rockaway, n. j., thursday, junk 21, 1900. summer shoes...

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VOL. XI, NO. 49 ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. 1.00 YI:AR SUMMER SHOES! A SHOE YOU DONT TIAVETO "BREAK IN" TRY a pair of inor s jl)ocs v and you will not be dissnpointcd asv Misess' Patent Leather Slippers. MINOR'S "EASY"SHOE FOR WOMEN Ladies' and Misses' Oxfords. Children's Shoes in great variety. Some Bargains in Broken Lines and Odd Pairs of Shoes. MIN0R5EASYSH0E E. H. TOD™ Roporta Proaontod—Contraota Awarded— Rooknwny Township Must Pay Colum- bus Jlanohard. Tho rognlar monthly nssonibly of tho Frooholdors oeourred last Wednesday morning. Mr. Fauohor woro a pleasant exprosBiou nud mot svery ouo with a oigar. Tho mystery was olearod up wnou Mr. Booker's congratulations of the Board woro oxtondod to Mr. Fauohor, who married Misa Elizabeth G. Rodor, of Nowark, ouMay lUth. Tho monthly roport of the oollootor showed roooipts nmonnting to $20,050.04, disbursements If Iu,lM.02,balanceljl),i)28.- 03. Bills of the Finauoo Oommittoo amounted to $4,440.GU. Tho Court HOUBO and Jail Oommittoo reportod ns follows : Iu Jnll nt last re- port 80, admitted siuoo 27, discharged 25, romaiiiiug 112. Bills current expenses amounted to $618.77. Mr. Whitohond submitted tho follow- ing flguros for the Alms House Commit- toe. In Poor Houso at last report 84, admittod siiico 111, disohnrgod 11, ro- . maiuing 811. In Children's Homo at last roport OH, admitted 5, disohargod none, remaining (13. Tho following bills woro ordered paid: Poor HOUBO 81)81.01 ; Children's Homo $3flt).04 ; Tlios. Mnlloy Jl.UOH ; F. F. Birch $100; W. H. Thompson $1,1105.76. Tho Miscellaneous Oommittoo report- od bills amounting to $1,50-1..VI. Tho road committee recominendod tho following contruetH whloh woro ap- proved : Repairing Poqununoo township road, Oolfnx & Stole, $1.20 por foot. Trap rook for year, F. W. Sohuudt. Hauling, building, rolling, oto., Aug. Muuson & Oo. Tho following bills wcro prosontod: Stato aid roads, gl,UUII.7H ; Road ropalrs, 857 50; county roads, $77.45. A resolution by Mr Vroolaud allow- ing tho collootor $500 for extra sorvloos was pasBod. Mr. Beoker'B resolution that no money bo expended for road ro- pairs uuloss ou rocomiuondnttou by the Iloiid Oomniittoo aud Iunpoutor was passed. Upou motion of Mr. Kimball tho Dlrootor was antliorizod to appoint u staudiug oommittoo of threo ou dam- ages, tho Frooholdors Iu tho towushipor town In whioh tho dumago ooours to sorvo. an tho Oommittoo. The Euginoor reported work started ou tho Moudhnm township road. Tho following ooutraota woro award- ed : W. H. Thompson, $01)0, radiators for Shorlff'B honso; Robert Oalgish, 600 ft. fonco nt 50 conts a foot on new Alms HOUBO property also two out houses at $24 enon; A. P. Soariug, $U0, ocsspool on Alms Honso property; Ohrlstophor Mlllor, $000, iron boam bridgo near Montvillo ohuroh, Oonnsol Rathbuu submitted his oplu- lou inregard to the olnliu of Eookaway. towUBlup against tho Oounty for email pox Iu tho Bltuichnrd family. Tho township must pay tho bill, All who swlfor ti'oui piton will bo Rind to lofivii that DoWHt'a Witch Haul Hulvo villl give them InBtuut nnd^setmnneut rollof. It will euro oozorxm au Bowaro o( oonatcrfolte. Who Was Frightened the Most. W. H. Mott had tho privilege of get tiug out of bnd Tuesday at midnight to snvo his property from being destroyed by a mad bull. Daniel Spnngouborg is tho owuor of ouo of thoso ferooiotiB nui- main, which he keeps tied with a rope. Tnosduy night ho got looso and inado an exploring trip of the town. Ho wont in Mr. Mott'n yard whoro ho has wagons and bogan enjoying liiinsolf iu tho gl of the olootrio light. Mr. Mott, dressed for sleeping, wout to drive tho animal away from a handsome wagou-whlohho had boon pushing, with his horns, all ovor tho yard, through tho feuoo aud about the gurdou. Tho ghostly appoarnuoo of a nmu iu a loug white robo BOouragod tho bull that he loft tho wngou and in ado a rush for Mr. Mott. Not uxpootlng suoh a recep- tion aud with nothing to dofond himself he had to rot rout to tho opposite side of some vohiolos standing nonrby, aud iu this way suvod hiniHolf froni a horrible gorlug. Finally tho auiuial, having sympathy for tho scauty-nttirod aud frlglitonod man, gavo a bellow, wag-god his tail and contiuuod onhis ronud. Oorna, Oornr, Corns. Why suffer with oorns whoa ono ton oout box of Friend's enru plasters will dliolvo the corns nnd relievo yon of hits puln nni) snfffirlni;, tlio beat on tho market in I ho Friend'a. SOD tbnt tbo name Is OD tho box, foil directions with evory box. WDJ. Glorard. New Water Supply. Tho newly appoiutod Board of Wator OominlBsionerH, of Dover, has engaged U. O. Vormoulo, of Now York Oity, us consulting ungincor toudviso Iu tho mat- ter of Dover's proposed now wator sup- ply. Mr. Vormoulo, acoompauled by Oivil Engiiivor Jenkins, of Dover, last wook visitod Groon Poud, from whioh it is oxpootod Dovor's uow wator supply will bo drawn. \ proposition to furnish wator from Orson Pond for $125,000 was, about a your ago, ruado by 15. P. Morritt, who OWUB tho groator part of tho laud around about Groou Pond, but Dover was at that timo not in a position to expendso largo an amount. Oonplod with Mr. Morritt'B proposition was au agreement to dofoud any and all suits that might bo iiiBtitutod by the East Jersey Wator Oompauy in oousoqneuoo of tho pro- posod dlvorsiou of tho wator from Groou Poud. A Monitor Devil Fish Destroying) its victim, In n typo of Con- stipation. Tbo powor of this malady Is fell on organs, norvon, mnBolts nod brtln. Dnt Dr. Kind's Now Lifo Fills are a snfe nnd cortalo ouro. Htomaob, Llvor, Only 25 couta at storo. Dent In tho world for KUInoya nnd Bowols. William Qerard'a dnig lteporlB thaw Unit over Qftoou hnndrod Ivrs havo been tavod through tho neo nf Ono Minute Gougb Onto. Mont of thoso wore , oroup, asthma, whooping tia nnd pneumonia. Its ooosumptlou. Wm. The Ticket is McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt, Governor of New York State, was nominated to-day by the Republican Convention in session at Philadelphia, Pa., for the office of Vice President of the United States. No other name was presented. Tllti IMlilS EXPOSITION. Mr. Editor: , FUANCB, Jnuo 4, 1800. I arrived yostorday and, lifter havlnp my bnggago eared for, am now nioely located iu a hotel within sight of tho ux- positlau. This morning I went ovor and give you this brief hitter an an ao- eount of my Urst day at the Groat Purls Exposition : Tho exposition is a wliited sopnlohro clean, ovou diiz/.ling without, but with Iu full of rubbish, soaiToldiug, lime dust, grense of inaruluory and other vuriotics of unolvaiilinoBs. It will not be ready for visitors for ut loast live wooks. This Is tho plain truth about it nomutter how much the Paris papors uinv try to di»gulso the fact of its uuroadiuoss or how loud they may proolnltu their Invi tut ion to 001110 now, Tho Exposition management; tho Purls Ilotols aud tlioumiudH of landlords with rooms to rout; to say uothing of a quarter of a million of Bhopkoopun wonld like to have a crowd ut ouoo and all tho timo, but thoso who wish to see tho Exposi- tion itBolf, aud not tlio process of prepa- tiou, will do well to wuit until tho first of July. I have talked with inauy Amorlcnns horo, somo of them are see- Ing Paris, others, flndiiiK It impossible to BOOthe Exposition with cloanliucsn and comfort, havo scattorod over Europe, Intending to return horo la tor. This Is tho bettor courso for thoso who can con- trol their tiniu aud who aro not rostriot- od by nil itiuerary mado boforo loaviug homo. I coulltiod my visit to tho Exposition today to tho Art Qallorji'.vliioli in one of tho perinanout buildings niaBsivo nnd handsome. It has qulto as much floor and wall spaoo as had the Art building at Chicago. Of course, tho great ma- of palutiugs were iu tho Frouch Soctfon, but I do not think Franco has eomo up to her art displays of formor ypars whou the walls wero oovored by of Miesfionier, Jerome, Doro, Bouuat and Oorot. Thero aro many imitators of thoso iu the present art ex- hibit and, of eourso, u largo numbor of paiutlugB of high niorit. It would uot bo a Frouoh ozhibit if it did uot aboundIu fonialo nudities in various poses and postures. Them appears to bo Rome uhango In tho trontmout of thoso, owiug, porhaps to tho dooadenco of idealism nud tho prevalence of impressionismor realism iu art. If tho model had morn angles than curves, promiuont shoulder blados aud big, tight-Bhoo deformed feet, tho artist has felt that it was his duty iu somo Instances to roproduoo thorn. Ouo goto tho improssiou that tho ar- ists of Frauoo fool very profouudly,tho friendship of Russia. Not only is tho splendid now bridgo over tho ijeine iiamod nfter the Czar's father a mouu- meut to that friendship, but mauy inoi- dents of tho Czar's visit to Paris of three ears ago are displayed ou large can- asos iu tho Frouoh section. Tho best of those Is tho iutroduotlou of the Czar aud tho O.ariua to the immortals, I\Htho French Aoadeiny Is called. The suhjeot s uduiirubly haudlod. Tho Ozar and his ponsort occupy seats In front while tho members of tho Academy sit nt tables in the loom iu attitudes of attention while member is rending an address of wel- come. Every faoo is a portrait, there is no sttfl'iioKs, but grace, dlguity, high brad seriousness aud composure through- ut, making a very pleasing picture and iinbaluiiug the foatures of somo distin- guished moil aud a most huuiano sover- ign nud his wife. Another picture iu his sootiou is that of the Frouch Minis- or, Oambou, rgniug the treaty of peaoo lOtwoou Spniu aud the United States iu tho presence of President MoKiuley aud all his Cabinet. Hare also tho por- trature is good aud tho French artist has aoooiituatod tho resemblance of Prosi- McKluloy to tho first Napoleon iu a way that Is almost startling. Iu poiutiugs, the German, Italian, and English Hootions aro very good. Tho English I thiuk is hotter thau at auy revious Exposition. Of tho United States \rt Exhibit, not much can bo said In ld b li i l f i frame work, aud held two or threo iuohes above tlio back of the animal. Loug ukirtB eitonding from tho saddle oouoealod this frame work. It is the llrst timo I ovor knew tho poor donkoy to have his iunlugs. Ho was getting a ride without being rlddou. Qlorloui Ntwi Conies from Dr. D. B. Cargile, of WuhlU, I. T. He writei: ' 'Elcotrio lilt- tort has cured Urs. llrcwer of icrolnl», which bad caused her great suffering for jure. Terrible eoroi wonld break out on her head an') face, »nd tho best dootori oould give DO holp; bnt Don her health excellent." Elcotrio Dltten is tbe best blood purifier known. Ii'n tho aupreme remedy for eozema, tetter, salt rhenm, uloeri, boils aud running sores, It atlmo- Itlea liver, kidneys »Dd bowels, expels polpons, helps (ll(7«BtloD, baildi nB ths Htrengtb. Only 50 ots. Bold by William Gerard, Drngglit. Guaranteed. OBITUARY. KIMUIILL. Ou Monday afteruoon Mrs. Surah Jane Kimbell, who of lato years has boou residing with her daughter, Mrs. William H. Dlokorsou, of Douville, died ou Mouday after an illness of about six weeks, aged TO years. About six wooks ago she had a stroke of naralysiB, whloh ultimately resulted in her death. Sho is survived by throo children: Mrs. Win. H. Dickerson, of Denvillo; Mrs. Hester lioach, of Orange, aud Jacob, of Madison. Tho f uuoral sorvtco took pluoo yester- day aftoruoou from tho residence of her daughter nt Douvlllo, wi,th Kev. Mr. nmiBcy, of 'tlm* mJycooflWdtlur.- 1v~ torment in tho DJuvillo Ocmotory with John O. MoGmth as dlrootor. K.\ You're There to Stay. OD the Laolmvanna Limited there's no ohrnige betweou New York and 8t Louia. Nuw dnlly pervioo TU NiaKnrn Palls and Wnbash lUilroud, loaving New York at 10 11. QI., arrlvlDR ID St. L?UIB 2 p. m. next day. Best and qnlokest route to tbe West. Luxurious sleeping o>ra. DIDIDJ car ser- vloe UDBurpnSBdd ID quality and prlco. Close oonneotlou for KaUBoa City nDd the Southwest. Ten-day stopofer permitted it Niagara Falls. 0-7-3i. Nearly Lost His Life. On Monday nftornoon Wm. A. Karr, of Hibornla, camo near losing his life at o Lackawauna station here. As tho 3 : 53 train was moving out ho attempt- od to board it and as ho grabbed the hand rail ho slipped botweon tho ooaohos. A. S. Senrfoss, tho ticket ageut, wns ou the platform at tho time aud caught him and held him up until tho train stopped, then suocoodod u helping him from his perilous post- ion. All who witnessed the accident expected to aoo the man grouud beneath tho whools. , ^ If it could bo talien by itself, it ivonld bo worth Boolug, bat incompari- son with others It is painfully weak. It h»9 GOuio good portraits and landscapes nud iu tho four or five rooms covered by American artists It may bo said that if here is nothing oxoollout, thore Is muoh hat 1Bworthy aud uothiug utterly bad. Malapropos of art I want to desoribo a merry-go-round 1 saw jostordny. In- tead of woodou horses it had renl live loukoys ou (Uoolronlar moving pint- lorm, tt^cse, wlillo stuudiug etook still ,voro oarrlcd around to tho strains of en- Ivouing muste. Tho boys nud girls sup- wsod tlioy woro riding tun doukoys, but hero is whoro the jouo comos in. Tho saddles in whloh thuv sat did not touch ho Uttlo boasta bot woro aupoortod by n Starvation nover yet oured dyBpepsin Persona with Indigestion aro nlrendy bnlf narved. Thny need plenty nf wboloaomo food. Koilol Dv«|)flpsia On re digen'B nbnt yon cut so tue body oan bit nourished while tho worn out orgoun are holiiR rr- i-onstrnotnd. It Is the only preparation known that will instantly relievo and eoiu- f ilotely onro nil stomaoh tronblos. TryIt [ you are snffprlng from lndlfiestlon It will oortainly do jou good. V\ m. Gemrd. Must Pay the Damages. Whon the Boanl of Health of Rocka- way township destroyed the household effects of Columbus Blauchnrd. a mem- ber of whoso family was a victimof smallpox, lnst winter, it did uot reckon who was to pay for the damage. Blan- ohiird sent a claim tothe board, which was not allowed, and he was referred to tho Board of Freeholders. That board has now decided that it has no jurisdic- tion, nnd has referred tho clnlin baok to tho Rookaway Township Board of Health. Nogloot is the »bort step BOmany take from a oongh or cold to conrnmptloa. Tho early use of One Minute Cough Cnro pre- vouta consumption. It it tbe only barm- lens remedy that glvps immediate results. It cares all throat and lung troubles. Chil- dren all like it and mothora ondorso it. Wm. Gerard. A Reminiscence of the Old Morris and Eeeex. Away back in tho flftiun, when /. B. BitHHKUger wanHupi-riutuudciiit of tho Morris & Knsex, tho late lidwnrd Kiug was running an engine and hud for fire- man a purty named Joseph Winters. Joe had, previouH to his advent ou tho road, boeu in the employ of the Morris Canal Company, aud as canal men wero not iu those days to any greater extent thau they are at present, laminouH ex- umpleB of virtne and morality, Joe was no exception to the general rule, aud his didoes caused the officials no end of trouble and worrimout. Iu those duys the agent at Dcnrille was Thomas Sturtevaut, a atald and sturdy descendant of the Knickerbock- ers, and Tommy, as he was generally known among tho boys, was the fa- vored victim of Joe's mischievous pranks, whioh ho termed as jokes The freight truiu whioh Joe fired was due at Oonville early iu the morning, aud it was the ageut'n doty to be on hand with the way bills. As Tommy was uot an early riser It wns his cuKtom to come down to the door of the station in a rather abbreviated costume aud hand the bills to the conductor as the train passed. Joe conceived an idea that as Tommy was generally half asleep when he handed out tho bills it would be a capital plan to 'wake him up a bit.' as ho expressed it, and as the front of the engine came opposite the door where Tommy wus standing Joe would pull opon tho cylinder cocks, completely drenching tlio astonished and indignant Tommy with steam aud water, which, In cold weather, was not over pleasant and agreeable. This was kept up for BOine timo despite Tommy's protests aud threats to roport the matter to Mr. Bossengor. At last forbearance ceased to be a virtne, the roport was mado and Joo and Engineer King were summoned to walk the carpot up Iu the superintendent's ollloe. To Mr. Bas- Bcnger's inquiries and expostulations' Joo stood np without the suspicion of a smile aud promptly denied the wholo matter, saying that his bringing np would nover havo allowed him to per- potrato finch au outrage, especially on as ulco nu old goutloman as Mr. Sturte- vnnt. For Joe's sake King was non- committal and tho superintendent was puzzler?. The next morning Tommy got his ciuvvmnrj bath .from the cylinder frO>;K!(,'iA'"£.J)^ou|{litfortb.ttriiiouurt'rw port to tfj^updriutoiidout, who by this timo wns' thoroughly augrj- as well as convinced as to tho authenticity of the agent's roport, nud Joe had a bad half hour with tho "super," nud the tnpi- noor was inntrncted to see that the matter did uot orcur again. After this Tommy's baths were loss frequent, but ho was compelled to take them ocoa- sioually uevertheloss, aud copious ones at that. A short timo after this incident Tom- my and Joe made up, buried the hatchet and were apparently very good friends. This was about the timo that Plymouth Rock fowls first came iuto promiuence aud Tommy, auxions to procure a set- tiug of the eggs, aaked Joe if be could got thorn for him. Joe said "certainly," aud that the cost of the setting wonld bo $1 for thirteen eggs. The dollar was produced aud the eggs prom- ised ou tho return trip. As soon ns tho trniu hnd left the station Joo went back into one of the box cars coutaiuiug local freight, plckfd thirteen eggs from a bar- rel, wrappod thorn up carefully nud brought them forward on the engine. When the train arrived at Denville. re- turning. Joo handed Tommy the eggs, and they were Immediately placed iu a hen's care nud keeping. Joe ns- cortuined iu some way where the heu wns setting, and the next dny when tho traiu stopped at the station he cameou the engine with the identical snmr epes ho had sold Tommy the day before. ,)oo cooked the egKs and he and the engi- neer had them for luuch. Tommy was not loug in discovering tho loss of his eggs aud on the next trip relating tho tale of their disappearance. He did not entertain the slightest suspi- oiou that Winters or King hnd any knowledge of tho matter, and whou Joo voluutoered to procure him nnotlier sot- ting for CO ceuts, he immediately hnud- cd over tho coiu. The second setting wns procured in tho sumo manner as tho previous one from a barrel inone of the local freight cars, and the eggs, were delivered iu good shape to Tommy's sat- isfaction. His joy wns short lived, how- evor. as two dnys later Joe came on tho engine with tho eggs in his hand- kerchief nud the lion herself under his arm. Sho was a fnt and uot over aged bird, and Joe wrung her neck, stenmed aud plucked her ou tho ongiue aud when tho train arrived at the end of the run she was converted into potpie. Tommy novor discovered where lies han nud cegs had disappeared to, but gave up the attempt torniso Plymouth Rocks. —Railroad Employee. Is it a Warning. A ropresontativo of this paper, who was ou a businosj trip to Hibernin ono day recontly, notioed, whilo in the offloo of Stickle Misol <8s Co., that tho clock on tho wall had stopped 10 mluutos of. 1. Tho firm nro truo-bluo Republicans, nud the isn't this a Doinoeratia c":.:'( A...1 J question is> hniirl nainttutr. to tho great plank in that, parlies pt«form "10 to IV" Ituiaybb avftrutuu. Ivy poisoning, poi«on wounds and all other aoeldentat irjurlen may bo quickly oured by nBlng DeWitt'u Witoh Hazel Halve. It Is also a certain enre for piles a.nd skin di?oase». Take no other. Wm. Oerard. An Exchange, Anyone baviupr n cold and will call nt our store with the cold nnd twentj-flvn cents in casb, we will exchange one lnrso bottle of GriBOom's Pineapple Oongh B>l- nnm a nover failing cnro for coughs, colds, joroup, oto. Wm. Gerard,

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Page 1: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

VOL. XI, NO. 49 R O C K A W A Y , N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. 1.00 YI:AR

SUMMER SHOES!A SHOE YOU DONT TIAVETO

"BREAK IN" TRY a pair of

inor s

jl)ocsv

and you will not be dissnpointcd

asv

Misess'Patent Leather

Slippers.

MINOR'S "EASY"SHOEFOR WOMEN

Ladies' and Misses'Oxfords.

Children's Shoes

in great variety.

Some Bargains in

Broken Lines and Odd Pairsof Shoes.

MIN0R5EASYSH0EE. H. TOD™

Roporta Proaontod—Contraota Awarded—Rooknwny Township Must Pay Colum-bus Jlanohard.

Tho rognlar monthly nssonibly of thoFrooholdors oeourred last Wednesdaymorning. Mr. Fauohor woro a pleasantexprosBiou nud mot svery ouo with aoigar. Tho mystery was olearod upwnou Mr. Booker's congratulations ofthe Board woro oxtondod to Mr.Fauohor, who married Misa ElizabethG. Rodor, of Nowark, ou May lUth.

Tho monthly roport of the oollootorshowed roooipts nmonnting to $20,050.04,disbursements If Iu,lM.02,balanceljl),i)28.-03. Bills of the Finauoo Oommittooamounted to $4,440.GU.

Tho Court HOUBO and Jail Oommittooreportod ns follows : Iu Jnll nt last re-port 80, admitted siuoo 27, discharged25, romaiiiiug 112. Bills current expensesamounted to $618.77.

Mr. Whitohond submitted tho follow-ing flguros for the Alms House Commit-toe. In Poor Houso at last report 84,admittod siiico 111, disohnrgod 11, ro-

. maiuing 811. In Children's Homo atlast roport OH, admitted 5, disohargodnone, remaining (13. Tho followingbills woro ordered paid: Poor HOUBO81)81.01 ; Children's Homo $3flt).04 ; Tlios.Mnlloy Jl.UOH ; F. F. Birch $100; W. H.Thompson $1,1105.76.

Tho Miscellaneous Oommittoo report-od bills amounting to $1,50-1..VI.

Tho road committee recominendod thofollowing contruetH whloh woro ap-proved : Repairing Poqununoo townshiproad, Oolfnx & Stole, $1.20 por foot.Trap rook for year, F. W. Sohuudt.Hauling, building, rolling, oto., Aug.Muuson & Oo.

Tho following bills wcro prosontod:Stato aid roads, gl,UUII.7H ; Road ropalrs,857 50; county roads, $77.45.

A resolution by Mr Vroolaud allow-ing tho collootor $500 for extra sorvlooswas pasBod. Mr. Beoker'B resolutionthat no money bo expended for road ro-pairs uuloss ou rocomiuondnttou by theIloiid Oomniittoo aud Iunpoutor waspassed. Upou motion of Mr. Kimballtho Dlrootor was antliorizod to appointu staudiug oommittoo of threo ou dam-ages, tho Frooholdors Iu tho towushiportown In whioh tho dumago ooours tosorvo. an tho Oommittoo.

The Euginoor reported work startedou tho Moudhnm township road.

Tho following ooutraota woro award-ed : W. H. Thompson, $01)0, radiatorsfor Shorlff'B honso; Robert Oalgish, 600ft. fonco nt 50 conts a foot on new AlmsHOUBO property also two out houses at$24 enon; A. P. Soariug, $U0, ocsspoolon Alms Honso property; OhrlstophorMlllor, $000, iron boam bridgo nearMontvillo ohuroh,

Oonnsol Rathbuu submitted his oplu-lou in regard to the olnliu of Eookaway.towUBlup against tho Oounty for emailpox Iu tho Bltuichnrd family. Thotownship must pay tho bill,

All who swlfor ti'oui piton will bo Rind tolofivii that DoWHt'a Witch Haul Hulvo villlgive them InBtuut nnd setmnneut rollof.It will euro oozorxm auBowaro o( oonatcrfolte.

Who Was Frightened theMost.

W. H. Mott had tho privilege of gettiug out of bnd Tuesday at midnight tosnvo his property from being destroyedby a mad bull. Daniel Spnngouborg istho owuor of ouo of thoso ferooiotiB nui-main, which he keeps tied with a rope.Tnosduy night ho got looso and inado anexploring trip of the town. Ho wont inMr. Mott'n yard whoro ho has wagonsand bogan enjoying liiinsolf iu tho glof the olootrio light. Mr. Mott, dressedfor sleeping, wout to drive tho animalaway from a handsome wagou-whlohhohad boon pushing, with his horns, allovor tho yard, through tho feuoo audabout the gurdou.

Tho ghostly appoarnuoo of a nmu iu aloug white robo BO ouragod tho bull thathe loft tho wngou and in ado a rush forMr. Mott. Not uxpootlng suoh a recep-tion aud with nothing to dofond himselfhe had to rot rout to tho opposite side ofsome vohiolos standing nonrby, aud iuthis way suvod hiniHolf froni a horriblegorlug. Finally tho auiuial, havingsympathy for tho scauty-nttirod audfrlglitonod man, gavo a bellow, wag-godhis tail and contiuuod on his ronud.

Oorna, Oornr, Corns.Why suffer with oorns whoa ono ton

oout box of Friend's enru plasters willdliolvo the corns nnd relievo yon of hitspuln nni) snfffirlni;, tlio beat on tho marketin I ho Friend'a. SOD tbnt tbo name Is OD thobox, foil directions with evory box. WDJ.Glorard.

New Water Supply.Tho newly appoiutod Board of Wator

OominlBsionerH, of Dover, has engagedU. O. Vormoulo, of Now York Oity, usconsulting ungincor toudviso Iu tho mat-ter of Dover's proposed now wator sup-ply. Mr. Vormoulo, acoompauled byOivil Engiiivor Jenkins, of Dover, lastwook visitod Groon Poud, from whioh itis oxpootod Dovor's uow wator supplywill bo drawn.

\ proposition to furnish wator fromOrson Pond for $125,000 was, about ayour ago, ruado by 15. P. Morritt, whoOWUB tho groator part of tho laud aroundabout Groou Pond, but Dover was atthat timo not in a position to expend solargo an amount. Oonplod with Mr.Morritt'B proposition was au agreementto dofoud any and all suits that mightbo iiiBtitutod by the East Jersey WatorOompauy in oousoqneuoo of tho pro-posod dlvorsiou of tho wator from GroouPoud.

A Monitor Devil FishDestroying) its victim, In n typo of Con-

stipation. Tbo powor of this malady Isfell on organs, norvon, mnBolts nod brtln.Dnt Dr. Kind's Now Lifo Fills are a snfennd cortalo ouro.Htomaob, Llvor,Only 25 couta atstoro.

Dent In tho world forKUInoya nnd Bowols.William Qerard'a dnig

lteporlB thaw Unit over Qftoou hnndrodIvrs havo been tavod through tho neo nf

Ono Minute Gougb Onto. Mont of thoso wore, oroup, asthma, whoopingtia nnd pneumonia. Its

ooosumptlou. Wm.

The Ticket isMcKinley and RoseveltSjiccial to thv Record.

Theodore Rosevelt, Governor of New York State, wasnominated to-day by the Republican Convention in session atPhiladelphia, Pa., for the office of Vice President of theUnited States. No other name was presented.

Tllti IMlilS EXPOSITION.

Mr. Editor:, FUANCB, Jnuo 4, 1800.

I arrived yostorday and, lifter havlnpmy bnggago eared for, am now nioelylocated iu a hotel within sight of tho ux-positlau. This morning I went ovorand give you this brief hitter an an ao-eount of my Urst day at the Groat PurlsExposition :

Tho exposition is a wliited sopnlohroclean, ovou diiz/.ling without, but withIu full of rubbish, soaiToldiug, lime dust,grense of inaruluory and other vurioticsof unolvaiilinoBs. It will not be readyfor visitors for ut loast live wooks. ThisIs tho plain truth about it no mutterhow much the Paris papors uinv try todi»gulso the fact of its uuroadiuoss orhow loud they may proolnltu their Invitut ion to 001110 now, Tho Expositionmanagement; tho Purls Ilotols audtlioumiudH of landlords with rooms torout; to say uothing of a quarter of amillion of Bhopkoopun wonld like tohave a crowd ut ouoo and all tho timo,but thoso who wish to see tho Exposi-tion itBolf, aud not tlio process of prepa-tiou, will do well to wuit until tho firstof July. I have talked with inauyAmorlcnns horo, somo of them are see-Ing Paris, others, flndiiiK It impossibleto BOO the Exposition with cloanliucsnand comfort, havo scattorod over Europe,Intending to return horo la tor. This Istho bettor courso for thoso who can con-trol their tiniu aud who aro not rostriot-od by nil itiuerary mado boforo loaviughomo.

I coulltiod my visit to tho Expositiontoday to tho Art Qallorji'.vliioli in oneof tho perinanout buildings niaBsivo nndhandsome. It has qulto as much floorand wall spaoo as had the Art buildingat Chicago. Of course, tho great ma-

of palutiugs were iu tho FrouchSoctfon, but I do not think Franco haseomo up to her art displays of formorypars whou the walls wero oovored by

of Miesfionier, Jerome, Doro,Bouuat and Oorot. Thero aro manyimitators of thoso iu the present art ex-hibit and, of eourso, u largo numbor ofpaiutlugB of high niorit. It would uot boa Frouoh ozhibit if it did uot abound Iufonialo nudities in various poses andpostures. Them appears to bo Romeuhango In tho trontmout of thoso, owiug,porhaps to tho dooadenco of idealismnud tho prevalence of impressionism orrealism iu art. If tho model had mornangles than curves, promiuont shoulderblados aud big, tight-Bhoo deformed feet,tho artist has felt that it was his duty iusomo Instances to roproduoo thorn.

Ouo goto tho improssiou that tho ar-ists of Frauoo fool very profouudly,tho

friendship of Russia. Not only is thosplendid now bridgo over tho ijeineiiamod nfter the Czar's father a mouu-meut to that friendship, but mauy inoi-dents of tho Czar's visit to Paris of three

ears ago are displayed ou large can-asos iu tho Frouoh section. Tho best

of those Is tho iutroduotlou of the Czaraud tho O.ariua to the immortals, I\H thoFrench Aoadeiny Is called. The suhjeots uduiirubly haudlod. Tho Ozar and hisponsort occupy seats In front while thomembers of tho Academy sit nt tables inthe loom iu attitudes of attention while

member is rending an address of wel-come. Every faoo is a portrait, there isno sttfl'iioKs, but grace, dlguity, highbrad seriousness aud composure through-ut, making a very pleasing picture andiinbaluiiug the foatures of somo distin-

guished moil aud a most huuiano sover-ign nud his wife. Another picture iuhis sootiou is that of the Frouch Minis-or, Oambou, rgniug the treaty of peaoolOtwoou Spniu aud the United States iu

tho presence of President MoKiuleyaud all his Cabinet. Hare also tho por-trature is good aud tho French artist hasaoooiituatod tho resemblance of Prosi-McKluloy to tho first Napoleon iu a waythat Is almost startling.

Iu poiutiugs, the German, Italian,and English Hootions aro very good. ThoEnglish I thiuk is hotter thau at auyrevious Exposition. Of tho United States

\rt Exhibit, not much can bo said Inld b li i l f i

frame work, aud held two or threoiuohes above tlio back of the animal.Loug ukirtB eitonding from tho saddleoouoealod this frame work. It is thellrst timo I ovor knew tho poor donkoyto have his iunlugs. Ho was getting aride without being rlddou.

Qlorloui NtwiConies from Dr. D. B. Cargile, of

WuhlU, I. T. He writei: ' 'Elcotrio lilt-tort has cured Urs. llrcwer of icrolnl»,which bad caused her great suffering forjure. Terrible eoroi wonld break out onher head an') face, »nd tho best dootorioould give DO holp; bnt Don her health i«excellent." Elcotrio Dltten is tbe bestblood purifier known. Ii'n tho aupremeremedy for eozema, tetter, salt rhenm,uloeri, boils aud running sores, It atlmo-Itlea liver, kidneys »Dd bowels, expelspolpons, helps (ll(7«BtloD, baildi nB thsHtrengtb. Only 50 ots. Bold by WilliamGerard, Drngglit. Guaranteed.

OBITUARY.KIMUIILL.

Ou Monday afteruoon Mrs. SurahJane Kimbell, who of lato years hasboou residing with her daughter, Mrs.William H. Dlokorsou, of Douville,died ou Mouday after an illness ofabout six weeks, aged TO years.About six wooks ago she had a stroke ofnaralysiB, whloh ultimately resulted inher death. Sho is survived by throochildren: Mrs. Win. H. Dickerson, ofDenvillo; Mrs. Hester lioach, of Orange,aud Jacob, of Madison.

Tho f uuoral sorvtco took pluoo yester-day aftoruoou from tho residence of herdaughter nt Douvlllo, wi,th Kev. Mr.nmiBcy, of 'tlm* mJycooflWdtlur.- 1v~torment in tho DJuvillo Ocmotory withJohn O. MoGmth as dlrootor.

K.\

You're There to Stay.OD the Laolmvanna Limited there's no

ohrnige betweou New York and 8t Louia.Nuw dnlly pervioo TU NiaKnrn Palls andWnbash lUilroud, loaving New York at 1011. QI., arrlvlDR ID St. L?UIB 2 p. m. nextday. Best and qnlokest route to tbe West.Luxurious sleeping o>ra. DIDIDJ car ser-vloe UDBurpnSBdd ID quality and prlco.Close oonneotlou for KaUBoa City nDd theSouthwest. Ten-day stopofer permitted itNiagara Falls. 0-7-3i.

Nearly Lost His Life.On Monday nftornoon Wm. A. Karr,

of Hibornla, camo near losing his life ato Lackawauna station here. As tho

3 : 53 train was moving out ho attempt-od to board it and as ho grabbed thehand rail ho slipped botweon thoooaohos. A. S. Senrfoss, tho ticketageut, wns ou the platform at tho timeaud caught him and held him upuntil tho train stopped, then suocoododu helping him from his perilous post-ion. All who witnessed the accidentexpected to aoo the man grouud beneaththo whools.

,^ If it could bo talien by itself, itivonld bo worth Boolug, bat in compari-son with others It is painfully weak. Ith»9 GOuio good portraits and landscapesnud iu tho four or five rooms covered byAmerican artists It may bo said that ifhere is nothing oxoollout, thore Is muohhat 1B worthy aud uothiug utterly bad.Malapropos of art I want to desoribo a

merry-go-round 1 saw jostordny. In-tead of woodou horses it had renl liveloukoys ou (Uo olronlar moving pint-lorm, tt cse, wlillo stuudiug etook still,voro oarrlcd around to tho strains of en-Ivouing muste. Tho boys nud girls sup-wsod tlioy woro riding tun doukoys, buthero is whoro the jouo comos in. Thosaddles in whloh thuv sat did not touchho Uttlo boasta bot woro aupoortod by n

Starvation nover yet oured dyBpepsinPersona with Indigestion aro nlrendy bnlfnarved. Thny need plenty nf wboloaomofood. Koilol Dv«|)flpsia On re digen'B nbntyon cut so tue body oan bit nourishedwhile tho worn out orgoun are holiiR rr-i-onstrnotnd. It Is the only preparationknown that will instantly relievo and eoiu-

filotely onro nil stomaoh tronblos. Try It[ you are snffprlng from lndlfiestlon It

will oortainly do jou good. V\ m. Gemrd.

Must Pay the Damages.Whon the Boanl of Health of Rocka-

way township destroyed the householdeffects of Columbus Blauchnrd. a mem-ber of whoso family was a victim ofsmallpox, lnst winter, it did uot reckonwho was to pay for the damage. Blan-ohiird sent a claim to the board, whichwas not allowed, and he was referred totho Board of Freeholders. That boardhas now decided that it has no jurisdic-tion, nnd has referred tho clnlin baok totho Rookaway Township Board ofHealth.

Nogloot is the »bort step BO many takefrom a oongh or cold to conrnmptloa. Thoearly use of One Minute Cough Cnro pre-vouta consumption. It it tbe only barm-lens remedy that glvps immediate results.It cares all throat and lung troubles. Chil-dren all like it and mothora ondorso it.Wm. Gerard.

A Reminiscence of the Old Morris andEeeex.

Away back in tho flftiun, when /. B.BitHHKUger wan Hupi-riutuudciiit of thoMorris & Knsex, tho late lidwnrd Kiugwas running an engine and hud for fire-man a purty named Joseph Winters.Joe had, previouH to his advent ou thoroad, boeu in the employ of the MorrisCanal Company, aud as canal men weronot iu those days to any greater extentthau they are at present, laminouH ex-umpleB of virtne and morality, Joe wasno exception to the general rule, audhis didoes caused the officials no end oftrouble and worrimout.

Iu those duys the agent at Dcnrillewas Thomas Sturtevaut, a atald andsturdy descendant of the Knickerbock-ers, and Tommy, as he was generallyknown among tho boys, was the fa-vored victim of Joe's mischievouspranks, whioh ho termed as jokes Thefreight truiu whioh Joe fired was dueat Oonville early iu the morning, aud itwas the ageut'n doty to be on hand withthe way bills. As Tommy was uot anearly riser It wns his cuKtom to comedown to the door of the station in arather abbreviated costume aud handthe bills to the conductor as the trainpassed. Joe conceived an idea that asTommy was generally half asleep whenhe handed out tho bills it would be acapital plan to 'wake him up a bit.' asho expressed it, and as the front of theengine came opposite the door whereTommy wus standing Joe would pullopon tho cylinder cocks, completelydrenching tlio astonished and indignantTommy with steam aud water, which,In cold weather, was not over pleasantand agreeable. This was kept up forBOine timo despite Tommy's protestsaud threats to roport the matter toMr. Bossengor. At last forbearanceceased to be a virtne, the roport wasmado and Joo and Engineer King weresummoned to walk the carpot up Iu thesuperintendent's ollloe. To Mr. Bas-Bcnger's inquiries and expostulations'Joo stood np without the suspicion of asmile aud promptly denied the wholomatter, saying that his bringing npwould nover havo allowed him to per-potrato finch au outrage, especially onas ulco nu old goutloman as Mr. Sturte-vnnt. For Joe's sake King was non-committal and tho superintendent waspuzzler?. The next morning Tommy gothis ciuvvmnrj bath .from the cylinderfrO>;K!(,'iA'"£.J)^ou|{litfortb.ttriiiouurt'rwport to tfj^updriutoiidout, who by thistimo wns' thoroughly augrj- as well asconvinced as to tho authenticity of theagent's roport, nud Joe had a bad halfhour with tho "super," nud the tnpi-noor was inntrncted to see that thematter did uot orcur again. After thisTommy's baths were loss frequent, butho was compelled to take them ocoa-sioually uevertheloss, aud copious onesat that.

A short timo after this incident Tom-my and Joe made up, buried the hatchetand were apparently very good friends.This was about the timo that PlymouthRock fowls first came iuto promiuenceaud Tommy, auxions to procure a set-tiug of the eggs, aaked Joe if be couldgot thorn for him. Joe said "certainly,"aud that the cost of the settingwonld bo $1 for thirteen eggs. Thedollar was produced aud the eggs prom-ised ou tho return trip. As soon ns thotrniu hnd left the station Joo went backinto one of the box cars coutaiuiug localfreight, plckfd thirteen eggs from a bar-rel, wrappod thorn up carefully nudbrought them forward on the engine.When the train arrived at Denville. re-turning. Joo handed Tommy the eggs,and they were Immediately placed iua hen's care nud keeping. Joe ns-cortuined iu some way where the heuwns setting, and the next dny when thotraiu stopped at the station he cameouthe engine with the identical snmr epesho had sold Tommy the day before. ,)oocooked the egKs and he and the engi-neer had them for luuch.

Tommy was not loug in discoveringtho loss of his eggs aud on the next triprelating tho tale of their disappearance.He did not entertain the slightest suspi-oiou that Winters or King hnd anyknowledge of tho matter, and whou Joovoluutoered to procure him nnotlier sot-ting for CO ceuts, he immediately hnud-cd over tho coiu. The second settingwns procured in tho sumo manner astho previous one from a barrel in one ofthe local freight cars, and the eggs, weredelivered iu good shape to Tommy's sat-isfaction. His joy wns short lived, how-evor. as two dnys later Joe came ontho engine with tho eggs in his hand-kerchief nud the lion herself under hisarm. Sho was a fnt and uot over agedbird, and Joe wrung her neck, stenmedaud plucked her ou tho ongiue audwhen tho train arrived at the end ofthe run she was converted into potpie.Tommy novor discovered where lies hannud cegs had disappeared to, but gaveup the attempt torniso Plymouth Rocks.—Railroad Employee.

Is it a Warning.A ropresontativo of this paper, who

was ou a businosj trip to Hibernin onoday recontly, notioed, whilo in the offlooof Stickle Misol <8s Co., that tho clock ontho wall had stopped 10 mluutos of. 1.Tho firm nro truo-bluo Republicans, nudthe isn't this a Doinoeratia

c":.:'( A...1 J

question is>hniirl nainttutr. to tho great plank in that,parlies pt«form "10 to IV" Ituiaybbavftrutuu.

Ivy poisoning, poi«on wounds and allother aoeldentat irjurlen may bo quicklyoured by nBlng DeWitt'u Witoh Hazel Halve.It Is also a certain enre for piles a.nd skindi?oase». Take no other. Wm. Oerard.

An Exchange,Anyone baviupr n cold and will call nt

our store with the cold nnd twentj-flvncents in casb, we will exchange one lnrsobottle of GriBOom's Pineapple Oongh B>l-nnm a nover failing cnro for coughs, colds,joroup, oto. Wm. Gerard,

Page 2: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

Rockaway RecordTlmi-H. lay , ,7inio 'J 1, VMHl

BRYAN ON FIRST BALLOT

Ho Will Bo Named For rresident

at tho Kansas City Convention

M i i M t T I I I I I I r n u t i K l i I ) i - l i t { : » l r « l l a u - ' " • " • t

1 i i H t r t i r t f i l l > y 1 J i m . o r m i l e M a l i ' t ' o n -

v t n l l o i i H l u I n m i m i H i t * N o m i n a t i o n .

K n i i s . ' i s C l l . v i S [ i f f i M l i . - T l i r n l n ; i -

r I < » n o f W i l i i i t i n f J r i i M i n i : * l ' . r , \ a n f u r

I ' r r s h l . - i i l m i I l u ' l i r s t b a l l o t .11 1 1 1 . '

I h i i i u r r ; i l i r N i i l l o i u i l C H | M r l i t l u i i , w l i i r l i

i .s l o u i i ' i ' l h c r i ' u i i J u l y I . i s n s s i i r n l .

. M i . r i ' l l t i i n 1 ' i n m ^ l i d< • I f , ; ; : . - •* l u n t ' I n < M

h i M i - i i f i i ' i l h y i l i f S t ; 111 • i D i i \ c m i< I I K I D

1' , - iM t h i - i r \ i » i i ' K r i . r \ U - \ r . n u s i h f i n - x t

I t c i i K M n i i l c r r f s i i l f i n i i i l I ' M i i t l H l j i i i ' .

P i n - n u i i i l i f i - < f i l f h - . U M i i - w i , . t w i l l ; u -

[ f i i d t i n 1 - \ : n K i i i a l I " i * u v f i n I ' - i i i s ! i ; ; u .

VI i n 1 ! i n I' w i - i n i i ' j T . 1 . - i l f l f ^ . i i f . s

l i i n l 1 H i l l < ' l m . s f i i . ; i ! i . | i . : n l n f i I n .. I T

- i ' \ r i i i \ s i x i n i i i v M i n n H i ' 1 i w n I n n l si f l i l t ' \\ h u l l ' l i U l l l l i i T | ] t v r - . - ; i r ) I n I ) i t l i l -

I I I : I i c n ' l ' i v i n > l n i r i i ' d t n \> <!*• I ' n r h i m .T h i s i n n k . ' s H i . - N i > i i i i u : i l i i ' i i u l " M r .I ' . M ; t n t > n I h f l i r M I I : I 1 1 " ! i v i i n i n .

I ' l i f i i > n \ I ' l i i l o i i l u i l l w i l l 1 ' f r i ' M i l yf o r I I H ' d c l f L r : i l f s ; i i I I n ( i i i i f i i i i i i i f i !' n i i i i r n p f n i l ^ t i l ' ! I n - f u i n • - i i i h i l l . T i n 1

u i i r k u l ' f f i m i l i l i i i ^ i l l ' ' . ' i i H l i l i i r l u i i i ; U " -i f i - i l i r t i n - \ v l i i - - t i i l f s i r n v f . l i I n 1 II r M

<l I ' l l f t l i r e W H S n i ] i l i | l . \ p l i s l i f i l . i l i n l t i l l 1

i ' \ | M ' t ' ! ; i l l u n s o f M i r c n i i l r m i u r s U n i t( I n - l i i i l l w i i u M 1 n« r i ' i i d y h y J u l y I J U Ti i i m - f t l u i n r n i l i z n l . T i n 1 m - w s i n i f -l u r c i s I n e v e r y w n p \ n s ^ m n l u s H i e: n i f I m n t f t l . [ i n n i l i < m u r l i t i n - M I M T I O I *

n i ; i , \ m > i h e u s M n c l y r u i i s l i n l H i t - s m t -l i m j i r f i i i i ' ^ f n i r i i t s j i r e : i l l i l i i i t i ; m h o

I > l : n i ( ) ( ' l t A T i c C U M 1 I : N I ' I O N S .

i l r h ' t f i l t e n I n K i i t i H U N r l l y I r i M m c ' t r d F i l l

H r j i n i *•>!». ,1< '<I I n I ' l l ' , . M i t t d c .

S I . 1 , 1 , I l l s . M i l . I S p r i i : l l i . T i l l ' I I,•111(1-

' T . ' l H c S ! ; i l i ' < ' n i l V r n ; i n n c l ' i i r . l i l . - l o -

LTMli 'S 1.1 l l i i ' K . ' l l l S i U i 1 ' i l V < ' n i l \ C H I i n n .

T h e y \ v i i n s l i i i i ' l c i l [ < i r l ! r y ; m .

A l l i i n l i i . <ii\. • S [ t < M • I.-111. T i n - I i c n i o -

T l l l l r S l a l r i \ > i n i - n l l u l l n u m i n ; l t r t l a

' n i l S l a d ' I i . - U . - l . l i . ' M i l i ' i l I ' .v A l l e n I i .

' i l l l i l l i T . t i n 1 C u v . ' - n i u i - . T i l l ' i l r l " K , ' l l i ' H11> t i n ' K M I I S . - I S 1 ' l l y ( ' i i i i v r l l l l u l l W e r e

i l l . - l f l i r t e d f ( , ! ' I I n ; 1U .

l . o t i l s v n l i . . K y . i S p i ' i ' l i i l i . - T l n ' I V m -

f . T U l U ' S l ; l 1 r ( ' " l l \ . i l l i n l l i - l ( ' - : , i l l l n l i ' -

^ . - l l i ' S t o t i l . ' K : l ! l s ; i s < " i t y < ' t ' l l \ ' - I I I l u l l ,

i m l t n s t n i i - t r . l i h i ' i n t u \ n l r I ' u r I t r y n i i .

• h t l l ' u r n i i i m l i l n r l a i ' i - s n ^ i i i i i H l t r t i s l i .

> c i ' i i t t c S t u t f C t i n v i ' i i t l ^ n ' 1 o i i : 4 n i u ( : i l a

I'ul] State ticket, hud oW'oiMi. 'clositifas'.ii the Knur l s City I '(invciillMi. Tim• n l l V l ' l l l I : H I | | , T 1 . ' 1 1 - ( ' I | I ' , I | - l l r y - H I . H i l l t i l l '

' h i r a p i plal I'nrin iiml a.Lrainsl ln i | i c r i a l -

S a r r n n i f H I D . ( ' a l . i S p e c f u l l . - T h o( • < • n i n c r a i i t - S l a t f < ' m i v r n t i n n i i i s t r i i c t -• d i h f t l f l f - a i i ' s t ' l f f i . - t l \<> t h f K a n s a s

I ' i t y C i m v e i n I n n t u v o t e f o r H r y a n .T h e p h i I f t t r n i n d u p t e i l i n d o r s e s t h e' h i r n j j o [ i l i i l f n r i n , f a \ n r s I l i e p o p u l a r

: ' l r f [ i t i i i n f 1 ' i i i U M l S t a l l ' s S r i i a t i i r s a m ia \ v s l o r 1 l i e e x f l u s i m i o f A s i a t i f l n -m r i ' i ' s a n d f o n d f i n i i s l i u s t f i .

HISTORIC SITE MARKED.

PredliytnrtmiB Vnveil Tholr IMoTinntentIn Old ScotH Ilurylnti (iniuml.

Ki-H'ht)hl. N. J . i S p f f i a l ) . - T h e r e w a su n v f i l r d on tin- s i te of i h e o ld S c o t ' sMeet inii' I l o u s e a n ionume i i t lo ih<>ineint t ry of t he I l rv . J n h n Hoyd . t holiiwt 1'ivsi .y l e r l a n m i n i s t e r in A m e r -ica, m id o i In 'Vs. T h e si te of I hi1 oldmeet in.L' In HIS.' is n e a r W i e k n t u n k .Ahnii t l ive h u n d r e d peuplu w e r e [ires-

REPUBLICAN CONVENTION

Proceeding-s of the Gathering' ill Phil-

adelphia Whioh Named theTiokot.

C. t'i'lit ljlltlUlHlllKIU AiVllt(L-Illl

lion ul tli43 Niiinoft of ntand Itoonovrlt.

l 1>J

P l i l l : n l c l j . l i l i i ( S p c c l n l i . • T h e f i r s t

i l n y ' s M ' s s l u i i ( i f t h e I t c p i i l i l l c i i n N i l -

t i u M i i l t ' o i i v f i n l n i i . w h i c h m i s l i c l d I n

( ' i n i M ' l i t l d l l H u l l , l i t t h e N i l t l o l i l l l lOx

j u i r i l ^ x p u s l i n g r o u n d s , A ' J I H i l l ' \ ' o t ( - < l

i n d l T c i ' t l i i K ii t i ' i n p u n i r . v o r K i m l z . ' i l l i i l i .

' l ' l n ' ( n i l \ I ' l l t i o n w n w C J l l l c d t o ( l l ' i i l ' r

b y S i ' i u i l u r H i i n n a . c l n i i r n u i n o f t i l e

I t i ' i u i l i l i i a u . N i i t l m i n l ( ' ( i i i u n l t t i H ' . a t

l i : . : ( i i p . . . . ' 1 1 1 . - H c v . . 1 . ( i . l t d l t o n

o p r n i ' l l 111*' p l ' d C t ' l ' l l i l l ^ H W l t l l p n i . M ' l ' ,

:i f11• r w l i l r h S c n . ' i i d i ' 11: i l i n n u i i i d c a

s p c i ' i ' h d l ' \ \ ' i i r ( i n i i 1 I d l i l t 1 ( i r l i ' ^ n t l ' H .

S r i i i i i u r !•]* 1 w a r « l o . W ' d l c o t t W I I H I n -

i i ' d i l u i ' i ' i l I I S t i ' i n p i i n i r y c l i i i l r i i i n i i , n m l

l l l l l i l r I l l s J l d i l l ' I ' S S . > \ ' l H ' l l h e C d l l c h l l p

r i l M r . W d l c i i i l r i ' i i i l t i n - l i m n l i s t d l '

• - r r r t ' i j i r i r s a n d n l l l r l a l H p r i M l o u s l y

i m i ' i ' r i l u p o n . I I n \ c r i i u i ' T a y l o r , o f

K i ' i i l u r K y , s i ' i ' i u n h ' d 111<' l i d i i i i l u l t I o n s

if t h i ' \ ; i i ' l < i i i s d l l l r l a l s a i l U d i i n r r i l , i i n i l

l l l r . v W c l ' c r l r c i c i l 11 l i a i l l l l l o u s l y . T i l l '

u s u a l r i i u l i i i r n i d i i o n s r i ' l a l 111j_r t o

r u l t ' s M i n i t i n 1 f o r m a t I o n o f r o n u i i i i -

h ' l ' s w e r e H i m n i l o p t i ' i l , m i d I h i . C u l l -

\ i ' l l t i u l l p l l l l i i x i ' d i l l t u t h e l i i i l l p i ' d i ' i * , s s

d f C11III11H I I i r r u l e of ' S l a l i ' s f u r l i s t s

i ) f o l l l c r r s d f f l i c s e v e r a l d e l r p i t I o n s .

(•voi'Kiecn, d n i p c i l w l l l i flai;s a m ib u n t i n g a n d a d o r n e d w i t h t h e i 'uat-ot '-l i n n s of e v e r y S l a t e , t h a t t h e etl'ei'lwuH zU-hly hai ' i i io i i idus . l i l r e c t l y int h e (.'I'lltre of t he w a l l over ldokl l lKIho e n t i r e h a l l , a n d f a c i n g t h e de le -

trnli'N w a s 1111 r x e i ' l l e n t c r a y o n port 1,'litof I 'r i 'Kldciil McKl .n ley .

T h e K p e e l a l o r s w h o h a d l l c k e l s ofa d m i s s i o n w e r e xlow In p i i l i c r ln i ; In( 'on vent Ion H u l l , hut w h e n t h e h o u rn r r l v c d for t h e p r o c e e d i n g s ID CIIIII-m e n c e t h e ^ r e a l i i m l l t o r i u n i w n s ino retlii in c i in i fdr t i i l i ly t i l led. A n niniKiiaJlylarj_ro n i i i i i he r of I he s p e c i u t m s w h dcai l ie wvfr \ \ ' I I I I ICII . Mosl of t h e S t a l eilcli'Kiil h u i s u r r u n g e d to i»o Id t h e hul la s hoi l ies , m a n y of t h e m lielnjj e s -

PRESIDENT WILLIAM McKINLEY.

The cot lveiulnn a d j o u r n r d at ,'l it'clocl;tint iI mum W e d n e s d a y .

T h e in lerh i r of Ihe ( ' ( invent ion H a l ll i ' se rved al l tile p r a i s e s t ha t h a v eI'ei'll h l \ l s l l e i l upon I ts Hl'l ' l lll^ellli ' l lts.T h e '.1S(I i l e l eml t e s w e r i ' s e a l e d In as i p i a r e p h . s e i u i ^ \ ' h a l l ike t h e o r e h e s -I ra s e a t s in a t h e a l r i ' . T h e n a m e a n dhn-nllnll of encli d e l e g a t i o n wiM'e in-l ica te i i hy s t imdai 'dH, t hi' l l a i ue s _!ieln^• 1-0111 iin-111 In w h i t e l e t t e r s u p o n ii 'baclc-L.'1'iilllld of red o r of liliicli. D i r e c t l yfucliiir t h i s hody of d e l e g a t e s on a

11O0HEVELT ESTEI1INO CONVENTION HALL.! (Wh«u he wnlked to Ids scat ho wan BU-I thuslastlonlly ohoorod.)

rnlsed philforin, provided with chairs•mil tnlilex, were seated the iiewHpapcrnii'ii, SUITOUIHUUK n Llglier platform,where the otllvvrs of the couvuntlonhad scuts and tableB hehlnd n hnnUof palniH, Hanked by two huge rosebushes In vei'BeH.

Hack of this pint form were tiers ofseats resurved for members of the Na-

Cdited through tho stroets by theirniarehliiK-cluhs, ivlth buiuU and ban-ners.

Senator l lnnnn wns cheered IIR hemoved up Ihe centre aisle throu-ili thefull length of tho hall to the platform.The lirst prouoilllced deinoiiHtratloii ofthe convention took place when (iov-ernor Koose\-(>lt came lu through themain entranoe, nnd moved down thecentral nlsle. i le WIIB Instantly rec-ogulzed. A Jeep, t'overberat Inj; cheerKl'ceteil him. Men jumped to their

hnlrs to cheer him, and women flut-tered their Handkerchiefs. SenatorOepew ciiine in with (lovernor ltoose-velt, hut Ihe crowd bad eyes only forHie (lovcniiir.

Senator Wolcott. In hi;, speech, pro-phesied extension of American com-merce In China, unless cuunsels of fear|>i'f\'all, and declared the Democracyhad been ( ITect ually routci.. Hepledged the party to prompt net Ion incurbing liarini ill trusts, tu AmericanInlerdi-eanlc ship canal and to relieffrom the War Kevenue act. He praisedMclMiiley's course, defeudei! the Por 'oUican Mad riiiiipi)hi(> policy, and de-chired Unit four years nf Republicanadministration had tmide the nation'scredit unassailable throughout theworld,

Due of the surprises of conventiontime was furnished at the final meet-Ing of the Kepubllcnn National Com-mlte•', when Colonel lletir U. Hwonlsretired as Its Hergeant-iU-anns. Colo-nel .Swords lind held the position forf\velvi' years. The mimes of the mem-bers of the new Republican NationalCommittee were tiuuouneed lu the con-vention.

1 lvo miles of clubs, mounted, onfoot, by conch, llonts nnd In carrlngis,Interspersed with music, red fire amin enko walk, Is the shortest v.'ay of

rnESDTTEniAN SIOSDMENT W1CKATUSK, N. J,

The granite shaft stnniln In tho cen-tre of the old burylui; grounil sur-lounded by the graves of old Cov-onnntcra nnd founders of Prusbyte-riHm In this country. It wns placed Inn sllRUt depression where It was sup-posed the old meeting uouso Htouh.The granite came from Scotland, Ire:laud nnd Now England.

/

KEPUJ)U0A.N NATIONAL CONVENTION HALL, PHILAUELPHIA.

tlonal; Committee and distinguishedK t f f i All nround the central pitwhcrcalic delegates Bat Tvere tho rowsof chnfcs, nil nximhercd and lettered,for t h » 10,OOg£speci|i.i™;.^_ Althoughtho woldwi^' *"'* ™~ Qd, ool-mnnn

describing tho turn-out cJ tho visitingnnd local political clubs on tho eve oftho convention. Tho pnrndo was dlvldod Into eight dlvlBlons, In Kvldobthcro^wero moro than eighty; locn',clubs nntl about twenty vUltlngjpolltl.' ' r l l ^ t l T i B

Bier and wliiskoy liave a deatructivo and poisonousell'uct upon thu K idneya and Bladder.It ia well known to sciuntists thattheso vital organs aro disoasud in allmen anil women who drink habituallyor occasionally. First thing thoyknow, them is a pain in tho small oftho back. The fitce in palo or veryhigh colored. Tho eyes sunken. Thourine is discolored or has a sediment.There is frequent dosiro to urinate,especially at night, iind in passingwater there is a scalding and burn-

ing sensation. If you suffer from a singlo oneof thuso Bymptoma and want to avoid fatal con-Hoquencea, tuku a course of treatment with

Dr. Disvltl Kennedy'sIFsavorite Remedy, - '

which will speedily correct tho bad effects ofintoxicating drinks, and provont those awful

hnadachen. It will restore the tone and vigor which tho liquors havodestroyed, and establish a perfectly healthy condition of all Urinary Organs.It will also purify and enrich tho blood, thus curing llhouniatism, Eczema,Scrofula and Stilt Rheum. A singlo dose works wonders.

.T. K. GanBO, living nour WupplnnurB FalU, N.Y., doclnrua lio was envoil froman awful duuttby Dr. Ilavid Konmnly'a Kuvorlto Ilomody. Ilia kidneys worn ina droailful BIIHJJO, onu-i|imrtor of his urino boing blouil. For two yoars ho wnaconiincd to his IIOUBU and bod with torriblo paina in luu'.k ami hoad. Toduy hoia iiualthy nnd ulrong buciui.Ho ho took Kftvorito Romody.

A largo bottlo U sold by druggists tor SI, or six bottlcl for $3.TRIAL BOTTLE FREE.

Bftri'T you I- nun it' II 11,1 iiiltliL'sH lot lui I»U. DAVIDKKSSKHV Cimi'DUATION. ll Inut, N Y . ,mentioning: this paper. Ynu will rc(!LMvo liy rv-luni mull. ul'Huliih [y fri'i'. u irlul lintth. (if Vu.vnrlti' lU'iiR'ilv, iiinl u jniiiipliU't contiihilnK vul-uublu mcillcui u.lvlcu, mioh im ivoryl««ly iicuili.

TRY THIS TEST.Put Botno urlno In n pluss lumhlor nnd let It

Hluli.l '21 liiiuiT. A st'iUmullt ill tllo hdttoin or ftlullky.cloinl)• iiiMii-iirinicu llulli'iiu-Hthut llus kld-IICVH uro In ti (iiilmorons conilillon, nnd tluvtKimirlto Keineily Is hndly nci'iloil. Healthyuiliiu In dour, uml duct) noltitaiii hncn.

Restore VitalityLost Vigorand Manhood...

Cure Impotency, Night Emissions, Loss of Memory, all wasting dis-eases, all ellects of self-abuse or excess and Indiscretion.A nerve tonic and blood builder. Brings tho pinkglow to pale cheeks and restores the flro of youth. Bymail 50c. por box, 6 boxes for $2.50, with our bank-able guarantee to euro or refund tho money paid.Send for circular and copy of our bankable guarantee) bond.

EXTRA STRENGTHImmediate Results

Positively guaranteed cure for Loss of Power, Varicocole, Undeveloped or ShrunkenOrgans, Paresis, Locornotor Ataxia, Nervous Prostration, Hysteria, Fits, Insanity,Paralysis and tho Results of Excessivo Use of Tobacco, Opium or Liquor. By mallin plain package, $1.00 a box, 6 for $5.00 with our bankable guarantee bond t oeuro In 30 days or refund money paid. Address • \

IMERVITA MEDICAL COMPANYClinton and Jackson Stroets CHICAGO, ILLINOIS

Sold by Wm. Gerard, Drug-gist, Rockaway, N. J.

NER1TA TABLETS(YELLOW LAI1EL)

Bettor than n Pinno, Organ, or Music Box, for it sings and tulkn ns well us phiya, nnddun't cost us much. It reproduces tho music of any instrument—hnnil or orchaitrii— tellsstories nnd sings—tho old familiar hymns 11a well 11s tho popular SOUKS—it is always ready.

Soo that Mr. KiliHon'n aitfmituni in on every machine Cata-logues ut all dealers, or NATIONAL PHONOQRAPH CO., 13s Filth Avo., New York.

A WEAL,

GRAPHOPHONE. .FOR..-

SimpleClockwork

Motor,Mechanism

Visible,Durablo Con-

struction.

NO BOTHER, MUCH FUN.All the Wonders and Pleasures of a

IliOli-Priced Tolkin • ' lachlne.IVhen accompanied by a Kecurder this

Ornphnnhone can be used to make K. orda.Price with Kccdnler, $7.60, Reprodu.-e: nilthe utondard Records. Send ordtr and moneyto our nenrcai office.

COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH CO. Dopt 30NEW YORK. 143-M5 Jlrondway.

CHICAGO, til) Wabaih Avo.m Olive St.GTON, 919 Pennsylvania Avo.<i, 1033 Chestnut St

I1ALT1MORK. to E. IJaltimor* SLBUFKAl.n, 31^ Mnin St.

-SAN FRANCISCO, (15 C.eary St.PARIS, y.\ Dntilcvard dei ltallcnr

11ERL1N, S5 Kronenstrmsa.

ST. LOUIS, ; io . ,u Oil'WASHINGTON, 919 1

PHILADELPHIA, 1033 Chest

I and see the handsome Sil-I verware that is to be given

away at our store. You canfind here

, THE LARGEST VARIETYI OF CANDIES

in town. Also a large assortment

of

Box Papers and Padsand all kinds of

JohnO.McGrath,Undertaker

andEmbalmor.

Residence, Church St.

JLT. N.

School Supplies

Perfumery

Notions

Oranges

Bananas

White Grapes

DollsToys

Lemon?

Dates

Fi£S

Fresh Roasted Peanuts

G. S. GTJSTIN.DESIGNS

TRADE-MARKSAND COPYRIGHTS

OBTAINEDADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITYNotlco In •' InTontlTO Ago "Book "How to obtain Patents"Ohargci modarato. NofooUllpatontlBcocurod.

Lflttora Rtrlotly oonfldontlnt Address,E. 0. SIQ06R8. Patent Lnwjior.lKathlna.ton, b.C.

C U R F "

vid Kennedys»te Remedy

Page 3: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

G o l i i I f fmin l l » r l z « ' J n i u U r . a.1, e n ,Thu Solution of. Life , o r ttclf-Prosurvi.t Inn,

oovur; c lo th , full ^ t l t , ir'l.u.y until. A buokfor m'ury mini, y*»iiuj;, middlo-n^ed or old.A mill ion cupitm Hold. Adilrc^h tho lYiiliodyMedhml IiiHtltute, No. 4 Ilulniieh Hi., Hint- It on , Mun.4.. llm oltliv-il mid l)i>:»t inM i tu t " in !AuiiTliMi. rnrnpurt i iH Ym.« Mi'Htin free. ,Htx ctr". lor jM.ritaKL'. Wiito lu-dity fur jthem) booliH. 'J'hny nro tin* kuyw to h«nlth f Iv igo r , uuoL'tmn iiuif Inipi'hii'i'H. !

Three lurpent inu p l aned IIHIH of 10.000ncivri (Mich wilt noun tie uLurU'il in tlioiSuuth,

Aru You UHII.JC All^n'M Fogt-lGii^o ?It in thu only euro for hwollcn, Kiniir! lu^,

Tlrot l , AUIIIIIK, Hot , H w a t l n y Fnoi, (3on»rtlUld iJlllituiiH, Ank for AI lun'H FOOI-KIIHO,a powder to \ni bltiilton Into tin- HIKID.H. Uuinrtwhllo you wnllc. Al all JmiKtrtHtH a n d HlionHtoruu, -i'jo. Kamplo duut I'MUOE. AtldruBMAUou H. Olinslnd, Lnliuy, N. V.

ForKO, N . I) . , wit.li a populat ion of ICHHthllll 11.UIK), ilUH LM lltyrHL'VL'U HL'L'lX't bUClC-tics.

IVIinl Slinl l \yn lliLVtt r o r l>«*wrnlThla qiiohtlon urlHdu In tho rninlly ihitlV- IJ^IUH iinmvor It to-duy, Try Jull-O, a doll'iloiinand hoiilthlul 'InnHnrt. I'l-opurmt In 2 mlu. NobollliiKl nobiil:in«! Hlmply add a lltrl't hotwntortfc Hut to mini. Fluvurn: lii>moii,Onini;<\Itaapborry and Htrawliurry. At Kroi:«r». 1(W:.

Them are 0000 coils in a Bfjuaro foot of

th.» Bel* Preiorlpt1»n for Chilli»nn FoT«r in ft bottli* of (iuovn'i T*HTBMIHBOnuxToHio. It leBlmiily Irou itml quiniii" tn« tftsieloni Torm. Nu cui«—no i»i»>p- 1'rloo ftuo.

MarridH0 *H often n failuru, h;:t jnltlurnfor the buiiiMit of crctlitorH.

HEIRESS TO A FORTUNE.Servant Girl Inherits $3,000,000

From the Man She Nursed.

SAVED HIM FROM CONSUMPTION.

FI'l'B normanont ly tmrril. Nn (itHnr nrrvoufi-IIOBN nl'tur III-KI <liiyTH IIBO "f Dr. KIIIIL.'K l i m i tNui'vo ItoHtoi-iir.J:^ ii'iul hulUn ami tri'iulKu U'vtifar. H. H. Kl.lNM. I.M., Hill Arelifcil., l'lillu., l>n.

Wo often worry lnoul over Ihu Iruublcathat never come.

Mm. Wliinlow'BHoolhlntf hyi'iip roi- ohlldron 'loothlliK. BuftmiH tlio ^uniH, I'UIIIIUUH111 lluminn- !Uon, nllayfl pain. mir«N wtml aollo, U.VMIIKIMI*., i

En^l'iiid rccoivcil tfB2H,2i2 worth of shoes !from llio United SIIIU-H in 18IIII. I

. - _ IS. K. Cobiirn. Mijr. OlnrW. Hi-ntt. writ™: "I

flml Hnll'n C'utnri'li C\iru u vuluablo ruuimly." ,l)nnji;lnl.» null It. "fin.

In 1880 the re were 1220 horni'B in Auetrn-l ia; in 1UUU t h e r e 2,tXH),llOO.

I do not bollove IMHO'B C«r« for ConsumptionluiB an unuiil tor UOUKIIK muW-oldn. - JOHN F.BoYltll. Trinity B|)|-IIIKK. liid.. Kub. Ill, 11XX).

A ndtivo I'^kimo has boon ordiuncd aa aiSwcdinh niiniater in Chicago.

Tho one thBssg that quall-ftos a person to glvo ad-vfoo on any subject is

oraates kaowBodgomNo other person haa so

wldo an ojtgsorlenao withfemale Ills nor such aroooi'd of sucoss&s as

m Plnkham has had*Over a hundred thou-

sand oases eome beforeher eaoh year. Some per-sonally, others by mall.And this has been goingon for 20 years, day afterday and day after day,i. Twenty years of con-stant suoooss — think ofthe knowledge thusgained F Scsrply womenore wlso Bit sodlcfnn ad-ylco front a woman withsuch an experience, es-poolally whon Si Is free*

) if you are HI get a bottleof -Lydla E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound atonee—then write Mrs,Plnkham, Lynn, Rflass*

I 'al l . ' i i l Wim u Wi'iill t iv (iKrmiiii IM.ir-

llillllt — VVIIIIII I I . ' H .u i iv . i . , 1 Illliiiml t.i

Miii'ly HIM NIIINC—iloi ' fiiri-iiln Oil-

Jvolml mill Him Uiiimt to ThlH Coi imiy

— l i e l.mtvoH ll«il' I l l s ICotlri) For t i l i ie .

M l h v n u L r i ' . W I s . ( S p c c l i i l i . - AH n re-

w a r d I'nr lun i i i f ; c n r c r u l l y n u r s e d a n

Invn l ld ! l i io i i^ l i M tr.vlDK sli.({<. nl NICU-

ui'HH. a Kt'fvnnt ^h' l ol' thlN c i ly lui^

fiillfii he i r in .f.'l.diiii.iHlll. ThiHii i iKHint

w a s li'fl Id lie!' |iy lii'i' Ki'iilcl'til p n l l c n t ,

w h o ^fintiM] to m a r r y IUM1. hu l 1 ho

u n i o n w a n pi ' i^Ti i l i 'd liy t h e ^Irl'H pa r -

1*111H. Who o p p o s e d till1 MlMll'll lltM'ailHI1

Ihc I n v a l i d milTcrcd I'roin coiiHvinipilon.

T h e irirl IH Kr in i 1 lull ' . I w n i l y - I ' m i rVrnrH old. n n d i-mployi ' i l ns Mfl'\utit f;li-lIII 111<• l io i i s i 'hold i-r 1(. A. .liihiiHliin,t in. r r a c l i c r m i l n i i l ' i u t t i r i T of thin i l l y .S h o rc i ' i ' l vcd w o r d n f ew diiyn a g ot h a t Nhi' h a d I'alU'M ho l r to a I'orluni*" s l l i i i n l c d l i i l i i ' w o r l l i rJ.iKMl.DDK marliHI'roni Hit' I 'MIMII' of a iniin In Hi'i ' l ln.l i i ' rmi i r iy . MIKK lhd i ' loft for N e wYork ( ' l l y , HO a s to be al i le lo l a l i e paH-^a^e l'ol- lOlll'ope on Ilie Au^l lHle \ ' l e t o -r ia . Sli<- wi l l p r o c e e d nt o n c e lo Ber-'In to elnllll tin- l i ' t tnry .

A hull I «rvi ' i i yeai'H affo Mis s Ih i lcWIIH rni;ii|;iMl to m i r n e a w e a l t h y pa-Mt'iit In II tlt'i'iiiMi) h o s p i t a l . Mil ' hai lmi offer of i n i i i T l n p ' I'roin h i m .iH'ompli ' il , Khi' HUppoHi'd, InCfcrely mil oflilndiii'KH. S h e w o u l d l inve lieen m a r -ried t o h i m hu l for Ilie HtreuunuN ob-li'el lolls of h e r p a r e n t s , w h o rel ' imedlo p e n u l t It. us he w a s a co i iNumpt lvo .S h e t h e n left t h e hnHpllnl . a n d I he IllHtm f o r n n i l I o n o l i i u l n e d liy h e r w a s s ixy e a r s n ^ o , w h e n h e r f o r m e r p a t i e n t ,w h o s e huslni'HH w a n lo ninl te e l o t h l n ^for royulty, had a icumulale . . au cnor-MIOUH fortune.

After leuVIUK her oet'upnlloii IIH a(uii'He she ohlnlui'd einployiiient with''oyal families nK a maid, and aliout. ii1'enr and a hull' ano oainc to Amwicn.

Mrs. Wli'tli'rHlielni IIIIH I'orrolioratotJ'hi' Rlrl's Blory. MISH Iliilc In alioutMvo tool Nt'ViMi Ini'hi'H full. IIIIH II pule,'aimcli full fact1. She ri>fiiHi>tl to (,'lvor.hi> iinino of lior honofai'lor, on thu ntl-I'k'i1 of lawyiM'H, who told hor who.Toiild make euenili'H of PONHIIIIO IIVIIIKrolntlvoH. The man In mild to haveinly one near relative, u hrolher, withwhom lie hnd dlUVrod, and who IN notsupposed lo have been mentioned Intho will.

MARRIED ON BASEBALL FIELD,

ilippv Pall' Mncl© Olio nt Iho Home of thoOrccnvlllti Club.

A slit al mill. I'enii. (Spoclnl).—The un-UHIUII Hiieetuclo of a wedding at thehaHt'liall uromulH regaled the rooterswho KallioVod al Ureenvlllo to wilnoHBIho pi ino bt'twoon the local tonin nnda visiting nine.

Just before tho time for Htiuiliif; dieKuini' tho linppy eotiple, with the at-tending friends nnd the clergyman.Kiithoroil at Ihe home phile, on whlohIho roiitrni-tlnn parties stood duringIho ceremony (hat made them mntiand wife.

The hrldi' Is Miss Cliini Heel; midIho bridegroom Pelor Celine, of lireon-vlllo. Mr. Kllln- Is n bnsi'bnll enlhu-KliHt, and for iwo HIMIKOUH IIHH phiyodsliorlstop for the nreonvllles.

Tho IliiKolinll AHNiii'liitlon showed Itsappreclntlcin of his servlees wlien, fol-lowing the ceremony, It bestowedupon tlio piilr some beautiful proHouts

What do theChildrenDrink?

.*•Don't glvo them toa or eoffoo.

Hnvo JJOU triod tho now food drinkcalled GHAIN-0 ? It is dolioiousnnd nourishing and takos tho plaoaof coffoo.

Tho moro Qrnln-O TOU"B'^O thoouildrou tho moro bonltu you distrib-ute, through thoir HyfUmiH.

Gniin-0 is innilo of puro graina,and whon properly propnroil timtcaliko tho ohoioo grudoa of ooffco butcosts about J ns llluuh. All groociBBoll it. IGo. uud 2Gu.

Try Crain-O IInnlottbnt your tirocor give* ; O U Q R A 1 K - 0

Aocopt no Imitation.

DON'T STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLYIt lnJnK^ norvmifl nvHtnin to rin no. l)iPnhths only ours tliui Urnlly OureH UBUU

rt ttil l t HWhths only ours tliui Urnlly OureH UBUUU»nrt nottilns you wliou to slop. HnW withirilnr&ntoi> that thrco tioxos will euro nny ennoRAPH RIIRn'a vnuptnbln nml linnnlc.ifi. It linnBAuU-UUnUciiifiV tlioiunndii, It will nnro yon.Atnll ilniRclBtsorby uintl |irunaul, S1.<H> " l»i:s linxes. 819.00. liooklct froo, Write EUUEKAOniiMIQAI. OO,, to Onuuv, Win.

NEW SIOCOVERT: •>»•quick r.ll.l.ndour.1 wontUand'lOdayi1 tMttmtnk

JUST KILL THE BURCLARS.

OhlonKO Pollco Cnptnln'i Iilon to Stopthe IlobtMirlfiB Thori..

ChlonRO (Spt'fliill.—"Hold-up mennuil burtrbu's, ihose follows who nrouinUiiiK no much trouble on tho WestSide just nt proHonl, should -o donltwith sunimnrlly." said Captain Camp-bell of tin" Warren rvenno polk-c «tn-tlon. "I think, iifd:- a trial, theyshould be taken to the lake front andshot. If a low of them understoodHint It mount tlonth t i ply their nefari-ous business and shoot Innooont oltl-zons, there would bo less of Unit kindof work."

LDBIII inithnrltles nro not In favorof tho ridlcul nionsuros advocated bythe police depnitint'iit. thotmh ChiefKlploy says Ktieh net loll, as sttgfiostcdhy Captain Campbell, would resultbonetk'lnlly.

DAY DUG'S VISION.

Pin t U« Rit\r tlin Wliltnn Di'ilroroil, ButHo Wna 1*OI-AIIH(IO[| to (laeii Attain.

Wnlkor, Minn. (Spochil).—Tbore Isnbsoltilely no piospoct of trouble hovewith t l* InillniiR. Tim reported wildexcitement mild to linve been cniisodby the Indlnn Messiah bus subsided.

One of the yonnc IndhuiR. iminedDay I>ue Wince, rocminted n wonder-ful vlHlo.n shown him by the "GrentWhite Spirit." Ho said bin vision In-formed him of n ttrilblo Btorm whichwould tloatroy nil white people and allChristian Indiana. Captain Morceipromptly ni-roHted him, nml told him toImvo ituothet' "vision," In which nilKood IudlniiB who would stny nt homowould tint be. hurt.

Day DUB nt once hnd the requested"revolution," nnd tho uprising wasaverted.

Smnllliox Scnro Onlln Out Mllltla.Tho lnllltln was chlled out to en

forco quarnntluo -rcBulntlous amongtlio employes a^Kn AValsh lirlcU-yard.

int atool.-nnrt H ' :,v.,< } , • ' , • • • • . , » , • • • • . • , » , — ^ _ » _ — ,

niynirrlotiN AIlncH 111 Afrii-n.IlesidcM I In; reel'H w h i c h lui \ 'e b e e n

( l l s t ' o \c i i ed , t h e r e e.\lnlH In Hboi l i^ l i i :inenorn iuuH ( ju i in t l ly of "o ld \ \ ' i i i , iu^:H,"niini'H w h i c h w e r e w o r l . e d In i i ne l en tl ime; ; , bill h a v e loii|,r s i n c e b e e n ab i in -donc i l , Kit 3'H t h e L o n d o n Tc le i^ in i th .l i y w h o m t h e s e m i n e s w e r e w u r l . c d l.ia n d wi l l p i 'oh i ib ly r c l n a l n l o n g e r nin.VMler.v. 1''MIIII old poi lo ry n n d IODIMw h i c h hav t : b e e n f o u n d II In evldi ' i i it l n i t t hene old workln^ 'H w e r e e i c n\ a l e d by o r u n d e r t h e d l r e d li»n of

m e n of k n o w l e d g e a n d lllli ' lll^<ln*c HII-p e l l o r to I h u s e ] lo.shcsHeil by Ihc p r o s

out luhiihltiiLHH of Hie c o u h l r y . C o h l\VI\H e x l n i c l c d f r o m t h e s e n i l n e s byHlnel l ln^ . n i n n y f i i rnnccu I I I M I I I ^ beenf o u n d , nnd nloiiK'-ddc of t l i cm n n c l c n tIlioldrt In whlc l i i n g o t s \ \ e r e I I I H I . ,Scvo r a l r u i n s b n \ e a l s o b e e n d i s c o v e r e dIn K h o d e s l a , t he nuiKullu<le a n d w o r kl u u n s h l p < f w h i c h p r o v e s thn t men of

HU|ierlor c l \ Ill/.lltlon e l t lu ' l ' l u l n l b l l e do r e l s e o c c u p i e d tlilw p a r t of I h e w o r l da l e w t h o u s a n d y e a r s b e f o r e us . T ot h e m a r e p r o b a b l y d u n t h e a n c i e n t

workings which have been I IWith the primitive lust riiiiienlH nttheir coiiiinnlid these miners of n pastu^e were only nble lo senipe the sur-face of Ihe fjnld-belll'llie; reel's, so thatthe quanti ty of ^old which bus beenInkoii from the mines Iniidly nfl'oclstheir value, while they arc a preciousIndication to the prospector and ena-ble him lo lest the reef below the sur-face, nud, as II rule, the site of mostof these oltl workings seems to havebeen Holeetod hy competent men, whochose the richest reefH.

Itliiyiir of Dulillii'u IMcnltv.T l i c 1 / O i d M i i y o r o f I n i b l l n l u n i n t i i i r i f !

a i l e | ' ] - c i . nt' i II , ii 11 > : i n d c l r < u i u i , l i i i i c cfill1 ; ' i v i i l r r t l u i i i U n i t ill a n y o t h e r c h l i :i l l K h l i i i r y In H i e r n l t e d K i n g d o m o u l -t . l d e o f l . o n i l o n . l i b ; o l l l c l i i l r c r . h l c l i c eIs n K t a l c l y c i l U i c e , w i t h n l n p l e ; i c c u l n -i n i n h i t i o n f o r c n l c r l n l u b t ^ . I n c l u d i n g" i h c r o u n d r u n i n , " n ^•|l^,l c h j u i i b c rc o n K i r u c t c i l w h e n H i e c i t y e n t e r i n l i i e d

I ' i e o l ' ^ c I \ ' . T h e c i i l l l ^ l l ^ c s n n d p t t w -j d c i v i l f o o l i n c h ol1 b i s l o r d s h i p w o u l d d o

i n . i l l s c r o d n l o Mis b r o l h e r o l l l e l u l Inl . ' U i i l u M . T h e L o r d M a y o r r c c e l \ - c H. 1 r».«ii it i ii y e a r , b u t It i in iNl b e r e m e m -b e r e d H i n t . ^ i r i . in i i i a y e a r In D u h l l ni r o e s f u n h c r U n t i l II I IOCM I n L o n d o n .T h e . b l i ' l ' n i i i K l s l r n l e I I I IH e n j o y e d t h et i t l e o f l o r d H I I I C C t h e I n n " o f I ' h n i i c HI I . I ! y l ; i r t h e II IOMI I I I K I I n r u l h h c db o l i l c r o f t h e o l l l c c w n ^ i J a n i e l U ' C o n -null.

Oilil CIIIISIII of ii fjuonr U'cilillng.One of Hit' nioHl romantic ninrrlapren

that bus occurred In Howling (ireon,Ohio, for some time took place whenIIIIITIHDII Cheney, who Is nbout seven-ty 3'enrs of a^e, was married to MissAllies May, lllfetl eighteen yenrs. TheninrrlnKe was In the way of the fulllll-inent of II promise made many yearnnno.

Cheney, when n younpr mnn, lived Inn Pennsylvunhi town, und WIIH a loverof ono who married another. She lookBlek afterwnnl, and upon her deathbedtdii! linked Cheney to look after a littledaughter. This he did, and Him Intime grew up nnd wan iniirriod. Shewns taken sick with coiiHumptlon, nnd,too, piiHKed away, but not before. Hhehnd pledged Cheney to look afnor herlittle girl, then two years old. Ills do-votlon to the little child culminated Inthulr

Hour, or Wtiat Point Gixlotn.The Htudents of. tho Went Point Mil-

itary Academy have just ouu hournnd a half recreation n (lay, exceptWciluesdnyB and Saturdays, When theyImvo six hours. They are cnllod at0::i() In the morning, and breakfast at0 In the summer, and In tho winterthey are cnllod at (1 and breakfast atG:at>, nnd their day Is divided IntotaNkH thnt continue until taps IsFounded nt 10 o'clock at night null alllights must go out.

A r i i l | . i t l > l « > I i ' J u N l l r * , .

ILdf the men In Ihe world gel ICHHtbiin they enrn nnd Ihe other half earnICHH tlinn they got.—Now York I'IOMH.

Y o u n g I*«>t» |» l< , ' f t I ' f i r l h f I n n I ' I I I O I I .T h i . T r i i i i H | i o i ' t . i > l l i . n » I - - I . I I I H f i ' i m i N i - w K n r -

b i l l i l H t i i l t . H . ' o i i - l i e i i l . N , . \ v V i n l i n m lN i ' W . l l T H . v . o l t i n - V I I ; l ' l m p l r ' n l h r l n l l l l l lr i i l . n i w l i l i l i n u m . , In A I I I U I U I . t i n . . J u l y III,IIHKI. l i l i v l o n U ' i l n n I h e o l i l i ' h i l r u l l t l i I InK . . I I U I I ' I - I I l u l l w i i y M I L r i m l i ' l l i r o i i K H t l u >" L i t n i l o r I h i ' M l y . 1 ' S p . - i l u l I n i l i n . l i i t v t i l i i . i . i ii i r r n l i n e d n m l 11 w i l l Im o n e o f I h i . m o x l M l c -<-.--:. r ii I n i i ' i ' t l i i i - n n v o r l i i l i l I n t i n : I ' I I I O I I .l u l l |in r t l ' i i l n i n f r o n i ' f r i i i m n o r u i l t o i i A u t ' l i t Hi . i - S o i i l . b . . n i H y . ' M i - l t o l O l ! i , ' , . » , :)71 i u . , 1 IIH.'iI I I I I I I • I w i t y . N i - w Y o r k . A l e s . H. ' I ' l i t v i i i i l l ,K i i H l u r n 1'imii. A n t . . I I H M I i ' i i n i l n n y ^ , N u w Y u r k .

AiiHtniliii coins its own gold, hut not itsnilvur.

J t l l - O , lliti N«tv UimiiirlDOHHDH nil thtt fnmlly, Four llavorn: —Li'lnen, OrutiKO, ItrtM|>borry uud tltruwburry.At your KroyorH. 10 otu.

IL'H only fine that tho conductor bhouldh/ive a huh; cliiuiye.

To Cnrnik Cold In Ona liny.Tako I.iHTlva Ilitoun gumiHi TADI.HTI. Alldi UMUU mfini.l thu miiui'ir If It t«ll« lo our*.K. W. UBOVI'll ulilualuro Uon tutuh bol. 1190,

^^rlliHthug iu thu ill wind thiit blov * no-body ood.

Utiv. .7. II. llrlilL-i'H. Colunibhi, Mo., miyiiIMIMIM) Hcnil nut unit Wnttln of Fruy'ti VuriulI'UKo. Noun to ho Inul hell'.

The end Htmt in a Hummer car has loutininu t'f itH popuhu-ity.

Hiivo you ovor uxporlonood tlio JoydllBuiiHiltlon ot n good uppotlto'i1 You will Ifyou olmw AIIIIUIH' Popitln Tuttl Fmttl .

An Iowa concern is inulcing furn\ wugonnwliolly of ntt'ol.

So iiiiiny

pu r ;. o n shave hairt Ii a t i sstub bo inand du 11.11 w (J n ' t[\ r o \v .W I H I ' B

the r e a s o n ? Hairneeds help just asanything else does attimes. The roots re-quire feeding. Whenhair stops ^rowlni; Itl o s e sits lus-ter. Itl ooksdead.

acts almost Instantlyon such hair. Itawakens new life Inthe hair bulbs. Theeffect is astonishing.Your hair grows, be-comes thicker, and oildandrulF is removed.

And the or ig inalcolor of early life isrestored to faded orgray ha i r . This isalways the case.

J I .00 ntiiitllr. All drugfrlita.

" I have lined Ayor'a Ilivlr Vltfor,nml inn l'«»lly IIWIOIIIHIKUI tu tintniuiil It lm» tlimii In ktii'hluii mylutlr from I'niiiliif; out. u l> tin'tuiHt toiitu 1 IIIIVA ti'ltul, unit 1Mmll iioiulnuo lo luuuuiiiitiud It lomy frltmilu."

MATTlIt llOl.T.Bo]>t. Z\, 1808. llurhnt'lun, N. f.

If you iln nut obtain nil UH. lumnniiyou exnutMtM! Troln thp me of I ha lUIrVIUOK, wtltii tlio Iti.rtnr KI'UIII It

Un. J. I). AVKH, Luwvll, M«n.

Crlppo Jfci^l.lvor DlsoQBoa.KNOWN Aixnm tici«T«. 35c,

ADVERTISING"1 vim VAVKnI'AYN, —NTNII C 6

I UUHEB WHERE A l l ELSE FAILS. .I Dost uou«h tJyruu 'iSwtw* UIKHT. D« I

Inttmo. HuVl Hi tf "

Fight on for wealth, old "Money Bags,"your liver is drying up and bowels wear-ing out, some day you will cry aloud forheai h, offering ail your wealth, -but youwill \ot get it because you neglected Naturein your mad rush to get gold. No matterwhat you do, or what ails you, to-day isthe day—every day is the day—to keepwatch of Nature's wants—and help yourbowels act regularly—CASCARETS willhelp Nature help you. Neglect means bilein the blood, foul breath, and awful painsin the back of the head with a loathingand bad feeling for all that is good in life.Don't care how rich or poor you arc, youcan't be well if you have bowel trouble,you will be regular If you take CASCA-RETS-get them to-day— CASCARETS—in metal box; cost 10 cents; take one, eatit lilce candy and it will work gently whileyou sleep. It cures; that means it strength-ens the muscular walls of the bowels and

gives them new life; then they act regularly and naturally, that is what you want—it is guaranteed to be found in—

THE IDEAL LAXATIVE

CATHARTIC

10c.25c. 50c.

To any nctd/ mcrtal julftrlng from bowel trouble* And too poor to buy' , Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago of New YorkW

ALLDRUGGISTS

i will tend a fox trot. Adircunrot and p*p«. •»

"'.'LT> '"••-•--'—..-

Page 4: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

Rockaway RecordThursday, June U 1, VMM).

NEWS OF THE STATE.Vtnrlii

Clinrlos K.in VliK'l.'ind I'n

lniiiilM- I>t-ml.lh died in liis homepunilyslx. Jlti was

it h e l ' u i t n d r r u l ' V i m h i n d , l l n u i i i m n l o i i ,

J . : U U U N \ i i h - , S e n I K U ' ( ' i t . \ , N e w H i l l y

u n d i i t l n - r s i i i i i l l f i 1 . " H i i l i J i T s c y t m v i i n .

\ \ v w u s I m n i i n I ' l i l l m l r l p h l n u n M m ' i ' h

. H i . I N ' . I . a n d s n i i J i r d l ; i u i n l l i e u l l l r r

DE. TALMAGE'S SEKMON.

SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTEDDIVINE.

S u b j u c t : ChrlMt O u r i:»>fui;ti — 4 MI'BBIIKIJo f I 'Ui i i fur l . C i iu i i t l l i i t ; l l i u l l n l i u v -lui- lit" t l n i l>lncl | i l t -( i t o i l i ( i n u > V l u i A l t )

d l I t i ' i i j n l u l u l l r e n . s l r r , b r i n e ; a d - ' a i : i l l i . l i l . l c s n > . "

|Cnl<ynn!il lHim. iW i s i i i M i T i i s . I) . I . D r . T a l m a ^ c . I.I

I In- L.llmMHH ihh HIM', wl i i c l l Hi' h a s Mlul I'lil i l irul mil 1 his u e i ' k , ^ i \ e s ii | t [v^ ' l ' i | i

1 MllM I a l es t i n ' d i v i n e h- \ M11 til I h \ h i ! a l l w l mn n . l r i I H n k l M ( | , | , , i i m . K | , . ' T h e | , | iH

M , , l l l n - » M \ , I : ! , ' • A n i l H I M I I I H I i | ' l i ' » n u l l

hintl a K i

I1 L 11 r. H I t o i l i i ' l i a r l i c l o r r I I

r c u r h r d t t l s i n i i j i n i l y , h u t t w o y e a r n

III I t ' I ' m i n e d ( I I p i ' J l i '1 l e e . l i e n i - i i l l l l i '

I n l r i v s i r d t n l i n i « l S C I M M I U ' M i i i n l | i i n -

c l m s e d . 'fiMiii n r r i ' S u f l i i m l . W i r i U l n j , '

J l n i i i i n o i i t i i i i n u ( H i s g r o u n d l i e M i l d

t i n 1 I n n d I D a n n u l M ' I U I T N . i i n d l i w a s

n i i u l c a i - o n i l i i i u n H i ' f \ i - v \ d i - i ' i l U n i t

l J i j u o r s . m i d n e v e r I n - s u h l u p i m t h r

I o ! . I n I M i 1 lu> | n i i v h ; i M ' d ; i I r u n n f

l l l ' i y s ( | i u i r r i i i i l r s n (" l a n d , m i d <>n t h i n

\ ' t i i r I n n d m i d i l s H i i r i ' u i i n d i i m v i l l a g e s

l i a v c l i c c i i b u i l t . l i t 1 M i i r i n l S t ' i i I H U »

< " i i y U N n i f i i i p i ' i ' i i i t c i 1 N i ' M s M i ' i v s o r t ,

n u d \ r \ v l i n l y a n n i ' l i n n l n n s n t I r n i r i i i

f u r l l n l u i n s . l l y l l i e l i - n n s u l ' h i s w i l l

t w o M I J H , I l i i ' l m r i l H ' . . M i - m l i 1 L u n -

I I I H n n d , l : t n i c N M o i d e v e r t L ; i m i l s , n r e

( I I H I I I I H T I U ' I I . T h e l a r j r t ' S l p s i r t ( i f t I n -

\\>H I ' n i f i n - i s i r l v c i i t o I d s H I S H T , M i s s

M i l l I h b i ! , M i n i I s . S u m 11 i r m i ' M r s w i ' - T i '

i n i i i l r i o t n i n i f d o i l l c c I ' l n p l n v e s j m d

c l m r l r n b i c n i - m i n l ^ M t h i n s i n V i m 1 ) H I M I .

T i n 1 S O I I H l i n v c r i ' i ;i l i i c d r o u n s t ' l u m l

w i l l ( M i n i i ' s i i l i r w i l l .

H u t i l t u f l n v r I t i M i n 1 ( 1 0 Y < m r n O l d .

t i n - I J u i l s i i i i ( ' . u n i t y l t u i i n l «»J' l l r n l t h

a n d V U u l S t a i I M W ' N w u s l l u i ' u l ' I ' u t -

r l c U l l r l l l y , (i i M i u j M - r n t t h r S n n k i - I I I M

A l n i s h n i i s e . w l m , I t w u s n s s e r l t - i l , W I I H

O V I T l u n y r . i r s o l d . W b r n U i - l l l y W I I H

l i d n d ( I t ; d t o t h e : i l n > N I M m m - s i x y n i r s d i n

' l f K i l l - 1 - l l l U K | i r i l | l l l ' l . . I l l l l l l

I 1 1 1 ' ( . V . . 1 I ] . . . I t i l l ' l | . B , ] J . | . ' U

nlu izrirl ami dismay. Thry

s M i t f i l m i l h a d j u s t

i h u v ' I ' d u p p i ' i i s r a r t ' \ r i i ^ c U i l

• , - . , , , , , . . n I ' M i m l l n o d o r d t - r c i l t h e d r u l h . .1

i S . i l i M , i , | r , •

l l , * - U ; i | » t i * t

\ \ n r I l i l n U II

h - l t i l i c n i s i ' k c H u t t e r l y d c i c i i H c l i - H s . T I U M

U . I . - n u m i l l i o r H . v I n w l i i f h t h e y r m i d i i | i - •

| n ' . d , nml y e t n i i c i m u M a l w u v n h i n t e . \ '

I . ! T - . . I K M I 11 i I n ' i c I K - I I M 1 I i n n ' i u c a i ' t o

M - I ( I it , t h e n t h e f i ^ < » i n / . < ' d M M I I w i l l ( i v .1 '

w . . i n - . | ( i i ( h e r e w a n a n e n > ' H i n t w a x '

» i l h i u ; t n h s l r n . T l u T t 1 IN .i I c . .i r p a - I

| ) i n ~ a n d u l ( h e N a m e l i m e a m i w l a d m i r - i

a b l e p i r h i c r i n t l i e w o r d * o l m v t e x l , j

• • T h r \ u e n l u m l t r I . I f s i w . " l i e i - o u l d •

u n d e r s t a n d a l l i h r i r u i i c l . a n d H e I I M I I H 1 /

11 i . i i i ' h M H I I I i n I it O u r b u r d e n s a r t ' n o t .

i i i o i r t h a n h a l f H O h f n v y I " c u r r y if u i i o d . c r

s h m i l d r r i p u t i n d r r t i n ' u l l i r r f i u l n f

t h n n I l c i T «• ( ' I i n d ( ' l i r i K t . H I M l i r m v ,

s l i i i d n w . - i l m i l l m n - 1 . ^ h i m l i i i t ; i n n i t ! t l i e

i i i ' < n i ( t u t i | i - - c ' i l r . w I t u , \ \ \ \ \ \ U ' i i r s n n 1 !

U i i l r n l K t ' s l u i i l a I \< • - u t i d w r i n u m ^ o l

i , , i - n l . - a n i l m i l c r y <>l l i i ' i T n v i ' i n n i l . ' i f c i > \ |

I H T s s i n ^ 1 1 i c i r w i n 1 . I i a p l a n • ! . w i t h I I I H •

s L i l j u l h r i i s h , p n l l i n t r n p n n i l i t * W M I I o f n

n , . i s i ) s b l l l u l a s i r o k c IIM w h r t i t i n ' p l u m '

n u p n n I t a l y l r i n 11n- i m r l l i K u

' , a n d I h i ' . v u p s e t t i n - ( . ' i i r d r n s , a n i l

I U D K C (\O\\ I I I h i ' s l a l l i e s M i n i H\ ->L

N u \ I n - r e m e v e r n m i u n o i i m . ' H 1

WZt> I n - L r n v i ' I l l s l i t . ' " a s a l i i r t y r u l i r ; I n . - l u r y u l i\\\ 11 if • s u m a m i I I I I U K I I I r r s u f

r i n d s a i d t l u i l h i ' w a s , I n . i n I n l i - i ' l i i i i i l . I " i n - r i i c i - i ' i i i i n i i r N i u n u l r o u i i l i l i a n d r i l :

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d r i l l < * l e v t ' h i n i l . ( i r p i i M f i l d u r i n g t h e II J n i T i N o n n d m I n i n t rii l i o n , a n d i-rii]>-p n l n t r d b y I ' r t ' s h U - n l ( . ' l e v u l u u d t l u r l n ^biw . s e c o n d I I T I H .

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u i h f l V n ' i i t l i i t t t t e r . . A s ' l o t i ^ IIH w e y.o d o w ntin- c i i n v n t tij' o u r c \ i l h a h i t wv s e e m t oji*'l a l o n - , p i u e t ^ i n n u t l i l y , h u t if a f t e r awtuU- « i ' t u r n u r m n t t l m n l It \ U i e n l ln>rw a y , t m v a r d ( ' l i r i .s l a n d p a n lun a n dh e a v e n , o h , I l i e n h o w u c lia vc tjj l a y I ot h e o j i rn ! S ' U I I wi l l h a v e y o u r I n n p t u it i.V i m h i i v r o n e k i n d , y o u a n u t . m i y o u a no i l i e r , i n n o n e p e r s o n e s i - n p i n n .

A t ' i i m . 1 f in i i n e m l t h e h e h i i v i o r nf t l i edi.scipli 'H t o a l l I h o s c w h o m v i\ lm il m !I o t IM< n l : n id t ' r t ' i t a n d p e r " t i l e d . W h e nH e r o d p u t J o h n ( o d e t a i l , t h e d i s c i p l e sk n e w t h a t , t h e n 1 o w n hca i i . s wvw n u t HI\(V.A n d il y u u k n o w t hu t e v e r y J o h n lun* ul l t ' i - n i l ? 'I h e r e a r e pr i -Miim m Ilk: \v l i u (Iun o t w i s h y o u \' . y w e l l . ^ o u i M ^ l o r t i i n c Hart 1 h o n e y c o n i *o l lie in T l u u u t x h t heir-l e d li I h e y IUHM a t y o u . IIHMIII 11'rpl 'ct m i r

m n l i v c s . u t id w o u l d bt ' jrliui t o S I T Viill l lp-M't. N o l i m n Kt'lH ihr i . ' i i ^ l i l ife ^vjl hc tu tl u n i n n " p o i n i n r l i n ^ . S o n i c s h u u l e r ( IMIICMat t t ' f y o u h n r u e t l u n d h u l k e d , u u l l u u i i e dt o p u r a n d 1 r a i n p i c y o u , n u d w h a t a r c\ t n i t o ' l o v I (e l l y m i p h i i i i l y I l m t n i l w h os c i v c C h r i s t iniiHt NidVer perHeei i t i o n . I t \t*( h r w o r * I Hi^n in t h e w o r l d f o r y u u t o h ol w n h l o t c . s i \y , " 1 l u i v e n o t n n n i t ' i n y mt h i ' w o r l d " A n-tit- i i p r o n o u n c e d in t l i el t i l i l r a u a n i H t I h c o n e o i w h o m ( M c r y h o d vhi ic i i l i s w e l l . | t ' v o n n i l id p e a c e w i t h n i lI lie world and rvcr \ hodv likes you undu p | i r o \ ( ' s y o n i 1 w n r k . it IH l i e e a u s e y o u a r ea n i d l e r i n t h e I . o r i l ' s \ i n e v a r d n u d a r em>! d o t i i ^ w m r t in t \ . A I! 1 hos t 1 w h o h a v en e r v e d C h r i s t , h o \ \ e \ r ( - n i i n e n t . a l l h a v eI.eeti m a l l r e n t e d tit s o m e s t a ^ e of t h e i r r \ -p e n e n e e . ^l iui k n o w it w a s s o m I h e t u n eof < ; e o r i ; c W h d e f i c l d w h e n h e s t o o d u n dn n d ed m e n i n t o t h e k i n ^ i h u n of ( J o i L\ \ ' h n l i lu l t l . e I c i i n . e d l>r .lulniHOM w i y nfhi la'? l i e p r o n m u i e c d l u m ti m i s e r i i h l em o u n t e b a n k . I low \ U I M it w l i e n K o b e r iH a l l N tood n i u l h | m k r a s M-iiividy u n y i i n i nH p i r e d m a n e v e r d i d s p c i d ; <>| ( h e plttrii-HM] h e a v e n ' ' A u d a s h e s t o o d S a b h a l l i nft e r S u l i b u t li p r e i v e h n i n oh t l u - s r t t i e m r sh i s l a c e k i in I leil w i t h t in 1 k r l n ry . ' o h nF o w l e r , a C h r i s l i i ' n i r ,\\. m u d of t I IM l l i a n ," I t n l i e r l " a l l IH u u l i i c t i u K . l u u l t l i e s m i l eo n h i s f a c e IH a r e f l e c t i o n uf lnw o w n v a n -H y " - l n h i i W e w l e y l u r i i e d a l l 1'jiL'lundiipMhlr d o w n M i d i V h r i N t i i i M r c f m n i , n n i ly e t t h e puiihtiM-H w e r e n l ' l e r l i n n . i\ui\ t h em e a n e s t jokew in K n u l n n d "I'W p e r p c t ni ( e i la b . a i i . l i d m W ' C H I I y . W l n i l is t r u e <»f t h ep u l p i t IH t r u e of t l i e p e w ; it is t r u e •' t h es t r i ' i ' t : it i s t r u e nf I h e sh<>i> a n d t h e s t o r e .Al l ^ h o hx't ' (fotliy iu C h r i s t - i r s u s m u s tHiiifer p e r s c c i i t i o n .

A n d I s e t it d o w n u s t i n ' v e r y w o r s t H I ^ Uin all v o u r C h r i s t i a n e x p e r i e n c e if y o u i i i rt m v of v o n I I ( j . r a e e w i t h a l l t h e w o r l d .T h r r e l i n i o n (>f C h r i s t is w» r . It is '\e h a l l e n ^ c t o " ( I n * w o r l d , t h e Mesh n n d t h ei l r u t . " a n d if vnfi w i l l I m r k l e o n \\\v w h o l ra n n n r of < i n d >nii w i l l f ind a izr i . i t h o s td i s i m t m ^ y n u r p a t h b e t W I T H '-in n n dh e j i v e n .

Uul w h a t a r e y o u t n d o w h e n v u u a r ca s s i u i l t c d a n i l s l a n d e r e d a n d a i m e d . a s Is u p p o s e n e a r l y a l l u f y o u l i ' i v c be i -u in y o u r

Short Talks on

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»M)st $:i:..tH)n. T h e v o l t - W I I H v r r y 1 1 - i d . «) ' ir i tH. a n d n n . t l h c r nu iu will d i v e d e e p e r

o n l y r l i r l n y - H i r h t v n i i n t o u t lit' p e r - " ^ \ l l l ] ' i \ "'s.- ( ' ^ s n | m " t , ^ i ; ; s a " I ' I ' / . V ' I . ' . V '

h u p s luii( l r l i L ' l b l r . I ' l i d o r t h e n e w l a w i |^' ' *•(',,, " ' " , Vii*' 1 K'"''i t pi **'t'*T '« r l r V i ' i ' t vw o m e n iin* r l l t i t h ' . l t . i v o l . ' u l s r l i o n l , ; , „ „ ' . , , | ' „ , " " , ' n p',.,,',!,-, i n , r e , ' a o d y . a n i l 1

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s t a n d s in- e l se IIv l o rM'li lo r t ' e t w h r r c hii v f u r c .

S o n i c til' YOU cro i i r ' h u n d e r n \ - "Ui \ a n d ,\'nii i n l u t h e i l n - l w h e n t h i s m o m e n t y o u !

lulii i i s e ii[i a crow i i r d e u i i q u t ' i ' o r . D r i v e n ;

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I M t i n t I T i i u ' l S u i c i d e .

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yt e a r UI I H i s u e t i h e c U , 111 i -ve rv « n s l i n fl l w M i l r . in |.\ e r y l u u n . l i l u r k e i u n i ; m u r k i"I l . i r e l a i In. i ' i i - I n n l . l e r t o s l i o i l l d e r . Iin t in - u r i n e i l i i i l ti ' l-mt. ' . h e a v e n s t u r i u i n ui l i ' n t l i m u . i i i 1 1M-.II- l i n n Way. " l i e Minte u l n e t h u n t o M e I wi l l in u n w i s e n l s t o u t . "

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r'nnni'i'S of (Iloiirester inn! SiilrinOmiit lus nr« iilrciiily pleUin^ rl|«> to-inatoes.

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Tin- wild liurlsli'liprry crop In theAtlimtlc County swnuips pi-oinlHes tobe the lnrgcnt for ninny yeiirw.

The Indications mv tlint Oxfonl willhave n HIU; mill. CnpllullHis nre ne-gotintlug for the purchasu of the oldnail factory.

nnd yenrs by anyearthly timepiece, might cmeulnte themby tlie mmibers of onportmiitieN nnd ,..er-cii'H whit'h are burning down and burninj»out, never to h<? rtiliRhtt'tl, lest at lust wi>be amid the foolish virgins who cried,'"Our lamps Imvc jrono out!"

A|/nin, I coiiimoiid the lielmvit r of . nodiseiiilrs to all who are tempted. I havehenrd men in mid-life HUV llicv luid neverbeen |rd into temptntinn. If you havenot felt tomjitnt inn, it in because yuu linvt*not i icd to dn right. A mini hojuded umlhanileiifTed, aw loni; 08 lit* lies quietly, dursnot test tin* power of tin chain, hu' whenhe lines i(\i und \v\t\\ d<itenn\n(vtiv>i\ ri1-solvt'H In inap the Jinndctdi or break thehoptde tlirn he finds the power of the iron.Ami there nre men who have been for tennnd twenny nnd thirfeV yerrs bound handtvtid {nnt Iny evil hatnts who Imvo neverfrit tlio iViwer of thn&clmin heeaiiso th«yhave ncvey tried to lt»i\k it. It is veryensy to g(/ on down \\mi the stream nnd

(in out' und hunt up the s l ande re r(Hi, nn, sillv m a n ! Whi l e ymi are explain-ing HUUV » udsehuod tn uuv pliu-f l u ,y |<ru-pic will just have heard n\' it in o t h e rliiuL-rn. I counsel yuu to ii imther n m r w .\\ lulc vou are nul to ntint im> oppor tun i t •nl se l l ing \nurse lves rij:ht. I want tn tt'll\m i nl" tHie wlm had the hardes t Ib inussinii almut Him, whose suhnt ' i v was dis-puted, \\ host' nuMsum \\m* senuted . w IIUNL1

chioiipionnlu[i wii.1 deimuneed, w ho wnspursued <IM a bnhe and spit U|»>n us a man .who win h o u l e d ut after He was dead. 1w ill have vmi ^o unto Him with yourhniMrd MOH! m w i n e Inmilile child p rayersaying: " I see Thy won nt Is- - wotiiuis ofhead, woundrt uf feet, wnuiuls ot henr t .Now hud; tit i iv WUUU-IH imil nee wliut thave sulVerrtl ami th rough ^vhat ba t t l e s Iam nniiiji. nnd I en t rea t Thee hy t ho»rWIIUIUIH "f Thine svinpntlu/t? wi th m e . "And He • • d U y m n t U h i w nud l i e \v*.U \w\\\.( in mid tell , lc-u-.

A^uin. 1 coinmi'iid t he hebn\ ier of tliodisciples tn all the bereaved. How manyin pi r l i <d iiniurninti ' H o w m a n y emblemsol surrow \ nu ln'huld t'\'tMV where . Ootlhas lli>* own way of takinn npar it turn-lly. \ \ f nuiit net out nf the way fo t emu-iiiH nrin*rat mns. We must $v\ oil I hi'slam> that titheiH may enini' on, and forth i s rea.-i'ii t h e r e IH a limp procession reaeb-iiiH ihiwn nil t he time into the valley «-r

shadnwji. TIUM iMiiiuriUioM from t -'ii' intoe t e r i u ty i* mi vns* MM en te rp r i se Hun wecimuut. \maevAli\ml \\. K w v y limvv \vv \wy\\Yt h e flann *>i" the srpulel ini l na t r . T h esoil must hr h m k e n . T h e urouud must beplowed lor i t ' sur iTftn h a i v - s l . KtiTiiitymust be peopled . T h e dus t must press mircyd iu* . " I t is appu in t ed u n t u nil menniii'i' tn d i e . " Thin e m i n n d i o n from linit'in to e l c r n i t y kecp^ t lirec fnnrl lis uf ihelamilieH of the ear th in desoliit iou. Tlieair is rt'nt with fiircwells, and tho nlaelctasseled ve ln r l r s of dea th n imb le t hnn inhi 'vrry s t r ee t . T h e bo.ly of t he child thatwnn'folded wi i l w e l y tn' t he m o t h e r ' s hea r t.is put aivuy in the cold and the ilarliticss.T i n ; luunbtc r freeze* to t h r girl 's Un, andt h e ruse scat ter* . The bov in tin- lmrvrst.field nf S h u n e m MIVS. " M y head, myb e a d 1 " nnd they • . ry h im home to die ont h e lap nf his n m t h e r . Widowlmoil stand;,w i l h tnvne^iies uf we.e xtrwek in to \\v }ml-lor of Hie cheek. Orpliunune cries in vainfor fiitluT J»-i*l muther . i^\, the urnvo iserutd! W i t h l c r | h uf slt>nr it clutelu's furits prcv. Hctwcen t he closing c a t r s nf thesiMMdrher oiii' heart a nre man pled andcrushed .

Is th ree any r a r t h l v solaer? None . \\*e(•nine to t he obsequies we ^il with theprirf s t r i cken , we ttilk pathet ica l ly to t h e i rsoul, but Minn tlie ohsri]Uit's have passed,the niiTMHi-N have left us at t he tloor, thefriends who s t , l H | fur a lew days a rc n-me,a n d the hear t situ in desola t ion l is teningfur the l i t t l e t't'et thn t will never u^tiiupa t t e r t l irnu^h the hall tir lunkinn fur thee n t r a n c e of those w ho will never i-oniotitrain. Hipluhg into t he t l a rkurss , ever amia nun coiniuy across some book o r liar-

Uu'lll ur litlU' slim1 nv pu'UU't' \\\\\\ l\V«V\w-t*former associat ion, id most Uiltinu thelira i t ; limp days ami iiiphts nl mitTcrinpthat wfiir nut the spirit and expunge thebright hues nf life anil givo hagmudnewstn tin- liic*1 and draw the lU'sh tight downover the tdieek lioiie ami draw dark linesunder i lie sun ken eye, and tho hand istreiniilniis, and the v"i>ii*r in hiiHky and un-{•ertain, nnd Hie gi ief is wearinp, grindinp.areuinuliiting, exhausting.

Nuw, what are Mich to do? Arc theymerely tu look up into a brazen and im-pitying skv? Are they to wnlk a lilaslo*!lu-atli unfed of ntri'iinu unshelti*rt>d hyoven-niching trees? Han (Jod turned usout on thr banen common to die? Oh,no. nn, nu! He han not.

lie eoiiu's with svmnathy anil kindnessuntl low. He \n«U1isu\nd^ nil "\\r urivf.lie sees the height ami the depth nnd thelength ami the limuitii of it. IU' in thoonlv OIH> that can fully sympathise, doand tell Jesus.

Soim'thm'H when we have troiuMo we ROto our friends, ami we explain it, and theytry to sympathize, Iml they do not under-stand it. They cannot underHtanil it.Hut Chrtot H«?H all over it und all throughit. Ho not only count* the tear* uml re-cords th« trroanH, hut hcf«ro tho tonrsRtnrtcd, befoiv tlio gamen howm, ChristHUW tho inmost hiding place of your Bor-

No. 11.Some time ngo one of the largest nud most liberal advertisers in a leading

Eastern city had a successful sale of u. stock of goods obtained t^irou^h the failurouf u competitor. Tho man who failed bad u. lurge capital invested in his business.He curried a line of ^oods above tho average for com-pleteness mid desirability. There seemed to be noreason for his failure except one. Mis gtore was poorlyadvertised.

In oue of tho advertisements of the firm whichbought the stock, the statement was made: "The storewas poorly advertised, so poorly, indeed, that few peo-ple knew uf tbu existence of so great a business bouseanywhere cast of Main street."

This transaction furnishes an object lesson that ismost conclusive. Tho man who failed advertised, but

he did not advertise right, UT enough.His stock was sold out by the adver-tiser who did advertise properly audliberally.

Advertising is the most useful ofall the tools of business, but it his arazor edge. The man who bandies it carelessly is sure towish he hadn't. The mere fact that a man advertises is by-no means an insurance of business success. He must giveconstant, careful thought to the subject. It is the only part ofhis business which will never run itself. You can get anyother department in the business down to such a system thatit will require very little thought, but the successful advertisermust bo always alert and must never take his hand off thoadvertising rudder for an instant.

Every day, people are gaining more and more confidencein advertising. More andmore of them arc turningto tho advertising columnsof tbe paper for informa.

tiou. There is no doubt about this.The business men who fail to appreciate

it are likely to find tberriselves so far behindthe times that they will never catch up. It isalways better to advertise a little too muchthan not quite enough. It is better to use alittle more time than is necessary in the con-sideration of advertising and the preparationof advertisements than it is to be ever BO littlecareless about it.

CoPvtfht, Charltx Autti* Pates, Kent' Verb.

"lit didn't <I./FTttiw, J/is j/rx* TIsold t>ut /•)• th* ,u/t>titer who did."

"Adv*rtiiin£ is the most useful of lmtitools, but it has a razor edge,"

V'iw, und \\v tnlu'H il, uml l i e pit ien ilwit li ww till uh.sorl>nin pit v.

Hum- ol' mir l>um\ Kli-Mi of our flrnli.) I part of our henr t . Sorrow ol' mir sor-row. AH lonu an II'1 rcini'inluMs Kazaiuw's(iruvo l i e will Htaiul liy you in t lie ci'im1-UTV.

(Vton when we wore in trouble we H<>ntfor our fritniis, Iml thry were far uwuy.They could not £'** t<i us. We wroio totln'in, "Come ri^lit a way." or ti'lejxniplu'il."Talii1 I In- uoxt t rain." They (nine atlust, yi*t were n ^n-at wliiU- in coming orpi'rlm'prt wen- too lato.

Hut Cluist in UIWHVH IHMW — lu'fon? you.behind von. within you. No mother everthrew her arms nroiind her child with sueliwarmth ami rcstacy "f uflWtmn as Christ|HIS shown Inward yon.

nrrr tinin tne staff upoiy eiiifr than the cup youyour lip. neiirer t him t lie hnnilltor-th wliieli you wipo away your tearw,

I preach Him mi ever present, nil R.vmpn-thii-.iiiK, coinpiissioimte .1 esiiM. 1 fnw cjinyou stay away one moment from Him with\oiir i;rirlV' (lo now. (io niul tell .lewus.

It is often tluit friends have no powerto relieve us. They would very much liketo do it, luit theyCiiniiot dihcntanale our(iiiiinces, tliev can lint cure mir nick newsniul raise our dead, hut Klory l.e to (^xl

l disciples went has nil\w\ eiwtli. nnd M mil

ur culumit ies niul nf

nt haiul. tle

put tc l i i e f

t h i l t H

call

to wliv inlie ill hlie ill a Ikthe rinfit tiine. in tin1 iii't'Heneo of nn

apl'luuiliiiK earth niul » resoumiinir henven,will raise our dead. He is mightier thanllerml. Vie is Mviurr than the storm. Heis ^riiniler than the t*va. He in vaster thaneti'rnitv. Atnl every sword of (Jod'a mil-mpiitenee will leap frnni itK senlihard nndthe resources of infinity bo exhausted rath-er thun tluit ( inns oliilil shall not hv do-livercil when he cries to Him for reset \'Suppose your chihl was in ti'ouhlo. Howniiieli wtMild you endure to i 't liim out ?Vnu would say, "I don't care what it willeost, I must p>t him out nf that trouble."|)o you think <i(»d tc not so jrnoil a fathermi vnu ? Seeing you are in 1 roul le nndhnviny all power, will Hr not fitrotch oiitllis urm \\y\\\ deliver you? He will. \W ismiulity to snvtv He rnn Irvol the mount-ain mid divide the t*w\. nud can extinguishtlie lire and save the urml. Kot dim ofeye, not weak of arm. not feelde of re-sources, nut with all eternity nnd tho njii-verse at His feet. Go and tell Josim. Willyou ?

Vo WIIORO eheekn nre wet with tho nic'itdew of tin- [rr«vt\ ye who rannot look up,ye whose Imtrtri nre dried with the breathof siriMMyt. in the name of tho reliirion of.,lesus Christ, which lifts cverv burden nndwipes away every tour nnd delivers everyviiplivv i\\\y\ Unlitt'UH ovvvy davknesa, I im-plore you now no and ti 1 .lesus.

A little child won I with lior fnt her. nsen en))tnin, to son, »ml when tho (irststorm eanie the littlo ehild wus very muchiriuhtrnod. ntitl in On* niirht rusliod out oftin1 cabin nnd said, "Whore ia fnthor,where is fiithor*" Then they told licr,"Father is on deck cuidiiiR the. vessel nndwntt'hiim the storm. Tlio little child im-HH'diately n'tnnied to her berth nnd paid,"It 's all'right, for father's on dock."

0 ye who are tossdl nnd driven in tnifiworld, up by tlie nintmtiiinR ntul down bythfi valleys nn<l nt your wita* onds, I wnntyou to know tho I ord Ciod is guiding theship. Your l'nthor in on dcek. He willbring you through the darkncBs into thoimrhor. Tnwl in tin1 I-ord. (Jo nnd tellJoKUs*.

If you pn to Him for pardon nnd sym-pathy, all is well. Kvi»rylliin« will hright-on uj), and jov will coino to the lionrt, nndporrow will depart, your sins will hi> for-givon, and your font will touch tho up-wind path, nnd tho sinning messengerstlmt report nhovc wluit is done hove willtell it until the treat arches of God re-BOimd with tho «lnd tidings if now withcontritinn nnd full tmstfulness of BOM youw;jl only RO nnd tell Jeans.

Hut t mn opnrepsecl ns I think ofttnoraw\p may not take this counsel nj^inny

? j

fcnuiiii unlilcHsod. I rannot help usl;ingwhat will IK' the ck-stiny ol' these itoople.Xerxi'M loolu'ti off nn his army. There were2,(K)0.IKH), perhaps the lini'st army over nmr-KUHIIMI. XLTXI'H rode along the linos, re-viewed them, eame baidi^ and stood onHOUR' hinh point, looked oil upon the 2,000,-000 men and hurst into leara. At that wo-men!, when every olio nuppnacd he woidcfhe in the greatest exultation, he broke *down in Ri'ii-f. '1'hry nsked l>im why hou-ept. "Ah," he said, '"I weep nt tliethought that no noon all thin host will bedead." So I think of these vast popula-tions nf immortal nien and women and re-uli/.e the fact that soon the plaees whiebknow them now will know them no more,and they will he gone—whither, whither?'I'here IH U ativrinn idei\ wlm'h tlio poetput in very peculiar verse when he said:'Tis not for man to trifle; life H brief,

And sin is here;Our age is but. the fnllinR of a '.. :,

A dropping tear.Not many lives, but only one have we—

One, onlv one;How WUTCII snould that one life tver be—

'i. hut narrow spun!

THE POLITICAL CAMPAICN.

ItepublU'iin ('oiiRivssltin.'il ('oinnilt-tw lii'.iiliiuiii'U'i'H will bo Iu CliicuKo.

John \V. Kern bus been noniln.'»to(T'iy Ilio IK'Uiucnits for (.iovi'i-nor ofJnillann.

l>™«o(Tiitl<> nomlnora for Stnto of-fices In Xorth Citrollun tire touriuy theStale in n body.

Tlio Uepnlillcjiii Stnlo ticket In Illi-nois Is nindt' up wholly of men llvlugutitsldi' cf ChU-iiKo.

Conner Coneressiniui Dnrlcory liasbcoii nonihinted for (Jovernor of Mis-souri l>y tlie Democrats.

A<lnilriil IVwcy'e cousin Is one oftlie deU'jiiUes from lilaho to flic Detii-ocratle Xallonal Oonvention.

CbarU'H II. t'orripan, of Syrjicu.se,N. Y.. luis been nominated for (Jov-ernor by the Socialist Labor party.

The Iioulslimsi Democratic lUutformInstructed for Iiryan, denoiiiieed lin-lierlallsin niul trusts, and syinpathizeilwith the Hoors.

\V. S. Taylor lias Issued a statementIn whlc.i lie declinos to be a candidate,for the Hepubllcau nomination fortiovernor of Kentucky.

The National Committee of the Na-tional (sold) Democratic party busbi'en ealknl for .Inly 25, nnd it IH ex-pected that n third 'Presldvutlnl ticketwill he nainotl.

Kenr-Adinlrnl Scliley wrote toColnurl A. K. McCIure, of TUiladclpbin, that he would not runfor VIce-Prvsldcnt nor serve ifelected.

Clark Ilon'ell, member of the Nn-llonnl Democratic Committee from(ieorKln, B.il'l: "There IN no possibledoubt Hint Mr. Bryan will receive thovote of every .Southern State at thoKiinsns City convention."

Colonel John I. .Martin, spiKeautaturniK for the Democratic Nntlonnl Con-(•ontloti, sriyN ho will permit the com-niittpoinon to name assistants, and thiswill keep from the halls all personsJiot from the States supposed to horepresented.

Dr. David Kennedysvorite Remedy

._ Dr. David Kennedysiavorite Remedy

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Rockaway Record

Tiiunulay, .Jiiuo 21, l'JOD.

THE NEWS EPITOMIZED.Wnnhltik-ton itiMnB.

Tti" Nnvy jopmtincnt has decided'o culabllsli a large ruullng fetation utS i l l ) U l i - K o , ( ' i l l .

Tin* second Intpninllonnl Congress•>[ Aiuerlciin Kepiiljllra will u.swinblo:ii Ilie city ol' Mcxlro iiuxt year, l)u-lu'eci) April mid .Inly.

The Viir Ileiiartment Issued ordera'or tnc retirement of Major-deaeralU'osley Merritt on aeeuuir ol' Ills'oachluy the ny;e limit.

Major Kreilorii'k l''uc;er. of theFourth iinilliTy. stationed ut Fort Me-llcnry. Maryland, was plueed on tho'•etired list heeause of a^e. Mo linyser\"ed coniinnoiiKly Cor foriy-fouryears.

non .Ilia . Cneslns, r,L. p., the firstV' Mrr to he KIMII to this countrya 1 the diplomatic representative ofCm -nay. was formerly preseutud tothe Pri'sideut.

IM'eskk'iit MeKlnh'y has appointedFormer Hepi-esentallve \\ . I). Ijynuin,nf lutllmiii, a niemlicr of the commis-sion to ciidify the criminal laws of tileUnited Mates.

The Nnvy Department lias estab-lished a United States Navy pay olllocat HOIIK Kong, wltli ' uymuster Smithin charge.

The Supreme ^ourt of Cuba linsruled that, under the decree of (ieneralBrooke, only civil marriages tiro lesul.in appeal will lie taUen to the UnitedStates Supreme Court.Governor-General Wood has decided

:o appoint a spej*inl commlsKlon to sifthe anmermiH c^nrgeH of otneial cor-•uptlon in Cuba.

General MijeArtliiir.il Manila reportsthe capture of the rebel GencralB III-znn nntl Cnvostnuy.

Multitudes offered sti^yestloiiR for;lvll rule In the Philippines duringthe Tnft Commission's first week ofwork nt Manila.

General Maximo Gomez has writtena letter concerning the efforts of both:lie National and Republican parties!n Cuba to convince the people thatlie favors their candidates for olHce.

Lawlessness lias been rnsumod In St.",ouls because of the failure to settle:he street car strike.

While vorklnff on the cantileverorldgo ut .Mfttrara FIIIIH, N. Y.. HenrySelpple fell 200 . ?t to Instant death.

Thousands of English npnn'ows haveDeen found dead In Chicago streets,1 rvUifi: been poisoned by/ unknownpersons.

Passengers Iroin Cupe Nome declaredit Vancouver, B. C, that the richness)f Uie gold fields have not beoit exas-perated.

A largo number of students fromFairmont College, at AVIchlta, andProm tile Southwestern Kansas Col-lege, at WinOeld. boys and girls, havecrono Into the Kansas wheat li". 3 as'jarvesters.

Bishop Potter, of New York City,upheld trusts In hla baccalaureate ser-mon to seniors of Harvard University.

The Federal quarantine at San Frnn-?lseo, establl hed because of fears ofthe bubonic ;<laguc, hns been raised.

Iteports from the Klondike showthat the "cleanup" will be ?25,000,000,which Is much larger than was ex-pected.

Dr. Kennedy, convicted of'^he mur-der of Dolly Reynolds, at the GrandHotel, New York City, hns boon de-nied a new trial by the New YorkS' ju'Otno Court.

David Block gnve a birthdny party,at which he presented each of his tenchildren with a check for $5000.

A San i Fe freight train ran Intoa loaded street car at Hutchinson,Kan., killing three persons and badlyInjuring four others. The dead areMrs. William Burch, Mrs. J. S. Pat-ton and Mrs. George Coon.

The pr. iperlty of the farmers In theNorthwest Is Indicated by the factthat many of them are making ar-rangements to visit the Paris Exposi-tion this summer.

The Mid vale Steel Company, ofPhiladelphia. Is to erect a large ar-mor plnte plant to compete with theCarnegie and Bethlehem Works InGovernment contracts.

Government engineers ascertain thatthe current In tLe Chicago River Isnot too strong for navigation.

After receiving two gunshot wounds,Watchman James Delanoy shot andkilled on unknown burglar at Chicago.

Governor Shaw, of Iowa, and threeithers were Injured by the collision5f Northwestern trains at Des Molues,(own.

I.ueretla Peabody Hnle, eighty years)ld, oldest surviving sister of the Rev.Or. Edward Everett Hale, died InBoston. Miss Hale contributed to pe-riodicals for young persons,

Voretjrn.The number of horses and mules

nnded In South Africa since the begin-ning of the war for military purposess ove( 150,000, nt a cost of $20,000,000.

Prince do Jolnvllle, son of the lateLouis Philippe, King of the French, Islead as a result of pneumonia.

King Humbert opened tho tveenty-i rs t Legislature of Italy, his speech!rom tlio throne being loudly ap-plauded, i

General Kuox, In command of aBritish post at Knnd River, bent off aBoer attacking y - t r . -no logs.wasinanll on both flld|

\~ • V v •"

Why let your neighborsknow it?

And why give them achance to guess you are evenfive or ten years more?

Better give them goodreasons for guessing theother way. It is ve-y easy;for nothing tells of age soquickly as gray hair.

is a youth-renewer.It hides the age under a

luxuriant growth of hair thecolor of youth.

It never falls to restorecolor to gray hair. It willstop the nair from comingout also.

It feeds the hair bulbs.Thin hnir becomes thick hair,and short hair becomes longhair.

It cleanses the scalp; re-moves nil dandruff, andprevents Its formation.

We have a book on theHair which we will gladlysend you.

If you <lo not obtalo all tho ban**fits you expected from tho uso of thoVlRor. wrfte tho doctor about It.l'rohnhlv thorn lu Bomo dlflli'iiltT

Met

Dr. J . C. Aytrr, Lowell', Mass.

LABOR WORLD.

\

T'nlon eoal miners in Kansas havewon their strike.

A coufeivneo hns Iwn ngveed on ntChicago to settle labor difficultiest here.

A general strike of the buildingtrades in Kivnsas City/Jhi\s !n>eu or-dered. /

A Jury at Kansas CltyV»Vfo., ite^elaredthe Cual Dealers' Club lu the city wasnu Hlt-gul combine.

The wholesale grocers of Memphis,Tenu., close their stores every dayduring the summer.nt rj o'clock.

Miners In the Schuylklll iPenn.) ro-glon will be paid one per cent, IM>1OWthe if'J.fiO basis for the last half ofMay nud first half of June.

Members of various circles of thoBrotherhood of the bnlou in Onnulen,N. J., have formed a preliminary or-ganization to suppress child lnlnn* inthe city.

There are now forty pearl-buttonfactories in lown. working up shellsprocured from the river beds. Near-ly lHOO people are employed In thefactories alone.

Seven tlunis.ind dock laborers InLondon have struck, alleging that theagreement with respect to overtimeand meal time hud been violated bytheir employers.

The New York eiKarmukers' strikesnro extending to Pennsylvania, strikeslielug ordered there to prevent firmstilling orders for firms In New YorkCity, whoso employes are on a strike.

There are nine branches In NewYork State of the Women's Interna-tional Inlon Labor Lcagua, whose ob-ject Is to persuade working men andwomen to buy only goods bearing themil on label.

A grpnt national organization ofwood workers, with over 150,000 mem-iwrB, is In process of organization. Itwill Include the United Brotherhoodof Carpenters, the American OnW ofStalrbullders and many "Bimillerunions,

FORTUNE IN A BUREAU.

Young f.ucns Never Suiitoctcul That HitMulder Wnt So Hloh.

For thirty-three years Mrs. Ellen Lu-cas, who died n. few days ago, lived in avery modest dwelling house in Omaha,Neb'., and never niiiue any pretcntion towealth.

After her dentli her son. John Lucas,went into the room formerly occupied byher and upon lifting a iunvH\mper out of aburenfl drawer saw n goodly-sized fortune-in gold and greenbacks.

After spending aeveral hours in counting'the pile Mr. Lucas found that it amount-ed to ium If37,000. Besides tu.s lie foundseveral thousand dollars' worth of Gov*ernment bonds.

Foreigri Fleet Seizes the Taku

Alter Being Fired Upon.

RELIEF FAILS TO REACH PER1N.

Allied 1'urcin—llulluf l'uiii> K.iUniitlu TIOII-I'HIII — Clilntt Now ui WinWith tlio Clvlllzuil World.

London (lty Cnblei.—China declaredwar against the world whin tin- Taliuforts opened lire upon thr interimtlonal lleet. A Japanese dispatchboat wllirh reached Chei- I-'uo l'niliiTukn l>n.>vigh\ tlu1 news llmt the forelgn admirals at Taku issued an Hiti-tnntuin to the eoiiiinaiulers of the Tukuforls demanding the withdrawal ottheir troops before 2 p. in. .June IT.The forts opened lire on ilie warshipsat 12.-l."j (/clock Sunday morning, andthe Husslnn, Kreuch, llrltish and Japauese siiipri replied. The l'oris Mirrendered after seven hours' hnuiburd-nieiit. The forts on bot.i sides <?!' tliel'ol-llo are now Ofcupled by the 111tenintlonnl fureos.

It Is reported Hint the Iiritish warship Algerlne, the tJernuin gunboatlit is and a Uusstnu gunboat uvrebndly ilaniaged by the tire from theforts. It Is stated that the ltusslancasualties were ten killed and forty-live wounded; (Jerinun, three killedand seven wounded: llrltish, onekilled and one wounded, and French,one killed and one wounded, u totnlof twenty-one killed and fifty-sevenwounded.

ihe Chinese torpedo boats ha/e becuseized by the nllled fleet.

The telegraph line and the railwaybetween Taku and TleuTslu havebeen destroyed.

The Japanese dispatch boat alsobrought news that the legations inPekiu hail been tnkvn, ami that theinternational column, under AdmiralSeymour, after trying for . week toget through to I'eklu, had been compolled to rcturu to Tleu-Tsln.

London (By Cable"! —Lord Salisbury.whon questioned in the House ofLords on the Chinese situation, suldlie regretted be was unable to enlight-en the Uouse on the state of affairs InChina. Admiral Seymour, he contin-ued, had returned to Tlon-Tslu, butthe Government did not know exuetlywhy, nor what Admiral Seymour's In-tentions were. It is feared that thecheck to Admiral Seymour's forces,necessitating their return to Tleu-Tsln,will lead to large accessions to themilks of the Boxers, i.nd make tlielrsuppression Etlll more difficult.

FATAL I M I I A B . FIRETen Dead and Many Injured in a

New York Tenement.

POLICEMEN MAKE BRAVE RESCUES

IIUIMtYINQ TKDOrS TO CHINA.

Ualted Htntes, Enclunri anil Franco ordotSolillern to the Scene of Trouble,

Mnnlla (By Cable!.-The Ninth Reglnient hns been ordered to Manila,whence It will proceed to Chluu. ,

The gunboat Concord, with marinesaboard, has sailed under sealed orders,supposed'.;" for China.

• London (By Cable).—The British Gov-ernment hns decided to detnch a divi-sion (10,0001 men of liifnutry. threebatteries of artillery and a siege trainfrom the Natal tSIr Kedvers Buller's)forces for Immediate dispatch to China.Kngland Is accumulating military andnaval forces In the far East.

Purls (By Cnblei.—The Minister ofMarine has ordered a division of cruis-ers got ready for sea to reinforce theFrench siinndron In Chinese waters.Transport in also being prepared totake military reluforeeuients.

TUB PRESIDENT ACTS PROMPTLY.

Unttlenlilp Oregon nu Well as Troopafrom Mnullii Ordered to China.

•Washington, D. C. (Special). — ThePresident liosseu* instructions to Rear-Admiral Kempff directing him to pro-tect American Interests, and to thatend to act concurrently with the rep-resentatives of the other powers. TheAdmiral's powers are ample to seizeforts, fight or do anything, provided ItIs In his judgment necessary for theprotection of American interests.

The President has also directed Gen-eral MacArtliur by cable to send fromthe \Pbilipplnes three regiments ofregulars to Tlen-Tsin, which, with thesupporting bodies, will make a forceof 5000 men.

Tho battleship Oregon has been or-dered from Hong Kong to Tnku.

BOERS REFUSE TO GIVE UP.Couunitndnnt ltotlia Doolln«l to Accep t

Uoneral ltobortn'B Succeitlon.

London (By Cable). — General Rob-erts, according to a Boer dispatch fromMnchadodorp, sent a message to Coui-mandnnt-General Louis Botha sug-gesting disarmament, nud compliment-ing the bravery of the burghers. Itwas pointed out that the surrenderwould be without dishonor to theburghers, and would prevent muchsuffering.

General Bothn asked for u six dnys'nrmistlce, lu order to confer r.ud con-sider. General Roberts consented toUvo dnys. Finally General Bothn de-clined to nceept the proposal, and hos-tilities were renewed.

The Boycott In St. Loult.Tho controversy between tho transit

company nnd Its striking employes inSt. Louis has developed Into n strugglebetween capital anil labor along thoUrtPH ot a bovcotj;

All iLiitlro I U I . I I I T Wiped Out—O< Anrotl»«r HoiiHuliolO Tliri-i, Are Dend andSl» Aru Nuv€!re!y liijitrti'l—A J'ollce-""Ui. Itlxltl llln Life lu Sitvti Iinpur-Wed IIIII . ILI . a l l I | Him lludlj. Iluriiud.

New York City iSpeclali.-Ten per-sons suffocated or burned to death. In-cluding one entire family of seven per-sons; seven seriously injured, twoslightly Injured, and a properly hissnot exceeding *SH». That la the re-sult of a lire of mysterious originwhich gutted an old fashioned Jlve-Btory tenement at No. HI Jacksonstreet. The dead are: William Cotter,laborer, folly years*: Kate Cotter, Illswife, thlrt.vtive years; Mary ('otter,daughter, thirteen years, Joseph Cot-ter, son, twelve years; Kate Cotter,daughter, nine yearn; John Cotter, southree years; William Cutter, sou. ninemonths; Louis Mnrlus. laborer, fortyyears; Mary Mnrlus, 1I!H wife, thirty-eight years; Elsie Marlins, daughter,six years, and Patrick Byrne, tweuty-Qve years. That the roll uf dead andinjured was not far greater le due tothe fact that four policemen did theirduty nobly. One lu particular. Patrol-man James T. Knovrles, covered hlm-Bolf with glory. The lire started about2:40 o'clock a. in. The flames hadgained full headway before any of thethirty or more personB In the buildingawakened. An employe of a uenr-bybakery was the first to give the alnrm.

Patrolmnn James T. Kuowles heardthe couimotiou which followed the cryDf wnrnlng, ..-ad ran from his post, rap-ping on the curb for assistance. Pa-trolmnn Soiled: heard the raps, and|olned liin brother officer. Togetherthey forced nu entrance into the housenext door nnd made their way over anarrow stone ledge to the window op-posite, from which the flames werepouring. Up through the smoke thepolicemen groped tlielr way to therooms occupied by the Cotter family,new tenants.

On the other side of the floor livedthe Mulhcarns, husband, wife andthree children, and a boarder, LarryKUroy. They were pushed out andsent to the street. The clothing of oneof the policemen was then In Games.He crushed the fire out with his hands.The Fire Department came, nnd life-saving ladders were run up. Firemenentered the burning building andfound the Cotter family had per' icd.Further Investigation resulted In thediscovery of the other victims.

Within a few blocks of the tenementwbera ten persons perished In thetinmen another fire occurred, resultingIn the death of one person nnd the In-jury of nine others. The dead personle Mrs. Jennie Solomon, thirty years ofage, found burned to death In the rearof tnc first floor.

The building. No. 20 Rutgers Btreet,in which this occurrad, has been ten-anted but n few months. It contained8lx floors nnd a basement. SamuelSolomon, who lives in-the front on thefirst floor, conducts a millinery estab-lishment. He was chatting In the frontwith a friend when a gust of windblew a lnce curtain against the gasJet The men ran for wnter, nnd be-fore they returned the entire contents?of the room were hlnr.tng up nud smokewas pouring through the narrow stair-ways to the roof.

Tho finiiics were extinguished in nfew minutes. When it was thoughtthnt nil the tenants hnd gotten outsafely the body of a woman was foundiu the tu\Uwtvy in the renr of the firstfloor. She hnd been burned to deathShe was Identified as Mrs. Jennie Solomon, wife of Samuel Solomon.

MRS. CLADSTONE DEAD.

Widow of lha '"Ornnil Old Mm" of Encland PuMoa Awny nt n«warden.

London (oy Cable).—Mrs. Gladstonethe widow of Wllllnm Ewart Gladstone, the Ku^iisli siatvoiunn, Is dead.Her body v i s burl"il In WostmlnsteiAbliey beside that of her husband.

Mrs. WHHani Ewart Gladstone wntelcl-t-V-eight years oid. aud had beenslowly sinking for some time past ntHawnrdin C.i<tic, the famll/ sent

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Page 6: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

Rockaway RecordThursday , J u n o " I , I Him.

NEWS OF THE STATE.

DB. TALHAGEYS SEEMON.

Yliielimil'n VoumW l>i'ail.C l i u r l e s K . l . t u u l l s d i e d n l b i s h o m o

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Uf l l e n j a n i l n I t l i r e w s i e r . I,, in;.: a d - a n d in !m i l l e d ' I,..I t h e l i a r h o l o r e h e b a d \ ir e a c b o d h i s m a j o r i t y , b u t t w o y e a rl l l l e r c e a s e d l o p r a i ' t I ce l i e n e i a l l lI n l i T c s l f i l In l a n d s c h i ' l i i e s a n d p u r Ic l i u s t ' i l ; i i i u o a c r e s o f l a n d . l o c a l I m :

SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BTTHE NOTED

DIVINE,

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m v H I , ! : - M a i l . I . l l , i . : i , i r . ' T i n ' l i I I H

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l l a p l l ~ l I l i e B l - o l l | i o l ( l i e d n . r l j . l e s

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l l i l l l o r s h o u l d n e v e r b e M I I I I u p o l l I h e i p n - M o l i l l i h e i e l i e a n l i u n i a n c a r I

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H a i t i I D l t u v . i ll(M<ik l o o V o u r i t 4•> 1 • I .

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( h e H u d s o n C o u n t y I l u n n l of H e a l t ha m i \ ' l t a l St;ntMii'i* w a s tha t olT I 'at-

nun tlmt wan p»id nud IHMUI-

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* h m h l v p i v / r I h e r e IH n n e u w ' '••r l l l t l s w h i c h d i - M l o p e d I n l n e o n s l i n i p -t i n ! ) . N o l h i n u w a s l v n n \ \ * n a h m i t l d l l )a t t i l e a i l i l s h a i i s e . e x c e p t t h l l t h i I ' J r lU-O f l y l i v e d III . J e r s e y C i t y .

W«lli.r (lo.liliiril Ilrii.l.

Walter Co.ldard, fnnner Collector ofthe l'ni-i i>.' lltidi.'1'p.irt. illcd at his rc«-

lie was liorn In London, (ml ramr to

this country about hull' a century Htfo.

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O i e l t e r . n m l t i n 1 I ' o n i o f f l e e t e s t e o n i H e r

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1' i iviirn u n i l l l t u r y l t a i u l .

T tn l lU 'VUl ' l l ( '(ti l l 111 I s s l i HUM' I , ( 'W |H, OfI ! m l s o n ( o n n t y , MM h i t I m t h i ' h u d i l l ' -o l i U ' d \i\ t \ t lv \K ' i \ \ t* \\w c o n s t r u r t I o nof n n i l l l t u r y roiul . 150 fiM't w l i l cf n n n .ItMwy Ci ty (<> ( 'Mindcn. oiu'-UnH1 't h i ' I'oHt to he h o r n o by t h e l lovoru-JinI»IIt. o i i c - q n a r t c f hy tho S t u t o umV,o n i ' - q u n r i c r hy iljc coutitlcH. Me l1

If wiiul i l lie \'iiluiilil<> for t r n t n l n ^ tin* *N u t l o i i u l (Jvinnlsnu ' i i In lonp

WuniPit V.m. Vur Now Nr

At n spiM-lat t 'h ' i ' t inn In ( ' npc M n y

the Mminl <'!' Kducnt Inn WIIH author- ml of aunt Ja in'" schtmlhotisr, to

us I lu 'v r i i n i t ' <>\ r r t h e l u l l s , n l t i n ' (i rw t

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c h a i u p i o n r t h i p w i n d e n o u n c e d . « ho WMMp u r s u e d IIH a I m h c n n d »pi t ui»«ni IIH n m a n ,w h o w i n l i m v l e i l nL nft.iT l i e WIVM d r n d . 1wi l l h a v e y m i j ;n u n t o H i m w i t li y i t u rh n i i n e d HOUI in H o m e h i i m h l e c h i l d p r u y e rna> i n n : " ' H t ' ( 1 '1'tiy w o u u d u - W O U I K I H o fh e a d , W O U I H I H o f f e e t , w o u n d n o l h e a r t .N o w l o o k nt i iy W O U I I . I H n n d n r e w h a t II m v e HiilVrred u n d t h r n u t f l i w h a t h n t t l r H In m Knini t , a n d I e n I r e n t T h e e h y t l n w eWOIMHIM of T h i n e H \ i n | m t l i i / e w i t ll m e . "A n d H e •• d l h y m p u t l u w u t u l H e w i l l \w\\\.( i o n m l t e l l . I C N U H .

A j i u i n , I c o i n m c n d t l i o h i ' h n v i o r nf t h e( l i s e i p l r H t o a l l t h e h e r c n v e d . H o w n i n n yin u a r h nf m o u r n i n g : 1 l l n w m a n y e i n h l e i i i Hill" H o r n n v y o u b e h o l d e v e r y w h e r e ( J n dII;IH H I M o w n w a y of Mikin i i upiu* n f a m -i l y . W e m u s t ne t out- of t i n 1 w n y fo . n u n -injr i - c n r r a t i o n M . W e m u n i g e t ofl l l mwltiKe t h a t et h e r n m n y c o m e o n . n m l f o rt h i s rei iHon t h e r e in JI l o n p p r « e o n H i n n r r u c h -i n u d o w n a l l ' . he t ime , i n t o t h e v a l l e y o r

n h a i l o w v , T I U H e m i g r a t i o n f r o m t • <n* i t i t t ie t c n n l y JM HO VIIH* n n ( ' n t e i ' p r i s r t ha> w rc u u u o t u u u e i ' K t f t n d i t . F . v e r y l imn* w e U ' i \ rt h e e l n n n of t h e s e p u l c h r a l u n l e . T h rnod itniHt l>e h r o k i ' i i , T h e g r o u n d m u s t l i ep l o w e d fo r iVKi i r rec lH h a r v e s t . l ^ t i ' r n i t ym u s t h e p c - o i d r d , T h e d i m t m u s t |U-CSK m i ri - v e l i d s . " I t iw n p | > o i i i l e d i m t it a l l m e no n c e l o d i e . " T I H N c i n i ^ r n l i o n f r o m t i m ei n t o e t e r n i t y k e e p s t h r e e - f o u r l l i H of I h rfani i l ieH of t h e e n r t h in d e s o l a t i o n . T h em r JN r e n t w i t h I n r c w r l U , a n d t h e o l a c ktiiHMcled v e l i i i ' l e s of d e a t h r u t n h l e t h r o u g he v e r y n ( r e e : . T h e h o d y of t h e c h i l d t l m tw a n ' f o l d i ' d s o ( k m e l y t o ' t h e n m l l i e r ' s h e a r ti* p u t i n v n y m t h e c«.|d a m i t h e da i ' kncHH.T h e l a u g h t e r f r n - z e s t o t h e g i r l ' s l i p , u n dt h r roHC K c a t t e r w . T h e hi»v ill t h e h u r \ c w t .l i e l d of S h u n e m M I V S , " M y h r n d . m yh r a i l ! " n n d t h e y • . r v h i m h o m e t o d i r o nt h r l a p of *>i" n i ' t t l i c r . ^ ' u l n w h u o d s t a m h .w i t h t n i n e d i i ' K of w o e w t i \ u U i n t o \\v \u\\-l o r of t h e c h e e k . O r p h a n a g e cr iew in v a i nf o r f a t h e r i . :nl m o t h e r . O h , t h e ^ r u v r inr r u e l ! W i t h (.i-ct h nf » t n W ' it c l u t c h e s f o ri t s p r e v . H e t w e c T i t h e c l o s i n g ( in tep of t h rs r p M l e l i e r o u r h e n r t H fire m n u p l e i l a n dCTUMIICI I .

I s t h e r e u n y e n r t h l v Holiiee'. ' N o n e . AVi1

c o m e t o t h e o h s r ( | i i i e n w e ^i l w i t h t h effrief si r i e k e i i . w e t u l k pa t l i e l i<*a l ly t o l l i e i ri -oul , l u l l M u m t h e nliM>i|uion h a v e puHNed,t h e ciirriiiKe*. I m v e le f t \\H n t t h e t l o o r , l l n -f r i c i n U w h o s t i t i t l fo r n f ew d a v n a r e ^ o u e ,n u d t h e h e a r t sitM in d e m o l i t i o n l i s t e n i n gf o r t h e h l t l e f r e t t h a t w i l l n e v e r n g i i mi m t t e r l l i n t n ^ l i t h e hu l l o r l o o k i u u fur t h eI'll I r a n e e of I h o u r u h o w i l l n e v e r c o m en i j n i u . Miic 11• iIJX i n t o t h e d n r k n c H s . e v e r a m iu m u i c o i n i n i ; IH-I-OHH H o m e h o o k o r urn1"m e n i o r l i l t l e s h o e ov n i e l u v e t ! \ u t I U ' ^ U W Hf o r m e r a s s o c i a t i o n , U I I U O H I k i l l i n g t h eh e n r t ; h>nn t lnyn a n d n i g h t s " ' nu fVer iun( h u t w e a r o u t t h e s p i r i t a m i e x p u n g e t h rh r i ^ l i t l i n e s o f l i fe a m i p i v e h u n « i u ' ( l n e H st o {\\v l i n e n m l d r a w t h o HOMO t i a h t d o w nover the rheek hone anil draw dark linesunder tlie sun ken eye, and tho hand istri'tmilmm. und the voice in litiHky und un-certain, tiiul the iri ief JH wi'iiriiiK, (frindinK*uecuiuumtiiiK. rxhiniHtin^.

Nnw, whut are n\ich to do? Arc theymerely to look up into u hru/.en and iin-tiityinV HI;VV Are they to walk u lilawtedlienth unfed ot Htrriim. nnnlu»U«Mvil byovrrrrachinn treeH? HUH (UH\ lurtird usout on tin? harirn common to die* Oh,no. no, no! I lo linn not,.

He eoiiiew willi svniiwithy ami kindneswami love. He UIUUM-HUUUU «U our uru-f.He HIM'N llie height and the depth nml tlielength and tho hreadth of it. lie in thennlv One that can fully NympiiLlii/.o. doami toll .lomiH.

Smnetinu'H whon wn hiwe iroiiMo ffo ROIn our t'riemlH, and wo explain it, and theytry to Nvtnputhiw, hut they «lo not under-HUIKI ii. They eunnot underHtimd il.lhit Chrwt H«»H nil over it and nil throughit. l lo not only counU Uic tearn nnd ro-north thfl aroniw, hut hofnro tho tonmBturtod, hefon* the KnniOH liPunn, ChrinLHIIW Lha ininoflt liidijiK plnco of your Hor*

Short Talks on

-\i By Cbarles Austin M e s . ^ /< O.i

No. I I .

Rome tlniL' iif'O onu of the lni'|;uKt and must liberal mlvui'tlKi-T.i In a Icmliiij;

ICusturn cily hi\d a .suecelisful salo of a fltock of goods obtuiucd thruu^h tho failure

uf u tiiv-ijiotitur. The mini who failed had a liu^ii cupltnl iuvustt d in his business,

lie curried a linu of jjoods nbfivu tliu avora;;« for foni-

jilctcnusK and desirability. Thoro sconied to bu no

reason l'or hit; failuru uxcojit ouo. IIi:t utol'o mis poorly

udvci tiucd.

Iii ono of thu (idvortiHomontH of the firm which

bought tho Ktock. Iho Ktittonicnt wns nnulu: "'1'ho (Uoro

wns |»o.)iiy atlvcrtiMod, no poorly, indeed, that fow puo-

plc knew of tho existence of KO f;ruat a buainoss houso

unywhore east of Main titreot."

This tntufinction furniKhus tin object lunson that is

most conclusive.

ipi'SBS

• V i.,1 • • - —

%

Mjnn

w

IT

••111 ka, „ to, t

faint in Au t

•Ill <ti,t«'l ,,,/tInt. Hi, ,l,;i ,10U <>ul hytht ,i,/t

liter whu ttt',1."

Tho man who failed advertised, but

he did not udvcrtimj rijdit, or uuoo(;h.

Jiis Block wan sold out by tho adver-

tiser who did advertise properly aiul

liberally.

Advertising is tho most useful of

nil the tools of business, but it hns n

razor edyo. The man who handles It carolosaly is sure to-

wish he hadn't. The mere fact that ft man advertises is by

no means an insurance of busiuess success. Ho must glvo

couHtunt, cmeful thought to tho subject. It is tho only part of

his business which will nevur run itself. Von can got any

other department in the business down to such a system that

it will require verylittlo thought, but tho successful advertiser

must bo always alert and must novor tnko hid hand oil tho

nilvortlsluc; rudder for an instant.

Kvery dny. people, are chaining moro tuid more contWleno

in ndvertising. Moro and

moro of them are turning

to tho advertising; columns

of the pnper for informa-

tion. There is no doubt about this.

The business raou who fail to npprecinto

it ere likely to find Uionisolvea so far behind

tbc times that they will novor catch up. It Is

always better to advertise a litllo too much

than not quite onough. It is bolter to use ft

little mole timo thnu is necessary in tho con-

sideration of advertising nud tho preparation

of ndverlisemonts than it is to bo ever no litllo

carcloss about it.

CttfivrifM, Ckarln AuittH Hair,, Urtf York."Aitrtrtiiutg is tht nuts! usefttt ,•/ fiuiinta

rW t*t il / / "

il. and \\v

oflie

l.aIII I h e e e m i ' -

i inv , imd H e l a l uu it h nn all ahrtorla

l l n n r of o u r l.ui.e'. ' KH e a r t uf o u r h e a r t . S«row . AH lurm HN H e veilu r a v e l i e w i n Mland hyt o r v .

<Wlen w h e n w e w o r e in t roub le , \vu s e n tfor o u r fneudr t , 1ml t h e y wet-o l a r u u a y .T h e y cuulil nut get tu u s . W o w r u t o tot h e m , " ( ' n i n e r i ^h i i n v n y , " ui" t f l t ^ r a p h e d ," T a l t o I hi1 n e x t t r a i n . " They c a n it' a thint, \ ft were n ^ rea t w h i l e in e imni iy orperhapK wvvv Inn l a t e .

Hut C l u i h t iH nlwuvw n e a r l ie fore y o u ,hch i iu l \ on, w i t h i n y o u . N o m o t h e r ove rt l n c u ' h e r iiruiH a r o u i u i h e r ch i l d w i t h HIM IIw a r in t li a n d ecNlacv of a licet ion IIH ("hrist.has HIIHW n t u n a rd you ,

tMiinr at l iuni l , n e a r e r t h a n t lie HtalY IIJHIIw h i c h ymi l e a n , n e a r e r t h a n t h e c u p ymiput I D your l i | i , n e a r e r t h a n t h e h a n d k e r -e lnef w i t h w h i c h you u i p o a w a y yd i i r teai'H,I p r e a c h H im a n e v e r p r e s e n t , all H.vtnpa-t lu/ . iuu, I ' liiiipiiNsionate J C N U H . l l o w c a nvtni s t a y a n a y o n e m o m e n t f rom H i m w i t hy o u r ur i i ' lV' ( i n n o w . ( J o a n d tel l J e m i s .

It is ol'ti'M ( ha t f r i e inU h a v e no p o w e rt o r e h e \ e HN. 'They w o u l d very m u c h l iketn ilu it , l u t t h e y c a n n o t d i s e n t a n g l e o u rf inances , t h e y e a n i m t c u r e ui i r s ick nouna n d r a i s e •mr d e a d , Imt tfiory h e t o ( Iodt h a t 1 le t o wliiiru t h e dinciplen w e n t h a s allp n w e r in l i e u w n i\n»l u n i - n i t h . uiul \\\ ovn

j ra i l Hi ' will ha l l ; o u r ea la in it ieN a m i a!; j u s t t h e n u M t i m e , in t h e prcHonco ol nitI a p p l i n u l i n n e a r l li a n d a roHound imt h e a v e n ,

will raINC mi r d e a d . H e IN m i ^ h l i c r t h a nH e r o d . \ l r in Hwii tor t h a n t h e s l n ' m . Mi*is g r a n d e r t h a n t h e nea. H e \H v a n t e r t h a ne t e r n i t y . A n d e v e r y n w n r d of ( Jod 'n oni-n i | i o l e n c e n ill l eap frniu itH s r n h h i i r d a n dt h e reHnurci'M n| i n l i u i t v he e x h a t m t e d r u t h -o r l i m n t i n t ( i m i H o iu ld HIIHII no t lie de-l ive red w h ' i i lie c r i e s t o H i m for renei \

•Suppone yi n r ch i ld w a s in t n m h l i 1 . H o wini ich would you e n d u r e to net h i m o u t ?V m i w.Mild Kay. "1 d o n ' t c a r e w h a t it wil le o s t . I tmiHt net h im ou t nf t l ia t t r o u l d e . "l)u you t h i n k ( i o d in not m» jjoml n f a t h e ra s y o u ? See inn you n r e in t r o u l IO a n dh a v i n n all p u w c r . ' w i l l H e n o t H t r r t e h o u tl l U u n u mid dc l ivev youY H e w i l l . H o i»n i i u h t y t o nave. H e enn level t h e m o u n t -a i n n m l d i v i d e t h e HCII, a n d c a n e^tinniUN))i h e l ire a n d HHVO t h e s o u l . N o t d i m ofe y e , not weak of a r m . no t feeh le of r eHom-cew, hu* w i t h al\ o l e v u i l y m u l t h e niii-VCI-MO a t 1E nt fee t . t Jo a m i te l l .IONIIH. W i l lyou?

Vo whoHd chcokH are wet willi tho ui(ihtdew of thoirravo, ye who cannot look up,vo vlioNc hourtrt art! dried with the hreatlit»f ^iroe^^l. in the narno of the roliuion of..II'NIIH I'lirint. which lifts every hurdtMi andwi|n*n away o\ciy tear and dt'livorn evoryeuptive and linlilvuH i-vtiyy di\i"Ui\vss, I im-plorc vou in w H<J and i\ 1 .To»un.

A little i-liild wont with her father, amm captain, to sea, and when tho fin*Istorm emm* the 1 it Llo child WUR vory muclifHwhlrnril, nml in thu niuht rHwhoil out ofthe cahin ami Hiiid, "Whero in fatlior,whero in father?" Then they told her,"Kather \H on doek piidittK the vennel nndwiitchiiut tlie HUU'III. The little child iin-mediately returned to )ier herth and nuid,"It1** all rin'lit, for fnther'H on (leek."

0 ye who nre triuncd nntl driven In thinworld, up liy tho mountain** and down hytho valloya uwl nt your witu* on*lH, 1 wantyou to It now tlio lionl Ciod is RiiiiliuK HH»Hhip. Your Kalhor IH on deck. Ho willhriiiK > ou through the darkness into thoharbor'. Tnint in the Lord. Co and toll

Jt'HUrt,

If you RO to Him for pnnlon nnd ftym-pathy, all in well. Kvcrythinn will hri^lit-en up, and joy will ootno to the heart, an<lHOITOW will depart, your HIIIH will ho for-nivon, nnd your foot will touch tho up-wtivd pnth. nnd tho HhiniiiK incHnonRorHthat report nbovo wluit is done noro willtoll it until tho trout niches of God re-sound with the ulud tidinpH if now withcontrition nml full trURtfulncsa of sotil youcontrition nnd full trtmtfulw'll only go nml toll .Tesus.

Ihit 1 d s Il

ly go nml toll .Tesus.t 1 nin oppressed ns I think of'thOROmny not take this counsel j)BjLtnt>V

remain unblessed. I cannot help askingwhat will be the destiny ol' these people.Xerxes looked oil" on Ins araiv. There were2,(il)tl,(H)ll, perhaps the lines) army ever mar-sluileil. Aevxes rode along tlie lines, re\iewed them, enlue haek. and stood onsome high point, lunked nil' upon the, 2,000,-tllltl men and burst into learn. At tliht 1110-InelK, when every one supposed lit? wolll Jhe ill tlie greatest oxullntiou. he broke 'down in grief. They nskeil him why howept. "Ah." he said, "I weep at tliethouitht that so soon all this host will hedead," Sn I think uf these vast pcpula-liuiiNnt iminnrtnl men and wnmen nnd re-iihw the fact that HOOII the places whielikmov them now will know Ihein no more,and they will ho gone —whither, whither?There is u stirring ideu which the paet.put in very peculiar verse when lie said:"fis not for man to trifle; life H brief,

Anil sin is here;Our ago is hut the falling of a '.. . ,

A dropping tear.Not many lives, hut only one have we—

One, nnlv one;HuW s a i l e d siuuild tinlt line life ever he —

Tha i na r row span!

THE POLITICAL CAMPAICM.

Kcpubllrnn Congressional Commit-lee lu'<u!i|iiuvU'i'K will lie 'it CliletiKo.

.lolm W. Kern has been nuinlimtod

!i.r Ihe DetnuernlH for (iovornor of

I nil lima.

Uenioerntle nominees for Stale of-tlces In .North Carolina are lourlni; the.State In a body.

The neptibllfiin State ticket In 1111-luils IN inadc up wholly of men livingoiitHhh' of CIIU-IIKO.

Fonner Coni;ressinan Docken' hasbeen lioiuliiuted fin* tioverniir ol Mis-souri by tho DiMiiocrntM.

Admiral Howey's cousin Is one ofthe dolefjnti'K I'roin Idaho to (ho Di'iu-oenitle National Convention.

Charles II. Corrlniin. of Syracuse,N. V., has been noniliiated for (!ov-ernor by the Socialist I.nbor parly.

The ljoulslnnu Uenioeratle pltitfonuliistrueti'd lor Ilrynn, denouiuril bn-perliillsin and trusts, anil Nyinpallil/.edwith the Hoers.

\ \ ' . S. Taylor has Issued i\ statenu'iitIn wldc.i he di'i'liui'S to be a caiullilatofor tho licpuhllciin nomination lorOovornor of Kentucky,

The National Committee of the Nn-tUuinl (Bold) Henioeriille party haalii'i'ii enlletl for .Inly - . \ nnd It IH ex-pected that a third Presidential ticketwill be named.

ltcar-Ailinlral Sthley wrote toColonel A. K. McClure. ol' Plilladetphlu, that he would not runfor Ylco-Prosldciit nor servo Ifelected.

Clark Howell, inoniber of the Nn-llonal Uenioeratle Conunltteo from(ii'oi'nla, HIIUI: "Thorc l« no possibledoubt that Mr. Itryan will recolvc thovote of overy Southern Stalo at tlioKansas City convention,"

Colonel John 1. Martin, si'iKeatit-iit..(irniK for the Deiuoi'iatle Nntluiial Con.tvntUin, says ho will penult tlu> ooni-i.iitteenicn to name assistants, and thinwill keep from tlio halls nil personsJiot from tlio States tmiinotied to lioI'epi'esmiteil.

Page 7: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

Rockaway Record

T i m i H i l u y . J u n o l i l , 11X11).

fl-IE NEWS EPITOMIZED.

i r n tnmk.Tl i" N n v y )( ipiii'tiii( int hH3 il<H Idoil

'n rsiiihlli-li n lurp> {•(inllii),' mi l l ion itt.Sllll Mil-Jin, ('III.

Tin 1 Mi'roml I nti'riint Wuiul Con^rcHR11' AtllCliCIIII Itl'lMlllllC'H Will llNKOllllllOHI i l » ' ( l i . v ill' ,MI<NII<() n e x t y e a r , l i e -i w r i ' i i A p r i l Mini . I n l y .

T i n ' V i i r H i ' i m i ' l i n i ' i i l IHHUI'II i i r i l o r s'or tilt1 rc l Iri' i iu'i i l til1 Mi t j i>r -<M'urni lWcs l i ' .v M c i T l t l o n i t i T u m r ol' l i ln•c i ir l i lum (li«- n i f c l l m l l .

M n j n r F r t ' t l i T l d ; l''ii«i>r. <>f t h oI'mi i ' l l i n n l l l i ' r y . NIIII IOIII ' I I a t l' 'orl M o -l l o n r y M n r y l n n i l , W I I H p l u c i ' i l o n tin*I'I'IIVIMI Ilnl III 'I 'IUINC o f n;,'!'. l i t ' h a ss o r v c i l I ' o n i l m i D i i s l y f u r f o r t y - f o u rVOIU'N.

l i n n J u a i Cui'HlnK. 1.1.. P . . t i n 'v I M I T in In' KI'IU i i i U I I y

UN t)U' l l l p l o i l l l l t h1 I'l'lH'fHI'llijll !\' l ' 111'I ' m • i i n y , W H S f o r n u ' i ' l y p r i ' s r n l o i l l otill' I ' lVKlll l ' l l t .

llrnt

Tin' Supri'ino v our! of Culm linn•iilt'tl Hint, mirier tin' lU'ori'i' of <!(>ni>rnlili'onkt', only civil lnniTlani'H iiro lepriil.\i\ npimnl will \M> tnlion to tin1 UnitedHnlos Supi'i'ino Court.

Govt»rnor-(ii'iionil Wooil IIIIH doclilodit appoint a Hpiu'lnl onintiiiNKlnn UiNlft\w mmiormiN O'III'UOH of otnolnl cor-•iipllon In Culm.

(Iclicrnl Milt-Arthur nt Manila reportstlio rupture of tin1 rcbi'l Ucni'i'als III-?.nn niul (.'nvostany.

Multitudes offered puirirestloiiM forrlvll rule In tlio riilllpplni'B durliiK:ho Tuft Commission's first week ofwork nt Manila.

General Miixlmn Geuira lias writtenit letter eonreriiliiK tlio ell'ortH of linth:he National ami ItepiiliUenu partiesin CuVin to convince tlio people thattie favors tlielr cnnilldntes for olUee.

llnmnnrin.lawlessness lias lieen resumed In St.

ijOXils because of the failure to Hi'ttle:he wtivet ear strlUe.

While vorklnit on tlio canlllovcrwldjte lit .Miimirn KnllH, N. V., HenrySelpplo fell Li(Rl . 't to luHtaut ilealli.

ThoiiBnnds of KUKIIHII nparrows linvoneon found dend In Chlcngo streets,^ininR been poisoned lijv unknownpersons,

I'nHscncors Crnin Cape Nome tloclnredit Vnni'ouver. II. C, (lint the richnessit ilie (told Holds have not beti» exag-gerated.

A largo number of students fromFairmont Colletre. at Wichita, andfrom the Southwestern Kaunas Col-lege, nt Wlnllold. boys and Kills, havecone Into the Kantian wheat He. 3 as'.larvesters.

Bishop Totter, of New York City,upheld trusts hi his baccalaureate ser-mou to seniors of Harvard University.

The Federal qum-auimo nt San Krnn-?lact>, cstabll hod been use of fears of(he bubonic ;,lnguo, haa been raised.

Reports from (ho Klondike show(hat the "elennup" will bo $2B.O00.lXX).which Is much larger than was cx-peetod.

Dr. Kennedy, convicted of the mur-der of Polly Uoynnlds, at the GrandHotel, New York City, hns been de-nied a new trial by the Now York!?• jiromo Court.

David Work gave n birthday pnrty,nt which ho presented each of his tonchildren with n check for $0000.

A Snn \ Ve freight train ran Inton loaded street car nt Hutchlnson,Kan., kllllliK throe persons nnd badlyInjuring four others. The dend areMrs. William Hureh, Jlrs. J. S. Pnt-ton nnd Mrs. Georgo Coon.

Tlio pr. <pcrlty of the farmora In theNorthwest Is Indicated by the factthat innny of them are, ranking ar-rnuRoments to visit the Paris Exposi-tion tills summer.

Tho Mldvnlc Stool Compnny, ofPlillndolpliln. Is to erect n Inrge ar-mor pinto plant to compote with thoCarnegie and Huthlohoin Works InGovernment contracts.

Government cnglnoers nscortdln thatthe current In tLo Chlengo lllvor lanot too strong for navigation.

After receiving two gunshot wounds,Watchman Jnmos Delnnay shot andkilled nn unknown burglar nt Chicago.

Governor Shnw, of Iown. nnd thVeeHhors wore Injured by the collision3f Northwestern trains nt Dos Molues,(own.

I.ucrotln Tenbody Halo, eighty yearsslil. oldest surviving sister of the Hev.i~>v, lOdwnrd Kverett Hale, died InBoston. Miss Hull) contributed to pe-'Tlodlcnls for young persons.

riiNlilint McKliili'y lins nppolnti'ilI'tirini'i1 Iti'pri'si'niiitl\i' W. II. llyiiiini,ill' 1 litllumi. n nii'inlici' of tint ronmils-HIIIII In onillly I hi' ell l il 1 nil I IIIWK of tlioI'lilti'il Slnii'K.

Tlu' Niivy Ucpnriiiioiil IIIIH OHIUII-UHIII'II n 1'nlli'il StmcK Navy ji.'iy ollloonl Hone Kong, wltli ' uyinasii'i- SmithIII I'lllll'tJl'.

lpnrolixn.Tho number of horses nnd mules

«ndod In South Africa since the begin-ning of tho war for military purposess ovel 1BO.O0O, lit n cost of $20,000,000.

l'rtuce de .lolnvlllc, son of the Intot.onl8 Philippe, King of the French, Istaul us n result of pneunumlii.

Kins Humbert opened tbo tweiity-i r s t Legislature ot Italy, IIIB speechirain the tlu-onc being loudly ap-plauded. >

Gcucrnl Kuox, In conynmnU ot nflrltlBh post ut told ltlver, hent ott nDoor attacking y^s". -no loss \va8

"1 on both BltiJ \,

"- \ .A-- v-

Why let your neighborsknow It?

And why give them achance to guess you arc evenlive or ten years more.?

Holier give ihcm goodreasons for cucsslng theother way. It Is vcy easy;for nothing tells of age soquickly as gray hair.

Is a youth-renewcr.It hides the age under «

luxuriant growth of hair thocolor of youth.

It never fails to restorecolor to nrny hair. It willstop tho liair from comingout also.

It feeds tho hair bulbs.Thin hnlr becomes thick hair,nnd short hair becomes longhair.

It cleanses tho scalp; re-moves nil dandruff, andprevents Its formation.

We have a book on theHair which wo will gladlysend you.

If you do not nMnln nil tho bnnft-fUu you axpOQtiMl from tho uiti or llvflVisor, wrlto tho doctor almut It.I'rotmbly thorc Is Homo itlfllruttrwith your CKiiornl nygtnni willedlimy liu omlly rmuotGil. Address,Or. J. C. Aytir, Lowell, Mom.

LABOR WORLD.

T'nlnn con! uiluoru In KntiRnH hnvcwon their strike.

A cv>i\feveiH'o bi\H I't'on npveed on ntChlcii(,-o to Mettle labor illlllcultloatlK'I'O.

A (rencrnl strllie of the biillilluRtrndvH in KniiHiiH t'lty him l>eou or-(lereil.

A Jury nt Kansas City. Mo., ileclnrpilthe Coal Dealers' ('lull In the city wasiu\ HloK'il combine.

The wholesale j;rocerH of Memphis,Tenn.. close their Mores every iuiydurliiK the summer at 'J o'clock.

Miners In the Scbuylklll iPenli.) TO-plon will he pnld one per cent, IK'IOWthe J-..">(l hauls lor the lust half otMay and llrnt half of .hine.

MemberH of various circles of tboHrotherhood of the l.nlou In (lainden,N. J., have formed u preliminary or-Kiinlnitlon to supproHH child Inlwr intho elty.

There are now forty pearl-buttonfactories In luwa, working up shollsprocured from tho river IIOCIN. Near-ly ltiOO iM-oi-lo are employed In tliofactories alone.

Seven Ihousitid dock laborers InLondon have struck, HIII'IIIIIK that thenjjrooiiH'Ut Avlth ri'spoct lo overtimeand inoal tltno hud boon violated bytheir employers.

The Now York clRnrninkors' ptrlkesnro extentlliiK '<> ri'iiiiHyivnnln, utrlki-Bhelnp ordered thoro to prevent tlrmnHIlliiK oiih-rs for HruiN In Now YorkCity, whose einployoH are on a strike.

Then" ore nine branches In NewYork State of the Women's Internn-ttonal l i i ion Labor Iycntnii), WIIOBC ol>-jeet Is to persuade working men amiwomen to buy ouly goods benrtng theunion 1UIH>1.

A grcnt nntlonnl orpunlzntlou ofw»od workerR, with o>-or 150,000 mem-bers, 18 lu proci>s» of orRiinlzntton. Itwill Include tho United Brotherhoodof Carjwntors, the Anwricnn Order ofStalrliolldiTH nnd innny ewallerunions, •

FORTUNE IN A BUREAU.

Young fiucna Never Sntitoctntl TlkAt l lttMother Wti» So ltlcli.

For thirty-three yer.rs Mrs. Ellen Lu-can, who ilicd n few duya IIRO, lived in nvery modest (iwellian houau in Onialm,Nob', and novor tniulo any jirctcntion towenlth.

After her denth her ROII. John Tjiicas,went into the ronni formerly occupied byher nnd upon lifting a no.\vHpujior oi\t of nInu^nn drinver MHW n Koudly-suod fortunuill gold nnd Kix't'iibiu'lcs.

After Hnondinn wovpral houra in countingthe pile Alt'. Litcus founil thut it amount-ed to iiwl if37,lKX). Itamlca tu.a lie foundsovenif llioiiHiinil dolhira' w o h f G

bdenif

ernment bonds.

lieorth of Gov-

Tb&cure ror J

Iyer and Blood

Foreign Fleet Seizes the Taku r:. ' . :

Alter Being Fired Upon.

RELIEF FAILS TO REACH PEKIN.

T i m r i f f M u t 'J'liKii 1-nitU Sdvr i i H C H H H -

KtlilHllllia Hul lvr l l t m v l u n l 1,01,1, A I I H . H U

A l l l o i l I ' l u ' c n — l l i . l lu f I 'or . , - I C . I I M I , .

l o TIVII - I 'MIII — CI1I1111 N o w ttl W i n

W i t h II... G'lvlllzml IVoj l . l .

London ( l l y Cnblci . —Clnun drclnrcilwnr ji^iiliist (In. world w h e n tin- Tnk 11fortH opi-ned lire upon lln- lutrrtiut lonul llei't. A .InpniioKc illNpuichIIOIIL wl l loh reached ( 'her FIJI) I'pilllTulu i brmiKbi Hie ni'WN llmt llu- I'orolgn a d m i r a l s nl Tnkii IHMICII 1111 ultl111 ritti 111 to Hie roinimimliTH of 1I111 Tnkufortu deiuniulliiK the wltlnli' invnl utthe ir troopH bol'oro « p. 111. .him1 17.T h e forlM opened lire on lln- wiirsli l | isnt YlA't o'rlocU Mundiiy morn ing , nuilthe ltuKHljiu, Krenrli , l trl i lnh 11ml ,Inpiini'Hi1 Nhlprf replleil . TI111 I'urtN hiirrendered til'tei- heven IIOUI-M' lutinlmnl-iiii-tit. T h e I'urtB on l i o t j NUII'H i.1!' theI V H I o nit1 now occupied by tin.1 Ill(ernnl lonnl COI-CCH.

It In reported Hint Hie Ilrltlnh wnrBlilp Algcrl i ic , t l ie (Jcruinii g u n b o a tlltlM niltl it KUHHlllll ^Ml\Ut>1l t Wvl'Olinilly d a m a g e d by Hie lire from thef o r t s . It IH Hinted Unit t h e ItilHuliincuumilt lcu w e r e t e n ki l led ami forty-l ive w o u n d e d ; ( i e n n u i i , three Rilledund Heven w o u n d e d ; BrltlNh, 0111:kll lud ami oun w o u n i l o d , nnd Kreueli ,o n e kil led anil onu w o u n d e d , a tola]of twi ' i i ty -one k i l l e d and Ul'ly-ueveuw o u m l e i l .

i 'he ChlnoHo lorjiptlo limits h a v e beenseized by the nllleil licet.

Tho ti'U'Kruph line and the rnllwnybetween Tnku mill TleuTslu himboon destroyed.

Tlio Jiipnni'Ho dispatch boat nlaobrought newu Hint the li'Kntionti niI'cklu hail been tnken, anil thnt tinlulcruntlonnl colunin, under AdmiralHuyniuur, after trying for '. wool: togel through to rekln. hnd been comlielleU tu return to Tlen-Tulu.

London (By Cn hlfl - Lord Siillsbury,when questioned In the House ofLords on tlio (/IIIIIOHO Hit nil I Ion, saidho ri'Kri'tted lie mm unable to enlight-en the House on Hie slate of nllali's InC'lilnn. Admiral Seymour, he contin-ued, had returned to 'i'lon-Tulu, butthe Government did not know exactlywhy, nor wlmt Admiral Seymour's In-tentions were. It IH feared thnt thecheck to Atlmlral Seymour's forces,ncccHHltntlug their return to Tloii-Tslu,will lend to large accessions to therniiks of the Boxers, i.nd make theiruupprcsnlon ttlll more dllllcult.

IIDRltVINO TKOOl'S TO CHINA.

United Ntntoi, Enslunil anil Frnnco OrdoiBolillom to tlio Hoono of Trouble,

Mnnlln (By Cable).—The Ninth Ilogl-inent hns been ordered to Mnn.Uu,whence It will proceed to China. ,

The guuboat Concord, with marinesaboard, 1ms milled under ueuled orders,supposedly for China.

• London iBy Cable).—The British Gov.eminent hns decided to dutncli u divi-sion (10,000) men of Infantry, threobatteries of artillery and a siege tralufrom the Nntnl iSIr Kedvers Huller'8)forces Cor liumcdtutv dispatch to Chlnn.England Is accumulating military andnaval forces In Hie far East.

Tin-Is (By Cable).—The MlulHter otMarine has ordered a division of cruis-ers got ready for sea to reinforce tboFrench sipinilron in Chinese waters.Transport Is also being prepared totake military reinforcements.

TUH PIIB8IDKNT ACTS 1'ItOMPTLY.

lluttlofililp Oroffou im Woll nn Troop!From ninnllit Onlorcri to Clilna.

•\\'nshlugtou, U. C. (Special).— ThePresident hnsHon' Instruetlons to Henr-Admiral KeinplT directing him to pro-tect American Interests, nnd to thatend to net concurrently with the rep-resentatives of the other powers. ThoAdmiral's powers nre nmplc to solzofortB, (Ight or do anything, provided ItIs In his Judgment necessary for theprotection of American Interests.

Tho President hns nlso directed Gen-oral MncArthnr by cable to send fromtho Philippines three regiments ofregulars to Tlen-Tsln, which, with thesupporting bodies, will make a forceof CiOOO men.

Tho battleship Oregon has been or-dered from Hong Kong to Tnku.

BOERS REFUSE TO GIVE UP.

Commnmlnnt Ilotlin Decline! to Arcop,(lonoral ltoborti's Stigiraitlon.

London (By Cnble). — General Rob-erts, according to n Boer ulspntch fromMnchndodorp, sent n messnge to Coin-ninndnnt-Geuernl Louis Botha siig-Rostlng disarmament, and compliment-ing tlio bravery of tho burghers. Itwas pointed out that the surrenderwould ho without dishonor to thebnrghera, and would prevent muchsniveling.

General Ilotlin naked for :> six tlnys*armistice, lu order to confer end cou-Hldor. General Roberts consented tollvo tlnys. finally Genornl Uothn de-clined to accept tlio proposnl, and hos-tilities were renewed.

Tho Uoycolt In St. Loulii,Tho controversy between tho transit

coinpnny nnd Its striking employes InSt, Louis lins developed into n strugglebetween cnpltnl nnd labor along tlio"vin^ of A bovcot^ ,

FATAL INCENDIARY FIRETen Dead and Many Injured in a

New York Tenement,

POLICEIVIEN MAKE BRAVE RESCUES

All ICnllru I'I.II.IIV Wiped Out—Ol Air

iilln-r lloiim.liiild I lu.11 Are llt-ii.! mill

Ml* A M Novnrvly Injiirtnl—A 1'ulliw.

•••an ICInk. IIIn I.II.1 to Hitvu I i i ip.u-

Illot] TUIIIIIIIH IUKI U'lm lia«ll> lltii'iu..l.

New York (Mly iSpeclnh.- Ten i>('i-BOHH miffoirnled nr liurnml to deutli, 111 -cludlut; one enllrc fiunlly of Hevcn |HT-Bonn; BCVOU Korloiisly Injured, twoHllKhily Injured, nnd 11 pm]>i.riy IOHHnot exeeodlh); ifBixX). That Is the re-Mill ol' a lire of mysterious originH-ldeli nultid an Mld-l'iiNhliiiied llvo-utory lenoiuent lit No. ill JIICICKOIIbtreet. The dead 11 re: William Cotter,laborer, forty yours: Kate Coltor. Illswife, llilrt.v live years; Mary ('otter,laughter, thirteen yours, Josonh Cot-tor, sou, twelve yours; Kate Cotter,dnuKhter, nine yours; John Cotter, winthree yeurs; Wllllatn Cotter, KOII. nineIBOIIIIIN; LOIIIII Marlus. laborer, fortyyears; Mury MarluB, Ills wife, thirty-eight years; KUlo Murlm, ilnuglitvr,elx yenrs, nnd ratrlcli Byrne, twonty-flve years. Thnt the roll of dead andInjured WIIB not far greater IB tluv tothe fact that four policemen did theirduty nobly. One lu particular, I'ntrol-iniiii Jiunos T. Knowlos. covered lilin-solf with glory, The lire started tlbout2:40 o'clock 11. 111. Tin- flninos hudgained full headway before any of thethirty or more [IITHOIIB In the buildingawakened. An employe of a near-byhnUury was the llivt lo KIVO the nlnrrn.

Patrolman .iamcH T. Kuowles ht'iirdthe commotion wlilcli follow>d the cryof warning, ..'jd run from IIIH pout, rnp-plnj,' on thu curb for nsHlBtance. I'n-trolninn Selleck henrtl the nips, andJoined bin brother oltlcer. Togetherthey forced an entrance Into the bousenext door and made tbolr way over anarrow stone ledge to tho window op-posite, from wlik'h the llnmes worepouring. Up through the smoke thepolicemen groped their way to thurooms occupied by the Cotter family,now tcnnntK.

On the other side of the floor livedthe Mulhenrns, husbnnd, wlfo nnilthroe children, mid a boarder, LnrryKllroy. They wore pushed out andBent to the street. The clothing of oneof the pollcenien wns then In tlnmcs.He crushed the lire out with his linnds.The Fire Departini'iit came, and life-saving lndders were run up. Firemenentered the burning building nndfound tho Cotter fnnilly hnd per' iod,Further Investigation resulted In thodiscovery of tho other vletlins.

Within n few blocks of the tenementwbcro ten persons fierlsbcd In tboflames another fire occurred, resultingIn the denth of one person nnd the In-jury of nine others. Tlio dend person1B Mrs. Jennie Solomon, thirty yenrs ofage, found burned to death 111 the rearof tno tlrst floor.

Tho building, No. 20 Itutgers street.In which this occurrod. has lieeu ten-anted but n few months. It containedsix floors nnd a bnsemout. SamuelSolomon, who lives Intho front on thoflrst floor, conducts a millinery estab-lishment. He was chnttlng In the frontwith a friend when n gust of windblew n luce curtain ngnlnst the gnsJot The men ran for water, nnd be-fore thoy returned the entire contents'of the room wcrehlnxlng up and smokewns pouring through the nnrruw stair-ways to the roof.

The flninos were extinguished In nfew minutes. When It wns thoughtHint nil the tenants hnd gotten outBnfoly the body of 11 woman wns foundlu the hallway In the rear o( the tlrstfloor. She hnd been burned to dentilShe was Identified (is Mrs. Jennie Sol-omon, wife of Samuel Solomon.

MRS. GLADSTONE DEAD.

tVl.lniT of Ilia ••Orniul Olil Ainu" or Enclnnd Pu«lo6 Awfty nt Hnworden.

London (i>y Cnble).—Mrs. Glndstoncthe widow of William Ewnrt Gladstone, tho Ku^iish stnU-smnn, Is dead.Hor body v i s burHl In WcstmlnsteiAhl>ey bosiilo that of her husbnnd.

Sirs. William Ewnrt Gladstono wafelBlity-cljrbt years old, and hnd beenslowly sinking for some time imst nlHa warden O.i'lic, the family sent

Lehigii

Sold Cheap forCash. In AllQuantities.

in. wmmn ra ro.,llpokaway, W. J _

yspepsia CureDigests what you eat.

Itartlllclally digests the food and aidsNature In Btrengtlicnlnf; and rocon-Btructlng the exliauntad digestive or-gans. It Is tho latest dlscoverod digest-ant and tonic. No other preparationcan approach It In efllclency It In-stantly relieves and permanently curesDvBpcpsIa, Indigestion, Heartburn,Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea,SlckIIcadache,Ga8tnilt,'la,Cranip9,anaallotherresultsof lmperfectdlcestlon

Prepared bv E C. DnWItt ft Co.. Cblcaao.

CHICHCSTER'S ENGLISH

flnff*. Alwnyi, n'llnbli'. l*ndlrK, wiU HriirKlHt fbr<!••< HlvSl |:|t'N EN41LINII lu I l n l anilUotii inrlunic bui«>.s, Hiiuh-.l with bluu ribbon.T n k r n o tithrr. •t^flinit (InnicrruuN iinbRtl-flutlmixiiml luiltntl i ina. ltuy of yuur Dnumhl,or m.llil -If. In Htimins fur I'arllfuliirft. Tfntl-UMintnlM i«\(\ " l l r l l r f for l<»01t>».'* I't Irtter,h H M l l 1 0 0 0 0 ' J V U I U S l J bl lrf for l<»01t». ,

10,000'JVnUuiuuInU SulJ by« l

hv r H u r n Mu l l ,nil lJnKri;lHtft.

OHIOnnSTEH OnBMlOAL OO.B100 .T»u<ll»<,n Nqunni, I'llILA., P i ,

ttantlon Ulll p«|ier.

TRADC MARKSDESIGNS

COPYRIGHTS AC.Anyone Bonding a nkptrh and do&crlntinn may

fiatokly tiBCort&ln our opliuvn frcu whother annrontlon IH pmbnblj nntcntaMa Ciimmunlra.

tlonnfltrlctljoonOdontlnl. llandbookon 1'ntontisont froo. Uliient ngonuf tor BocurlnuJiatont*.

rntonta ttkkon turuuiltl Munn It Cu. rvcolTO

una. TTIIXILM Aw*nt OLADSTONS.

8ho wns tho i.'ltlest dimgliter of tho InttSir Ulchnrd (llynxic. Bnrt., ot Huwiu1-rten CnBUc, nnd wns mnrrlcA to MrGlndstono lu 1830. Ho died May II),1808.

feho wua a woninn loved nnd nilralreilhy tlw vast ctrcln of those •wh6\c<unclu contnet with her busy niid, vnlcd^Ife. 8uo huJ gi-oat. luOaencc oyqi ie r

ion*

Scientific American.A hondnomvlr UlustratHl weekly. I-orRost clr-oulntlon uf any •dontiUo loumftl, Tornm, f9 aroarj four months, 9L Sold by nil nowadcalom.

MUNN&Co.38'6™4™'-New York

Draoch Offlco. G2i F 8U WaahloutgQ. D, C.

Wall PaperALL STYLEST

ALL PRICESjj'rom 8c up..

A. G. BUCK,Dover, N. J.QE0LE.Contractor

andBuilder.

PLANS ANDFIRMSUKD.

Rockaway N. J.John NorriB,

Real EstateInsurance.

and

Carotul an6 'rompi Attoniion oivcn to thoIteming on*! Oikloor l'rororty nn'l Collection o(llcnt». Monci1 to Loan on Howl nnil Morlcnso

KOOKAWAV,

NEW JEttSEY.

FIRE INSURANCEJ. P. STIOKtiK,

I rcrroBont tho boat companies, wm msko yottnor/ecUyBniolncasuotllro. KOyiao ypiii withrcaflr money. Sly compantiii settle all oiairaiQuickly. Insure now. It will oost jou less thanyou think.

Dr. David Itennedyls

Page 8: ROCKAWAY, N. J., THURSDAY, JUNK 21, 1900. SUMMER SHOES ...test.rtlibrary.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/... · McKinley and Rosevelt Sjiccial to thv Record. Theodore Rosevelt,

Rockaway RecordThursday, June 21, 1900.

MARRIED.

JJEFLEH—ELMF.II—At tho PresbyterianpiirsouaKi', Hookawuy, on Wednesday,June 20, 11)00, !iy Hov. Thomas ABuuvoM, Frederick J. Iii'flor, of 1'usKuicand Mitrn Flot^io L. Eluiur, of Hock-awuy.

SEKZON—SANDKU—At the M. E Punson-uj?o, Rookiiwiiy, N. J., ThursdayJQUO 21, 1000, by Ruv. \V. O. TlmhrullMr. Edwiu A. Soozou, of Jin-soy OityaucT Minn Agustu ijuudur, of Nowurk

Their Ann ual Meeting.One eveuiiiR last week tho Douvillo

Gamo Protective AfiBOciutiou hold theirannual meeting at tho Douvillo hotel.The newly elected officers nro president,Olaade Miller, of Nowurk ; vice proni-dent, J. H. Hautiuetou, of Newark;treasurer, E. Dickereou, of Douvllle;Eeorefary, l^red Myers, of Deuville.There were about twenty of the ruein*hers preneut and after the meeting, re-freshments wero served by Mine HostHaden in a creditable manner.

Married Last Evening.Last oveuiug MIHH Flossie L., daugh-

ter of Mrs. Helen Elmor, of thin place,and Frederick J. Lefler, of Pussaic, worehappily married at the Presbyterian pnr-iionage by Hev. T. A. BeevoH. Afterthe oereinouy the happy couple and afow fritmds enjoyed a woddiug dinuorat the bride's home. Later they weutby coaoh to Dover, wliore thoy took atrain to Passaic to occupy their newlyfumishod homo.

Unclaimed LettersAt the Hockaway, N. J., Postomoe foithe week ending June 10, 1U00 :

Mrs. E. A. Chudloy.MIBS Bessio M. Felter.Tho Poerloss Bicycle Oo.Mr. B. Schatel. (2)Miss Nettie Tnttle.To obtain the above say advertised

aud give dato of this list.WM. GILL. P. M.

A Sure Thing.To our readers who aro anxiously

awaiting the news couoeruiug the nowindustry about to locate here, we wouldsay according to all reports and appear-auces it is a sure thing. The grentorpart of the money has been securod, andthe committee of the Board of Trade,•who have the matter ill charge, reportprogress. We may bo able to say morenext week.

Now is the Time.The managers of tho Electric Light

and Improvement Oo., wish ns to an-nounce to our townspeople that theyhave a lot of material now ou baud withwhich to do house wiring and if thosewho aro contemplating having that-kind of work done will como forward insnfllciont numbers, an electrician will besecured and the work done at aboutcost.

TOM WASN'T MODEST.

Ha Told the General Who Wai theBeat Rider and Sol*

, dler.

' ArTEngMish g-ent'rul in reviewing1 acorps of cavalry stopped before aBpleudid-looking fellow and asked ab-ruptly:

"Which la the belt horee in the regi-ment?"

"No. 40, sir.""What makes you think he 1» the

•best horse?""He walks, trots and gallops well;

IB a good Jumper; has no vice, no blem-ish; carries his head well; la in hisprime."

"And who Is tho beet soldier in thisregiment?"

"Tom Jones, sir.""Why?""Ik-causo he is an honornble man, la

obedient, tidy, Uikes pood care of bisequipment and his horse, and does hisdutifs well."

"And who Li the best rider of thebest hnrse?"

"Tom Jones, plr.""And who is Tom .Tones?""I am, sir."

Ilmevt ("iinlllnK-

The gardens in Hamburg have within*Tu' last ten yearH been decorated withwhite-leaf maples, 11ml a writer in theZoologist Bays that Bince the Introduc-tion of these shrubs the common whitebutterfly has chosen them for its set-ding places. Concealed in tho whiteleaves, the butterfly Is safe from ene-mieR. An anecdote, more suggestive ofInflect reasoning, is told of a apldvr byJames Weir. It spun Its web In a saw-mill in a place where the passing oflumber frequently broke the long staythreads that held the web. The s'tu-atlon was too favorable for flies to beabandoned, and finally the spider gotaround the difficulty by discarding theuse of Btays and xubstituting for them,to keep tho web stretched, a nail which.It wove into the lower edge of the fab-ric

Slberlnn Fnrm Life,The most characteristic feature of

Siberian farm life IH thnt the fnrmcrsJive not Bcnttered all over the country,remote from' neighbors but In villagesnn near ns posoible to the land they nroonltivatlQg,...'.*.. •w.,vv....r.;7V'...'.^-...... .

THE ROCKAWAY CEMETERY RECORDS.BY J. P. CRAYON, ROCKAWAY, N J.

(Continued from lust week.)

Tho early family records hnd boonlost, but history mentions Fredoriok,and Jacob a probable aon. They weroalso among the earliest settlors at NewFouudlimd in this (Uookaway) town-ship. Tho mytliioul inscription"P. x 9. 17711" ou tho triangular stouetibovo tho door of the old stone housenow owned by Thoodore Brown, may bointerpreted that the building was ereot-od by Peter Suyder in 177a. It woe anaddition to the original stoue hoaRo builtjust forty years previous upon the laudsowned by a member of tho DoMonthfamily, who boated there from Bockn-way Valley about 1780, aud inherited bytho wife of Peter Suyder, who was adaughter of tills early settlor at NewFonndlaud.

Mr. Thomas DuMouth, who (?avo mothis information, livod and owuod laudswhero tho Clinton reservoir now is,these lauds bolug oocupiod by IIIB father,Thomas, a desooudaut of tho originalfamily in Amorion. Ho was born Sept.a, 1804, died July 2, 1881. MarriedBetsey Levi, of Litohflold, Ot. Herpeople wero amoug the first settlors ofthat county. She was born Oct. 1, 1700,diod Sept. 8, 1887. Both bnried at OakRidge. Children : Wosloy, who servedin tho war '01-6 ; Elocta, married Rev.Peter D. Vroeland Nov. 12, 1H5II; Elizn-both, married Patrick Burns Nov. 10,18(17; Thomas, Jr., born Oct. 4, 18118,diod Ang. 4, 1858 ; Hiram, born Mar. 1)0,1840, married Stagg, died about 1800;Abuor and Miuorva.

THE FORD FAMILY.The »hip Forlune, a vossel of 40 or

SO, tons sailed from London, England,July, 1021, with thirty-five passengors;arrived one year after tho Mayflower,aftor a long aud tedious voyage, havingboon takou by a French mau-of warand released to the Plymouth Colony,Deo., 1021, with Beauty provisions. Thofollowing were a list of piwsengors:Johu Adams, William Bassito, WilliamBeale, Jonathan Brewstor, OlomeutBrigg, John Cannon, William Oonor,Hobort Oushma-u, Thomas Uushmau,Stophou Deau, Philip De-la-NoyoThomas Fluvcl and sou, Widow Foordaud four children, Hobort Hicks, Wil-liam Hilton, Uouuett Morgan, ThomasMortou, Austin Noahols, WilliamPalmer, William Pitt, Thomas Priuce,Mosos Simousou, Hugh Static, JamesUtoward, William Touch, Johu Wius-ow and William Wright.

Tbe ohildreu of tho Widow Foordwere, William, Martha, Johu, and ouowhose name the records fail to give.But little is known of the children othorthau William. Ho had children : Wil-iam, Michael, Moliceut aud Margaret.William (2) married Sarah Dingey, andhad childrou : John, born at Duxbury,Mass., 1(151), settled at Woodbridgo, N.J., before 1700, was deacon therein

709, and older iu 1710, canie to Morriscounty before 172-1. Mercy, marriedSamuel Thomas. Josiuh, and perhapsothers.

John, who camo to Morris county,marriod Elizabeth Freeman at Wood-bridge, Dec. 1 !i, 1701. She was born atAxtol, England, Miir., 1(181,diod at Mor-ristowu, Apr. 21, 1772. She marriod (2)John Lindly—John Ford having (lied litor near Morristown bol'ore 1724.

Children of Johu and Elizabeth : Ex-perience, born ut Woodbridgo, about

02 ; Jacob, born Apr. 18, 1704, marriedHannah, danghtor of Jonathan andSusnunah (Kitchel.) Baldwin, 1724. Hebecame a merchant, and largely interest-ed iu the manufacture of iron in Morriscounty. Was colonel in the Revolution.Dii'd of fevor at Morristowu, Jan. 10,1777. His wife was born Nov., 1701,died ut Morristown, July .11, 1777.Samuel, born Oct. 11, 1710, marriedHannah's sister, Sarah Baldwin, 17112.Died at Morristowu, Ang. 11, 1752. Hiswidow married (3) John Allen, Sept. 110,17D1), (!)) Solomou Boyle, Jau. 5, 1701!.She was born July 82,1701), died Apr. 22,1781). There wero porhaps othor ohil-dren uot ou the records.

Children of Jacob aud Hannah : Johu,born Apr. 5,1728, married (1) PonolopoJennings Mar. 20,1748. She diod Oct. 18,1748. (2) Martha Raynor Jan, 20, 1751,died Feb. 14, 1707. Phobo, born Fob.20, 1730, mnrriod (1) Samuel Arnold,Oct. 1(1, 1748. Ho diod Oct. 8, 1704, aged88, (2) Jouns Phillips Deo. 24,17(1(1. Howas born March 13, 171)5, diod Doo. 13,1818, sho di(born-July ;'(>JKenny, Aug.Tuthill, sonwavboru Sept.

Aug. 2, 18111. Sarah.1782, marriod (1) John

1741), (2) Dr. SmnuolL Joliu, Nov. !), 17C1, hog3, 1721, died May ill,

T < .

1814. Sho died Nov. 11, 1K11. Maryboru about 17114, married Aziinuli Dunham, of Pificutua, Mny 21, 170!). Junoboru Jun. 20,178(1, married Moses Tiutlosou of Joseph, Doc. ID, 1750, died Nov22, 171)4. Ho was boru Nov. Ill, 1782died July 11, 1810, both bnried at llocka-way. Jacob, Jr., born Feb. 10, 1788married Theodosia, daughter of IievTimothy Johnes, of Morristown, Jau27, 1702. She WHS loru Sept. II), 1741diod Aug. Ill, 1K24. He was also colouelin tho Revolution, and died eight daysbefore his father ou Jan. 11, 1777. Davidboru Apr. 2, 1741, died Mny 1U, 1700Elizabeth, boru May 20, 1748, died July18, 1740.

Ohildreu of Samuel and Sarah : Jonathan, born 178U, married Eunice, daughter of Jonathan and Temporance (Dick-erBon) Odoll, Mar. 1, 170(1. He aud hissou, Johu Odoll, were largely iuterestodin iron workB iu the nppor PequauuocValley, and built some of the first forgosthoro. Ho died at Stockholm, July 12,1817. His wifo wns boru 1742 diod atStookholm July 24, lsao. Samuol, Jr.,married Oraoo Kitcliell, daughter ofAbraham, of Rookuway, Jau. 20, 1767was counootod with money makingschemes, loft aud went to Virginiawhero he chauged uamo to Baldwin,married aud had childrou thoro—dato ofdeath unknown. Charity, married Ab-raham ltitcholl, of Rockaway; Hau-uah, boru about 1740, married JosephMorris, sou of Stophou, Apr. 12, 1750Ho was boru 1782, died from wounds ro-oeived tho 111 Revolution war Jan. 5,1778. Eunice, baptized Apr. !), 1748,mar-riod (1) Stephen Mooro Apr. 21,1701,who diod Jan. 1U, 1777, aged 80; (2)John Scott, who died Juuo 5, 1800, ngod87. Sho died Mar. 8, 1802. Demos, bap-tized Apr. 14, 1747, married (1) MaryLewis, who diod Sept. 17, 17S1), agod 28(2) Rachel, who as his widow, marriedOalviu Caullold. James, boru Nov. 21,1717, mnrriod Elizabeth Odell, daughterof Jonathan, May I), 1770. Sho was boru1740, diod Jau. 20, 1K10. Ho died Mar.1, 1827.

Ohildron of Johu and Martha (Raynor) Ford : Pouelopo, baptized Nov. 8,175!!; Jneob, baptized Nov. 3, 1768 ; Han-nah, baptizod Dec. 11, 1754. Mahlon,boru July 20, 1750, died at Ogdonsburg,N. Y. Ohillion, boru Deo. 30, 1757, wascolonol in Revolution, had wife, Harriet,who diod Deo. 17, 1803, aged 81, wasconnected with tho business interest ofRookaway, as store keoper. The frameof tho old store ia now oocupied by Cen-tral R. R. as a depot. It is said ho cou-traded oholoro- nt New York ou a busi-ness visit, diod Boon after his rotnru atRoobnway, Oot. 10, 1800, was buried ntMorristown. Johu, baptizod Sept. 2,1750, diod before 1707. David, boruApr. 18, 1701, was colonel, went toOgdensburg, N. Y., 1804, died Nov. 0,1885. Nathan, born Doo. 8, 1703, uerermarried, diod Apr. 20, 1820.

Ohildrou of Phobe (Ford) Arnold:Jacob, baptizod Feb. 34, 1754, marriedEliznboth Tuthill. Johu, boru Nov. 10,1752, diod Dec. 14, 17C0. Hnuuah, born•Inly 22, 1754, died Doc. 14,1750. Samnol,born July 8, 1757, diod Nov. 28, 1700.Phebo, boru Ann. 12, 1700, married JohnKouuy Oct. 21, 1778, died Fob. 17, 1820.Konny died 1K!!2. Anne, baptizod Mar.27, 1708, married George Tucker, sou ofPhilip, Jan. 7, 1787, died Sept. 17, 1807.He was boru 1700, died Get. 20, 1807.Cliildrou by Phillips: George, baptizedApr. 10, 1708, died Jan. 10, 1780.Samuol, born Apr. 0, 1770, diod May 0,1771. Mary, boru Sept. 18, 1773, diedJuly a, 1H11.

Children of Sarnh (Ford) Tuthill:Elizaboth, baptized Apr. 1, 1764, mar-ried Col. Jacob Arnold Oot. 1, 1770.•Inno, baptizod May 10, 1700, mnrriedDr. Lewis Duulinm Mny 4, 1777, hndfour ohildrou, Sarah, baptizod Juuo24, 1859, married (1) Jonathan Stiles,Jr., Nov. 32, 1775, hnd four ohildren.Ho diod, Feb. 4, 1807. (2) Rov. WilliamWoodbridgo Deo. 14, 1810. Thocdorus,baptizod July 13, 1701, married JaueHanoook 1708, who wns boru 1750, diedJuno 1, 1814. Ho diod Aug. 10, 1805..Samuol, baptized Oot. 80, 1708, not mar-ried, diod July 27, 1884. Mary, bap-tizod Jan. 19, 1700, mnrriod RodolphusKont Nov. 11, 1878, hnd thirteen ohil-drou. Ho wna born 17C4, diod Mny 0,1820. Sho diod Oot. 20, 1810. Hnnunh,baptized July 10,1708, mnrried Dr. Wm.OiinipQold Nov. 10, 1789. Jacob Ford,born Apr. 0, 1770, diod Deo. 37,1709, Achild diod Sopt 13,1773, child diod July

28, 1777.

.)

and examine the

Labor Saving KitchenCabinets

also the

GO CARTS andBABY CARRIAGES

as well as the

Porch Rockers andSwinging HammockChairs

to make you comfortable during the hot weather.

H. D. & J. T. TUTTLE.

The Modern Hardware Store

Warm WeatherComforts

Do you need a Refrigerator this summer?We've different styles and sizes to show you.Our Refrigerators are built of seasoned hard

lined with heavy zinc and charcoal filled.We're Rockaway's Headquarters for Refrigerators—

better call and them.

wood,

HAMMOCKS.For beauty and comfort, there's no hammock equal toours. There's many different styles and colors foryou to select fromlWe.

Screen Doors and Windows.Lawn Mowers and Garden Hose.

Rockaway Hardware and Stove Co.

'lOSSMORE" RANGES COOKS LIKETHEM

FurnnoeB, Fire Places and Open Franhlln Hooters, Parlor and Cook Stoveshave stood the test for over thirty years. Would be ploaBed to sendcatalogue or other information upon reoeipt of luqniry.

2 0 0 X 2 0 2MARKET STjNEWARK N i

21523MECHKNICSTNEWARK H I

Second-Hand ArticlesCheap.

In our trading, buying, and selling second-hand articles wehave accumulated considerable material, which is as good as newand much cheaper, that we want to dispose of at once. They con-sist of:

Autoharp, 50 cents.Flour Chest, 50 cents.25£allon Oil Tank, $1.00.Folding Fishing Rod, 15 cents.

radle, 75 cents.Baby carriage, $2.00.Cylinder Stove, $5.00.5 gall. Oil Tank, 25 cents.

Brass Hanging Lamps, $1.50each.

Soda Fountain, Good as New,cost $rf55, will sell for $1:0.

3 Nicktl Hanging Lamps, 75cents each.

Lot of two-quart Candy Jars, 10cents each.

Three-foot • Oval Front, Nickel-trimmed Show Case, $2.50.

2 Four-foot Square Front, Silver-trimmed Show Cases.

Automatic Blue Flame Stovegood as new. Cost $14.Will sell at a bargain.