be PAGE THREE MARVELOUS PANAMA-PAGIFIC INTERKATIONAL EXPOSITION WILL OPEN UPON A COMPLETED ASSEMBLAGE OF THE TREASURES OF THE WORLD'S-ARTS, SCIENGES AND INDUSTRIES A conclave of nations unsurpassed in the history of the world will assem- Be at San Francisco when the marvelous Panama-Pacific International expo- sition opens on February 20. 1915. Today, the Panama-Pacfic International exposition overshadows and eclipses any commemorative and instructive exhibition in history. Progress In all phases of this most brilliant and comprehensive of world’s celebrations visualizes the exposition as it will appear when the exhibits of the worid are installed within its spacious halls, when hundreds of thousands of rare trees, plants and shrubs brought from far corners of the globe have transformed the grounds into a semitropical paradise and when from the Golden Gate the fraveler will behold the vast Exposition {walls of the encircling amphitheater of the hills of San Francisco. In the assured participation of the foreign nations and of the commercial and industrial interests of the world the Panama-Pacific International exposi- Yon stands alone among the great expositions cf the past. : As a tribute to America’s heroic task in the completion of the Panama eanal 34 of the world’s great nations have formally accepted the invitation of Ahe president to take part in the celebration and are now engagec in pre | paring magnificent displays, which will illustrate their progress in every iine of social and industrial actlvity. The Argentine leads with a government Appropriation of $1,300,000 (gold), and in its magnificent pavilion will be presented the wonders of that far-away land. Canada will expend $600,000; Japan, $600,000;; China, $800,000; Turkey, $300,000, and in the Turkish yavilion will be shown the rarest and costliest treasures of the Ottoman | empire. New Zealand and Australia will make tremendous displays. Fifteen hundred manufacturers in Germany will make a collective exhibit, to be shown | | is usually fore : : ; | of the other eruptive fevers of child- attend a series of great international conventions and congresses to be held at | : congresses will be the | In a great German building; 600 manufacturers from England will present a combined exhibit. More than 500,000 accredited delegates from all parts of the globe will Ban Francisco during the exposition. Among the great International Engineering congress, of which Col George W. Goethals, [builder of the Panama canal, is chairman. Thousands of visitors from all parts of the globe are great exposition at San Francisco in, 1915, and wonderful being made to transport and to &are for them HUGE TRIUMPHAL ARCH AT THE WORL SITION A WONDERFUL SIGH preparations are n'Q “ Copyright, 1914, by Pacific International Panama The Arch of the Rising Sun at the Panama-Pacific International exposi- | Exposition Company | tion, which will be crowned by a wonderful group of statuary, “The Nations | &< the East.” The howdah upon the elephant will be 188 feet above the floors. | of the court; the group itself will be 42 feet in height. This huge arch, | breathing the spirit of the Orient, will be upon the east side of the great | Central court, the Court of the Sun and Stars Upon the west side of the | 1L10n court will be an arch typifying Occidental civiliz: WONDERFUL PALACE OF HORTICULTURE nm mo — GT ——————— | { | | | i | | Copy uo ' pany The superb Palace of Horticulture at the Panama-Pacific International position in San Francisco in 1915 will be surmounted by a vast dome of | glass, supported with immense steel trusses. The dome will be 186 feet in | eight and 152 feet in diameter. At night batteries of colored searchlights will play on the inside of the dome from within the building, so that it will present the appearance of a gigautic soap bubble continuously changing to every color of the rainbow EE ———————————— —— smn EASTER IN OUR CHURCHES gore; recitation, “Adam Never Was - 1 Boy Oscar Strickler: exercise, 8pecial Programs Rendered by many 'Easte Dandelions; recitation, of Ou Sunday Schools Esther Sterringer: song by the SE junior choir Easte Peace,” exer- Special programs were rendered by | cise, “Spring and Her Flower Mes the various churches and Sunday | si ngel recitation ‘Good-Night, Schools hereabouts The following! George Shenck ong by the school were reported to us — Land Missionary’ Meeting The followin vas ren Phe monthly meeting of the Church dered on Su the Lu-| of God will be held Thursday evening theran Church, La Opening in the Sunday School room. The pro- selection by the a; song by|eram follows: the school; responsive reading; rect Singing, O to do Something; Pray- tation, “An ster Wish,” Martha or; Singing, Lend a Hand; Reading Habecker: ecitation, “His Compli-| Scripture Lesson, Miss Malinda Grein ment,” David Sterringer recitation, | er; Singing, Is it Nothing to You?: “New Easter Hats,” Hiram Diffender | Reading of Minutes, Mrs. Eli Smeltz fer; song girls, “Bagster Heralds;" | er; Solo, Mr. Frank Shatto; Reading recitation, “Don’t Be Afraid.” Artbur! Miss Anna Hoffer; Singing Are You Bushong; recitation, ‘Easter Hat| Helping?; Reading, Miss Anna Hoft- Come,” Mary Sharpe song by fhe! master; Singing, Just as God Leads: school; recitation, “Easter Lilies,”| Reading, Miss Wilma Eaton; Singing, A Light Along the Way; Remarks; Collection; Singing, All Hail the Pow- er; Benediction. r——— Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. 1 Cathryn Gable; exercise, “An Easter | Story;” song by the children; recita-| tion, “Giving,” Conrad Holbein; ad-| dress by Rev. Irving of Susquehanna | Jniversity; recitation, “Easter Wish,” /Jpsbong; solo, Margaret Kil- | } city rising to great heights against the | | | the age of planning to see the | i children UO GREATEST EXPO- ' ra HT. | no raised | usually the | takes to bed. ing tinal raised area of skin extremely in blisten should be shorten simple Ointment familiar if on herbs and medicinal plants “Even those what that a Hunger give a banquet. E BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY. PA. Wednesday, April 15, 1914. HOME HEALTH CLUB By Dr. David H. Reeder, Chicago, lll Varicella Pox is the t x v fevers. It is characterized by suec- cessive crops of vesicles or water- blisters distributed over the entire surface of the body, which disappear in from 4 to 7 days by drying up and scalding, The germ causing it has never been isolated. Some years ago it was believed by many physicians to be a modified form of small-pox, but we now have abundant proof that this is not true. or Chicken-pox: Chiche milde cl the eruptive It is pre-eminently a disease of childhood. It even effects nursing babies. It occurs more frequently at five and ig rarely met with after the ten. 1t rare! occurs a seccnd time in the same in- dividual. Single cases occur from age of [time to time but it is usually found in epidemics, one child transmitting is highly contagious es- the scaling of the to many. I[t pecially during rash. After a child has been exposed it ten to seventeen days be- disease Unlike some the shows. hood it may appear without the child | showing any other signs than the | rash. Recently I saw two children whose mother only discovered the rash when giving the daily bath. The The An- fam- sick were well otherwise. ish disappeared in two days. child, a baby in the same lly had a ght child. Usually a other fever and was a chi'd complain of being warm, refuse its food, not this time on the at found If its examined the rash body is will usually be back and sides of the abdomen. Each spot of the rash is at first a red patch of skin, soon becoming a blister, resembling in size the head of a pin to a split pea. An important chicken-pox is pricking the blister to escape leaving diagnosing that water portion of skin. The rash first appears on the trunk abdomen or sides of the body. It is thicker on the back, breast scalp and appears rarely | on the face, usually being limited to | the forehead. One other point in de- | termining the rash of chicken-pox is the fact that the pustules never run together as in measles. Another | point is that one blister may be dry- | ing up and next to it appears a fresh | blister. | The rash eften shows on the lining | of the mouth and tongue and the va gina in girls is frequently a favorite for the rash, The be | comes annoying because of tense itching which leads the to break the blisters by rubbing scratching and gives an appearance of | numerous skin abrasions with each one having a healing scab. A strik ing feature of chicken-pox is the | presence of two, three or four crops point in the allows the fact and RESESSIAARRE2S ERR EE EEE rash { the in- | child | and place of rashes in different stages, one being a remaining faint red blotch vith a.fresh scab, another showing perfect blister and yet ano fer being ' the first red patch of a future blister. Occasionally one may see a spot or two containing pus or matter and | this may confuse the disease with | small-pox which has for its character- | istic many pustules, or pus blisters. If it is noticed carefully it will be | | seen that these spots containing pus number and are due a blister with vesicles remain are only few in to the child infecting its finger The wthout change until the third day and then begin to dry up and scale. I most other diseases of this kind, es nails, pecially small-pox, the rash remains longer In small-pox he person usually | complains of being ill, has fever the limbs, headache, and | Again small-pox usual- | pains in \y is found after 12 to 14 years while | chicken-pox is a childhood disease, al- though it has been found in grown | ecple \n eruption of blisters or vesicles as they should he called in a child over 12 or in an adult is open to suspicion and a competent physi cian should be the one to decide. points about chicken-pox are: | \-—The absence toms; 2—The short before the rash and usually disappear- { The man- The of any severe sSymp- fever beginning rash vapid spread and rer of the rash as it spreads over body. Chicken-pox bath. It trouble is something disturbance. the appears; when the irregular the | be hastened by a may resemble hives but the result of intes- will hot that ating usually that Hives causes show a | itching | character and rarely shows any Chicken-pox is treatment limited needs out- diet, cooling drinks, a confinement in- lasts. To lessen children self rarely any f a light ntle laxative and >» fever to other the patient should be kept in another body | | the rash dries the and as rubbed oom with oil treatment 1 the itching ana well as to with the idmother’s h all ve read my lectures have ific The sver found to best spec ivoid scars is to rut old-fashic wi are you ha nt A I ee who disagree with the president says must agree | he says it wonderfully well EE, hk In England the Suffragettes go on strike. Over here they | and which doctors’ n { SHERER, 126 Cass St | Mrs MH 1 on a w n = a a to sell at five dollars. Were and sold to us at half price portunity. ACEC SCY Erp @ = = = n n a ® a B = = % = N = 2 on 5 0 2 The Famous £ 3 Es 5 : $4.98 spe 13 clusive are these hundreds of =k I n They are French Milan, Moire, i! Hemp, Lacquered Braids, in Plate Wat wu, G Sailors, ete, trimmed = rericar aut ses, lacquered roses, mm § quered ), ‘nitures of smal] flowers, toillece ibbons, bronzes and lacquered wings, quills, ete STYLE, The Most Attractive Feature The Price A Special Purchase Nearly a hundred trimmed hats; all new, made finished too late A Donovan TRIMMED HAT THEY ARE ALL THE LAST WORD IN THEY ARE ALL ABSOLUTELY NEW, THEY ARE ENTIRELY DIFFERENT $498 wonderful op- NO TWO ALIKE For Both Feature Women Fashions and i Smartest Misses Styles Millinery Stores invited our charged jobbers, Are LSA 0 OD EO 1 Ta 3° i § 1 indefinite assortment of those chic i otice tO narrow brim hats, with high dented or slan crowns and straight gently rolled, rippled or sideg flan brims. There is a style to be come every woman, ang black hats were ne hats regular by retai) We Are Leading All Lancaster In: MILLINERY In Prices, Assortment, Newness and Millinery Operators The Donovan Store Has No Competition Worthy of The Name Within a Radius of Fifty Miles From Lancaster ev~vvo Cd Coq In shapes suitable for oyung girls and middle-aged women. Black and burnt. A’ good dollar value elsewhere. 11 49c Finest Quality Hemp Hats In Black Burnt and colors The rarest ind newest shapes of the season. Included in these are the famous Watteau models The Shepherdess, Sans Souci. These hats are not n Lancaster under two dol re aa — am Untrimmed Hats Fine All Black Milan Hemps fashionable. A real $5.00 value $2.98 IMQTe€ to inspect our immense and trimmings. You will find prices less than that Philadelphia and New York ANCASTER PRER JP. - v SEER TEE TWO WOMEN AVOID OPERATIONS By Taking Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. Chicago, Ill. —*‘I must thank you witt all my heart for Lydia E. Pinkham’s mmm vegetable Com- pound. I usedtogo omy doctor for pills j{and remedies and #1 they Cid not helpme. I had headaches and could not eat, and the doctor claimed I had jd female trouble and ZAmust have an opera- tion. I read in the paper about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound and I have taken it and feel fine. A lady said one day, ‘Oh, I { feel so tired all the time and have head- ache.” I said, ‘Take Lydia ‘E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound,’ and she did and feels fine now.’’—Mrs. M. R. KARSCHNICK, 1438 N. Paulina Street, | Chicago, Illinois. The Other Case. Dayton, Ohio. — ‘* Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound relieved me of pains in my side that I relieve. It has cert: an operation. I you by a persona in the 1 k conditi same , Dayton, Ohio. If you want advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Med- idine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence: Special Rettew—Hoffmaster i Edwin F. Hoffma 1 of thi I e ant Iiss Laura S Rettew of [ronville, were married by Re WR shel at the Church of God parson- | age on Saturday evening. A wedding dinnel Ss given them at the home of the groom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. G F. Hoffmaster, on y fo owing guests were. present and Mrs. George Rett Fred erick I and Mrs. E nk, Mr Chris Garber and children and Miss Mary Hoffer of town; Mrs. Mary Martin and Mr. Norman Sheaffer of Elizabeth- town; Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Hoffmaster, Miss Anna Hoffmaster and Mr. and Edwin I Hoffmaster. The new- ly mziTied couple will be at home to their friends at Mlizabethtown after May ist. DEERE EEE EES BEE TREE ERR EEE EES nes 1] Hats Trimmed 32-38 East King Street, “ge ele 0 OER OE FREE By The Best Millinery Talent In The Country Successors To Williamson's Foster & Cochran Lancaster, Penna. Fully Equipped COO \ i A 1 € to- I ¥ s—the ork- A toe of 4 8 ti ne A X cn ——————————————— SS Rheems, Penna. iE EE 8 8EN 6 Cylinder 48 H. P. 11 Rn 10 5 ® 5 ® x " ® ® ® = = 5 ® ® ® a = ® ® © H i i 01