The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, April 27, 1910, Image 5

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FATTER
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LLL LLL EER EEL ELLE RE LEE EE LETTER]
LLL EEL ERLE ERE LL LEER ELL LEE ETHER TS
BEMIS TOBACCO PLANTERS
Hm HEE
GASOLINE ENGINES
PERRY SPRING *TOOTH
HARROWS
COLUMBUS "WAGONS
STAR STEEL HAY CARRIERS
WITH TRACK AND ALL
FIXTURES
NEW HORSE LIFT CULTIVATY-
OR WITH TOBACCO HOE-
ING ATTACHMENT
JHIO PIVOT AXLE CULTIVATOR
ARMOUR TOBACCO FERTILIZER
CARARRA PAINT

TIT
THs nnn
HERR

WE HAVE ALSO TAKEN THE
ARE TWO OF THE MOST USEFU
EEE EEE EEE DEE NEE EEE EE TE EEA




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FOR FIFTEEN DAYS WE WILL
AGENCY FOR SULPHATE OF POTASH, RECEIVING IT DIRECT FR
BACCO AND POTATO GROWER SHOULD MAKE
i Fr

wits \ he
BR ————r —— a SAIN XP TNT SI
fa - . re. ——————— -
il «ray > ’ @ (> »
a! \ { 8 a
1) 3 b ~ “- (PAC £3 Nu ON)
a / R /k A {/ > ~~ yE £7 i
| MG DANI WMS
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OF THE WORLD,
AND HAS BEEN
THE MSCORMICK :
FOR 73 YEARS
w
IS THE CHOICE
OF THE FARMERS


The vast majority of farmers choose the McCORMICK BINDER
because it does splendid work in the field no matter whether the
conditions are favorable or unfavorable. The McCormick has a
record extending over a: period of seventy-three years, which en-
ables the farmer to reach a fairly accurate conclusion as to the
merits of the machine. Read about the excellent points of the

McCormick in the attractive book entitled ‘‘It Takes the Palm,”
supplied free.




MAKE SPECIAL PRICES ON McCORMICK COMBINATION HARROWS
INQUIRY ABOUT.
FARM. MACHINERY ON THE MARKET TODAY.
BEFORE BUYING ELSEWHERE.
L PIECES OF
INE THESE MACHINES
We carry almost any kind of Modern and Improved Machinery usediby farmers.
M. L. Greider & Co., Mount Joy, Pa.
EERE ERNE EEN ENN ENE E ENE Ry EET ON NEARER AREER RNR R NRE RRNA RR RRA ARd

Read The Bulletin
OUT OF DOORS |

AGAIN!
OU will be far more
joyful this Spring if
DON'T TAKE CHANCES, Bu
‘al nal 1


your new shoes FEEL fi ctotins that vo mare positive
right as well as look right io 1
“ r op 1 i ur 1 (
—and they WILL if you fl o find evi :
( pocke a t 101 i
 
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OM THE

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. : i
i] £ h
om i ailer WY Ow
AREER RRO Rann
Hm
BEERRRRRRRRRR SRNR RARER 5
FERERRRRRRRRRN RRR Ene
McCORMICK
HAY
SELF-DUMPING
RAKES
IMBODEN IMPROVED LAN
ROLLER WITH SPRING
HARROW ATTACH-
MENT
VICTOR DOUBLE ROW AN
CAMPBELL SINGLE ROW
CORN PLANTERS
ONTARIO GRAIN DRILLS
HARROW
prepar-
PULVERIZING
adapted for
NEW
specially
ing tobacco ground for
planting.
OUR SPROIAL OFFER
CULTIVA
EVERY
AND 1-HORSE
MINES, THAT
Vulcan Plows and Universal Cultivators With Tobacco Hoeing Attachments
DON'T FA
IL TO COME AND EXAM-

Call and see us.
ccm



TORS.
TO-
J: S.CARMANT

i
i i ta Al
“This Cross model is the fi
a H =r Imo RA = 3 o DT 5D §
n : pop | fancy cuts. i 20 D DZ El Wi =N’S S “i RTI > 5 /
It’s a fir “Ca det Calf,” i 25 Wal
isa: S5c., Ver usual Va
with dove top and just a dash ny ery Unusua :
of embossing — on our now A hit ut alkey sha shirts to us, th
. lollar for. They were purch
famous high toe * Marathon” n pr > us to transfer a good bit of extra value to
last. i you at 75 cents.
All of the many Crossett styles fi All New Soring Patterns
are skillfully moulded to the itl Of good quality Madras and Percale: made with se parate cuffs;
lines of the feet—giving solid | cut full and well made. Neat stripes of black, bule, green, lavendar

comfort from heel to toe.
$4 to $6 everywhere.
Lewis A.Crossett, Inc., Maker,
NORTH ABINGTON, MASS.
Style No. 161


FOR sSsAL:E BY
fe

FLORIN, PENNA.






materials.
oms;
the new colors,
FOSTER 2» GOCHRA?
and brown.
The Best 50c¢ Shirt
We know of is ready for you today.
Made according to our own ideas of good shirt making and good
A hundred different patterns in plain and pleated bos-
regular or coat cuts; separate or attached cuffs.
Percale and Madras materials, in figures, stripes and plaids; all
also black and white. Sizes 14 to 19; Price 502 ea.

32-38 East King Street, LANCASTER, PENNA.
 


EE RENEE ORNL ARERR RENE NER RRR
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EEE EERE RA
ERE ERROR RENE
EEE EOE EEE REE ER NA AE AE EEE


TAMING A TERROR,


f AD
| I ABS0
I Day,
e of
( terror to
in fond
( 1 just doted
) \ \ he 1 of ten years
i 15 W \ 1 iy elt.
izen of the town we ] who had
not been sued H time was close at
hand, however He had t » hives of
bed in his back yard, and the had
swarmed earlier than was looked for, |
Not finding new hives ready, they had |
passed ‘er into Aunt Haunalh's or
chard m1 stung her and her cow and
pig before going farther. She decided | ¢
to start a suit for damage
Elder Thomas had never had a law
suit nor been summoned as a juryman
or witness, He had a dread of the
inw, and the knowledge that he was
going to be sued set him trembling. It
| was no use for him to go over and see
| Aunt Hannah
|
She never changed her
He
and he spent
Ie was
mind nor settled a case,
her decision one morning,
the forenoon worrying over fit,
still worrying after dinner when he
| set out with hoe on his shoulder to
work in a cornfleld half a mile outside
the village On the edge of the field
was a creek, and on the, banks of the
creek was an old shed in a tumble-

| retired.
down condition. The elder had been
hilling up corn for about a quarter of
an hour when a voice called to him
from the shed. He raised his head and
listened, and it called again. He drop-
ped his hoe and took a few steps for-
ward, and the voice cried out:
“Stop, Elder Thomas! Stop right
where you are!
“Who is it?”
“It's me—Aunt Hannah.”
“Are you in the shed?”
“Yes
“For the land's sake,
you doing way out here,
happened to you?’
“You keep your place right where
you are, and I'll tell you. I came out
to pick some blackberries, and after I
got here the fit took me to go in swim-
ming in the creek. I undressed in the
shed and paddled round for half an
hour, and when I came out of the wa
ter I found that an infernal hog had
chewed all my clothes to rags. There
ain't a piece left as big as my hand.
I've been waiting here a whole hour.”
“But what are you going to do?” ask-
ed the elder as be scratched the back
of his head.
“Don’t ask fool questions! I've got
to get home, haven't 1? And I can’t
get home without some clothes. I'd
need clothes even if I waited till mid-
night.”
“I guess you would; but,
can’t lend you any of mine.
got on is shirt and trousers.”
“Who wants to borrow any of you'
I don’t, I'm sure. I want you to gc
home and tell your wife about it and
bring me back a bundle of her clothes.
You don’t s'pose I'd go back to town
in trousers, do you? What you sneak:
ing up nigher for?”
“I want to sit down on that log and
talk to you a minit. You sent me
word this morning tliat you was going
but what are
and what's
you see, 1
All I've
to sue me about the bees.”
“Yes, I did. It was all your fault,
and you'll have to pay smart money
for it.”
It struck the eller as he sat down
on the log that the situation was in his
hands, to say. The spot was a
quarter of a mfle off the road and very
There was hardly a chance of
the woman finding another messenger
for two or three days. Accident might
enable him to accomplish what dele
gations and committees had failed to.
“Well, why don’t you go?’ asked
Aunt Hannah after a long minute
“Do you think I want to stay here all
SO






heard of |
THE PROVISION DEALER

be moren


., BLACKHEADS, ECZEMA E
QUICKLY CURED.
Cs
with warm
t meal tied up in
r drying
inexpensive
prescription;
arug store:
Alcohol 7
the
e during the
night and md
1011 Le
0 Lie { » this mixture on
rning any=
the
the
Do
little
following this
will soon have
ant Complexion.
nain
then
1 off.
some
on
mnmuies,
wipe
for
1 Wf the Kin, are ollow ne ter 1 1 13)
treatn
ent vou
!; Wash the face carefully ev-|a clear Bri

along the route he was driven, each
with a bomb in his armpit. One of
these men threw his bomb. Men and
horses of the imperial coach were
killed, but the czar was unhurt. He
| stepped from his carriage, and anothes
bomb fell at his feet, His legs were
By PAUL ORLOFF.
[Copyright, 1909, by American Press Asso
ciation.)
A disguised policeman stepped into | shattered, and he fell as if mowed
a provision shop in the Malaja Sado down by na scythe.
vaga street, St. Petersburg. The czar | Later the police found the tunnel,
often passed that way, and the locality | Oe
was kept under constant surveillance, |
Nearly every one in the street was a MANHEIM
paid spy.
“What will you buy this morning?" Harry Lipp of Lebanon, spen
asked the shopkeeper. Sunday with his brother, John Lipp
“Have you Mr. and Mrs. John S$. Shelley spent
the policeman,
question.
“No; I have just opened.”
“You seem to have quite a number
without replying to the Sunday among Mastersonville rela-
tives.
|
|
|
|
been here long?” asked |
|
|
|
|
Miss Bertha
Mease, of Lancaster

Miss Carrie Ginder of Ephrata,
| spent Sunday with her grandmother,
Mrs. Rebecca Ginder.
be bought anywhere else for less than
2 rubles the pair, 1 sell them for half
that.”
“I see. Where did you come from?”
“lI have been in America for three
years past. It is there where I learn-
ed how to attract trade. A shopkeeper
in that country will lower his prices
when he first opens, get a good clien-
tele, then gradually raise them.”
“That is a great country, America.”
“Yes, in everything but the govern.
ment. They have no ‘little father’
there to keep them in order—only »
president.”
The policeman went out thinking
there could certainly be no harm in a
provision dealer who had lived in
America and yet who revered the czar.
The shopkeeper looked at his retreat-
ing figure knowingly from the corner
of his eye and knit his brows, Busying
himself at the same time in drawing a
jug of train oil from a cask.
That day the trade of the shopkeeper
(Kobozeff) thrived to a still greater ex-
tent. People were constantly running
to his shop and out with parcels under
their arms. The eyes of the spies were
on the place, but Kobozeff was so jolly
with his customers and gave such good
weight and large measure that it was
quite natural he should thus suddenly
step into a brisk trade. Only his fel-
low tradesmen were jealous of him,
and one of them shook his head and
of customers, considering that you [is again staying in the home of Wil-
have only been here since yesterday {liam Gibble.
morning.” Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Young and son,
“Oh, that is very easily explained I Bdwin and Ti as Hendricks .
You see, in order to start trade 1 sell | -o. 0 ATC Tomas Hendricks spent
very cheaply. These fowls could not [Sunday at Lancaster
{
|
Charles Rhoads, of Lebanon, spent
Sunday with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. Penn Roads.
Harry Stormfeltz and sister, Miss
Fannie, spent Sunday to Tuesday eve
ening at Reading, guests of Mrs. Jno.
Koch.
Miss Sadie Hallacher and Mrs. Jos.
Mohn, of Rothsville, spent Sunday
with Miss Katie Adams, at the Ameri-
can House.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Grove, of
Lancaster, spent Sunday with the
former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil-
liam Grove.
With the houses in course of erec-
tion and those contemplated for a
certainty, there will twenty-one
built this summer.
Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Stoneroad and
daughter, Miss Edith, and Miss Helen
Summy, spent Sunday at the Junc-
tion, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paris
Rohrer.
On account of the inclement weath
er on Sunday the corner-stone laying
of the Lutheran church at Lan-
disville was postponed t nday,
be
new
said the officials of the government | May 8, at two o’clock p. n
had better .o0k out—there must be Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Waughtel, of
something wrong about this provision Reading, spent Saturday and Sun
dealer who was selling goods so low. |qay with their parents My
a, > y iv i \ ale 33 - i y 2 : .
People who lived in the Malaja Sa D. W. Waughtel, and Mr. an
dovaga street, hearing of the low
prices for which Kobozeff sold goods,
began to go into his shop to purchase
Hiram Hoffer.
On account of the inclement weath-
er the attendance at the Germania

For, though it had not been noticed,
those who were continually running [band’s fair on Saturday evening was
out with bundles were strangers of |small. The band boys will again
the neighborhood. But those would-be | have the fair open. the coming Sat-
ror he a’ p jor . 14 .
purchasers of the neighborhood did |urday evening.
not seem to find what they wante | Danner on
Squire Monday filed the
Either Kobozeff had not what they |






 

the afternoon? There may : aT : I plans at the court house at Lancaster
forty hogs in my garden by this time | were looking for in his stock or his | for the. alli pi .
There are tramps around, and mebbe | price on that particular article was | > a fon or 12 1 to the
some of ’em are robbing the house.” | as high as that of other dealers or of { borough, which 1 rly a part
“Yes, jest as you say,” replied the| infe quality. But the provision |9f Rapho township, and the people
elder, “but I think we’d better have a| man went on selling people from other |lyiving in that ction, about sixty
talk before 1 go after any clothes | locs and kept everybody in a good | in number, are ne under the protect
Why should I iter clothes for a | is jokes, his banter and hi
woman who's going to make me trou one woman, who in a
ble?” ' butter and eggs fre rt ' }
“You didn't em be site, wondered how d keep s
snd vou di t I of ui | ing goods without ent repler
3 ishi his stock. Ge o Ver he n
vy ¢ lay lit | ¢ 1 hie I -
will r 1
ed clothes for a 1 n
let a hog chaw I
up her duc } to work, and | tl iu A t
ou n ! n }
A ind 1 ( i
stood } I'hen 1¢ | fore K 1
called the log da ted. iti (
as Ii 1 it I h ntered
1 I'c the shoj
“py de 1 1
R¥ 1
( 1
I ’
I
Y
\ 1 1
clothes ot « I fi 1 \ i er
but ! bi t his v ‘ as we er of I a
and then 1 ‘od into the corn and le where is the eart 1 i
the two wi n together taken outs’ [cClond, Norman S. Si David
pledges and promi oiven “Carried away in parcels by supposed + a Pa reer
years it was a stery to the » etieved customers.”
citizens of le why Aunt Hannah “What will you do now?” =

so suddenly reformed. She died a few
months ag 1 so there is no longer
occasion for secrecy.


unclaimed Letters
Following is a list of the unclaim-
ed letters in the Mt. Joy post office |
Wednesday, April 29th, 1910:
G. W. Robbins,
J. G. Hubbend (2)
J. J. McConnell,
W. W. Weaver,
Menno L. Hess,
Elmer H. Heisey.
J. FRED FENSTERMACHER,
Postmaster.
| tions of the czar's intentions and, hav.
i ing learned the
“Give our lives to the cause.”
At that moment a boy with a basket
on his arm entered the shop.
WE ARE
“l will take these pheasants,” said In the vernacular
the girl, handing Kobozeff a coin. of the day «a
and she went to her carriage, the | “fan” is an en-
tradesman following with the birds thusiast.
Then she was driven away. She was WE ARE ENTHU.
the Countess Perouskaya, in league SIASTIC ABOUT
OUR PRINTSHOP.
You also will be
if you come in
and let ws show
you the classy
class of work we
are doing in the
printing of every
thing printable.
A
with the conspirators bent on assassi-
nating Alexander ll. by exploding a
mine under Malaja Sadovaja street, ou
which he was expected to pass, She
was one of those watching for indica

altered arrangements,
had given the information. |
When the czar returned from lunch-
ing with the Grand Duchegs Catherine
Michgelovna four men weke stationed
J
/
\


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