& t # { FF *A®E FIVE BAKING POWDER ABSCLUTELY PURE Insures the most delicious and healthful food By the use of Royal Baking Powder a great many more articles cf food may be readily made at home, all healthful, de- licious, and economical, adding much - variety and attractiveness to the menu. The ‘* Royal Baker and Pastry Cook,” containing hundred practical receipts for all kinds of baking and cookery, free. Address Reyal Baking Powder Co., Ncw Yerk. five 1 In | I 11 1 1 TT IH! | oR wy | 1776 1914 Farmer at the plough, Farmer gone to auto show, Wife milking cow, Daughter at the piano, Daughter, spinning yarn, Madam gaily dress’d in satin; Son thres in the barn, All boys a learnin’ latin, All happy t charm With a mortgage on the farm. --oan een eres Ady I Joy Bulletin \dvertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Adv n tl Joy \d he Mt. Joy Bulletin. Adv tl Advertise i e Mt. Joy Bulletin Adve y the Mt, Jo Ad tise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. 111 1 1 1) 1) 1 1 GO RO = | 3 Bs Personal Medical : bh \ ® ® i ] Examination FREE : ——AT THE— Hotel Garrett, Elizabethtown Friday, February 20th AND EACH FRIDAY THEREAFTER Or. Manship of the Radio Institute, of Lancaster will make his regu lar weekly visit to Elizahethtown. i | We require no advance fees for consultation, advice or examina tion. We give you the benefit of the best advice without charge and tell you what RADIO will do for you and then it is for you to say what will be done. No one is too poor to come to us and learn about the really wonderful merit of RADIO and noone in ill health should neglect to secure vaiu- able free advice. Let us PERSONALLY see you and talk over the mat- ter. Remember that our diagnosis 18 more than half a cure, The RADIO energy Is invariably pleasant and agreeable to patients. The RADIO treatment means a complete restoration of health im the following diseases Deafness and Head Noises, Catarrh of the Head and Throat. Bronchial Catarrh and Asthma, Catarrh of the Stomach Gastritis, Dyspepsia and Indigestion. Constipation and Diarrhoea. Kidney and Bladder Chronic and Acute Lumbago. Liver, Troubles. Rheumatism and all Nervous Diseases Cancer & Lupus and all skir diseases A Few of Those Who Have lestified Are MRS. E. MUSSELMAN—353 E. New MRS. M. URBAN—1003 Clark St MRS. SADIE DENNIS—620 E. Madison St, MR. H. McAllister—322% N. Queen St. MRS. ELIZA KELLER—Ephrata, MR. J. RATHMAN—Ephrata, Pa. MR. M, ZIMMERMAN—East Ea, MR. R. HORST—R. F. D. No. 2N St. Lancaster, Pa. | ancaster, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. Lancaster Co., Pa. 'w Holland, Pa. LETTERS FROM ABOVE ANI MARVY SEEN AT OUR OFFICES. OTHERS CAN BE THE HOME OFFICE OF RAJIO INSTITUTE BLD. LANCASTER, PA. IS 303 FEHL. DR MANSHIP WiLL EXAMINE erie ALL THOSE WHO CALL AT Hotel Garret, Elizabethown FRIDAY. FEB. 20 Hours From 10 A.M.to 7 P. M. mm EE SS ! spent last Wednesday in THE BULLETIN, Personal Mention (Continued from page 1) home after spending some Mastersonville Mr. and Mrs. Jos. R. Charles spent from Friday to Sunday in the City of Brotherly Love. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Pholm of Man- heim, were guests of friends in the boro on Sunday. Messrs. F. M. Pennypacker and N. Hall of Columbia, were Thursday visitors to town. Mrs. Samuel Hummer of Steelton, spent Saturday and Sunday here with relatives and friends. Miss Pearl Getz of Ephrata, spent from Thursday to Saturday in town, the guest of her brothers. Mr. J. F. Todd of Lexington, Pa., town with time at friends and acquaintances. Miss Alice Klugh of Harrisburg, spent yesterday in town with her pa- rents, Mr, and Mrs. H. E. Klugh, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stoll visited their daughter, Mrs. Jay MacNicholl at Merchantville, N. J,, on Sunday. Messrs, A. A, Luce, J. J. Glin and R. Roberts of the Windy City, were guests of Mr. J. M. Backenstoe Sun- day Mr. Ralph Sheaffe formerly a esident of: this place but now living at Reading, circulated among friends in town Mr, ( ome i Co ter ndir 1 1s a guest of Mr nd Mrs. C. 8 Longenecker Mr, Carson Engle left on Friday f Saginaw Mich., where he has enrolled as a student in a college of which our former townsman Mr John E. Engle is at the head. Mrs. Clara Jrubaker will leave tomorrow for Jersey City where she will reside with her daughter, Mrs. Jno. Everitt for the present. She | will be accompanied by Mrs, Walter Brown Mrs Brubaker expects to ® return and take up her residence wm | here again in the Spring : Order United American Mechanics. 2 For Sale— Single and double seat- d Te c 8B 4 sleigh 1 horse wagon, McCall | | as = ’ | Yours in favor of a four years’ course, | RB! wagon, dobls gst Of Yalkss ban N a Ww. > Chin HOME HEALTH CLUB ss. CaM on John Evans, Mt. Joy. tf | | Ress. Col Sl | 18 years a director of the Schools of i . $100 to $400 per month selling Strasburg Boro, By Dr. David H. Reeder, Chicago, Ill highgrade and general Lubricating | : = . : J ® | Oils, Greases, Paints and exclusive | ~ Why & % Sch | Nerves: — (Continuation of article = 3 PM ? 0 3 \ , specialties. Salary or Commission. | 4 y ®, Bye chool I written for Home Health Club by H. - 5 . ast h 's the c¢ r ahr p Among se = | gairfax Refining Co., Cleveland, Ohio. | east half thgf boys the country { Lindlahr M. D.) Among the country » Sd : ove? leave schoop’as soon as the law | p opulation of Germany the meaning ® FOR SALE CHEAP—A large new | allows, which ig usually at 14 years |of the words “dyspepsia and dentist” Nn 1 « 3» OV il e @ sas stove with a double oven. Will | of 288... Buf only a small percentage hardly known. The latter can m | Sell very reasonable as I live in the | 10,00 though any real pressure from | make a ving only in the larger & country and can't use same sip their parents. That is, the great ma- | cities. These old country people live ii at this office t jority of parents worship education |closer to nature than our over-fed $35 and up earned weekly selling and are ing to make whatever | but ‘“mineral-starved” Americans In 5 our High Quality Lakeshore Grown | sacrific I ssary to continue the iermany, on account of the high cost = Nursery Stock Best grown in the hildren in school f flesh foods, meat is used 8 U S. Pe ent position. Pay week- On the other hand, the majority of | sparingly. White sug coffee, B ly. Outfit Free. Write today. Pennsyl- mployers who have work to offer | pastries, are holiday luxuries n inia Nursery Co., Girard, Pa. feb 4-8t hich is for these boys, do not want | water is not found even in the home : em unt fit, they are at least 16 [of the wealthiest people nor in th w Newtown strain S. C. White Leg- : on rn J we, dt 3 0 . ' : : : : S 14 hick fo ale. 10c | Years old, and many not until they best hotels Che peasantry and mid- 10TT 1 old chic 0 S » x : ‘ ® horn day X pcHs r3 are 18. The amount of money which | dle class people in Germany, and in each. Order now. Also, custom hatch- ’ a ° Pal 3 boys up to these ages can earn is|other northern European countie ing, at 4 cents a chick. Newpher on : 3 Hoa to i 2 meltzer, Mount Joy, Pa tf certainly not in any degree an equiv-| live largely on whole-grain bread, po- 1e 2 ( ’ ¢ . { : Bn Sn alent for the education which they | tatoes, vegetables and dairy products. - Insurance is Now Due should _obtain in the 2 or 4 year | When they come to this country they " oe as a rt period The almost universal plea | are pictures of health and of robust ance assessme : : : Stone ihov andoilv = | payable to J. Willis Freed, Mt. Joy, | on the part of children is they hate | stren ngth, but they eagerly adopt jo : A y . ple r | cus " livinz. beliovi | Pa. If assessments are not paid om school and want to work. What does | American custom of living, believing or before Feb. 15 1914, policies Will | this mean? What part of school life ( that meat, white bread and coffee 8 | be suspended. 4t| jo they hate and what part of shop [three times a day constitute “high ® For Sale—A lot of kindling wood, | jife do they crave? j living. The natural result is that in B | cut ready for stove use; $1 a load.| Ope man I know, who has had |? few years most of them lose their @ | Wm. Darrenkamp Mt. Joy. tf abundant opportunity to investigate | red cheeks and become dyspeptic and = i eg = ihe largest | nervous like their new compatriots. ” For Sale Cheap—A large gas gener- these matters holds that the nrgest [ frequently observed the gradual ® ator for an automobile in first-class | cause of this defection is a lack of loners of the Tarte . Ganado oo ili thi ‘ < 3 TO { 1 £ PB 1€8 St8 ar m condition complete with bracket. willingness to think and to take re- | nl aie of Iettae: I date IT 3 i dec as S.A 1 migra S. £ Only $5.00. Apply at this office. sponsibility. That is, it is a form of | fecen nh : Y & | fe hq v ill f ors - FI : ES as mental laziness. As he views the | families you Na find fhe grand * ’ e fe peg gre £ y D Nv Veisp one TO u 9 o private situation, a boy feels that he can | father Jane JRO ore w ig come bacco cellar, etc, set of tw 1v, Es Poin Real from the “old sod,” hale and hearty o telephones for this purpose can be | dodge responsibility for correct ar- in their old a th bad ToT EE : ; ine lie IT eir old age; the second ge - 8 nought for $5. They will save you ithmetic English and anything else t midaled Wsbensi and z + o> 3 § ale-age SP S1¢ m many steps and time. Drop us acard | he ig taught in school, by entering a | oD: 2 nic : ge dysy > i n E | 3 i y v nervous, anc the rand-children a ind we will show you how easy you shop. There, at his age, he is only us g = can have this convenience. The Co- | 3 do work which is almost | 2nemic, wearing glasses at tender m lumbia Telephone Co. Columbia, Pa.| allowed to do work which 1s : age, and affected by all sorts of = "automatic in its nature, which re- h ’ i il t St tisti Bow | : chronic ailments, atigtics sho = NO 19M’ | quires almost no thought and little a : . + : that in our largest cities, where sur- Ss attention for its successful comple- : . ie Z . : i roundings and habits of living are = | tion. He is only given work which : : = . : most unnatural, the fourth “eity mu does require thought and attention A : = | i li to do its bred” generation dies out unless re- as he shows willingness to do ; » as he 10 : & aver Fits generated by the inflow of fresh = ic ans that many never ris My : un which means 2 ¥ tively | healthy blood of immigrants from £ at a the rest comparatively _ » e = OC S at all and the $ pé Northern Europe and of the sturdy ® slowly 1 I d ; the | Young pec ple who crowd in from the = To r 10 I's & ay Ir ej. : . ou Poa hoy our 5 y . .__ | farming communities to he swallow = & { shop spells more Hberty than Bye ed up by the insatiable maw of the = un = hours in a school room, because Ii reat lity. ys} e ly does what he can . Th = Guaranteed in every Particular the Shor, h : 5 ) id hd a iton We will now somewhat consider easily do witho, we b . the proper diet for people suffering ~~ and Without, Worry. , In - the: Se Be | rom nervous ailments. The belief room he is expe ae at least, ! ® 8 prevails that in order to make rich ! const / alert ¢ raine - : Seven Jewel constantly on the alot and 8 n blood one must eat large amounts up to concert pitch. eggs. The science of I RES Bi u UUW UR WJ HE = mle For Se. For Rent Watches Made by the Seth Thomas Watch in case. $2.75 Company, heavy silveroid = Quadruple Silver Plated Bread Trays : $2, 25 & $3. 00 Son W. Gorrecht 2 {Near Bowman's Store) MOUNT JOY, PA. 2 = = » ® H " = & w Ww = © = = a = = » MOUNT JOY. School Question (Continued Because from page 1) ‘twas such a crooked path. But still they: followed—do not laugh The first migrations of that calf, And through this winding woodway stalked Because he wobbled when he walked. This forest path became a lane, That bent, and turned, and turned again; This crooked lane became a road, Where many a poor horse with his load Toiled on beneath the burning sun, And traveled some three miles in one, | And thus, a century and a half They trod in the footsteps of that calf. The years passed ‘in swiftness fleet; The road became a village street; And this before they were aware, A city’s crowded thoroughfare; on And soon the central street was this Of a renowned metropolis. And men two centuries and a half Trod in the footsteps of that calf. rout calf about; went Each day a hundred thousand Followed And o’er his crooked The traffic of a continent A hundred By one calf near the zigzag journey thousand men were Jed followed still his crooked way a day; They And lost one hundred years For such reverence is lent To well established precedent A moral lesson this might teach, Were I ordained and For men are prone to go it blind Along the calf paths of the mind, And work away from sun to sun To do what other men have done. They follow in the And in, beaten track; and out, and forth, three centuries dead. called to preach, and back, | PA. Mortuary | Recordings (Continued from page 1) Peter Brady, late of Marietta, died in the Columbia Hospital. Death was due to liver trouble, after an illness of one year. The deceased was in her sixty-first year, and was a daughter of the late Frederick Kreiner. With ‘her husband she lived in Marietta many years. She is survived by | seven sons, as follows, Daniel, Lewis, | George, John, Peter, Alonzo and Frederick. The funeral was held Fri- day. Mrs. Harriet Brubaker Mrs. Harriet Brubaker, widow of { the late Benjamin Brubaker, died | yesterday morning at her home, at | Sporting Hill, aged eighty-five years, | death resulting from cancer, One sister, Mrs. Annie Ely, residing in { Franklin = county, survives. The ! funeral will be held from her late home on Friday at 9 a. m., and at [9:30 o'clock: at Kreider’'s Meeting- | house; interment will be made in the | cemetery adjoining. North A number of M. Hinton persons from this j section were at Cumbler’s Heights to | attend the funeral of North M. Hin- | ton, who was killed at Steelton on Monday, which was held Thursday evening at the late home, Rev. James M. Waggoner of the Church of God, | of which the deceased was a member officiating. Jurial was made at | Elizabethtown on Friday morning. | The young man was born at Maytown iand was a machinist of some ability. | Until recently he lived here, and re- | moved with his family to Cumbler’s | Heights. He was employed by the { Pennsylvania i : | while working Steel company, and near a big fan which from the floor so that placed under it, was suspended rollers could be And still their devious course pursue, | big apparatus fell and he was caught To keep the path that others do. But how the laugh Who saw the first primeval calf! Ah! many things this teach, ‘But I am not ordained to preach. wise old wood gods | crushed and he tale might | age, and | children. | i by the ropes. His chest was terribly lived only half an after being admitted to the He was thirty-two years of leaves his wife and two He was a member of the | hour hospital. f of meat and Could we, by inaugurating prac- | Natural Dietetics however. oRchos tical work, such as is done at the us that the richness of the blood de- various trade schools, keep the | Perids HOt 50 much on sugars, faf and voung men in school a few Years| oteins. as on the positive mineral longer? Yes. This is also true of | elements. Almost atiy ‘ordinary. food the ladies as they quit school andj... re will provide enough of the enter factories and that is about the] “mineral. seit” height of ambition of the average | in order to feed the blood With all young woman who does not beecome| ;. cements it needs in right pro- a benedict | portions, and in that way to main * ONE WHO KNOWS | ain it in a normal, healthy condition, SRR one-half of the diet should consist of The pupils of the Maytown High|e is ang vegetables, and the other | School are visiting our publie schools |; ip should be made up of sugars, this afternoon. They compos® 2 |gtarches, fats and proteins. Meat sleighing party should be used sparingly. Many I —- thousands of enthusiastiv vegetarians If you 'want Rubber Boots, ShO€8, | have proved that it is better to do Arctics or Felt Boots that are eX®| without meat aitogether E;s also good get them at I. D. Beneman’s. should be used sparingly at an aver- mai ei ater age not more than one a day. Coffee Subscribe for the Mt. J Rglletl nd tea must be avoided altogether Subscribe for the Mt. J eti py contain powerful nerve stimu- Subscribe for the A hti lieve that theig juence dr co Pe wi mi or of Trinity United Evangelical church Isaac Walborn, wife and daughter, held their annual social at the Leona, spent Sunday at Manheim, home of Mrs. M. B Tuhrsday evening. side the i upon the system, jus ‘a and coffee habit, Wednesday, Feb} in the long run, is bara Hemperly, Ella 4 t as bad as that of weak alcoholic leman, Florence Kayl8 inks. One has to smile at the in- Way, Mary and Martha nsistency of people, bilious, dys- Anna Myers, May and Blan® ptic and nervous as a result of the leman, Edith and Kathryn G looking down and Lottie Eshleman. th virtuous indignation upon the ao in who indulges in a glass of beer | white wine. i en sn LANCASTER JUNCTION in { Mr. and Mrs. Jonas Snavely Sunday with John Cassel and i Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. arr et Reco son Jonas Heisey spent Sunday Miss Rosanna Zerphy. Henry Heagy and wife and: Misses Missionary Society Social The Woman's Ida, Kathryn and Nellie Ault when the losing Groff. entertained the winning side. Tuesday with elegant refreshments The following members and township. friends attended: Rev, and Mrs, N. Mrs. Albert Kling and sons, Harry A. Barr, Mrs. M. B. Eshleman, Mrs. and Elmer spent Saturday with Joseph Weber, Mrs. Sophia Dowhow- Michael Adams and wife and Jacob er, Mrs. George Myers, Mrs. J. H. Kling and wife at Lititz, : Gingrich, Mrs. Harry Morton, Mrs. Well, those people who believe ia S. F. Eshleman, Mrs. C. S. Gingrich, the ground hog as a weather prophet Mrs, Irvin Walters, Mrs. Amos Kay- have had their day. lor, Mrs, John Way, Mrs. Simon has been very cold during the past Menaugh, Misses Jessie Mishey, Bar- week. : Mrs. Jonas Snavely, sr., and git Missionary Society Sunday guestsof Miss Stella Weaver. Eshleman last guests in the home of Abraham B Mrs, Isaac Walborn and daughter, After the regular business was trans- Leona, spent acted served. were brother Harry W. Shearer in Rapho The weather / with her (Goirig Out Of Bus Siness Ss Sale TE A BE ——— Only 1 Thre» Mare Weeks All $18, $20, $22, $25, $28 SUITS and OVERCOATS To be Sold Now at the Final Reduced Price $10.96 The Clothing at Big Reduced Prices In Our Window Shows what splendid values you can buy now at WAY BELOW THE COST PRICE Our time is limited to thcee weeks, so this forces us to sell with no consideration of the cost of these Suits and Overcoeats. $15 & $16.50 Suits & Uvercoats Now $8.98 24 West King Street, Lancaster. | : $12 & $13.50 Suits & Overcoats Now $6.98 | Outlet Clothing or 4 : pp on Ee NRE BORER REE BERBERS REE na New Farm and . - B siness Direciory of Lancaster Count > Y Our Representatives ‘c= Waar This Badge RATS The publishers of the old reliable FARM JOURNAL, of Phila delphia, are preparing to publish the illustrated FARM AND BUSI- NESS DIRECTORY OF LANCASTER COUNTY, giving the name, post-office, rural route, and telephone connection of every farmer in the county, all arranged under post-offices, and a classified BUSINESS DIRECTORY, including all business houses in the county, arranged under the proper headings With the Directory is given a complete ROAD MAP of the county, with each road NUMBEREDtc show the exact location of each farm, as given in the Directory This Directory will contain man nterestinug PICTURES of ine farms, thoroughbred stock, churches an Hic nstitutions, schools and pupils, portraits of prominent pe of The names and necessary information about MPmers are being secured by PERSONAL CANVASS of the 10,835 farms in the coun- ty This Directory and Road Map are so useful to farmers that from our experience in other counti9s we can guarantee that the Directory will go into at least SIX THOUSAND HOMES of Lan- caster County, where it will be constantly usedby farmers and business men for the next five years The Farm Journal Directories give information which makes them indispensable to every farmer and business man in the coun- ty. They are an immense improvement over other directories, con- aining what most publications do nCt give First, they give the names, addresses, telephone connection, ind other important information about farmers secured by PER- SONAL CANVASS from the farmer himself This =~anvass of country districts is so costly that mest direction ymhlishers can- not afford to make it, and therefore jists of farms ubiished are in nearly all cases copied fiom the assessor's S The classified BUSINESS DIRECTORY udes every busi- ness house in the county, whether in city or country. In other directories the names of houses iD the cities ani Owns on- lv are usually given These features, with the Road Map make & Fai Journal Directory an indispensable nd-beok for ever ¢ tarmar and business man in the county If you are not sure that correct information has been given to one of our canvassers, please send it direet to our main office. WILMER TKINSON COMPANY bills s of Farm Journal - SQUARE, PHILADELPH J WASHIN{ TT 0 0