The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, September 14, 1901, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    
oTNME ©
NEWS TOLD IN BRIEF,
Local -Happenings as Reported bygf>ur
Many Reporters.
Fred Snyder was at Atlantic City on
Sunday,
John Hossler and wife were at York
this week.
Eli Carson was at Columbia on
Wednesday.
El Weaver received a lot of mustang
ponies last Saturday.
Miss Gertrude Menaugh was at Lan-
caster on Wednesday,
Saddler Rider transacted business at
Elizebethtown, on Monday.
H. H. Reider, of Manheim,
visitor to town on Wednesday.
John Fletcher, of Maytown, has
been granted a pension of $12.
Ed Gish and wife of Elizabethtown,
were visitors to town on Sunday,
Ira Early of Campbellstown, was the
guest of C. A. Wiley on Sunday.
David H. Cooper of Enhaut was the
guest of J. D. Easton over Sunday.
Jac. S. Carmany, our enterprising
merchant, was at Palmyra last Sunday.
Mrs—Annie Clark had a new
roof put on her dwelling on Wednesday
Mrs. Fred Snyder left on Saturday
for.a visit to her sister near Lancaster.
was a
single
Mrs. Charles Blessing spent several
days with friends at Marietta this week.
Miss Mary Carmany left-on Tuesday
for Madam Cotta’s College at Lancas-
ter.
Samuel Groff and lady friend of
Mastersonville, were in town on Sun-
day.
Albert Fike sold a fine porker to
Butcher Mumma at Mount Joy on
Inesday.
kk Mary Carmany was the guest
Grace Fisher at Palmyra dur-
ast week.
Stauffer
ays with the family
this week.
of Reading spent
of John
s and clocks repaired prompt-
ly by Harry Peopple, Mount Joy, and
all work guaranteed.
Jacob H. Haldeman purchased the
Francis Nauman property on Main
street on private terms.
Lincoln Yellets has secured employ-
ment as one of the gang with Samuel
Landis’ threshing outfit.
Rev. H. M. Miller will baptize a
number of persons at the Cove this af-
ternoon at three o'clock.
Miss Barry Hostetter is = spending
Several days at Harrisburg the guest of
George Stoll.
The watchman’s castle the tool-house
and railing along the board walk at the
depot were repainted this week.
Miss Elizabeth Geyer, after spending
several days in town with her parents,
left for her home in Philadelphia.
Jacob Hostetter, sold his property
on Church street to Mr. Stoler, a
brother of T. F. Stoler’s of this place.
Miss Barry Hostetter of this place ac-
companied by Mrs. George Stoll of
Harrisburg, left for Altoona and other
western cities.
F. E. Klugh of this place,
employed at Lancaster, had
hurt in a turning machine and
present off duty.
William McGarvey moved his
ily and household effects from Market
street to the property he recently pur-
chased from Christian Shatz on Wood
street.
Misses Mary Carmany and Grace
Fisher were visiting at Annville last
week and called on John Hambright
and George Reiter, at Lebanon Valley
College.
The largest cheese in the world is at
the Pan-American exhibition. It weighs
1,100 pounds, is 26 inches high, 36
inches in diameter, and wes made out
of 5,500 quarts of milk.
J. Y. Kline and his force of masons
are now employed in Elizabethtown
putting up the foundations for seyeral
new houses which are being erected by
Mr. Hoffman, of that place.
her sister Mrs.
who is
arm
at
his
1S
fam-
Emlin F. Buller has just prepared a
fine lot of tobacco for housing which
he raised in this place. ~~ Some leaves
measure 43 inches in length and 25
inches in width. It is ; considered a
NOT PROUD oF HIS "HONORS, |
Col, Rickey Is Known Chiefly as the
Godfather of an Noted
Drink,
The Result Of frasing.
Two sons of Harry HY¥nkle, of Maytown,
figured in a driving acqident late Satur-
day evening, just this sidfe of Maytown, in
which their buggy was cor fe tely wrecked
and the young men more + less seriously
injured. They were Ph and neck,
up the Marietta pike with y oyg man
named Seaman, from near D{mneg. < “also in
a buggy. Ahead of them a § “distance
were Mr, and Mrs, John Grad Ve, ?; abuggy,
and just ahead of these latter , 48s Elmer |
Garber in a spring wagon. ring the
chatter of hoofs Mr. Grady pulled@ose over
against the fence and called to M{r. Garber
fame;
is
Some people are born to
others achieve it, while celebrity
thrust upon a few. Among the
ter is Col. Joe Rickey, of Missouri.
But instead of feeling proud of the
fact that he has given his name to
a popular tipple Col. Rickey feels
very much aggrieved. “only a few
years ago,” he said recently, “I was
Col. Rickey, of Missouri, the friend
of senators, judges and statesmen
and something of an authority on po-
litical matters and political move-
ments. As time had dealt lightly
[ with me I had no right to quarrel
| with the world. I am still the friend
of statesmen and politicians, and I

Mr. Garber failed to hear the warn\ing cry. |
The racers missed Mr. Grady’s
a very narrow margin and dashed
spring wagon. The night was very
and Hinkle's excited horse, evidentlly not
seeing the wagon until he was too cloke to
swerve in his course, jumped with his Yore-
feet in the wagon, striking it with sich the world. But am I ever spoken of
3 for those reasons? I fear not. No
force that Mr. Garber’s horse and wagon . ’
od} TI am known to fame as the author of
were turned completely around and heady | the ‘Rickey,’ and 1 have to be satis
. , \ J « < ne -
for Marietin, although ne Wagan be | fied with that. There is one consola-
a v s c y (le ree : v
upset, Ina twinkling the 1p 2 a re 3 | tion in the fact that there are fash-
TOY ’ y rere a tangled : : T \
buggy and young men were in a lang . “J ions in drinks. The present popular-
nes ) y ik 3 Yi X e were |p . 1 :
mass on the turnpike, the young men Ye*® N ity of the Scotch high ball may pos-
beneath the buggy and crying to be extri- lose me my reputation and re-
cated from their dangerous position. Sea- | ¢y 0 me my former fame. °Tis a
man who had cleared the springwagon, consummation devoutly to be wished
turned, and he aud Mr, Grady helped the| gop»
fallen ones to their feet, They were not; —_
very seriously injured. The boggy was Fooled by
dark
| think I keep fairly well in toueh with
sibly
re-
the Barber.
cranks often get fooled, and
make them believe that they are
what they want when they are
not getting it,” says the Milwaukee
Seni “I remember a man I shaved
just twice in a town out in the state,
He wanted a very close shave, so close,
in fact, that he could not feel the
beard by rubbing his face either with
or against the ‘grain.’ It would take
about three-quarters of an hour to ac-
complish this, which was far too much
spend him for ten cents,
orted to stategy. After shav-
fully in the usual way, 1
face with alum water,
which caused the skin to close over
the ends of the hairs, and, rub as he
might, he coud feel a hair. Of
course, in an hour or when the ef
fect of the alum water had worn off,
the beard made its appearance, but he
did not understard the situation. This
is a trick commonly resorted to by
barbers with men who want an uns
reasonably close slave.”
zr “r he
completely wrecked. ve
resem AR erence
Oh How Easy !
Fresh from an eleven inning victory over
a lot of country lads that know as much
an Bsquimaux knows
getting
about base ball as
about raising bananas, an aggregation from
the Cotton Mills and Grey Iron Works at
Mount Joy, came to this place last Satur-
day and were given a blow that almost put
The
to
business entirely.
Ebersole
the team out of the
team depends on its pitcher,
win the game, he having struck out seven-
teen men the Saturday before. In the first
inning the home team fell on Ehersole’s de-
livery and pounded the horsehide wherever
they pleased. The game went on until the
third i nning with Florin at the bat and
three men on bases and the phenomenal (7)
Ebersole sending in benders, rain-bows and
anything imaginable, C. Hollenbaugh came
to bat and drove out a ‘homer,’ scoring four
This was teo much for the vis-
Harry no
10 on
time
so 1 res
ing ‘him cars:
washed his
not
S0,
more runs.
itors and they quit, score 12 to 0.
more toots about his probabilities of enter-
ing the leagues in the future, as he found
out that every team he faces is not as easy
as Drytown was,
eer lens
Cities That Remind You of People.
According to a Weiter in the July
number of Harper's Mageazine, cities,
like human beings, hive distinct per-
sonalities, are frivolovs, progressive,
somber or gay, much after th people
lat-
PLANS A HUSBAND BOUNTY.
Japanese Government Proposes to
Reward Girls Who Marry Col=
lege Students,
Maidens of Japan who succeed in
interesting young Japanese students
long enough to induce them to get
married will be rewarded in the near
future with matrimonial dowries by
the mikado’s government if the plans
of leading Japanese statesmen prove
as successful as expected, according
to Secretary Yomma, of the Japan-
ese consulate in Chicago, reports the
Chronicle.
What led the secretary to make the
announcement as to the prospective
husband bounty bill was the pub-
lished account of the lecture in which
Prof. Starr, of the University of Chi-
eago, made the sensational state-
ment before his class in anthropol-
ogy that the marvelous advance of
the Japanese in the learning and civ-
ilization of th: western countries had
proved too rapid and was making
them the victims of an epidemic of
brain fever that threatened their ex-
tinction as a nation.
“Statistics show that students in
Japan are affected more by eye trou
bles from overstudy than by brain
fever,” said Secretary Yomma. “It is
true that our young men very
studious, but our young women are
not expected to be scholars. They
are encouraged in the cultivation of
feminine graces and charms, and it is
becoming a fad with some of our
statesmen to advocate a liberal mar
riage bounty for the maiden who
proves herself sufficiently fascinating
to cause a young man at college to
forsake his books long enough to get
married.”
DEFECTIVE DINING T TABLES.
are
They Give 1 Man No Chance to Cross
is Legs—Complaint of
an Epicure,
“I have discovered a very great de-
fect in the architecture of the dining
table,” remarked an epicure the oth-
er day to New Orleans Times-Demo-
crat man, “and the defeet is univer-
sal. T have found in my time but
very few tables built after my ideal,
and it seems to me that some man in-
terested in matters of this sort ought
to start a revolution these
Jines. When I sit down to a meal I
want to rest. Eating and resting
ought to go togéther., Restfulness at
meal time, absolute comfort at the
table and good food of the whole-~
some kind are thinge that will come
along

A Horribly Mangled Corpse Found.
At about 4:30 o’clock Thursday
Pennsylvania Railroad Track
Steinberger found the horribly
corpse of a man lying on the eastbound track
about a mile and a half west of Bainbridge.
The body was completely in two and the
parts were badly cut and crushed. The
victim of the accident was judged to be a
a man about thirty-five years of age, five
feet six inches tall and of a stocky build.
The body was attired in dark clothes, of
character that would stamp him as a me-
chanic. He had a sandy mustache,
brown and gray mixed hair. There was
nothing in the dead man’s clothes to lead
to an identification, and it is not known
how the accident happened. The track
walker took the body to Collins’ Station
and Deputy Coroner S. S. Steffy, of Baing
bridge, held an inquest. The body is in
charge of Undertaker Hawthorne, of Bain-
bridge.
about us, and produce a: vivid impres-
ee eee
: tr re
s who slap
ay morning |
Walker
mutilated
sions on tl.
cago are cordial good fel
Salem or Annapolis is mg htioned a
vision is invoked of mittentd ahd ker-
chiefed old ladies drinking tea from
a
and
dishes of rare Nanking. New York is
theresplendent wifeof a banker, push.
ing her noisy way in the world Ngd daz-
zling foreign courts with hdr dia-
monds, much to the disgust of passe
Mistress Boston.
rt Yt Sle
Apple Butter While You Wait.
Boiling apple butter while you wait \.
latest in Berks county, and it is predicted
that in a few years the old time apple stirr-
ings will be a thing of the past.
munities are now patronizing a machine,
which not only grinds up the fruit and
makes the cider, but boils the apple butter,
the whole process consuming
minutes.
—— ree
Lady’s Frightful Fall.
Miss Harriet P, Watson, a widely-known
middle-aged lady, and daughter of the late
Dr. Nathan Watson, met with a
accident at her home, at Millbank, in East
Donegai township on Monday afternoon.
Miss watson was seated in a rocker on the
wide veranda in front of her residence, and
as she rocked the chair, unnoticed, gradu-
ally worked to the edge of the porch. Sud-
denly the chair overturned, Miss Watson
turning a complete somersaultand alighting
on her head at the foot of the stone steps,
cresent-shaped gash
She
ee Ae
Church Chronicle.
serious
every Sunday evening at 7 p. m. by the pas-
John Boehm on alternate eve-
nm.
tor and Rev.
nings. Epworth League at 6 p
bath School at 9 a. m., Amos Risser Super-
Class meeting Sunday morning
at 10 a. Prayer-meeting Tnursday 7 p.
m. Rev. Wayne Channell pastor, Rev.
John Poehm assistant pastor.
a -
A Large Rabbitry.
rabbits on
Sab-
intendent,
m.
cutting a ragged, en-
tirely across her
moved into the house, Dr. G.
Maytown, summoned, and
given the necessary attention.
gteatly prostrated, Miss Watson
no other injuries.
——— ent
A Mild Winter.
Farmers in this district are not worrying
about the rise in the price of coal nor are
looking well to their woodpiles. They
sure the winter is going to be mild
that precautions against extreme cold
be unnecessary. These predictions
based on the fact that the hornets are build-
ing their nests close to tf8ground.
Old farmers say this ij a never failing
gign of a warm winter With little or no
snow. When the nests ade built only on”
stout trees, high from the ground and close
to the trunk, then the following winter will
be a rough one and there will be plenty of
SNOW.
There ¢ 500 the
farm of Miller,
These have been raised
It is proposed to
was re- re now over
A. Harter,
her injuries
Although
sustained
forehead.
of
Tree, within
last three months.
ten times as many. The main breeding
house measures 24 by 110 feet. The
will be sent to the New York market
sale,
have
furs
Aree
More Room For Rifle Range.
The Mount Gretna Rifle Range will
enlarged next year to four times its present
size. It will be increased from 60 to 250
acres in dimensions, and the
from 600 to 1000 yards.
also in contemplation,
Milton Grove Hotel Sold.
Charles H. Zeller,
be
are
and
will
are
real estate
Hotel, owned by A. G. Balmer, to El. Wea~
ver, Mr, Weaver will take charge
spring.
i
A special ‘Pentecostal Service”
I —— Pp ———
A Snake Surprised Him.
Last Friday Clayton, son of Isaac 8. Wit-
man, of near Milton Grove, had quite a
surprise. He was chopping wood and in
splitting one of the largest pieces he came
across a black snake, which was huddled
together in a hollow part of the log. The
snake made its way out and was about to
escape when Clayton with a well-directed
stroke with the axe dispatched it. The
snake measured full two feet,
on Sunday evening. Rev.
Everybody is welcome,
EE
to Aaron R. Landis, on Tuesday.

banner patch. -~

one on the back and call new acquaint- |
ances by their Christian names. When |
|
Some com- |
rN...
mend themselves to most men.
L_ have what I_
hobby. TI always
legs under the table. Most
I believe. And why not? It
is a comfortable position. It enables
one to sit more erect, too. I do not
know what etiquette says about one’s
legs and feet during meal time, but T
suppose it goes no further than to
suggest that they should be kept un-
der the table, which is correct, I
ween. But I insist that among my
inalienable rights is the right to cross
my legs, and to cross them under the
mahogany at that if it pleases me to
do so and adds to my comfort.
“And yet it is a fact that one rare-
ly enjoys this gracious privilege be-
i cause of the awkward, grotesque and
unhappy architecture of the dining
table. The tables ought to be differ-
call a
want to
may
mealtime
cross my
men do,

; roomier, :
ninety : 2h Sa
mpl ie e
aus if it pleased him to do so.
Methodist Episcopal Chnreh—Preachibg | nht qo it,
Sennett and Co., at Green |
the |
for |
largest range
A large arsenal is:
agent of
Mount Joy Borough, sold the Milton Grove
in the
will be held in the M. E. church holocaust.
Wayne |
Channell will preach. Everybody !
The license for the Bainbridge hotel |
was transferred from Henry G. Demmy | or steal, perhaps?”
ently made. They ought to be
so that a fellow would have
in which to cross his
Of
if one dees not want to cross
at meal times one need
so the change could do no
Spe ac
Worse,
one's
legs
| harm.”
| REFURNISHING WINDSOR.
———
| The'0id Furniture in the Castle Will
\ He Burned to Prevent
Its Cireulation,
»
to clear out
furniture and
Vindsor castle and replace
Having in
been on the
bonfire some-
intends
old
je
His ¥oe
a oood
ty
I of the
1\
sea
{ fittings bt
them with
= old re
his own. this
idents have
signs of a
he precincts of the eastle,
any chairs
view
lookout fo
“where in
for in pasi times, when
and tables and other articles therein
were condeyned, it was the practice
to have they burned, says Modern
| Society.
The object
| pieces of furniture
queen’s monog
‘of this was to prevent
stamped with the
from being let
loose, as it wel, and so allowed to
drift into the hinds and
thence into the ppssession of persons
tp them, but willing
any price to be able
1 articles in their
s a wasteful ex-
tand the
There
ams
of brokers,
having no right
| to pay almost
i to display such roy
{ own houses. It we
pedient, but one
need of such a
have been so many of roy-
al gifts and discarded articles being
found in shops and stcres that some
{ means of prevention ar: quite necess
But up to the present time
| sary.
| there have been no indications of a
car unders
precaution.
irstances
—— a
He Was a “Bigamist.
“What brought you here, my poor
{ man 2” inquired the prison visitor.
“Well, lady,” replied the prisoner,
| “I guess my trouble started \from at-
tending too many weddin’s.”
“Ah! You learned to drink there,
“No, lady; I was always t bride«
groom.’ "~Tit-Bits.
‘
MOUNT Joy ITEMS.
The News of our Neighboring Borough in
a Condensed Form,
Miss Clara Ricker is visiting friends
in Philadelphia.
Harry Leedom yesterday attended
the Middletown Fair.
John W* McGinnes and wife was at
the Middletown Fair yesterday.
Miss May Killian left yesterday on
a visit to friends in Harrisburg.
Sylvester Dearbeck and wife, were
at the Middletown Fair yesterday.
Miss Bess Stehman is attending
Madam Cotta’s College at Lancaster,
Misses Caroline Schock returned to
Maryland College at Lutherville, Md.
Miss Felty, of Philadelphia, visited
her sister, Mrs. Wayne Channel last
week.
The public schools of the town
opened last Monday with a large at-
tendance.
Mrs. Barbara Hemperly will next
Thursday sell a lot of furniture at
public gale.
Abraham Haines and Jacob Ocker
left last Tuesday for the Pan-Ameri-
can Exposition.
Milton Stehman a short distance
east of town fell off a straw stack and
broke his right arm.
Mrs. John M. Brandt and son Owen
returned home Monday from the Pan-
American Exposition.
Mrs, Abraham L. Kolp yesterday
returned home from a visit to ker
daughter at Harrisburg,
Benjamin H. Greider of Rheems was
one of the judges of poultry, at the
Middletown Fair, this week.
Mrs. Mary Kberle, of Harrisburg,
who has been the guest of Mrs. Martin
Greider, left for her home yesterday.
John E. Longenecker the extensive
tobacco packer of this place, a few
days ago, cold 1400 cases of last year’s
packing.
Samuel Rinehart and wife Misses
Anna Blensinger and Frances Fach,
attended the Middletown fair last
Wednesday.
The Peter Haldeman farm, near
Risser’s meeting house, in Mount Joy
township, will be offered at public
sale, next Thursday.
Unmovable Christians will be the
theme of Rev. A R, King’s subject,

Sada
In ATi UW Rivaugeisul duurch
next Sunday morning.
Mrs. A. L. Clay, who had been
spending the summer with the family
of Dr. J.J. Newpher, has ret. ned to
her home in Norfolk, Va.
The County Commissioners at noon
to-day, will open sealed proposals for
the erection of an inter-county bridge,
across the Conewago creek.
A party was held last Saturday eve-
ning, at the residence of Daniel Forry
near Newton, which was attended by
a large number of young people,
Mrs. Saliie Fry, of Manheim, died
last Sunday morning, at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. John F. Smith,
525 West Chestnut street, siancaster.
Christian L. Nissley of Florin, will
leave next Monday, on an extended
trip to Canada. He will algo visit the
Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo.
Among the divorees granted by the
court last Saturday, was that of Sadie
Rodkey, of Marietta, from John Reod-
key, on the ground of eruel treatment
Mrs. Frank Roland and son Charlie,
of Philadelphis, who have been the
guests of the family of John W.
Roland, left for their howe last Wed-
needay.
Miss Grace Holwager and Miss Edna
Kriner, of Philadelphia, spent the
week, at Columbia, visiting Miss Hol
wager’s aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs
Peter Mauer.
John and Allen Nissley, of Florin,
who were at the Pan-American Expo-
sition, at Buffalo, saw President Me
Kinley, last Friday, a short time be-
fore he was shot.
Constable Peck, of Marietta, in his
report to the court, last Monday, re-
turned the town council of Marietta
borough, for not keeping thegstreets
in good condition.
Mrs, Elizabeth Myers, returned
home last Tuesday, after spending
five months, in Baltimore, with her
son Clayton Myers, an extensive
druggist of the city,
I'he game was not p
on account of a dispat
Tuvitations h#ve jhed
nouncing\ the wedding ©
Donaven nd Miss Mary |
Tuesday, September 17, at)
of the bride'in this borough,
Owen Brandt of this place, wi
at the Pan American Exposition)
Friday, saw President MecKinl§
after he we~ shot, as he was bein
carried away on the stretcher.
Elmer Bard enlisted at Lancaster
on Tuesday and will do duty for
Uncle Sam for three more years. He
will be sent to the Columbus bar.
racks within a week or ten days.
The grand jury last Tuesday re
turned a true bill, against Join H
Dierolf and Mary Dierolf, of this
place, for receiving stolen goods, on a
charge preferred by Simon P. Heilig,
of Hummelstown,
Ephraim Baker and his son Frederie
Baker last Wednesday, purchased the
coal and lumber yard of A. N. Cassel
& Son, formerly managed by Addison
Flowers. Frederic Baker will conduet
the business angd will take charge of it
in a few days.
John H. Stoll, the ticket agent at
this place, if at Toronto, Canada, at-
tending the tenth annual convention
of the International Association of
the Ticket Agents, He will also visit
Niagara Falls and the Buffalo Fixposi
tion, before he returns home.
John H. Buohl’s hardware and
stove store, was broken into) Wednes"
day night and about $500 worth of
goods were stolen, consisting mostly
of guns, revolvers, cutlery, &ec. Amn.’
entrance was effected by breakipe
open a side window. The burg/lars
were not heard by Mr. Buo¥kil, nor
John Sechroll, who lives aln7ag side of
where the entrance vas effected,
Efforts are being mage to apprehend
the robbers.
Bad blood seemp: to be boiling in the
breasts of quite/ a number of Ww
and colored “people of the tower
the result irs a fight at frequen
tervals. Juast Saturday ovening a
most disgraceful scene took place at
the corp.er of Westy Main and Mane
heim streets, whiclf was kept up for
several hours, during which time
pist.olse were discharged quite freely.
The outcoms has been a nuniber
lawsuits and counter lawsuits: C
stable Fissel was busy the fore par
the week in making a large numbel
of arrests. The principal parties oe
the suits are Clarence Craley, Howard
Yellets, Harry Morton, Joseph Brandt
and others. The charges are assault
and battery, carrying concealed dead
ly weapons, &c. Beveral cases were
heard before '8quire Zgsller last Wed.
nezday evening, when the cases were
continued for a further hearing, the
time for which has not yet been se
A Big City Show in Mount Joy Ha
on Friday, September 20,
Long Brothers’ Pawnee Bill a
May Lillie’s big city show,’ Mandaline
of Fort Reno” will appear in Mount
Joy Hall on Friday evening, SBeptem-
ber 20. This is one of the big aramat-
ic organizations of the present season,
and only consents to play in Mt, Joy
on account of an open date between
Harrisburg and Lancaster. A more
perfect and complete theatrical organ
ization than ‘Mandaline of Fort Reno’
has perhaps never before been seen
‘here. The company carries all scenery
nroperties and effects, besides having
ah a ting cast of twenty-three people
and a number of genuine Indians.
‘WMadaline of Fort Reno’ is not a
senftional play but a charming love
romsyice of the far west cleyerly acted
by a company of Metropolitan players
The paesentation here will be given
presinely as at Reading, Lancaster and
Philadelphia. 1t is a play that ladies
and children will enjoy and which de-
lights all kinds of people. Arrang e-
ments for the sale of seats in advance
have been made with Yoffe & Gaffin,
who will be pleased to furnish all in=
formation desired.
meee Re ——
A Curlous Find,
A farmer residing a short distance
west of town, found in his field
turkey nest with a double egg in it
Each egg is perfectly formed onky
they are joined together as if it wene
one egg. Mr, Calan was offered
good price for his egg curiosity but h
refused it, becanse he intends f{
hatch out a double turkey from


Martin Young, a former resident of |
Marietta, but for some time an in-|
mate at the county almshouse, was
killed by the cars last Saturday after |
noon, at the cut off.
Rev. A. R. King will give a lecture
in the United Evangelical church, on
Monday evening, October 14th, on “'A |
the Far West Really is.”
The Mount Joy basebal! team last
Satarday defeated the Mariotta Nine*

Trip Through the Far West or What
in this place, by a “PP to &
strange find.
emis wi r—
Sumptuously Enterfained,
From the Hummelstown Sun.
Mrs. Wm, Karmany suf
entertained, during the ps
"her niece, Miss Mary Kars
{ Florin, Miss Mary Smith. of
‘and Miss Katie Aughenbach,
nom.
ences AQP eerste.
It is rumored that a new
‘pany will be organized in
town, on account of th
rates charged by the p!