and Toned and the System is working !
LY VEGETABLE ingredients known
CORRECT-
IVE and HEALTH-BUILDING prop-
Each ingredient is chosen to
help Nature to cleanse and tone the
to correct this cause of Con-
and
Appetite—to Nourish and Strength |
stipation—to improve Digestion and hy
Over-taxed Nerves, and to send pur- er civilization,
er, Healthier Blood coursing through |
It will cost you nothing to na aliens who were admitted to do the |
All we ask in return is that you tell :
others what a few spoonfuls did for| cases they drifted in as
Keep up this helpful treatment| many entered as slaves,
after the sample bottle has demon-|
strated its merits in your case. Show i
your friends and relatives that the
pourt quick RELIEF, druggists are regular large size bottle is sold un-
der the guarantee that every penny
will be refunded if for any reason

 
 



 








 
1

{ 1 | Americanism. Being myself an
Do Al 1PNNS Help | American of foreign birth, having
| come here from Wales with my
! An Countru?. mother, four brothers and a sister,
| ALL MY as iorants just over forty-two
| vears ago, I have learned to appre-
WRITTEN ESPECIALLY FOR THE ciate what American means to the
MOUNT JOY BULLETIN BY immigrant, what it ought to mean to
JAMES J. DAVIS | him, and having studied the prob-
lems of America as an American, I
One of the prime factors in the
moulding civilization since the



when tl t prehistoric man
dwelling the cave
| of the bear that he had killed has]
been the jon of peoples. |
Through ages, wherever al
given race or people has set up a
strong, prosperous, comfortable state
of life there have flocked the throng ®
of less advanced races seeking the |
| ease of the better civilization. There |
|is no instance in all history since
| the Goths, starving and in danger of!
| extinction by their enemies, sue-
ceeded in begging their way into the
| Roman Empire, which does not
| demonstrate that soon or late the
| immigrant people overthrows the old-
This has not been
accomplished by force or by armed
invasion. In almost every instance
|great civilizations have perished
{through peaceful penetration of
community. In some
free labor,
or as sol-
work of the
| patr otic

for the great mass of
ever
also « peak
Americans who are
serve the interests of the
alert to

Repu .
The general immigration laws
nlace no restriction upon immigra-
tion other than through the Chinese
Exclusion Act, and the enforcement
of the literacy test provision of the
act of 1917. The so-called three,
per cent act did not repeal any of
the provisions of the general laws, |
but merely temporarily limits the |
number of immigrants which may]
enter from a given country in any
one year to three per cent of those |
who were in America at the time of |
the taking of the 1910 census.
Immigration has always been look- |
ed upon as a source of labor supply. |
After the World War the demand for |
labor, in the United States and in|
all other countries, suddenly dimin- |
ished. At the same time it became
possible for the people of Europe]
to emigrate. In the fiscal year 1921, |
nearly a million immigrants were re-|
ceived, and reports from abroad in-|

in the employ of the higher
civilization. In every case, however,
these migrations have resulted in the
overthrow of the higher civiliization
by the infiltrating aliens.
A century ago when we had vast
areas of fertile land uninhabited
before we had become an industrial
nation—there was no need to re-
strict numerically or for physical or
mental defects, immigration from
other nations. There was room for
every one possessing sufficient back-
bone, muscle, common sense and
mentality to find his way on to our
soil; there was no opportunity, and
no means of livelihood for any other.
Everybody as too busy poineering to
find time to listen to false political
doctrines, and life in a new and
largely unknown country was too
serious to be attempted by the phy-
sically, mentally and morally defi-
cient unable to make his way in the
land of his birth.
No one will dispute the high
character and the important services
to America of the great majority of
the immigrants who have come to
us in the past. Their record is
written clearly in our political and
economic history. But conditions in
this land of ours are not what they
were a generation ago and farther
back to the days when the Republic
was founded. We have changed this
continent from maizes of unsurvey-
ed forests and unmapped plains into
a highly developed country not only
agriculturally, but industrially far
above the standard of any other na-
tion. The world looks hungrily up-
on our national wealth—our gener-
osity is conceded as a matter of
course—and the credulity of our
citizens conceived to be like the old
swimmin’ hole, a property right in
all who are able to get in. From
those who thus look upon America
and her institutions we need pro-
tection. I am confident that the
foreign born citizen, and the native
born citizen of foreign stock will be
quick to join with me in protecting
our present and future population
from evil mental, moral or physical
influences whether those influences
come to us from abroad or develop
among us at home. The undesirable
individual who comes to us from
the older countries of the world les-
sens the opportunity of the worthy
immigrant as well as the opporunity
of the native born, The mental,
moral or physical demoralization
which he may represent is as great
a menace to the worthy immigrant
and his children as it is to the eiti-
zen whose progenitors have been in
this country for generations.
The man or woman who comes to
the United States from abroad must
be of a type mentally, morally and
physically capable of appreciating
the advantages of life in the Re-
public, and of taking the fullest
measure of success, socially, econo-
mically and politically under our
beneficfent institutions. America’s
110,000,000 men, woman and child-
ren owe it to themselves to see to
it that only the worth while are per-
mitted to take up their residence a-
mong us. To accomplish this we
have immigration laws, and while I
believe they can be improved upon,
still we are, in the enforcement of
the present statutes doing much to
preserve the high standards of




dicated that millions more lacked
only transportation facilities to make
this new wave of immigration great-|
er than any preceeding it. At that
i time there were over five million
| wage earners out of employment,
i but it took the courage of our late
President Harding to come out and
take the definite stand that workmen
already in America, when employ-
ment was scarce, should be given
first claim on American industry.
His definite steps to remedy the sit-
nation, not the least of which was
the signing of the immigration re-
strictive act rejected by President
Wilson, soon brought to the country
normal conditions of employment.
The condition of American wage
earners, while directly affected by
the admission of large numbers of
competing workmen, is also indirect-
ly affected by the admission of
those who are unable to support
themselves. If they are over-taxed
to provide for public institutions to
house aliens, he is as financially
affected as though workmen of lower
living standards had forced him to
accept a reduction in wages.
Competition is the life of trade—
it is as legitimate in the sale of
service as in the marketing of com-
modities—but when inspired by an
attempt to reduce the level of our
workmen to that of coolie labor it is
as unfair as it is un-American. And
States for good wholesome, upstand-
ing workmen, built of the stuff we
like to refer to as material for
American citizens—men and women
who will shoulder our responsibilities
as well as partake of the fruits of
the labors of the generations which
have struggled to make us a great
nation.
I am sure that no one who has the
best interests of America and the
future of humanity at heart can dis-
agree with me when I hold that we
must bar from America every indi-
vidual who is physically, mentally or
morally unsound, or whose political
or economic views constitute a men-
ace to free institutions, As long as
our laws admit foreigners I feel that
every honest American, native or
foreign born, can subscribe with me
to the principle that we must make
admission to the United States easier
and more gracious for the immigrant
of good sound mind, good heart and
good morals, and utterly impossible
for the individual who is tainted in
body, mind or morals.
It is unfortunate, but inevitable,
that in these discussions we stress
the evils which have come to us with
immigration, while we disregard the
good which we have won from it.
Like every great human develop-
ment, it is the evil which advertises
itself. It is the rotten apple which
shows first in the barrel, but we
must not forget that, unless the rot-
ten apple is removed, the whole bar-
rel is in danger.
Part of our present immigration
problem arises largely through the
so-called “bootlegging” of aliens. I
have before me estimates which
place the number of aliens who en-
ter the United States surreptitiously
at one hundred daily. Some esti-
mates run as high as one thousand
a day. In -addition to the smuggled
alien, we have always the alien who,
although inadmissable, comes to this


so, I say, there is room in the United!
country and seeks through the ef-


forts of friends, relatives and mem-
bers of his racial group, to influence
im-migration officials to waive the
restrictions and admit him. These
cases are exceedingly difficult to han-
dle. They appeal to every instinct
of humanity in the government of-
ficer who must pass upon them.
Usually they involve the breaking
up of familiies, or the return of in-
dividuals, even children, to deplor-|
able conditions abroad. We are now
disposing of about one hundred of
these cases involving children certi-
fied as feeble-minded who were ad-
mitted under bond during the last
days of the previous administration.
I am sure you know something of
the clamor by well-meaning individ-
uals, organizations and newspapers
which these cases have aroused. But
to my mind no public official can
conscientiously stretch the law of
the land, to admit to the United
States individuals who, sooner or
later, will become public charges,
and whose admission will taint our
whole level of mental and moral life.
The results of such a policy are al-|
ready upon us. A scientist who has
made a thorough study of American |
mental standards, testifying before
the House of Representatives Com- |
mittee on Immigration and Natural-|
ization, recently made some inter-
esting statements. He estimated
that is the mental tests applied to
the American army during the worl
war had been enforced against th
foreidn born now in the United
States, and all showing a menta
level below a standard fixed betwee
low average and inferior intelligence
had been excluded, 45.6 per cent of]
the 13,920,692 foreign born now i
the United States or 6,347,835
| would have been barred.
I propose that we establish strict,
but just tests of physical and men-
tal health, and that we make those
tests under whatever numerical re-
striction Congress may by law place
| on immigration. I would have those
tests made abroad in order that the
applicant for admission may nof
have to spend the savings of a life
time on a long sea voyage, in ordey
to find out whether he can enter thg
United States. The Solicitor of thd
Department is now inquiring int
the possibility of moving our whol
examining machinery to foreig
countries under our present laws.
feel that nothing would strengthe
our whole immigration policy s
much as this move.
One great result of moving ou
inspection machinery abroad to mak
selections among the applicants fo
admission would be to end thq


heart-rending scenes which
day confront our agents at Elli
Island and other ports of ent
| Law enforcement is made particula
ly difficult when officials are faceq
with the suffering sorrows of the u
fortunates who have traveled thous
| ands of miles, leaving behind a
that life has meant to them up
that time, only to find that unde
the law they are barred from Ame
ca, to them the promised land. Me
bowed under years of oppressio
women whole life has been a con=
tinued struggle for existence, child-
ren who have know little or nothing
of the joys of childhood, stand with
appealing hands begging for admit-
tance. Rejection for many of them
means utter poverty, a long return
sea voyage, and despair. But the
law is inexorable.
So long as under the law we ad-
mit foreigners to this country, we
could end all of these horrors if we
could make our selections on the
other side, and transform our immi-
gran stations at the perts into gate-
ways of welcome, devoid of the
-harshness of official delays and pains,
of sorrows and disappointments.
America would then be the ideal land
of the immigrant as he has always
fancied it. All of the sorrow and
despair at Ellis Island arise from
the cases of those immigrants who
come here despite the fact thst the
law prevents their admittance. If
we halt these cases before they
leave their native countries we will
end the troubles at our ports of
entry. The immigrant would be
qualified to land in the United States
immediately upon his arrival.
This I call selective immigration.
So long as the United States is to
admit foreigners, I would have our
system function to bring us the best
that we can get from abroad, and to
make ‘their way into America easy
and comfortable.
el A A
A machine perfected recently will
measure the 500,000,000 part of an
inch.

| For sale by druggists everywhere.
|
AFTER BABY
WAS BORN
Back Weak and Painful.
Mrs. Miller Benefited by
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound


Rotan, Texas.—*‘1 am writing to let
you know how I have been benefited by
" taking your medi-
cine. After my sec-
ond baby was born |
my back was weak
lijand hurt me contin-
etl ually, sol thoughtl’d |
Lydia E. Pink- |
ham’s Vegetable |
Compound as I had
read so much about
where it had helped
so many women. I
had been bothered
—dwith my back for
over a year, and it would hurt me until |
1 could not do my work, which is keep-
ing house for three and cooking and
washing dishes. I tell all my friends if
they have any kind of female troubles
to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound a trial. You may use this
testimonial if it will help any one.”’—
Mrs. C. R. MILLER, R. F. D. No. 1,
Box 76, Rotan, Texas.
In a recent country-wide canvass of
purchasers of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound over 121,000 replies
were received, and 98 out of every 100
reported they were benefited by its use.












WEDNESDAY, JULY 23rd,
THATS THE
DRINK FOR ME
Leave it to’ the child-
ren—they know foods.
They know that Mar-
tins Dairy milk is the
proper drink for them.
Follow their laed—
it’s a rich, rare food-
treat.
4 THEMARTIN WA
# ANITARY DAIRY
AR.MARTIN, PROP
3 Dorr bk
56 W.DONEGAL ST. §
a TL TI Et
 

 

 
 
 
 
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THE
Wingert & Haas
Hat Store

Largest Line of
STRAWS
and
PANAMAS
In the City
Plain Hats A Specialty

JOHN A. HAAS, Propr.
144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa.
1924




00
GOOD
CIGARETTES








































Your Calendar
should tell you:
“EVERY 10 DAYS YOU
NEED A HAIRCUT”
Cultivate this fine personal
habit—it makes a man look
his best always. Women
like well-groomed men.
Hershey’s Barber Shep
Don. W. Gorreoht
37 WEST MAIN STREET






Jeweler
Watchmaker—Engra ver
Wo use 1 ‘methods empley-
od oy i hp SUN Sper.
henes our results ave fully as
h
Add months of wear to your
have them repaired here.
City Shoe
Repairing Company
90-52 5. Queen St. Lanenster, Po
1f you want to succeed—Advertise
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin

GENUINE
“BULL”
DURHAM
TOBACCO


It’s the Talk of the
Town

—the new Sunbeam Set—the finest
electric iron you ever saw,
cord and stand all conveniently
tucked away in an indestructable,
dirt-and-moisture-proof case. A
time ironing equipment. $8.60 com-
plete. Step in and see it.

29 Cash Discount on Irons During
the Month of June.
JNO. H. DIETZ
119 E. Main St. Bell Phone 115R3


H. H. KRALL

{ always have on hand anything i»
the line of
SMOKED MEATS, HAM, DRIED
BEEF, BOLOGNA, LARD, ETC.
Alse Fresh Beef, Veal, Pork, Mutien
Krall’s Meat Market
West Maia St, MOUNT JOY.

MEN!
You must hand it to the
ladies, they all keep their hair
trimmed and look De
Why not do the same before!
stepping out among them.
WEAVER WEST END BARBER
Opposite Spickler’s Hotei
Ladies Bobbing
Shampooing
Some Time
and

ding nvitations os
public sale bills, re
member we can turm
work at the