AGE THREE WAY FOR THE YOUN: MEN. Bendition That Must Be Recognized le Pointed Out by Writer in Magazine. Moar the way for the young men. are entering “the strong, flour and beautiful age of man's B88." They decree the changes. The ®ap of the world may be rolled up— Very acre tramped upon and inhab- Bed. But gta they come, claiming all Whe rights of the adventurer and pio- @eer. Domains must be found for Shem if the old earth has gone stale. of the lite of danger and discovery is ‘@idod, then they will turn their hand BL our secure world and refash- the pleasant places. They will root tradition and shatter the insti- 8. We should like them better they fitted tmto our scheme, if they Me ruddy and cheery and ended But they come earnest and They jeer at our failures, ogfoct our compromises. It isn’t our 8s a? youth ,our peaceful picture of youth should be. Poets sing it if it were a pretty thing, the gentle on of a golden race of beings. ft 1s lusty with power and disas- 8 {0 comfort. Men sigh for it as pit fad vanished with old Japan at | heur when it is romping ih thelr d and challenging their dear They are wistful for it im raasfigured memory, and they , ose {i in thelr councils, for youth! mdver is what the elders would have | ®. It does unacceptable things, while ! age stands blinking and sorrowful. It Waraly, turbulent power oa its end- | track. —~Collier's Weekly. hn SPMETHING MORE THAN HINT Sandy McQuibber Could Hardly Have | Been Pleased by the Remarks of the Beadle. A mative of a small village in Scot | Red, Baving “made good” in “furrin | [Sa returned home, and, to show | more little he valued £ =. d., he pre | il a brand-new umbrella stand to | kirk.” In accordance with | : custom the presentation was amnownced by the beadle on the Sab ‘bath, | just before the service started. i The beadle, a grizzled old warrior of about seventy, delivered himself in $e following manner: — "Nae doot, brethren, ye'll a'hae no : diced the bran-new umbrella-stan’ that t wor worthy neiber, Mr. MacRae, has &lem tae the kirk. Noo, umbrellas is ‘wmbrellas, and human naturs human mafurs, an’ although it ill behoves me tae say onything agin oay worshiper ¥ fale sacred place, yet tae tell ye the trash we wad 2’ be vera pleaged if Bandy MacQuibber wad tak’ a sittin’ ‘A wee bittie farer awa’ fra the door!” ~{,ondon Tit-Bits - t h a Birthstones. There are two systems of birth S course this J¢ simply a matter o metom, nav to be settled arbitri:iiv 1 “Polish system is as follows: Jawuary, garnet; February, an sthyst; March, bloodstone; April, Diamond: Mey, emerald; June, chalcedony or agate; July, ruby; August sardonyx; | g September, sapphire; October, QUA | mw ine or beryl; November, topaz; Pecember, turquois. | The Jewish system is: January gar- | MN; February, amethyst: March, jas Ir; April, sapphire; May, chalcedony, elise, or agate; Jume, emerald: Onyx; August, carnelian; Sep oer, chrysolite; October, acqua ine or beryl: November, topaz: | mber, ruby Hi Failed to Come Up. Hi Larity treated his peg leg to a @andeome coat of white paint one d: this week, after which he fnches and half inches on it and 1 since been pai a a8 a measuring ck when digging postholes and do th ng other work Our road overseer | same along a few days later and placed Ja white pole in the creek with inches and naifnc hes painted on it so team Bters can tell when the creek t high to ford. Lin} way shortly after Bummers staring pently. Link asked P iching “T've Lollog “A ina ‘ 1y. of the pole most in- him what en settin’ he was here wearly an hour,” Simp replied, “waitin’ eo see what Hi's divin’ after, but hit | seems like hit takes him a long time | RO te come up."-—Kansas City Star. to He Remembered. One day I told my son, aged three, | pick up his blocks quickly, for din- | wag ready to begin at once, but | would no more than get them piled | until he would accidentally knock | m over again. Finally I reproved | rather sharply, and, looking up | be p with a hurt feeling, he said: | uma, am I a bad boy?” hewered: "No, dear, but vou are few days later I had occaslon to | give him a dose of medicine. He | ida’t want to take it, so 1 said, en- souragingly, “Take it it isn’t bad.” {a *Well,” he answered, “if it isn’t bad, | We carelese.”—-Chicago Tribune. Medals for What They Don’t 3 “Dear me,” said the potentate, “who thoee people and what is the mean- of their enormous badges?” ! “Prince,” was the reply, “they are | In heir badges signify tbat they never |g Ppt drunk.” The prince frowned. “If 1 wore a big badge,” he said, “for wwery wrong thing I don’t do you pemidn’t see my ciothes at all.” Day the Past Month Pollowing is the report of our bor- gh echools for the month just ed: High School, Marguerite M. Herr and Mabel F. Donovan. Teachers Beniors—Dale Garba Qwen Green- it, Harvey ker, Edgar | gsemer, Raym ssly, Alvin he: | RO L fam Ckand- Ream, Lot Fra A vin Esh it live to be a huudred years sud, that moment will always stand cut ag plain. unfortunate brethren at home Iy had guessed it. «8 south of the toes. . once in their lives, but no negro ever as persimmon wine. | persimmon beer. blow Casey stumbled up the | steps Into the house and awakened his wife by his efforts to negotiats shey, Mabel ’ Theda Walters. hart, George PRrown, Wgrren Eshle- man, Paul ‘Heisvy, Frank Gantz, Cal- ET AMC TT , NAMES T Mal Carved on E Tombstones, Th 8 cy Recall the Works of Great Author. The happy discovery in Chalk eburchyard of “the immortal names’ of Twist, Flight and Guppy reminds Bunhili Fields cemetery I noticed om some from one Sarah Brass, Garland and Sophronia, all of which appear in “The Og Curiosity Shop;” Oram, the name of the under- me that some years ago in tombstones not far apart another the following names: taker in “David Copperfield.” and Blight and George Sampson, names oocurring in “Our Mutual Friend.” George Sampson is the much snub- bed suitor of Bella Wilfer's sister La vinia. “Young Plight,” whose wages were 16s a week is elaborately de- scribed as being “managing clerk, Junior clerk, common law clerk, con- veying clerk, chancery clerk, every re- fivrement and department of clerk, ot Mr. Mortimer Lightwood, Solicitor.’ Dick Swiveller's “The Marchioness,” whom he named “Sophronia Sphinx,’ as being “a name euphonious and gen teel, and furthermore indicative of { mystery,” is known to everybody. In “Our Mutual Friend,” however, there figures a much less distinguished and well known Sophronia, the wife, name- by, of “the ginger whiskered” and dis reputable Mr. Lammle—Correspon- dence London Times. WHEN THE ROMANCE FADED : John's Prosaic Recollection Decidedly Not What the Young Wife Had Expacted, she asked, cuddling up to “John,” Lim, for it was the third anniversary of their marriage, “what was the hep { piest moment of your life?” “Ah, dear,” he replied, “1 remember well. 1 shall uever forget ft. If J it does tonight.” She sighed and nestled a little cios as er, looking longingly up inte hig honess blue eyes. she urged: After a moment's silence “Yes, but John, dearest. you haven't cid ms when it was.” “Oh” be answered, “I thought yuu It was when you came 0 ine in the autumn, if you remeber, nd told nie that you had decided to rim up one of your old hats so as to aske it do for the winter” Then celebration of the third an i arriage became un g and formal “Nobody Eats Possum Now.” The South long heen cursed stories of things said to exist be peculiarly Southern that re the were fictions of the exuberant has ere as imaginations of professional Scuthery 1 6 and professional outherners who have never been far #Be, one Polish and the other Jew: | ther south than Washington ¥ fn origin. The Polish system is the Nobody now eats possum, and no @ now more genertlly accepted, but body now eats possum and sweet pota Once the negroes ate Possum ¥ made a second assault on a dish of Possum sum should have a copper riveted stomach and a taste for pure fat with A man who could enjoy pos strong odor. There is no such thing Once there was It is about as pala | table as rainwater flavored with dried appies—Memphis Commercial Ap peal. Brand-New Excuse. Casey announced to his wife, Ellen that he was goihg to the ball game ‘All day he was gone. but no Casey to take his place at the head of the table. Casey—one three o'clock—no Casey. Night came, Midnight and ne o'clock—two o'clock— As the six o'clock whistles began tg fron 6 stairs. She hopped out f bed and met her better half in the hall | way. “Well,” sald Mrs. Casey, determing tion written on her Amazon face. “’Salirite, Ilin,” said Casey, weak “The game was called on account daylight.” Fans Unhealthful. Though the electric fan brings re freshing coolness to hot places, it does t ventilate a closed room, and Lang lais and Satory, French experimenters. have found that the ordinary fan tends lessen the airs purity instead of in creasing it, the stirring up of dust be | ing probably responsible for a large | addition to the bacteria. i | During dancing in a ballroom the number of bacteria per cubic yard of | the air rose from 4,000 to 720,000. For | ventilation an ozone generator may used with the fan, or an exhaust | [fan may be placed in a hole in the | | ‘outer wall 50 as to pump out the vith (ated air, when, of course, fresh afy | | will take its place. i Great Classical Works Lost. There are more ways of des | book than burning it. The old | | ‘monks were adepts at another form | of destruction with what they comsié i ered laudable motives. Vellum wag | {costly and they were indefatigable in | erasing the best works of the Greek | | and Latin to make room for a life of | | some saint or other on the same sheet, | the , Vatican one of the books of | wembers of a temperance society and | Livy can be faintly discerned beneath ! missal and Cicero's “de Republicn™ | was lost to the world for centurisg | underneath a mass of monkish writ | ing. | composition was seldop comparalils | | with what he destroyed. And the quality of the monk's | nk, Helen Habecker, Mary Her-| Moore, Leah Stauffer, | Class—John Bear, Walter Bern- Kramer, Oscar Laskewitz, Earl | leman, Maude Sehroll. | Anna / ! QTOO00 HID OCE on, > HIN or ENO i {dug a sink for Councilman D. F. : Webb, May Diffen- vin Hertzog, Clarence Bleyer, Warzen 'o! ii Barba na town Nerney, dorfery Martha Felker, “Alta GIDE Baios, Albert Laskowiun Joh Heloew, (Cohie 2t ble Nora Basia street Gl rayne Dosey: rich, Bmily Gingrich, Virginia Green Leo Smeltser, Omer Brabalich, Jean elon, hn OO a Glenn Derr, Clayton Ebersole, Samu awalt, Pauline Shoop, Alice Way, Thome, Frances Garber, Nedra Ka "would mot off 2s quickly 8s Mildred Fellenbaum, Esther Ging: | Miller, Russel Rinehart, James SR Wiover lor, Esther Laskewits, Martha wil |v ig uot pass 2 Suiekly ss ®t Rapp, Allen Schatz, Paul Stark, e . mer, Clara Penmell, Marie Shultz {8iould and S 1€ one 8 > intermediate Grade, ? ‘ i i l a. Wt Arion Roem Ber Coa Pac Ow Als Puncsast Asie \l/omer 4 A Wonderfully Lucky Purchase. Buy Your Easter Suit at Great Savings EVERYBODY KNOWS SAMPLE SUITS ARE THE BEST AND MOST CAREFULLY MADE BECAUSE A MANUFACTURER STANDS OR FALLS BY HIS SAMPLES AND THEY ARE ALWAYS CRITICALLY INSPECTED BY THE MOST SHREWD MERCHANTS COUNTRY. EST AND CLASSIEST SUITS WE HAVE SEEN THIS SEASON. THERE IS NOT A SUIT IN THE LOT WHICH $20—MOST OF THEM WERE MADE TO SELL AT $25 AND $30. SERGES, GABARDINES, WOOL CREPES, POPLINS, BLACK, BLACK, BLUE AND NEARLY ALL COLORS—WHILE THEY LAST. ! DICKENS USED oo RH I Hr 3 RN HR KR HR OB III IIHF ORS ; o THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Wednesday, Mareh 2, 1914. 7 WHOKOOOODOOOOOOOOO OOOO OOOO LEE [=] BS tid + Or 810% £ & J AIS OOO0O0OOLDOOOOOOLOOD si) Gif) q2 CNG Donovan Oc 1 Hats Trimmed FREE by The Best Millinery Talent in the Country 25-38 East King Street, Lancaster, Penna. 5 NEW Spring Sample Suits The Restaurant When you get tired of the ordini- Se wT ———— ary things to eat “come to the Don- § ovan restaurant. Here you will find : things that are dainty and different tasty and tempting New Menu Every Day ———— —————_——— WE HAVE GOT THE SAMPLE OF THE LINE OF ONE OF AMERICA'S GREATEST MANUFACTURERS. THEY ARE THE VERY NEW IS WORTH LESS THAN ln In the back or vertibla giays, 1 shades ; The Latest Swagger Balmacaans smartest English loose raglan styles, collar, The materials include owns and many other smart unmatichable values, our price styles-——belted tailored con- Most Unusual $4.98 Eveany Made of Lace coll the highs wogl Cre Elegant Spring Street Dresses new color! Every new style! such materials that are used in r priced dresses—French serges, pes and Silk Taffetas. Features-— ars, frills and vestees, tunics, etc., Furniture Values $9.98 the tier skirt Very Extra Special Spring Suits Of line quality Serge. Jackets are made with kimono sleeves, This Suit is beauti- fully lined with good satin and shows all the best Sprinig stvle features; including Caused by hundreds of odd pieces left over from the Febru ary Furniture sale ang some shipments received ‘too late. Those quoted below are only more fractions of the man: splendid opportunities. $9.96 Wonderfully Fine Spring Suits O1 Cloth Pop § arn | ish shoulder; § new peg shades; Fn, Crepe, All-Wool Serge, Waffle 1 Gabardine, all the swellest, styl all the latest effect; drop short jackets, Skirts with the top and tier effects $25.00 Golden Oak $19.98 Buffets Wonderful Donovan Trimmed Hat $16.98 Why Pay More? These Hats Are the “Talk” of Town Made of selected oak, has a very white polished finish. . 7 i 131 A mateh- No other store can duplicate these hats for twice the amount. We Mite ONE. 45. 4 price that iS | buy our hats and trimings direct from the great manufacturer: of New | joke on the original value York who are glad to sellto us because of theimense quanity we use Some | of these wonderful hats are exact copies of famous French and Fifth A = : Felt creations, the originial which our New York office saw displayed in swell | . millinery stores on Broadway costing three, four and five times what our 1 Combination low price is. : Mattress : s 5 | o pe | one or lwo parts; covered Our Big Untrimmed Hat Department i with very good quality tick; full . . el, 3} g Ibs. Weight; made of all new Where All Hats Are Trimmed by Cur Skili- {f= Fee mate of a new . : we at an immense Price Con ful Designers--Absolutely FREE of CHARGE Ho a ror Here are a few of the money savers in this great department which style, variety and price has no equal between Philadelphia & Pittsburg sae smcm. nam A. 8 TRAE TE EE 75¢c. Brussels T ; 3 . § Leghorn, Belgian £ a Children’s f Best Quality Excellent Quality ng a ew To We Shi I i : i ietol] ohn fies {| HempHats fi yee saw | | shapes; 1 {I son's best shapes — § In black all the f In the Watteau eft ¢ : i different s§ § many hats excellent for f ; hike nosi-§i €cts als jaunty | ¥ ne all exceedis y f middle aged women ff ey up to the m nute g «fg ! 50¢ i] 79¢ a i tive $2 value, 98g §f in style, 82.98 E er —— el Bt EAD 0 30 4 CEE y ® BR D : ilks| |Men’s Cloth F The Worlds B Maker Dress Goods & Silks en’s Clothing From The Worlds Best Makers Direct, From The Mills To You Where Is The Equal of The Famous Donovan Special ; . i | Spring Exposition of Fabric Fashions have al For Men ly fo source of pleasure and inspiration to More Than Fifty Styles -— honsands of women who have learned to rely upon, ” : is store's authentie information and first -display of XY M n and Stout Vi n rt the new things. Each section, Silks, and Dress Goods oung € should be visited in turn to get the full effect of 0 S . Vv 1 F fashion's phages A $20.0 uit a ue or Below we quote just afew offerings taken from our : BE I Toa) He Are strictly all wool, are positively hand tailored; have hand felied ad collars; hand made buttonholes; hand tailored front, which will not break, Club Checks Silk Poplin and are sewed throughour with pure silk thread. : With sh This seasols Os! de Fine. ‘uuglity[s good The trimmings and linings are in keeping with the outside. Va L$ e sirable fabnic for Dress- weight and very silky, Seon . . outside arts. a fact: pb 49 40 to 54 | all colors and black, 40 inside parts we are just as particular as with the . Pe bd inches wide inches wide. every “Donovan Special Suit” is made and tailored exactly to ou . 50c to $1.50 Yard 59c a Yard ’ w : A Fine All Wool Donovan Specia! Suit Silk Crepe de Chine Tango Crepe EXTRA WELL MADE AND CUT T O THE HEIGHT OF FASHION ! LR a AlL WOO! Many fancy patterns in plain colors, neat pencil stripe effects; Ors od DiveR) OS uew All the weW 3s HM checks and plaids; fancy self stripe and blue serges. Two and three ] es wide; just the thing | as staple shades, 44 button style coats. English and straight front cut; snug fitting collars. \ 258 for the new dress inches wide Coats ame lined with fine Mohair or silk. Algo some skeleton back styles. ts w» At 50c. 98¢ a Yard Vests are high cut with or without collars. Trousers are on 2 Darrower . . 1914 Kuppenhes scale than last season. A $20 ‘Suit, heimer nen Shonk, Beulah Zercher. tin Fellenbaum, Harold Harmon, John | Christine Moy 1 . , Reist, Walter Rutt, Ellsworth Shrite, [rice Schatz, Catherine Witmer, Mary John Stoll, Ruth Brubaker, Virginia Schneider. Grammar, Edna Martin, Teacher { Mevers, Arthur Moyer, Ralph Musser, | via Stauff i Vivian Coolidge, Grace Dietz, Blanche | Lois |rich, Erma Hertzog, Dorothy Myers, | Miriam Mummert, Emily Newcomer, Wiley, Wi SOOO OCOOOOOOOGOCOGOOGOOOOO0OOOOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOO0O0OO000000 O000000C000000 0000000000000 Alvin Reist,. Lester Roberts, Edwin Pauline Sheaffer, Paul Alexander, Eshleman, John McGann, Beatrice oo Krall, Verna CuRningham, Matie| ame ieee SCHOOL REPORT tie Royer, Fannie Strickler, Bsther Walters, George Weber, Frances Charles Engle, Charles Eshleman, Fuhrman, Anne Brooks, Elenora Sa, Carson, Gertie Hendrix. oii Weber, ‘Beatty, Vivian Chandler, Mabel Geist-| Omer Eshleman, James Gerber, Wal- bel, Clara Greenawalt, Dorothy Hei- A SoA CadHis] Painful to Panes es of Pupils Who Didn't Miss a | Juniors— Clarence Brubaker, Aus-|Weit, Florence Habecker, Elsie Miller, ter Mumma, John Rahm, Herbert lig, Eunice Herr, Lura Hertzog, Mary Second Primary, Ruth Sto acher.! er, Mary Rapp, Beat-| Stark, Sylvester Dearbeck. Elizabeth R.! Esther Wittle, | Eshleman, Teacher | Beatrice Hawthorne, Martha Heis- B Class—Thomas Bennett, Charles ey, Mae Hinkle, Mildred Krall, Emma | DeLong, Ross Eshleman, Jay Klugh, Kramer, Caroline Nigssly, Lillian Roth, Truman Sprout, Henry Witmer, Ma- Fourth Grade, Katharine G. Aumii- | Car] Schatz, Howard Stark, John Mil ler, Roy Loraw, Morris Cuncingham, | Haines, Elmer Pennell, Harry Stine Ward enn ‘Evelyn Mumma, tuck, Frank: Hinkle, Jean Mumma, Kathryn Longenecker, Esther Garber, Mildred Way, Mary Peoples, Ethel Erla Bear, Dorothy Panncbecker, Lo. | Hendrix, Helen Keller, Mildred Geist- na Dillinger, Martha Zercher, Margar- | weit, Mabel Carson, Elsie Loraw. ler, Teacher Ellis Fellenbaum, Waealter Thome, Gilmour Schmaelzle, Roy Arndt, Am- Ebersole, Leroy Engle, Robert Recently Mr. Andrew Weidman Moyer, Beatrice Newcomer, Barbara Eli Engle, Howard Lindemuth, Al Verna C. Chandler, Third Grade, bottom of i ploding dynamite &' the i i ‘the sink. sticks of explosive | Warren Béntzel Jobm Dillinger, Bd- pe) Brown, Ella Childs, Christine Teacher First Primary, M. G. Miller Teacher the sink. Four sticks o ; 'gar Dyer, Mahlon Foreman, Ellwood Gillums, Dorothy Longenecker, Sarah popert Keller, Witmer Eberle, John Harry Brooks, Byron Roudabnsh, Were piace yrs the hd o vet of Gillums, Carl Krall, Lloyd Myers, Da-| McGinnis, Bertha Miller, Lillian Mum- Rollman, Winfield Zerphey, John Esh- Harold Krall, Elwood Brubaker, Les after which Mr. Gab : er, Musser Stauffer. | ma. | leman, Elmer Dobson, Amos Stark, ter Kaylor, Harvey Engle, Bugene chanic replace hine wing Delong. Normas Mater, Robert panes tha! were hooker