iS that by 8. P, har- C00 PAGE FIVE 5 Dos OO0006 LOOLLOLLOLOC Mortuary Recordings OOOOO0O000O0O0OO0OOOOOOIOINIIIOIINHNNI NINN NANRNRNAIRINANIN Double “5 & H” Green Stamps Saturday Mornings Until 12 o'clock LEINBACH and COMPANY ¢ OO000000000000O00CO000O000OOOCO0O0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0 OOO000000O00O00O0OOOOO0O0O000 The Vow That THE BULLETIN, MT. JOY, PA. WHRANNINIOOVOLOOOOOODDOOOOOOI000000000000OO0O00O0O0O0O000C of Lodge, No, 367, formed Church of ANCASTER | Te PENNA. POLLLOOOO00000000000O00000000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOS and who resides : at Wernersville, Pa. —— Rev. William J. Lowe of the Re- An Overdose of Poison Proves Effec- thousand down. Maytown and a AND THE AUTO WAS BOUGHT Copyright, Puck By MAX MERRYMAN Daughter, — If the flyers can have an auto I don’t see why we can’t have one. I don’t believe that they have any more income than | we have, and they have a four-thou- sand-dollar car. They say you can get FAMILY HAD A CLOSE CALL | a car of that price by paying only a tive as a Life Saver The Son.—A thousand! The auto High- | Went Wrong “Five dollars, sir. wife of gellent weapon which will bring dows Frank Lenhard of Mountville and a man at a distance of fifty yards.” John of Landisville, with whom Mrs. Mr. Varin fingered the revolver Hershey made her home. The fun- Sagonty 2 Hed rh spose Play 3 , on- | thoug! s wife's actions ha Tal was fei at 9 ek on ol him with such despair that his only | thought was death. He had married her because she was beautiful, although she did not | posess a penny, and he had takem her to a comfortable home, where | she soon felt bored to death, because (Continued from page 1) Christian Musser of Mountville; Da- vid of Columbia; Fannie, day morning from her and at 10 o'clock from the Menno- nite meeting house at Landisville.! Interment was made in the Silver Spring Cemetery, Allen S. Myers Allen S. Myers, senior and last | pretty. surviving member of the firm ot After a while she grew tired of Myers Bros. florists, passed away at| her uninteresting, careless husband, 1:45 ooclock Friday afternoon at his | 80d eloped with a handsome young | man of leisure, who filled her ears home at Eldorado, Blair Co. He | with all the pretty words she had had been in failing health for thee) longed to hear from the lips of her years. He was born in this borough husband, who felt too secure of her on Feb. 15, 1859. In 1883 he estab- to pay compliments to her, though lished green houses at Eldorado, he loved her as much as it was pos where he continued to reside until Hil rym ove = one. , his death, On Jan. 2, 1883, Mr. My | F. Pp or the revolver, ers was united in marriage with | balled a cab :nd drove home, with Miss Lucie BE. Shaw of Altoona, Wo) the rooms where every little thing survives with these children: Mrs. | reminded him of her. It 1s an ex | | she had nothing to do but look | MASONIC HUME NOTES The event of paramount interest to the Homes in the week past, was the | breaking of ground for the erection | of “Berks Home,” the memorial , building of the Masons of Berks | County, which took place on Thurs- | day, May 6, 1915. | The beautiful weather of a perfect | spring day added to the attraction of |the contemplated object and was | sufficient to bring to the grounds a (concourse of people in addition to the Berks County delegation, the men, women and children of the Homes and many from Elizabeth- town and vicinity, ag well ag from Mount Joy and Lancaster. The proceedings were exceedingly |interesting, and the assemblage | presented a picturesque group on the (village green. | The site selected of this memorial ‘junction of the north and east boule |vards, and is about five hundred for the erection | The proceedings were exceedingly |interesting, and the assemblage pre- building, ig at the member of Chandler Lodge, No. 227 jof Reading, Pa., then pronounced the benediction. | The other have provided memorials at | Homes, are Districts comprises the Lodges of Lancaster|ill, and they were siding at Kinderhook, i trict No, 20, for the County of Blair,|cian. | whose memorial is a rest house , modeled water, Other districts have in con-|the pests | templation, memorial | ings. The regular religious services of| Catherine Albright, ten years old, (Sunday, May 10, 1915 were conducted |was cleaning the by Rev. Frank Croman, pastor of Christ’s Lutheran Church of Eliza-| knowing that it was | bethtown. The services were en-|poison, but supposing that probably saved County, whose memorial is in the|from death because of an overdose reservoir and water system; and Dis-|and the prompt response of a physi- Recently the family had been an- after a Crecian Temple of |noved by mice, in order to get rid of 38Y poison was mixed with Dice to have an auto. It would save mixed with it was dealers would jump at the chance to The family of Samuel Albright, re- gell a four-thousand-dollar car for five narrowly es- hundred down if they got good securi- Masonic Districts that caped death Monday evening as a re- ty for the balance. I know a fellow | the sult of a peculiar mistake. Through wp, got a fine car by paying only two | No. 1, which poison the entire family became very hundred down. Auto dealers are so thick, and competition is so sharp, you can get any kind of an accommo- ! dation if you want to buy a car. The Mother.—Is that so? I must that I think it would be awfully | Home build-| cornmeal, which wag placed in a dish a lot of car-fares and, of course, We and put into a cupboard. Yesterday would learn to drive it ourselves. | They say that you can drive I for- | cupboard. Seeing get how men miles on a El solene, and it comes very Cc the cornmeal in a dish, and not 8 EE Tien might go in with some one else and buy a whole barrel. Seems as though want ourselves, and a HNttle { We | Wednesday, May 12, 1915, HOW A DEEP SEATED GOUGH Ard Sore Lungs Were Overs come by Vinol—Mr. Hill man’s Statement of Facts Follows: Camden, N. J.—“I had a deep seated cough, a run-down system and m: lungs were awfully weak and sore. Iam an electrician by occupation and my cough kept me awake nights so I thought at | times I would have to give up. {tried everything everybody suggested and had taken so much medicine I was dis- | gusted. | , “One evening I read about Vinol and | decided to give it a trial. Soon I noticed an improvement. I kept on taking it and today I am a well man. The sore- ness is all gone from my lungs, I do not have any cough and have gained fifteen yunds in oa and I am telling my riends that Vinol did it.”’ — FRaNE ; HILLMAN, Camden, N. J. It is the curative, tissue-building in- fluence of cods’ livers aided by the blood- making, strength creating properties of tonic iron, contained in Vinol, that made it s0 successful in Mr. Hillman’s case, We ask every person in this vicinit suffering from weak lungs, chronic coughs, or a run-down condition of the system to try a bottle of Vinol on our 1arantee to return your money if it ails to help you. W. D. CHANDLER & CO. Never Satfefled To think a little less of what we o (hanced by the splendid singing of a)placed there for future use, emptied wg might afford one if the Highfiyers what will make others happy, is the solo “Meet Mother in the Skies,” by|the contents into a bag of meal and and nearly all of our other neighbors | gurest way to find happiness. have one. What do you think about it girls are always Miss Katherine Aumiller (duet “Sun of My Soul,” by Misses and a|set it aside, ing, both of Elizabethtown. On Sunday next, May 17, 1915, we|that her brother Masons and their friends| members Mountville, who' will take charge of|Mrs. Albright, of the family. Miss Katherine Aumiller and Harriet Morn-| bright made some corn cakes taking the meal from the bag, and unawars daughter had emptied the | the intention of ending his life fm vards north of Grand Lodge Hall|will be honored by a visit from our|poisoned meal into the bag. All the yp, iio Go ahead—don’t mind me. Mr, and The Mother.—Now Father! Catherine and Last evening, for supper, Mrs, Al- father? Father.—Business what difference does it make what H think? If the rest of you are set on getting it I don’t count. | | is rotten. But 1 never do, | | | | discontented, for, the more selfishness gets, the more 8 warts. It can never be satisfied. Missouri has noted a big increase | in automobile registrations this A year. During the entire year of 1918, $4,387 cars were registered, while up The Daughter—We can economize geptember 10 of this year no hess A. M. Grifin, Mrs. Walter J. Lee, Mrs, Othello Hite and Eugene Myers A. Wallis and Ethel, at home. Deceased was a member of | the discovery of his body by the | junction of the north and east boule-{199 of 3 opal | Wighth Avene. Methodist Eniseoba | police, the arrival of the doctor, the |vards, and is | street outside the house filled with |yards north Church, Altoona. Funeral services were held from his late residence, on Sunday afternoon. Henry Gallagher Henry Gallagher, a well known barber of Lancaster, died suddenly on Friday at the home of his daugh- ter, Mrs. Abner Hull, at No. 217 N. Prince street, where he made his home. His health had been poor for the past several years, as he had an affliction of the heart. De- ceased was in his 64th year and was a son of the late Levi D. Gal- lagher, an auctioneer of thig place. He was born in this borough, at- tending the public schools and after- wards learning the trade of barber- ing. About thirty-five years ago he wenr to the business there for several years. He went from there to Brooklyn, where he was in business for 18 years. He returned again to Lan- caster and conducted a shop, retir- ing two years ago on account of ill health. He leaves one daughter, Mrs. Hull and a brother, Levi, in the real estate business in Brook- lyn, and one step-sister, Mrs. Sallie Denlinger, of this place, ns lI eee Mayflower Relics. Among the Maine people who claim t® have genuine Mayflower relics is Mrs. Hiram Butterfield, of Farming- ton, who has a plece of bed cord used on the Mayflower. It is made of whale’s sinews. One of Mrs. Butter fleld’s ancestors came over in that historic vessel. Mrs. Butterfield also cherishes with great care a large conch shell which belonged to her grandfather, Elisha Lambert, and which was used at Martha's Vine- yard during the Revolutionary War as a signal of danger from the ap- proach of Britishers. Mustard {8 grown in England to a considerable extent in the eastern counties and the Fen district and to some extent In the Midlands. It is ordinarily grown in heavy black sofl, but it is generally believed that the grop draws a great deal of strength from the soll. The yield an acre is variable, ranging from twenty to thirty bushels, but twenty bushels is usually considered a fair yield. The seed rate is usuilly about three to four pounds an acre when drilled in rows from tn to twelve inches apart. “Berle”, from which Berlin has "caught her name, means uncultivated land. Slavonian Wends, the earliest settlers on the sandy plain, could make but little out of the soil. The population in 1832 was only a quarter of a million; less than forty years later it was 300,000, and now it runs into two millions. The man who gave to Berlin its present form was Fred- erick II, but Frederick the Great and the Great Elector started the noble hobby of beautifying the wondertul eity. It has been shown in practice that concrete buildings require less artifi- cial light than those of slow-burning mill construction. This is owing to the reflection of light from the white walls and ceilings and columns and | also to the fact that it is possible to supply buildings of this character | with greater window area than | others. i A rir Hunting Season Plans Plang for the hunting season next | fall are already being discussed by p~- bers of the State Game Commis- Orders for license tags to be hn hunters who pay the state of $1 have been sent to the ter and it is expected that about 000 will be printed. The tags be salmon colored this year. J \ ™ Lancaster and carried on | of water. | & curious crowd, to live for revenge. couple and kill giving himself up to the police. He saw himself the hero of a sensa | tional trial ending with acquittal This prospect being far more ak |r 1,0dge, luring than suicide, he went to bed to dream of the dreadful punishment he would inflict upon the two who had wrecked his happiness. | The next day—a cold, gray, cheer | less morning in December—he got | Would prove | up, as usual, and sat down to eat his breakfast alone, before he went |ancient x custom, he called upon Among. the frisad oar out of Caldwell, N. J,, for the last father. But I am sure that we could to his office. Brother Rev. Edward W. Rushton of aie Flends » Pres to offer trip of the night to Newark at 18:88 do without some of our expensive | Many Jong. monotonous days fol T.odge, No. 400, to invoke a divine hs : ay yas us sister-in-law, o'clock recently. deserts, and we could eat 1gss meat, phe hb i geass oi hie] blessing upon the undertaking. st rs Sat 3b Ai of on There was one passenger, an emr wi is Series ug ong rag e ; ’ : urneye 0 e as : a o buy. T if you were willing, Ma- understood his first excitement; but Chairman Marx then gave a Homes for the beecasion. flove of ue Pannen Dairy Compacy, bel, you and I could go without new [to his colleagues he still posed as sketch of the project to erect this —— a —— ound for Montclair. Spring suits, and Joe could do the; - | the stern unforgiving husband who Memorial building, and stated that it : Hoffman rang his gong at the ap- same. | ive only in order to get revenge. |represented the RELIGIOUS NEws proach to Pompton turnpike. The | Furiously ‘dipping his pen In the ink, | he sald, time and time again, in a | voice that trembled with indignation, | “Some day I will catch the two, and (then I will kill them, if I have to | give up my own life to the gallows | for it.” | The others tried to calm him, bat © representing the Right Worshipful | he refused to listen to them: “Never, never will I forgive or forget. 1 [think too much of my honor for | that!” | After a while the others grew | tired of his eruptions and did not | appear to notice them at all; and, as | tor Varin himself, the whole affair | had long ago ceased to interest him. When he was alone he surprised him- | self feeling happy at the thought of | being a free man once more, and one | night in July he slipped the still loaded revolver into his pocket, walk- ed down to the river and sauntered | along the drive, | It was a real summer day, light | and hot, as such days are in New { York. Women passed by, dressed {In the lightest of gossamer gowns with low neck and short sleeves look- | ing like flowers just breaking out of | the buds. Mr. Varin looked at them, | threw his revolver into the river, and invited a charming young girl te | dance. PAID A GHOST'S DEBTS. Old Woman's Superstition Brings Queer Case Before Judge. An amazing story of an old wom- an’s superstition came before Judge Drummond at Balieborough, county Cavan, in the course of an action brough by Miss Anne Brady against a local farmer named Connell. The plaintiff said that in June last the defendant told her that the ghost of her brother Phil, who had been dead twenty-six years, was haunting him because he forgot to pay de- fendant 70 shillings he owed him. The witness was frightened and paid the money, which the defendant swore on “the poker and tongs” was due. The defendant said he, after Phil died, walked nine miles to the wake to see if he could get an op- portunity of mentioning the debt, but he was not given a chance. nied having sald anything whatever about Phil's ghost. His Honor, in giving judgment, said he firmly be- Heved the story. A Little Scare. Percival came running to his grandma one day, asking for a drink “Quick, quick, grandma” he sald, “give me a drink of water, quick!” After he got his drink, he said: “The reason that I was in such a hurry, I thought I swallowed a worm while eating an apple and 1 wamted to drown it.” Read Re : #9 Standing in front of the big mir |sented a {ror in their bedroom, he pressed the | village green, all of Altoona; Allen S. jr, Marian | cold muzzle of the revolver against | his temple and shivered. He saw the | hee a scene that was to follow— [of this memorial building, is at the|and a member of Charity Lodge, No.|from Columbia. received the|scene and administered emitics. fellow-guests on| were violently world now be to catch the gull . i : them both ii |spicuous object facing the approach Pa. in Company A {to the Homes by the north boulevara.' Ment; went to Chambersburg by way| sured footed it from |opened by Brother F. A. Marx, P. M. "eT¢ over the Allegheny Mountains No. 80, and Chairman of to Pittsburgh; thence down the Ohio | to New Or- leans. and from there by sailing ves- the sel to Lobos Island, where they land-| ed and participated in the battle of In the war of the Rebel- lion he served as First Lieutenant of Company B. Fourth Penna, Regiment. He de- | picturesque group on the|the religious services of the day. The site selected for the erection| Thomas Magee, a guest of the Homes Norristown, about five hundred|felicitations of his of Grand Lodge Hall.) his 90th birthday, ! : which will be of the, Who is Brother {The building, happily domiciled to the same feresting army history. 1846 he participatted |architecture of the other Homes’, [0 2nd Pa. The interesting ceremonies were °F Harrisburg, then [the Committee on Berks and Mississippi Rivers {who presided over - the He expressed the | work they Memorial, ceremonies, hopa that were about to begin, a blessing to mankind, ora Orus, and in accordance with a wise and donations of the Berks County, 2500 Freemasons of which comprises the Seventh Ma- sonic District of Pennsylvania, and that it would be fitting and proper that Brother Jenkin Hill, District Deputy Grand Master of District No. of Worship Trinity Lutheran Rev. I. H. Kern, Paster Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. Grand Master, Brother J. Henry Wil- liams of Philadelphia, should proceed with the breaking of the ground. Brother George F. REisenbrown of Lodge No. 227 and T easurer of the Berks Home Committee, wieldii the pick. District Deputy Jenkin Hill worked the shovel, and Brother Mil- {ton W. Yocum, P. M. of Lodge, No. {435 wheeled the first barrow of earth.’ 7:30 P. M. Presbyterian Rev. Frank G. Bossert, Pastor Services next Sabbath at 10:30 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Prayer Meeting this 7:30. ! Methodist Episcopal | Under the leadership «f Brother Rev, C. B. Johnston, Pastor | Bisenbrow n, al] present sang “Amer- Sunda: School 9:30 2 M lica,” which was followed by the sinz- ¥ a r * Public worship, 7:30 P. M. Epworth League, 6:30 P. M. Wednesday evenin, ra meet- | Brother Hon. George W. Wagner ing, 7:30. y 2 aver ;of Lodge, No. 35 and Associate | Judge of the Common Pleas Court of ing of “Onward Christian Soldiers” 10:20 4 M. and Jby 32 boys and girls, the children of | the Homes. United Brethren Berks County, was introduced and Rev. D. E, Long, Pastor delivered a masterful address in Sunday School, 9 A. M which he complimented the manage (O]q People’s Day Services 10:15 ment of the Homes on the appear-| 5 M. ‘ance of the children jand of their care in separate build-| lings for the sexes. He spoke of the board charity of the Fraternity in jcaring for the aged and infirm of ev | both sexes, as well ag the orphan | wards. He could appreciate the work | being done here, as he was the pro- [duct and now a Trustee of the i Bethany Orphans Home of the Re- Preachin i > service : i formed Church of Womelsdorf, Pa., and 7:30 2 M. 5 at10:20.4. NM. | from which more than 1,000 children Juni { or and Int | have gone out into the world, and p SrSliste,. 0 ¥, 8 | live successful lives. Senior C. B., 6:45 P. M | The hymn sung by the children, to tha on | the Saviour of the world, ang that evening at 7:30 P. M |of “My Country tis of Thee” are 4 | indicative of the principles of Free- i masonry and of those taught to the {children of the Homes. When you j teach them love of God and love of | Country, what more of the Homes, junior ¢, |, 6:30 Pp. M. 6: 3 Senior C. BE, 6:30 P. M. Preaching, 7:30 P. M. Preayer meeting every Wednesday ening at 7:30, Church of God C. D. Rishel, Pastor Sunday School, 9:30 A. M. Trinity United Evangelieal Rev. I. E. Johnson, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 A. M. | Preaching services at 10:30 A. M. can you do for ang 7:30 P. M. | children. Communion services with evening | He stated that Berks County was sermon by Presiding Wider Hell {the first of the Masonic districts of May 23rd. |the State, to break ground for a Prayer meeting | memorial home; that it is an honor evening at 7:30 | much appreciated by them, and that . jit was in keeping with many other, St. Luke's Episcopal things in which Berks County Was Rev. Lewls Chester Morrison, Reetor first. His elosing remarks were on Sunday School, 9:18 A WM the subject of selfishness. It ig what! Morning prayer and sermon, 10:80 {you do for other that counts, AM : Chairman Marx then called upon Tvening prayer and sermon, 7:30 'the architect. Brother Calvin James P. M. RT ‘of Lodge, No. 549, to deliver the, Holy Communion (regularly) th plans and specifications of the build- Sunday In each month, 9:89 A. M. every Wednesday On Monday, May 10, 1915, Brother|the night all in the| They were very ill the entire nigh | buildings, will at this site be a con- Mexican War. He enlisted at Reading|and are still confined to bed to-day, couldn’t do as so many are doing now | Regi-| but their speedy recovery is now as- g;q have no breakfast? It would save News From Our Many Local Houses was deserted. Divine Worship, 10:30 A, M. amd| and Shaw and the passenger got off, evening at ahead of the car. Prayer meeting every Wednesday | Mrs. Blymier ate heartily. Later in in lots of ways, and why couldn't we ! because violently ill, put a small mortgage > te si make the first payment? s of folks SAD. J.P Rennsdy Was summoned do. Then, I have often thought that | Tre hastened to the we don’t need so large a house as this. | An We might let two or three rooms. Or | were vomit- we might move out and take a small ’ ill and Magee|ing. Thig was due to an overdose of flat that we could rent for a good deal | at the|the poison. Then he thought of his wife, to (same granite and Indiana limestone Homes with his aged wife, hag an in-| patients for a long whom the news of his death would |trycture, and conform perhaps come as a relief, and resolved His one aim | After working on his less than we could get for this house. time the physi- The Mother—So we could! I de | clare, Mabel, you ought to be in busi- nger. ’ Gan pronounced them out of dang ¢ ness. You have so many good business | ideas. I have been wondering if we | a lot in the course of a year, and I do think that all of us eat too much. Of course, father would have to have 8POOK WALKED THROUGH CAR. something; but I think the rest of us | could do without. Then I think that | Thrilling Experience of Motormam We could set a plainer table, and— and Conductor in New Jersey. or Father.—Now see Lote, Masia) mnly ou’'ve not going to come down to po- This fale is sole Worl 10°59 tatoes and bread to buy an auto like | Motorman Howard Hoffman and Con- the Softheads did. ductor John Shaw, of the Bloomfield > : The Mother.—No one wants you to avenue trolley line, who took thelf .,.,¢ Gown to bread and potatoes, seme Se. meena The Daughter.—Why couldn't we let the maid go and do the work our selves, mamma? [I am sure that I would be willing to. If we come down to two meals a day it would lessen the work a lot and give us more time with the car. Let’s let the maid go. The Mother.—I am sure that I am willing to if you are. What we would save in that way would buy both of us auto coats in a month or two. And there’s another thing: We wouldn't need to go away next summer if we | had an auto. We could stay at home | “There he is now. Is that my ima- gang take auto trips as so many do. | | glnation or is that a man?” cried Then there's lots of little ways we | | Hoffman, pointing down the tracks could save. Mrs. Skinner was real sur- | They looked and prised when I told her the other day | | saw the man Hoffman had seen, that you and I each gave fifty cents a | ' hands in pockets, his head bent, week to the church. She said that she | | and plodding slowly along. They ran thought twenty-five was enough to give | after him. The figure swung ahead with our large membership. If you and | headlight illuminated the road, which Hoffman peered back over his shoulder, and when he look- | ed forward again he saw a man, with | bowed head and hands in his pockets, | plodding along not 50 feet ahead of | his car. He slammed the brakes, but | the car ran over the man. Hoffman | but they did not find the mangled | body they expected. “It was all your imagination,” said | Shaw. { at the same distance, with no appar I cut our subscription down to twenty- | - | rent effort of eluding them. The three five cents each it would be a saving | | men ran 100 yards beyond an eleo- of fifty-cents a week right there, and tric light, and the figure suddenly with all the money pouring into the | disappeared. They stared at each missionary treasuries nowadays 1 | other foolishly. think that if we gave a dollar each it | “I am an goose-flesh,” said Shaw. Would be enough. There's lots of little | | “I swear I saw a man” ways we could save if we bought that | The two others vowed it as sol &uto. What do you think father? | emnly. They turned around again, The Father.—I think that you will | | and they saw the man again. He ®&et it, no matter what I think. | was walking toward them, The Mother.—Now, father! | middle of the track. The three The Son.—I bet I could learn to | white-faced men stood still on the @rive the thing in three days. I'd be | front platform of the oar, speechless. Willing to out down a good deal on | | As the man passed under the electric XY cigars to help pay for it and I'd | light all sought a view of his face, Just as soon as not cut out & lunch | but they could not distinguish his 2°¥ and then when I don’t feel very | | features. The man continued at his Buns x we gan get the spondulix | Qotding pace, walking to the" gum. | 10 19 et event | gucas we cna | doen the car, and suddenly dis- 8ay, dad, why couldn't you borrow the , first-payment money on your life-in aR surance? | Wellesley’s Anclent Oak. Mother.—Sure enough! Depend og | A wide-spreading oak which ex- Joe for the right idea at the right | | perts have declared must have been | time. . | growing at the time of the discovery Daughter.—Oh, papa, do! + of America by Columbus is a land- Father—I've borrowed on my life- | | mark on the estate of the late Arthur insurance now untfl I have about | | Humewell in Wellesley. reached the limit. The magnificent tree measures 26 Mother—Why not go to the limit feet in circumference at the base. It and borrow enough for the first pay-| is a noticeable landmark on account tnent on the aute? It would really be of its unusual size. It intersects the | & saving in many ways to have the ‘fence which separates the fertile auto. We could take you into business flelds of the Hunnewell estate from A every morning and pick you up in the 'the highway, and thus arrests the at- | evening. It would give you a bettes tention of the passerby. standing in the business world if i The late Mr. Hunnewell took great A Was known that you had a fine autg, pride in the ancient tree. It has with- | It looks so prosperous. We might look stood the ravages of pests for a great | 8t autos and see what we can do. many years and is apparently in con- dition to live for a great many more decades. Mr. Hunnewell once had the tree examined by an expert from the Smithsonian Institution, who de- elared that it was between 400 and 500 years old. Eliot, the apostle to the Indians, rr Ae ns What an Oid Housel The house occupied by A. L. Gantz in Mt, Joy township, on the Conewago creek, was once called Redsecker’s mill, It was bulk fn frequently passed the towering oak | 1776 while going to and from South Na- tick, where he preached to the In- ya dians, the tree being beside what And Yet He's a D was an old trall Peter Sides Advertise In the Mt. Joy Bulletin |Y°2IR Old. Salat ing, which he then presented to the Thursday, May 18, Ascension Day. ! contractor, Brother Adam C. Spats Holy Communion, 7 A. M. { { 5 f We print all the mews fit to ean {work of that than 36485 were on the books, with more coming every day. Word, For Ste, For hel FOR SALE—A good as new 3-burm- er gasoline stove in Al condition Cost $15 but will sell very cheap as have no further use. Call at this office, tt FOR SALE—A 1914 Twin 2-speed 9 to 13 horsepower Dayton motoreyele, fully equipped, speedometer, prests lite tank, big lamp, good as new. First come, first served. Apply to OC. O. Brandt, Mount Joy. 2t. FOR SALE—A complete pony team Pony is a sorrel mare, 10 years old, well broke, any child can drive her. Also 2-seated wagon, harness, ete. Call on or address, A. D. Frank- houser, Sporting Hill, Pa, apr. 28-4t FURNITURE REPAIRING of alt kinds at very reasonable prices. Anti. que Work a specialty. Also new work, H. C. Myers, Mount Joy Pa, may 12-2t White Leg- Day Old Chicks—S. C. hors for sale, 10c a ch. Also Cus tom Hatching at 4c a ch. Newpher Smeltzer, Mount Joy, tf NOTICE—I am prepared to do all kinds of hauling, plowing lots, and kind. Charges very reasonable. Jacob Brown, Mt. Joy. tf LOST—Between Florin Arch and the Colebrook road, a lady's opem face gold watch with initials B. C. G. on back. Return to Bessie OC. Gainer, Rheems, Pa, DAY OLD CHICKS—S. C. W. Leg horn for sale. Custom Hatching specialty. Write or phone for prices to Springdale Farm, B. L. Keener, Salunga, Pa. Bell Phone 130-23. jan 13-t£. FOR SALE—A good bedroom suite complete with mattress, bedding, etc Also feather tick ang pillows, a Do- mestic Sewing Machine, 2-burner gas blate, a good stove, For particulars call on Miss Nettie Culp, Mt. Joy. tt ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Estate of CHRISTIAN S. FLORY, late of East Donegal Township, Lan- caster County, Pa.. deceased. Letters of Administration on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, HENRY H. EBY, HARRY M. FLORY, Mount Joy, R. D. 2 Administrators, apr 28-6, lee Cream Sodas lee Cream Sundaes The season is here and we are prepared to serve you with the vard ous drinks and pure delicious Ice Gream This we can furnish you by thé plate, cone, pint or quart. If you are particular about what you drink or eat along these lines this is the place to come when you are tired, hungry or thirsty, Ww. B. Frank Kready, Atty