a“ } J \ woman ¢ a we suffering, the t fe ondency cp vomen who carry of ill-health and pain because of disorders and me le nd portant organs that are Ine t gres 50 bravely endured come long tin i rite Presce is a positive cure for ra ne A dis cof t tm organism IT MAKES WEAK MIEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. It ys inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain, It tones and builds up the nerves, It fits for wifehood i motherhood, Henest medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing to urge upon you as '‘just as good.” It is non-secret, non-alcoholic and has a record of forty years of cures, Asx Your Neigusors. They probably know of some of its many cures. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cure them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr, Pierce to pay cost of mailing only, and he will send you a free copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser—revised, up-to date edition, in paper covers, Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y, Ia handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V ARE YOU BUYING YOUR Where You Can Get The Best Quality at The Lowest ST ASOD OE J ——_—_— Pricesr «7 Vou can answer this question correctely after you have amined red our prices with what others and couipa sted the quality of our goods which are guaranteed to gi All H. (G. Hagerniberger BELL PHONE ‘Mount Joy, Penna. vOil entire satisfaction. goods De'1vered. V ! Despair and De spondency rocery Needs SX - ask and e We know how important it is and have provided hundreds of the ‘‘right” sort styles. The “flats” (English) are very much the vogue; plenty of the best to pick from here. High toe, high heel- ed ones, too, if you'd rather havethem. And the good old standbys always here in all leathers—for all feet— 53, $4, $5 Ee a SHAUB & CO. BOOTS, SHOES, RUBBERS 0SIERY 18S N. Queen Street, and deieeoiedeoripiesfoodedpadortoofosfodenderiorioredodradeodedduriesdeodedodedrrdesdedecdeerderdeotoobeob oc iefotenfoseifefoafooesfontoofoss fafeoote ode felesfoeferirofodreofesdodeoioiodoede fede dbboiedede dob "eh 3 SHAUB & COMPANY BE] * % YOU KNOW, OR OUGHT TO KNOW, HOW IMPORTANT IT ©. IS TO HAVE YOUR SHOES FIT AND FEEL RIGHT 2 a sfesforfococfosfoofocforooforfosfesfosfocorforfocfocfecfcfecfonerdenfecfocfonorfeciacfroferfe tas WIIC he ( : jimals res ! on I ; : : ; F. B. GROFF North Ket St., Mount Joy, Pa, 2 dposeseofefeelenfofestesfefostfocfosfodecfofocfdenieol —— me ——— ERLE * Newest Styles and hatest Ideas in Summer Furniture up-to-date A spring display of all that will be el kinds of home-maker A complete asseml e of Summer Fur e, so grouped that glance, thus making nnecessary to shop t ideas and sugges- render it an easy A minute’s spection will suppl; tions, as well lowest prices obtainal matter to arrive at a decision. For Porch and Living Room,— Full assortments of the newest designs—Chairs, Rockers, Set- tees, Hanging Swings, and many other useful pieces, in reed, rat- tan, cane and the new kaltex fiber rush Awnings—Place your order now, before the big rush begins. CARPET CLEANING AND RELAYING. Malev & Mvers LANCASTER, PA. Westernberger, 125-131 East King S'., J TEACHER OF Violin. Viola. Plano. Sean and Mandolin STRICT ATTENTION PAID TO PUPILS Director of WAITZ’S ORCHESTRA Music Furnished for All Occasions € udioc: 340 West HingSt.. Lancaster. feb 28-3 me Bell Phone, 978M gE EO OOO PPP efesfofoluiviedetedofedeleded sofosfosforfecforforfocfonforforforfocioafocfecfecfocfocforieciocde geofery 5 teenie food deren oderfoolefoofefeedertoduedesferforfonde fr eS ———————————————] wd v2 Leader 3 ET eae ae ufo ale afe aBeaPe Be oT ae ole ols ole ole ele oe oo ou ol WR RRR RRR RR RESP PEER HE AL ALARA mY AT CLA i OF A COUN [IC { rt F AY HH BELONGS [ TY f 1 f Joliet t y f « Years Breal tor n the Quar € want tate I ¢ years a convict vho i blood relationshij with el ( the British nobility has een breaking stone in the quarries of ollet penite ary while, he says, law- Ve ve searched two continents tor him as the missing heir to a $60,000, 000 esta.e Conviet Ne 117 is the man. He de clares he is FE r N Churchill, the grandson and sole helr to thy estate of James Samuel Churchill, who died 24 vea at St. Johns, Newfound- land, and for whose heirs the long search has been made More than 30,000 acres of Newfound land land and nearly a score of ships will revert to the convict if he can prove his claim. Two Chicago women, Mrs. Minnie Smith and Mrs. Ella Gard- ner of 1022 Sedgwick street, may con- test his right. He brands them both impostors Revealed His True Name. Under the stigma of conviction as a horse thief the convict has drudged in the quarries and kept his secret. He gave name on as Edmund Morris The other day he declared himself and the story he told his law- ver seemed like a tale from Victor Hugo Five years ago the property which he will strive to gain came under the suzerainty of the late King Edward of England. Its settlement has been un- supervision of the Duke of De- vonshire. Convict 5,117 isists that the wife of the dead Newfoundland capitalist was his grandmother, that she was Marion Churchill, first cousin of the Duke of Marlborough his arrest der the Story of the Convict. Here is the convict’s story: “James Samuel Churchill was my grandfather and died 24 years ago, leaving a daughter, Clairmond. “Clairmond was married to John Bo- land, a sea captain. They were my parents. They separated and 1 took my mother's surname. Later she mar- riled W. 8. Stratton of Colorado Springs, who died ten years ago. Bo- land and my mother also are dead. “My mother's share in the estate would have aggregated between $40, 000,000 and $50,000,000. That is what I want.” The claimant was convicted of horse | stealing in 1895 and was sent to Jo- liet from Kankakee County to serve from one to fourteen years. The prisoner's attorney, William G. Anderson, will communicate with Grey & Cox, the London law firm that offered a reward in recent advertise- ments for information leading to the | whereabouts of the missing heir. He also will take legal action looking to- ward the release of the convict. PISTOL SHOTS SCARE LOVER Muscovite Beauty Sousht by Two Young Swains Chooses Braver of the Pair. Irwin, Pa.—Two shots from a revol- ver fired into the air lost Mike Polav a bride and gave her to his rival, Mis- kal Maiask Polav resides in the Youghiogheny River district re- cently he met Annie Borak Russian girl Polav started making « spite of hat the already p ) A Vi Ky C to have a wedding n, the parents of the girl ( to ace e !} Polav. g fc d directions of her I an I ) r Polav se- Cure 3 started for the hor ( » bride. Jus ¢ € ri! some of 1 lav and t b to the Yough R Polav Ww I el 0 ke t ( y 1 ! oun n ¢ 0 ) 1 V ( 2y I here 1e nex rning € ble She i \T £ S 1 fed law He w nake io This th n of af- 1 to have changed her announced ined And ) € > IN a i 1 I N a ATT t ac she has no n ( er riencing an le Jur when the arm I \ ar ntly without LUS¢ I'he cut out Officer Prosecutes Sor W 1 ause of a tamily at n itrolman Joseph Bidwell rrested and late led him to the | e court, where, by avi ence, .he prisoner was irty days in jail The oilman This machine has come to stay, because it does anything for the | operator that is asked of it. Runs | your yash machine, ice cream | freezer, polishes with a buffing | wheel, grinds with an emery wheel, ete. A full 1-3 H. P. Motor and the lichtest machine of its size on the BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, Little Basaues' Responsibilities In *« | n at Play and Other { by Rose M. Bradley, we are y \ le Basque } 1 Y y 1 1 Lhe 1 { i t { But { { ' ! { l¢ 1 hat they | ‘ 1 the Ly ¢ this “‘delibe t ( ne ' is that in their conscript days t have the mortification nd pain of learning it all over again! But, pleasure Ke as the young natives may be, the are duties also for even babe to per form. It may seem incredible that a little barelegeged boy of 8 or 9 should be the trusted lamplighter of the dis trict, yet so it is, and it is far more : tounding to read of a “railway official” of 4 or 5, who may be seen “seated upon a minute chair on the platform grasping a red flag, whi it is his business to wave when a train ap proaches, presumably as a warning to his brethren and the chicl who play unconcernedly upon the rails He feels that the responsibility of the traffic of the whole line to Bayonne rests upon his little shoulders.” Guayule, the Rubber Plant. Guayule was for years overlooked or despised; its rubber content was considered of little or no value, and when at last acknowledged this was said to be inferior to other rubber be- cause it did not come from Yet in spite of all guayule has become an important source of rubber supply, millions of dollars have invest- the topics. been ed in the industry, factories have been erected close to the guayule fields and towns have grown up for the opera- tives and field laborers. Every process of the rubber from the plant has oped into a system; ever production of been devel- gathering the shrub receives more care than at first; but the essence of the whole problem, that is, the propagation of guayule so that a continuous supply may be assured, is as yet unsolved, and if once the land is completely cleared and the chances of renawal lost the industry will wither and die, and the busy areas of today will be come depopulated and revert to the | wilderness. What Ailed Him. “lI want you to tell me plainly, doc tor,” said the man with the fat gov- ernment position, “what is the mat- | ter with me.” “Well, sir,” answered the oid doc- tor, leaning back in his chair and look ing at his beefy, red-faced patient, “you are suffering from underwork and overpay.” In the Eye. “That man is very much in the pub lic eye.” *Yes,” re “he is as irritati locomotive.’ jenator Sorghum; from a plied a cinder market. Only a convince needed to catalog tration Ask for demons any one . 0. Box 42 MT. JOY, PA. hen vou are cleaning house, vhy not rent a sweeper and make hard work easy. Charges are reasonable Be sure to engage the sweeper in time: TRAE IT 2 4 5 rs i oy Ried d he had no control over his son. Our large ice plant is now in op- The formal charge placed against the oration continuously and we are latter was for malicious trespass prepared to furnish good clean and — nie clear ice in any quantity. Will run a wagon through town daily. Don’t DOES UPHOLSTERING place your order for ice until yva first get our prices. Persons having upholsteri . do, such as a or. » Also ample room for placing window shades or anything | in general repair work, will confer | C 1d St a favor and save money by calling | O orage on me, Prices are right. . H. S. MUSSELMAN, May15-3mo. Florin, et Eee Pa. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. HF. BROOKS & New Haven Mount Joy. (0. PA. - -FKS HELD HILL FIVE WE MEMORIAL om RATES BRAVE ACT Of EER Early Colora , With His Fam ily, Held Party of Indians at Bay or t Now Known as Prominent an the weky like hil hat 1rroul r, is a rugged I poir t t out skirts of the town no 1 imp son's Rest.” Recently there was ed on this hill a monument comn rating the brave fight put up at this spot by John Simpson, one ol the ear liest settlers of Colorado rainst a war party of Utes and Cheyenne in 1855. The Indian fighter and his wife are buried on top of the hill The Utes and Cheyennes made the foothills and the plains adjoining the Rockies their hunting ground, but they rarely gave trouble to settlers. Consequently, one May morning in 1855, when Simpson's children, Bob and Nora, aged 15 and 13, were mak- ing their way to a small stream near their home, they were surprised to see a large party of Indians riding tow: ird them at a terrific pace, shaking their lances and uttering blood-thirsty cries. At the same time they heard a cry from the direction of the cabin, and saw their father running toward them with his rifle in his hand. Simpson had just returned from an expedition. He had heard that the Cheyennes and Utes had gone on the warpath, and he had hastened home just in time to rescue his family. See- ing the trapper, the Indians hesitated, for Simpson's fame as a shot had spread throughout the frontier, and the redskins knew that several among them would meet death if they per- sisted in their attempt to capture the children. Two burros were packed with provi- keg of water and all the am- trapper possessed. Driv- ahead of them the little family set out Simpson covered the rifle when they ap- proached too near, and the family was unmolested. The hill which appealed to the trapper as a good place for de- | fense was accessible only by a single narrow, rocky path, up which one { must climb today in reaching the sum- | mit of “Simpson’s Rest” The sum- mit of the hill is flat, about half an acre in extent and surrounded by a high rocky wall. It would be impos- | sible to storm such a natural fortress | except by over-powering the defenders at the narrow defile which served as { an entrance. | The Indians saw that it was hope- less to attempt to storm the natural fortress, so they surrounded the hill and began a siege in the endeavor to “starve out” the defenders. The siege has no parallel in the history of the west. For five weeks the plucky pio- neer and his family held their fortress. They killed their burrors when pro- visions ran low. Fortunately, there had been heavy rains, and depressions sions, a munition the ing the burros members of the from the house. Indians with his in the rocks at the top of the hill were filled with water, giving an am- At the end of the fifth week, when hope was nearly aban- | doned, the Indians suddenly brought in | their ponies and rode away with shrill cries. A troop of cavalry from Fort Lyon, 150 miles distant, which had been sent out to render aid to any set- : tlers who might have escaped the ma- rauding Indians, soon came in view, | and Simpson and his family were res- pie supply. | cued. Woman's Ch S. The plan of the Bro mn priest who suggests a fine of for every oung man who reaches his twenty- fifth birthday unmarried, and a le gal requirement th ery unmari W man must propos t least thre times ] nt 1 compil ) er I'¢ nance purports va aiirer C For example, be- tween 1§ 1 ¢ her chance is 14 I n 20 and 2b it ju lin between 2° 15 per cent. between ) it is only 2 cent nd after 60 she has only one chance in 1. : i hinks t nat bash al € Nn¢ S ak Undoubtedly tl and it is to be hoj the tinue so to do N 11 ul as the < will go farther getti a good husband unt of cultivated bold- t of J ph Work it is about vasion of Iu 1 He looked ar y streets a bit, and found wished, the right t Size “I'll take it,” he said to the owner “But that is not customary. To whom will you refer me? To your so- heitor?” “I haven't any.” “But friends of yours ondon?”’ “I came here yesterd haven't got acquainted with anybod) Here's the rental money for the first six months. Take it or leave it.’ “But won't tomorrow be more satis- factory for coming io a settlement?” “That’s one day too late. 1 want the office today, now.” He got his office. Requirements of Dairy. Some people have an idea that dal- rying is an easy job and can be done | without much effort. Dairy work is { just like any kind of work. If it is going to be done profitably it requires thought and care. | Fix Up the Stable. { A small investment will fix up al- | most any stable With a few more | windows and some ventilating flues, | the result will be thoroughly valuable. ———— { | Read the Mt. Joy Builetin. Cold tion. Ple To have pure and wholesome food, be sure that your baking powder is made from cream of tartar and not from alum. No Alum drafts Wednesday mai { a Absolutely Pure? 4s The Label will guide you Royal is the only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar No Lime Phosphates 10—On the premises from Mount Joy Friday, May Drafts Stop Eggs. on the road leading will check egg produc- nty of fresh air is necessary to Madeira’s Mill, one fourth mile but this does not mean a draft The west of the latter in Rapho town- t house has raly one side chip, a small tract of land with im- open-fron open; the for drafts to be created. alfalfa or rying sO his neigh t is, there 1» no oppc i a pportunity provements. Also a lot of personal or : property by Ed Ream executor of Farmer With Alfalfa. Charles Hemple, deceased. Zeller, The dairy farmer who has plenty ot auct. good clover hay is not wor- Saturday, June 1—On the prem- much about feed prices as ises in Florin, 2 lots of ground with bor, who believes that he improvements, by Christian IL. Niss- ice this Find oi feed ley, executor of Eli L. Flowers, de- cannot 1 ceased. See ad. 10 RN LT HAVE YOU TRIED ~ IY! MAGIC " u = = a : - = = w - -— a . . . ’ ® If not will youtry thetrial size - oe B left at yotlir house today s There is nothing to equal it = = : FOR CLEANING CLOTHING = = n 4 u . of Grease or Tar Spots, Clea Vas dlrs . . ” s : on Men's or Ladies’ a s a a & Itis soon timz for house cleaning and if = : you want to clean the woodwork or = J # brighten up the furniture use a - \ = little of the trial s 3:1 ft“you so tha MH 1 ™ 4 you will b e 2 i yothing better = 7} a &8 A 3 Fo] { 2 X m + m a -N = Mm 2 " % n BE %%° Rr TU NA NNN STRIPS PIR LA ALA SARA A a ni g 9 (1 = = Fil © = \ bd & Hl 3 = @ a 8 3 CN Z 11 U : : Vi z ' " m » : East Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa. . = - ERE 0 3 A n : ’ * I'm Rady for You With one of the finest lines of JEWELRY, WATCHES, ® pe CLOCKS, ETC., to be found in any first-class jewelry store. My line = cannot be exceeded, much less equalled in this community. The best way to be convinced is to call and see for yourself. ” a 0 00 OL A REPAIR WORK OF ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY. East Main Street, MOUNT JOY, PA. H. MILLER, Ww