housefurmsliings and funiiture;...l|i|f|i§itp^^.'• editor knd publisher.; ; is tie '...

8
l|I|f|i§itp^^ .'• Editor knd Publisher. ; ; Is tie' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel f«i and improy'enieht bftSmninlt. It desires the support of-the liberal- ^ainded citizens, of,the community. The subscription,price;isjhfpdol- lars "per, annuni tuid no better in; /estment can be made than la. sub rii^tlriaprr^: sribinE^ortlrispaper^r^:,;,,, ... v "ALFRED J..LANE, r - v",''.'" vEdltor. and Publisher; lissaans; h I.- j . [•:•• f" . t ! . . - K H, -. •. *§?• ••: a i s 3 87 . 36S . . t)ir- ' . . S4O . < 45 .- t3 SO ssa «M 040 . 7 88 - . 7 46 '8 21 . 8 50' am 263 5 lit . 881) 3D1 « 03 4 01 8 SO 6 44 .0 IS ,8 61. 7 SI 8 14 8 27 8 B8 - 9 81 9 M 1053 12H 1 S3 TM 8 10 111 8S0 . 8 50 «.OO -9 10 9 40 10C0 10 80 11 DO 11 40 IS 40: \P.'k .1 SO . a io 350 8 20 S'40 .4 10 4 80 4 80 440 .550 - 6 lOi gio "7 20 7 65 840 ' a 55 0 35 055 10S5 lira 1 tie&V7, ExpressTr«lni ' t3aturt»Ti;o»lT. ffTUiffli $ # IS ,010 : 9 30: 10 u ~£s; uoo IS 10 19 SO :-ta 40- . 12 50 H 80 •',180 aoo 3 SO 8 SO 4OO '4 00 -:« SO .4 80 4 BO :s oo ••!•» 0 30 7 80 8 00 VJO » .10 45 .11.00 IS 80 oua V-« « ::7 42- .6.18; •-8-45- ' S 10:1 ,9"« ' 10 OS ,10 «• : ii <8 , P.M. 12 84 : 12 48 .100 •l;18i > 123 ; :8.03 , 2 05 •i..n- :B60- 4 81 4 88. ; BD3' 5 OS, BIO '.' s ~ti "8 10 < 616- flS2 7 08 .8 00 6 St. I 0 45. 1118! J2*7- 1 oa. ' 7 1^ ' 8 19 .flBi •Mom 10 45 •'«•» r 1'fiO' --1-SS 100 ^8 bO 4 A3 5 22 s ai C 00 0 43 '' BE7 70s ' 7 AT 8 49 0 10 10 V? 11 C8' : SUNSAVi-TtULINS, 1 rzrlcl:'- ; t*HTO BernardBVJIle:' ' 6:14.6:M,'T:8ti 8ifi7,'ll;20,-8:00. 4:55,f:08.'8!03; r i" oiitby the majority, of'fle ' who are iooking.rfor~tlie best.: •••;• "•, ; „<^O.£5:I^fH- j 'We sell., nothing .but native'• ,beef; No cheap gra ,.: ;.'/;. i .TrJ 1 y\:;•<..•<• The tip top of enormous value giving is finally reached in the most re. .rnarkable,retailing ,achieyern'en£ of decent'times; : " ; Pachj year; the September :Traiae-Sale^ has'iifeco'me a^ more! imp'ortant•Jactcirj"iti a ^to?tidbusijr: growipg- i b^ i h tiusinp ; ss,-irid there is probablyho movement 'during'the^entiife; twelve moriths ,:that.involves anything Ijke the number of colossal bargains^ jri ajrripst every. : . ; line. .The finest and best productions of leading makers of ^Women's, , Misses',,' Children's,. Men's and Boys' outerwear and furnishings are here,: together with immense assortments of Gown Fabrics, Upholsteries, FloorCoverings and /'staple articies'ior all practical uses, at from; . .',:•!•.'.-;'.•'• .. ' . ;: Orte Quarter toOne T hi^ 1 . . This is the season of theyear when manufacturers and impo'rtersdispose ofstocks made up in excess of orders, and close out entire'sample lines,at a sacrifice. Taking advantage of their losses; opportunities are afforded thous^ ::an<3sof Nfewark buyers to secure the latest ani most desirable goods for less " than actual factor^ cost; Some of the lpts^are.not large, and we cannot be. held responsible for the disappointment of late "comers. - f ' •^Mail'Orders Filled for Everything. . I; ; Goods ; Delivered Free. , :, 'Got Her 3Iouoj", and Got It, Too, '-:tlic Wny ShoiWantcait.'. : !"pne'. day' d'urlng tlio'lnisy season; i \7lien . every ^mqiiicut!was precloiis'," Buld;a.tjant;tenei', "a wpuitiii yroscr.t- cil, her.,passbook , ami: a'sjicfl to hay her:uioneyi .which niiioimtetl to $000. ., "Ialways.endeavor tosaye needles work, and, thinking that -Bhe luteudet making a payiueut to some one wli( would - only redeposit : the money,' asked her if she intended' handing all the money over to one "person; if BO a check maHicd'eood' would answer hei purpose, as 'well! as. the cash, besides s a y i n g l a b o r , i• . . • ' . " .' .•-'.-. .-'.<••' ;< "Crushing . mo with s one, .diBdainfu: look, she replied: .•::,.• . . '"Iwishthe money.' • • •' . . . "Theynioney was duly handed out in ton dbllar,-bills"! -After spending• some flfteeu anxious minutea In her effort to.'courit the,money,.nil the while lick- !lng,. her "fingers regniariy,' slie.h'ande) It back to me, all nilxed up,, with th> remark: ., , •'; !,'. ."V. .,;"-—/ ".'I wish to leave this, with; you; again,; I /Just wanted to 'see if it was - The folio wing year the operation was repeated, but, X .'Tvas ; ready ' forj her. : The,next ,tl. m ?. -I, handed .her sis. one hundred'dollar bills.' 'Mucli to my, coii- fusfoa and. complete dlscomfttiire, she returned .them, saylng,": 'I .want those t e n s I l e f t y o u . ' ; -.. ••.:-•.;•: •• • ; , - VShe gotthem.'r-^PhllQdelphia.Times, BREAK-tF-A- pAStETS; HAVE HAD. A WONDERFVI.. SDC- CBSS 1 SINCE INTEODtCED PHARMACY; \ Are you going to move.this Spring? Have TO" freight or eipress to be carted ?. If you have we are prepared to.do.lt, for you: ', in the best pdtaible.ninnner.;...',.-., j SUMMIT EXPRJESS CO.f 1 OfficeaiunVoaplace'. T.cIepliOuecall11T-I.ji$ I AHhoura-Blnf,"»VP or 5^°?"f.?F^th, A I Sto'rnKo' f; tVarehbu«e..v Separate^ ! Rooms. Covered Vans, Exper- c "lent' Pinnos Cnrehillj' S ,_ AiG. •WOODRUFF,. J „., /tf first cjpsa'mWirej from . sevvSgc Sisp'esal grounds. -'Will be •sold.ot n rea- ionalile.prlcc on' nppllcnttbn' cither to Road Bu- jerihte'niient l\v'hiuor George 0. Hand chnlrniau Street Committee... •.••' y c-cerit n' line column, qf lite ECOKD is u want getter../ . «; ' Housefurmsliings and Funiiture; •... Until September first.we will sell all summer goods at;a big redaction to.make roomfornew stock 1 . : . . ••• ..;. .-I^Prgam Ereezera at aredpetiondf lOpereeiit.': Jelly Grlaias- ea at : S8o''i)rid iJ8c dbien. .jdriBubbsrs fit Be arid lOo dozen. Tee CruBhing-Maohines, 2;60,and 3.00., Rubber Garden Hose, 7 i-2c, 13c,: 15c.per'foot. Hose reels. 50c and 7 5 c La\vn Mowers at cost. Hammocks, 90c and up.-. ..Window Screenes, 25c and 35c.' 6 gallon Water'.eoplers at,.l;.6O.;:i,Timotliy, Clover and Hungarian 5rasa,i Porch Chairs and Rockers lO^per cent, reduction." 3 piece 1 Oalt B e d R o o m S u i t , . ; 1 5 . q p . ; . ^ ; . , ;•; ; '.:;;.' ; r ' : V ;• •::.••.,: .-• .••;•.,. :'• ' .:; Summit, N; J., Corner Springfield Avenue arid the Boulevard. . ..:• ^ . . ; ^.:, . . . / : :.-. ,^.i;:. r:i..> . I ^ . J J T ;)• i. 1 .: .•:•,.' HOTT *lio Ancien'tn Moved Stone. ' An. unfinished obelisk' found in 1 quarry at Syene showed how; the .an- cients separated these : Immense mono- liths from the native rock., A groove marking the,*boundnry^ of .the stoni contained a number of holes into which w'oodeu wedges' were- firmly driven. The, groove was then filled with water, andthe swelled wedges' cracked thi grauItVthe whole length of the groove. .Th'e!detached block, was then pushed forward upon rollers made from palm trees to a-large'timber,raft on the edgo orthe. Nile, where - It remained until the nest inundation floated the raft to the city where, the obelisk'was to be setup. •' : '-' ; - v ;; , ' "••' •" •'•' •"• ' • .' Thousniids of hands! their pushed It .on' rollers upf tin' iricilned plane to the frout of .the. templeT where it was to stand. ; The,,pedestal hod previously beeupiaced in position, and n firm causeway of-sand covered -with planks led tosthe top of it.: Then by means of rollers, levers nnd ropes made of date paim^thfriltacllsfe-was gradually hoisted Intoi'"an uptight position. ; Inflocase hiis aii pbellskbeeii found to be; out of th^truepeirpeudlcular.!.'.-•.; "' . : ;. White Men:In- Slovcpr. ": Slavery ISBO connected, in^the popu^ lar miod with'the dusky: hue of the •African that it/seems hard'to believp that only nboul;; 100 years ago white ihtin ; cbuld be sold Into' Blavery.-in Xew York-. : It- arose jthrough. jiipplyipg- the redemption Mdea'tb;, poor immigrantB and obtained equally Iti all the coun- tries of the jDnited.KIngdom'.-A man In r England; wishing to come to Amer- ica,: would go;to'the correspondent.of Borneo American house and for a i tain, sum : of money 1 sell himself : fora 'period of. from ; one to Uu*ee yetirs, as thecaBemight, be. : Taking the money so raised^ he would pay hiBpaesagp and tliat of his family to,'th'lB country.. Im: mediately," upon, his. arrival, in New :YorkhIs 'ftime," would-be put up,at auction and: himself sold, to work: for the stipulated period before. he could be considered>a free man. Many men who r ' after^'ard 'rose to great proml- nenco came t'otliiB countryunder tliese distressing'conditions. ,' . ! „'" To aitttcU HI« Match. An llrigiishman, was in a ,smoking compartment of a .city: train, a little while back, and at n certain station la:! German entered 1 the -carriage: and took his seat opposite him. When the -traltf-had started, the foreigner, cotlc- :lng the 'other's;cigar,! inquired ; if ho cpuld^give liim ouel '.'••,'..'.'.,' : -..' --'' ••-'•', 'OClie' Englishinan, astonished! at the r«iuest,'reluct(uifjy piilied.out,his case aiid. spxYrwith: disgust..the other.select the best he:could flnd.and take a,match ;from 'his -pocket and .light it .After thklngn few puffs' with, evident enjoy- ment, the •'German, beaming at his compduJon 'through his" spectacles, af- fably 't;ori(iuue'd: : " '•.'.'', *'; '. ' •_ '• • '' 1 '.'I youia not haf droublecl you,, but 1 had.n li'atcb' inVmeln b'ogglt uud Ijdid not know; vat tp,do mit it/'—Chums... "i !•'•' .;i,.: : , A-.Sovere-Crltlci;'; }:.;.:->•/•, 'X-'- self 1 - conscious and - .egotistical 76\\rig 'clergymim -was "supplying"' thp piil^lt' of'•:a' country church.' 1 Afterthe! icvxicc^' .says' .the New'York Evening; Post, 1 be-risked' one";o£ [thtj'tfohcbbsl'.n grizzled,,, plain spoken man,.',wlidt, .lie- ithpught of /.''thls.uiornlng's effort!! ,-•; t ,".Wual."anBworpd tiie.old man slow- ly,, "I'll tell;ye; I'll tell yb: In a- kind^ o l ! parable. It reminded me of' Sim Peck's CitBt''dee"r ; lnntt^'when! ho was: green.. BTe follered the' deer's tracks all Tight,' but, h^.ifojlered ^em all' day.' In.! tlie >vr6ng!directipn.". : / , " .. '•!'. '.", •• ' '" "'' ''<'' '" " '"'' '' ''/' ' V V" r ,.;.;.?iemOTinff : Temptation.;.> -•..-.,(; | : aiothor-rrGnicibusl Stop that nolBQ ip' there;- KiWiUie/. didn't rl. tell. you, not 1 o^puUfthat cat's tali again?-' -• •'- : • ; JWinie-r-i'ttin't"'pullin*;it;tna. i "••/';•'•..> ; ilotheiv-Yoii\ must'!bei{"6f| : tb9.' : cat pu'Idn't\screo : m P! Bp lu !' 11 ' ' ''v 1 '^ 1 ' ; : '''; . ; r^ : jest cattln 1 ; ciin?t; pull ; 'It'arty P ; '''''' •Bi* ..Craxy J^ntlc* i on nn , UaQnl*b*ed : Brid(t« Acro««. the Hlasnrn. "I remember," said a bridge con- tractor''some time ago.'Wlille: on 1 tlio subject of ; workmeu'a. daredevil tries, "when working : at t h e , big brldgp; ucross the Niagara, when,the two can-, talever^arms had' approached within, -fifty feet of each otlier a 'l:een rivalry' as'to who shiiuld betbe first-to' cross sprang "up among'the men.! A' long plank connected the two arms, leaving- about two and a half •feet of support at each end; Strict orders wero. Issued that no, onoshould attempt to crosstbu plank . upon- penalty, of ,.Instant dlR- : missal. , •' . , ..."' ' !. *'At the noon" bom\I suddenly heartV a great fihout Troni tbVmen, who were ail'sthrtlug : up.' Raising my eyes, I saw a^mim-step ou-tho end of thut plauk.<Ktop aimtnute and look dowi| Into the whirlpool below. I knew ho vrnR going to cross, and I shouted to him,.hut.lie 'was too high up tp hear. Deliberately he walked' out until he. reached''tlie' middle of the plank.' It sagged far down with his weight until Xcould see llght^etween the two short supporting ends aadtbe.'cantilevers oil. which they rested- He.save-the end. in .^ froot-of ; Uini .do this,, hesitated and Ioplved.back:tp;Bee.bow l %he other end . was. . '._" . : . '. ( '" !'|-'"..",.".' -" / , ' ' "I thougbt be'ivns going to turnl He atopped, giiisped both : edges of the plaiik with" uls bauds and,' throwing hlBfeet up. stood oti'bis liea'd, kicking his'legs'In the"nir. cracking his heeln (ogether and yelling tothe:tercified on- lookers., ThiB hedid.for about a.min- ute. It seemed to me -lilse forty.. Then ho let his feet drop down, Btood up; Tvavedhls bat and trotted along the plank to tbe otlier'Bide and regained t h e g r o u n d . - -• : •• • " •"••• "Wo discharged him*, of course, but •what did he care? Ho got all the glo- ry, his fellows envied him, and he could command work. anywhere.*'— Cassler's Magazine. " ; , , . . FRUITS AND FLOWERS. I In planting the orchard care should be taken to allow each tree plenty of r o o m . l .' • •••'•• ' - . ' . . - : ' • - • A layer of charcoal inthe bottom of a flower bed la very beneficial in keep- Ing the soil fresh. • , : ,, ,.>.'•• In. plowing in the : orchard .always [ turn, tho furrow toward the.tree, and bo careful not to injure.the fine,, fibrous Tha Hfo'of an 'apple-.tree' is'often Bhbrtentid because It grows in a poor. exhausted'/'sbU or onei not • properly - d r a h a e o V ••• ; - , ' •••"••• • •. - , :-••• -i When 111 or ailing, handle the flowers . little or wear.glovesi Jpellcate^plants are eensitlvo(^to human magnetism; good or bad. ;. __ ;,.-_ . . i; ., -,. .-., ,, : The rpota . of,, the. strawberry often rcnch-TOut 'five feet from the^ main stem;, heoce thb plants should not bo •Bcttoothickly. 1 ' "• •-'• ' " ; An apple 'or' cherry tree Is mncQ more valuable if It shoots but low. Trim from the r top,as this wlir.causo ' thoJower branches togrow out , , Land: that..has :been too .rough for plowing may; yet be sufficiently .fertilo to grow fruit trees,and Is better,thrui land, that has been exhausted by crop ; * ^ : - ' " . " ; . . . " - . - " : . ; . . , i ' ' Too' Gorttcon* :llooli>> - ,. • • The ;autbor of "Elizabeth'and Her German Garden," writing ou the VtUvr ttig'Of Books'*.In tbe'Century, says:.' Gifts of books addressed solely' to- the spirit sli'ouldnev'er he editions de- luxe. Or what Use Is'a book to me, Iiowever much I inuy want to read It* If It Is so Koi'yeous that It must not be taken hiiyivhere, where, rnla migbt fall, on it. or, whuiv It lnj^bt get; muddy, or where ii heedlesB guat. caught by the quick turning of a leaf, might leave its legs.in_the_;pngcs, angering the owner of thefdpilleilbcok; wbo dbes'not want Its legs, almost us much as It 1B ltselt angered bj*'uuvlng! to gd on being a gnat; without them? I..can no'.more take an , overgorgepus boob to, my, heart than I can .fold my child In my arms when,It Is.dressed fora party. .-.'. •''. " '"" A. tight ScntcnccT v "^ -XT. ' -—^ j A gentleman'- 1 how' living' In Nevir. •Tori;-tells the following story of d 1 " ne- gro In Temifssoe wliose-6on ; had been cotrrlcted of tilling a fellow; workman. Jew. days.aftor.the trial the father ' vrixu itslieJ what disposition bad been uinde of the ense. ", , "Ob," ht' imawered, "dey donosentl Jbhnsbn to Jail for a'mdnf." "' ' : "Tbnt*fi a nghtsentonce for kllling'a rannv don't you tliluUS" ; ' • • . '.'Yes,' 1 answered: the darky,.."but nt .da-cud -of de-monf ;dey:;done goln'. to hang Mm.; p —NeMvYork T i m e s . . , , , , ., . , Dlvcrao. At>pct((ca.( ,'"I"wondcr why dba'keyiaeat'tnisties?'' snfd the -uiiin who 'Is oln-ayai flndmg oom'ething peculiar" Ixi MIfe. 1 ' '•••"• "Oh," answered tho'ptersod.who Hkea plain food, vtliere la ho accounting <for taste.;. If ,n( donkeyiwere to givestbe matter n thought, ;I suppose .he would VtjbnderTwuy uuuinn beingB eat.ojlves/ 1 •' —Washington Btur. \, •'/.'.' ,-, ' \. Bigg's—i met a inun' yesterday who nmkes lila living'by-buying millinery;;^ BlEgSr-Ohr nothing;, only . I'yo:rbeen lUylng inilSlnery/eyer/sinctJ lTvns;mar- "* -'imd.!)ir,:rjqrcr .ninde-flny .inooey : - - ' I . 1 .. ; •"• ••'""••' ''''•'•' : ' - >V - '' •'['. '•••"' ••• V . : . ' ' T ~ ^ ' . \ ' ; " . ' / ' - " . ' 1 ' : - ' I 1 . ' : - : : , ' , ' " " ' ' / 1 i ' ' '''•.-. •' •". •••••"•" : ,' •'••

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Page 1: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

l|I|f|i§itp^^

.'• Editor knd Publisher.

; ; Is t i e ' best -local newspaper \NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nAeiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewelf « i and improy'enieht bftSmninlt.It desires the support of-the liberal-^ainded citizens, of,the community.The subscription,price;isjhfpdol-lars "per, annuni tuid no better in;/estment can be made than la. sub

rii^tlriaprr^:sribinE^ortlrispaper^r^:,;,,,... v "ALFRED J..LANE, r -v" , ' ' . ' " vEdltor. and Publisher;

lissaans;

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: SUNSAVi-TtULINS, 1

-rzrlcl:'-

;t*HTO BernardBVJIle:'' 6:14.6:M,'T:8ti 8ifi7,'ll;20,-8:00. 4:55,f:08.'8!03;

r i" oiitby the majority, of'fle' who are iooking.rfor~tlie best.:•••;• " • , ; „<^O.£5 : I^fH-

j 'We sell., nothing .but native'•

,beef; No cheap gra

, . : ; . ' / ; . i . T r J 1 y \ : ; • < . . • < •

The tip top of enormous value giving is finally reached in the most re..rnarkable,retailing ,achieyern'en£ of decent'times; :";Pachj year; the September:Traiae-Sale has'iifeco'me a more! imp'ortant•Jactcirj"iti a ^to?tidbusijr: growipg-

i b ^ i h• tiusinp;ss,-irid there is probablyho movement 'during'the^entiife; twelve moriths

,:that.involves anything Ijke the number of colossal bargains^ jri ajrripst every.:.; line. . T h e finest and best productions of leading makers of Women's, , Misses',,'

Children's,. Men's and Boys' outerwear and furnishings are here,: together withimmense assortments of Gown Fabrics, Upholsteries, FloorCoverings and

/'staple articies'ior all practical uses, at from; . .',:•!•.'.-;'.•'• . . ' . ;:

Orte Quarter to One T h i ^1 . . This is the season of theyear when manufacturers and impo'rtersdispose

ofstocks made up in excess of orders, and close out entire'sample lines,at a

sacrifice. Taking advantage of their losses; opportunities are afforded thous^

::an<3sof Nfewark buyers to secure the latest ani most desirable goods for less

" than actual factor^ cost; Some of the lpts^are.not large, and we cannot be.held responsible for the disappointment of late "comers. - f

' •^Mail'Orders Filled for Everything. . I ; ; Goods; Delivered Free. , :,

'Got Her 3Iouoj", and Got It, Too,• '-:tlic Wny ShoiWantcait.'.

:!"pne'. day' d'urlng tlio'lnisy season;i \7lien . every ^mqiiicut!was precloiis',"Buld;a.tjant;tenei', "a wpuitiii yroscr.t-cil, her.,passbook , ami: a'sjicfl to hayher:uioneyi .which niiioimtetl to $000.., "Ialways.endeavor tosaye needleswork, and, thinking that -Bhe luteudetmaking a payiueut to some one wli(would - only redeposit: the money,'asked her if she intended' handing allthe money over to one "person; if BO acheck maHicd'eood' would answer heipurpose, as 'well! as. the cash, besidess a y i n g l a b o r , i • . . • ' . " .' . • - ' . - . . - ' . < • • '

;< "Crushing . mo with s one, .diBdainfu:look, she replied: .•::,.• . .

' " I w i s h t h e money.' • • •' . . ."Theynioney was duly handed out in

ton dbllar,-bills"! -After spending• someflfteeu anxious minutea In her effortto.'courit the,money,.nil the while lick-!lng,. her "fingers regniariy,' slie.h'ande)It back to me, all nilxed up,, with th>remark: . , , •'; !,'. ."V. . , ; " - — /

".'I wish to leave this, with; you;again,; I /Just wanted to 'see if it was

- The folio wing year the operation wasrepeated, but , X .'Tvas; ready ' forj her.:

The,next ,tl.m?. -I, handed .her s is . onehundred'dollar bills.' 'Mucli to my, coii-fusfoa and. complete dlscomfttiire, shereturned .them, saylng,": 'I .want thoset e n s I l e f t y o u . ' ; -.. ••.:-•.;•: • • • • ; ,

- VShe gotthem.'r-^PhllQdelphia.Times,

BREAK-tF-A-p A S t E T S ; HAVE

HAD. A WONDERFVI.. SDC-

CBSS1 SINCE INTEODtCED

PHARMACY;

\ Are you going to move.thisSpring? Have T O " freight oreipress to be carted ?. If you havewe are prepared to.do.lt, for you:

', in the best pdtaible.ninnner.;...',.-., •

j SUMMIT EXPRJESS CO.f1 OfficeaiunVoaplace'. T.cIepliOuecall11 T-I.ji$I AHhoura-Blnf,"»VPor5^°?"f.?F^th, AI Sto'rnKo'f;tVarehbu«e..v Sepa ra t e^! Rooms. Covered Vans, Exper- c

"lent ' Pinnos Cnrehillj' S,_ AiG. •WOODRUFF,. J

„ . , / t f first cjpsa'mWirej from .sevvSgc Sisp'esal grounds. -'Will be •sold.ot n rea-ionalile.prlcc on' nppllcnttbn' cither to Road Bu-jerihte'niient l\v'hiuor George 0 . Hand chnlrniau

Street Committee... •.••'

y c-cerit n' line column, qf liteECOKD is u want get ter . . / . «; '

Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;•... • Until September first.we will sell all summer goods at;a bigredaction to.make room for new stock1.: . . •••..;. .-I^Prgam Ereezera at aredpetiondf lOpereeiit.': Jelly Grlaias-

ea at:S8o''i)rid iJ8c dbien. .jdriBubbsrs fit Be arid lOo dozen. TeeCruBhing-Maohines, 2;60,and 3.00., Rubber Garden Hose, 7 i-2c,13c,: 15c.per'foot. Hose reels. 50c and 7 5 c La\vn Mowers at cost.Hammocks, • 90c and up.-. ..Window Screenes, 25c and 35c.' 6 gallonWater'.eoplers at,.l;.6O.;:i,Timotliy, Clover and Hungarian 5rasa,iPorch Chairs and Rockers lO^per cent, reduction." 3 piece1 OaltB e d R o o m S u i t , . ; 1 5 . q p . ; . ^ ; . , ;•; ; ' . : ; ; . ' ; r ' : V ;• •::.••.,: . - • .••;•.,. :'• ' . : ;

Summit, N; J., Corner Springfield Avenue arid the Boulevard.

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HOTT *lio Ancien'tn Moved Stone.• ' An. unfinished obelisk' found in1

quarry at Syene showed how; the .an-cients separated these: Immense mono-liths from the native rock., A groovemarking the,*boundnry^ of .the stonicontained a number of holes into whichw'oodeu wedges' were- firmly driven.The, groove was then filled with water,and the swelled wedges' cracked thigrauItVthe whole length of the groove..Th'e!detached block, was then pushedforward upon rollers made from palmtrees to a-large'timber,raft on the edgoorthe. Nile, where - It remained untilthe nest inundation floated the raft tothe city where, the obelisk'was to bes e t u p . •'

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• Thousniids of hands! their pushed It.on' rollers upf tin' iricilned plane to thefrout of .the. templeT where it was tostand. ;The,,pedestal hod previouslybeeupiaced in position, and n firmcauseway of-sand covered -with planksled tosthe top of it.: Then by means ofrollers, levers nnd ropes made of datepaim^thfriltacllsfe-was gradually hoistedIntoi'"an uptight position. ; In flo casehiis aii pbellskbeeii found to be; out ofth^truepeirpeudlcular . ! . ' . - • . ; "' .

: ;. White Men:In- Slovcpr. ":Slavery ISBO connected, in^the popu^

lar miod with ' the dusky: hue of the•African that it/seems hard ' to believpthat only nboul;; 100 years ago whiteihtin;cbuld be sold Into' Blavery.-in XewYork-. : It- arose jthrough. jiipplyipg- theredemption Mdea'tb;, poor immigrantBand obtained equally Iti all the coun-tries of the jDnited.KIngdom'.-A manIn r England; wishing to come to Amer-ica,: would go;to'the correspondent.ofBorneo American house and for a itain, sum: of money1 sell himself : f o r a'period of. from; one to Uu*ee yetirs, asthecaBemight, be. : Taking the moneyso raised^ he would pay hiB paesagp andtliat of his family to,'th'lB country.. Im:mediately," upon, his. arrival, in New:YorkhIs 'ftime," would-be put up ,a tauction and: himself sold, to work: forthe stipulated period before. he couldbe considered>a free man. Many menwhor' after^'ard 'rose to great proml-nenco came t'otliiB countryunder tliesedistressing'conditions. ,'

. ! „'" To aitttcU HI« Match.An llrigiishman, was in a ,smoking

compartment of a .city: train, a littlewhile back, and at n certain stationla:! German entered1 the -carriage: andtook his seat opposite him. When the-traltf-had started, the foreigner, cotlc-:lng the 'other's;cigar,! inquired; if hocpuld^give liim ouel '.'••,'..'.'.,' :-..' --'' ••-'•',

'OClie' Englishinan, astonished! at ther«iuest,'reluct(uifjy piilied.out,his caseaiid. spxYrwith: disgust..the other.selectthe best he:could flnd.and take a,match;from 'his -pocket and .light i t .Af te rthklngn few puffs' with, evident enjoy-ment, the •'German, beaming • a t • hiscompduJon 'through his" spectacles, af-fably 't;ori(iuue'd: :" '•.'.'', *'; ' . ' •_ '• • ''

1 '.'I youia not haf droublecl you,, but 1had.n li'atcb' inVmeln b'ogglt uud Ijdidnot know; vat tp,do mit it/'—Chums...

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'X-'- self1 - conscious • and - .egotistical76\\rig 'clergymim -was "supplying"' thppiil^lt' of'•:a' country church.'1 Afterthe!icvxicc^' .says' .the New'York Evening;Post,1 be-risked' one";o£ [thtj'tfohcbbsl'.ngrizzled,,, plain spoken man,.',wlidt, .lie-ithpught of /.''thls.uiornlng's effort!! ,-•;t ,".Wual."anBworpd tiie.old man slow-ly,, "I'll tell;ye; I'll tell yb: In a- kind^ ol!parable. I t reminded me of' Sim Peck'sCitBt''dee"r ;lnntt^'when! ho was: green..BTe follered the' deer's tracks all Tight,'but, h^.ifojlered ^em al l ' day.' In.! tlie>vr6ng!directipn.".: • / , " .. '•!'. '.", •• ''" "'' ''<'' '" " '"' ' ' ' ''/' ' V V"r ,.;.;.?iemOTinff: Temptation.;.> -•..-.,(; |

: aiothor-rrGnicibusl Stop tha t nolBQip' there;- KiWiUie/. didn't rl. tell. you, not1

o^puUfthat cat 's tali again?-' -• •'- : • ;JWinie-r-i'ttin't"'pullin*;it;tna. i "••/';•'•..> ;ilotheiv-Yoii\ must'!bei{"6f|: tb9.' :catpu'Idn't\screo:mP!Bplu!'11' ' ' ' v 1 ' ^ 1 ' ; : ' ' ';. ;

r ^ : jest cattln1

; ciin?t; pull ;'It'artyP ; ' ' ' ' ' '

•Bi* ..Craxy J^ntlc* i on nn , UaQnl*b*ed: Brid(t« Acro««. the Hlasnrn.

"I remember," said a bridge con-tractor''some time ago.'Wlille: on1 tliosubject of ; workmeu'a. daredevil tries,"when working : a t t h e , big brldgp;ucross the Niagara, when,the two can-,talever^arms had' approached within,

-fifty feet of each otlier a 'l:een rivalry'as'to who shiiuld be tbe first-to' crosssprang "up among'the men.! A' longplank connected the two arms, leaving-about two and a half •feet of supportat each end; Strict orders wero. Issuedthat no, onoshould attempt to crosstbuplank . upon- penalty, of ,.Instant dlR-:

missal. , • ' . , ..."' ' !.• *'At the noon" bom\I suddenly heartVa great fihout Troni tbVmen, who were •ail 'sthrtlug :up.' Raising my eyes, Isaw a^mim-step ou-tho end of thutplauk.<Ktop aimtnute and look dowi|Into the whirlpool below. I knew hovrnR going to cross, and I shouted tohim,.hut.lie 'was too high up tp hear.Deliberately he walked' out until he.reached''tlie' middle of the plank.' Itsagged far down with his weight untilXcould see llght^etween the two shortsupporting ends aadtbe.'cantilevers oil.which they rested- He.save-the end. in .^froot-of ; Uini .do this,, hesitated andIoplved.back:tp;Bee.bowl%he other end .was. . '._" . :. '. ( ' " !'|-'"..",.".' -" / , '' "I thougbt be'ivns going to turnl He

atopped, giiisped both: edges of theplaiik with" uls bauds and,' throwinghlBfeet up. stood oti'bis liea'd, kickinghis'legs'In the"nir. cracking his heeln(ogether and yelling to the:tercified on-lookers., ThiB he did.for about a.min-ute. It seemed to me -lilse forty.. Thenho let his feet drop down, Btood up;Tvavedhls bat and trotted along theplank to tbe otlier'Bide and regained

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"Wo discharged him*, of course, but•what did he care? Ho got all the glo-ry, his fellows envied him, and hecould command work. anywhere.*'—Cassler's Magazine. " ; , , . .

FRUITS AND FLOWERS. I

In planting the orchard care shouldbe taken to allow each tree plenty ofr o o m .

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A layer of charcoal in the bottom of aflower bed la very beneficial in keep-Ing the soil fresh. • ,: ,, , .>. '••

In. plowing in the : orchard .always [turn, tho furrow toward the.tree, andbo careful not to injure.the fine,, fibrous

Tha Hfo'of an 'apple-.tree' is'oftenBhbrtentid because It grows in a poor.exhausted'/'sbU or onei not • properly -d r a h a e o V ••• ; - , ' • • • " • • • • •. - , : - • • • - i

When 111 or ailing, handle the flowers .little or wear.glovesi Jpellcate^plantsare eensitlvo(^to human magnetism;good or bad. ;. __ ;,.-_ . . i; ., -,. .-., ,,: The rpota . of,, the. strawberry oftenrcnch-TOut 'five feet from the^ mainstem;, heoce thb plants should not bo•Bcttoothickly.1 ' "• •-'• ' " ;

An apple 'or' cherry tree Is mncQmore valuable if It shoots but low.Trim from the r top ,as this wlir.causo 'thoJower branches to grow out , ,

Land: that..has :been too .rough forplowing may; yet be sufficiently .fertiloto grow fruit trees,and Is better,thruiland, that has been exhausted by crop;

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i ' ' Too' Gorttcon* :llooli>> - ,. • •The ;autbor of "Elizabeth'and Her

German Garden," writing ou the VtUvrttig'Of Books'*.In tbe'Century, says: . '

Gifts of books addressed solely' to-the spirit sli'ouldnev'er he editions de-luxe. Or what Use Is 'a book to me, •Iiowever much I inuy want to read It*If It Is so Koi'yeous that It must not betaken hiiyivhere, where, rnla migbt fall,on it. or, whuiv It lnj^bt get; muddy, orwhere ii heedlesB guat. caught by thequick turning of a leaf, might leave itslegs.in_the_;pngcs, angering the ownerof thefdpilleilbcok; wbo dbes'not wantIts legs, almost us much as It 1B ltseltangered bj*'uuvlng! to gd on being agnat; without them? I..can no'.moretake an , overgorgepus boob to, my,heart than I can .fold my child In myarms when,It Is.dressed fora party. .-.'.

•''. " '"" A. t i g h t ScntcnccT v"^ -XT.'-— jA gentleman'-1 how' living' In Nevir.

•Tori;-tells the following story of d1" ne-gro In Temifssoe wliose-6on;had beencotrrlcted of tilling a fellow; workman.

Jew. days.aftor.the trial the father 'vrixu itslieJ what disposition bad beenuinde of the ense. ", ,

"Ob," ht' imawered, "dey donosentlJbhnsbn to Jail for a'mdnf." "' '•:"Tbnt*fi a nghtsentonce for kllling'arannv don't you tliluUS" ; ' • • .

'.'Yes,'1 answered: the darky,.."but nt.da-cud -of de-monf ;dey:;done goln'. tohang Mm.;p—NeMvYork Times. . , , , , .,

. , • Dlvcrao. At>pct((ca. (,'"I"wondcr why dba'keyiaeat'tnisties?''

snfd the -uiiin who 'Is oln-ayai flndmgoom'ething peculiar" Ixi MIfe.1' ' • • • " •

"Oh," answered tho'ptersod.who Hkeaplain food, vtliere la ho accounting <fortaste.;. If ,n( donkeyiwere to givestbematter n thought, ;I suppose .he wouldVtjbnderTwuy uuuinn beingB eat.ojlves/1 •'—Washington Btur. \ , •'/.'.' ,-, ' \ .

Bigg's— i met a inun' yesterday whonmkes lila living'by-buying millinery;;^

BlEgSr-Ohr nothing;, only . I'yo:rbeenlUylng inilSlnery/eyer/sinctJ lTvns;mar-

"* -'imd.!)ir,:rjqrcr .ninde-flny .inooey

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Page 2: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

E&UCATIONAL

constructed: thenib'Vbut'ifnotv ICearn«TjUe thought it,peculiar?two^wfiCksto

TREATMENT GUARANTEED TO EVERV.CU5TOMERSCHOOL FOR fK»S,

%"iiffiifeS"S'titnb ei; 6i' ResideliT i P h p i l s deceived into- the/ •

e'flrgunieht subm itted -at themeeting .by Hfihr's' cpdttsel^ i H d l d

BROAD ST.-,2rW.PAEK-ST.-MBWAKK

.Common t'ouhcil laskihgwfOr.' the/ em.tabiUhment o i i W d

ra ofnri-.'onjlnabiiie to b&ed"prqViicliug for'such;u:body,'ienttbhttrft^unauaieiice.tKut

.filfeti .meeting.; room "'for,. TuesdaynighV;a.Council Bession. ;The,.petitio^

' hntjjjeen oirculatedliby ft.fewiof those.who have "'"been-' fighting * he presentEniBe Board arid1 ita; poHcy- since the

' e'BtabJBhnient of that body.1 Their op*positipn has. ,t)ceo due to.the Bbard'flcourse in maliiag^heJicense fee $500

.. in reducing the. number of saloons andhotels and its •. course in revoking-thelicense of August-C. Hahr •foL.seUlng

. l i q u o r o n S u n d a y . - - '•""*•'.'•"•••'• - •'•' "'"••'-

;-V Some person', interested ' In 'this H-cebeequeEtion'jdiacovered a law passedby t^ii^t'IeglBlaiurc'j'hnd apprbved

. Api-Jl 8, igoa under, which, it"'is eJniiniedthe Common Council, here* can by.'pi>

P |ifnvidc for nn excise board of

five''members to.'be elected: for «1hree

'of Common ,'Pleas. Imme^iately.^oiithe discovery;".of.) this .'law; petitioit

^^p 'a«dYr^f lo i r t In i r i^ iB 'Co! indl

• elective boards <-It was rreportedlthutthia'petition" would beTirit reduced by('bUncilmhn Hand'1 but. he 'was.toot

- 1 presentat Tue^dHy'Hj'Se'Bsion; hndt the; ^petition-wrifibuiided to the .C ity Clei-k

by,Lawyer John,,;B. .jWalsh,. •yvho.lvad1 been retained bx those intere.st,ed.in

the proposition;y.It declnrect.jfchat thesigners' believed' :"thnt i the:'.-popular

' election of' nri excise 'bohrd f-would• prove'lnore'Vdvahtn'gliotiB'jilnd satis-

factory than thepreseht ;mbde'bf np-pointmenTifr* £4*>t, the" voters of the

• city would have u voice anU'be' lienrd' in the selection of the cpmnii^Bioners"

and requested the adbptipn.bf .qn prd,if-narice for the establishment cf a ljons<jof five.menibersiito be .elected at.^thcnextigeheralelectioqi-.••-;; I-.-: ;:•,;,<•••)

The names'attached-=to" • the1, petition. "wcreV'i 0; 7. 'Carlffbb', Ei Fii;<Au'derSun,

Jf/^Keyesj EugeWe.Satillj-i I'red'W1.,Barber.'M^J^Suliivan^Leb 'Klein' 'jlS,i:Grnyf J. ;W. £ . Gray.-.F.^E., Suy.re,

Thomaq JtfcCuc,- JJnmes :THiis, Jojia A'rHarris, Edward'puffy,; J. J-' "\Y/tlsh\-*t>

• B; Crane, •Edwnrir.Del^ney.^Jirniur

, K e n n y r F r a n k H e l q ^ W i.jpavid Swayne, John J. fehcn'i? ti":.'J>Jqnes;^!jrbhti::'iB^

;/Mahan^Peter1 Hpffm^^i i .W/ )E^e^,' W.'Batterburyj Fred' Br(enti,''. Daniel^o'Kei./T^njcvSwanaojii'^jEEank'r'J;"WhitdfJ. C.-'Kellingtonv.^.F; Ht>p-

" kins;;Joseph'. Fletcher, Jl? E,,-Barker,. Thomas':Franks, R. Rudoiphj-Pv IPaiJ-Jilbs;'Jl- H.'Woo-d,- iE;-^T.J^relson.T J. .

'. R'u'doiphV ThWmas Britt: I»•-'-M1.;;\V6o'd-: rtiffl'Tlib'maaiqnerganyJEi'X ,Lpflg,TP:.; J. , 6'Brieni'*Jdcbb"'Doy ' Jrr,'"Prank

Brenn,.E. W. • Compton,-T, AlesbuVyVGeorge '•"Gate's -Jr.; - -Kichcjlas Gatcs.jI'ebn,ardLGatb8; Pet'ei^ReinyV'H.'Ocr-1

miinhaliEeji' : ';E!mer _:'• pay, 'Joseph;P'Briian:, Jam6s'O'Rourke;::Alon2p!4n-:derspn.iJ^^^'.Su.ltivan.V^F- i i . Uyatt.i

-. Peter;Kearns,.-^iilinm/.iMcCue,'VitO;-<3sorEe, JamesJA; ..Belcher(;C..,thine,

Ddniot JR'eldyt A; Vicari, J. J; Rboney,FrautX:. SheaVAdani Mirer; H.SM.

. >- Vheii the City Clert;)had, read', the:'body r of; this; petition bQtn:,,Mcssrf.;.Jones and- Franklin 'naked to have ai-

few of the names read.' Thecrerkreiultiboui'a dozen and Mr, Jones'remar'keci'

••tb^Ir.iFr-inkiin; ItbatV.,uIl]m

:BatjsfiejA|)ifyou' are'^nnd' the luttev responded

'.-' VPerfectly,',' .and, Miv-Joneai moved torefer it.to the Lnw and Qrdinnnce com-!

'-mittce.-.'-.-.A minute,, lnter,;.he \vithrowIthntmotion, when'>Mr.jFrnnklln^GJC-p'ained ttVat the lawjinder.which thepresent Excise Bo^rd WIIB .eatubHphed

/contained'a clause 'providing ..tiint'tiie,Board should, not: be .interfered ,'with:for'five years from the (late.of appoint-!ment;an^.offered n motion to refer-thcquestion to the .C.Uy, ^olicitor,!fo,r an'opini(m!hstb:wbettier .the act ofiiQorfftplilJbdtio Summit,-' Mr;':Carr;ittreredhn limendment requirinp'that i f ' thc

^Solicitor fttund'tliatilie'Counci] could

'=• bjinBtructe^.to.prepare.such. an ordlr.. nance.- This amendment .wus"p i

•.sloniitappenred: ns'^though .Jfr.i: .had offered'" ttv believinff the intention'

.•^fHr.'^ranklin'B.'motioriAvns, ttfTenvetiie'enti're'question' whether V£tip: Cpun-Icil should adopt nuch'an' ordina'ndc or

""• : ••••-"!W-' -"""""^'jAr. Frank-:to

- In ;rcdding thoulUt. of iiames: the;.'clerk'arihpuc<sady" one"of ahe.;ndmf9 as'

/'•MJcTifiel/.vKenny'iind lhcrented.?rau6h:

Joai^^rS^ckiiatniiitEC,rr:;He^ declarethat Hahr'sIIcehse hud-bee? revokedby vthe';Exbise: Board o« ;!evidefl'C^ub-;mitted bytwo. witnesses, that had not'beencontradicted andi:in-A;trial?.thBt,,was'entirelVijjllstincb'^fromrlhBfipolicecourt, proc^edintte. • Tho, dccJBio.n? >ofthe Supreme Court 'he •declared' Ve'rc,in reference" to .•'. defects in,' the coin-plaint before the Police 'Justice' and'inrib way affec1 ed the Excise Board pro-;-ceedihgs.'- He •;'declureil;.-that.1i brihrcould not recover either the license feeordamngf-flin:'any legnl proceedings/1 he opinion:was.ordered.-filed; •./:;.

M Cnrr ngain took a promiup i n i o n a rCnrr -ngain - took ath dings fpart in the proceedinga of the meeting

and his attitude..and views*'on Reyeralof the'matters', sub'ultted' 'only;'served,tb bear out the coti'viction'galncd tit'the previous meeting.-by the other'counci'men and those in the ':audiencethat his service in' the "Council; will beof much vaitfs to lhe;city; -liiews.thefirst "member of the Council to questionthe methods pursued by the,.Board ofHealth, to -insist-cn something, likebusiness procedure rby thatbody. andtp. offer; .a, motion refusing ^a,request:tVom that body,-Until the Council/un-.derstood jiist wliat thq .firinnc-'al con'di-ition ofthe'Boardis.- 'His 'oppositioncame at this, meeting in responBe W astatement and-petitlun filed'-by Secre-tary Rowe of the Bonrd. It^yas.prob-ab!y the most complicated- Jumble .offigures ever aubmlttted- to the.Council

and forabout, one-halt' hour txll the

atibn of ?soo for the "Emergency ;Fuhdarid the right to'transfer ifflfjotd thatfund.from'the general healtUo.ccount.

.The report* -Bhowed L Rebalance of§raoo;Tini,the-]r;general',.. h,e,ft.Hh>ntnc-ceuct. .Mr;- Carr .declared that, lhoCouncil hitdj pr.ov.lded Uiat-, Board Svithon Emergency Fuqd o f ' ^op ' aiid'h'6did not believe ith'a'd any. right to <ix-ceed tlia't nmbunt' withput'. the •cbn 'ehtof the Council..'He -would; refuse tovote'ani' additional appronriation -ntthistime,nnd;offered a.motion,to'referthe.reqiiest back;tp the-boardforHomc-.thing ukeaclearfitnt-ment.. This wasseconded by; Mr. FrnnkHnandadoptedbut lat'ef the1 two members' spent sombtime1 ib ' dirsecting the 'dbcuroeht' inconnection with/ the11'ljills filed" nt thfc"meeting and concluded thtittbe'Bonrdneefled$85o;to pay ' theso bills.;: Thefirstimotion waa reconsidered .and an-other adopted' authorizing the Boardto transfer $8,50 from the laeDernlHeath.-.account;,,to ;the ..limergeucyl<,un(i1but> the ddjiional apprpprhitionw a s npt 'a ' lbwe.fl ." •".•' " " '•••"; . ' . ' "','t'-!

iThe'''menib"ers'; ;llin^'d;'upt;ir'qn'' some-

—liiiglik'e1 politicnl'linesoii' 'a propoHi-tiori Rubmitted'b'ji'Hr. 'Franklin in re-gard1 toi the-negotiations-with-the rail-road conlpan'y for improvements, here.Heiofferedia! mqtirn to:.'ndd; Dr.rJ.Boj'd Risk and, Joel .G^yanCise. tp.thecommittee-now,,in,charge ;of tlie iVego-tiations.»- The committed ' coniprisesMayb'rJBaldwin,* Couficilmen'ybneJi,Franklin'and Can*; Mr.'C/'EMCimb'ilV,Mr.- P. W.—Pnge-and-vity SolicitorW Uiams:' Mr; JoncBopposed' the in-crease'in-'membcrship; because heide-tilnredwiih a.Jarge.cpnmiittee/iLi wasalways more,ain^cultrtbi:arr(inge meet-inE!B,.and he.thought: the,presept committee eot-irely'^apfible'bf disporfrigbf-th'e-BUbject: '• " 'v ' , ' '..'"', ".'." "•'.;. •"•*,'' !Mr.'FntnklinrcpHed that1 during Mr.jbnea' ' iibstiice • an effort':had'-bee'nmade to;lib!d a cpmhiitte6 meeting' butitfailed, the : dhly^menibers presentbeing- 'Miiyor' Baldwin;-'/ CouncilmanCarr and htms. If. •_„ At. that meeting hedeclaredthnt:ithadi been^.decidedvtoinvite Mcesrs, rEietand. Ydu ;Cise 3 tojoin .the committee,ar», it^yas •intehclQd"O; issue a, statement fo the public that!irbu'l'd.' corr.e>t'.8bnie', ideas ;'thiit' bad;aiued' cbrisiderable j belief and -had

jecn'fpBtered 1iyJ Viiribil9';jnieans' co'rf-cethin'g the -(utir"ei;ra|lr6ad •'qtiefltion,Mr:iJones failed'*tb'se'e^aKy-merit iilh»s hfgumentinndi deriiarided the^ayc~UJ- -la'j^'ivbte !on: :the-jpropcBition,

'i Jbnes^.Carr.andnTiiylor. vot<*dan ainut the increase cnd.llcssrs., Woodand j . FraDk-^n^.in, favqr. ,q'F it,, .Mr..Fran'k'lih'fluslVed angrily,!,a's.the .votewas announced abddeclrired:' .' ''

"I cnn't'underBttih(d"MrT""Carr'B votein view of tlie fact that he was presenfat last-week's meeting.'' '.•••i;;-! •'• '•; '•'Wfiti-I'lliry.'and' malteitclear^ie-•torted Mr.- Carr iwlth.i equal sharpnesH.•I was .^present,! atithut'meeting ,but Ii

joinjthp ;Cpmm;ittee or ipronpBttion toiincrease, Us membership.'^:,Instead ,'bfifisuTng"'statements ;ib,'.the' publio -Isthink we should secure' the ''opinion ofoutside.codnsel bir'the' merits of thecontract between tlio :city'1 rind theTailrondi; I made BUCU a motion at the•last meeting '• and it1, was adopted buthas never been :complled ,\vith.: As.Iu'nier«tandH the only question in dis-pute is one clause ;ia.the(cqntiapt,and'I believe the; committee that has had:charge of the negotiations .tbroughoufccan Pettie that it' we follow .the'eoursa'agreed bn in regard'to nn opinion."" The- subject: was' hot ; ; referred toagain'at'this ;ae89ibri;; A' letter wasread from,-Morristown-r otRciala againseeking Summit's^ co-operation. in the'effort to secure, that city'B admission tothe joint sewer plan and.was referred-to the Mayor and,Drainuge committee,,,i*u rnBtru'ctums tpn,vonfer.:with.!tlie:

Jibusij-oniMbrriR: iivenue which,tho tenant WBB obliged tb'ya'chte'in'or-dertoavbid:' qiiarautine •because ofa;

sOiail pox;cose in that^vicinlt^Revcrnl.nxonths ago.^The; ^amount requeBtedwa»S34/nnd. it -was, referred; to ••, the;Health Board. ,'. ,-v, • v.':'.",,"- ' • •:".' \ ;"3IcTs for "the cobb ing of .Wbbdlandiavenue ware opened, and the contract,awarde^d-to"Jamts Moore at 44!^ centsper aSttate-^ard;1! :T-he'[bnly,;other bid

cents-per;,squrire,:yara.: .Later', in.'Ui-,session - another.'. question; cpncernjuc

y'. questi:;';befor

B Wbidfl'was .brought :;';before,rtjhe,i CouncL"When-tawyer John B.:\Valsh appearedon behalf of'J6hn".Fifcznntr!clc;. and:qaested " ''jftif,1 Ann;^ a c t i o n at the:'rireyirpua;-mebtinE inawaWidg:theyt;66'nyr'ac^

v« ambtbiuu&\!^-•FitEpatrick^:, then-; joined! i l iawy.r!\Valh inTequestlniK arycoiiaideratlon. o n d b b t h ^ d t h n t because the CAU for,bldrtcoutained;-the tiualx tunk in the'description 'of'wbrl^rit musybe includtjd,[in.'tlie-total -of the bids.* City C:erkDay in reply to a questftr* informedMr. Carr that the plans dld'nut prp.-vide'foria flush tan t and tlie diseus-'albn ended when Mayor Baldwin in\ifortn^d the. Council that he thrd that-:du* signed the conWoct with'-'Kcarns.

;TheT)rainnge Committee^ had ne«-Tected to comply with a motion udopl-ed"lit1 the previous meeting to cousiderand report on! the question "of..exteridr.ife'g the teekman Road sewer-tb'Highstreettand in calling- attention^ to - it^Mr. Franklin offered a rootiotKto baVti,the committee instructed to report ntthe next meeting and it was udoptcd.Au ordinance for constructing a seweron Florida avenue was introduced anda'fterfirBt reading referred to the Lawand Ordinance committee. Mr. W.O, od'smotion far the Solicitor to prepare anordinance forchauging the grade ofSprintjfield avenue from Kdgar Placeib Hobart. avenue to conform ;to thepresent surface of-the street i<vasadopted after the President had calledfor objections in accordance with thenotice of intention and move -was sub-mitted. • _ _ . :? A.iiotice was received from th'1 Joint

Sewer Commission that, Suinmit,'s,ppr-tion-bf the last riaaessnJerit for'thaf

For Prospcclui Aildrcss JAMES HEARD, A. M... y ',-v*.;•./-'• 1-i;^.' ' ,-i' --.-!••-,•;, :-.•!• •• v " P r i n r i p a l . .-

Prerfatati'6bJ'for- Cdllege, Scien^ifio

School anO. Business.

work would be;^10,700 nna.ttie^ treas-Urci-,wa8 authorized to. issue notes o'u'

was-aleo authorized'1 tb raise' $a;6bo oni-bad account qaml Si,$op; on city.ac-,coiint. Mr., wood offert'd a nibtioii tohave the Street > comnjiitfee locate -*.yfoStreet lights "on- lurnpik'e Road" be-tween Summit avenue-., and theNcounty.Iineand Mr. Taylor, 'a similar motionfor a liglitiphj/i-edar;- Htreet and, (both,were adopted. For the"- Railroad com-panyf John ;;J.^ Lane .iequested.;thechanging of a light near tL'ef. entranceto the new freight yard on Park ave-nue:from its present location to a pole(.urthier west and it was agreed to.I Three bills for the Essex Unior^Water company, vere fil^d- but no:the membere^ppearedfamiliar^eni _with toem tb guarantee their correct-nesa'and all were laid over on motionof Mr. L'arr. One wns for the citv's

but Mr. Franklin hnd complained of6nepole thtitliiul been left in a i dang-erous position at Crescent and Wood-land aveiiuealand :this;is tp be.moved..• The bills ordered paid.were:.Summit Herald.;:-1..':.:'vr..i..$; 81401. - " '* 19.00

D . C, Dny 4-00.lames Moore . 27.50C. Bi Smi th& Co 14.35LaFrance Engine L O ,-. , , g.85P; J:'Fleming..-iV.,:.'."i.J.^.V..'.•.':' Qty/i K Fleming 631W. H.Swaic . ;- . : . ' . ./..>.-• 151.4$9.-AI .French ..-•' 7-3°Win: Kelly . : . . . '.~?::\. • • - • / :Q. W. Brown..-.*C^......-* *iS.;liSummit Record'-v f\.:..,....V..... J.tyR_e'ey« & CbfTey.'..", .' £E. P. Shipmun .•. HSamuel Knott....-....'. — 20.00Miss, Evann.. .;..;>".: ; -130.00B. S; H. Baker. . , 5-5°Reeve & Goffey £3-55,h Burling- „*... . ( W . _ . ._•«-.- • 1 v-4J)0-°°

"Jl'J, Muchmofe..:.,i..*...'....•. • .7.53

• W ol ter~Bro3r.-rrr r-.r-rrr.-rrrrrr.F E Luhdcn, •:

i i :a tab^Bena«mo, . j (6Jla to-bo. found'a/u^oroiiiotn-

i oi"-a more awe insyhiug persontiian the hendsiiuui, w-J]io..i)luxs lii I^dlathe role which the olll^faliibaiisiminplays iii a European'city;• /';l Jl A ,"{

Hls'deadb- woilc Ui>_nei'fonns withS-eot'Slill). ;r.jid;.li^-his bearing there la•a certaiiiii dignity -\Tli!ch-~Is ncror-'ifca".in ii Europor.n htrj^mr.n. Moreover,vpIiIlGrlii .'Europe1 .tiie pQpr.J'.icoi re^i'.rdsa iK'.ngman with u feeling which. Ispartly contomi'-t r.ud.piirtlj* ljovrcr, tubl)?pi)l(?: of ,Iiid"i,' r'cspet't(1iind .fear the'

qlit? h;is l6\voi'cU

cc;ile by iictt?iJtitis

in

ofhen.i lma: . I . , . . . : . : / ; . :-. On, ;fpBtlye;1 pcenalbnii. -aiitl ••wlipti; a r -r:;,vetl.ln..lila rcilica of plHcc. tbe execu-tioner Is (U'cJdifdly'ii-picttirl'stiui' figure!UHl tiltORCtlior (llffei-t'iit• fvcm the soin-bjer and 'griui. hauguittn of. JSuropo;

.' . ., .Tbe-.Bisear.e DIiI.Kot Fit.;..J. - - -The doctor had paid "a visit to Mr.

Cassidy, ami aftGt-v.hiH;dui):ii";uro Mrs.Casstdy,'8 "friends- In .' tliu; ^tenementstepped' in to hcin-.-tlie'v,erdlct.';

"Well." s:iid Mrs. Cassidy. smooth-ing down her; aprou,'wlth.-an ..-nil1, fitmodest triumph; ''tlie doctber- saysMoiUo BeeniB to be having an-attncktof plural pneumoDia;but Ol snyffto-ulm,01 says. 'Docther, you know well thatMolke IB a shaiall llttleinan.' Oi says,:'and"ain't; you ei:nggeratIng"n'bH, for,to my "tblnklng.;:slngle"la all .tlier'e'd beroom In him for,' Oi snys.'. But;

(wblnbe- weut off. his .w'urrd was unchanged,BO It'sipluftil prieumonla/i'lolke'uri^ byII!B telling, and RUre it's a grand, largodisease for Boshmall a man'as blui." •

,, How It reddens the Bkln, Itcbaa, ooses,dries and scales I ; . .' •/-. ' ..-. :

Borne people call it totter, milk crnst orsalt rheum. . . •' . ... • , .-•--. .- Tho Buffering Jfr0raUt'-larflomotimea la-tense; local applications aro resorted to—tbey mitigate, but cannot cure.. •" -. „ , , .

It jroefceds Irom Iiumbrs Inherited? or. ac-quired and persists until theso hare.Dcen

' r e m o v e d . ': • • ' • • . . • • . • • - . " . • ' V . ' . . . ' . ' • " .

Hoofl'sSarsxipanlla'poBltlvelyrcrnoyes th6m \v\s j^d^l iy

CfeBatjt??t6ftSch6p

;, '^i' f- $ '~\ •'• ^'""A |Prin'cipftl.;

" O O L ' - F C E . -N-o tv -a r l c . 1ST; J .TheLanttstam] Dest, Equipped UPBIIUKI School ^

DAY ^ p y ^ ^AU'BO5[D(S9 St^udlea, Shorthaud and

' i ;

']:'. ' 1;;--TIM1T./ B.E5T :RESULT^.' <u, >..•.-., Call or write for Cata*ofiir. .

:-Calls for help (Inf)y': KojErliduift': ..out of a

"•' Con Acci'lciiiyaiitl Halscy fctrccta• (One blotfk rcaf o l ^ ^ ^ i ^ 0 ? 1 9fSc^'? '

Taleph'ono 3712^ -:~ ' .ff.lCOli'EMAN,'President.

f l ic Fa( l S^ssiohs'of" > J : '•

• 683: Broad Streets-Neviarfoy ;;

(0 r P 0 SITE 111 L i rk n' Y- -'P X n k

DAY ANDCATALOGUE

'' ' C. TVMiller,"E. A. Newcomber, Soc-Treas.

Q nud jitioutha'Urae ^i!I givejj-ou the bettt^couiBS^ti BUSIB«8: that has ever- fceivc n t c d . ' . . ' ' ' • \ " . • '• . . ; . •

Hundreds tare uow tiling It sVic'cessruUy. '• ! (

•ftSite forpahicularsror cfll nfthe college."- -

\NjQO p/S sCO LLEG E.'' : Sire.Btc-nllst;, Newark, N. J.

BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND. , -^1 'completed' ilie^shorticourseJgi^BitsIues^liitwo months, nudfinJ It very satiafactorj' nudcomplete. ..

: • • • • • • , - • -3».-(A;.UNK.

THE E AST 6R A IN G ER e s i d e n t a n d D a y S c h o o l , :'•

: ? C o l i c g e I ' r e p n r n t o r y f o r G i r j a ' n u A ,'r.:

••' Re-Opecs.Wednesday, September 24;;1 ThorouRliTrcparotory Cour t s <"or College. Cct-

ti6VatesoTArinit.-Eioi.l6 Vnssar, WcltyWcllesl«ynnd Mount Holyoke Colleges'. •' • • '• •'•

1-ranch Departmeat, MLLE. L. X. I.OOCON.Kiudcrearlcu Traliliop Hrpartfncnt incliargc

or MISS OJRA WEBB I'KET. - OWu |o.thost &•slrinjr to mnte khidergorteo n proles-Ion. A. dl-DlomanlsnUyinc Hint the holder la .quollUbd for,flit: dutU-s ofn Uiidergarteu will be uwnrded onthe snllslnctory cotnplctiou of the a years course.,~ Indorsed ,by tor. Wm. Hnrrisv U ti. Coiiiinln-^ioiier of Kducntion, Madamr Kraus-Boclte, ol.vcw Yorm-Ur- Wm. Mabon, Mr. Charles Whc-

[0QArt Deportment under -SllSd", FL0R15KCCLUMNTS. . • • ..

- H. X.OUI3E UNDERHU.t, Principal.63 Honison Strcat, :. Kakt Orange.

TU'ENTV-SIiCONDTHilAlt . .. '

. The*Newark |

. Business Cpljege,!?

COR, BROAD-and'MARKET STS. ,• - . . - . - .. - . . -Kowark.N. J v - • . . . ..-,

'; -W.' W. WINNER, Principal. . g... Modern courflcofBtnay.FncllUlcsdoiib- H

led. TLnrecnttcndnucc.. I'opulnr.tiiiUon, -,?,—payable monthly- Dny ontl'iiiRlit-rnH-'-K

-year. "Kulcr ntiy titfle. Studies optionul. •§indii-IdiniHiiBtrucHon.Tlieleadingschoo'of. Shorthand and Typewriting in. tlitcity. Send for catalogue, or, better, call

and permanently cured tho worst cases, midIs without nn equal "'.tor. .'all cutaneouse r u p t i o n s . ' - ' . - ' . '

: • ' ' • • . • " • • • • - . . • . ' •.-. ' . -

ie Siimmlt School for Glrlsiand'',''- ' " • - Y b u ' r i g ' . ' B o y ^ - : ' . • • ' • _:

: PARK AVENUE WEST, KEAH TULIP SrREET. 'foarQiensOoiobzrFirsU

Primnrv." Int'erriiedlate.V "co'lcgc rrcparalorj';Krudersarteii Methodn for Yoimxcst Pupilr

j Remarkable Yalaes in press (Goods aiid Silks'.ii •%.Thousands of Yards at Saving Pricey

d:not dwell on the.Beautj' pfjlhese dress inaWiats, for jjf ' "*""

; ghtrati.ee to the right to view this hterials at bargain prices. • v -

light blue and pink, real "7Qp' ;^eader for iM,ontlay"!ohIy', ;\iQQ-yalue, yard at / u u , 'yard a t ' ; ' ; ! •'- : '! :-'; ' ;|

y U p J eivark for Reliable Dt^-Gooils • ^

EDUCATIONAL

e,' ;Wiliiam"'H. .Risk/ D. ,;Sommers 'HOTVi..Crawford,; Bic'mrd Eickarcl.Eraiicis S: Plirauer',

George Wilcox,' John brewer. ;•'. :. . '

• • ! : i , i i ' J " , : ••;..:• , -.-•.. : - , - r . - : . . , j l 1 A t O I T ( L : T T i'-:-'> ''""'. l ' j - . - ' ' - . . ' . ' ',, llrs. Sai-ali Woodman Paui.iA.. B,, Principal; Mathematics.

iXissAnna'S; Woodman'A. J3., Aes't/Prin;,'- English and History.Sliss Mnrtbft D. LaPorto,!A. ;B.,' Latin and^reek.

Misj Henrietta CftttolIi;A; B., llatliematics., ••, Miss Blary-WrifiJit, Ai-BL,"English and Voice Culture.

' i'lieliu^ii^taCu'enflet, French.-.- Miss-i-—r> German and Science.Bliss Mnry F. Street, Intermediate Department.

Hiss Annie B. Ellison, jPrtinary. Department. : !

.f . •..•-.. 3Ii'a'3'Bertha I). Sanders,'Drawing arid Painting."i.Ir. 'August Arnold, MiBs Alice .Blakp, Pianoforte antl. Harmony,

;;: , , ";i; :-. Miss jMEditJi Blake,' Vocal Music. ;.Hiss Sbpliie Shepherd Hbgau, ;Physical Culture.

!OPINS SEPT. 24

jIILLSl;SCHOOL

gSHORT HIb£gif:NgVy JERSEY.

^BfSpMxcAQn^^choo]] fop IBoys and GirlsF A L L T E R M i i ^ N S i ' E P T . 2Sth.- •

DIRECTORS: . . ' / . . . : • '-. S. P. Davidge, Mrrjolip Fa'rrj' Mr: A. K. Gardiner,:., Ste.wart.-Harlsiiorn,N Mr,jD. P. Kiiigsford, Mr. J-. R.Strong,;r. Stewart H. Hartsli'orb, Mr^Ekhard'Hppkins, Mr. C. H. Wheeler,.•T^Wa'sliingtbli Irving,"' -Nlr. G. H. Richmond, Mr; A. F . Riacb..:• p A prospectus }V-JH,t(e sen\ upon application to Head Master ..

' - ' - '-^nrirFl'Twitcheli, Short HillSV%'.ji

— i ~S^ :

• - : i \[ •" •' • " •• - •••••

p$ i i '-1 .It.B(J£K:A.OENTS FOKMISSENHARTBlt AND 0. O.1 CONN'S .:

Blond aad Orchestra instruments.' iririi IN STOCK ; : ' ' '

p i ^ N I ) TEAPS. 1 .: :.'

jEyerything in MusicStuitz and Bauer and

TROWBRIDGE

< : N'o Better Instruments Made.• EASY PAYMENTS.

- i PIAN05 REPAIRBDAND TUNKD,- Simplex I'mno Plnyor—Call nnd Uear It Piny.

PHOiNOQRAPHS AND RECORDS• ;-Victpr Talking Machine's .'and Disc^Records. Full Line of Cameras and.Supplies.; Plates... and. Films De-

S0l8 flgentS fOF ihO Sblla MnsiC B)X. ^eloped; Printing and Mounting.

feEDi DAWSON & C ^ Inc, ^43 Broad St.Hahne's Old P.ullqing Newark. :

Office Reod's Orchestra'• "• ]'-. I Telephone 9123Newark, New Jersey."

Manio Furnielicd locjyeil(lloff»nndItccontionB. ':S.—All orders for special inuslo left « our uto're beforo 10 A. ». will bo tttlii t h o s .an day.

NATIONAL BANK• :•• V-; ••'•:.. Gharteredj ini ;18 ;65. ; ' ; ' ' ; / : :"• ; ; .

Capital, Surplus ^ and Undivided Prpfits,:'';';\':::••;::•• :j ;u'-;: '$sQ5ado; ::- ;--^'-i ; :;- ' : ' 'v :; - ^AIBBUT-H. VERNAM, Eres., ., :,'. JoSEPiI 'HiH H IOsBt;l<iyiceI>r«si:-GtrsrM

, Cashier.iPHUDOWH H. IOssBt;lB<iyice7Ir«s:,GtsrMrNT0N, 2n_dVi3ePres.

Interest allowed on. deposits ofSlOO-andtipjvaid, subject to,check; at the rate of- S?:,per cent.; per anauni'^froiil date of .—:•••••-,••- ' ; " d e i ) o s i t i m t U w i t h d r a w a l i ; ' ; • • • - - • ! :•

' ' ' '' ' KRT CORy^jA jit

Page 3: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

';:.V^^''^::•^:.-1••^v''!^V'•^:^^l.?1:'••

llliillli^^ '3

" tain -Xvottt,: eayo this 'World's jWbri*. '.' ••.';;.

taku a'. teen l i u i i d i c d f t f a j t / . ^ . /!.. "i'ou," aaW-'anbtlicr "voice;' ."cfc! a>,. t o o l . " l • ' • . • . - . i - ; • • ; ; ! . . ; , ' • , - ' ( , = ' " . . . - f • ' , • • ; - I - Y - - ,

/; ,"N6t at Ql{,">iin]b'BncIirnlJgxitaionM-t

tlvciy. " "The rlvcr'a-very low. /^Vifit;there is of it turp^. to,spray .In- tliefirst hundred ;J!ec't; it. will "tfiinply. comedOTVii liUo^raln. Why, you'd go imderthe Bridal Veil yom-s'oif; -, Only tlirittS-

' Brcsale." This Is something bis- Come-o n . " / ' - • • • , - " 7 / i - - . • ; " " • : . : • • >

• ' • ' • • N o t i . ' ! V : - r1

-1

' . . '1

. ; • . : ; > . : ' . • > ••.••••. •

But I yrna, there to. spo.; .'The.water.• as (be! had, eaitl, 'caiacdown/ra1 coasld--erable part of it, .in-ralii-anU spray

' that flew out "on theMwlnd; incredible •.-distances. .Biit to.cra\vl downV dr.esseilin a.'bathiDg'-Euit; closer .t& the nminstream thut falls-to the pool and uponthe rocks..'with a murderous swish1 lptho air .'and a.roar. Hko n rttiltvny trainwhen i t Btrilcca ivns daring to fodl-liardiness.';-At 'any moment a "veeringwind might swing .the .wiio/c/mnss upontlie tall, sllin figure backing tentative:ly on nil fours dbivn-tho jagged' tnliiaslope,' his eyeglass pebbles 'glinting'cheerfully,/,. A-.Eteadj:, breesQ.J>cp.t. ,tbc.

-fall-swung out a.little the other-way,,and the .spray/lmrgeoned-out fnr-.up

; tlieothersibije: Tho[roar Vas.deafeh-$ i n i g . ' , ~ k : r < ' ? : . ; ^ ' . - » • . . i f f - ' • ; " . • . - > . ! - * ' • ' * > •*

;?• AJHot./jOnCq: tbtf Vvlnd,;::sli^ted,!:the,£" watirf'sVurig tmck; aildvlrt n^flasli tue.

.• human figure .was -blotted' out in a- dels'• uge that turned me sick, for n sec--i onil—thh't',(see5iCdLnu-^houi'-;it> plny.etf;

' ' dm'ed "to, ( d L n u - ^ h o u i ' - ; i t > plny.etf;

' on -the'spot? fiendishly.' it sedm'ed "tome, standing horrified there, and then

>sIowlKiC^ept)n^v43'4 ~ ~*>sIowlKiC^ep,t)n^v434 - —i And fheu" tltere was a movement." a» painful^crawllng movement, down there

on the slope,nn(ll scrambled down tlie'• slippery rocl^ to-lieJp£rtjfiiJn!cin£r;jciylfi>

ing, much ^siirpl-ised* yoiitlu bleedingfrom a hundred cuts. f up, to whore his

• clothes liiK.i^He>as stlli^do;-daze|4 | o ': epcak. 'When bis breath returned and'-• his extra glasses-were, nDrched ragalu., on.hla noskihftsflid: i ),'O [\.\\ U ..J

"The oceans foil upon me! For God'seake. come back to New Englaudl"

The "Man and the Wave.: Once upon ii time a man ,was telling;

a tale of woe'lbatuiivellcuUils lbatrf-l*. monlalexperleiice... • "It "was all >on account of-a llttlt*

dainty handkerchief." he saId!'j>!*Ths'first time that I snw the girl and bivfore we hnd been introduced she ,waretV

t b l t f l f l t m e and I w a ^ e n r• fore we hnd been introduced she ,waretV

that.blt pf.lace.flt.me, and I^wa^/enr-r!ed"away."'-'l£ was a'fait 'In love and.then matrimony;'1 But; ralas.f tViat: •dciP-

• cate handljor.chlef'waB.-.nolndeatcttln!girl's" nature, and I- found myselfwrecked on, Uie.flua.of matrimony.'.'r-'.-^

:- • Moral.-1-A^mariinay be"cftri-i«l awaybyn-wave-nnd' wreckpdT\1thoUt"EOiiig

, ncarjthe.wfttv'i;-—New, York, Herald.,-,.•>

•:••i'ii.:, JiTVii'ii'JeilJii'Lower'Koy.'1''"'"•' -i,.,.',Spntts-^iy.v ;lpye, .1,,wish, you ...wouldalter tile kfj" of -your voice."'.,' ..,.v , :•

Mrs.,Spatts—Whut's tbo mii'tter witjv. J t ? ; ; ; \ . . •,,-,•• • . • : T I — - - . W T ,1 J spiitts—Ohrnothlug: only* from1 tho

i K h ' f l F t ;!nt,,«i5;iiiiM.it,.,

Itvyliolt* In tlie l

Parspn^ /(visiting,, prison)—.^'Uy,, an*you here, 'my misguided' friend? •'•'""'

Prisqner^-f-Ifrn';tlip .vlctlni of tlie ;qn.lucky'No. 13.'." _" .;.. I ,; , , , ' ,

'Parson—irideeai-How's-that?-J : ' J 1 'Prisoner—Twelve Jurors • j and qm

one -*bf .TJocm' Sa'ni's'wnrslilJaldvartwvnlr officer, r,'<wo:Ji^<2(nmong oar able ..'seamen', tw61/ lliiko and Barney. .tliey hpfl'

i^qpieiaboard three.days after.they had;landed in the country* but they learned:&b'merthlnga so quickly that they hadrjcjiUJrcd a very definite Idea of .;thoinpa'ujng of tlio Fourth of July.long pe-forc the dhy arrived,--which was some-thing JlUe a month after we had sailedoh'.'ou'r cruise. I t chanced that tUetivqivete^on -tin enrly morning wntcb to-gether when Independenco day tdttivnqd,nnd they at ctoce began to plan <for |taproper welcome*. TUey seenyx£ to real-ize, you SOLV that there was nncessttyfor an unusual * 'for an unusual.dlsplayxf^pnUIolJ

'•Barney ,Wccslqd 'they flrV^ealutefi-om on6 6t the fbrwajra'ql^Ut ijound-ci-3, buririkci fL'ar^iTtli'at'would'rouse

i h ' i l d ' ntlio cntfro ship. 'Nivcr molnd.'swoi^d, Barney:';-.'po ye.hpldjarllu^fci-nUist !th'o!ibuzi!lei a'n'iftHHnfaeaden'tU*c sound.' And three minutes laterthat gun went .cffl.wUlj:fiuch,r,a..rcar nsbrought "every, man of the crew outjoftho midst of peaceful dreams..' y j• "I sent "for'Bhrnoy. 'Now, my man,'

said i ; ' te l l me evLTythtng/ '•'*'-'' • •! •".'Sure,1 he faltered, 'ltT whs bnlyj.a

bit uv a cilibratlon. because UV' our fa-lplndencev-.,-. -.--'' "';. .•-•'•.r':' ''^;i'i! fJ ', ".Uud.Where's .Mike,?'; I demanded;'• 'Captain, dear,' he groaned, 'bc;

Int-nfthj.Ta~bucketrTiv"wnthor; an'*lfhe c c i n i ? s - l ) n c l r n s - t i t i l c i r n s f e '

i V ' ' / i V

There Is'ii uew.'rniuId.inVtbuyfamnyi- :&Virtiish" RlrV Wft> 'bap; 'iittiny1; thingspsidC3 bjiiffcnge-tp'icarn: says an -oxj

;cbiiugo^ ;iJIer>ewrnilstress,-..wh^-Is

'llOrV VIIL?" Kil 'till . ' • iu^ownn •»!«•' • »"i*v-i

lifcatl,1 'tlic^girl' boin{,'i.toid''Jtliat>Bbqshould ;ancnk>,of ;bread.which;had'lostJtsrlreshuqss aa stalo.and not ol'd'fTlibgirl, "was: my&, ,'to; euiember., this,-, ;foishe wns,n^Ictt.to.jearn, nnd^sbp^dld;So the yb'ung/wifeikndw w,heh' a. few;daya';iater the" maid remarked to; bercbniiabntidliy: ; '' ''"•-•'•'- ' • ' _' •' ; "It1 is/tbo.:bad,:i3D't It, .that yourbnsband1 is Bomuch more stnlo'tnanyou nrei'pTr-Detrpit Free Press.,: ,-; , i

. . . , , ; j P r c l i n i I i » n . T y . . : ; i , • . ', • ; .

' Pbe policeman berird high words andpoiied his nend in th'e door. ' ' '' ' : •

1 "What's goln' bn'herb?" hodemand-

^Nnwthin1!' Nawthln' ht all," answerrod one of the belligerent. Irishmen: Inthe, middle, of tbq flp.or. /'There's naw:

thin;;goln''.OIL but there's; a,fight com:In' off in ltss than a minute if ye'U onlyUeep movin'."—CblcngoPost . (' j

:> •:. M : H t H a d t o D i e . : - ' ; " ' " : i

"If • you refuse• me,'1 cried "Moody,,"my.blopd w(!l be upon your head. / Icannot live without you!',',; , *

d u c . r o i s h t , n w . : \ ; : .' A n d ' t h e n the ofllepr closcvl his.storywlth-.thQ^toplp statement:./'Bflt Mtkewa^jiever^coveria.^/;-$J"§-V1 ' ?\')-

ourt Tind-out, of It. andp Jones.-belugvha^tolglit-V?'called;more1 clever than'mith, Invariably got tho better of:tHe

unter In the end so cowed was'S ,encounter.

iably got tho better of:tHeIn the end so cowed was

w,onder LWh t object hfi has In this?"Ii6^alicu'-up?nii bfs reserve faculties toebmbet the fresh attack which poorcombat the fres attac pJonesnever ccntcmplatqdy ;•:.J: bne'day-'a friend'callea on Smlthhn'd'greeted him with: . : ' ; '

"Well, old man,, have you hcardithe2' ' '{ 5 ] :

"Jones is dead. He. died .last nightjat bSdqfebJrt" repll6d.ftlSe. other. ,-•;'

^mitiipaused, drew JaL hard breath,raised his band to his forehead 'find.thought, then blurted outr '• ;••• i'! "bdiid.dld you say —Jones dead?.Great her^yepa. ,X,wonder what object

;.;.,..,...NO HIDING.;.. „; , .,„ 'the fact ^Uat all broduced in our bake-shop Is1 .well liked.: After one or two,tnals it is token:regularly by.those whoappreciati fine • texture, j good color,crispnesa. , lightness, and .wholesome-n e s s . . ; • , • • / • - ' , . ,_,•. .. '. ; ' . , ; ; ' • . ;

Don't eat soggy, heavy "bread.• OUH.3READ .: ..•'

will be! deliyered \6 residence at anytime desired. We make'all kinds that'sg o o d . ' r' ' . . ' . ' ; " " " '' : ; '• • • / ' • • • •

George W. Baldwin and Sons.

,466. SpriD^Qeld iyflnne,; Summit,' II.' J.Telephone-1.23, ^uinmlt^—. • V rT~';"..'

>>f!OFESSibNAI.

•:;."S.;.BREWSTER., •,.• ,v( . . v . - ; !

', r .pUNERAL^biRECTOR.; ",','! !377 SpringSsliLAyenue,. Summit, .N. J

, - ;iTeIephbnel46.'A:' : . '. '• •' •

1 'CITY-ENGHNJEER AND '•

SUMMIT,'

. DEPOT/'''N; J.

; :L1: '.McEIR6AN;" i '

qRepresentative.of PideHty-THI© De-

posit and Guarantee'Company of New-v k ' N J ' ; : ' ' i ; " " : j

Springfield Avenue," - , Summif.

Rhyme. ^ • •

:In'*n*cUp 6CJ warm "water arid Bwallow:,. right soon. ':; i "For -burnflrtry borax,and.a wot-banaase

- ' t o b j ; " ' " " ' * ~ ' " • ' " • • ' ' • " ' " " " " ' " " •

Jl hllstcrdtiienoUanddryJlanDel- will

;L;;;I>ECPBTEB;Vti;.".: - j

, COtJNSEtiOK. AT ii^W. - jay'^r Block,'Maplo at*,'Summit, N.. j ,

i : . ;: 800 Broad Bt.; Newark..N.J.i -. '.

|Wmbe,intSummit'offic3bvery Saturday

t $t- hHstfrrfl,. do .

For children's convulsions worm bathsnro tho rule; '•••'•/ ; •

,."With castor oil ataci too, but tcep thobead cool. ' yC i \ .. \.

'Civo cirup ot Ipdcao.:Tvhcn croup 13 In.., -store:- }y~: '''-• • j ,For fnlnttnj- stretch ipatlent right out on

tjie door. J v-V,1; ''To soak Jn hot Tvatejr Ja best for a sprain;nemember these rUles^and 'twill save you

- "What Is this stuff r(-asked tho testyhusband, spfatterlrig.,bver,,a raouthfulfof the straiigb'disfi which "he finds onthe breaUfast<tabI^.*-:^;-v-.'.'•"•' . '

"That," answers-tho thoughtful wife,"is tho new^henltli .fpod-V^ \

"It ought to;bp:healtuy>*' declnres thehusband. *"i'll bet'nb^germ of,any,

_E.ense would vtr^;tb;ltve;;bn itl"—Baltl*more Amcrlcam'.;.-".-";'1 '.1' -'•t-xi •

rJ Q DENTIST,' •'"' • 0 jBUILDING,, SUMMIT, N.' J,

-rn &. KELLY; i ^ " • " • • - • ' ' " ' • ; .

Paasage to.ani'ftoil'any part of Eur

JOHNB. WALSH-;- —

STORE CLOSES AT 16 P. H. SATURDAYS.

NEW JERSEY'S GREATEST STORE.

CH 6 i tE ; AS G RE AT AS IN NEW YORK,

OPENING

WUIInm A. J.' Reeve; 7 Thomas J- Coffcy.

R e e v e :;••&: ::!:Coffey

/:/v/-;;::;.':;i.n.:Alt'PepartmTents.'-; The second annual Fall and Winter Opening of seasonable and

particular. desirable merchandise finds us better prepared than everto satisfy the wishes of our patrorisr • •

Our foreign buyers have returned from abroad, and their selectionsembrace, every .known novelty and staple1—the leading manufacturersand designers.having vied with.each other in their.collection of every-thing that was chic and as dictated by the world's leading modistes forthe coniingseason. . •' ' ' .

Our d omestic staff has. been' alert, and we can honestly and safelystate that we do not believe.there is a store in the. country' belter pre-pared to respond to the most exacting demands of their patrons thanthis establishment.: , • : : • . • •

_ The newest of the new is portrayediin lavish assortment,and at correct"prices, for we are never unmindful of the po-tency of selling reliable merchandise at narrow profit margins.

: AND

SHOP1297 MORRIS AYE.: SDHH1I II J

: WRIGHT,C O N T R A C T O R ' .•',':'•''.'''':•.

O f f i c e a n d Y a r d 14-Bank S t r ee t ,:'..;.'/'}'', ! " . s i u M i y i ; T : ' : ••;; / , .

. MASON 'WORK" OF- i t l , •faiESeRlPXION.A.S^ECIALTy.FURNACE,. GRATE/ BOILER. ",•: "AND FILE.WORK. • ; , : :

Estimates Furnlehod .:

J obblne Promt) tlv Attendedito

Telephone Connection. i^7A.'.... -

d[.

Pluiitiber,

GaraSrv aidet' Par iamg. Tools,•STOYES AND RANGES!0E ALLn .

FALL AND WINTER^ 1902-3

Wearing Apparel."We are placing on exhibition the grandest display of handsome

Outer Garments that Newark's gentlewomen have ever seen. Theyrepresent the latest productions, imported models and copies from the-world's best known-mc.distes, such as Paquin, Doucet, Rcuff,.Francis,-Ernest, Raudnitz, Gustave Beer, etc. . , — - - , - -

In Evening and Carriage Gowns, "Wraps, Promenade and WalkirgCostumes,-.Tailor Made and Shirt Waists Suits, Dress and WalkingSkirts we.will offer for this occasion. .. ,',. . . . .

Special values in Ladies' Fine Man Tailored Suits, made, in threestyles of fine:cheviots.. Iu black,, brown, and blue, .with the lateststyle skirts.^nd'coats, lined throughout with fine taffeta, Q C f l f |which we sliall sell regularly atg35; specialfor this occasion, £ u . i U U

' Misses' ahii Children's Fine Coats, Suits and Dresses, in all. the lat-est styles." '\ • ' . , ' • ' " ' ' " ." ' . ." ..-. " . '' Ladies' Fine SiJk Flannel and Cotton "Waists, in all t ie latest weaver.: Ladies 'Tea Gowns, Dressing'Sacques, Silk Pelticcats, in all t t e

latest novelties. ' ' • ' ; . . "

,,.: FASfllONABLE MILLINERY.-, FOR FALL AND WINTER 1902-3 • __

: Opening Days.1 Grand Opening Exhibit of trimmed and unlriLjiuedMillinery;'Ostricn nnd Fancy Feathers, Ornaments, Trimmings, etc.

Our.collection of Imported Hats, Toques and Bonnets embraces thebest efforts of the'leadiug designs of Paris: and London. ' .. Our;own exclusive designers have surpassed all the previous show-ings in having, produced.newest ideas that staiul j-econd to none.. >•

Our Untriuimed Hat Department overflows with thy prpdact:ons ofEuro^caii and Anierican Leading Manufacturers. •.; . ;

W e make ' a specialty..of.'.popular ;pncc;i 'iVim:n. <j l,i_ats a t$4,75, $7.75, $9:75,;_ Other;excellent dr.-iyni ii|. r., f 5 J . o o .

NOTE—We are the sole agents in Newark It ,!i(,- "K; OA"H a t s . . • . . . . - - . . • . - . . . • • . . . - . • • . • • • . - .

SEABRAILWAY.

SHORTEST AND QUICKEST ROUlli TOCHJHLOTTB,OUTHERN PINE,

PINEHURT, CAIVIDEN,COLUMBlAT-SAVANNAHi

and FLORIDA POINTS' ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ~— rl T " C V

HAMLET;MACU.

ATLANTA. MON i C'OivltRY.' N t W C i l L f A i '„ _ _ ' N t W

and TEXAS POINT!-;Dotiblc doily limited trnius. lcavinK New York I:

MLLKAGK XXOKBTS of this compauy's issue, sold nt «3S oo lar ,.".«a lhc Bnllimore Steam pneket Company's lw.ils lhri.nL:ii. r -r..k.

r:55 p HI,: Thrtufili rullniaii

to nil poj«ta on iU Hues in the South, including- 1*anina1,.Ili.a" ; .\h,i.tn"n t-rv. Al.<., I.I.U -\tljutu, t.ia..thus cuabliuff the TourUt. Mauufacturcr, I'nnncr nud Slook K«ir-(.r U, u:.wl i.t 11icui.tly icUnctdcost, • ' •• i i . . • • • - • " • . • • . • • - ' -

• IXTKItCnANGKAllI -E Mlf-V.AOH T I C K K T - ' : - I r nOi'.iiinr i-nln »\» \v niilrttpc lickclstliete'nrc~on sn lcn t all-OfTictKof-tlils compmiy iuterchatiRo.tltlv 1.000 tin e iltktu. suta «t ST. oo.tlietc'nrc~on sc l en t all-0fTictK(riWt|il3 compmiy iuti"*'-—c Uctcts'ore good over thefollowin^ lines, with SWBB SIIRIII CJ-CIIILIUIII- H

Atlanta, KuoxvlllcS: Northern Ry. Atlniiin K: U I M l'..intAtlantic Coast LIncK.R. HnUhuure riifi.m I'.ckBmuswiclc & BlniiiiiRham R. B . r . .- . , Cltnrlwtoii S: « -hlcr-iClicsapenke Steam ship Cn,Georgia Railroad. :! ; ' ' • i •:'.'••Louisville, Heudcreoji & St. Louia Hy.

• ' ' NotihwcrfeniBy. ofSoutli Carolina.- :Kichmojid, I'rca'ctsburR & Potomac R. R. . . _ . .

1 Southern Kyi, • • • - • • , . Western Hy, ol .•Western & Atlantic It it

J> AIK L I N E itAILWAY offer desirnblL- locr.ti. 11;Seeker, /fnnueraud Sloct Uniser: Qlsospeclal low rntcs.

Before dccldlug upon a location call on or write any n(jciit oC-thUc

• • . . , ' • • " <-;' W. H,' PLEASANT3, Traffic .Manager..

JNO. T. PATRICK, • ': : , , . d. L. AOAMQ,Chief Industrial Agent,. ' , ..Oonoral Cc=lci

. . . . Plnobluff, -N. O. t i

CltnrlrituiColtinil<titrNtfwiiiirv ^ I.nlirei H . .I.ouisvlllt & Nn>.|ivj11f 1 .Nil'shvitlr, ClinH;iiu«4 :t .Si 11. I.ou'» By.

i ' f W 'to II e Mnnuf ctuter, Home

DIIIJJ IUV fjr fi.il parlicalni^.

THE ONE¥ .PURE AND^CORRECT ART IFICIALI MiNERAL 'WATERS;' SOLD

.--".••' SHIPPED BY FREIGHT., OR EXPRESS TO ANY PART.OFTHE UNITEDSTATES:

: - . . ; • TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS. 430-444 FIRST AVE., NEW YORK CITY.'

• , '.:.'V.'..'i.'-. AND FIRST CLASS WORK IIV . . . ' k

Cabinet Making, Upholstery. Pic ure F » s , : t .JAMES LONG,

• WINDOW SHADES. CARPETS. MA.TIMSSBS, ETC.

MADE TO ORDE? C R

L 5 V - ' <5T0"f A " " 0 n r E " " D °t"'H"'DRE. OP v OBK GD4BJHT8ED'

Page 4: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

M,.STJKltfIT BECOB3J, SKPX1JM.BER 20, 1902

Commit, ff, JM Saturday, Sept. 20,

; EnWeS atiPoat "01I* matter,

>t Summit, N.";J., na

THE SUMiyilTJRECORp

f jb ihhi i ' a very Batardoy fromtiie Poat;Ofl!cbuilding corner Sprtift/ioldJ and Hi«liload uv'*:-

. cues, Summit, t t , J. , •.,SubscrlptlODs for this paper mny bD left at

either of Uie following ploces: < '. • ..'• '• '•: • ;

Roburt J. M u l S o W j , Now* Agent, 31. £ E . BR.Station, ..-. r( • : . , • . : . , . . . - . '

E. fit I,, J. Cooko,'SprlDJtfleld avenuo,' ; ' ' '1 • 8. Rodcnstj-, Wulff Bl'dir Sprlnjficld Av

gnotices..'..... •... ...lOctBrpcrtfiNotice la local columnSubscription Price, per yen

iflctt. per line• S3.C0

nthB f 1.00' All coirnzinlcfltior'fl Intended for publlca-t'nij must t e t i l ths ItEcoaD Offlco jvit lator than

j

All Advertisements should be s e c I j o r' mortrtaz,.; • 'During tlic enrnmcr nnnths'ch uiges oftlfspJa;advtmUlug" must be received by Thursday noou.

, -•';;;.••.- ALFRED J. LANE. -Editor and Publisher.

:\:.i!hQ Faction, SENATOR CROSS has. ably earned-arenbminatipn 'from ;;the; party to.

;: which his public service has broughtso much horior. We do not believe

1 '.in the, theories or policies, of thepartyf'to,^v)ijcli"iie"1t)elongs, ;nnd un-.der ;rio circumstances could : ho

•. command tlie support of the BECORDin a contest with a Democrat, be-

' • cause we are opposed to the-ings and px'actices of the party he

represents, but we do..not believe• that partisanship should ever blind

iv newspaper, or' an individual Jo' the merits and virtues of apolitical' qpppHeut holding publio office.\'( Union County "has never Had a

more conscientious or honest, rep-,roB'entative in the Senate thanJoseph Cross. As compared with the

' . political roustabouts and mount-banks wlio have engineered theopposition to'him, he isoa far above•them !as 'President Roosevelt isabove "Bill" Deyepv. A prime rea-son for the" fight against liini is thathe lias had tooLhigh, a regard-forthe dignity; of. his position to getdown to the level, of these, machinemen in their political dickering and

" squabbling.' 'We do not believe thsEepublicuns of Summit consider

. - ' - the exigencies of any political situ-ation of such a character ns to war-

- rant;bne:.of, their1 representativey,holding a high executive position,

,;in so, far. forgetting the dignity ofhis office as to make a personal can-vass of all .the low grade aaloons.inBU^abethport seeking assistance inH petty County Committee fight.

. • • And/yet that is' the extreme to•which one of the.most conspicuous•of% Senator Cross's opponents.deemed it safe to resort a short

. . ;time ago, and the > sort of politicsthey*expected him to stoop to.

If the.Eepublicansof Summit do'•'_ ";""jpoiv sand a delegation absolutely

pledged to the candidacy of Senator.-Cross or of such acalibre^that theirsincerity in his- support will never

• "be doubted, tlieh they, will loose anopportunity to show thatthey be-

:. lieve in regarding honesty and fi-.. ^elity in public pffice and that they

prefer the man who endeavors tobe airaightforward, honorable anddignified in his course as a publicofficial, to ' the political tricksterand thimblerigger. •

to t e s p ^ d t K / ; 1 ^ . ; : ^ ' ^ '*•' "'•';" This, control of tbe'daily papers

ous companies; in the discounting!'of jiotes, which-;the.:'managers, ofthe papers fear; may be called, inwhendue, or as'in ^he caserof thodisreputable New -TTork Sun^, inobsoiiiteBiort^rtgeli'eld by J.'Pier-pont Morgan or some of his. asso-ciates. Chicago, in its palmiestdays, wjieu every daily,.jiaiier therejoined a...combination . for 'theavowed purpose of exacting tributefrom every seeker of franchise, \YOLBnever inbre'iu need of ft free, reli-able and public spirited journaltiian-is New Tort- today; Tiro so-called "great organs of publicopinion" have become merely themouthpieces of a group of stock-jobbers and thimble riggers,. whomanage, to escape the imprison-ment that their . offefiises deservemerely because;they.have that con-trol of the political .and journalis-tic machinery . that tbo. ordinaryhighwayman, operating: ;with ublackjack", cannot obtaiu, thoughthe Crimea; 'of the Matter nr.e. nomore illegal oe disreputable than

those cloaked undeclever financiering.;

the title of

JqwtEi^.-fighting, .'Cross for re-nomination. Senator Cross is fifty-nine years; of jagpi; hnd,: .althoughholding many public positions ofimportance and'Cpportuni.ties, ifbe cared, to avail of them, since hisfirst connection •with politics thirtyyears ago, is Btill comparatively apooi" man. Fowler. ;ls'ten: yearsyottngerT'and although openly ad-vocated • by his sponsor for office,John C. Kaukin, aB a very poor manwhen first named foi- Congress, hassucceeded, during his eight yearsof service, in .amassing: n, fortuneso 'vast that he talks ' of _xi' giltamouuting to 5150,000 as a merebagatelle. Republican readers ofthe RECOUD can draw their, own de-ductions as to which of these meii

iiilli6.VIeiniry.of Mbot-I'elco Durloff

should be preferredcontests ., ,

__political

FOB the edification of'our readerswe publish 5n the : report, of thrCommon Council a complete list ofthe names appended to the petitionfor an elective Excise Board. I t issuch a represeutative.array of in-,tdligent/ public-spiritedl ( citizensthat a careful perusal of it will nodoubt prove.entertaininK.. ACoun-cilthat would refuse a demand, in?dorsed by such eminent' backers,can ;be justifiably charged with a]flclw!of zeal'for thei comfort andgood order of the cit.vl- .'' ':'•• •<•'.

Thousands of Mr. Fowler's con-h h l ld hi

. Is Councilman Franklin's intenseanxiety to issue a statement to the

. public, in referenco to the railroadmatters, due to a desire to give that'public tbe.exact, unbiased and ac-ourate facts about tho controversy,

.or to try and tuke from the shoul-ders of the City Solicitor and hiBRepublican orgnrjization friends thoonus of obstructiong this generallydesirod improvement? i .

s'tituents who have called upon him toperform the, duititudiaoitB lain or dtt-ties which make the ( oogress life suchn bupy one can attest to his faithfuland usBiduouB care for tu.eir interests."

THE above is one clause of a two-cblumujirticle preainnobly. dictatedor paid for. by Fowler that ap-peared in the New York Tribune, Jafew days ago,; and .of which thous-r.bds-of'copies'ard'bemg distributedthrough the (Fiftlr.;District in his1

iuterests.. This ^particular clauseis republiBlied because- it ia so pal-pably false.' i] Fowler's wholo careerin.Cdiigress IIAS"been ' devoted.tothe Standard Oil, City .NationalBank and Typewriter Trust to suchan extent that his^ constituentscould never induce him to pay any,attention to.subjects of perspnul o,r.direct interest to tUera. Partica-larlywehavo in"mind a. very de-serving .case' 'of; a pension to nwidow in Summit : that requiredonly^ft visit .by Fowler to the De-partment to have settled,., either

I'favprably ror ,unfavorably but forfour yearfi he could uot.be m'dnaedto dovote even the few minutes thntrequired .to this particular case. ;

New York*3 S'ewspap^rs.,; '•: Ei^fnEyE wo publish a charm-

ing bit of Earcasm-'from Newark'sbright'Town Talk which shows

Mnore offebtively.-than !the most..-ojaborate esposurq ppssiWy could,

tho policies that control and. themethods that preva'l, in. the con-.

.... duct of the daily papers in HowXovk. WitboiiGortwoesoeptiorSjall of those papers aro absolutely

,.*fnnderthp" control.'of. tho powers,• that are'TiHereared i i {he : Stoel

Trust, the'Coal Trust,; areat TrriSt;uu4 the ^'ai' s other combinations,4 ^

. that lmve"'Bti2n acting . for tho ]>nstfew year's, on' tho theory, that'

:.i(;neithor thc.uativ::.-.1: ;I.v vsriciis

That wns n'splendld nrgumcDt—-theone used by ,Mr. R. V. LJndabury inthe steel corporation fight-^-but pluckedbefore it-,waB.'ripe by the ahead-of-dfite newBpiiper reporters. Quite npiece of enterprise, surely! TheNews,Advertiser; Evening Snn, CommercinlAdvertiser. Mail nnd Express and theWnil Street Journr.I told in glowingheadlinea and ,picturesq);e type, howand in what language, lit. Lindaburyflayed Uie complnioimtj in thegrentcnBB,,;Thia all happened "Wednesdayafternoon, •wherein Mr. Llndabu^ydidn't set to work' with his hienvy ar-tillery »nd rapid-fire Riins until Thurs-day. The iirgu:ucut must hiive.beenthought well oFby Mr. Lindnbury andthepapera nforesmd to be used so fullybefore a was- fully hatched. No -won-der Mr. Robert H. McCnrlcr sprinkledn fe\y chpjce-chunks^of sarenpm' overhis own'nrguinent delivered '' hursday,twehtyfbir liura' nftr he Itnd dtwehty-fb-ir. jhis opponent's l ethe d;(! :::ju!ttt.— '-O

day,.' nfttr. he Itnd read

iil «j.Ti:flion in- ' "

tnpWici i Summit beciiviBe' of Uln fre-quciitVyiBitB dnrtngthe long'residenceof his jjrothery •Xoujs! Hellpriii hererianowjy'escaped (l^ath'';:iii, thei lasteruption of-MontPelee and.for- manydays after it,:, the fei'ure to receivesome definite; Tvord- from him led to awidespread belief' that he had beenloat. I>rofes3or Heilprin, Julius Coch-rnne and-a. considerable pnrty ofothers visited the vo'cano lnteiu Au-gust for the purpoee of continuing theinvestigation for scientific purposesthat Professor Heilprin: hnd startedjoon after the first eruption.

Ou the afternoon In August that thesecond eruption occurred • tho party-had a narrow escape from tho shdweiof Btoiies projected by the volcuno.:

Very loud rumblings nnd sevenehukings were continuous until ninio'clock, when, saturated with mud andwater and after two ottemptB to reachthe crater, they were driven back byhuge Toluoies of steam. ProfessorHeilprin,. who .reached nearer thecrater1 than his party, remained im-pressed by the terrific noise and tniimmensity, of.Jhe burning surface.The sky offered a beautiful scene withelectric spnrkSTJf nil colon..- Unaw&re2of the^real danger hehndIpassed Pi'bfessor Heilyrin reache'dLriyns and went to bed enveloped bythe hot blnsv'iliat killed hundreds andruined u vast nmount of territory. Heonlj* Ieurned of.the disaster the nexlmornimr nnd hastened through, beds o:hot mad to get" oui" of reach of thev o l c a n o . • . - • ; " - •

Of the cntaslrophe, P.rofessor Ileil-tirin has sent the following report tothe National .Geographical Society: ^

"The scene of cEentruction in the lasteruption of Mont Pelee far surpasses,n extent that of the eruption of May8, when St. Pierre was destroyed, andincludes the broad area lying betweenMocouba and Carbet, and involves.Haute Tours de Bourdon, Basse Pointe,Jlorae Bnlai and Ajoupa Bouillon,where nlone upward of three hundredpersons were killed, as well ns MorneRouge,,-with a death list of.probablynot less than eleven hundred persons;.jrorhe Cnpot and the heights some-what ihiH Bide of Fonds St. Denis, theblnst; however, leaving the last namedplace untouched. ; ;•

, "Great cinders fell also over theregion of Grand Riviere, and Precheur!R covered deep with ashes. In Cnrbetthe ashes lie one foot deep, nnd nearlythe same nmount covers th.e,.tuinR ofSt. Pierre. All of Morne Rougi.'-'withthe exception of about four houses andthe'b'eautliul church, hns; been sweptto the ground, nnd the greater part oftho town has been burned up. AtAjoflpa Bouillon, where one-half ofthe t-<wn has been prostrated, nnd'there is no trace offire of nny kind.

• DANGER GRBATLY INCKEABED.; ;"The destructive blast, instead of

confining itBelf ton section or'nren. nswasthecnae durJriKthe first eruption,wns distributed radially, crossing thelow summit of the .volcano near, theknob i>f Morne Jacob nnd. skippingzones between its rays. The dangerfrom Mont Pelee is thus materially in-creased, nnd perhaps no position In ttieno'th of the island is absolutely nnfe.The government has judicious'y or-dered -the evacuation lofJTill ; pointsc t o l

Aed by a radius of nbten miles from the cmter.

"Th t h

pointsrut eight dr

peruptions-waa cotnpam-ificant.nlthough it densely

nph cloud which fellThe electrical illumi-

h d

e; "The recent..phenomem were pre-cisely like those of Mny,. 8, denth re-suiting in most cnBes f ou contuct withthe terribly swifY nnd hot blast, whichburned nnd which .suffocated. Thesulphur emitted'frpm the crater duringthe recant eruptionswaa cotnpamHvely insignp-rmeated iheover Precheur. he e c i unntions during the Btorm were wonder-ful nnd greatlv surpassed those of Julyg. There wnsno barometric disturb-nnce to indicate n coming eruption.

SOUTH 1IEFDOE IN HOLE. ' •'During tfie time I WHS on the vol-

enno on the olteruoon of the eruptionMoot Pelee was' in terrible nctivity,and refuge from flying bombs hnd tobe nought inn hole. The great, conecould not be seen On the wny downthe momitnin the party wai' envelopedin nBhes and mud,, the centre •• of thenph nnd ftteam clouds being almostvertically overoB. , •"""The- destruction of the severaltowns nnd localities wns simultaneous,occurring nt ten minutes past nine inthe evening. ,

. "There is much uneasiness nil overthe island of Martinique, nnd this inintensified by tho knowledRe tljnt LnSoufi-iere, on the island of St. Vincent,is ngnin in full nctivity. The lllumi-nntion of the eruption on St. ViDcentfns seen from , here the night of Wed-nesday, -was most terrifymp:, and onTliufadnymprningthebsh cloud-fromthe St. Vincent volcano carried dnrk-riess to Fort De Frnnce for n period ofnearly six hours. No.dctn'Isof thecnsunlities on St. Vincent have yetbeen received here "- ,

KKL1UIOUB NOTICKS.

First Bnptlst' church.; The Rev. W.WnrrCn Giles, pnstor. Prenchlng ntII a. to., nnd'S p. m., by the Kev. F. R.Morse, nBsoeiate pnstor of.the' CalvnryBnptiBt Church, New York; Theevening service will .be preceded bythe prayer meeting conducted, by theC. E. Socictv which beglna nt y.p. m.Mid-week service." /Wednesday nt'8 p;m , nt which Mr. S. W. Kent, cf' theBaptist temple of Brooklya.:will,be tholender. Tbpic'"flcVd0cs-my- life wit-ness . for Christ.!' Bibtc ; school for-youni* nnd old nt 9:43 n.'tr. TheodoreVnn Dyke, superintendent, Fcnts freeand a pordin' welcome to nil. services..

VILLIAZlti l)KAD,

V/elJ-Known New Provlclouct) Mon P. ' • . - • : / • . ; - • - . • • • . A w a y . . • • • : ! . ' •

:Edward.F."Winiam's, ex-Mayor ofthe.JBorpugh of New Providence, nndtor twenty years one of the prominentnnd!popular citizens of that place, died,there yesterday morning nfter n longillhCBB.": Lnst Jnnunry ^ e WIlB afflicted,with n trouble in the i'oot thnt he • be-lltjved resulted from freezing the toesdurinEn'very cold spell. He wns con-fined to the house, but. it was not un-til some weeks later that it was regard-ed ns serious. It continued to growworce until aboutfour weeks ago whenDr: Lnwrcnce advised the patient andhla family that amputation, would benecessary if his Hfe was to beBpared.Bv amputating the foot nt the anklethe physician declared his life wouldbe prolonged Indefinitely, but refusalmeant nn caily dcoth. • '

Mr. Williams refused'to consent t..the operation and failed gradually uatil the end catne yesterdoy. Seversyears ago he suffered from n. cancer'onthe tongue, and members of his familybelieve thnt the trouble "with his foolw^s-due to some traces of this that re-mninediti hia blood.

Sir. Williams was 'seventy-sevenyears of age nnd possessed one of thosekindly, generous natures thnt enrnmany nnd warm friendships. His fitfamily wee of the old Knjckerbockeistock nnd, he. wns one of Brooltlyn'ilending citizens and business men fo:years. He was engaged in Bhip-building and during the Civil War nttendedtn the rcpftiring of mnny war vesseliowned by the government. He Tur-nished the timber foi the first monitoiconstructed in thnt war. His prom inence in business xros such thnt he wnschosen '.reasurer of the relief fund foithe.benefit of the Chicago fire sufferennnd served in « sjmiJnr enpacity nfterthe Brooklyn Theatre fire.

Twenty yenrs ago he retired frombusiness nnd removed to New Providence, where he resided 'ever since.When the borough was created there nfew. years ago he wns unnnimouslychosen ns its first Mayor and was re-elected when his term expired.

The funeral will he tonight with scrvices at the house at eight o'clock nndinterment ia Greenwood tomorrow.

Chatnqun nnd return, July, 23,$11.15; San Francisco nnd retard Augustisttonth; 67.00; Salt LnkeCity, 5 to S,52.60; Niagara Falls, 29 10-31, 9.00; Toronto.Ont. 29 to 31, 10,00; Deuver Col.29 to 31,45.00; Also low rates tootherpoints and to nil Summer 'resorts, forfurther information apply to

: J. J. LANE,Tephorieijja Summit Agent.

RRIAG_ESInspect our lieadquarters-aud seeour facilities. Estimates cheerfullyL'iven on all work. BEST qualit>of ETJBBBR TIRES at factoryprices. Satisfaction guarauteed onall work done by us, oryour mone>refunded.^ Consult us before goingelsewhere: ' < -•RACT1CAL HORSESHOE1NQ A

, ...... SPECIALTV.

y & AndersonPark and Chestnut Av»>,, Summit

W. P. FLEMING,

g Asphalt aitoHl Artificial

^f Stone AVCH'K a special- ^

§p ty. Drives," Curbing, KssM Cobble. Paving. Sew- fea

g ering, (.Trailing. §582 Springfield Ave., Summit

OUR BUSINESS TO DOIT

Your Business to Have It

4 4 •GIVE 115 p. TRIflli.

Enterprise LaundryCHiS.'T. CORBY & SOS

PROPRIETORS. .

Springfield Avenue,SUMM T, N. J

GEORGE C. HAND,.'•. ! . DEALEEIN '

CamagesiMIagonsI carry afull'lloe ot Carriages ot all'' styles and .of the btat mnlte.

'.' RUBBER. TIRES OB'WITHOtrf.'

Repository, Park Avenue,Kcnr Chpatriut ATenue.EcXMn, N. J

for debt, but your policy ofLife Insurance can be soarranged that it cannot bealienated from' those you

" wish to protect and b.enefit. ,Failure to secure the pro-tection of Life Insurance isinexcusable,

The 'PRUDEWTIALInsurance Co, of AmericaHome Office: Newark, N. J.-

JOHN F.DBYDEN, President.LESLIE D. WARD, Vice President.KDQARH, WARD, £d V.Pres'tfi: CDBI.rORKEST DflrDEN. Secretarv. _ .FRED RIEGKAF, Asst. 8upt,,Room 3, Post OHlieJ Build Ing,GT W 8BINER, Asat. BupW. Tuylur B ' I 'K. t5- Orange, N. J.

MORRISTQWN TRUST CO.Capital, Surlpus, Profits $2,115000

-•• Deposits, -over^ - - - -1,500,000

1 PAYS 3 PER CENT. INTEREST.On Accounts of $100 and Upwards,Subject to Check Without Notice

Deposits Earn Interest Jrom DateMade Until Withdrawn ^ * *

' Send for Pamphlet.

SAMUEL FREEMAN, PresidentA. B. HU:l.p, Vice Pres. W. W. Cutler, 2 V.loe Pres.;

' JNO'. H. B; CORIELL. Secretary and TreasurerH. A. VAN GILDER. Ass't Secretary and Treasurer.

We direct Jour attention to ouryards which contain the largest sellec-tion of Cemetery Memorials in this partof the country.

MODERATE ELABORATEMEMORIALS. MEMORIALS.MEMORIALS TO MEET EVERY

TASTE AT EVERY PRICE.By dealing with us, the only, manufac-turing concern in the State, you"

GET FIRST CLASS'WORKSAVE ALL MIDDLE PROFITS.

IHE DAViS GRANITE CD,,Yards: 5-7 & 20r24 MoM.*Siroet,

aOBBISTOIflH.

Office- ao Morris St. Te1e,^4_A>v- -Works—Barre, Vermont. ~

Lackawanna Park.Building Sites for Sale,. Cash or Installments.

Attractive Terms to Prospective Builders.If you havejany faith in the luture " •of Summit, which is certain to go--west-ward, investigate this property. Situatedon Springfield avenuer-a short distancefiom'the West Summit Railroad Depot.All lots are about 50x200 and are re-stricted against all nuisances. Elec-tric X,ights. City Water..

For Information Address. ; -

West Summit Land and Improvement Company,42, West Summtit, I J , ,

Special Offer During July and 7Vi gust:A special discount of 10 per cent ttil! be allowed on, all contract-

,igned before the first of September. Also another 10 percsnt, allowed.0 ally one.agreeing to build within 90 days after'taking title..

.fir.!' ' -Vv'

t)

Page 5: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

! • ' • ' • • •

., SUMMIT BECOBD,- SEPTEMBEE 20, 1902

• .•. h"V::' ••''••; pi'::, ••'•'——— -."."-• T • : - ) " J B 5 M a i n e A n d wi l l B j e n d S a . f i h o r ^ ; S m e - a t

mm a iTHiciWAXti AA'D J irJtTadfuuaiBzit.-:,

A ;

Political 'mill Iluslnei* Items Beemei• '•• SufHcleiitlDtnroBttoltcqnlrttSpancilD

.Record's Cdlumn*—Tablet ami Gloaiil• f a Verttinni diameter and N«w» of V»r-JoiiA KlndV-Gpuaral Outline of Life m

. Local Circles DurlQi; (ho Pant No~"• l > n y « . " • . ;• . / ' . •

:

—Mr. John N. Peet and family start-ed on Sunday fora" tr ip of four weeks

' . to Canada..—Dr. E. H. Raymond and family reT

turned to Summit on Wednesday aftera summer spent at Edgartown, Mass.

—Mr. Michael'J. Kenny and family' have returned from a two months stay

nt Asbury Park to the home on DeForest Place.

--1— • —Mrs. James McLaughlin and her• > nice* Miss Julia, Kelly returned on

Wednesday from a trip of one week to: relatives in New, York.\ —Mr- J . A. Johnson'and family -who( have divide i their summer season be-

. . . tween Lake Placid und Cannda txbcefcto return to Summit on Tuesday.

—Mr. Richard Hahne of the well-known Newark firm of Hahne & Co.,

_' ' who has been a summer resident of-• Summit will return to Newark today.

. ; Mn and Mrs George E. Barstow whosej : house on :Ncw England avenue Mr.

: " \ Hahne has occupied,,, will return to itj on Monday. V . • . :• •. ' ;j -. ,' ,,— George Sawyer, of 'West Summit.,i , and Miss Ethel Briggs, of~asto>ia, L.'

I., "were married at the. home of thehride Hist' "Wednesday evening. Ni-B

"' Katie Sawyer-was bridesmaid. Therewere a number of guests ,present from

• i " West Summit und New Providence.j *The newly married couple will reside> on South street, New Providence,I —To Prohibitionists and temperance

• advocates ' a pleasant evening is as-sured fyr next. Thursday night when

' Rev. C. H. Mead whose eloquence hasi charmed Summit 's 'audiences several: . times in past1 yearn will"'visit Howard

Hall and deliver a temperance lecture!;The meeting is to be for ladles and

; .gentleman// His subject'- will he"Wanted—a man."' ., -:•

• • —An unusually sad-rftffiiction - wasthat visited on Mr. and Mrs. WilliamWeiler at their home on Beauvoir ave-

•** . j ^ nue oa Monday when their three year- old daughter, Tiny, died .frqm-.an at-', tack of pneumoiiift. She was an only

child and'"exceptionally bright and-winsome; I t is just one year since Mr.

'• . and Mrs. Weiler suffered another loss'. in. the,death of twin's; About one year

i -old. The baby who died this weekt-, was buried in Orange en Wednesday. .

• -• .-. —Abost of friends here were glad to- .extend a'welcometo Eugene C. Pier-

. . ' . son o n h i s return to business'on Thura-' day.Hfter an absence of Beyeral monthsjduring which he l>ad ••"suffered from an.attack of typhoid'fever that for weeks

. ;it was believed .would prove fatal."When-he had gained sufficient strength

, from the fe'ver'Mr. Piewon.went.tb the* Coust of Maine and spent five weeks

; there. He returned frorn that trip onWednesday and resumed business,

. . feeling even, stronger than before his• . " < i l l n e s s . ' ' "•'.' •" . . - , . , •••• • . " • ' ' .;'."• •

• . ,—Miss Potwin who has Bpeat thesummer in Europe will sa'l -iroinEng

! , land today, instead of from Genoa ass h e had originally .planned. She will

, . ^ . ; ' b e a passenger on the steamer St.Louis scheduled; to reach New Yorknext Saturday and will come at once

: ' to Summit,to prepare for.the opening; . .ofherBchdol on October first.. Miss; - .:' Holt who' will assist her with the

: school jwill be at the Blackburn House, ' next week to arrange with these de-i " ' ; siring to enroll children in the school'sI • . . c ' a s s e a . • : • - ' • > • • • ' • • - • ' •

; —Rev.J. F.Butterworthi-who earned; the respect and; affection of. such a'. Inrjce proportion of Summit's inhabi-' tahts duriug his service' of so many-j years ns r eco r of Calvary Episcopalj church hero returned, to- America^with

. Mrs.' Buttcrworth- JaBt' week, from. Dresden,, Germany^ where' Mr. 'Butter*

;, worth has.been s ta t ioned for the pastfew years.' Both have enjoyed excel-

•; lent health during their life abroad;'; and expectto-retnuin in America, for

about three weeks! On Thursday•, they came toSuraejit "nnd will :remain

^ - ;" here for « few days . with Bim.3 %iitter-* ''itV* "';••• "worth's brother, Edward H. Duryee

. •• who.-has n handsome new summer• ; homcon Summit avenue. ;- . . . .', • —Dr. and Mrs. Thomas,Kelly,, who^ ' • occupied ttio residence" of ' James A.; • - Heard in Suinmit>this summer -were,5 .riding.to'their:homo,, 357 West Fifty-!.J . "aeyenth 's t reet New, York on. Monday--]; •. night in a hansom, driven by ,JamesT Malipnev, when an Eighth .avenue car• -drove into.the cnb,tttsTi(eenith6treet.'|; ,The physician,and ,. his wife were!i .. thrown to *th'e pnvement, while the

,.l- . , <lriver W8B fiTmg into the guUer, -One

I , wheel of tb^hansoui was \vrenchcd..off••^a,nd passengers in the enr; were greatly

." ' •'•excited, fenrinir the carriage occupants i: j .:,•. w'ere'klHed. Their clothing was torn

:•••--•'• :; and soiled,,but;Dr. Kelly ,'and'his.wife

'\ '.,'.•.. 7 .wcrc,not;'injure(t,and they- went home- i 1 - ' -^ ' - - , in another Cnb. The driver was not.-;i " • ; . : ; ' • . ' ' . U i u r t . . ' ; - ; . v v f ' 1 . : - 1 - - ' / / : : : • • • , : . ' • • . • : • :"• • • : • • • • - • -.-;•

phib,'parents df Mrs;-Walter, Libby.spent a few d a y s ' o f t h e paflt.'-wthe Blackburn House, - • •• • .

"—Mr; and^ Mrs. George W- Saul whoresided in Summit for a fewyears havereturned for ahriefviBit andaregucaisnt the New: Park House.

•Mr. J . F . Huas has returned froma vacation of one month in Middledum,Maine and resumed his duties as cash-ier of the, Summit Bank on, Wednes-day.. - .

—Robert J . Murphy has purchasedtwo lots.from :DavidF. O'Rourkc onthe plot alone: Irving Place developedby the hitter and .formerly 4 comprisedIn the LeHuray homestead land-. Mr.Murphy intends to build oh the property at once. ~ . *

—The nuniDer of Summit familieswho.spsntthe-summer at. Nnntucket,Mass., comprising ,a small- colony at;that pretty resort all. returned to theirhomes here during the past ten days.They included L. K. Jones and family,P. A. Dillingham and family, NormanSchultzand family nnd Mr. aud'Mrs.CfinrJes E- Bnikley. •

—Mrmnd MrB. Thomaa B. Adamscame to Su nmit for a few days thisweek but Mrs. Adams returned >~eBter-day to Long Island where ehe, spentthe summer. The house on FernwoodRoad which they occupied for sometime has been leased for a term of two'years to Mr. Adams brother, >WilliamNewton Adams who now occupies it.'—The many friends-of.Mr. Henry.

Besle will regret to learn; of his suffer-ings from•••; an^at taek of appendicitis_with which he was afflicted 'suddenlylastweek :ahd which necessitated hisremoval to the New York Hospital onSnturday. There an operation thatwas entirely successful was performedand since then the patient has beenrecovering slowly. .: . 1 , .'

—Mr. C._A. Mnnger spent severaldays ibis~weE6~ at the BlackburnHouae but has now returned to Bostonwhere he has resided for the past year.Mrs. Munger wnB unable to join him inthe trip to Summit as she is at thehome of her mother . whose death oc-curred n few weeks ago. An aunt of:Mrs, Munger also died a short time be-fore her mother. :

—Aaron Sopher returned to .thehome of his parents, Mr. and M re.James Sopher here on Wednesday af-ter an ab3*encc of several months,twelve weeks of which were spent in aClevelnnd hospital from an attack oftyphoid feyer. He , was. stricken sud-denly with the illness wKile travellingfor the paint supply firm with whichhe is connectf d and for many weekshis life was despaired of, Hehaa com

^.recovered and after.,a month,spent with his parents will go to Chi-cago ib assume charged or the i westernbranch ofthe firm's-business. :

—It was a husy day on Saturday atthe links of. th,e; Irlorns County GolfClub, notwithstanding the : raint und

I. - It_was the opening.dny of theFull season, and. golfers were out inforce., Besides a match between tennisfrom Baltusrol, and Morris county,there, was a bogie handicap and .sev-eral private matches. The Baltusrolteam was as follows:' W. FellowsMorgan, L. H. Graham, C.-H. Palmer,C. B. Beckwith. and, J.. H. Wharton.The Morris county team" was RalphMnrflh, Granville Smith, Leland B.Garretts6n, Alfred Macj- and Archi-bald Forbes. The-latter team won by8 o p ; V , . ' . . . . • ; -.' •••'. ••' .

; ' • • • " • " ' • ; '.

—Many of the.friends and acquaint-ances met here by Mr, D; D.- Mnncamduring his regular summer visits forseveral'years were shocked to lenrnthis week of his denth in 'Clif tonSprings which' occurred on August 151

but of which.few in Summit wereiware until a week ago. Mr. Alangam!

was here in the early: spring and ex-pected toTemain all summer as lie hadfor ten years but his physician hdviaedhimtu- remove._to' some! place more'distant from New Yc»Vic in ; order to beentirely-frjeo^ of-.-buu'iness cares. Hiswife was a daughter of Rev. T. DeWitt Talmagc and is doubly -aftiictedsince the death of her fnther only oc-curred in^the spring. • ' . . .• . ••' ',

—The New ParkHouse , is retainingthe popularity which it enjoyed wi'hsumnier visitors, among those in search:,of a comfortable, healthy nnd pleasantdutiimn. resort. 'Manager Kelly ex-'pects to have, a considerable number oftheffuestB'now^tUere.foV the entirewinter season and while thrttjs usuallya d^U.period with Summit ho t eT^"

y^indication-. that ;.Wrj Kell'good management and wide reputa-t ionaa a hotel , man will make tlieNew Park a notnble success as an nil?eur house-.-; Among, those wha. ar-rived during the past"week" were, Mi\and Mrs. W. T. Bc'sson, M^ki Besson*Mr. and Krs. S. G., Chapin, Mr/ nndMrs. John F.'Cone;; Mrs. R.^.'Leggatt;-'Miss Mi Its MrsV'C; M. Scott, Mis. Rob-;neon.rMissScott, &Ir. and Mrs. GeorgeW. Snuli ofNew YorkjMiss Patton, ofPlainfield; Kiss Guatinj of Saynnnah,.and Mrs. W. L. Morrison of Ph'iiadeK

p h l a . :. '•-'• ; • • • ' • > - , - • > • • • ' . , - ; ;

:; — Sir, •Anthonj'Comstock and fnmlijrhave return^d'to their home on Beek-^ a n ' R o d d ^ ' ' . ^ - . ^ . : : ^ ".;Vr;-:U-•->•:;•.'

Yemetta Coleman spent lattSiiotlayJln^SummitaBthe guest of Mrs.McDermlt a t h e r homeinSummi t ave-nue. :Mis3;Coleman,has juBt_:retumedfrom 'a ^aa: interesting trip., of threemonthstbEbrope. • • : .:;

—Mr.' and : Mrs. A. J . Cammeyer havereturned t a their country' home onLong-Hill after n t r ip of three monthsin Europe.- They.were passengers onthe Fuerst Bismark. which arrived inNew York after a delightful voyagelast Saturday.

—Dr. Thomas Kelly, who occupiedthe residence of James Ar Heard—onWoodland avenue for jthe Bummer re-turned to New York oh M6nday.; Mr.and Mva. Heard removed to theirhome on the following day nnd Mr.Heard is now preparing for the cingofhisBchool which will occur onSeptember 30.

—Next Friday evening the recentlyorganized Ven'sCIubbf the Methodistchurch will tender a\ reception in theparlors of the church to Rev. and "Mrs.Tuttle and a general invitation hasbeen tasued.to the members andfriendaof the.chureh to attend. (.The club wasorganize4_to aid iri church work andprombtegood fellowship and enjoy-ment and they hope tc make this firstreception a notable success.

—Rev. Father Yalentioe, whose elo-quent preaching aqd general successin the infasfon conducted a .few monthsago in St. Teresa's church, crtatedsuch widespread interest in the citywill return to Summit again and. to-mbrrow in St., Teresa's church'wlllpreach at the mprnirig-service a t 10:30a. m., and also at the evening vespers.Father Vassallo' has issued a generalinvitation to those • desiring to hearhim to attend these services..

—Several members of Crystal LodgeNo* 250, I. O. O. F. , comprising whntis known ns the Degree team visitedBernardsvilte on Tuesday and in thepresence of two hundred Odd Fellowsfrom various branches conferred theinitiatory degree on'iwelve membersof Seney Lodge, a branch though or-ganized only a few weeks having amembership of Li3.The first\second andthird degrees will be conferred onfourteen candidates .from Seney- Lodgein the Summit club rooms' next Satur-day night.

—St, Teresa's school open«d lastweek and euch an increase in mem-bership followed the first day that even.with theinrge building on Morris ave-nue secured a few years ago FatherYassallo found - the facilities taxed tdtheir utmost to accommodate the pu-pils. The total number enrolled i nthe first week was 291 and ,as ' a resultIt was necessary to form another classin addition to those comprised In theschool laetyear. I t "is also probablethat another teacher will be requiredbefore the present school year ends. '

Chancel, nt the Fabllo School.Several changes of importance have

occurred in the-Inculty at. the . PublicBchool sinceHhc opening of the schooltwo weeks ago. Miss Miller who hadcharge.of the fifth _ grade accented, anoffer togo to the Baltimore Trainingschool and there her time will be de-voted to nature study nnd geography.Ker successor is Miss" Cora Rosen-krans, a graduate of (be, Trenton Nor-mal school but who has more recentlybeen a teacher in Clifton, j . .

W. E; Hnrper retired from the posi-tion of musical instructor at the closeof the last school year and this posi-tion will now he filled by Miss Barneswho, has heretofore hecu one of thehigh school instructors. To BucceedMiss Barnes, > the Board- has engaged

s,' Isabel Holmes a graduate cfTuft's,College from. '• which she holdsthe degrees of A. B. and A. M. Hereshe 'wilt ..teach Latin,, history and.rithtnetic, : '

tflHy Yonra aorvieo In Ono FnwlJy.!

'; •••; fCOKTRIDOTEpJ '

.Mary A., Connell aged . 66 after ashort and sharp1 attack bf'prieuinonia,died on September"; 15th ; at the ' homeof Dr. Morrison, after nearly hnlf acentury of] uninterrupted and faithfulBervicein one family—a record seldomequalled!' Engaged aB a nurse inEnglandfcy Dr. Murrlaon's fatherin1854, for forty-eic;hfc years she had

with rare fidelity in that.ca-pacity, and at the time of her ' las t ill-'

fl still engaged in' .tending thechildren of one whom she had earedfor in his own infancy.. Her love forchildren was the one characteristic ofher life, and her devotion to those tsn-trasted to her care was1 beautiful.'

uh todea th i" alwnyspatientV'^unselfish and thqughtfui

of others' to the end, a born . hUrae andyet careless of, her own. health andcomfortih caring for others, n hardand conscientious .worker, nnd above,all a devoted lover of tup children shecared for^-aurely thin fnit'iful1 old.nurao richly merited-, t h e "well done,good and faithful.servant." which no<toubt sKe liprird from tlie, irnsterfp Upswhen she laid her.earthly labora down.And so we drop this little token of tip-predation upon- her grave. She,"rests from her labors.Vand her wb'rkaof loving service do follow her. i

ThoTcmains were'Jaid .to rest in.the .

of Summit'*.'CharculUR. * cttmba to a Long 111:

Bath-made, a still further inroadthis week into the rapidly diminishingranks of the -women whose > benatifulcharacter and charms of mind andperson accomplished so much, in whqtare now regarded, as Summit's, earlydays, towards making the place a clight. socially, in relieving . .distressamong the poor and. suffering and ingenerally, establishing the high char-acter for.the community that it nowenjoys. • Mrs. Helena Wellington Dil-lingbnm whose denthfn iV*«tkins, NewYork, on Tuesday, waB one ofthe mostprominent of. these women of ."thedays that are gone" und her death willcome in the nature of a personal lostto hundreds In the community. .

While she had been an invalid forseveral months her death-was' some-what sudden arid unexpected. Shebad been ill for. some' weeks in thebeautiful new bomejjn.F,ern-wood-Roadwhich she occupied • but a short-time;when this illness had abated some-what-was removed to Watkins.: whereshe improved steadily until late in Au-gust." For two weeks her decline wasrapid and the physicians could offerlittle hope fora recovery but it wasnot expected that the end would comeforeeveral weeks. Death finally re-sulted on Tuesday night f onr Myocar-ditis or a general weakening of themuBclesofthe henrfc>duc .to the longund trying illness through which shehad passed. The remains.were broughtto Summit on Thursday night und thefuneral will be from the residence onFernwood Road-lhis afternoon a t 2:45o'clock with services by Rev. WalkerGwynne. ' ' . :

Mrs. Dillioghanr was j i native" ofBangor, Maine, the daughter of Mr.Nathan (VAyer one ofthe mostpromi^nent citizens of that stnte. He served'for years ns president of the SecondNational Bank in his home c i ty andat his death last Match was succeededIn that position by his sun. The lateMr. Dillingham was also 'a . native o f | ^ e " t h n n - e v e r before, both in the fnm.

b ' i l y and in the day school, and itsfriends have, every reason to expect ayear of continued success.

BangpHbut it was m New_ York thathe earned a success in b'usiness thatmade his firm one of the country's.fa-mous publishing houses. They re-moved to Summit about twenty yearsago and. occupied the home on theBoulevard which Mrs. Dillingham dis-posed of only a few years Hgo, erect*ing thereafter the house on FernwoodRoad which she occupied only a fewmonths when stricken with the illnesswhich proved fatal.

In the early years of her residence(*here Mrs.'Dillingham was actively in-terested in the Village Association thatdid so much towards beautifying Sum-mit and in later years her energieswere directed in the field of charity in ialdJng'the Arthur Home. From the ;time of the establishment of that other [noble charity, the Fresh Air nnd Con-valescent Home, Rhe was active in itsaffairs and for several years has servedas vice-president of the ' inst i tut ion.Mr! Dilingham. died here n few yearsago but the deceased is survived byone son and two daughters, all udults.

.Recen t Summit,and New York Direc-tories & Buliiriger'a Railroad Guide—corrected weekly—nt your service atthe little "Public Desk" in Campbell'sPharmacy. * * * .

GOLF AT TlltS VANOE JIRJOK VZUTt,

Match Detwoen Four Players PostponedBeen mo Jolly aud Maokie Fall to

f A p p t n r . „' ••••:,.:.

• Chisholm and Pirie were somewhatsurprised Sunday afternoon, whenJack J.ojly and John Mackie failed toappear~aCthe_.Ca.T;oe Brook CountryClub, inSummir, to play the four-ballmatoh which it was expected would becontested between the four crack pro-fessionals, , ' - .

After it became-certain that theRosevjlle and Forest Hill representa-tives would not make their appearancea handicap affair • was arranged, be-tween Pirie nnd Chisholm, the lattergiving a handicnp.of three holeBand winning by 3 up and 2 to play.

Clifsliolm and Pirie were much an-noyed by the non-appearance of Jollyand Mackie," and stated that theycould not give any. reason for it, asthey supposed that the latter pair un-derstood fully that the match -was tohave been played Sunday. I t is likelythat a meeting will be nrranged later.

On account of the work on the club-house not yet'being-complete, it hasbeen found .necessary to again postponethe formal opening - of the houpe,which was • scheduled for Monday af:

ternoon, for two week?.

'-'.family plot ia Greenwood Cen:et;iy.. • 'of this city,•

—Rev. A. H. Tuttle bos returnedfrom hte.vacation of several weeks andwill tomo'row res'unie charee of" theservices'in the Methodist churcb.

—The Rev. T*anl D. Terge 1 of Taing-tau, China, who is on a .visit 10 thiscountry, will aj^cnk at the .CentralPresljyterian church on Sundny.niorn-ing, aeptember: aist. VMr,. l e r g e a . is"|doing very, aucceaaful. work on his mis-sion field and is.supported toy tke con-,tributions of the' Proibjterinn c"-;urch4-'

FAcV£TY~OFkEST-& OOZ. I

,C. 'i'l', •(-' i . v ' . ; ' / •"' ".'" / '.'1^.' '':''.•) '\- i I

*F«tv Clmncea AmoDfe tins Tti«rnotor»-at j'' '.' TltUVroaiicr'ouiiXtifttliutlon. )

The Keat Place school re-opens forits ninth year, the seventh under Mtf.Paul, on Wednesday next, the twerny-fourth, at nineo'clock. Th^re are fewchanges ia the^. faculty for the yeurJ9oP3-i9o3. MiesO. \V\ L. Sinter ia in! Monday n i g h t - i ^ .the First Ward atEurope on leave of absence for a year; {the City Hall and in the Second Ward

b JUOM>iYX1OUT

9 ^lo 2£lcotG(l to tJio Jtcpml^llcfiuCounty CouVoutlait, '

'"' The Republican primaries for theelection of detegateB. to the CountyConvention to nominate candidates forS'ate Senator, Sheriff and members ofAsaerably will be held in Summit on

her position will ba taken by MissHenrietta: Cat tell, A. B., "A'elle>ley,who hag for several years had chnrgeof the work in ' mathematics at St.Gabriel's school is in Peek skill.

Miss Alice Sinclair, who went toGermany in June, expecting to apendthe summer, has decided to remain fora year. In her place, Miss Olga Tafelof Cincinnati has been secured to teachthe'German and Science. Mias Tafelia German and is in every way es-pecially qualffied_for the work ehe un-dertakes.: . ' . . - . .

Miss 'Mary Street remains at <the:

head of the Intermediate Departnieiitjwhich she conducted last yenr -vrilh;

rmarhed aucpesa. She is nsaisted liyMiss Wright and Miss Tafel, whileMile. Cuendet takea the French tothat the girlB of nine to fourteen havethe advantage of being taught by theaimehighly educated nnd experiencedwomen aBare the older pupils.

The Primary Department continuesunder Uisj Annie .Belle—Ellison. Inaddition' to her excellent educationMiss Ellison has had normal traininglor and has been most successful inber teaching of both primary and kin-dergarten work,. Under her charge lastyear, by her1 happy combination ofwork and play, the children made un-usunlly rapid progress In themary department, Mile Cuendet gives

—The fall meeting of the Presby-tery of Morris and Ornnge was held inthe church nt Mine Hill on Tuesdaylast and was entertained for the noonlunch by the ladies of ' the , ' church .Sovehty'members were present. Rev.I..A. Vvhlte, of Whippnny. was chosenmoderator. Rev. Mr. Dalrymple, pas-tor a t the B dd'B Lake, was dismissedat his own request, thiit he might nc-cept a former call to his former parishin Pennsylvania. . . . ,

a t the Hook and 'Ladder building on 'Park avenue. . Ytryl little has beenheard here concerning the factionalfight in which the party is involvedover the question of a Senatorial can-didate and whether there will be acontest at the primaries ia not yet cer-tain. Among those familiar, with thetactics of the Republican machine hereit is believed that a contest will beavoided.by the selection of delegatesin each ward ostensibly for the renom- •inntion of-Cross but in r?ulity ao close-ly tied to the organization that themanagers ' can throw their votes toany candidate desired should an op-portunity present itself for a valuabledicker ut the convention to be held inElizabeth on vi edciesday.

Nothing so hitter as, the faction fightnow raging over the question of re-nominating Senator Cross has everbeen witnessed in either party in thecounty. Seontor Cross IH extremelypopular in Summit and in every con-test in which he has been a candidatehas secured a much larger-number ofvoteB here than any, other candidateon "the Republican tfekei. Thtre is nodoubt about the acntiment here infnyorofhis renbminntion. The fightagainst him was , engineered by Fow-ler, 'Rankinand Yoorheea for two ien*rona—to jninish him becausa ne ie-fused to endorse or assist them in some

instruction in French, largely through"] despicable political schemes - and togames and playa. : . ~

The classes in Physical Culture, indrawing and iri music, which are opento all the pupils, of every grade, areunder the same teachers who accom-plished such excellent resultB last year.

The school opeoB with.larger uttend"-

prevent his presence n n the Senatewhen the United S a t e s Senator inelected to succeed John Kean in 1904.Fowler expects to lie o candidate forthat office and is reasoaablv certainthat with hi? record in connection withStandard Oil, National Bank andTypewriter Trust matter, a man ofsuch honesty and BcruplcR concerningpublic life as Senator Cross could neverbe expected to aid his candidacy.Fowler and hJB crowd have chosen W.N.Rnnyonof Plninfield as their-can-didate. • '

The Summit delegates will probablypresent the name of S. R. Mullen tothe convention for the office of Sheriffbut Summit delegates at conventionsin previous years have always beenopen to dickers on convention day andthe men sent this year will undoubt-edly be ofthe same calibre.

'BEE HIVE" NEWARKThe Shopping Centre of New Jersey.

Open Saturday Nights. Close Other Dajs 6 P. M.

OPEN INGMillinery Masterpiecs,

Women's Outerwear.

Monday, Sept. 22nd,Tuesday, Sept. 23rd,

Wednesday, Sept. 24th,.. Attendance will be of supreme import-

ance and profit to you, arid we shall take, great,pleasure in showing the authentic: fashions for ,

PKEE DAILY DELIVERIES BY OUR OWN WAGONSTO SUMMIT AND VICINITY.

Mailorders;/> Pilled-; Stores.

Page 6: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

.'-";'' J ; 'nna- ;\tiio ; . 'T^icJc« ( r;siiorii J i"o|f ; 'Tlicl '

;• •;•-•!• "i 'BoiiJriai;itiio- |Scc»6*'.'r 'r.''i V-'1'- '-• '•• . '

'itue'scb'neB view-, of tbe^fn-

; 'tfpfi'flft'pr ceodri ... „_:' nations.' There ar i feW''of ^us 'whoJi'1\;a3ne'''6ur'6wn"'lcbir^Bii'1*Jilurib1ns'1

; so1 hlffbly that we -vrfli notpart'SvitiI'them'"•. for tho funof 'seeing jaoW we ndvobeen'._• f o o l e d . ' . • 1 " ' : ' : . f ' : ; : : L

i (J " t " ' > - ' 1 ; ; ; - i ! " 1 ' ; • " * ' - " " : • ' • •

1.. Here ;nre 'exaniplea !of 'samo-of' the• ;besfc knowntr lcks:- ' ; '<<•••• ;•- ••• •' ,,!

. •:...The box .trick-is asiclevcr as well. .known and aSrOW as.any.-. A .heavy,, brass bound, chest is e^hJbJted.. An-ps^T 'elstant Js.placed in,a large canvas bag,

"the inouth 'of' which Js securely fas-' tened, a'nd: tbo'ling. Is' 'placed' in' 'the

• chest, whlcb' Is'locked-aiid roped. '1; : .["• '•'• The bos1 is concsnled'for'.a'fow'. . onda, and wJjea.it is rcveiiled thooccu-

pant Is slttlus-tiiiou ft. .thc'clcsed itad::;aealed biiK.bealde^Lihu.! ,TIie cords and. seals ou tbe bos -are. jiitnct^,..

' .thus: The 6cc't:i;aut of'tlie'lniK lnis'-ii-:

- -certed^a : wdofldii' i'iiuf:'"Ih/"tuL' 'mouth' while the tying' ia biv!•: the chest is locked, beimlls it out, slips: '-out- his bund;-.pulls: off-the-x-ords.-.gets", out uiid. rephicos tlie covds.ovt'i* the top

,-'-. P? *UG tTmeTtl>e .chcat'.Is'ropediho i iVCree.VXbe chdst'hiis.a st'cret opening,1

^usually, at'thfi ond.'iiml white It Is'kid*.'•den .he cr;nvls'[diit'.''::A slim'iriaii Jsusually employed-to do the trick.

'..-> The1 varjIty-Xah'/trfcki;ls;oue:.of^the.most baffiJus .I:i:tIioi:repKr|:ory of:." tlie;

!'..black lift.-; A iwo:i)un,r^tiutds.,buforei B.Jarge UIUTOIVU.bout,;urn t<i<si high and.placed iii a huavy. rniiiiei. Abqutthreefpet' from the .floor Is. a ''small' s'.i'eirplaced aj-iiinst rheiiiiiTdr, thV bottom

•"6-f which la'aboutelgliteiiti Indies' from''the'-flboiV'The yliiss-hdvlug been'dulyilnspcctifd,' xhv .vouiig iwomantmounts

:.the.sbelC^,Sboittien,t\H-ng ,to, arrange. her hair;by ti]G,iuii;tor. (ijlje /s'aske;! to^face^the. nudlencij, Lnit,q&iij|i,uDd.ugiiin'.turns her bti^k',i)eucl'r',tbi>r;t!anjii iiftlii

. y s p ^ ^ p >• er' thrusts 'alisniaH'.-ticfeen)tln:r;fro'otr'bf'her; tires -a'pUtol-at^tho-spot'-wbere.'she;wa^ st:iudlpg;i.slifltcl]cs un'ay.thescreen, and she has vanished...;; :; :;.

/'._,..TUe.tqp^bdttoua and• sides of.tbe mir-!ror have'been n yiew.ull.tbe (imo.tjnd';OQl _ the center, has been Ouiilden. for' afew^sbeori'dsy- ''''' : '] ! :" : "''•'' '"ll yl'\"The'sVcret' 'IIe3'inJthe fact that the-!ower'.pal-t of1 the ;'niIiTor*'IS''[uiflde

i "double, isthe-1 b6ttonr • of. the, upper - part-.•• etiiff! .concealed-: by.-a'i second.:ahect-i of

ailvcred glassynlflccd^ip-front ofi it.;!,.''.The shelf" fits against 'the line of

'"^t'samihed by the audience. As soon ns ;•*?.:the\iBreen Is placed the mirror slid.eV;

b J i aj.fo.ot ltildi;,tl:o top %t (boh ^ i V tb!s V

•:, through tliis bole r^JlIidy'ViiStiVn:;isllp.s. hud escapua'bx'a board which•'liasheey pushed forward from bulilnd

k:4th!ii.£cene£j./Ayhil05^he vanity fiiir by-up playl j'w^fs '•^blug- "oa. Tlie glass theuy.^sHde^ filowlS; Jigaln, tbu screen la re-Mtobt-cdtiMid1 [fhe^iniitor^upp^a^.s -just--fe'as solid :-.s It \rnsbefore.,. •|£' ••*"" Another of- the nip's J asfoiindlnp; featsHjifi' modern :mngic* Is'thiit of'making a^^ersun. 'or object jvpj&raitly iloat lii tlii'ra air. A couple' of ordluury chairs are

. ©.placed ou thy stnso—well--tov.#iirdv4be.{^'baekt wliieh Is United wltli;.}i)nck cjothi'-—and upo:i; these IK Mid a fero.^!.: thiick(jjplank. A youiif- liidyHs-'itbeti^irlfro--)^<diiced :md Is nsslsted. to-place berai'UTjt,"in a recumbent position on the plank.• tj, He |hpn«!{iimws qsidc tuff chairs, -jnd

• Vj'tbe exblbiior, taki'3 it large hoop and'iipassus It W-Uwui'd'nnd forward over

•*vt-and around the plunk. '

* .5-QS -thpcfinif^ fi?i«"tct'f Hi'.position Jx>n'.v'the board u.ciirrlngc; placed behind the

:':(»4jlucl£ curtnUi ntul sf.ppoftluga sti'tfag??ilroii bar ,twice, tient upon it-self. Is• ''.'lmsiied fprwtinj^by mi assistant so tliqt%4be Iroir^jijri^iileb1* Tij rcdveVed/' with;'i>iaek cjotli. Vouicsjiut through'a al'lt^ In the cartnl!) wlilii- tbe exhibitor is§; prote::uln^'to luustuertee tlie huly. The"'liar has at its ciul a very strong clip,p.and tht.i.noi'form.vu, vcbik1 making-bis-J- hypnotic ji!t«ai>s.'^nide^"thisroir-to;.tlie\l board. ffuV !?!inlra;>a'ny-':tbtin-iTei^o"vod,-j; ; and tbe board-remains suspended byr '. the Invisible' Iron Jj;?..r-\ .. . . • •-'•-' f-The hc^p1;^ p:!S,sctL nlon^t'.frOrn'.one^i ou3 uiiflr'lt'- feht-Iii^tlie'' beiiti'i wliurei,;'j: the bnr . piisscs ti:roii^h tlie curtain.

£;:• p'psite1 dlr. £' back agntn. nntl ,tlie pftect is such that

. iVthe avertipeiSpi'CtatoriSjCouyJncedjtbiit'•>• the hoop iiii^'Tc'iiliy tit'oii" passed over

' ;,t tho! lady aijd;.; tli^f;b(Jnra,^rouj, end ,to"''( ' e n d . . ' • • ' * . • ' • ",' . . . . . . ; - - - ' ,",

'&'. vAnptber.'vcry'eireetlve! lUusIan/hr-. ^-.ranged upon the same principle, shows

&. the head and; bust of.a lady supported•ki'an a.throo legged stool resting,on .a

•-;: small table.-ting, .can apparently see.' not-duly-between the legs of the table

v to tbo' back of tho Btoge, but through•••iVtb'e Bpacb'b'etween'-'the-sloQi uhd^tbe ta-;

7' • -In this case tho thre%e'iegged.st'o'ol: is-:'; oiranged'.with mu-rors: precisely as In

,; • the-.trfpJD.a illusion, buf: tho;-table,; whichj-'\ : tins totir 'tegs, Aa. 'managed' differently.

• -V; A larce1,iuh:rpr,.HVi)laced dingo'nnlly'uii^.1;'? -derthd^'table, Joining to tfJipbsItQ'legs.•/-O'Thnai.tiie spet'tntors really only .sees

mm r^oCtUb.iegsrUio-foprtUibbing.slfc: tho•••{•eliectlou 'of tlie; first;—New

' ' ' ' ''' '

...... _ Aibotweeri.';tho>.workinen'8:^rporations..-.lii>Vrnbce.'-2:esiili; In -''Ho*'merl^jcombats;,.bfoo^y.'.'.b'attles.'t,.It Iathe;one bad aide of;on;iostltution that'is:.otherwlse sp truly frateriidK•.'• ',',;•' »'' \ TheV start '.out irJ'icompan'ies,' rarelyalone',' to makV.th'ehr "tbur of:Franl6e.';Before'coming' bhek to'; continue" • theiriwork' in-.tliclr owrii villages.-tho youngapprentices, go togethejr; from town to.tpjvn'to.Btudy.on tho.gvound.the:mas-terpleces of their tra.de ;and to seo^tbo1

best that the genlus;'of tnelr ; ancestorshas produced.' I t is tlie knight errantry'bf*tbo workman:'' , ' ' ' " : " •" !He earns his living en route, perfectshimself In his1 profession, teams fromone. master; and .another/ sces,.cpares, studies, admires.T He gathers his.bumble; harvest.of souvenirs .nnd.Ini-prpsslons,. enjoys tbe full.vlgor, pfhisearly years and passes his youth alongttie'sunny highways. " "-' . ' . ' ' ./Unfortunately thero Is disagreement

bmong the "societies."' In1 everj'ttihigthere''Is-found a protest for quarrols,Xhe. Dociety- of. ,the,;-Pere Soublsor is'Jealous of .that of SIai;re> Jacques, and't!:e Enfauts tlu iSo/oi::on. tnke part lu'the-ijudrrel whenever, possible. , , , - •

;Two; cortipauics mcet.on the .'road.The tv/oIwiCcrs. ihe^'niaster^companTio:is,"'Btop' at tweufy, paces' from each

"Halt!" pays one.?: -,;' . <;•..;• ••. VKalt!" says, tbp: other. -. ••; , ;"Wh^t -trade?*;' ., . •, t. . ,,"Carpenter. And youV" , ' i"Stoiiecuttcr. .Coiiipaulbn^*1. " '"'

• "Compitnlon!" • • ' '" :i '•"'"''•"I'onrsociety-^ountry?" ' " : l r

1 And according-to tlio reply thoy drlnl^from the; siinn*!goiird"or; flgbt. Thomelee, .becomcs-general..•.;They;,fight,fist-and stickinibtlt.'tli'e.rciad Js Uttered,wltb: 'those' wJio a re ' wounded, some-times', oren to'^^th'e deiith.—B.aypcr'%-

ORIGIN OF-THE'-KISS. : ;

[•ho , Crccli , Story,, of • tjio ,Way.. I:'", ' Whieb ' l t Caiiic'jnlo Delng!"'[ 1Kissing' is usually 'itcceptt'd"us an

agreeable fact, and'Its 'ihoorj*' nhd'|blio-tory are Ignored;'but ;if Tiissiug did "not:begln-with 'Adnm 'and; Kvo It'Liegau.wlt^.tbeibeauiiful-.youns'tJi-cck-sbcp-,herdess.who, found an opn) .ouonmofthe*.hlll3' of—U.iTo.ce-.-. and, wishlugjjtogive It to ii.j;outhfru|,,shcpiit:rti .whose',ands were iiusy •iv'ftlViila" lioclc/ let

Ulni take It fi-bTi'iliT-i-IIinr'v/ltb his ou-u.says'i ScIeiic-6 - s:i"t!:;^s:"' Tlmsl'-'tlio kiss

tjiip'ci|stil:ibti;;iij;ji!ns£'ibi» opal ui:ij" pftraced biick-itti" ili^'.fwiiuy/ilncitli'iit, forosculatipn .ljns,>vroiij,rbt'gi-eut ti'iigeiilesin ,the. world's jbistpi'j".-, ,Tr-,. V. • j i :

by •a^Uiss'. 'H,ui)iips]:!{*;'-tl!ijt--H -ox-:aped tbi-ougb his liprtU!tHh,e'uibim>:it

I*jvas'''1flrst'"li.fi"O'ili!L'fe(l*'hitd 'lCiVfj'tiil'iili'liy-roynlty. Tiie nrltlsli t::oi:::rcli Vdi"ti-B^Tn^aV^ ;l l:anl;iyjt In boucr or jii!!'fe'c'ajjdinaviXJU) allli'-^vt, whlfb-lltnytitiii.SieJ6e51ii;lfSilV^ri>b^UTOf-4.I.iMi0 wjifa

an^pr cf hrr p p o p j e ^ 5 . • J-;Th6smo3j.ljouornliiL' royal kiss on tec-.

rd Is that "which (Jupcn Murgiirc^'cff h h 6 i

coui"t oi:el<^:ty'-iidprhitcd''bn-:tb^;llps,o'fthe ugliest man in,the kingdom, AlainCbai-,tltiiv^whdm shrfTouud asleep. J;'l'othose around her she nuld, "1 do ruot

j, the man, but the ,inonf h that liiis*red so muhy'cha'rmlug things."!;

Tho Demon of Inillceatlon. >;, j -Coots-and housekeepers bave n'no-

iler mlfislbn than they us a class seemfl^be aware of.- I t Is tbnt__pf feeding'.hevhumaif being and keeping.lilniUiiipnlth unil good working condition;,-; AiDjrly fed man Is likely to be mlsyra-r.)le7\ FeWWan$s"6Z:xi3 are-oble to'rlso-[bbve cbod j'tlona^,_.''iv * 'Ji :';: )••;' •

lA 'slck_mah, slr.'^safc^Dr. Johnson.'Isalwa'ys a'scoundrel." Thelaiigurigi1'is pei-huiJB aomewhat strong and lack-ing, In cbarlty,but~it contnluH iv goodgrain, of truth. The dyspeptic, who pees-therTYorld-glyen';.bvci? to&j'tl and dallyjrowiu^ urddsei is^verjr.JI'toJy to think'limself unable to swim against the cup-ent and to drift to disaster. *;.'v e-

are saved by hope," but without it good!digestion ,faith...Jione',nnd~chavlty rOije-.nKn/icf frnhntSRlhloil <> • " \$ ' ; I -

Stories of Children. ;.;' ,Teacher— What is velocity, Johnnj:^

fohnuy— Velocity J s , what a feller .let*;0 of abumblebeo with. „„ : .The-' parson—My: biiyv '.I'm' sorry to

ie* y.ou' aylnp your :kite! on the- Sab-jatli. Small Boy—Dat'B all rlglit. mis-:-:cr, DIs-kite's.made uv,q "Hgioua'pn-.

I/- iie'iii'ing n number :orfrogs in n pond making a Ulclcoiwnoise, esclnlined, j.-. "My 'i;oodness. tmt•tlie frbgiclofl .uluBt^'Iceli) itivful souhdl*':

'SVh'y dp "yoii \bTlil;''1aoV" ' nsked! his--mother. •"Cauae they snoro so lotni,"-replied Ned.—St. I*ouls Post-Dispatch.

. , '.>• • -•ui,1,|iJ,(i'-Clioloe. :•[ •• \ Father-;.! ohnny. -I., see your Ilttlt-brpther bus tbe smaller, apple. Didyou'give' 'him his' choice, aa 1 sug-gested. . . • , • - . : ''•Johnny—YeBrfatlier; I told hlm'lipcould have his choice—the little one ornone—and he took the little one.—

Chums. ]_\~j_ ',„;„ •';' •' ' ;

• "•;',. j ; .-Th6/Color ; ip't I t . ; : ' , ' •'." •"And you loaned h!'mv$2? DIdryou

vex see.tbe': color of bis money?" \[',. "Wel l , ' yes . ••There-.was a good 'deal

.otv'dpn t o , i t ,before I got . It,"—New.'Yor l :Herald . ' r J : . ' j ' ^ - ' . i : 1 . ) ::,':.;,_ ;-, •.'.

' 'And' 'Yet Ho H a lThe h.vcrag'o boy ia Uko a n uyuj.-£iuna..

He won't work for more than sixty: minuitis unless-somebbdy.fiiriiB'him up-

' side dbyn.—SomcrYUIo JQU"""1

- Worry Is but one of tho many formsof fedr1,- so tbajtwowy -tends 'to the•'production >6f'JndJgestibh. ••' Indigestion•tends'to put tbo body of th6 subject in;a condition tuat-Xavora. worry/. •'.There;Is .thus.estahllfibcd:!a:.'.v|cloii3 .circleSvh'ich .teuda to .perpetiiute itself, eacheloment'aujmiunting^he othei1.' , , . :

it Is' neec6SaryJ to secure" a" cheerful,wh'oleBpiiio'iitmoBphcrL',' for the dys-peptic." "He should eat his uieala'at atable" where there'; Is ;good ' fellowshipand where funny.etprlesaro told. • Hophould himeelf jnakQ a great-.cffort'tocontribute bis share of this at the table,ev'cM If It bo neccasarj-, aB it was in oue.case'under•aiycnrc,,fqr him to solemn-ly and seriously collect fruriny para-,graplia' froirithe press, and1 at' first'In*terj^ttt them spasmodically during fnllaIn the,conversation at the table. TheVory /efforts and determination of theman to .correct liia own silent habits attable,. to, correct his feelings of dis-bpuragomentand worry, were in them-,selves'a pro'uilse of success., The ef-fdrt made was adoiiuate to. the obsta-cle's to he overcome.. He succeeded, and.the''spectacle ot that man tuyltig tobe funny at table when be felt thor-oughly discouraged and blue Is one weshall' never forget. • . . •; ,•..

Laughlng.Is la itself also a usefulexercise 'fro'iii tlie standpoint of diges-tion. ]'- It titEru up all the abdominaloi'gans. it lucri'i'ises the circulation ofthe blood, it lufrenses peristnlsls. It In-creases, tlie secretion1 of gastric juices.•Five iuluutc-3' dellbemte laughing after!Mch;meal would be an Gscellont pre-.jcrlption for, some people.—Family Dot:-

' THE JAPAN. ;Cnrloan ; Lccend ; ot -\ tl»o Crcatloi• l]/m<lc(l Doivn - l>y tfro. -JfkiptmGHQ*Tho followlDS is the curious legend,

ftf the.m-'atlou. as It "is told in Japan:.•Clouds formed the bridge on'which'oric'u' god Ymnngbl' tind bis spousel*zauuuia: stcod pondering on: the rid-dle of existence, whi-tbor the begin-,ulngs of ;worlds niid-tbo beginulngsof.lifei"lay •8linnberlng;:in : that; sea-' ofChaos.- Yzaiittghl,;apparently more en-terpi'i.slng. than .philosophically. ]n-L

idlaed, BDIZKI big shimmering spear.'aiiO. plungW' it' Into the 'black andteething ilood. : Pulling it lip again,'he'discovered Beyeu salt drops on' its dia-mond1 'point^ whleh,1 dropping,1 con-

ned and formed.tbe islaud of Cuso-k o r o s l m a . - : . . ; • . . < • ,• • ; - , : : • • - - . ; •. • - . • - . • ' '

Th.priMippa Yzanaghl and his spouseselected.the, upot.of ciivtb wlilch hadthus UiH?n created as tuelr permanentdvcelHng pliiceaiid1 peopled it with in-tiUmerdble tit'iill of' hiilmal' and plantlife and spirits ot the elements. Andaround,; tills •'•palace, ot Immortality!'rose-eight other .Islands—-Av^adsl,- the'Island of fo;mi; the mountainous Clio,-

'ainato, bkm-e<l with' fruK^Yyo, un-surpassed In its beaiity; tbe quinquan-gulhr Tsii;onsi, Sado," rich In copper:ari'd" gold: Ykl. bii'e of tbe'plllnrs ofheaven, arid Oko.-surVbund^iI'by three

Sucb Aviistlie.Mrth ofMapnn.iorithatcurious• land .of.• Kuslyiuiia.- .wltUr;Its>i m in bit* .pyiHilatlon of artist.-, nrt'.-.ina.!Its 'gract'fui(.'trabonBoa. Ha' fitlsl^iihij:silks, 'its gi-otesiin> "dwarf ."trww',,'' Its

•wbiteVniiies and Ureiiuiy lotus jionds.^Hmiier'H Miijriixlne.1 J- ' •'"'. '•' " :

: . . , ; , . , -Tlie .T(r«-*I Foot. ;-,;.- .- ..'A.lady wusiwiitybliiga. potter at, bis-

work'whose one Coot, \vus...kept with u:"never slnclieniug speed • turning hisswift: 'wbeel-'rouna*'1''while -tbt-'-'bther'ri'sted piitlciitly oa the 'ground. ;WUCD

lady enltl to btm; In Hympsthlztni; *om?,i"IJow tlrtut :.v»ur ;fpot-inust.be!"

the-nutti ralpcd hJ» eyi>s and SJIW: "Xa-ma.*uin; It-Isn't tht' foot that worksbatVtirL'dr'Ifa :0H' foot'tha-t stands

T h a t ' s1 » / • ' • • * -•"':• • '••'••'•' - '•

; v ' ' • ' : '

If you wnnt,..to tin*** your stpi'iigth.u se ' i t If you want-tO'Ki't tli'tnl, da'nothing.- AB ti nuitti-r of- fnirt.'m»' nil

- that the hi»t nmiir to glxe H'lielp-g hmid.to imy. new uudi'irtaklug Is

he. uinit wbi> lui* ph'tity of ,tlime on hislands; It' to the- luiin und \uuiiihn who;re doing tut' urmst who"uav''always.

ivllIJug to clo-w tittle moret"— PbiUdcl..ahltt•Ledfter. - -,..• :i • •'.• ' • v

' I t is not at iilay,;bnt at. work, thatctiildren-get round sbouldered;!andthey have several months of 5 workahead of thenn. 'A little :helpdur-ihgthe;growing.period;.will insuresquare shbuldersj .-.while yneglectniay,meana. defect that, will aeverbe:remedied. We haye.Stioulder;Braces—good ones—for.botli,chil-dren and adults;;, the latest andmost, approved 'designs. .. ; Theydon't costagreat deal and you can'testimate the good they may do.

SUMMIT^: TELKI>HONE.74.'

sunniTPLDING; t MM

• '• .Association.NEW SERIESlOperiBd. Marcli iflO2

1 v ' .OFFICERS..^HENRY L. PIERSON. PmiJcnt." ' : '"

i, FRED CHAMBERUH, Vlc-'PmUen^••-••-'-i j ; FRANKUN HAAS, ynuuttt

WIIUAMS PORTEFRANKUN HAAS, ynuutttWII.UAMS. PORTER,SKIHU}.., ATWOOpL.DtCOSTER.CoaB«l

PAY RENT?-."Wbon you can purcbasr .,

.1 orbuiM yourownbome ;by a loan at ,5 per cent,. ,

,: upon,tbo plan offeredi.by;.

;-.: For full ponlcolars

iteam Carpet [Clean-

f i

• 5-Piece Pearler:,Stii{,

¥ N tho.selection•B. ' twice the

made , Thti /durable da'ma!

, Saft.OD fortho

Qsanrtnient, a t m a .

ames ore heavy alebf3am o S o i t - • ' •• .

-. IO'.V-).'

Moat

- | c " • ' •

• • •

d with

33 and 35 Market St.Oop. Court House-, Newark-, N..J.

A Saving pf-Fuel: Mechanics" ToolsFactory Supplies

Ordtru by mnll ' will rtcoivo proiDpt ntioalUn•orpota c&llod for (mjldellvaroo ptomptlv. Oilalnt8andr*to«on avpll'viiton^' " ;

BORWBTT.

T H E

: Makes o uiottt attrac'tso route to'

Point Coitifort,RiehmoncI,

and Washington, B.C.SteameiflFaildoiiy oxcoptSiinJoy From

•le'r 20, North B!ver, 'foot of Beach St.: ;

New-'Yorl'.'1-- "•' :-•''>".''•' . :<i • . ; ' . "•Tickets; incl.ndinp mr'aU and statc^

robnivacconiodtitiocp, .f9.00 ono way,§19 00 round tripi and upward*?/: , . r ; -

Old Dominion Stearai-hip Co;81 Sine'. Niw Ycrk. N.-.Y. :;

I. B. WALKEH. T I nf. ,M(jr. J, J. Diww.i, G. V, A.

E'R BURROUGHS

FORNISMING

478 'Springfield: ;Ave.r;

TELEPHONE : ^ i - k ' "l1-1 ; "^:

,.••/fl-.-PMELAN,-,...... ,|...;

Cobti'ticta Proin^ptil^r A tteoded' to-J; -''' - ;.: ' '- :...••'. Clwirgos K'ensonable.

285 Park A'veniie,; ' " 'i; Smnmifc.'N. J.

Money!..,.'. .Moneyl-,7'.v.,Money!ITO LOAN^ ;

In AnjrAmduntMm $25.to$300.

• •Vou'frttthemoticy the fifty you wnnt it.,.:You 8^U*cTwiiaui(>n»t.vou desire' Yougetjotirowii time to pay it in.

on Household Good9, Dud V.erao'"1' Properly ofCTerv description, Plnnon, Komea; Wnttoua.1 Youretntn pOESESBlon of goods. ; No publicity ia ourbuslnfcsa metliods. ' • ' " ' , " . "

They arc in ad c.'hi vcikly or moiitlily' tnstnlUmciits; "easy pnyni'ctit including priucipal aud

' No borrower la 4vcru'JiatitJicti'wIth bur' trtnt-

We'wnntyou to'hnve the saihe confidence ia usH 3 w e h a v e i h y o u . r -

1 1' ' • ' ' ' •

1 "'••'•'• •'" • ''•"'"-• .

, Loncs made in all suburban towns. ;; . ,,rieo'tie call or write and let us eicplnin tcrmf; i

.; :lf you.havc n Loan with BOIUC oilier IvoawCora-pnny vcwill pny..it.ofT and advnncc,you more

Mutual Loan & investment Co..'' '." "'iiS^iap-Market St.',!.v.' • -Near Halscy Slre«t. .: ; NEWAIIKi N. J.

i . •"'•• .'•..•'•'Artistic,: :..and;• Xttrdot ive:-.'•'' .'faces ofTypei combined

'•:•"','•.' '••'• :wi*i"".diiiii ' : . p a s ' t . P o w e r '

'•"' ;r ; ' ' 'presses enable us toplease

... '...''.'''MU eyery.'respect.'., ,.",..'•' •

is'effebted by heating'your houstwith,steam. It.takes iesj1 coal'to keep the' fire going and less heat escapes through, tile-chimney than By any'other heaiingsystem. You get the bene-fit of every ounce of Steam', j It wouldn't be a bad idea to look,into it by'visiting our Sliow: Rooms, where we have the latestfor Heating and'for'High Grade Plumbing.

iob arid 203 rtartsiet Street2i and 23 Mechanic Street Meprk, N. j.

INTEREST ON DEPOSITS! •, .-•• —. --

0;

. R M C W - « 0rpORlt|iBabJpottflCIi*'rkaml<Alli»wiilXiitera>ton Daily Bhlnnccn.X-»T»eH Tim* itixl V*-niiimVCorUXlcurc«bf »OJ»OB1((1 BeiwJnjr Intelsat,fMPOHTANTTORENTE RSOFSAFE DEPI3S1T BOXES IN N.Y

• .I'TheXe-tocj- nfid I«hCritduccTa.T Lawi'! rs enacted under the Inws of tlie fitntc oi t ^ J J » . ;FeVcOnr9vfhnPEcr39<)-oriSga/nnthoiliea city or county offidalB to exarainaBhu etntenis of Safe-Deposit Boxes nt the "dcnUi of rcmer, in order to detennfue-the.imouu( of^titxcit to be levied on tlie estate ,. .: .... t .. •• ••

BOXES'TO RENT FROM $5.00 TO f300 PER ANNUM.> T H E H E f f JEHSKY'TITIiK GUAKANTEE AND TItUoX COBIPAIIV;

'••:.•' ; • : •••:i\ ":''.;MdKTGOMHRY STREET, JERSEY CITY. • " '

,; 3D«alers iri |JP111 EeliaWev:" -Jewelry.

-_'." ". "V So much poorjewelr j ; hns-beca sold the publ ic ' t l in t they.-nrc-bc^Fniiin^' -' • " • ' • • ' lo rea i lue t l iat i t pnyri to buy of n nrpiitnblc house . ' Hverythhijr 'w'e ofTcr

• -,' '• i acxac t ly n s rcnrcse«lcd, .an<2«ur m w store is mostconiplctt t . Thens«or t -

,_•;- : i ; - incat in every l ine is pe-.-fect. _. •• : . , , - .- , ' • ; : . .• . , , : • • , .

:, • . , •! . ! • : < -.:;- . . . . . i • ; : • ; • : • • . ' t , - < ' . , i . - ' ! • : • • • • > • . . , . • • . ' . ' " ; • • • . . - - • -. • ; . • .

Fin© Jewelry : Silverware.-:;;;,:-;;;Art Novelties'^

^GIocks; Diamonds:

5Cnt «oi Cor. Brodi and West P a r i S f s ^t o n A p p r o v n i -V • • • ' • • ; . ; . ^ N e w a r k , ' N . j . . • • • . . " • • ' • '

iiWWa

:'"•:.•• GEORGE : 'V . ; - ;MTJCHMQRE.

AND . MASON MATERIALS,- -'TVAED. PARK AVENUE, SUMMIT, N. J.

j 1111%• PLAIN diFANCY BRICK. DRAIN TILI:.

BTIMAJES .FUhN!8HEB;F0R'/'ALL;KIIID8'.OF,BUILDING• MATERIALS]

fcr^tie of Scraston, Lshigh, AmoricnntiDi Eng'.lab.OannQliaad Bla'ka^. h; . Ing Coal., ' [ , ' • • :

r , ;^.--M;.-;«. .« . ^ .^*wf ; . ^ . : ; \ , * ^ - ^ ; . ' ; i

Page 7: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

SS

f! ""f . l : • ."

lr -

PED0L.ER.1

A Character. Common toJtlic.German*,••<•,.''.:\'j$'t!ctioii'-dl'-Xc*t;\'6rl£i:) .1 i'i 2

i !'-•

.';• The rpgnl'nr' nnd popular••-"• tlio^'Gerniaa. inus and 'tnvorua oC the. enst side Is tbe sauei'kniut icnn. Hebrings* his .calling witlfrhiin froin^tbe'old' cpuntry-,aiiu\ trnds a^more profitablefleia.In New Xorfe tlipn^in iBerIfn;or

; HaiDbyrtv-iHIs'equipinijiit Js'qgjfreVeu-'I'lous, ''Ho wears.a blue, or white apronrunning from li!s neck nearly; to theankles, .ami (from UJs sboultleriHs dps-

. pended u circular; ..•metal"*'bos wbieiigoes half o'roubd his-waist Mt^'haa

' three large' compartments, two.^of• wulcli are'surrounded by hot writer.-In one nre' well cooked frankfurterBausnges .and In ;lbe .other; thoroughlyUolled sauerifraiit /ins the- third "com*pnrtmoht is potato salnd. He carries Inlite Imnd^a- basket ID. iWhlchVaro. smaltplates anil'steel forks: One sausageand a generous spoonful -^sauerkrautarid potato, sdlad .cost ,5. cents. All threearticles arc'jbC;. goodJ "quality,, 'wellcooked iiiid1 '^oasdned. •Uij'.dritlfl -liis liestcustomers In. tli&bf) wljn galleys;; wherethe exertion, dfemanided"; by^the ;j?anieproduces*I argot appetites. - Next ^b. tbcioare the' tuYernSrwhlolydo npt"supp|yfood withtthelr'aiink^1 L^st pfallJire 'the halls* arid1 ineo,iln^ ' rooiife "wl erbdifferent societies assemble.'1 His night-ly stock consists of fifty •sausages, sev-en pounds'.of sauerkraut nnd ns much)'more'.ofj saludO -On !bad evenings'--jho'-takes only half as much stock as onfair ones. Some of the more fortunatepeddlera.bave amiDgGments wjtlr.clubs..,"Vphfclipay»tIiein-h very fair profit-vp'ou1

their goods". Others ure free Jancea,wbo visit every place wb ere tbe'51 thinkthey- enri effect) ar sale. ;]• :\',>'tIr'-'-.. r "-..:,

The, metal boses nre very- Ingeniousand are made in Germany; -The metajis^Botue •vurlety;of r.pe\v,ter, and^thafitting of the conjpartmenX3,\flfttj;.0.fstIJ(ientire affair to,tbp.!bo^y:i8>verxraerlcurate." Tbe cover8*'are|so5n'en"nlQ*ge3^and umielaV the edges \ihah'iy?tierl-tlw)owner falls down Lie-..ij ja tl; y,ab,le:jto '

tbe peddlers tippeaito educated pal-ates and curry. with them cervelatbock. reh. leberwu'ratv and ,;yienba7as well as, frnuUfurters.; V'iJhe$G' fancysausages ..'usually brhig10 centa'^risteudof the l'egulfltlon S. " - ~ / - J >•

The forks are washed after the .cus-tomer btis tlnlshed bis little meal, an.31

from repeated' cleansing and p qse•. opeas bright ns silver. The plate's, oVtho';other hand, nrtj,so bunged and; bruised,that they 'might be easily mistaken for;crackle weur.—Ne\r 3?orfc Post! "• • •'

- ? . TIic Wrnthof.tho Bijc '. .:

• At the end of winter most;hives have)exhausted .their .stores;:and" becomeidnngerouB. When this Is tIie"iCas'eVwo6to him wbo touches the hives. Smokehas lost its sp'otf, tuitf youysnall scarcehave enilttejl tb<i iljrst puffs before£0,000 acrid ami eftrngSd demons willdiirt from irJtliln _tbe_w;al]s, overwhelmyour haudi.~ bili'id"your"eyes arid black-en your face. No living being except,they sivy, tbe benr'nnd tbe^iiblnx 'itVip*pos, can ricslstUlief fnpa ,gC-:the iniSHjkhleyloris^ Above iJl.'^iib^aQt'-.Btrusgla/'

•-;~;;C-;:«ERiAL-poLq::'' . , X f l . n c t ' . * o f ; ' A t u c E R c i i i e i i i - ' a n n

' Writing on ilOu:* Equr.toriai: Islands''In the Century, JHIIICS p.- Hngui* s:iys:.

I t beenmo an uuiiisliig ttlyet'slou.. to.Ojyertum the lnrgef ilatj*stories jbene^tliw'ljich ;*tbe rat's l^ero blciing -iln s^ilfl:

DuaBses; and watch ItliGiD'nstb^y sea in-,peretl *ln; •all'Mirdctkiiis,"1 pursued" tlrtiUquickly snatched up by the man-o^-warbawke. Thesa crafty birds T:;rc r -,t tc

'1leavwl$haiethy,appearance ot Q^mcu•Ayalfcing; ott tliejElund,- espdci'iilly.* witha dog, meant rats for tbeui, and any.one thus going forth waa usuallyrfol1-lowed by-n hovering flock, ready jilidlmp'atieut_.rpr A\}% .sport tbey--hadlearned, liMttxpect. A-'.wit brbislit idband by tbe dog was qutctly tossed In:ilr,' Avhepe' tbo . birds"; were: reaily- itosnatch It, Bomotimes.wltb.-a.contest mitbe wlnff for the disputed/possession.One forniot.tbis sport^a sort-ot aerialpolo, which seemed to be'as good funfor the bbrds as for the observers, con-sisted., lu .tossing two. rats-into the ,air.at. tue"sa"in6f moment, not singly andapart,, but tied together with- abouttiix-feet-tff-stiw/g"twine. ••-• ••• • . /* Instaqtly,the birCg made'a dash forIbo.rate, and thd successful winner pttbo ifii'Bt-lirlze- went' sailing off wltbone rat in bis bill «ndtbe\otber swing-ing 'in the air. beneath, until" snritchedby tbe/eecobd .winner, wbeni-after'.'jaquick; siirirp strpggie-apc( a taiifc-'etf^luon the cord,, the bird witb the weaker

rapidly repeuted disappearances andrciippearauct?ssQfstCe| lltjle/ats, ^swal-lowed anU* reluctantly k disgorged bythe birds In quick succession until tboflock, thoroughly exhausted- by-,,thclr)Impetnousj;. flight <«nd,* •eitrSprdJnai'yVexercise., .alighted 6ri^JUe'ErQund::fopa|!short truce," 1wbenT'[bi3^two:,tem"pofaryi

stakeholders woulU-bo^foand,. sitting!faco tb';;face» keeaty-eylhg'^aclif dtherj1

from opposite end^ of the Btrin'g stillcomiQctlng them, ^eneb anxiously onthe sharp Ispkont for sudden jerks nnd iunpl^asant^uipWs.es.^^ile.aUjthe ;otU;er pursuers.'gnttiered iiriubtl' In.'airlpg;wafting for the two prize birds to fly.The general aspect of all participantsseemed) t6r\vei;if!Jthe, .£aui|iiap adag[Jtbaj^tne; plcaKDte-;Is -upUiiJ tbo igamelbut*In the cbnse. . ,

SC1ENCE-:SlFT1NGSi;!

Pruits & Vegetables.PrKits. Vegetables.ORANGES,

JANGERENES,CfHAPE "TRV1T,PINE APPLES, jMALAGA, . .

GRAPES,BANANAS,liEMONS,ORANBEBRIES. O

MUSHROOMS,TOMATOES,'' 'STRING BEANS,CAULIFLOWER,BRUSSELS

. . . SPROUTS,LETTUCE,CELERY,SPINACH,

SQUASH.

Wei m'ako it a point to ALWAYS havon hand extra good POTATOESalso FISH andOTCSXEitS, POUL-TRY and GAME.

> We handle no meat, but devote ourentire attenttonto FRUITS nnd YE"STABLES and Bell a sufficient' quanty to always keep them FRESH. O».prices compare favorably with firstclass Mnrkets of Newark imd NewYork.Monthly, accounts opened with respoisibleparties.' Orders called for anad"ivered promptly. A trial solicited.

flELVILLE ffl, RUTAH,\ Poultry uame and Produce,} "ALWAYS THE BBPT" ., :

'bile volcanic eruptions urtr^asoallyrestricted in nre:i. earthquakes'ure not.

If dll'Titt* raoiiri£ahrs"iu hft?" ivqrWwereilpycled. tlic average',height oftbe land'ivouTd "rise-iieiirly'236 feet.

sklerabie'uumbiir of 'miifbiiigs". notablyone arpnt Kt.-uj-let natch covering nearly•id^OOO^qiunx' ioflcs.' ' ' '. ' •1)/:rr ••-..'

The furyrwoald overtake the neighbor-ing colonies. -Tlicre Is no mains of

U f l Tthe bushes. The bee Is less rancorous,less-;yltDplacable,^-tljaii,-the 'Wasn;>-aiid;rurely^purfeues berr^uenjy^ If fllghjf'boInippssible?, ahsolute imm'phllityfaldnejmigbtrcalni-Wor put uei?b£T theRtfeot.She fears and attnclcs uoy; too suddenmovement, but at once forgives^'" '•Which no longer ^stlt;s.—JSarper^.

The insuring of ope's life Is one ofthose things which one is most apt toput off. -There are f W; boweyer^wKopostpone what ougbt^ptbe^lie^evita-,bie until so lute a period in life ns didthe tough old smiiel; oiroer ofOrinishy.

' When, JieT pi\eS<»nte4 Jilmself '»dt,tbiGuVanc^ioffla^jhe j^iis l iCtilm'll.if jahla age. "His reply was. "Eilnety-four?*

. "Why, my good jnan. jy?, cannot lu-fiure you"."- said ;the"<:pmpany,"( j "\Vhy|not?" lie. dtimntitled. "W'h"y,; you arenfnety'four yours of nge." "What ofthat?" the old nimi cried.,/"Look;.atEtntistlcs. and they will tell you tliatfewer men die at ninety.-four than atany ot'lier"uge"."—lT6uQ*6n~ BualueBB""11-lustrated,' '•' •- '•••' ; — : — • " ' '" :" (jri'.'-lb.

, The It- Drnaoti of -Service.':,'"#0 what bnineh of. the. military'

servIvH do cuptiiins of liitlUBtry be-ioiiK'-" it keiK the recognized yet surfvlviug JoUi-r of the party." ' ' *' ! ••• :.."! give It up," replied his .victim,

• w e a r i l y . • ' - . . • . • • • ; • , ' . . • . " • ' • . . • - : . : *

"To'ihe ai'tlllery. becauRe they're all'big Ki|iis.';"-SeeV Ha"; ha, ho, bo!"—Eyracusy Herald.

6qrfa_c.(j.ofi,<jiiiiordlu$r5V,hi^n 18^32,^0^pounds, or over fourteen axid u- baitXpnm -The ordinary rise und.fall of the•ta'rometei^Increascsor decreases thispressure by U.5QP,. pounds, ,._.

*"""H1» OflTband ifiinncr.*'Dan." said u contractor to one of

ijJs trusted employees, 'Vhen you nreseeing abou^t.tbqfiime this morning. 1wi^JiTT3u''ttttia*rttl6D1'to Dempsey that 1would like to' have that bill paid. Soutjeeiln't, press .ft, you kqow." but justiiiOntI6Lr-;lt'rto bJm]lir;an oflbantl-miaii

"res, sorr." - , •,•"1 cot,tbe money, from Dempsey,"said-BaVdu blsifeturirni'i "1

Cool- Tree*. 'It Is not^l)adC>~aloue:that tnalies It

• cooler under u tree la the summer. Thecooliii-sR ;or-,tlie ;treQ,ltself-li«lus. -for.Its tomperatui-e iBMibjarit-^sCdegrees-F/at nil tUuea, as tlnTfbr tbchunian bodyfa'tTfriic"Ctbd"ch'b"r6-tlJah Qgldegree^. 'Soa iclump of• trees cools tbe'air as a;piecei of ice cools the water In n pitch-'

. u r . ; . , . ; • .; / • , .-:' . , •; !

. - • • - ' . , ' • V

. f.;.:,-.:."-.,- >t-; R a « p l n a . ....... , , . . . . ; .Barber—How's the razor, sir?

. Customer—JDlda't know I was beJngsnared. , ._. " :' "' • -

Bnrbor . (flattered)—Very glad, I'mB u r e , s i r . • . , • . • . ., •

Customer—I thought' I was being. sandpapered.—Pick Me Up. . ;< ;:

ETappfly Mnrrfefl. . " '"1 hope you have found happiness In

marriage, dear.""Oh. yes. J can do lots of tblnga I

didn't dare do,when. I was a.glrV—•_ . N e w v l o r k P r e s s . •: f - • y ,''';.,; • _'..; '••'

• Perseverance not only goes' far; to iInsure success, but also obtains, hon-

.ors for those who, altbougb the less. fortunate,! iiavc, 1ieGaythp\:'mpBtr_ flUI*:

t V J ' ± "

The amount o,tjie.at produced by anaverage man in]a jlay's \york would besufficient to nfise-slxty-thYee" pounds ofwater_froui_ treezlne to boiling polaL

Cirrus clouds were once observed ata height of_43,S(y) feet. -This is by faithe^ greatest ^horshjE a t , wiilch'.'lcloudvapor.' basj-jever ^e^n ;-notedj;abj{ve thesurface-of ith!f<eiVtti ^ ^ .^ * i.

Esperlmpntti n^ntfe while in a ballooDjjipw^Jhaftjrebftn w^ietgbt o£_ 15.000-feet has been "retichcd uie numOer'o^fcorpuscles iu the human brood have ln<

"b^^t"Bnrd"*;'cfeased;by^ctBnd. | ;v r ^ v' iTbe-ijtmqsp'uerl'c.jpressu^e upon tbi6qrfac(j*of<jiiiiordlu$r5Vhi n 18^32^0

"I'm very glad. You merely alludedtoj t in 'qn offhand way. I suppose?"'•''•'yes.' ftarr. I handed him the bill andtold bim If be didn't pay It I would leijoELmy,Jiand und.gire blnn.a.Jj^apk, eyetbut .be wouldn't fprget for a month,pnd he paid It ut wunst"—London Au«

**Whea 1 wus your age,"^sald Mr.Galiltiaga sternly, "I earned: iny ovra

• H y i n g " ' ' '•••••' • : " ' . J '> /His son, lobUedi uneasy^ but wasjel-lent. t ' • . . ' . ' ' "-: VWelli hayej you inotiiln^ to sny foryourself In that connection?"

"N-nothlng. air, except that I sym-pathize with you, and congratulate youon the fnet'thet it's all over."—LondonTit-Bits. -.;/ v\ : - . : . ; : v - .:..:•:.'.' *'% . ,\ • \

Not aii" Con'slderatc n«'Etc Micrht Be"He's a, good friend of yours," Isn't

he?" • . ' , r" "Oh."only medium.". — . -

"What do you .mean by mediumV", .!"Ob, he listens while i tell hunt all

of-my troubles, but. he also wants meto listcu while be;tells me all rif'hls."—Chicago Poafc. ' '- • ' *-' • -••

;-- 'VA' .''.'Hc-'Hnil It.'Yes; it^sFullerton's hobby that ad-

vice is cbeap and within the reach vtevery, person/' , „ • • . • ' '

"What docs be mean, anyhow?""What* be- snys,..I suppose. He's a.

.coufldential:: divorce: lawyer." — Bait!'more News.;.; ..' . .-,' . 1

/ • ' • - ' - - ' A n ' jEm(ht>iia Sou l . ' •.';•*Weri, did she'buy tbe book?" ..."No," replied the clerk*, "She Bald,

flho didn't like the, covep. design."—De^;trolt Fred Press. '"'• '•" " ' ' .• :'.

:lty?e c6uld ;ralseourcelghbor'a'dren Instead of our own, there iw

'a model generation,—Now York: : ' ' ' ' •'

EDWARD B.Justice of the Peai -;

NOTARY PUBLIC*-—

; —COMMISSIONER OFLUU

Member of tho New jGrsej: State Detective Bureau,

Agent for the Society Prevention Cruolt)to Animals. : Also fop.theAMEltjOAJEyxfcAMSHiP LINK; INTEUNATIONAL NAVI-GATION Co. Drafts "For Sule Payable iiall parts of Great Britain and Ireland.Agent for tbo PKOTIBENCE WAsniNaTo*FmB iNsoiiArtE Co., aud the; A i KFutE INSURANCE Co.

ADVERTISING AGENT for-NE&JtHl

]'•••• ';-"''EVENING-'NEWS.

bffi<e Spriij^iertf"i , Opp. Boulevard.

PT;O,Boxi36J

B f f l D & GARABRANX

PflPEl*

eB funiiahed aiid • jbb l igVatfended '•'. toL '..',;. Best, oi

(work gua

THIS 13 TflE TIME FOIl WOBMS. ,:

BHYOdRi WORMS .G0T:;fl6RSES7Are they Ketttag.tnla and wcakt^Arn Wioy "otheir feed!" Do they "aweat uprl worry!"

;• DIE. TEIUtERSOK'"DKATtHUOT." ''

rim REMOVE-wanaix. VEAV or ALIVE, icon.HOHflES AND OATTLB: • It -will- purify ttieBlood. Correct and tono up tbt* stomach, andStrenptlitn tbo Norres.

Plrecllbnswltheach .box. BoM by DruBor pent by mall npaa i-ecelpt of irillr c<mt«.

J ^ B . SMITH & COMPAQWholcsfile Druggists, 833 & 83$ Brand Newark 8L

T J M, HANCXXJK :

; Funeraj Director' ~ And Einbolmeri ' ,

!or. SpringQold and Woodland AvonueaSummit, N. J.

Te lephone , 2O A. Summi t .

THE BEST GROCERIES OBTAINABLE

At New York Prices

THOMAS F. ROONEY,(BuocoBSorto John Sooner.

Cor.GbestDQt and Springfield Aies.,; ; . . • ;; S U M M I T , N . . J . " ". .•"•. "

PliitSBtJRY'S SBST J plSpkATCHLBSS CREAM-

--:-':.-'BRY' BOTTBR A ; =

-,'. ., . Attheverrlovrectprilcca.

:• Subjects^.,:'.2p~tb f>5d..eo,.

If j^9^|(^'5Y[riw ,Ping-PongiSots, Rakeis,

- Nets, Balls,Posts.

uarter ,;Cen.tu.ry' of Silk Buying '

: . T H E SILK MAKERS are.producingsome.wonder-

ful!y pretty :silfcs at popular prices. • Only a'feW years

,. ago sillcs'thafare to-day within easy, touch" of women bf. ordinary means were a luxury whjcli oii'ly women of

wealth could think of possesing. What/would fcavebeen an extreme novelty .then. is'now • commpnplace.•And the x^ariety of patterns and colorings -is so "stupen-dous that the average buyer entering the'wholesale mar-

' kets is simply bewildered. ' ,

Her'e is where' our. buyer has an advantage overmany. He has been buying silks for the patrons of thishouse for.more than a quarter of a century. ^He knowsthe, markets thoroughly. He knows silks from A to Zhis finger lips are a tree guide to quality. Equippedwith this knowledge, and knowing "accurately the d'e-

imaads'of the people of this vicinity, he is better able to(select silks that will give .fullersatisfaction than thoseless experienced.- '.'''.''.•'.'.'

. ' 9 1 i - • • • . > ' • • • • "* ~ ' ' ' • • • - - - •

yi.' '.,<.'. T " e Fall stocks are not yet.fully ready, but.there's' . .a generous assortment of new jiijk's here-.'an'd we.'w.iil be

-glad to showthem to you any time.you come. .:, .... I,

/MOIREiVELOURS..

' Conspicuous "among ttie'"'newsilks' are M'oire Yel6urs7 ; ; ^Thesepromise to be the seasons! favor-ites, and the silk .makers'have .trifned ou t : some: -prize' winnersthat will surely fascinate all who,see-them, There.are many kindsof the new moire effects. .., '

.^White Moire Yelour with blackpolka dpts, 1.25. .

Black' Moire Velour, 75c to 1.50a ' y a r d . ! ! ' • , ] ; • ; t t ' '- : ' ' ; - ' • r I

Colored Moire Velour.in light•••blue, reseda, tan,' light bro«[n,pink, navy, black arid whitegrounds, with white-satin stripes,.1 . 2 5 a y a r d . ' " . . . , : ; . ' • ' ' ',

. Colored.Moire Velour in green,navy itrid black grounds with large.and.smallbirdseye dots, i.ss'ayd.:

I Cplored]Moire Velour in pink,white £n<2' blick', gray, tan; tadet,nlais, voyal/'navy*, light blue,' sil-ver' gray,"' reseda,''did rcse- andcardinal j1'wbuld be fairly priced •at i'.bo; selling at 89ca yard.

Better grade, extra heavy, 1.25Colored Ottoman Moire'Velour-,

in gray 'and'eadet, 1.25. • •• *Colored l:Moire Francaise in

black,'white, rsilver gray; drab,tanj royal blue and cardinal, 'allsilk, 1.15 ayard. • •••: •

f Elack Moire Francaise, 1.00' to

; Black Moire Antique, 750102.25.• .'Black Fancy Moire, 1.66'to 1 25

v. BROCADES ..;;,.-.j; Colored Brocaded Satin in pink,light blue, gray .'and -white, .ele-gant stuffs, 2:50 a yard.1

. .:, .. .. .TAFFETAS' •L

'PtipuVar Printe||.^V?frp" Taffetasbeautiful .whife, s'4(jtt stripes, 1,25a yard. •

. Black auoWliite.Taffetas withstripes of varying'widths, 75c to" 1 . 5 0 a y a r d . , • • . - . -

Colored.Stripe Taffetas, i.oo'to. 2 . 5 0 a y a r d . ' , . ' . . ' • '_.. -

'LOtJISlNES

Colored- ,,Louisines . iu .pink,white, navy, reseda, old rose andand tan, 1.0b a yard.

Colored Louisines ' with' blackand colored satiu stripe effects,1.25 a.yard.; . ; '

Best black' gpods.v :IMew dress fabrics.Wewill this BeasoDj/aa jo.r noany seasons past, maiu'-

tainour leadership in Black Dress Goods selling. -, Our.selections for the !Fal) trade have heealmacie with worethan libiial c'arei out endeavor' betni» to better' tbe, stockinever^ way poaaible:'--' 'Yoxi <viU Sort here; the largest,variety bf.fine goyds :a the State. 'Erery-fflsbioaftblo'yceavB finds repreBBntRtipn in tho atocy. Tl^ere is noth-

Coinbined with this excellence bf quality and varietyofdefiiRn and .weave is tbeAV. .V.Snj je r & Co.. sy'Bteim-of low prices. XTnlike, other Rood cluss bbuBfis'we dp not'exact''exorbitant' pric^R.-' 'We a^k' .as littla aspoa-.1 sible. '" AH a'reBuH-.yoii will invnnabl.vj find th6 higheriB rade goodssellioK bere from,25o to. OOon;yard cbeftpur.1

than otber Newark or New York' Btojvs sell tbem. Thisis no idle) boast" 'Test the truth'of (he. statement bycomparing samples and prices. :,!•...:: j i: ..'"'•: ,':

Jua tab in t of kindsand pi'iceR: . ; : . ... .- ,, , 'At 75o a>ard—Caroel's bnirZebolme/tGriqite,' Chpv-.

iot; Serge, Crepe de Chine; Melrose. jWuiuro ami others.-: , At &1 ft-yord—Pebble, Cheviot, .UufiniuM1 Worsted,Basket. Cloth, .Hoinespun, Wool Crasuj Etumiue, Vuilr,

At 1.25, 1.50, 1 75 an j ' S2—Fautiy'Camf«?V bfi:r,Stripes, Black and Gray Mixed CamflVhair, .Lpnp and.tiliorl UameJV^air, LOD^ iind Sbbrt Ctiaitl's bair 'Zjbe-'iup, Worsteds, B-Jugli and Smootn. Cheviot^, pGbbla)bevlntsaud,;others- , , . , : . . : ..'. :. .

At $1 to 2.25^NeweBt Novelties:in neat designs,.Btripes, ban" Irneejetc. - :' • ' -

.At 50c Ui 1.25-r-Blaok ana "White;CbecliB, .PlaidaStripes, .etc. - - . . . • . , ' . . . . ','• • ' •• At 1.25 to 2.00—Black and dray Camel's .Mixturesand noveltiesl ' Many'othpr-kinda at lower prices." ! .":

Silk Veilings for-Veils' and Crepe. for . trimming and ,BiliDg a t r ea sonab l e p r ices . . . ; • •!"•:• . •

. Suelyes and counters aii'd tables'are "overflowing1 with1

.', the,now goods' and they are anxious for an au'-liencs'. - w i t h i y o . u . < . " ; • < - . • ' . . ; . " . , -,

': G l a t l t o s h o w y o u _tbo l i ne w b o t h e r j o u ' x o r e a d y to: : ibuy ,p r -bo t . . i ,Cora"e ' i u . . -r—___^i_:-r-_r-!..,', _,_,, ^_; .

- Knickerboc l i t f rSn i t inga Jn blue, brpwa, cas to r and .Oxford.03 iachfia wide , ;af 80c to i;!>3 ft yard. . . ; -. .,,,.,., I m p o r t e d Cooiera bai r . iu ricU nnd pla in novel ty, effects,.In green, blue, brown,.castor, grpy, earuett and, Oxford.

1 light, medium andheavy waists, 04 inches wide; "at .1.00 to.2 25 ayard. . '• • . ;. ,, .

, PebWe Sulthjff here in gray,, garnet, brown, royal apdnavy; light and heavy weightB; 53 Inches wide;, 682, 1.00,1.25 and 1.50..'• . .' •• r:".,;.V , • .

• •" Scoxh Check Suitings in manish patterns,, bv.tJi good 'look'. ing and serviceable. • Hfre in brown, blue and gray 45

im;h£s wide! oulf 75o a yard.Meltons in. blue, brown, castor, Oxford,, grny," greeu,

and block, in mixtures and oliGckaj'heiivy'wfciijut; 56 inches, wiiie;;03c to 2.00 a yard. . _ J——• • Broadcloths and Venetians are here in the- neweat blue,'Ureen. browns; ton, loyiil, ensign, rese'na. and black; 52inches wide, 7Uc to U.O0 a yurd. • : •

Pannnia Sultlnga—HandBome mixtures in blup, OJivea;-Oxford, Totraml gniy; OtHncbes wide; 1.25 to 2.00 11 yard-

Crush' an»A Canvas Suitings in pretty mixtures, iu^blitff' brown and gray; 54 inche'3 Wide; OWc, 89c. and ySc.iiyard.

Lighter Weight Fabrics for .street or ovtming goWna—Voilea. iiSa. to1.35; Pi1uaellfts,;80c. ; ta 1,23; Zi<lw\djti*, l.OO'to 1.25; Flamme, 73o. to 1.50; Crepe dePurla, 1.00 to 1.75;Wbipcords, Popllnes, Bedfurds aud other popular stulla^ nilrenaonably piiced. ' , . . . .,

. Mfluy, Handsome Plaida here. AU the best known clanBnre represented. Some euitablo for women's went; someespecinlty for children's drcsdea—all pretty and all cheap—

• UUc, toOSc. ayard, .. ' .

W.V. SNYDER & CO., Broad and Cedar,Streets, Newark.

Let me. put your .clothes in good -t r i m ? ' ••:•'

. C. BflTES,

SUMMIT, iST-. J -

T.General Contractor.

Excavating,^—Giaiipjji Sewering:,Curbing and Paying. : Macad-

am and Telford Roads andDrives a Specialty. •-

. . . . , ; Dealer, in BuiUU! ;

ing,. Trench .and Paving *

•.',- S t o n e . '•

41 ASHWOOD AvE-, 'SUMMIT, 'N.J .

ARE PERFECT

A "GENTLEMAN'SSMOKE"

Sold in'Suiiiiuit and Milbuni by 'GEORGE S. ,CAMPBEI/JV

Ghas p . "Decker & Bros.

The Regent Tea Rooms/ !4fi WoBtHOtli st.,NowTprk;L. '

Bet. 5th & 6th nvs., isth St Efcvated sta ,I.UUC1IODII Sorvon from 1» to 3 I \ 3r

!i XicntlonwnlroliorBhoppcr.. Rmptlou"'.{ room forUicconvcnlcucecrpatro«B..

AHa uroon Toa 3 too P. Iff.

Orange, East Orange, South Orange, . . . and, Moiuclair.; .

John W.

BUILDER.AH Kinds of Repairing and

l iz Promptly. At-. t e i t d e d . ' . t o . :. :••': :- ' ••

gam n't..N. 4

Page 8: Housefurmsliings and Funiiture;...l|I|f|i§itp^^.'• Editor knd Publisher.; ; Is tie ' best -local newspaper ^^\ NewJPrsejr;:/?tisErogresslyfr«nA eiiereejic and deyoted^.toftewel

\

8

••A .

( • ! • • • •

PROPOSED KJiW RAILROAD

Marvejora Have Ontlluod n Xlouto for tJtfcw Qrauge Koni), Entering SuiutylttheEaatarn Uoaudarr ami TomunittiNent- the- Corner of Park and BaranAvauuos-To })ouneet>—Wjth tile Jcne;Central Head

Several weeks ajjo a number of sur-veyors appeared in Summit and fotdays -wet e engaged m the work of theliprofession in the eastern and southeisection of the city conducting it withmuch secrecy. All attempts to Jthe object for which they were em-plo ed proved futile and till sorts o!rumprs-of proposed trolley roads, nc1

. steam rai roads and various other im-, • provemeots were circulated by thosi

who hud noticed their work.During the past ten days it haB been

ascertained that their work was forthe purpose of outlining a route for asteam railroad—a continuation of th

• rond at New Orange,/just outside olElizabeth.; The: proposition:; io con.tinue-.thic road to Summit has.been under consideration for some years.. ;-Theoriginal plan was to build it to the cityline making the. terrninua near the

. arch bridge,' en'st of JHuritlev. ThiBhas been changed and according to arepresentative of *,he company whohas been Eccuriag options on.land eastof Summit for the past two weeks, the

„: company intends to :,build!-through' . SpringQeld and coming through prop*

'•'•erty'of tbuis' Ke)Ier nnd the Hum-_phreys estate io reach' Summit through

the eastern.section and terminat nearthe corner of Park apd Summit, aver

' • ' n u e s . . ' ' . ' ' . " - • :

- ' ' . • : : . ' . ; • - • • • . - ;

Thfs representative of the companyhas applied to nearly ev«ry- owner inEitBt Summit' along the .route for anoption on the property desired and has

' secured Buch option on a few cases,'He told the property owners through

whose properties the railroad is to beballt; that It will • probably be calledthe "New Orange & Four JunctionEailroad," and will connect Summitwith New Orange and the Jersey C<trarrailroad. '

The line will be completed ^when. itextends through Summit to Morria-town, but the promoters have no im-mediate: intention of.going beyondSummit. " " ' . . ' ]•..'• ' •

The new railroad is to approach Ba|• tusrol Mountain considerably south ol

Springfield, and * will run throughlands owned by Louis Keller, Robin-son's, Kemp's; the Humphrey estate,George Dean^s bhd : Benjnmln Denn'slands croBniog Morris avenue, thenceacross the western edge of John Den

' man's landa near the foot of Overlook- Mountain, turning westerly and fol-

lowing Park avenue'to Summit' ave-nue where the station is to be built. -'. To these who refused to give the dp-

tibnR requested this representative iesaid to have announced rather aggres-sively' that they could-.do fiB theypleased but the company would securethe land whether the owners liked itor not and that even while condemnstioh proceedings axe'in progress the•woibof bridge-building, grading andtrack-laying will.be conducted nt.the

' eastern term hus of thV line. ' ' .

A BSMUBSQER HUGE STORE.

QrsmntlJPloorpt State JDaikinc CompaDy,-' llullrilnfftolla 2IE:<)A UietU

A.few years-, ago one might huve. thought the big Bamberger fltore, at. tho! corner of" Market . and • Ha seystreets' Newarki'woutd be plenty largeenough for all the business that mightbe done for many-years.'Time and

• again since then, however, it has beenenlarged, Its front -ex'ended. and itfidepth increased. It has grown down-ward, into.the ground, Its cellars beingdeepened; it' has..grown upward to-1

ward the sky, additional stories being"built, and it has grown backward intothe bock. And yefc nil this does notsuffice. Now it is to extend its domin-ions across, the streets-.The ground.floor of the . State Banking Companybuilding,*on* the' northwest corner ofMarket and Halsey streets; is being.fitted out as.a.menls.ahoe store for theBambergers. •• ' ' • . • • • - -

\:',A KKCoab man' was -informed' 'lnstweek that this shoe'store .ia\ to be HBcomplete aa If is possible to'.mnkeit;There is tine: show window space findthis .will, pf, qburse, -be, utilised., skill*,fully nntl.to advantage.. Anyone' pass-:ing this corner will see raen|s shoes nirill the best sorts before him, .for it isintended to carry a big . stockl(of- allgood Uinds of Foot' coverings, whichmodern civilization sees fit todon.The outside of the building 1B to be al-tered to conforrii,;.in genfjud,architect.ural- style to thiii oh. the.1 Bambergerbuilding across the street, so thaivex-ternally, us well as within; it shall ap-pear like.a simple .continuation of the

.•bigfctore.v.^.'.';. .•:,;-,;,..^ •„.; ih:'--'., " '. : "

• Slembcra.ofythe; firni^coUtd not Ray.yesterday when the shoe Btore wouldberendy for the opening, but it willnot be uniil'somie tiniefn October.

•:•: —Coloneli^N; Col^.r&brothe' (oHon. Bird.;S;^Coleri >yhose splendidrecord as Comptroiier if New York.

. ,city has made one of the mis', promi-nent of the'cancll^ates for, thv', Demo-cratieGubernhtlcndl. narainfufea-iB'to'spend l ie next -six-weeks/ iri:Summitand has removed to the .residence ofv\. R. King which hehnB lehsed for

"thnt period.' Mr. King and family re-

THE ATTACK O$ MB

It* Dflipfeable Nfctnre B ndo More ^Iarlntby Ekima Faota Abont HI* Harried Trip,

The RECORD has just learned of somfacts n connection with the trtn o:City Engineer 0. S Seller to Europwhich were generally unknown, beforeand which only serve to nmkemcrglaring the despicable nature of thattack made on him by those engi-neering the investigation scheme onWoodland, avenue tot the- dual pur-pose.oC preventing'the'-Engineers ap-pointment in charge of the Joint Seweiwork here and securing capital for thcoming.municipal campaign. Seller'family went to Germany in the earlysummer for the purpose ot visiting hiaparents and his wife's folks who stillreside tbcre. '

, It was known * among the city ofH-ctals undine friends that, the Engine*:also intended to go abroad in September to stay, n short time with his,pa-rents and nnike the rcurn" trip withhla family. -When, this so-called inyestigntlon on Woodland avenue wasstarted he decided to defer his tripjust aa long as possible- and merelymade an Informal statement to thectiyofficers.nffirming the accuracy ofcertificate to .'Contractor. Boylan andgiving a straightforward description ofthe work so tar as he was able: to.

Soon after making this he received a.letter from his- wife notifying him ofhe serious illness of, his, father and of

his two children—the latter havingbeen stricken with an illness so dang-erous that Mrs. Seller expressed a fearthat they could ni t live until the ari l vat of her .husband...': Mr. . Sellertarted two days later for Europe buthe,so called,r .investigation: continued

and.those back of the .scheme withoutgiving him a single chance to defendhimself or prove the accuracy of thework and without a--particle of evi-dence to. juBtify it except their own'ague-suspicions induced the Council:o adopt a report which in .effect de-:lared that the Engineer or Contractor

both had robbed the city in theWood'and avenue work, .

Unhue & Co'* Display or Fall Milliner? n nd

Hahne& To's (Newark) mammothestablishment was thronged today withwomen, eager to inspect the display offall gowns, outer garments and milli-nery examples of -the product of thebest foreign houses being on view, aswell some excellent designs originat-ing in'the .work rooms of the house.

Several truly magnificent' costumesire worthy the brush of a painter, soirtistlc and unique are they, one par-.icularly rich evening gown composed>f white cloth, with ermine tailsileverly plumed upon it, making a robe' f o r a ducheBBi" This^ gowa was.jnple-in its lines, i relying for its

;harm principally on its etttctive rnu-terialand the orange-colored foliagewith which it was'decorated. - •;

Another gorgeous toilet was of blrtck'elyet, ingeniously embroidered ^-ith__jnchenille on lace, inset in the

ikirt'and bodice, which was'deoorntedith jet fisb scales und cut.a la kimona.

is t h e Bleeves. • -..- • , • ; ;

The chief features of the new cos-jmfes for fall wear are the hRbit-brtcks,arge and qunlntly shaped sleeves;3eep-skirted basques or blouses," findNorfolk effects. The cloaks are chieflyloose in the.back, three-quarter length)od elegantly tailoredi with elceveaofill'Bbrts of widths, especially' at thel a n d . . - • - : . ' • , • ; . " " . " • • - . ; . ; , ; " [ . . ; . , _ ; ; . < , . ,

In the fur department are somemag-ilficent. exainples of minkp, ermineind fox, with an entirely new feature

presentefl-^ii'j which our . grand-mothers will remember ' well—graysquirrel. If the: up-to-date - woiunnwishea a fashionable furr let her pur-,chase h gray squirrel alole and flatmuff; Bhe cannot get a smarter "set,"and they are shown in grtat.variety in;his department. . ; , .. . ; , , '

Milhnery wai, of coarfe," the mainibject of attention ttndaornc exceptioh-iHy.worthy examples were exhibited'or the consideration of the fastidiouabuyer. Nan-beaver and rough effectsm feltp carried the palm for style andjistihetion; in fiict there waa little:e'se,^.choose from, there being-a rage for,his material in all sorts otcolors, thepreference, as IUBURI, shown for blackind white ; effects. Flat Bheperdessitvles lead, with turbans and beefeaterrrowns RB close favorites.. These areLecornted with birds or autumn foli-ige, the "birds" being a triumph ofle featfiermakerB.' .skill, composed of

the honest blirnyard fowl and an 6c-casional'real t edd:- No soog bi1 ds areieen nnd the conscientious Audubonneinber need have no qualms in pur-ihasing htit? eo'decornteu. C- '" ,,

Hund-p^inied 'luce is annther'neweature,,and ihls^dftinty, nrodn'ct'.deco-~ -B ftn exquisite hut of black niip-_ ?er and.chiffon, with.hulf jplumes

surling gi;acefully around and throughb e

:b n m ; ' . . • ; ' : • . - ' . • • ' • • ' ;• • ' • . - ' /

In a'l three dRpartments Iherc istitewilaerlng asBortment from whicK to:hoose, and,' as the displav will con-inue untiLand Including r,Wednenday,Newark womerf "will have ' aniDle op-ortunlty to view this- choice1 c'ollec-ion of unique garments. ".'•' ' ' •

qn. Class A.'f SSCi^Wo. 41,013—To

rit: Bolt, reman!berod. That on theIghth day of SBptomber, 1002, M-Vir-:inlaTerhunei ot New.York, N-Y.» hath-lepoaited.inthls Offlue tbn.iiclo of aIOOK, the .itleof whiob la in (hfl follow-

words, to wit:'. - J." . ' ; ; : *"From' My "Youth ' U p : ' Ty Marlon

Harland. New York, G. W, h llingbamCo. MOMII." tho right wl»< reot Jahe

aima aa author and proprietor in rcon'rmlty with thV/laws-of. tha .ITaIt6 ;taUfrreapeotipgCopyrlgits.' 1 . v-'JiiL'OfDco of. the Register of C p j r i g h t .

Vaabiugton, D.".O;,-'. -. . • •. .(tlgQ^d) HERDERT PnrNAsr..

. . Librarian of Congh sa,v r~ -— - " - •By.ThoryaldSolbBrg.BeElatorofOop/-

i turned ,from\ParkBvillev; Fenp.,T this- rights: , . , '...r ' - . • - • \wnr-k but will vemain at the B'tickburn":• In renewal for fouiteei jeara. fron

' t urJn^ Mr, Colerastny here. • • ' ' . - .NOP-mber 30tbf 1909, -• .

E C E C T f t m NOTICE.General Election Nov. 4,1902

County of Union.Notice o£ the meetings of the

District Boards of Eegistryand Election in and for the.County of Union.Pursuant to an act entitled

,"An Act to Begulate Elections"(Eevision of 1898,) ,appj.-oyedApiii 4th, 1898> withnhe Con-stitutional Provisions concerningthe right of suffrage, notice ishereby given that the DistrictBoards of Registry and. Electionin and for each, and every Electioe District or Precinct in theCity of Elizabeth1 will meet onTuesday, Sept. 30th, 1902,at 1 o'clock in the afternoon, atthe places in their respectiveElection District or Precinctswhere the next election will beheld, or at such other places asthe;Clerk of said City shall desig-nate, and continue in sessionuntil nine o'clQck in the evening,for the'purpose of registeringthe name3 of all legal voters en-titled. to. the right of snfEeragetherein at the next election. - ;

And' the said District Boardsof Registry and Election shallalso meet in the same j>lace\ onTuesday, Oct. Ttfi. 1902,

and finally on

Tuesday, Oct. 2ist. 1902,at one o'clock in the afternoonof, each of said days, and con-tinue in session until 9 o'clockin the evening, for the pnrposeof Revising and Correcting theirRegistries'- in the manner- pre-scribed by law.

And:the Boards oE Registryanci Election in and fpt' 'eacharid every Election District^brVoting Precinct in said Countyof Union, outside of the City ofElizabeth, will meet on T

Tuesday, Oct. 14th. 1902,at ten o'clock in. the morning, atthe places in their, respectiveElection Districts where the nextelection will be held, or at suchother places as the Clerks of tlieseveral Townships, Cities ' andMunicipalities of said Countyshall designate, and continue insession until 9 o'clock in theevening, but may.take a ..recessfrom one to two o'clock duringsaid time, for the purpose ofmaking a Registration of•• allpersons in theirrespective Elec-,tion , Districts • entitled to theright of suffrage therein • at the^ext Election/.,' : ' :i. • . : .'

And the said Boards of Reg-istry and' Election^ outside ofthe City of Elizabeth,. shall alsom e e t o n •••• •'• _ .

Tiiesday, Oct. 28th. 1902,lit the place of the foimer meet-ing, at the hour of one 0' clock in;he afternoon, and remain in ses-.sion until nine o'clock in theevening for the purpose of -Re-vising^ and:. correcting the Ori-ginal Registers in the mannerdescribed by law. •''" ' •* ••._••.,

Dated September 15th, 1902." P J J : ' ' R Y A N , •'• • . '• - ; ••

JOHN W. MURRAY, Jn.,JOHN t . CROWELL,WILLIAM C. CARR,• Union County Board of

Elections. '

FIVE RENTS A LINE COLUMN

TpOR S.U.E.KandBoracpaVlor upright jtmnd piano V.ill be

Mid nt a barguij Address W c caie of Kcconl

• Small family havinjr spare room, will Inte wegle gcutlctunu to board.. AH couvenieuws; 1 ivniinutcsfrani depot. ' AddrcBS Private, Box 131:New .York City,

L O S T

i-ackDge of laundry marked R V..-«.will receive rewnrd by returning aamJohtiKou, Woodland Avenue.

L

l'acknge, ranrked 203. A reward will be pa!<by retuniinc sanic lo'J. W. lohtuon, 1'rospcct £

"C1OR S\I,^

Bargain D irnble bulldtug plot of nearly nacre iron ing-on River Road {ncnr M0rrt3n\cnnd running bncl^ to ?a*snlcRi\er 100 feet fromage on river Price 5 oooo Address Dculz 33Baltic street Brooklyn H Y

nno LET. •- I'icanaut corofr house, six rooms with bath,

ITIOR SAI.E.,

A good family horse. Can be driven by n ladyandta not afraid, ol —-"-•— •—•ris aveuue. .

my tiling. Apply at 56 Me

WA

A^SESSOR'&f MEETING.O ALL WHOM'IT MAYCOKCURN: .T A K K N O T I C K that the Board ol Assessors of,c City. ofSiinimtt will inett at the Ciiy Hall lu

miil City o( summit on Wcducsdny. the, twenU-rourtb dnyrorHcptcrubertriBtniu at So'clocle r . JITor the purposc-of coneiderlne th? nmltirig ofssesfmeriis fpr bcncGU nKainst. the owner or.W\ICTA of inmlK nml Yen] eaiotc bcueClted by theallowing public iiup'rovtnienU. nnnielv;Lttylnji of s ldowalk un ttnatBldo of ElmtU

PJaoil

llt on bo ; l i eld-B nTSi8l>iK(iflutcl Avuitiiu

Ljtvltiir o r S | l o w » k i i u t t h » r l T rhlnoflorldu Av*-»oe vrnMt or South KnaSt r rn f .Coti>truciln« nr«nwHr In KuclWl Avmn*.Ij^vtim .or, • lit«walIcon Norllicrlv nlda^ifurrli* Avui.uc. -' < '.^'...* i ;.-' : v:1 i f j •.'.-•T.avinc ««f-.l.rownlk on Westerly sldoor,;-<tI<inin Ituml., ,-•: -, • 1. . . , ,. -,At winch Uhie and p'nee all persons Interrflted1 sn'd public iniprovementH orbcucQU arlsine

.herefro 111 inoy be Heard; ' ' • . J- • ' -' -':.., .V ' l l l inniD Gi'sby, , 1. Hoard of

.•:••'. Richard Philr1 ' - . f Asoesiorfl.

Ki iidl ing Wood FactoryNo. 70-73 rr(inklln Pluce. ..

ALL KINDSOT1 FIRE WOOD

dress. Fir»i-c!oss™iaundry wort guaranteedprices rensoaable. Address Wra. L. U. care olRecord Offace.

wadncsday about 4 P? MJ11 or nenr Mr. P . R.Little's store. I^nther change purse with change

id ring.'.- Finder nLl receive a reward and. efnre thanks of the owner by leaving it at thi

m o BEST .Btnlls and wagon room in private stnbie, ccntr

of dty- -Address j . C. care of Pecord office.

To rent a-flat or pninll house ia Spnimit or vldn-itv. foroccupatiotiaboufOctobor finit Kposeible.FredVBitter. i Broadway, New York. CUyT -

W UiTED'

AMtjrtiffircniiin who thoroughly understandsT>team4ienthiR-, Best of references required. Ad-dress The Elizabeth Kuivcry Co. Hlirabeth, N. T

i t *ua be driven by•eof Hccord office.

rpo tBT. .- raUhetl. Elaht rooni house nt No. 5&

... ._e. Hot wnt«-r he-^t and all imnrovcnnNewly furnished. Enouire ol Unvid K. O'Kourke5 Irving Place, Snmmlt.

WSmi

I, 'AlliOrilnrs I

'ANTED

5maH"funiL3he<l House, for thewinter from Oct.ax si be within rca»onahle wntkiug distance

.mutation. Family of two. Address W. H. W.iiirnlt Kecord.

Hftmblctouioti Horse, thorough bred, very (oat.1 Pony, 1 Surrey,. 3 Hunnbouts, 1 Trap, for Ratecheap Apply at Kelley'a Stables Bpringfif Id Avc,

Horce surrey and harucsss. all In good csndi-ion. Horse sound, kind and gentle. Addrco J.X, Care of Record office. Summit. . 34

Wanted to lease smnll farm in vicinity of BH._mit. wlthprivllcctcol buying. AddressT., careRecord office, . . - • • • . .

HOUKC and five rooms on Morris avcto John Thompson, 318 Morris aventu

TJ13R SALE

AtmtlhreeiicresoI'KTound in West F11 mm it,six-ro.ira h.ousi;, barn, chicken house and properlythoroughly appointed. House and other nrointments- almost new Apply to Hugh .-51l i n n , W«nt 6uininlt N. J .

|?j 165 Passaic Avd1, Summit, N. J.

I Contracting and-Teamingfjj:"" • ' •'; - OP ALL KINDS. :

^ CiBterne, Vnul t s nnd CesBpoolsSJ Attended to Promptly.

TTNION COUNTY ORPHANS COURT,

In the matter of the estate of Daniel W. Dayand Charles S. Day. partners, etc., as D. W. Daytk. Sou. a l igned lor the benefit of creditors, '

NOTICE is herhy given that an hppUcatiouhas been mode by the undersigned Assignee of-Joniel W. Day nud Charles 8. Way, pnrtnera naaforesaid, for the confirmation of a contract made

by the said assignee for the sale of the lands andreal estate in the northwest corner ofSumnilt andEudlrt avenues, In the^City of Summit, for thesum orSi6,35o, subject only to a mortgage of S«i-000, -which Is to be computed as part ofTthe jmr-ciiiiifc money: itudtiiuL ii>o smd Court has fixedWednesday the 34II1 day ol'bepteiucr, 1501, a t t c"o'cloclc In tbe forenoon nt the Court House ni 111Cliy 01 lillssabctli. as the time'and'place for heaimg the said application, at which time and pineth? creditors of the sold'Dnniel W. Dny an_Charles B, Day^pnrtners a* nfqrcsaid, may showause why said application should uot be grautcd.Dated September 5, IQOJ. . . . .

• • V " " AlfrcdM; Jonw, A»siitneci

Broacl :$t Msitrkei

. ' • 'TEETH' 1 ••Thai1 FIT I1'-'

$5.00CROWNSThatWEAfi

$5.0024,3 rB^ay, opfj. City Hall.

. N E V E R CLOSED:,

The Great Furniture Store.

Sons218=220 Market St., Newark.

Parlor Suit,Upholstered in Silk Damask,regular price $42.00.

REDUCED To $ 2 4Iron Beds,

Regular. price '

Special Price $1,89Handsome Couches,Upholstered in Velour, 25

different patterns,

Regular price 11.00 Special at

5.50.

Parlor Suit,Regnlar price #42.50,

Special Price $25.Odd Dressers,

Enamel finish,o. • match iron

beds; also gol-den oak and •mahogany,-Special price,

7.50

CWffoniere.Golden Oak fin-

ish, bevel p l a t e

glass and .5 draw-

ers,, regular 512.75

Special price

7.50

Mullins & Sons.

STEPHENS BROS,SUCCESSORS TO

D. W . D A Y & S O N ,COAL, W O O D ,

Lumber and Builders' Supplies in General.SjiriDgfield.• Av&,: Summit, New Jersey.. Telephone 6-A. :

Every one visiting Newark should KsssBssseaaissBs;;try oiir new Summer Drink | ^ = 6 UETTEH |

PingPorig Punch; -O-'-f-'-'-^^.' I.Only to be had at WALSH'S. | OVER ^ ^ |

5 Cents per Glass. ' H«.. ;.;, ;.,™. „„„§

157 Market St.151 Market St.

Counters: ; 683 Broad St;

SUMMIT^ N.'J.S20,000. mts been.spent.on.; thisbeautiful hotel

property, in alterations and repairs. -Severalnew private:'baths,:Bteam lieat and Blectnc lightshave been addea.' The Ji.oose has'; been newlyiurnishedthronghout. ; , . , . . - , , , .'•'. '

ORC E^^ n r M n t o i ' . j ' . ! . ' , ' • ' ' ' . ' . . ' ; ' . . V . : " ; ' ' , , i . ': " ] ' . ' . [ •

:.::;;•;:•"•/':•' 7'~ ••' < C :. 'MOSTIMEH.-M^JtESLEY^ P r o p 'rormerly Maiia-er HtjbrEinrire,.New York City. .'