Hauck, of Lancaster, were in on Monday Mr. and Mrs Deposit, Pa here on T Ts v3 Mi i il ' 11ily ¥ IU] ion were guests friends Sunday wfonfecforforfosfesfoctsofenteciosferecs STRICT ATTENTION PAID TO PUPILS ofocloctocfecocfosirefosihcfoctocfecteatucfocfonfociosfocfociectodie fodder The Hager Decorative Departments THESE SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS MAKE A SPECIAL FEATURE OF FRESCOING CHURCH- ES, BANKS, LODGE ROOMS, SCHOOLS AND OTHER PUBLIC BUILDINGS. THE MANY BUILDINGS WE'VE DECORATED OR REDECORATED IN BOTH LANCASTER CITY AND COUNTY ARE SPLENDID EXAMPLES OF THE CHARACTER OF THE WORK WE DO. ALWAYS GLAD TO SUBMIT SPECIALLY PREPARED COLORED DRAWINGS SHOWING COL- OR SCHEMES AND METHOD OF TREATMENT. DURING THE SUMMER MONTHS, WE OFFER SPECIAL GIVE AN ESTIMATE. PRICE INDUCEMENTS—LET US a y = E . SVECIAL QUALITIES IN OUR OWN [| SPLENDID SHOWING OF NEW WALL PAPERS IMPORTATIONS OF MATTINGS ! Wall paper for 3! rooms—Iliving room, din- ; : ing r , par citchen, den, library, bedr ’ Among the Chinese Mattings are tan and hi room, parlor, Kkitche den, library, bedroom green, wood browns, blue, red and natural. al Prices—35c, 8c, 10¢, 123¢, and upwards per good matting at 12¢ a yard or $5 for roll of 40 iece vards. Other Chinese Mattings at 20c and 25c¢ the | Special prices given for papering and decorat- > yard. i » entire residences. A visit to the Wall Paper A full range of grades in Japanese Mattings {| Department and to the “Model Apartments” shows 3 : . il the newest methods of home decorations and includes damask, multi-colored, inserted and || ¢,rnishings burnt wood effects ; : If interested, send for our handsome illus- All finished with high grade patent edges. trated booklet showing descigns in water color. Prices 20¢ and upwards per yard. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS “BRIGHTEN-UP” PAINTS The paints for outside use will be found on PRAIRIE GRASS MATTING RUGS the fourth-floor -those for inside use are sold in i : 2 G the Housefurnishing Department, Basement. These ARE SERVICEABLE AND ECONOMICAL three items are from the basement. These rugs are closely woven and have be- FAMILY PAINT—a durable oil glass paint come a staple floor covering for home and porch that wears well and may be washed. For wood- ¥ use as well as for summer homes. In greens, work, kitchen chairs, tables, cupboards, ete., 1-4 browns, blues and red. pint, Jor, Share: 0c, ti i ; . t ah ; : £ specla preparation or stoveplipes anc a ? There are more than half a dozen different surfaces subjeet to heat, prevents rusting. 3 pint, sizes and prices, from 30c for an 18x36 inch plain || 25¢, 1 pint, 45c. rug to a 9x12 ft. size at $7.25 of $8.25 in bordered BUGGY PAINT for painting and varnishing pattern. The 6x9 ft. size, at $3.75 or $4.25 if || at once. Good for buggies, wagons, farm imple- bordered, is a popular seller. ments, boats, etc. 3% pint, 30¢, 1 pint, 60c, 1 quart, 11 0 25-31 West King Street, Lancaster, Pa. 2 LO JU LL —— arn and Roads Woman's Power y M. Qwer an Woman's most glorious endowment the power to awaken and hold the pure and honest | i worthy man, When she loses it and still oy no one in the w © Wor OW he h I A she endures Lhe » A 5 s 1 ness and deran t ganism soon I 5 i ® man Her general y i her Ee od 100K ne : r and her power an r ¢ i witl the assistance f his stall 1 i nany thousands of v en. 3 [ | ment It is k A i i e's Fa . specihic tor the weakne i ¢ regu Bates, strengthens and ) will advise you t ta t rtor IT WEAK WOM WOMEN 1 Dr. P vels. I + ge 3 + ¢ wn, 4 d d oy, 3 RE \ i —— Res \ ’ J Wt \ 4 hb | de 3 $+ YOU KNOW, OR OUGHT TO KNO I IM RTANT IT 3 IS TO HAVE YOUR SHOES FIT AND FEEL RIGHT ge ¥ tant it 18 ar ) d 1 1dreds of 3 I ¢ The ‘fla e very much the 4 do [ enty of the best to pick fre ere. High toe, high heel- 3 on t rather havet And the good old standby ) i hers—for all feet . & x + I oe de 8 (Te a o : 33, 4, dO : | 5 h x > | ed « 1 mi bh o | i YUseg « 8 Ld lu Cw. de * nd tl ol i < nade eat ever Ic 1e 3 é A wy 5 wl fF a ) d rmer wh vould 1 1 rons > ao ££ # al 4 + th tl 1¢ trouble he road of . i oa SiR 3 % 3 ermanent « I 1 peal - It an easy matter to make a bo Talalsnl CTA NT ™ TA Te 3CCTS. Halk, RUBLEES ano HUSLE # good road bad by heaping earth and oo : hs a ‘ - 9 A DWF vo 3. | weeds to form the crown and it is 18 N. Queen Street, LAN ASTER 3 no more aimicu to convert a . & had road into the farily good by fill- SOPPPEDbddeirivrodeoieiondeioieirfiofuirddododpopobofsadoboisorfofddpdodofiddedddd |. 0 the hollows as they appear with ————————————————— — —— suitable stones for a foundation and surfacing with a flner material SO t ibid bbb bb bbbbbb ddd db bdbbbbd db ddibbbdbbbdddbbe Labor is the principal cost of rural o road construction and up keep So MR. HORSE OWNER 3 far the labor emploved has been . : fe roe > ye P i ie ore It will pay you to read this ad carefully, then come and inspect largely wasted and in this degre my line of the township taxpayer has deprived L z himself of pleasure opportunity Flynets, Cooling BlanKets profit in marketing and a profit in and all kinds of needs for the horse. i his land as an investment. ivi Dey mm Qo m= aa o> W Driving fly nets, flank, ............ $2.75, $3.50, $3.75 3 Unclaimed Letters Driving ‘fly nets, around breast,... ci adie BBs, 83.50 Following is the list of unclaimed leather team Dets,. ......crcvviiiiiiiinrrenenns $2.50 $ etters the Mount Joy post office , ~ Go o = - CT Wedr day [ay 2¢ 1912. Yellow and Black Cord Nets, $1.00, $1.15, , $1.75 Inesday, N th, 1 ’ ‘ : =e mo ee Mrs. Geo. M. Detrick, Woolen Cooling Blankets,.................. $1.50 to $5.00 Me L Hu r e0., 1 fuges Always a complete line of all kinds of harness in stock. Prices Mr Stanlev N Mumma cheerfully given. Rev John C. Mattls. - ny J. Fred. Fenstermacher 7 - Postmaster. F. B. GROFF Ih North MarKet St., Mount Joy, Pa, Mr. D. Myers of Baltimore, Ma., 3 was in town yesterday oefoafooferoctostocterfostosfeatecturiectontortorefosfosfecfoctosforesferesforfecfoctest gore 2 fests . <y Bie blip Mr. G. E. Schwanger of York, was = here on business Monday ofodfocfpeofocfecfocfoctocfe fondo cforfostsforfacfosiosfortorfocfosiorfosiorfocfocirsiorforfecioofocfociuefecforociortorfocfosiociosfocierfocts One of Pottstown’s foremost citi- HERBET GG. WAIT sony We I. BE. Maurer, was in town onday TEACHER OF Mr. H. G. Myers and George M. town George Miller of Un- of = & Master Nelson Baker of Christi- ) rr '& - og Director of WAITZ’S ORCHESTRA % ana, is spending some time here as Music Furnished for All Occasions 3 the guest of his father Mr. F. H. - N 5 Baker s t y 65 ff = po 3 Studio: 340 West HingSt.. Lancaster. % Mrs Charles Stelzelman, daughter Bell Phone, 978M feb 28-3 mo % Miss Eva and Miss Cora Haulman of % the Capital City, spent Sunday at I —_—-, yy Bf ? the Exchange Hotel J 006 a i = ] 11 TO 1 RRR BULI ] VOUNT JOY, Florin News Sam delphia, The Child's Toys. Cloaked under a ense of mak- ing the children ha sour ve been many. In first place, we have been giving them too many toys and have made the recipients blase and unappreciative. One at a time IS enough. In our ¢ t souls most of us have b cot 1s of that mi take. In the sec «7d desire to produce something new wonderful at frequent intervals thing that would do us credit eyes of our young a mirers, we been getting the wrong kinds. The ported mechanical toys upon which we have fallen with gusto and played happily ourselves u il obliged to hand them over are far better for us, it seems, than fo: em. They do the work for the child t 1 of making him do it. Here we have in a nutshell the main principle underlying the ec- tion of toys. The child's toys should stimulate his imagination and make him work. If he h too many he has nothing left to in if they re- spond to the magic of a key, he can only stand by and watch. VIartha Cutler, in Harper's Bazar. Rubbing It In. Booth Tarkingto: as talking in In- dianapolis about novelist of the “high-brow” type—one of those h 11f- starved novelists wh reviews are much more remarkable than their sales. “As this novelist, shabby and cold,” said Mr. Tarkington, “was walking in Fifth avenue one wintry afternoon there glided past the magnificent auto- mobile of a publisher who had brought out one of the poor fellow’s books at a heavy loss. “The publisher signaled to his chauf- feur, the automobile stopped, and the novelist, in reply to a wave of the mil- lionaire’s hand, presented himself at the window of the car humbly “The publisher, wrapped in furs, said: “ ‘There's a great manuscript nearly falling out of your hip pocket. If you weren’t so well known “Here the publisher removed the superb Havana cigar from his mouth and laughed a loud, scornful laugh. “‘If you weren't so well known,’ he repeated, ‘I guess you'd have had your pocket picked.” To Escape Gold Bricks. A man or a woman with funds to invest should make it a primary prin- ciple to first consult an experienced banking house of established reputa- tion. The first step in the prudent in- | vestment of your money is the selec- tion of your banking house. You should choose a banker not only will ing but competent to serve your ev- ery need—one with the requisite pa- | tience and sympathy to study your in. | new guild vestment problem from all angles, to make your problem his problem. Few investors realize that within the past few years there has sprung up a in the banking business, bankers whose business runs well over | $100,000,000 annually and whose suc- cess is largely due to the faithful and | thoughtful attention given each serious inquiry or request for advice. If you | can save and command $100 or more each year you can command the best financial brains in America.—Leslie’s. Ignored the Heart Convention. “Did you hear that Mrs. Brownbill has adopted some sort of new beliet?” “I'm not at all surprised. i saw her playing bridge last night, and when her partner led spades on a doubled no trumper she only smiled.’ Clean Milk. The best milk is_quickly contami- nated if left uncovered within or out- side a refrigerator, tier An Xray Examination Mr. Ross Engle, who had his foot severely injured recently, was taken to the Hospital at Lancaster, and the Xrays put upon the injury. It was found that no bones were broken but several ligaments are torn and the foot was badly bruised. ——————- Children’s Day Exercises Children’s Day exercises will be held in the Presbyteran church at Donegal Springs on Sunday after- noon at 2 o'clock, etl eee— Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin PA. HEROES IN DAILY LIFE NOT Al NE {F [ | 1 ) ( stit y - ple ( ) € ( race bey 1 \ \nnot eve f lities; but go lor 18 tl 11 jountain bar- riers to be overcome, ods to be con- trolled, deserts an to be re- claimed; or so lo men are de nied equal opport , and preda- tory wealth” has any other than a his- toric meaning, man need not feel that war is necessary to call forth the best there is in him heroism, the age of fe”"—when some The age of true the ideal “strenuous li philosopher of the distant future shall write a history of ci zation—will not be that of Alexander or Caesar or Napoleon, but of those later periods when the energy of the race is direct- ed to friendly co-operation instead of bloody conflict or incessant prepara- tion therefor. It an age in which every virtue of militarism will find a higher and fuller expression, while its manifest vices, and particu- larly the horrors of war, will be laid aside. Let nations wage all the Pana~ ma wars that they like—the more the better—but let them outgrow as rapidly as possible their Gravelottes will be and Plevnas and Port Arthurs. Greenland Is Green. Greenland is green in more ways than one. Its wonderful miniature a most beautiful green, and declare color is ywhere in the world. trees are travelers found else no such ireenland is practically a great group of green mountains covered with ice that has green tint, and >reat icebound gla- between the moun- which has formed ciers, that are tied tain ranges and can be penetrated on- ly by a drill. Where the sun strikes with suffi- client force the ice and snow let go, and the glaciers, which are called “live,” often melt enough to slide and dash down the mountain, or drop with an awful force into the inlets. Very often such glaciers do a lot of damage to shipping that has sought ghelter in bays or inlets. During the long night period the country is often illuminate vith what we term northern lights, or aurora borealis. Without this electrical dis- play, the country would be wrapped in darkness of a peculiar density. Shoe Dealer Duke. The story of how rand duke, & near relation of the czar Russia, came to be a boot and shoe dealer on the Neveky Prospeckt comes from St. Petersburg. Some time ago a woman from Paris appeared in the Russian capital, covered with diamonds. It ras loudly whispered that this woman of | was a protege of the grand duke; that the money that paid for all this dis- play came out of the admiralty trgas- ury and would have paid the crews of many ships in the war with Japan. One evening at a reception this wom- an was hooted and was obliged to withdraw. The czar drove her away and dismissed the grand duke in dis- grace. His career having thus been closed he opened the shoe store. Now he has been pardoned and restored to his rank. But his shoe store contin- ues to do business and all the officers who are under his orders are wise enough to patronize it in order not to put anything in the way of their ad- vancement. Nova Scotia Eelgrass. United States Consul Albert J. Fleming of Yarmouth, N. S., reports that the exportations of eelgrass to the port of Boston in the latter part of 1911 were the largest in the history | of that traffic, the amount in two months being 237 tons, the gross price of which was $10 a ton. This practi- cally cleaned up the crop in th age barns, but since then larg tities were gathered, and, after the grass was stored to supply mand during the next season. Eelgrass is practically unlim| supply in that region, and it is| that larger shipments will be in the near future. The princi is for mats and cheap mattres the Yarmouth firms who are el in buying from small producH marketing the commodity, belie the eelgrass can be used in th facture of coarse wrapping par ————- GI Auxiliary Meeting The regular meeting of tH pital Auxiliary will be held EE EER EER SEE EEE EEE Saar Ij J 1 Wednesday, May 29, 1912 a Ani — 0 HEVE YOU TRIED hA 7A if IVI/™\ 7 I \ a A : : pm ” be oN y . v N R-t | f 7 ¥ 3 8A A . B i u H K J : 2 \ a) 1 - ven . thet a 0 N = R) i 3 3 3 B- - 3 HW A. Boren Ba LE. W om, 2 » ! ~ 1 wv If not wuill yot ) the trial size left at your use today ? 1 1 ¥ ct Nn A fF N 1 I HING iV iA | LUT HIINU of Grease or far Spots, Licaning LOIOIS ys an Lond: . on Men's or Ladies Loats : It is soon timz2 for house cledning and if you want to clean the woodwork or brighten up the firniture use a r little of the trial siz left you so that you wuill be convinecd that there = is nothing better - on - » For House Cleaning " We can sell any quantity you want u at a very reasonable figure. a : Give It a Trial i ive 1t ria U0 G6%%u5%% 5 5s%%%%%% 5% 5% 55 59% S5%%%555 5555 %%%% 9 = 9 . = ® * : n 8 2 ! a a 3 . 1 : East Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa. =n —-— EER mL LR EEA TN ASA PE 5) Gofesfecffecoeforortonfertosioo] ofecforfordocfesfeefocis reload focfeofocfonfecforoe]” Yofeofocforfocfosfoniosfoctociocfosfocionfosforforfesorfocrefuciecfoctrcfosforfocfecforionfocirofocfocfende home of Mrs. J. H. Buch, in bethtown on Thursday aft June 6, at 3 o’clock. This ¥ the last meeting of the A until September and we hop member will be present. > Read the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Advertise in the Mt. Joy H Witl Art. ing | Prin Acc tical 200d ° do Imperial 3 placi 3 in g Specifications—4 5-16 by 5 1-4; 40 h. p; wheel-base 115; % A 1a 34x3% demountable rims and tires, Mohair top, wind-shield; 3 nm 1 speedometer and gas tank. > + a Model 44 Fully $1750 % | M Equipped Motor, 43 by 5 1-4; wheel base, 120 inches; full floating rear M axle; tires, 36 by 4. Silk Mo hair Top; Wind-Shield, Speedometer 4 and Gas Tank. 4 Where can you get better value for your money? 4 Imperial cars are noted for their quiet and beautiful oper- ! ation, remarkable flexibility, hill climbing capacity, simple con- ; i struction, easy-riding qualities. ; These are features that should satisfy the most critical mmr buyer, \ Imperial Cars are strictly high grade and at a medium price. - Imperial Modei 34, Touring Car, Five $1400 Passenger, Fully Equipped : Specifications: Motor, 4 5.16 by 5 1-4; 40 horse power; wheel base, 116 inches; tires, 34x4; demountable rims; mohair top; windshield; Speedometer and Gas Tank. 4 A demonstrator will be here at intervals and can be seen at / post office or Exchange Hotel. Pro-spective buyers are invited to . Pp NN request a demonstration. i F.LONGENECKER: Agent, Lititz, Pa 3 1) E11 | = \ . " 2 = A / est lines of JEWELRY, WATCHES, - in any first-class jewelry store. My line 34 pss equalled in this community. The t to call and see for yourself. ; ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY. East Main Street, LER, MOUNT JOY, PA. Ef OT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers