PAGE FOUR T every day by It acts directly on the organs affected tive tonic for the whole system of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreea local treatment so universally insisted upon every modest woman, cent stamps to cover cost of mailing only; or, i binding for 31 stamps. We shall not particularize here as to the symptoms of those peculiar affections incident to women, but those wanting full information as to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred to the People's Come mon Sense Medical Adviser—1008 pages, newly revised and up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of Al one- n cloth Vogue plenty of the best to pick f n here ed ones, too, if you'd rather havethem ilways here in all leathers —for all feet SEHAUB & 18 N. Queen Street, sheviecirodvdeodoofeeopadeddefecde srofetecfesedert sdesferferfesfesterfosectesiesiorfoctecortecfosteefortorforecdocfectoniode © Co a8 aa aa a S80 0 0 8 . ree PE) 2.2 Be Le seelealooks slot PTET a TTT eTY my line of and all kinds of needs for the horse. Driving fly nets, flank, ......... Driving fly nets, to breast............. me leather team mnets,............crcvaeesns Yellow and Black Cord Nets, $1.00, $1.15, $1 cheerfully given. North Market St. Ee ——. wa ow TEACHER OF ofertorfocdesfodpefortocfectasdesocfosfesfocforfocisferfociooioole Bell Phone, 978M ofertesle 1101 ie, light and airy. Skirts at $1.48, $1.98, $2.98 and $4'50 to $4.50. S— A BON TON, ROYAL WORCESTER OR AD- JUSTO CORSET Miss Hendrick, who has been with us the past week, will be here next week. Miss Hendrick is an expert corsetiere and will be pleased to give you a fitting. Even though you are not in need of a new model at this time, it will be well worth your while to be fitted by this expert—who will give you the style, number and size of your Bon Ton or Royal Worcester—and you. may make the purchase at your convenience. Corset Fitting Rooms—second floor. High toe, high heel- And the good old standbys & ng 4 u : Yo SF © BCCTS, RECESS, RUBBERS and HOS LANCASTER oo revo fda earth.” There are evils threatening MR. HORSE OWNER It will pay you to read this ad carefully. then come and inspect Flynets, Cooling BlanKets, Lap Dusters 2.25 and $2.50 $2.75, $3.50, $3.75 . $2.50 able case to illustrate the priceless advantages that America offers $1.50, $1.75 ' the oppressed of other lands for ob- Woolen Cooling Blankets,.................. $1.50 to $5.00 Always a complete line of all kin ds of harness in stock. Prices F. B. GRO FL Mount Joy, Pa BE STRICT ATTENTION PAID TO PUPILS Director of WAITZ’S ORCHESTR Music Furnished for All Occasions €ivdio: 340 West KingSt.,. Lancaster. feb 28-3 me 11) E11 OO dAGER & BRO. June White Days at The Hager Store » 5 JuneWhite Days are always interesting at the Hager Store—they mean so much. snowy white garments and fabrics lend a charm that is particularly suggestive of Cupid Time and u Commencement Days. Brides and graduates always depend upon the Hager : z a with dainty outfits—and their many friends do likewise when selecting gifts. A “World of White” is awaiting you—in many departments. below the usual ones for garments of this character. All garments are made of fine, sheer nainsook seems that the beautiful patterns are characteristic of the French idea of beauty A striking feature of these garments will be seen in the clever straight lines. to avoid white skirts as much as possible but these with their fitted backs and silhouette outline, will accentuate the desired slender effect rather than mar it. Fine Corset Covers as low as 68c and up to $2.50. Princess Combinations are very popular with particular dressers because they eliminate all un- necessary bulginess about the waist and hips. These at $3.98 and up to $4.50, Drawers in desirable flat effect at 98c and up to $2.25, ————————————— = ——— ( { F. ts f 1 / k W. A i] TA\ALICUL acts Ji véa omer! | ; Nine-tenths ol ickness of women is due to rangement or die 1 (Continued fro page ease of the organs distinctly feminine, Such sickness can be cured-—is cured | ad ak Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription tinction It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. and is at the same time a general restores Ii cures female complaint right in the privacy ble questioning, examinations & by doctors, and so abhorrent to Orations and kssays Ho H. L.ongene« won e time pointing out the Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. \ccine on to future generations ————————— — ———— — — we | NETitagE . studving the records of dedeadueenfosioipetosfocdosdeodosdoduiode deoferdeririendeoiededioloiuldiir odode bb dd bE ions. he said, the history of 3 stands out conspicuous above ™ E YX 3% . ® » Fy % te thers The current of its HAUB & COMPANY i NY 1H Ot J F i > to have at all times * ed by the hand of YOU KNOW. OR OUGHT TO KNOW, HOW IMPORTANT IT J wur country ge] Ie » Tx 1 e W( IS TO HAVE YOUR SHOES FIT AND FEEL RIGHT x i ! ; ymple to other nations We know how important it is 1 we provided hundreds of 3 find China, the eeping n the “‘right” sort styles. The “fla (English) are very much the [the earth, awakening becau influence of America She the American people as no other The Pilgrim { ne to this country not ake of conquest but because {might worship God their convictions Ow wars aged in the cause of freedom They have given to us an : tance, not of gold, but that ¥ conld not be [But when they gave us this tance they also laid upon { people. by the people, and osderfertesfortocderterfoctortetosteotecdeafaitesfonfestofoctrnnoofastestosiecto natal or this country that would make { possible and it is for us to prevent desferferesfenfonrerfeeforfesfeefesfoiirieeeas (SUCH an event. It is but just | proper that we should spend |efforts in the cause for which We this as a debt to their memories and ancestors gave their lives we pay it not from compulsion, gratitude and pity “The Promised Land,” was title of an essay read by Lucy Alta who has such ambitions ES TURES oeofefodooforfoefoofers focferfonfeofososfocirsfooocionfoefocissfocarocioniscfoofssfectosiociasiofocforfacocfecforfocisfocisefssfories + it with a description of the oppres- #* sion to which the ‘Hebrews are sub- HERBIE T GG. WA XI" % § cdtoin Russia, the child beir ected C 1 RUSSI¢ € 111 ing Jel te . : : : & room for the Hebrew girl was : Lin %* mother’s kitchen. The child til ® eager to study, and her father pro- tii ” teacher for her. The & cured a Hebrew 3 family came to America, and on the we? + first day in their new home RA 2 father led her to school i oress was very rapid. She grew y love the country, and was proud of % her citizenship in the J States. She carried off graduation i honors, and continued to pursue her - I. The beautiful Lovely Hand Embroidered French Lingerie Specially Priced Never before have we been able to secure such splendid French Lingerie at these remarkable prices. We are conservative in stating that our special June prices are at least a fourth to a third Our own direct importation. “many of the finer ones being made by hand. Dainty Chemises at similar prices. Night Gowns with round low necks and fancy short sleeves, neatly embroidered $1.48, and $1.79 FINE EMBROIDERIES AT LOWERED PRICES Thousands of yards of the finest and most stylish dress flcuncings, galloons, broad bands, with insertions, etc., help make up the most important embroidery sale we've ever held. The pick and choice of the sea- son, purchased by us at remarkably low prices from importers who overestimated their capacity For instance, at 39¢, fine dress flouncings worth 75¢ to $1 a yard— and similar values at 89¢, $1.15 and up- wards. A most timely sale, right at the outset of the hot season. Do Not Miss The June Sale of Toilet Article Lor honor, and after perform unction attending 1 the pleasin hat office he delivered an pon \ Debt of Honor, In he ought to impress pon present generation ol Americans Migations unde which they i forefathers who ecured liberty and laid the foundation their advanced civilization, Providence according purchased by [ responsibility that, as [Lincoln | important factor | pressed it, “this Government people, shall not perish from because of our personal feeling taining not only freedom from per- secution, but the means of obtaining an education and rising to highest attainments when the ability so do is possessed by the individual She related in an interesting man- ner the story of a little girl, Mary ooferfosges] 3 : : deofeodeedeofundofuiiodeds Ashe, a little girl reared in the Pol- ish settlement of Russia, prefacing 2 of the Jewish faith. The only school- Her pro- studies. She went to Barnard, and — 1101 EER | Store to supply them dainty and artist- Many women seem 11 E11 = i 25-31 West King Street, hancaster, Pa. 3 as" INTE EW rT a ‘ IQOUN] OY On ana ubsequentiy e entered Into the full current of American He ind became an au thot eachel and ettlement ork \ characteristic thing about the R lan Jew Is that he not ( ten 0 pi I't alone, but mhst hi { | vith him and tion with the Russian Jew lean more than the adoption of th immigrant by America it may mean the adoption of America by the immigrant The Giant Force was the title of the High School oration, which wa delivered by Jame Emmett Kendig The ihject with which he dealt was electricity Franklin told us. he said, that electricity exists in the air Marconi put the theory in- to practice by making the first suc cessful wirele telegraph very where we see evidences of this giant force The world is being ruided and operated by it Every day men are finding new ways of applying it Scientist have gone o far ¢ te \V that man operated | electricity Dr Andre McConnell the chief nromoter of this theory The people of co n 11 see ore nde n { 11 We even ( I © of elect t 1 it dy n re [ ly tried Ifo pe d of ren We plac Wf 1 1 it yund that the were superio in health, height and the amount ol knowledge ained a compared vith the hildren ho had not the treatment In sumn g up the sub- ject, the young author referred to the almost illimitable possibilities that lie in the future development of this marvelous and mysterious force. which he regarded as the most in the future progress of the race Frances Shelly Bailer read an es- sav on Paul Lawrence Dunbar, in which she paid a fine tribute to the | gifted young poet. He was the first poet of African descent, she said, and American civilization, who felt capable of expressing the lift of his people lyrically. He was a son of two ex-slaves, and was born in Day- ton. Ohio, June 27, 1872. At the early age of seven he wrote his first verse. In the High School he edited its paper, a monthly publication is- sued by the pupils of the State | High School. After graduation he Gibbons, in which she cited a not- was forced to take a position as an elevator boy His first address was delivered before the Western Asso- ciation of Writers, and he published his first verses, ‘Oak and Ivy,” in 1892 On one occasion, after lis- tening to a Toledo man’s attack on his race and realizing he was sole defender of his race, he gave an entirely different address than he had prepared to deliver at the same place Those who heard him were impressed with his genius, and touched by the fact that a boy of twenty had espoused the cause of a race numbering more than six millions A few days before his last birthday, in June, 1905, he wrote a prayer called, “Lead Gently, Kindly Iieht.”” which really was his own prayer to God for help The ist expressed her opinion that Dun- bar's talent was inherited, as his parents, although they had had few advantages, were fond of books. Elmer Ellsworth Blocher was the valedictorian, and bore the honor with ease and dignity. His oration was entitled, “The Value of Farm Life.” in which, among other things, he said: Farm life has its beauties and values, just as city life has its charms and values, but those of the {| farm outclass the city. The farm teaches us many useful things. Washington was honest, faithful, persevering, God-fearing because he learned these values on his farm. The farm instills us with the neces- It is also the | healthiest life, because of the sim- | plicity of its habits and its outdoor sity of punctuality. labors. A boy grows to manhood on the farm in constant touch with na- ture and apart from the temptations | of city life. Thus he is purer in his | thoughts and economical in his | ways. On the farm man gets much of his education, He learns the ways of nature, and everything in the whole world is correlated with nature. As the farm proves valu-' able to the individual, so it is to the nation, and the farmers shall go on proving their value to the world un- til they have emblazoned their names and fame high up amid the stars, and the people will honor them in the words which Holmes employs in his poem, ‘The Plow- man.” Faculty and Directors Following were the teachers of the Mt. Joy schools during the past term: I. R. Kraybill, supervising principal; Marguerite M. Herr, nrst assistant, High School; Mabel F. Donaven, second assistant, High School: Anna R. Kraybill, seventh grade: Elizabeth Eshleman, sixth grade: Edna Martin, fifth grade: lou Kuhns, fourth grade: Verna Chandler, third grade: Ruth Stoll, second grade; Mary G. Miller, first grade. The School Board is composed of the following: Gabriel Moyer, presi- dent: Dr. E. W. Newcomer, secre- tary; John S. Eby, E. W. Bentzel and Howard Longenecker. ee Bought a Motorcycle Mr. John Dietz bought a fine Emblem motorcycle from the local agent Mr. John Stehman. ‘ !is intimated around that ‘Doc’ Ringwalt will give a “strawberry setout” in honor of his { “home-coming’”’ very soon. PA SALUNGA Dr. J Kendl has purchased a fine dri I'he lennonite Church is belng improved One | Vi Ruth Keltl | (castel 1 M 1 ‘ M | dh in at tachment to hig new home M1 John Roland o Kast Berlin called on friends on Sunday Mr Jacob Newcomer is putting a large attachment to his residence The Doctor hrought a fine boy to the home of Blacksmith Brackbill Whitman Deacon of Strasburg was the guest of James Kendig for several days Mrs Philip Metzger gpent from Saturday to Tuesda of last week Philadelphia lL.ovefeast at the home of Mr and Mr Rzra Hostetter on Wednes day and Thursday Mi Ira Hen ind Mr Jacob Herr attended the annual meeting t York on Tuesday Mi An Montooth of near l.Lancaster pent Sunday with her ) f | the { M nd M 1 d dan er nda } 1 1 k Mi AB I nd ¢ nent Snund with Mr. and Mrs. Jacol thellenberger near Mountville 1 nd Mr Wilcon and sey Tunior Wilsor ¢ de hap over tl! arrival of baby daughter Miss Ella Sturge of Manheim and Miss Arline Stauffer of l.eola, were the guests of Mis Miriam Kendig several davs last week Miss Martha Eby. Miss Miriam Kendig and Mr. James Kendig took part in the Alumni Association’s Janquet in Mount Joy Hall Monday evening Mr. and Mrs. Frank Deichler and sons Frank and Kendig were visit- ors in the home of Mrs. Deichler. They returned to Highland Park, Philadelphia, on Monday Samuel Eby and family, Jonas Miller and family, Elias Eby and family, A. G. Miller and family, Mrs. Adaline Hertzler, Miss Kate Garber, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Good and son Martin, and I. N. Mumma and family were entertained on Sun- day by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Gar- ber. If Mount. Joy wants the patronage of any of her Eastern neighbors, the Boro Fathers should be up and doing something to the Traction Co. On the night of the Commencement exercises we noticed on the streets twenty-five or thirty persons wait- ing for an eastbound car due at Mount Joy 11.45. The car previous left at 9.15, about 2% hours between cars The night was fine and the air general and there was no actual suffering but imagine a stormy win- r night and the result en -O-- NEWTOWN Mr. James Metzler and wife visit- d relatives in this place on Sunday Henry Witmer and wife were Sun- dav visitors at the home of Christian Rigel in West Hempfield. Mr. John Kemerly and wife paid a it to their daughter, Mrs. Jen- nie Koehler on Sunday. Mr. Samuel Givens of Mount Joy left again for Shrewsbury, York Co. after Mr. Amos Gallaghe his home in Steelton after a short vigit to his sister Mrs. Rufus Hipple. short visit in these parts. returned to Peraching services were held by the pastor on Sunday morning. Sim- ilar services will he held on Sunday evening, June 16. The quarantine for diphtheria on the premises of William Fogie was lifted last Sunday after a period of three weeks isolation, all the pa- tients having fully recovered from the disease covering. - — OG — eee A BIG PARADE Appropriate Services Held Here Last Thursday. Big Crowd Present As is the custom in Mount Joy, Memorial Day is always appropri- ately observed, by decorations, ser- , vices, parade, etc, and it seems to be the general impression that this: vear's demonstration exceeded those | of former occasions—but whether | or no this be the case—we had a fine day, big crowd of people, good | music, good parade and no acci-| { dents, which was all that one could | expect. In the forenoon the G. A. R. and S. of V. decorated the graves of the old heroes in the various cemeteries hereabouts. Promptly at 2 p. m. the parade formed and marched ov- {er all the principal streets of town. By actual count there were 641 in line warms — ls eee Back in a Week “Billy’’ Morrison, a motorman on the local trolley line, had an idea he would prefer the Lititz run, but after killing an hour doing eight miles for one week, we are pleased to see him among us once more. It Rohrerstown ESE Will Clean the Basin If the weather man does not in- terfere the reservoir will be cleaned on Sunday. The water will be shut | off at 11.30 Saturday night. creme Ree. Miss Belle W. Leader of Eliza- bethtown, spent several days in | town with, Mrs. Sarah Brady. ¢ 000 0 =n 28 B22 e ES aE gaa acsemsm Ss 8 KB = FoR ON NEN Ee 1 RR BRE EE EER oofeafrofeafoofortortooionfostodorf eloseofanfeofosfonfe Zonfecfoofonfonfosforfoofenfeofoodsnfonfinfoofeforfeod 1912 Imperial Car Wofucisefesfocfeeforfoniorfociociocierfocosiocferorfuefecirforiofociscorioofocociorforfeoireforiecione Gladys, the little girl afflicted with diabetes, is slowly re- | In 11 CLOCKS, ETC., to be found in any first-class jewelry store. My line cannot be exceeded, much less equalled in this community. The 1 best way to be convinced is to call and see for yourself. w NO \ Wednesda) June 5, 1912 HAVE YOU TRIED MAGIC 113 If not will youtry thetrial size left at yotir house today ? / There is nothing to equal it Su FOR CLEANING CLOTHING of Grease or Tar Spots, Cleaning Colors . S po alin + on Men’s or Ladies’ Coats It is soon timz for house cleaning and if you want to clean the woodwork or brighten up the fdrniture Use a little of the trial size 1 left yold so that you will be eonvineed that there is nothing better For House Cleaning We can sell any quantity you want at a very reasonable figure. Give It a Trial GG %%% NH NYG % 5555555559 5%%% 1 EERE ERR Cn. Imperial Model 33 Roadster $1250 Specifications—4 5-16 by 5 1-4; 40 h. p; wheel-base 115; 34x33 demountable rims and tires, Mohair top, wind-shield; speedometer and gas tank. Model 44 Fully Equipped Motor, 43% by 5 1-4; wheel base, 120 inches; full floating rear axle; tires, 36 by 4. Silk Mo hair Top; Wind-Shield, Speedometer and Gas Tank. Where can you get better value for your money? Imperial cars are noted for their quiet and beautiful oper- ation, remarkable flexibility, hill climbing capacity, simple con- struction, easy-riding qualities. These are features that should satisfy the most critical buyer. Imperial Cars are strictly high grade and at a medium price. imperial Modsi 34, Touring Car, Five G8 { Af)() 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. ae A demonstrator will be here at intervals and can be seen at post office or Exchange Hotel. Pro-spective buyers are invited to request a demonstration. BELL 4-3, IND. 78-L. J.F.LONGENECKER Ceneral Agent, Lititz, Pa I'm R:ady for You with one of the finest lines of JEWELRY, WATCHES, REPAIR WORK OF ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY. LLER, oo or, ra S. H. MI y MOUNT JOY, PA. 8 OO