"ey Err t eee le ddd PRATT PITT TTvTTyrTereereetse THT RTRs MOORE Deal er In Lumber, Coal, "Grain Feed, Hay, Straw, Slate, Salt, Cement and Fertilizer y \ large stock of Feed constantly on hand Highest cash price pald for grain Estimates on Lumber and Mill Work a Specialty FLORIN, PENNA. CELEBRATED YOU WILL GET TEN S. & H. Trading Stamps PUR ” {3 Sl 9 A i i R 3/08 Hib F. H. Baker's COAL and LUMBER YARDS DOLLAR'S WORTH OF COAL FOR CASH AT {WITH EVERY CHASED Mount Joy, Penna Shingles Cedar always on hand No. 1 Door , Blinds, agent for Congo Roofing. Also Siding, Flooring, Sash, Mouldings, Lath, Etec. Agents for Alpha Portland Cement. Also Roofing Slate estimates Quickly and Cheerfully made on all kinds Building Material No. 833. Opposite Old P. R. R. Depot Bole Telephone Summer Hats Straws of Every Variety PANAMAS, BANKOKS, JAVAS, MILANS, MACKINAWS, FEATH- ZR WEIGHT STIFF AND SOFT HATS, CAPS FOR ALL PURPOSES,— ALL AT BOTTOM PRICES. a a Winger ¢ & Hass : 44 North Queen St., Lancaster Pa. drfoaorduafpofoctectoriocen vinfecfocdrriodrafocforieofrsfodecforiochraleofrofpeloauipifodaipipdoafocfecfeddederfocdecdrcfecfocorieofeofocfoade Remember the Graduate suggestions to COA A glance through our store offers many par- ents and friends, for the remembrances so appropriate at com- as aeaie coals secede uedndi ment time, WATCHES, ence BAGS, ETC, their other MESH young graduate, RINGS, BRACELETS, interest those very to the friends will also find many acc eptable articles in our stock. Our So ojo ofe sfx fe ofe ofontenis sfeofe te near Jorgen! should Sealectoalinaiiuat WER RRR RRP PPP z00d 2 I A EOE ST CTR CIR PIROSH & SIMMONS 20 North soe ste ofesfes ood 0 Jewelers and Opticians Queen Street. Shoe Store PENNA. Selle Next Door to Shaub & Co. LANCASTER, SocloolectocRoahe cinios tort BR AAR sfoferdesforfodo soso sft oy 111 1 [Hi la Engle’s Furniture Warerooms PENNA. MOUNT JOY, |S A SPECIALTY DONE AEMADE FURNITURE UPHOLSTERING 00D HOM TO ORDER = Poplar Lumber for sale in lots to suit the purchasers Undertaking and Embalming ; N11 0 11 0 01 1 0 FE E10 0 SE 1) 1 1897 THE GRAIN HOUSE THE EAST ESTABLISHEI] WILLIAM L. BEAR & CO. (Members Chicago Board of Trade) PENNSYLVANIA BUILDING, Chestnut and 15th Sts, PHILADELFHA | STOCHS-BONDS—- INVESTMENTS 80 SECONDS 2 MINUTES To Chicago Board of Trade. To any Grain Market in Americs Lancaster Branch 220-226 Woolworth Bldg. | BROEERS - ( B | 3 1 F\ [Hid / \ fA} \ d ; 2%; YY { — 1 1 & J f ) J | J PI — A BUL LETIN, MOUNT JOY, ——————————————— —————— ————— pp —— eerie or the wagon road. RIZONA, whose entry as the the forty-eighth member of the Union, and completed the nation of states from ocean to ocean, has had a history probably as turbulent and trying as any state in the Union. The struggles of the Pilgrims of Massachusetts, the Hollanders who colonized New York the Quakers who settled Pennsylvania and the English who Yrought civiliza- tion to the Virginia shores were no hardier than those of the pioneers of Arizona. They were killed hy Indi- ans, robbed by lawbess people of their own nationality, starved upon the des- arts, frozen in the snov capped moun- tains and bitten by poisonous reptiles They had no gov ment for many hard to get terri have been fight- years to years and fought as torfal rights as they ng for the pest statehood rights. They were on point of rebelling at one time even went so far as to establish a ter- ritorial form of government of their own desplte the expressed desire of congress, exemplified in its refusal to grant a territorial government, that they should remain a part of New Mexico. Their nearest peace and judicial of- get the and ten ficlals were then four hundred miles away, at Mesilla, N. M., and their law was the law of the strongest agsinst the weakest. At one time all of the present state ol Arizona was the county of Arizona, attached to New Mexico for purposes of administration | only. Gen. Nelson A. Miles, General Law- ton, General Crook and many other noted men of the United States army gained their first fame in campaigning in Arizona. It was from Arizona that the only raid of United States troops was ever made into a forelgn country not then at war with us; the soldiers were after Indians who had been kill- ing and robbing in Arizona. The his- tory of Artzona is thrilling from {ts inception to the present day. The origin of the name Arizona is not definitely known. Bancroft, the historian, and some others have in- sisted that the name from a sup- posed Pima Indian word, “Arizonac,” although Bancroft admits that the aboriginal meaning of the term is not is known.” The historian treats as “extremely absurd” the suggestion that the name is of Spanish deriva- tion, and he apparently bases that conclusion upon: the fact that there is no stmtlar word in Spanish. But it is possible that “Arizona” may have had its dertvation from the Spanish words arida zona (arid zons) The well-known tendency of unedu- cated speakers of Spanish to leave off the last syllables of words ending in vowels and their tendency to run wards together would easily trans- form arida zona into “Arizona.” First True Exploration. It was about 1627 that Vaca turned his wander to the Hopi and Zuni gos in the northeast, gaining Mexico at last by way of the friendly Pima settlements along the Gila. It was in 1540 that Vasco de Coro- nado, governor of Mexico, lured by the golden tales of a monkish travel- er, started northward on the first true exploration of that myster land. He sought the fabled Seven Cities Cibola, where gold and precious gems paved the streets. Though he did not find the object of his search his ex- Cabeza de footsteps ious of pedition led to Spanish settlements and agriculture, and mining had some development. Back again into barbarism was Ari- zona plunged by the Mexican war for independence, and not until the Gads den purchase, in 1848 did the firm hand of governmental authority again take hold Even then, however all that was known of Arizona was a nar row strip within which t 3 rn Pacific railroad now ru the which flowed tide of tra the eastern states to the gold of Californiz nous indians of Long Ago. white ma ir to the re me X Marico pas and Apaches, of al grouj 0s perpetr: several massacre early day t it was not long Bb: all the 18 except the ars had been subdued _$100 Reward, $100 0 1s, Adc iress F. J. CHENE XY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢ Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. s jC ozemA, Aoovevell barr Arvwzora Tricky and cruel, the Apaches held out for many years against the in roads of the whites upon their ancient hunting grounds. Such eaders as Cochise, Geronimo and Natchez led the Apaches gainst famous American generals like Nelson A Miles and George Crook A reward of $5,000 y once offered for Apache Kid, but never claimed. Up to 1874 t Indians terrorized large sections of the territory and é wit immigration and capital In that year all the Apaches that could roun i up were placed on the Carlos rdsery: tion It was sup osed that an end had been p t to the lian troubles, but raids in 1882 and 1883 shook the feeli: g of security In the year 1883 there were 25,000 Indians In the territory occu ving lands rese »d for them by the gen- government The government supporting about five thousand of 1882 the Chiricahua, White Mountain and San Carlos Apaches broke out in open rebellior On the morning of April 19 Loco's band broke out at San Carlos and after killing the chief of police started up the valley of the Gila, killing at least sixty white settlers Then for six years Arizona was the scene of a merciless Indian war. In 1883 Geronimo became chief of the Apaches. He massacred settlers and burned ranches almost at will. After each reid he would escape to the mountain fastnesses of Mexico where the United States soldiers could not pursue him. Finally permission was secured from Mexico for soldiers to cross the frontier in pursuit of the In- dians. In 1888 Captain Lawton, gerv- ing under Gen. Nelson A. Miles, sur- rounded Geronimo’s warriors and made them prisoners. The whole tribe wag taken to Florida and later trans- ferred to Fort Sill, Okla., as prisoners of war. There Geronimo remained until his death, three or four years ago, and the remainder of his band is still there. All desire to return to Arizona and {it Is possible that sometime the government may see fit to grant them their wish. Today they are as peace- ful and placid as any Indians, having seen the folly of resisting the whites. Of course there were bad men and gun men in Arizona In her early days Stage and train robberies were by no means uncommon and excited only assing comment. Finally train rob- beries became so frequent that in S the ] alty for t crime was f at death. In the same year the 1 ature passed law providing a fine of $25 for any one carrying con- cealed weapons. It was not after the penalty for train robbin rad been fixed at death that Arizon became’ really peaceful. Now there is no train rob 1 any more, and as the day of the c is practically passed the ge r is extinct Until 1907 everything was wide pen in Arizona. Gambling was unre- strained except where municipal laws prevented, - women and minors were allowed in saloons. In that vear the legi ture responded to an urgent nessage from Governor Kibbey and to pronounced pu sentiment and passed a rigid anti-gambling law that closed such games. Starling Going South. Reports received at the department of agriculture state that the English starling, whose progress in this coun- | try has been watched with some un- sinees, has got as far south as New port News. imported rank birds with the It does 1, but it is is one of the £ red wil English parrow s1des idvice umber o 00Kks cor Dem— Makes the Nation Gasp | The awful I injuries on a Fourth J staggers humanity. | Set against it, however, is the wonderful healing, Bucklen’s | Arnica of thousands, who suffered cuts, bullet wounds or explosions. the qnick healer of sore lips or La B. Bernhart & Co’s, etl Eee: the Mt. Joy Bulletin st of 0 over by Salve, from burns, bruises, boils, ulcers piles. in Advertise Wednesday, June 26, 1912 $e dtd oor ddevieedvideoforiodfed A 3 @ TT de . - 4- a> " i i J * + X 4 Vy : +» 4 " i 2) ! A “we I F 9 LJ) } J AN ) L 3 + fe — ————————— — — A — + 3 9 3 + i " . : ’ + 3 Hi71V ii y i I o { itd t & “5 1 2 3 5 + $ HI\ I 3 3 : A } oo " ! i 3 o ld 3 “ | “5 oo or ‘ oe + A J il + a he oc vhe ( i T 3 1 the » 4 pre 1! mad ) who jummer outs I Ie t y be re d, i ' k or for V Bost ) f fine merchandise 3 JOC © i 1 i oe a tion from t en of he Or. 3 e have ever seen All here ready Ge your shirts, oo be Not that red 1 I'é nov In | ry and underwear right inside the re juare door, and Addison's t fe ’ vi- | % 1 oe rear main or ) on 1it on the second & dence in tl I'¢ 0 eth In +» France the height and color of the * brand new merchandise to choose from, much spe- u oe 3 heel were a fashion set by the grand + ced to save you money and more peop than usual monarque & Y y vO I . 0 serve vi . Present day votarieg of the da 3 > might not inconceivably laugh the sug- 3 I gestion to scorn, but, in other respects oe ~4 + and with due modifications, the de 3 / 3 scription does not seem unrecogniz- + ably archaic. “Out at heels” long i 1 been a proverbial phrase; Falstaff, who 3 # nowadays would possibly have de: ov . I J 3 clared he was “stoney broke,” tells i A New sSUummen Suit & Pistol he is almost “out at heels.” : 7 ave. ke me's heels A hi ’ i We have—to take to one's heels, to i \nd while he’s about it, why not a bang-up, good suit? I kick one’s heels to show a pair of oo 3 heels, to turn on one’s heels, to grind 3 » need to pay much, Today he can get an All-Worsted or * under heel, to cool one’s heels, heels 1 it al . YUE I 1 1 av or over head, the fron heel. And that 3 ’ 3 S_VIDg, 7 are 1 ftv Trunav ray . in. A ‘ Sa . we are most lofty runaways—a kin x Special events in the Men’s Clo Store dred expression to our “showing a og clean pair of heels,” and “taking to unu I arrangement with manufacturers brings fine new one’s heels.” And quotations might 4 u of ust igh priced grade at be multipli Nor must the familiar J + “two for hee be forgotten, the 5 vulgarity of whi ienated the gen- 3 3 § L J A teel mind of immortal Mrs, Battle % $15, $16.50 to 20 3 from cribbage 3 * LJ A 1 } 1 3 + —————————— 3 | ] hand-tailored, expertl: cut in the correct § 1 - 1 : we oe The Dullness of Genius, 3 fashic » ft ison and made of fabri that have latest design % In my mst I mentioned my having 4 ¥ Bh thas ebb . 3% 3 3: Spent an ever society of [5 oven in em Bot Plain and Fan« erges, Medium and Light 3 + 1 x authors who se jealous and 4 Colored Worsted 4 ». : > ne afraid of one uncle was 32 + not at all surprised to hear me say os . 3 that I was disappointed in their con- i The Best Shirts Made at $1 3 versation. “A man may be very en-'« : tertaining and instructive on paper,” + ’ ' y Arlt i wis Loe + said he, “and exceedingly dull in com- Are i flere 4 mon discourse. I have observed that ¥ > those who shine most in private com- « f 8+} y 1 4 I 1 rivate Il SoIt Solesette—We have to keep explaining th: 1e © -* pany are but secondary stars in the ® . ; ; : hil ioh ning that they are not > constellation of genius. A small stock | 5 ilk Mostly plain shades. Plenty of beautiful Madras Shirts; § of ideas is more easily managed and % stripes and figures; and the best values on the market; $1.00 To sooner displayed than a great quantity oe + crowded together, There is very sek % T ; . J oe . . dom anything extraordinary in the ap- + Underwear at All Prices Time For Belts and Belts are 3 pearance and address of a good writ- 3 x oo : Every good and We > er; whereas a dull author generally Sa : on! ed Here 3 distinguishes himself by some oddity 5 kind and at prices that will * FAVA a for 11 eng i i i tT of extravagance. For this reason I # meet all purses. This under- Belt is important, you fancy that an assembly of grubs must + i : : x TT be very diverting.”—By Tobias Smol- wear section for men is very know, Should be one that ) D g. ) as Sm oe lett to Sir Watkin Phillips of Jesus t convenient, just inside the will keep on looking like an + 5 ”e college, Oxon. 3 Centre Square door. Prices important belt. There are all fe ——— ; = : = 3 range from 25c¢ a garment up. kinds, 25c up. * Their Preference. 3 3 “Now, boys,” said the teacher, “I 3 + need not tell you anything further of | os 3 the duty of cultivating a kindly dis-|% { * y as 3 q dE. K position, but I will tell you a little of orner dare an . In Sts. 3 story of two dogs. George had a nice | Soateatead BedoclordoaSostorocbotocootialondi ule bib at 2 $ little dog that was as gentle as a! = afin a ty lamb. He would sit by George's side ' =m . = quietly for an hour at a time. He would not bark at passers-by, nor at strange dogs, and would never bite ARE YOU BUYING YOUR anybody or anything. Thomas’ dog, on the contrary, was always fighting other dogs, and would sometimes tear them cruelly. He would also fly at the hens and cats in neighborhood, and on several occasions known to seize a cow by ¢ He barked at rocery Needs Where You Can Get The Best the d been nostrils and throw her, all the strange men that came along ind . x . - id y them 1 v ine would bite them unless somebody in Quality at The Lowest Prices? terfered. Now, boys, which log - < you would like to own, r Thomas’s?” instantly n- sewer in one eager it I'homas’s.” Ss You can answer this question correctely after you have ex— Fifteen Miles. 1 ie > ) L q on the mined and compa prices with what othe T'S ask and : ar entme ! { sted the quality of our oOo is which ar ou need ) ‘give 1arkabl CoO DV 17 - 1 ? miles throush the Calf o | YOu ent satisfaction All goods De ¢ a gte: d 2EIR 18 in S54 1 en on tl Y gE i X Rr a "y - Ro 5 é ard by a I ge (Vo il De §° 18 not missed by h ip ie Ae a i Sy & iS Yar 8 4 He struck out and . seven hours in th UNMET E made shore BELL PHONE It was a turbulent sea and Schur- a: ¥ g ra " fod nr p ~ . - man was exhausted ed up Mount voy, Penna. on the beach five mile om Port Ar- 0 ME TREX CI RIN ASOT thur and sent to a hospital. . - Sida Ye wi E11 ER R100 1B idr d It. Redd—Do you ve in th w tom of breaking a = M ak Y p ch i i bl ¥ 39% of brediuny 8 € Your vor Comfor ani Greene—I1 ¢¢ ( Ings | m nm x ‘ : 3 C 3 To Make It Cool-—Screen it with VUDOR P( SHADES good luck to the st rise win bony SHADES, ® “Well, I know of one V ) ere | ® Their extremely moderate price makes tl pol ith every ®W they never ) i her one who can afford a porch at all. - bow and mad very ¢ ul | wm voyage.” FOR SOLID COMFORT—Get a Tammock for out- x “] e the T= door sleeping or lounging it has no u The : i B® — SUI FUR A fe! f our = Wa t ar 11x 141 1 na = Ya Z ; Ww ing 1 cl 1 2 : m \bles, Ss n a t ian WM 1 1 hickory, etc " w oe : : 1 A : X u > 125-131 East King S ANCASTER, PA. s ¢ RR 8 ® RR Mrs. W " a . " “ . # ; rn ——— ——— ck the fel VE UPHOLD THE MIGH QUALITY I won ve rom. He hasn't OF OUR ICE CREAM spoken to r 9 : el It will melt in your mouth, it is so € Call on us and try our His Arm Cut I flavors and dainty service. All Paul Clepper, of Maytown, was the latest dishes, sundaes, with our severely injured at the Marietta natural fruit flavors. If you cannot freicht station. While assisting to get your wife to come with you— unload tobacco cases from the take a quart to her. Try us once wagon, his arm came in contact with | and then you can say you have real the sharp tongs he was using, and | ly tasted ice cream. Order and g : n the flesh was penetrated deeply. A tir it will keep for hours, because vein was cut, and before a p 7: it is the right kind arrived he lost considera and fainted. Dr. T. E. In at- Lewis Siller tended him