NO. 1. RAGGED TO DEATH. endler Meets With a Frightful Accident. Rendler, aged 64 years, of Mount ip, was the victim of an acci- by morning that resulted in a ul death. y hour the old gentleman, who three and one-half miles north went to his barn. to harness a hauling sand I'endler had horse's back animal ¢ purpore of on is that Mr, wrncess over the astened it and as the sunning out of the stable it the door and the animal kht behind it, started on a fhe trace becoming more «1 around the prostrate far- mp Reaching the d on a dead run. The 5 the farmhouse of John Pit mile distant, when he omeagain, with Mr. Rend- stened by the trace. Mrs. horse coming and man- hto the barn yard, where he trace. When released dead. His skull was ody, from which most of brn, was frightfully cut uty Coroner B. S. Dillin- an Dr. J. J. Newpher, bn and rendered an opin- vith the facts as above War prisonment Libby arved to death. lle Berman Baptist Church the foll ow- ng in the West; 1ome; Mrs. Abram Jacob Geib, Mount ndt, Donegal; Mrs. township,and Harry, a veteran of Civil in held tomorrow at the ales. Sheriff Mc’ ich- und, with two-story vaytown to ['allie ip a tract of land in ontaining 33acres vements. Seized Landis to Sarah ling house, con- Front street, in the property of THE WEEKLY BULLETIN FLORIN, PENNA, WEDNESDAY, NOV EMBER 90, 1901. : MOUNT JOY ITEMS. NEWS TOLD IN BRIEF, Sow The News of our Neighboring Borough in | Local Happenings as Reported by Our a Condensed Form. Many Reporters. | Porn, to Dr. T. F. McEliigott and wife, a son, ill. | The : srchants are reducing the | wy Fhe local merchants ate Yelnoinig | John Kolp visited John Hossler on | price of coal. Sunday In order to meet the demands of his trade | x : : : Jonas Hostetter has put on additional help. | E. S. Weaver ‘sold seventeen horses | organ and | last week. Frank Eby will leave for New York week. | tomorrow. *Fquire Zeller ¢ itted Leonard Bow- 3 Smal : qiife Zeller coninliied, 4 . on! Roy Baker of Dillsburg, is visiting in man, a tramp, to jail last Thursday, for 90, : days [ the village. Harry H. Zeller was granted a divorce Operator Charles Winters was home from his wife Emma, on the grounds of on Sunday. desertion. 3 Levi N. Stauiler pirbin 4 Herbert Risser of F. & M. was home DY. . d e b « and gasoline engine for David Newcomer at OVEr Sunday. Fuck last week. Mrs. J. D. Easton was at Gabriel Moyer is building a new ware- last Saturday. house on his property adjoining the Henry | Eberle cemetery. { The D.D. of A. (Dew Drops of America) | with his parents. | Mrs. Jacob Nissley was at Elizabeth- Jacob MeGirl received a new the Heilig Sisters received a new piano last chopping mill Lancaster Ed. Kline of near Manheim, is home is the latest of our already large list of se- cret organizations. 2 eh ors Su : town on Monday. On Monday William Scholing reduced the price of bread and will hereafter do a A son was born to John orton and strictly cash business. | wife last Wednesday. Mrs. Charles Blessing of Marietta, was C. H. Zeller sold the property of Moses’ in town several days. Gantz in this place, to Clinton kby of I ap- ho township, on private terms. | Harry Ebersole and four of the Way | Brothers accompanied the Salunga Band to Manheim last Saturday evening. Emanuel Young and wife were at Lancaster last Wednesday. E. S. Weaver took a number of hor- has been ses to Lancaster on JZonday:. | Hamilton Inners of this place, | | granted a pension of six dollars a month | | Harry Stokes and son Roy, of Han- | over, were here on Sunday. Lert Fisher and family of Lancaster, were in the village on Sunday. John Shumaker and 4Zae Raymond were at Lancaster last Saturday. through the agency of M. V. Kilburn. The narrow stairway at John Murray's which caused the recent fire, being Harry Zeller is doing the work. is re- built. A slight fire occurred at the home of Jno. Murray on Wednesday morning but extinguished beforemuch damage was doue. Charles McFadden, former proprietor of the Red Lion hotel, has taken the exclusive agency for this borough for a patent win- was | | Mrs. George Demmy was the guest lof Mary Ann Easton on Saturday. Abram Shelly and wife of A/ilton Grove, were in town on AZonday. Chester Hubley, wife and three chil- dren of Philadelphia, are in town. Miss Lizzie Mickey visited the fami- ly of Jacob Garman near AZaytown. dow lock, James Glatfelter last Thursday erected in the Henry Eberle cemetery, a very fie | granite monument on the family lot of H. | H. Strickler. George Brown’s Sons will shortly put in- | to their No. 1 mill a new dynamo. It will | have a capacity of 900 lights and will be direct connected. Abe Ichler returned home on Mrs. Frank Faker who has been ill for day after an absence of several months. some time, was suddenly attacked by severe Eli Eshleman moved into the spell of neuralgia on Saturday evening but' , . oh side of his new double house on Thurs- Satur- west at present is improved. | Bete Jaroe screws were blown off a gen- day. a on Wednesday by | A shooting match will be held at adrew S. Holwag- William Gantz’s Hotel Marietta tomor- wd escaped in- row. New Market wagon for sale cheap or xchange for pork or beef. Apply Christ Wachstetter is lying critically | ki oo Lydia Greiner's executor brought | suit against John B. Myers, of Mount! Joy, to recover $1,100 on a promis- sory note. Frank N. Mumma, ot the firm of Keene & Mumma, the extensive shoe dealers at Lancaster, was in town last Wednesday. Mr. Sumner, a native of South Africa now a student at Lebanon Valley col- lege, will lecture in the U. B. church on Sunday morning. J. S. Carmany was one of the cor- mittee that decided to purchase a pipe organ for $1,300 for the Lutheran church at Mount Joy. W. M. Franklin, attorney for David Bowman, has issued an execution against Solon Z. Landis of East Done- gal township, for $300. Misses Mary Bishop, Annie Easton, Lizzie Beatty, Gabriel Easton, Charles Bishop, visited George Demmy’s, two miles north of town on Sunday. Several desirable rooms for rent a short distance north of town. Lady occupant desired. Call on or address, M. N. Stauffer, Mount Joy, Pa, E. H. Reider will occupy the dweil- ing one door east of the hotel and will have his saddler shop in the building opposite his residence on April 1st. 75 first-class apple trees for Fall planting. Smith’s Cider, York Imper- ial and Smokehonse. Will be sold at wholesale prices. Inquire at this office. While rebuilding a hog sty on the farm tenanted by Martin E. Shank, 1 mile west of town last Monday, Joseph McGarvey sr., captured a fine black skunk. Benjamin Herr of Manor township, has purchased several lots in this place from Benjamin Brubaker, where he intends to build and reside in the near future. A cteer and a bull Lecame tangled in their stalls la t Saty-day night and on Sunday morning both were lying dead cach in the other's stall. Benjamin Brubaker is the loser. Andrew Hershey of Mountville and D. D. Easton of Lincoln, were on- a gunning trip to Huntingdon county recently and returned with 63 birds, 10 rabbits and several squirrels. Amos Lehman, who died at St. Jos- brought to Mount eph’s hospital, was v or burial by - are nz Not a IMustlaer, “I tell you,” the sprightly passen- ger in the pepper-and-salt suit was saying, “there is nothing like get up and hustle. I hustle. If business doesn’t come to me I go out and hunt it. Yesterday I made nearly $11 re- pairing sewing machines. Had siy I can afford to take a holiday ” jobs. once in awhile. “Well,” slowly replied the ger in the suit of somber black. “I'm not so good on the hustle. I've only had one job in the last six months.” “That’s too bad,” replied the other, “What's your occu passen- sympathizingly. pation?” “Building lighthouses.” And the conversation drooped.— She Felt Wicked, Revivalist—Is it possible that you fance? Fair Sinner—Oh, ves, often. “Now tell me, honestly and fairly, non't you think the tendency of danc- ing is toward sin?” “I must confess while dancing I have thoughts.” “Aha! I feared so. When is it that you have wicked thoughts?” “When my partner steps toes.”—N. Y. Weekly. that sometimes very wicked on my How He Reached Her Heart. “She has accepted you, you say?” “Yes.” “But she refused you a month ago, when you told her you were worth a million dollars and would lay it all at ier feet.” “She did.” “Then how ‘did she come to change her mind?” “I marked my fortune down to niue hundred and ninety-nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars.” —Leslie’s Weekly. Three of a Kind. Eila—Bella told me that you told her that secret I told you not to tell her. Stella—She’s a mean thing—I told her not to tell you I told her. Ella—Well! I told her I wouldn’t tell you she told me—so don’t tell her I did.—Brooklyn Life. Ditterness. “There's that girl singing ‘A Bird in a Gilded Cage!’” said the nervous man. “Yes,” answered the boarding house wag. “If I had a bird that couldn’t sing any better than that, I'd open the cage and let it fly away.,”—Wash- ington Star. The Correct Answer. “So you have captured the moon- shiners,” said the chief to his lieuten- ant. “Good enough! How did you happen to be so successful?” “Well, sir, we went on a still hunt,” replied the lieutenant, who dearly loved a merry jest.—Leslie’s Weekly eee liana os Jumpzd on a Ten Penny Nail. The little daughter of Mr. J. N. Powell jumped on an inverted r adi 3 Victims by tke Score. | Rich Men Whe Can Trace Their Fi- | vpancial Downfall to Golf, Horses, Dogs and Antiquities Are Quite Numerous, How many tuen have been ruined | by hobbies? That is a question that | cannot be accurately answered, yet ! the number is known to be large. : All hobbies, from stamp-collecting and amateur photography to deer- | stalking, have had their victims. Ken- neth Price, the well-known Scottish | golf player, who died about six months ago, owed his downfall en- tirely to golf. Ile was the son of Gordon Price, a wealthy Scottish ironmaster, who left him his business | and a big fortune. Kenneth started playing golf as a boy, and for 25 years he lived solely for the game, playing it, literally, day and night; for he had his well-known links at Alderley lighted by electric lights at a cost of $35,000, so ghat night should not | stop him when he wanted to play. At St. Andrew’s and all the great golfing centers he spent thousands, living at the most expensive hotels and spending his time on the links. He did the thing well, certainly, for he held five amateur championships and paid his private caddie $1,500 a year. He devoted only ten days a year to business, the remaining 355 to golf, and the reason of his bank- ruptey was easily attributable to golf. It was yachting that brought about the downfall of Elliot Reid, the own- er of the famous English racing boat, Mjyrteia. Je owned, altogether, 53 boats in the course of his caresr, and he said that for ten years he had never been out of sight of one of his beloved craft. His love of yachting amounted to a monomania, and though he had an income of $30,000 a year, it could not keep pace with his expenditures on yachts. When he was | brought into the bankruptey court his yachting expenses were given— truly enough-—as the reason of his failure. Recently there died, at Bloemfon- tein, South Africa, Whyte Morley, 50 | Every Kind ¢f Craze Counts Its CENTS A YEAR PROF. RUDOLPH VIRCHOW., (Famous German Pathologist and Patriot Now 80 Years Old.) Dr. Virchow held in his own land. It is not often that a nation ex- presses its affection for a living hero. It is reported in Berlin that the kaiser himself will be present at the celebration and that he has in store a beautiful gift. Rudolph Virchow was born Oc- tober 13, 1821, at Schievelbein, a small town in Pomerania. He was educated at the gymnasium in Berlin, gradu- ating at the age of 18. He then began his medical studies and was graduated from the University Berlin in 1843. From the beginning of his medical career to the present day he has been in the habit of oc- casionally startling the scientific world with some new discovery or theory. The study of disease be made a special feature of his work, and the volumes which he has written con- | cerning his investigations in this di- rection are among the most valuable which the modern school of med- icine has at its command. His con- ception of cellular processes intro- duced wholly new and most fertile ideas as to all the phenomena of disease. This invaluable pathology would alone have him famous, but his researches contribution to made in | other fields have produced equally brilliant results. In 1856 he was ap- pointed professor of pathological anatomy at Berlin, and this position he still holds. > In political life Prof. Virchow has also been an active figure, and he has been a brave and outspoken lead- er on the side of progress and lib- erality. At one time he had Bismarck as an opponent, and the controversy’ be- came so heated that it was rumored the scientist and the iron chancellor were to fight a duel, but this never occurred. He was for many years a member of the municipal counci of Berlin, and it is due to his inf ence that the sanitary conditig that and other German citi been so much improved. Hi activities he never allowg fere, however, with hi suits, which he his proper. an though he often more like recreat work. ce mann Not the Grammatical Kind. “What is a conjunction?” asked the teacher. “That which joins together,” wag the prompt reply. “Give an illustration,” said th: teacher. ’ The up-to-date miss hesitated ana blushed. “The marriage service,” she said, aj last.—Chicago Post. His Own Success, Miss Kulcher—Did you ever go in fof! ature, Mr. Gay? —Well—er—nat exactly, buf] gllece I wrote a 5 of \ ~