A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

8
E5TABU5HED l8 93 .—NO. 1245 OPENING INSPECTION DAYS ^ A.-cLg-cLst A new residence ^art of Oanford will be thrown open these daysi and an invitation is extended to the towns- ^Lje to make an inspection of this new section. ft is knownas^ Normaridie: Park. -..-•-•---.-• Noraiahdie Park begins at tlie intersection of Riverside e and Normandie Place, on the easterly side of the Riverside Drive is being extended along the river for jjay a mile, with parkways and plots alternating between 4e driveand thefiver.": Now installed: Special Notices. _ -Solve-the water -supply <|iH>9tiou-t«r- yourself by having s well drilled on yow own promises by Fmik T. Cliulek, y RaU- CRANFORD LOCALS Up to the-present time_oyer m residents have filed application cards for ha pp privile8e...,n£ drawing .book? lGaW' ; »^w^umb«*: with the Township Committee last night, fol- lowing the Health Board meeting. It "was "found"that tmly normal in- creases, occasioned by the growth of or telephone 250-L. " " V. return of cool weather. Tho car that best sailed to yonrtaS* Jorjn W. Heins and family started aild iiocketliook m»y the Elmore, °'l this morning in their car for Niagara which 11. L. Fink, Westfielil, ha».*{»> p a where they will pick up Miss .agency. Why not settle nil ab » «? Gertrude Holrs and continue their 11 one em 01 iu« iieacu M»JII """HJ" •• _ - n-j,,,-~Vpniip-was find every housewife who thinks of c&nnUtj? >Joeeph GroBB of Parker a\enue was utching tho market ot J.. E. Miller. i|; thrown from his wheel yesterday in front of Crane's feed Btorc and fel on his head with a tores sufficient tc render him unconscious. Theaccident witnessed by Waiter Schole terVij ' as' -street 'tijjhtTrig, I rentals, and other charges not dth voted rentals, and g on at theelections, and that the $4,000 water plant appropriation and the library tax would ' * to a.large extent be taken care by the increase NO DODGING THIS Whether they like it or not, (and the chances are that they don't,) all candidates for State offices this fill, from the Gavsrnor dawn t) tho A»- seih'b'iyrnen, HiuStirisirer'tir trfase to. answer eomo very direct questions on their attitude in regard to local op- tion. And failure to answer will be just as significant as a plain reply. of _ in I This week all. candidates le valuations. As the county Governorship have received -Need any desk blotters, or white or urod card board ? A large supply-at sheet is obtainable at tho Chronicle Attractive rooms to rent, single or -~ r We, conncctiug or separate; table bo»tili waB •« on same block; central location; rifer, who, with the help of another carried view; 111 Springfield Avenue; Mrs. Horace; the boy into Reay's pharmacy, where ^ 3Iont '..-.-:-- -...- „ . : . , . . - ; - _ - _ , r7'iJ--l he was restored to consciousness and Wanted: Byajanrilyof three, a n a aoi| tIlken home . Dr Gilpin's examina- tion showed that the lad had sustained u concussion of the brain. In connection w,ith its report of the One or two gentlemen can flnd " " : "~ > ° A •""""•""miner of the Field furnMicd rooms; reasonable; 4 .„...„_._.._ _. from station; 222 Walnut a remits. [fr* j on Monday announced that thcfollow- _An elderly woman would like to go (jut " " * "•--' nursing in confinement" cases, or tuko c&Ve of invalid. Mrs. K. Stain, cor Oak St. tMi SecondAvo.,.Qanvood, N,,.J. 18-85.. before Saturday a. m. full parficulari'io 0. B. Houston, 225 Kiftli Avo.,N. Y. Citjr. f TUSC CONCRETE SIDEWALKS SEWERS ' GAS ELECTRIC LIGHT SERVICE TELEPHONE SER VICE A. number of houses are now under construction, Having aU ino4e« JmrWJvcments installed. These houses contain 8 and 9 rooms. Our plan for the purchase of plots or houses is an ing officers were elected: Chairman, 1. C r S H l l l i t r ; Mcrctary, W. L. and that the tellers were P. Tlft Hacker; tax will be lower "', than usi year, the probabilities aro that the local rate, when fixed, will be found to be about that of 1009, whichwas Jl.fiO on the $100.' The. public schools will reopen on September 7th, much earlier than usual. Experience of the difficulty of holding sessions for the required number 'of days,—180—without, pro- longing tho spring term until late in June, baa demonstrated the wisdom of beginning the fall term early. The factory of the Ramie Fibro Manufacturing Company at Kenilworth was sold on Monday bythe sheriff to Annie Ruh, the mortgagee. Financial troubles seem to be the destiny of most of the industries of our tieigh- Yowing for the the fol- ntendant. .- of the Anti-Saluon League. Aspi- .. rants for the senate and houe? will . got theirs later. August 23, 1910.. Dear Sir:—On behalf of the great multitude in New Jersey who are working for a law commonly known as tho Local Option, or majority rale license law; andunder the direction—.-i qf the executive committee of the An,ti-Saloon League,. I write you to lean your position on this matter. . This is not a letter personal toyou, but is sent to every candidate for Governor whoso name comes before the people of New Jersey for their ''^^^ A beautiful booklet roailcdon request. GENERAL MANAGER* parts ot Cranford'. G. D. Stone, Potter | is,"the gentlemen" linildintv————______^r,tt For Rent—One store hi tho Win. Sparry building. For salo, two family IIOUBC; also 1 room house for Bale at a. bargaiu. J» 0. """ w> -*" ~* - W. lUukiu Agent, 11 E. North a r ^ ' I U ' lhu township r Dr. James L. Vail is to be the Republican candidate for coroner. - with the F. & R. Club, but served as officers of theRepublican primary, in rooms. bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand <;Mrsi Frederick R. Zundel on Monday. With a new house and a new baby it would seem that their cup "of joy must be brimful. have talks 'withthreo "dTstlnguTsKod' cng3ncerB-prior-to-tho-T6wnahip_Co(m.-. d rnittee meeting of next Wednesday evening, at which timo a choice of plant investigation for "the "townshlpi will probably bo made. The candi- dates for the position are Messrs. 1 Fuerties, Hill and Hess. Mr. Fuer- " city. held- by the members of the Taught In Craofotd An experiencMl teacher by latest methods ' liiisuriiig.tb/irpiighress, ofllcieiicy, success and completion' of'co'jfFe' In'sirortest-pos- . Asaleol.liopkcascs, rug,extension table timo, will.rcee'iea limited number of nnd other articIea""vviH'1Jc' hi'ld^lnriilnT nipiK For further information', address, innrning at ten o'clock nt .tho ,former "• n...,t n *i library rooms in tho Opera Hou^e. I am suro if you will reflect on the methods by which candidates and . ns oftonseolc to«vado a plain,,, simple, Btraightforwafd (iuoatibfi, you ' -will—pario.n-our—plainness—and-our— insistence that tho simple interroga- tion placed before you boanswered in sucli a mannqr that the people of No;w Jersoy shall know wher*i'ywf Btaria ttti" this specific legislation. <' .,, Enoloscd you will please" flnd a copy of the Local Option Bill introduced itor .Gpbhardt in -the Senate £ , 121 Union Avenue, Cranford. excursion to Asbury . „.„ will take* place "on Saturday. The train leaves Cranford at 1:22 and Vctufnliig;'leaves Asbu-ry-Park at-11 - -ilack;: -- '- - : : -. •- J ,— -• National Councilor Kenney of tho ! I Daughters of Liberty is in favor of as there is some dijficulty in| w j, ot he r Assembly. ln.a word, the ( law that is boing urged by the local option people is simply to provide that the voter* . in any |)a Hicular municipality ..ahall, havo tho powor by their own initiatlvo to deteimino by means of majority vote nt a. special election whether order. Jhoy shalf not. The reawni For FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY ^^«O O T rU -- ; - U1L fJpHK"Aventt6 Pfeaches-50c, 60c and 75c basket can bo- "daughters" "of 'GETcrty^iSr any other species of parent. Cran- ford •haB -several -daughters-of-.-the •Ifif'tleBr"-8<j)cv""'ineluding- : • Assistant! iPostmastor Walter E. -Reinhart. ' ! Tho Democratic Assembly enndi- .Pabij^JL.^^Broadhoad^ of =' I^aTnffclaT 1 ' »i'rJir»rte^^S^«{^!^;HiM6jfc" Hugh McLaughlin of Elizabeth. First:—Becauso tne peoplenivoThe right to know before they cast their votes in the primiry-or-eloction. -the. nttitudo-thnt a catidiaatowlll aasumo on the . fundamental proposition ot whether tho .majority shall rale In JSew Jcraby as they do in every other state, with tho exceptions o [CONTINUBD OH tABTTAOBJ vffarvjvtcrcjt^rxmx.titi^ifytm-vx^t-jvav trKcr^Mrftwsc^rWTiLiaj.fn'r=t?s i Kay-«Mij;.(i £m*itiP«•*ftjj-TrwiRnJOSCss SHOE DEPARTMENT-AH Summer WOMEN - S s.SODo.o.Kv^O^^P-^ *«\ f* 3.00T "7 ShoesjorBoys LADES'GOWNS, 1.25 goods at - a : « 1.75 goods at ' - ;'%- 1 * ^ WAISTS, white lawn, tucked a«idj;mbroidered,vl.25 goods at 75C ine of Educator Shoes for Men, Women and Children and Girls at big reductions. Full line and Leather. Trunks:of-all sizes at big reductions alone $1.00 ^ Q or DY SHIRTS, 1.50goods at .1.15. spEaAtS !N WHITE GOODS DEPT. SUITS ' COMBINATION U N D E R W ^ A. SHAPIRO,

Transcript of A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

Page 1: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

t off•t-ot

E5TABU5HED l 8 9 3 . — N O . 1245

OPENING INSPECTION DAYS

^ A.-cLg-cLst

A new residence ^art of Oanford will be thrown openthese daysi and an invitation is extended to the towns-

^Lje to make an inspection of this new section.ft is knownas^ Normaridie: Park. -..-•-•---.-•Noraiahdie Park begins at tlie intersection of Riversidee and Normandie Place, on the easterly side of the

Riverside Drive is being extended along the river forj jay a mile, with parkways and plots alternating between4e driveand thefiver.":

Now installed:

Special Notices. _-Solve-the water -supply <|iH>9tiou-t«r-

yourself by having s well drilled on y o wown promises by Fmik T. Cliulek,

yRaU-

CRANFORD LOCALSUp to the-present time_oyer m

residents have filed application cardsfor

ha ppprivile8e...,n£ drawing .book?

l G a W ' ; » ^ w ^ u m b « * :

w i t h t h e

Township Committee last night, fol-lowing the Health Board meeting.It "was "found"that tmly normal in-creases, occasioned by the growth of

or telephone 250-L. " " V. return of cool weather.Tho car that i» best sailed to yonrtaS* Jorjn W. Heins and family started

aild iiocketliook m»y l« the Elmore, °' l this morning in their car for Niagarawhich 11. L. Fink, Westfielil, ha».*{»> p a n» where they will pick up Miss

.agency. Why not settle nil d ° a b » « ? Gertrude Holrs and continue their

11 one em 01 iu« iieacu M»JII """HJ" •• _ - n-j,,,-~Vpniip-was

find every housewife who thinks of c&nnUtj? >Joeeph GroBB of Parker a\enue wasutching tho market ot J.. E. Miller. i|; thrown from his wheel yesterday infront of Crane's feed Btorc and fel

on his head with a tores sufficient tcrender him unconscious. The accident

witnessed by Waiter Schole

terVij ' as' -street 'tijjhtTrig, Irentals, and other charges not

d thvotedrentals, and g

on at the elections, and that the $4,000water plant appropriation and thelibrary tax would ' *to a.large extent

be taken careby the increase

NO DODGING THISWhether they like it or not, (and

the chances are that they don't,) allcandidates for State offices this fill ,from the Gavsrnor dawn t) tho A»-seih'b'iyrnen, HiuStirisirer'tir trfase to.answer eomo very direct questions ontheir attitude in regard to local op-tion. And failure to answer will bejust as significant as a plain reply.

fewtllec-

of _in I This week all. candidates

le valuations. As the county Governorship have received

-Need any desk blotters, or white orurod card board ? A large supply-atsheet is obtainable at tho Chronicle

Attractive rooms to rent, single or -~rWe, conncctiug or separate; table bo»tiliw a B •«on same block; central location; rifer, who, with the help of another carriedview; 111 Springfield Avenue; Mrs. Horace; the boy into Reay's pharmacy, where^3Iont'..-.-:-- -...- „ . : . , . . - ; - _ - _ , r7'iJ--l he was restored to consciousness and

Wanted: Byajanrilyof three, a n a a o i | t I l k e n h o m e . D r Gilpin's examina-tion showed that the lad had sustainedu concussion of the brain.

In connection w,ith its report of theOne or two gentlemen can flnd " " :"~>°A •""""•""miner of the Field

furnMicd rooms; reasonable; 4 .„ . . . „_ ._ . . _ _.from station; 222 Walnut a remits. [fr* j on Monday announced that thcfollow-_An elderly woman would like to go (jut " " * "•--'nursing in confinement" cases, or tuko c&Veof invalid. Mrs. K. Stain, cor Oak St. tMiSecondAvo.,.Qanvood, N,,.J. 18-85..

before Saturday a. m. full parficulari'io0. B. Houston, 225 Kiftli Avo.,N. Y. Cit jr.

f

TUSCCONCRETE SIDEWALKSSEWERS '

GASELECTRIC LIGHT SERVICETELEPHONE SER VICE

A. number of houses are now under construction,

Having aU ino4e« JmrWJvcments installed.

These houses contain 8 and 9 rooms.

Our plan for the purchase of plots or houses is an

ing officers were elected: Chairman,1. C r S H l l l i t r ; Mcrctary, W. L.

and that the tellers were P.T l f tHacker;

tax will be lower"', than usiyear, the probabilities aro that thelocal rate, when fixed, will be foundto be about that of 1009, which wasJl.fiO on the $100.'

The. public schools will reopen onSeptember 7th, much earlier thanusual. Experience of the difficultyof holding sessions for the requirednumber 'of days,—180—without, pro-longing tho spring term until late inJune, baa demonstrated the wisdom ofbeginning the fall term early.

The factory of the Ramie FibroManufacturing Company at Kenilworthwas sold on Monday by the sheriff toAnnie Ruh, the mortgagee. Financialtroubles seem to be the destiny ofmost of the industries of our tieigh-

Yowing

for thethe fol-ntendant. .-

of the Anti-Saluon League. Aspi- ..rants for the senate and houe? will .got theirs later.

August 23, 1910..Dear Sir:—On behalf of the great

multitude in New Jersey who areworking for a law commonly knownas tho Local Option, or majority ralelicense law; and under the direction—.-iqf the executive committee of theAn,ti-Saloon League,. I write you tolean your position on this matter.. This is not a letter personal to you,but is sent to every candidate forGovernor whoso name comes beforethe people of New Jersey for their

'itef

' ' ^ ^ ^

A beautiful booklet roailcdon request.

GENERAL MANAGER*

parts ot Cranford'. G. D. Stone, Potter | is,"the gentlemen"l i n i l d i n t v — — — — _ _ _ _ _ _ ^ r , t t

For Rent—One store hi tho Win. Sparrybuilding. For salo, two family IIOUBC; also1 room house for Bale at a. bargaiu. J» 0. """w>-*" ~* -W. lUukiu Agent, 11 E. North ar^'IU' l h u township r

Dr. James L. Vail is to be theRepublican candidate for coroner. -

with the F. & R. Club, but served asofficers of the Republican primary, in

rooms.bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand <;Mrsi

Frederick R. Zundel on Monday.With a new house and a new babyit would seem that their cup "of joymust be brimful.

have talks 'withthreo "dTstlnguTsKod'cng3ncerB-prior-to-tho-T6wnahip_Co(m.-.

d

rnittee meeting of next Wednesdayevening, at which timo a choice of

plant investigation for "the "townshlpiwill probably bo made. The candi-dates for the position are Messrs.1

Fuerties, Hill and Hess. Mr. Fuer-" city.

held- by the members of theTaught In Craofotd

An experiencMl teacher by latest methods 'liiisuriiig.tb/irpiighress, ofllcieiicy, successand completion' of'co'jfFe' In'sirortest-pos- . Asaleol.liopkcascs, rug,extension table

timo, will.rcee'iea limited number of nnd other articIea""vviH'1Jc' hi'ld lnriilnTnipiK For further information', address, innrning at ten o'clock nt .tho ,former

"• • • n...,tn*i library rooms in tho Opera Hou e.

I am suro if you will reflect onthe methods by which candidates and .

ns oftonseolc to«vado a plain,,,simple, Btraightforwafd (iuoatibfi, you '-will—pario.n-our—plainness—and-our—insistence that tho simple interroga-tion placed before you bo answered insucli a mannqr that the people of No;wJersoy shall know wher*i'ywf Btaria ttti"this specific legislation. <'.,, Enoloscd you will please" flnd a copyof the Local Option Bill introduced

itor .Gpbhardt in -the • Senate £

Ion

, 121 Union Avenue, Cranford.

excursion to Asbury. „.„ will take* place "on Saturday.The train leaves Cranford at 1:22 andVctufnliig;'leaves Asbu-ry-Park at-11

- • -ilack;: -- '- - :: -. •- J ,— -•National Councilor Kenney of tho

! I Daughters of Liberty is in favor of

as there is some dijficulty in|wj,other

Assembly. ln.a word, the( law that isboing urged by the local option peopleis simply to provide that the voter* .in any |)a Hicular municipality ..ahall,havo tho powor by their own initiatlvoto deteimino by means of majorityvote nt a. special election whether

order. Jhoy shalf not. The reawni

For FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY

^ ^ « OO

TrU--;- U1L fJpHK"Aventt6

Pfeaches-50c, 60c and 75c basket

can bo- "daughters" "of 'GETcrty iSrany other species of parent. Cran-ford •haB -several -daughters-of-.-the•Ifif'tleBr"-8<j)cv""'ineluding-:• Assistant!iPostmastor Walter E. -Reinhart.'! Tho Democratic Assembly enndi-

.Pabij^JL. ^Broadhoad^ of =' I aTnffclaT1

' »i'rJir»rte^^S^«{^!^;HiM6jfc"Hugh McLaughlin of Elizabeth.

First:—Becauso tne peoplenivoTheright to know before they cast theirvotes in the primiry-or-eloction. -the.nttitudo-thnt a catidiaatowlll aasumoon the . fundamental proposition otwhether tho .majority shall rale InJSew Jcraby as they do in every other

o.ou'o.oo

state, with tho exceptions o

[CONTINUBD OH tABTTAOBJ

vffarvjvtcrcjt^rxmx.titi^ifytm-vx^t-jvav trKcr^Mrftwsc^rWTiLiaj.fn'r=t?siKay-«Mij;.(i £m *itiP «•* ft jj-TrwiRnJOSCss

led

knil

J.

SHOE DEPARTMENT-AH Summer

W O M E N - S s .SODo.o .Kv^O^^P-^ * « \

f*

3.00T " 7

ShoesjorBoys

LADES'GOWNS, 1.25 goods at -a : « 1.75 goods at ' - ;'%- 1 * ^

WAISTS, white lawn, tucked a«idj;mbroidered,vl.25 goods at 75C

ine of Educator Shoes for Men, Women and Childrenand Girls at big reductions. Full line

and Leather. Trunks:of-all sizes at big reductionsalone $1.00^ Q

o r

DY SHIRTS, 1.50 goods at .1.15. s p E a A t S !N WHITE GOODS DEPT.

SUITS ' COMBINATION U N D E R W ^

A. SHAPIRO,

Page 2: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

By Stacy E. Baker

i»».fcr^Uuchud IMifify Ptw

- I , , ,

Train 16—pride of the Prather sys-tem—left Oe tracks at the curved»xitrane».to,Ui«*Jo6r»toTim;tnniiel, 'resolutely"-' tried to" plo* "» waythrough the rock.

Steven. Larkln, after extricatinghimself from the debris of the lastPullman, found himself with a brokennrtst and badly damaged side.

"My good, fellow," be called. Lar-Mn' w»s° an ;actor; °"My*good '-'fellow,'come here." A bearded rustic, gapingat some little distance away, hurriedforward. ' .

"Is there a doctor hereabouts r"None nlgher than eight miles.""I can't continue this way," com-

•lalned Larkln, petulantly. The numb-ness of tho sudden break was com'aenclng to die away, and the deep,throbbing pain substituting. itself,brought with it a disgusting nausea.

"Not much? you can't," contributedtbe other. "It'll be hours before thetrabk's clear "enough"for trains' tocome and go on. Best thing you cando, I reckon, Is to stop here, and—'an avaricious gleam crept into theeyes ot the locallte—"I'll use you aswell as any one, and for as littlemoney.- You'll nndmy house the thirdso the right band side of the road. Ityou want to go down there and stay

.ttoIghC.JXMtc«.wlll.be:.1n,soc«Trom_ «JLaro"fidt_ I'll see that you get^ne^

My daughter will come to the door.Tell her who you are, and that I sontyou, and for her to five you the spareroom." The Moorstown man,turned

W M T : rIn the gathering dusk of the evening

Larklnmade a comprehensive surveysf the badly dilapidated' train, thecoaches of which, strewn along, the

8 ^ &

them neatly, I won't be accountablefor what happens If you attempt tog» your ho«te3«-T-I«an Vouch lor

STANDARD OIL SAVE

By Means of Sensitive Little Instru-ment World's Richest Corporation

Conserves Time and Foot*steps of Employees.

In popular fancy no office bnlldlngin. the world la associated with so

to remain, although I should not askIt" if there was a hospital, sanitariumor decent hotel In the community."

Larkln, too spent to protest, layback on his plljow. He had bsen putto bed by the determlped physician.Thanks to- s*datl»e, b* closed -hi* eye*.—and slept

Before the week was done the housewas cleared of patients with the oneexception of Larkln. He stayed on.Every day he was fearful lest thephysician announce that he was wellenough to resume' his InterruptedJourney.

Where. Is your fatherr asked theactor, ooe morning, gsjlng »t the girlwith appreciative eyes. "I haven'tseen him since, the day of the wreck."

I—I. why, he Isn't here now,"Hammered the crimson-faced maid.She hurried from the room. Larklnfollowed her exit with surprised eyes.

"Hmm," muttered the man. "Iwonder what I've Bald to' hurt herfeelings. Come to think of It, theold chap didn't look very honest May-bo he Is In Jail." But when the girlreturned to the room the flush wasgtm«:ta)m;h6r chettlts, and ibtt was.herjisual^composed self. The subjectwas not brought up again.

Larkln, by complaining about non-existent pains, kept the doctor fromallowing him to leave the house.

Tle"and* ' his ' nurse 'became closefriends. ' There was nothing"of"therustic about her. Her mind was keenand broad. She was well Informed.Larkln delighted In telling her. tales

• and ..His ,Nuwe..Became CloseFriends.

Into by thin threads of name. Sweat-Crimed employees of the road, andStoorstowners cooperated In rescuingthe wounded and dead. It was themost disastrous wreck of the year,

Larkln, weak, limp, and In thethroes of an acute pain* growing keen-er each Instant, stumbled down theroad In tbe direction given him by themative. At the door of a small, grayhouse, with a white gravel path lead-lug np to It; a path dividing a spa-cious yard with the bloom of springin its syringa and lilac bushes. Its longbeds of pansies and lilies of the val-ley; Larkln stopped. He tapped attbe door. . '

nOImfIrr answerlngTCTeHium^tnons was the very antithesis of theImage In the mind of the man. Shebad dark eyes, keenly sensitive to thepredicament of the tall youth. With the

-set ^ws. Aflno lltUa Jumd JtsslstcdKm to enter • ••.-—•

"Your father," gasped Larkln, nowwell beside himself with the agony ofbis hurt wrist and wounded side, "yourfather sent me here."

From tbe great easy- chair in thepretty furnished parlor, the actor,•eases self-centered by pain, failed tonotice the start of surprise followedby the little BOTlle curving the perfectlips of the girl.

_...,'.IMH*«fl*SW[*««-WHW,<llW«sa!Ies and the conservative success fol-

lowing. Miss Nun—this was her name—followed him with Urge eyes and awonderful interest .-v. ,„.... ; ....

"I have always cared for tho stage,"she. said simply, and- brought, .hi*around to the subject again.

Time went on. The day ot Larkln'

est as the big grey stone pile at itBroadway, New York City, fromwhich tho vast business ot the Stand-ard OH Company is directed. In tbeIntelligence and Industry with whichIts worldwide Interests are adminis-tered no corporation on earth has de-veloped such an efflcient'busineis'oKganltatlon. ' Here wasted steps meandissipated energy. Misspent effortsclog the carburater, of a great Indus-trial machine and, in an Institution of

I the size of Standard Oil, represent an[aggregate annual toss of many thou-sands of dollars when time paid forby the corporation is not put to profit-able use. _ _, -

Of none of Its assets Is StandardOil moro Jealously solicitous than oftime. To husband It every room Isequipped with dictographs, a wonder-ful little Instrument designed to en-courage economy in steps and ohviatodelay in Intercourse between depart-ment heads.

Without leaving his desk any em-ployee can' discuss every ramificationof a business transaction with a fel-low employee in another part ot the

For Hot Weather

Beatcd alongside of each other. Fora wh"6Te''a5y~8r'Sufeairchlef-can-T»i-maln cloistered In hlB office withoutseeing a single soul and keep In touchwith every development of his depart-ment: "Airihe"while He can"hi; tesTSt1'twenty "feet" away from tbesensitiveInstrument which picks up the faint-est whisper and makes it plainly audi-ble In any distant room with which It

MUNYON'SPAW-PAW

I * u t u r strum «

HTM- «r blood »UB>n£ 1

The NaturalLaxative

acts oa the bowels just a s 80mefoods act Cuss*, thus

in the jiostrils. Soon thi.E2Sffrow so calloused that one mustmultiply tbe dose. *

f'

ASHINOTON.—Ignorance onpart of amateur diplomats ci^''t¥'i^ii>''f61f9t^'iii

Woman'a Inhumanity to man maleiCountless divorce lawyers happy.

Mi* •Wln.low'i Bootttnt Bjrnp ror Chna~•-«thlni, •oftena the funs, nducea Inflimm*'

>n, »ll»y« pain, earn wind eolit, S5c a \MH£

Thinking of Curtain Lectures.Mrs. Peck—I aee the Maine Auricnl-

tural college proposes to establish lee-turea especially for countrypastors :

• Mr. Peck—What's the matter, ain't»ne of the parsons up there marrleiJT

^ i pcorrespondence nearly preclpltatecwar ecar« In two nations not 1<dncc. It was announced thai, the <pcror ot. Germany had dellberatslfronted the United States govccent by employing affectionate teiIn addressing President MadrizNicaragua, whom our government 1refused to recognize. '.

• "Oreftt and" Ooof rvieaa.""" Is*ay the kaiser's letter to Madriz \commenced. This had sinister. :olflcance to the amateurs. Immiatcly tbe newspapers were filled, •«stories that Germany had espousedcause of Madriz; that the Mondoctrine had been thrown.down irepudiated by the warlike kalsealso the emperof had been act

i

When "'Ole" sun " strengthens1" :andbiases In tho sty and heat becomes afactor to reckon with 'In dress, andeverything else, millinery must be cool

-wfjl.fall.to_ba attractive.

tiresome rehearsals called him back.

carefully diagnosed his feelings forthis simple maid whom he was leav-ing behind. ;_#ii0Je."J.he_iuminatedr .'.'and me,all people, to be listed for a part Inthe skit The worst of it Is I knowHI forget my lines."

after you have heard It." Larkln hadproposed. "I live here alone, and Iwilfully led you to believe that theman you saw at the wreck was myfather."

«^tBeglrf t lmp&.^am|( iaVjroncame. Others—and a physician—willbe here shortly."

The parlor door closed softly as thegirl went to answer the door> < The

"0retty"1ioUBerdr8s'nd~thn6nrm7eaBycarriage would Eave^Impressed Lar-

' kin at any other time."Othor-victlmB.^explained his host-

ess, returning? "My—er—our houseJs small,—There-4vlll4be-no-more-pa<~U e n t s b t t h d t n r h " 5 " rU e n t s r b u t t h e d o e t e r n , d h ewill be in,to see you." .Larkln ac-cepted a glass of somo stimulatingbeverage and closed his eyes for abrief moment - < ...

The door opened again. Careful fln-fcers touched tho broken wrist of theJronng man, ButilsupersenBtitlve, theCouth Instantty came out of his date

' and little lines of pain furrowed his•trong face.

llclan. "Bad break." The doctorW- slipped bis sentences. "Too bad.

Careful now." He examined the wristSuddenly his two hands closed overIhe hurt member. There was antudlble snap' and a smothered scream

•>. * from; Larkln.- The wrist was set* „ Tfou must not move for a week,"K *aotloned the medicine man, after an

^.swaiaaUon. rYou Uve three broken^SsA.aUbttaXh 1 hate budaged

Larkln.'He lives tn the next house down

I—I wanted you myself. I didn't tellyou of your mistake. My father andmother are dead—and I am so lone-some."

Larkln made a move as It to gatherher In his one good arm. but she heldup a protesting hand.

"One moment. I am not finished.'4She looked at him half sorrowfully."1 have deceived you even more thanthat." She stopped for a falteringsecond and then hurried on. "I amNancy Nun, the California actress,now under the management of theFirnans and due. to open my soason inNew York next fall.'

"You—Nance Nun!" gasped Larkln.—The girl flushed. '-'Moved-you,"-shesaid simply. "I wanted to be wooedas other gills are wooed. Can you forgive me?"

Larkln did.

'••j~•'} 8rnallest Working Railway,'"The Eaton Hall railway enjoys the

distinction of being the smallest work-Ing railway In Great Britain. The linei d s across many of the park drivesand over small stream's, spanned bysteel girders. Sometimes as many asthree hundred tons ot coal a month Ishauled "by'the miniature locomotivesaild wagons. There are two engines,the largest of which has a tank ca-pacity of 7O;6allono-a"bolIerPre8Sureof'iTfe'pdundB'to the^square inch andweighs four tons twolvo hundred-weight. There are 44 good wagons',two brake vans, one carriage, one par-cel car and one tool van. Tho pas-senger car mna on two tour-wheeliogles, Is 20 feet long, and has Beat-ing accommodation for 1C passengers.It has carried many a royal passenger,—Westminster Gazette.

Cat Was Too Wise.In a backyard In Rothesay, a duck

hatching her Tggs was disturbed, bya cat, who, after devouring tho onlytwo ducklings out, coiled itself roundthe remainder of the eggs, and thoother ducklings wero dispatched Infopuss's interior as soon as hatched.After a consultation the neighbors de-cided that the cat must be executed,ancVthfr sentence-was duly carried "onfby a shooting expert.

Logical."Mother," asked llttlo Ethel, "now

that you're In mourning i * CousinAdelaide, will you wear black nightdresses, too?"

"What an absurd question, child!"-'- "Oh, I only thought you might be aisorry at night'as you were during thsday." ventured EtheL—Harper's Batar,

what is good for Standard Oil is goodfor them, most of th* larg* bankinghouses, railroad offices and businessinstitutions, of the. ..country, ore nb_wequipping their offices with dicto-graphs. :, -. Secretary of the Treasury Jlac-

Veagh and Attorney General Wieker-

.ernors-.pt .the.. States .at -Illinois, anA

A1^P^;lftf1f1liiBHjHMrTfrfwMlffwith black.' givo ns the'erispest andbeat effecta for the dog days. Butwhite set off with a bit of scarlet,deft..blue, .'or Jeal. green . ia. smart, and.effective also, and. may be chosen In-stead of white with black.

Black for day time wear Is not coollooking except.when made of the thln-

in all parts of the country.

— - — - W a r Against H a l l . —Notwithstanding scientific! demon-

strations of its Inuttllty. the! practice

and Northern Italy.. The theory un-derlying this practice Is that the dis-charges disrupt the cloudB and pre-vent the formation of hall. Muoamoney has been spent on tho needfulapparatus,^ and manjr l

l ^ "

Exceedingly Pretty Dross EminentlySuitable for Garden Party or

River Wear.

A very charming lingerie gown has

A new effort to coavlnce the advo-cates of the system that they arewesting their time and money hatJust been reported to the Paris Acad-emy of Sciences. It Is based upon'a,comparison of records at losses Inthe Department of the Rhone fortwenty years before and for ten year*since the cannon was Introduced, andli shows that the losses have slightlyIncreased Instead of diminishingsince the war on hall was begun —Youth's Companion.

orTuuVbraia or pyroxylinsare lacy In texture and the adm^a

heart. This season they belong to the"mystery" class; those hats that comedown over the head, veiling the eyesand showing thaprottle from One sideonly. The cprday hats of net and lace

or- those made on the "helmet" sh»DO«.have captivated as many as the bigdrooping picture hats.

A lovely hat for the hot weather Isshown, hvo made ot dead.white chip.

grouping of four' Immense roses Intulle and silk Is mounted across thefront, they are almost colorless witha blunh.ofpala pink, at the edges Pfsome of the petals. The effect Is ofmillinery as light wi'Slrr.'

A pretty Bailor for practical wear Istrimmed with white wlnga and a coro-

Tho shape Is a Milan In the''natural

r p f fcrisp satin faced ribbon la chosen formaking the plaiting.

A floating *ashable lace v«H Is't&'e'-'Ww:BnierBlIr':«on^wii&~*''tiisailors.

upon which appears a row of- van'dyked Insertion, the insertion beingcontinued at the top of the flounce intbe same form, and appearing at intervals upon the skirt, the center tm-

IUH Modest IIopc."Thenyou don't want to leave foot- j.

prints upon the sands of tlmo?"-Nlxr"5—answered .tha politician,!..

guardedly. "AH I want Is to cover uti jmy tracks."—From tho Washington |Herald.

According to local creamery men,St. Paul "isv^ho. second largest btttUrmaking city In the world. Omahaalone surpasses St.' Paul in theamount of butter made each twelvomonths within the confines ot the city.

Nearly ten million pounds a year iflmado hero by creameries from creamshipped Jo Jhe city from all orcr th»Stato, also porlltna of Iowa andSouth .:pakpta,._T,"he_.lndustry_ Is ontho Increase, andiheta artipottibtics tiint thin year the production willamount lo twelve million pounds.—St. Paul Pioneer Press.

Straight Shooting Now.In tho days ot tho SpanUh xvir

Corrcgldnr Inland was nss3<dat*dwith Ineffective- mnrkmaoshlp. TheWar Dopartment is determined toJiavo-that~strong-pos!tton-|n-Manila-harbor held more efficiently thanwhen Dowey called Into t ic bay, andhas sent twenty companies ot coastArtillery, now stationed nt Tart Schul-lor, which havci n.notnble rsrord fornrtlllery praclic*. — Springfield Re-publican. .

Illustrated Time Tables.

liave been is.nied by a Wcatar* rail-road In •which the traveler finis. Just

-opposite tho flKures showing tho timeoforrlval nn«! leaving of trains, a de^scTfptioa of-tho -place and tho inter-

esting scenes alons tho route. Be-tween the Cguros aro scenic photo-'graphs. ' At tho top of each page Is adiagram giving," the altitude ot thelino at Iho various points1.—PopularMechanics. , <

mediately below tho knee being beau-tifully embroidered., The bodice hasa collar of Valenciennes lace, Inser-tions of which appear In dainty designupon the bodice and upon the longsleeves and waist belt, the center otthe bodice being embroidered tn

Height and Breadth Can Be Increasedor Toned Down by Draping

of 8«sh. \

There Is a great deal of art In the...<^lag^of-*^ash^G,M,,cia,iner«as«.•ono's height or one's breadth; adorn aplain gown, tone down an elaborateone, give a touch of distinction toone's whole appearance, simply by theway In which tbe sash Is draped andadjusted. •

Try wearing tho sash In .shawlstyle over the shoulders,- caught by astitch In back and tucked under thegirdle, to fall In diagonal lengths toJust above the ankles.

Or wind it twice around the waist,like a girdle; cross it in front andfasten with a knot at the sides ofthe skirt below the knees.

Then there Is the Scotch tartan ef-fect, especially attractive with a plaidscarf, where there Is a. broad bandover the left shoulder, a ^narrowdraped _one_ over Jthe back ftad_tha.right; and a knot at the waist on theleft Bide, BO that the sash falls In abroad width almost to the bottom ottho frock. x

:ould..for. the United States. .:„Aftethe Outlook office how he got through I " l t l e inquiry the Wax ' scare faso mnch work and at the same Urns I *vaT> 'saw so many people. "I shun bores," I " f o «M probability.", said a statewas the reply. "I don't 'waste"amln. I partwent official, "the emperor neiUte,ofvnijfymejpn;bores. _Do you tier. H —-r-.- .-- •—celve that I have"ohly Just' one cffir'';im^d*-"T]»nfl'"'*Tli1i3»*In this room? You. tee. my hunting • D&** .L iOnCl 1 l u eexperiences have shown me that greathorea.are always ot-amall.caliber." 'M II /Vff i l^^f*f lK\ -*** fitvCHPEI

8elfls)i Youth. • I f 'i^Tfpn|^^*«J^eiSfculyoR"'•Youth Ii ipt to be aeinsh." MI4 • ft* "' / r a f B c O W W H E T O H

Mrs. Mary B. 'Wllklns-Preeman. the • | - - ^ T ^ i ^ T B 3 l D 0 M > T

distinguished novelist, at a Matucheap i c n i c . " '"•'•""•••"--'• -••• --

"Woman in her youth," she went on"Is especially apt to ha selfish. HI • k RBPOBT made to congress b;nev.tr forget the story of the young I >* commission appointed to exam

fled by,^odern.,buBlneas hpuses^

skin, a little'boy In a mackintosh ac- I still owned by the government, :costed him. ' ' . • vithBtandlng' the present tenants

" 'Excuse me, sir,' said the_bpy, "bijt _ B H?y-e_they. have a dear UUeto-are yon tho gentleman whx> is waiting-for Miss Endlcott?' • Tola question of .land titles in

"'Yes,' the young man answered • catlonal capital is not a new one.'." 'Well.' f aid the boy. 'she asked me • rears ago congress created a ctomi

GAVE 818 AWAY.

Wll«TewferenceW'thVconceal-ment of some defect In the garmentIt covers-a tiny tear, perhaps, or ahIneradicable ,ta(n. It should ompha-

e ^ T * ! pofnts of the "*"•<> *>ade the bad. That Is why the old

fashion of tho stiff bow at the backw g jjUMs it made every ^

Her Little Brothor—Say, are yougoln' ter marry my sister Bess?

Her Suitor—Why', er—er—er don'tknow;

Her Little Brother—Well, you are. Iheard her tell pop she was .goln' terJHMl jou.tonlghti.

retary- of wari SenaVirginia. Representative BartboldlMissouri, and one of'the district cmlssloners. The report reveals allblo land tanglo; which the courts>robably never be able to straiglK i f S 8 i C 3 t f g n 9wild speculation In real estate 'look place for a good many years sIhe capital was laid out.

Private lands , were acquired

Now Planning a

—«. thought-to the-araplns;of your sash, and half your

match the skirt. This in an exceeding-ly pretty and useful model, and Iseminently suitable for garden party orriver wear. This model Is the one II-tastrated above.'

Effective Sofa Pillows.An effective and easily made sofa

pillow for a summer home Is madeIn oblong shapo, 14 by 20 Inches.

ThUlheavy weave crash in ecru or gray.Two inches from each, end are bandsof flowered cretonne three Incheswide crossing the pillow. These bandsare edged on both aides with narrowecru lace applied flat.

Another variation had the body otthe pillow of flowered chlnti or cre-tonne with bands of figured ecru lin-en such as Is used for furniture cov-axtafc The ends of this xdllow have aWriMh wide linen tace la ecru-ttBta.

—'-Jgr'iam tevyegj

The Dainty Negligee

the" uW' as ZZJZ-&**!* atshort waist length and a t

with pink

Tulle Roses.A charming trimming qn a p I n k ,,k

evening dress seen recently consistedof a cluster of five roses/formed ofpink tulle, with green t u H e ^ LtwUtod over thin Trtre sewedleft side of the low nect Thewas exceedingly attractive

com*

BreakfastCooking

Easy to start the daycool and comfortable if

are in the pantryto-serve right~from- the

_pacfeige. No _co_ofeingrequired; just add somecream and a little sugar.

EspeciaUy p l e a s i n gthese surnrner rriorhihgswith berries or fresh

One can feel'cooTln.hot weather oh pro'perfood. .

"the Merhory Lingers*

totrrcu CEBBAL CXL, ltd.

DEEK and elk preserves may plaImportant part1 In reducing

high iost of beef.. According towumpnt "TrpT*^ who Tiftvn madiInvestigation of the cost and metot raising venison, declare thatgame laws of the various statespreventing deer and elk farming

tourcea of cheap and good meat;and elk can be raised readily In Ily every state In the Union. The]easily controlled and cheaplyTho Increase of elk under dome:Ucn Is fully equal to that of ci

The stato and the governithrough Its Yellowstone park offlihave cooperated with lndlv

-tancJimen In caring Ion the..T8StJof elk In the Jackson's Hole regliMy^nid^fi^H?Pia:B>u^are 30,000 elk in the Yellowstoneregion, constituting the only Iherd left For two-or three wi:these elk have been fed, and have

Government's C<

IN the present census the gotoent has made a great effort I

tain, through special agents, fullauthentic data concerning the 'relations of the Indians, as a di

taken, It prohably will be Ithat those Indians who are noiWoaent. wards of the nation hnij«»me full-fledged citliens.. W<

Tho Indian population af>the4JEtatea decreased in the^decide•1890 to J900, from !!fS;607 to 20an 1S80 the care of' thTo Indians

.national government _|5,20ihad risen to

1 v'v:.v.tfu

Page 3: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

you

Diplomats Cause Trouble

fASHINOtON.—Ignorance on thepart ofamateur diplomats con-

ipcorrespondence nearly precipitated anrar ecar« In two nations not longilncc. It was announced thai, the em-peror of. Germany had deliberatelyaffronted the United States govern-

| cent by employing affectionate termsIn addressing President Madriz ofNicaragua, whom our government hadrefused to recognize. •

-—••Great - and' Good Frlena.""" I» the*ay the kaiser's letter to Madrfz wascommenced. This had sinister, sig-nificance to the amateurs. Immedi-ately the newspapers were filled, withitoricB that Germany had espoused the.cause of Madrlz; that the Monroedoctrine had been thrown.down and

| repudiated by the warlike kaiser;;also the emperor had been acting

eould..for j h e JJnlted-Etatea.:_ After-, alittle Inquiry the War ' scare fadedaway. . : •

"In all probability.", sold a state de-partment omclal, "the emperor never

TOOMUCH ECONOMY

EXTREMES.

Housewife Will Do Well to Guard |Agalnit ttnurlousness, in Which '

Th«J» Can Be No Pos-— ; — s l b l o Savlnjj.

knew that the note ' In question was;8enft:7tt:-»as;a^eguiM;routJ|j,e;jnatter^ W J ^ T 1 * * ? - • -.*«fk the G«fm«D farelruofllce and .^opi^^'l».*lw»rsi..bottoidsd'.^ f glowed the stereotyped form.

Nations are excessively polite'toone another la their Interchange ofcommunications. Every letter thatgoes out from the state department toa foreign government has this cere-monial finish:" "Accepf.'e'xcellencyrtiie renewed as-surance of my highest consideration."

The cermonall letters of all coun-tries begin in about the same way.For Instance, all of England's com-munications begin:

The housewife who it so conselen-econpmlcol, ..that

aoa»ttrreati<J-, ed by reversible, silk iklrU that shouldbe thrown In the rag bag, or frazzledcenterpieces that could be cut up Intojollies, or lawn scraps that might beturned into handkerchiefs, should talea whole day off and learn that "every jexcess Is a defect". aid "extremes!•weaken."'""**"''*•""'"""'"'•-'-•"""'"'•''"" "''*'""*

Sometimes such'painful and tedious!ecomonles are necessary. Often they!are not Once In a while they are;ridiculous. At times It happens that!

, they even cause misery. Perhaps you |remember with what pongs of wound-1

"George V.. by the Grace of God, of ed pride you went to school In thethe United Kingdom "of Great Britainand Ireland, king, defender of thefaith, emperpr of Indla^ etc."""''Nicnblas," by the Graco o? God, em-peror autocrat of all the Russias, czarof Cosan, czar of Astracan, etc., lordof Plescott and grand duke of Smo-lensk!, etc."

Germany's letters are very muchlike those of Russia, in that they be-gin by announcing all the titles of-theruling potentate.. "William II., byGod's grace, emperor of Germany and

metamorphosed dress of your elder1

Bister. Perhaps you read about theigirt whoetme' back -from-boardlny'tchool and' straightway rejected her1

young country lover because bis eco-tnomlcal mother hod put tucks In histrousers to provide against his rapid,growth. Anyhow, there are two kinds iof economies and the kind that willmonopolize your time from sunrise to

AXLE GREASE.Keeps, lhn ..spindle -bright-and

LITTLE ONES.

Scld "by Sealers everywhere. -

STANDARD OIL CO.l Itkcorporml «M1>

MAPLEINEA. TXAVoa that Isor v»nUl*. By ulswl *+£ the ume an Iraum

u:,' irnaiiulateil uiifntr 1B

i

A lUKle Coltle. N.-iok and nleck.Dues In the barnyard rua; , -

UP klcka up his hvela and flirts hli tallAnd hua «uch_loa4s, of fcAU,. .- —..

A little Plfgie In the pen 'Itoots ro^nd with funny tmout:

Ho knoWB Just where to find good thing*,And soonhe roots theia cuC 7~ " ~

A little Chlrkla In th» yardPars icratch with tiny feet;

''TIs happy when It finds a, crumb.For It does love to eat.

Gunie, in Fancy Costume, Astonishedthe' -Doorkeeper for a

Moment. '

Gusslo was knock-kneed, angularand rounil ahoulik'rcd. He had a t*r-rtble Bquint, and. a'm'outH iike a Bteiim" iroller. All the same, he reckoned on jmaking something of a hit at the |fancy dress bail, and hi3 costume was !as elegant as his figure was un- jlovely. j

With fast beating heart he Bteppc.lJauntily' from his automobile outs!Jethe town hall, where the ball was bo-Ing held. The hall porter stepped backward-at-tho-unstgbtlj-apparition;

"Groat Christopher Columbus!"gasped, as he regarded GUSHIC.__-"MD._np.l-iny . good- man!"chirpedGussle. as he tripped through the por-tals. . "Chawles the First, my dear fel-low—Chavles tho First!"—London An-swers. ' •

he

KEEP BABTSiSOTCLE/«r

Few parents realize how many es-tunaDie^Mves""h^^^

RBPOBT made to congress by a. commission appointed to examine

IJl8c1osSi1'T^;n^y^oi«:^i'-iaia^ctf'fled by.jnodern business houses, and

•till owned by the government, not-withstanding tho present tenants be-lloyo.they, have a dear.title to

This Question of.land titles In thecatlonal capital Is not a new one. Twofears ago congress created a comtnls-•Tbli'lo^iManir^TnXaHmfistoH'c^^^^^

retarjrof warrSenalbr-Scott of westVirginia. Representative Bartholdt ofMIsBourl, and one of4he district com-missioners. The report reveals a hor-rible land tanglo; which the courts willprobably never be able to straighten

wild speculation In real estate thatlook place for a good many years afterthe capital was laid out.

Private lands , were acquired In

m o _ q n r l s e a n d , k e e p y o u h u m p i n g - f o r - ~ L - - . . . . - . _ . . . . .. -

ward threading needles or fUshln,, Vu'nlT S ^ ^ a W ^ i :crochet hooks, and maybe make some- | n laughs and crowi and merry u

i^S^i^lSJ^i^J^iS^vJtiQta^SSS^tk^^^^Sfi^^Xn Tlffe,811 t •J5!tou?.!ffi!;J..^.?,,5Pl55lS&,5Syy\......preseiit1-em'PBror-a^d'resses''-h1s'cew---that-wlilipg-:'oid:;se^monlal letters. ThB;'emperot_wrUes:i fera to-relleve-^u-or-^l^rthe-non--—^with a quill peri, and if one may Judge essential dry goods, woodware and, f _ _ _ _ _ vented by serious Bkln affecUohsby his signature on file in the stat« Ironware for cash, it Is for you to r-. i , p i_ v e r write. » •»"« Smt«nce ! w n l ( : h BO o f t e n result from the neglectdepartment, does not take much time watch out that the goblins of regret, .1 llrpoMihle u.lnn Onlv Word. i o f m l n o r c r uP t t o n« J n Infancy andabout i t . . - • ; and disgust don't got you. • . I ConUlnlna Vo^el SeTected childhood. With but a little care and

;-;v:v;:Fori!»k;Habtot*'-A^Unless It is a case of "hav» TO" the 1 "How" sold Charlies when every- ' B h m a n d b t t l r m a 5 r bo preserved, puri-

tendency always to create something ' tody'was gather around the table' B e ( 1 and • beauUned, minor eruptionsWashington, In the early days, by e new out of something ofil • is not so «i ef s D i a , the vowel came father to.d Prevented from becoming chronic and

cededment by Maryland and Virginia and In the first place most of us claim

that modern dry goods has not tho

to survey and by

one at once sweet, so speedily effective as t i e c o t•It's very easy," replied Charlies. «**1 U B e °'CuUcura Soap, assisted.

.distributing-pencils.-and paper lm-...?Sfpartially among, the family grounp, S*1"1 to , . • . . »says the Comrade. "You take the .olo proprietors Boston for their freefive regular vowels, a, e. I. o. u. and. »2psge Cutl?ura Book, telling all about

the care and treatment of the skin.

Corp.,

United Statos. Power was given thecommissioners to purchase or accept

te.eastern.side otthe, Poto:..

and the.commissioners were furtherrequired to provide suitable buildingsfor

there Id always some doubt as to the beginning with the first letter, each,.f&Vir&H!)^^

thing, and the market for all kind's of can, using no vowel except**a* in any*c:inaaainK:;funtfturav.aa.wBa.o;::^ies, Delng always openT Il.lif - en as he wishes."* «

generally easy.to dispose of things ' "I don't Quite understand," saidthat ore in the way. . . Cousin Lucy. "Please give us an ex-

hOTnewlfejwhoTwlsliesas" ""up to date1' "must

grant herself sufficient leisure, to neu- ntes' grace,i then," laughed Charlietrallze the domestic strain with social taking his pencil and paper. "Suppose.'

hjDr=JnMecte^eiH^those laborious economies musrbi few minutes and then read the result

They are about £80 miles In extent andare said to have contained 6,000.000.bodies. During the persecutions jof the

^"Vb^iThSve^vrm^^man emperors the. catacombs were-used for hiding places. Under Diocle-tian the" catacombs were crowded with

I Jnst had a fall on your sidewalk.

sugar stralRht and put your sand on

planned to Belllts land to private par- ; o f _dftUjr housework: A mother with cat that can catch all bad ants andU e s - • L (•- . four children and an excellent Income bats at Nathan's pantry and barn."

No sooner had tho capital city boon u n r a v e l e d a k n t t t a ( J BWeater that wa« ".Bravo!" cried uncles and aunts and

sagged on one sldo and -crocheted two- lho Queer.scatence,

tho slabs which seal the tombs. No'i and then are small chapels where

paintings are to be found. All areBlblo illustrations, so that the cnu-

their operations. It Is "asserted", muchland which belonged to the govern-ment Illegally passed to Individualowners.

Now Planning a Substitute for Beef

EEK and elk preserves may play anImportant part1 in reducing the

high .tost of beef.. According to gov-»rnmpnt "xpffrtB wh" lisve made aninvestigation of the cost and methodsof raising venison, declare that thogame laws of the various states are

deer and elk farming and

come to look upon the feeding as nmatter of course, and State GameWarden Nowlln of Wyoming, who hasled tbe feeding experiments, says thatthe last of tho great elk herds IB be-coming rapidly domesticated. Severalranchmen In the Rocky mountain coun-try have conducted private elk pre-serves for years. Outside of the pri-vate e}k preserves there are few herdsleft.in the west. > '

Barret Littlefleld. who lives near"SlaTefrh&srseverat-hmidred-elk-on-his-great ranch. Every season he shipsmany carcasses of elk to the Denvermarket, besides supplying zoological

A d e ^ n E s t o ^ c o m t i y i p n e r ^ t j t ^ . h ^joiircea of cheap and good meat; Beerand elk can be raised readily in near-ly every state In the Union. They areeasily controlled and cheaply fed.Tho Increase of elk under domestlca-'Uon Is fully equal to that of cattle.

The state and th<S government,through Its Yellowstone park officials,have cooperated with Individualtanchmen In caring lot.tb.o.jrastjherds_of elk In the Jackson's Hole region In

are 30,000 elk in the Yellowstone parkregion, constituting the only ' greatfcerd left For two or three winters

i these elk have been fed, and have now

pairs of hougo slippers of the ravel-Ings.

This used up all of her afternoonleisure for two weeks. By darningcarefully and stretching thta swtatera little, which would have taken heronly a few minutei, she could easilyhave disposed of It

For Simple Living.Fancy cake is not possible without

butter and eggs In abundance, but ItIs not necessary to the health of afamily or the table of a good house-keeper. There are substitutes, likefruit—plain ' or cooked—gingerbreadand cookies. It Is not fashionable toeat too much or too often, so those•whose-prlde-suffersln-the-lopplng-off-process may solve It with that knowl-edge. But women of fashion do goto market and select food, keeping intouch with the novelties as they ap-

'You see," continued Charlies, "youmay give the plnyers flve minutes, orany time you agree on beforehand, tomake up the sentence. When the timeIs up, the sentences are read and. theone having the longest sentence ofgood, plain, commonplace English hasgained tbe first point. You go thisway for each of the five vowels, and,when all the sentences are read andcompared, the person who has gainedthe most points wins the game."

^ MBlblo In effect;—Tho •Christian Herald;

f gardens throughout tho county. He

the" market—so profitable that heabandoned the cattle business yearsago and has devoted himself entirelyto the raising of venison. There aretwo other'elk preserves In northwest?ern Colorado. J. B. Dawson, a Routtcounty pioneer, has several hundredhead of elk on his ranch near Hayden.

In nearly every state In the Unionthe killing of "deer"Isrtorbldden • ex-«eptlng-)n-th»,fall_juid_during;.a Urn-

raised for the market the ventaonfarmer must be allowed to kill for themarket, whenever the demand la there.

stock whenever i t Is to be found. They"eat as a matter of course, whllo plain-er folk make feeding a prominent foa-ture of life. Quality, rather thanquantity, counts with them,'for theyhave learned that food governs healthIn a great measure. They- havo alsobeen taught that greediness of nppe-'tlte is distinctly vulgar.

GLOVE HELPS IN SWIMMING.Device With Concave, or Dished Sur-

face, Enables; Swimmer to GetBetter Grip on Water. •' /

.._.. , / _ „ /In order to Increase the effective

area of a swimmer's hand, oh inventorhas provided a glove consisting of anelastic web formed'with cots or stallsIn which tho fingers and thumb may^inie^c^^Tfie-KlbveCls'- lOso™af

means of

• He Had No Eye for Color. 'There came to the home of a Negro

In Tennessee an addition to the fam-ily In the shape of triplets. The proud'father balled, tho first man who camealong the road and asked him In tosee them. The man. who was .an Irish-man, seemed greatly Interested In thoInfants as he looked them over, lyingIn a row before him./

"What does^yoythlnk?" asked theparent / y

"Waul'V^polntlng to th» one In themiddle-^'ihlnk I'd save that one."—Everybody's Magaxlne. :

A. Fake Camera."Yonder 1B a beach camera fiend',"

said the flrsthathing ^irir-"Tbey~*re~disgusting, I think."

"This one Is particularly disgust-ing," declared the second bathing girl.After I had posed all morning for his

j

.Til e. d r y Ing. Knl*t.y..

Government's Census of Indian Wards

N the present census the govern-ment has made a great effort to ob-

tain, through' special agents, full andauthentic data concerning the tribalrelations of the Indians, as a decade

taken, It prohably will be foundthat thqse Indians who are now ydePwodent. wards of tho nation hai[e'be-«>me full-fledged citizens., 'xj/.--

Tho Indian population of>th^vnltedEtatea decreased In tne^decade from•W90 to J900, from tfijtO/f to 266,760.tin 1680 Hhe care of'the Indians cost•Jio national government |5,20G,109;Ja lilOS the/«o»f had risen to $16,-TO.162,

the government or by missionary en-terpruse Is 25,777. In these schools

I d

how to sharpen tho carving knife. Thosteel should be held,In the left hand,

- which should be on a level with the el-bow, pointing'toward the right shoul-der, and the knife held almost perpen-dicularly in tho right hand.

The hilt of the knife's edge shouldbe placed at the top of the steel andterpruse Is 2 , 7 D e p p

no effort Is spared "to teach the child th e blade drawn downward the whole^ h l h h y ^ p ^ ^ b t h t l d k i f f l tsome l n d u a t i r b y ^ ^ p ^ g g ^

port himself when he comes of^agei one side and -then on the other, soand the Indians are' gradually learn- that the point of the knife finishes atIng to live by the sweat of 'thebrow. the hilt of the steeLupon the product of their ciwn self- | The blade should bo'almost flat onrespecting handiwork,"rather than up-^ the steel, with the back slightly raisedon the bounty of. tWgovernment

The Apach'e.i Indians employed onthe Roosevelt'reclamatldn project un-

|34,0OOliif June 17,

^09, and rendorei:tory service in

Abeneflt^ he_ ate> jhls lunch tom_ thatbox.?;"%-• " •'^~':'z:>':"::^^i';r~

There is In every man's heart, as In.a desk, a secret drawer; the onlything Is to find the spring and open1L—Anon.

strap. • The cots are made of open. work material, so that they will hav«

but with only the edge touching It. a tendency to grip and-bind the Ongers to, prevent the glare, .from. slip.

herding has given profitable employ-ment to many hundreds of NavaJoBand Pueblos in the past year, andPlma nisd Papago- Indians, employedns navvies on The Bouthcrn Pacific

earned mahjr" thousands of

; ceanlna-nd me.cMn, H.t. , g * ^ - g , " « g ^ AmericanThe following mlxtur* Is recon> d o w n w a r d f o r I n l l l e a concave or dfsh

mended for cleaning, and bleaching c d s u r f a C e which will enable thestraw hats. It can be uswl on ex- BWimmer,-to secure aheitpr.xrjB-JPJ*

"prasTv^PaBBinff^snrs'^wftfctiat'-lnJnr^^^ a

Ing tho material: Sodium blsulphate, | . ' •flve drams; tertarlc. add, ! one dram: | A R e r n a p k able Library,borax, flve drams. Moisten a small i A genUeman a good many years agt

dollars.' The Sioux ' « « * " ^ V ^ Iwell, though they aro deficient In the •

of persistent patience that

quantity of the-powder and apply Itwith a tooth brush to the hat firstremove the band.

Ttcnltant WK

built a fu.e houso and wanted to havia good library, and so this (s tbe re

I markable order he sent to a boo)buyer: ' iSs> '

•Is'feet of theology, samit

lav

Right food is a basis

Forrighr living.— : - ^ ~ - ____^JJ

"TlcrfcVonljioue.diseasA" ..;

Says an eminent writer—•<

"Wrong living

"And but one cure—

"Right living." :..

Right food is supplied by

It contains the vital

Body and brain-building

Elements of wheat:and barley—

Mostimportant of which is

The Potassium Phosphate,

For rebuilding tissues •- <•'-."

Broken down by daily use.

Folks who use Grape-! luts

Know this—they feel i t

"Tlree** a Reason"

Read -TTK Road to WdMBeTFoaadiaptcbgeb

Workman's Thoughts Not AltogetherFixed on What Might Be Called

Higher Things.

Mayor William S. Jordan, nt a Dem*ocratlc h.mquft In Jacksonville. Balio f "cp'tfrritem ••""'•••"• "J1A"" «••*-«.»««"•.*.«...«..

"Let uscultivatetjptlrnlsmand hope-fulnpfs. There Is^uolhlnK like It. Vhooi.timistlr man can see a bright sidoto everything—everything.

"A missionary In a slum oi.'ce laidbis hand on a man's shoulder andtald:

" 'Frlena. do you. henr the solemnticking of that clocl;\? Tick-tack; tick-tack. A n d o h . m y frlt<n«I,*«lo.-3:aa.know_.what day It Inexorably and relentlesslybrings nearer?'

r. 'YCJ.ray day,' tin* other,nn hon-est, optimistic worklngman. repl ied"

HEARD IN A GROCERY STORY.

THE IMPORTANCE OF HEALTHY• t KIONEY8.

^ ^ yeons from tbe blood, and they ars thacauso of backache, headache, urln»

ary troubles and dl i irepellsi To Insure goo*

5Kidney Fills removeall kidney Ills. ,

Hrt. Sophia HultJ1st. 10 W. 16th St<

/Jamestown, N. Y.."sa}K*D&4T

could not live - sixmonths. I was bloat-ed to twice normalsize and friends couldnot recognize mo. I

was perfectly helpless and wished fordeath. Rapid improvement tookplace after I began using Doan's Kid-ney Pills, and In six weeks" I wascored.

Remember tho name—Doan's, Forsale by all dealers. B0 cents a box.Foster-Jlilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.

IsIn the Suburb.

"What beautiful public buildingthat?"

"That Isn't a public building. It'sold man Savltt's summer cottage."__!tAnd .whosejoeat_Jltt]e_Li»ttago Isthat over there with the tower on it?That little one-story frame affair."

"That l i n t a cottage. It's the FirstEplcopal church."—Life.

T R Y iURfflE EYE REMEDYI GRANULATEDEYEUDS I

UarineDocsn'tSmart-SoothesEyePaiD•noMS4B-teEi.Kmrfr.Uffll.ae.Slc.IUBkbriM Er> SA*. Jo A~pUcT.k«.2Sc tlJOO)EXK BOOKS AND ADVICE FREE BY HAH.MurineiEyeRemedyCo,Chlc«ao)

You Can't Cut OutAgSORBINE

wtn ttma thra 18 i » n > n | l ) v u tnot toUatcrpr rmmane Xh» b»lr. Cmi

VuhvetK llrdniMle. KaptDrad Uns-u » t > t i l inxl <J!»t«li. AllAtt P«lo

WJU MUyo. •»""!( Too wrlto. ^ o n l M *

MAOnXlST APPRENTICES WANTEDBROWN & SHARPS MFC CO. .

BOVS l&to-18 ytm o i l Crmmmu School

4 ;,BtcowN& SiiMipe Mra Coi

DROPSY DISCOVERT

W. M. 1U NSW YORK.

;? ':W^^§:PmTsrPr->B'^wWKW^^

Page 4: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

TheCranford ChroniclecsAirout, s . J.

Kntered «t the post Offic*, Cranford, N. J.. uaecond-claa* matter.

JQIIN ALFBED POTTKB, - Editor and JYop'r

T«TIM: Strictly Cub l> Advwa.

M I u i . - . •">" • - . . • »IS0

,lnnr'Ccpii> - ' ' *

Advertising raid (umlsknl upon ai>|>|lcalfimTfae Cbronlclo may be found on sale at tbe

.Union, llarrii'a and Welntraob'i Newt Stamia,Beay'i Druff Store and tbe Chronicle office.

Nobody, so {far as we can learn, i«1 Atforryfng-'OTei'i thcv delay i n .i.Mepun?.-

ing tfae census returns from Cranford.This town h»8 population enough andwealth enough to provide its residentswith goo I schools, good churches, goodtrain service, good roads, good sew-ers, good light, good water and everyother good thing that suburbanitesneed, and the addition of a largenumber of ..newromejs, would add noth-ing to these advantages. On the oilierhand it would ovcr'.ax our school fa-cilities and compel large increasesIn our municipal debt. A quiet,wholesome growth, derived from thecoming h»ro of select, well-to-do,cultured .familiea,-is ail-that Cranford,needs or should encourage. ••

"Unless' Wp'-'imle of'•"cigifreftea toy

one indignant father informs us thatho proposes to complain t<5 the autho-rities, and have the ofTending dealerprosecuted. Thjs .parent has caught

rMn »utj^riol4J¥iy.,-W'!!,ftf? F?°.on," and learned where they wort?purchased. The boy, needless to say,has already taken the woodshed trcat-

if he doesn't mend his ways.

• "Alas! Fiction, JktiontJietioni8..thBety. If a man takes up a book andfinds it in excellent condition, probablywith leaves uncut, he has very likelygotten hold of C8omethinjjr worth whifi

by hearing the chimes in the hotelbelfry ring out the tune of "Jesus,lover of my soul," just as I beginwrltlng~tho first line of-this.,letter.

Does it seem odd to you to hear ofa hotel wjth a chime of bells playingChristian tunes on a Sabbath morning?

other hand, the dog-eared_andjicncil-

'bes^ seller.'" The foregoing iswritten concerning a library less, than10 miles from Cranford. It isn't

" trUe"~6fWr«,-ar'least Wo" hope ' Uisn't. . . . . ' •

™Westfield

rays': "I wavglad to see in your issueof the 13th that Mr. Bergen has inmind a water supply for the townsbelow the W.atchung mountain.

" w a r i i m e s , g ^illustration of how the plaintiff anddefendant came out in n law suit.He had the plaintiff hold of a cow bythe horns; tho defendant bad hold ofthe tail; tho lawyer was milking.The horns came off;the tail came off;the lawyer had the cow.

"Look out'for the result if Mr.Bergen BuCcceds in getting the townsto combine on a water supply. Ifwe bond our town at all, tt should befor our own plant, and not in any com-bination in which promoters have thelion's (hare. If we. join in anyUnion Water Co. project they willhave the cow and we the' horns andUH." ,

A package of cheese, sent by par-cels post from Italy tbCamilloMassa,arrived at the local post office onTuesday. Mr. Warner-and his asaist-antB^got one whilT of the package andwere about to.send it by Bpccial mes-senger to Burnsidc avenue when a la-bel directing that the unpaid dutyinfill be collected caused a change ofplan, and necessitated keeping it untilcalled for; In the meantime everydoor, window and other means of ven-

'"tlUtiori"was- utilized,-and a specialwatch on the cheese was maintained

deliver itself. '

- An effort IB to be made tt> obtainfor E. A. Turner of Grove street thepension to which as a surviving -soldier of the Northern Army in theCivil War he is entitled. If theeffort succeeds, Mr. Turner will beable to pass the rest of his days with-

i d th b d btout anxiety regarding the bread, but-ter and raiment queetion that is sodisturbing to the most of us.

An educational campaign in theInterest of the renomination^nf Congressman Fowler ia being conducted bymeans of letters to the press byvarions prominent citizens. .The Cran-

- ford end of the correspondence is held>1. E. W. Austin, and what

through its Newest Monthly Income Policy,the surest way to provide the money yourwife and family will need for their support,after you are gone, and pays the money tothe family in the most practical way^-byMonthly Income Checks. Write for particulars.

Prudential

LETTER FROM DR. GREENETheGIenwood Mission Inn, Riverside,

• • • • /

_ Xu^.'i4th, "lib'io."To .the Sunday Schop^at Home:

Dear F r i e n d s ^ ! have just returnedfrom church, arid my thoughts turnto the dear friends who are 3,000miles awrfy." Oura Is a Christian landf com esa tft,astf.ut),. ,a».J(jun,; remind?ed/by finciihg churches and SundaySchools everywhere,—ard as I am

MOTOR LAW CHANGESTbe N. J. Automobile and Motor

paBsed Ihe jfollowifig'resbiutidns'f' Whereas; The existing automo-bile statute known as the Frelinghuy-

Kf^yie^Sr^^iiT^WaTOfiiBBiP^iSSsions, that were erected by theFranciscan monks all over Southern« l prnia. ver^^hjii ;r.ed-;. year ..agjQ2.and which were intendefnot only asreligious centers, but as placeB of,rest and refreshment for travelers.

*A. fc— •• -r4 -'-— jm^-.- • -ML .i. • . . Aiji 'y^ ,~-- a ' . . fjw M IB^M* 1 wV3J*ilflki^a^a^Bi^a>i

Tnu noCCi gariiuiia atO pl»«*H lITT!9,

orange tceca.nml all. Jnauincr-uf,trppi;

,«,,.„„ », -, ,

of thin vicinity in mass meeting as-sembled, in order- to protect the good

Tn"lTie~coniing efecHorr ioeleci^WmBmen to qflice regardless of party, whoshall pledge themselves to tbe un-

- qualified- -support i«f—the J motoring

parrots sitting loose on the limbs ofthe- trees; and within the buildingthere is a chapel, and all the furnitureis of the real mission Btyle; and, as

"Bells;"' that "ring "fflf 'thieerlly-fhTce-times a day.

Both ex-President Roosevelt andPresident Taft have been entertainedat tho Glcmvood; and in the main"lobby-is a mission chair, that wasespecially built for President Taft tosit in last October. Its wide enoughfor three ordinary people to sit inaide by side.

The preacher this morning in theCongregational church was Rev. Dr.Meredith, formerly of Brooklyn, butnow of Passaderia,- Cul. He is spend-ing Sunday at tho Glenwobd, and Ihad n long chat with him last night.He remembers quite a number of ourown peuple who were once connectedw~itn~the T6mpTtins~'Avenue "Cnurchifor example,' the members of theConklirg family, and Mr. and Mrs.Schuylcr Bennett. His face lightedup-.inatantiy:whea._l .mentioned '"•""Bennett,'" Mrs":" Fosfe'f'S>1Meredith's sermon was from a textfrom the*14th chapter of HoBea, whichspeaks of tho "dew, of Hermon."You may look it up^if you please.The sermon was beautiful and spirit-ual. '• / • '

Riverside is a lieautiful city at thegateway =of-=Southem. ^California.The houses are mostly in the mission

"°.f ™3.d9be ;.3."ndf''usual4yr V' hample gardens of tfopicaj trees'"ariaf

shrubs. Great palm trees grow alongthe'eurbs, and rose trees and oleandertrees grow to great size. OveruokirigUie~eity are great mountains, rome ofthem 14,000 feet high, and some ofthem capped with snow. So we arcliving in a beautiful summer,, whilewe can seo winter up above us on the

IK

been printed in an Elizabeth nnd'uRabway paper.

"The- judge looks, remarkablyeboerful."

"He's having the time of his life""What's be doing?"

- VVisitlng «ll tho doubtful playsI moving picture shows. He's the

(censor, you know."

mountains."I must not omit to tell you of an

interesting incident.. As our train,"The California Limited;" nearedSan Bcrnardina.yestcrday morning, apngo 4n uniform gnvp a bunch ofcarnations to each of the passengersaWlie Said to each of us—*'Thig- i_with the compliments of the SantaFe Railroad,'.' Wasn't that pretty?

I have enjoyed every hour of myT8u>Trroy"So*--rtt^ftratr-t-r}rr-nflt--forgetthe . good people of the' Cranfordchurch. God bless them, one anda l l ! ' • • . • •

Your sincere pastor and friend,' . <i. F. GKEENE.

The rabbit and the rooster showThat nature's ways arc queer.

One has hair without a comb ard oneA comb wltborA tbe hair.

Have'You a -Boy to Spare ?Tbe saloon must hqve boys or it

i. j.it?,; Bhop; i^Can'

It is a great factory and unless itcan have 2,000,000 from each genera-tion for raw material, some of thelaw with its amendments has

caused our neighboring, states to pass factories roust close up and the opera-retaliatory measures, and * I tives ba thrown out upon a cold world,^Whereas; The. business interests j and the public^reyenue dwindle.

'of'\he"State"are "being' ••B^'{^''t^ti'''""''^~'^-—"'~l-"^:^*''1--—l&~''-lfc-ig

ists of other states being barred fromiriled with the Secretary of State

powers of attorney and .securedlicenses for which compensation isexacted,.,»nd ..:. .; .

Whereas j Approximately $400,000of the reported $500,000 to be. expend-ed by this State in the repair of

law: .1. That non-resident automobillsta

desiring to tour in New Jersey, bepermitted to do so for a limited period

•without-Tequiring-thein-tospecial-licenses, or sign powers ofattorney, before entering the bordersof the State, provided they have dulycomplied with the laws of the statesin which they reside.

2. . That the law which was recent-ly passed requiring all vehicles tocarry lights at night shall bo re-enacted and mdde so that it can beproperly enforced and a minimumpenalty fixed, and the fines collectedfor breaches thereof turned over tothe State Treasurer to be spent onlyon the repair.of/improved highways.

3. That the horse power - of cars'for license/purposes shall be ratedA. L. A V M . . and not upon the manu-facturer's rating. • •——

j t r That in. consideration of thelarge sums received from license feesby the State, automobiles be exemptedfrom taxation, and that the' feefl so

other and all taxes.5. That two thousand dollars

($2,000) per year,, for a period of atleast three year's, be set' aside fromthe funds paid by the automobilistsfor licenses, etc., such amount to beused in erecting proper, guiding signsqponthp.highways .where..required,.

6. That motorists Bfiall have theh right to- appeal- to the Supreme Court

sioner of Motor Vehicles.7. That a law be enacted requir-

ing gates at all grade crossings ofsteam railways and of electric rail-ways where operated over a privateright of way, crossing a public high-way. "

contribute a boy in order to* keep up

""WliT'you" KelpTWriicB" one"oF"yourboys shall it bo? .

Are you a father? Have.you givenyour share to kwj),.up tl^eaupjiJy forthis great public institution that ishelping pay your taxes and kindlyelecting public officers for you?

contributed a boy? If

•rto^l^pSitte^'iiaJooiiS.opealatil.'grind up boys and then doing nothingto keep up the supply.

Ponder-theso-questions, ye votcrr.

you-will one day give an account forvotes asiwell as prayers.^AndVe-roothera, «lve»~a»d daughiteWj' jre' yoii..b, . rjrwjgpt,: examyh

doing all you can to W e the boysfrom the enticements of the legalizedliquor saloon, and hasten the" daywhen it shall be outlawed, and curse

not?

ODDS AND ENDSDo it now—to-morrow some one

else may have done' it and collectedthepay. •

A thick hide may be good for anelephant or a politician, but it nevercould help an honest man.

The old saying, "It is never toolate to mend'' must have been writ-ten by (he mother of a large familyof growing children. '

"YeB," said the nut to the nail," i t gave me a terrible wrench topart from him, but I knew it wouldbe only a matter of a few days beforehe would bolt," anyway." , ,TTriT SuWubT^h^Hai'Kireona'manto plant shade trees)—Digging outthe hole), I see, Mr. Lannigan.Lannigan—No,_jnum. Oi'm diggin'

recalls a famous epigram perpetratedby a brilliant pupil, upon the profes-sor, who was somewhat inclined tocorpulency.- .,._ _., _ L.._,. p . B., oh be obedient* To nature's stern decrees;

iFor though^on be but one,.O. B.,' You may be too obese 1

., That ' 'handsome doctor at therhoteTseems to be an object of interest tothe young ladies."

"He claims to be investigating thetheory of germ transmission bykissing."-"Well?" .

3 "They're 'hoping he'll J call forvolunteers."

SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES

It cures painful, smartftgT~nervbUs~feer^and instantly lakes tho sting out ot cornsand bunions. It's the greatest comfortdiscovery ot the age. Allen's Foot-Basemiikes tijht or new shoes feel easy. It isa certain care for sweating, callous, swol-len, tired, aching feet. Always use it toBreak in New shoes. Try it lo-daj. Soldeverywhere By mail for SScts. in tUraps.JkmU adtept any nOttitvU. For FREEtntl r«oten.«Jd|MB.*llm B. -L * B O T , N . Y . " . >

M O ^ O ^ - . i 4 r . J . . l . ; . . l . ?i'E*,* And "what- are^we "to.- understandby the Biblical expression 'the fourcomers of the earth?' " asked theinstructor in theology. "Rockefeller'scorner in oil, Havermeyer's corner insugar, Carnegie's corner in steel andPatten's corner in wheat," answeredthe now student. * .

The recent publication of the ine-a celebrated English univer

'Did you hear the awful ehriekthat engine gave as it flew by?"asked the first man as they approach-ed • railroad crossing. -

'Yes. What caused i t ? " rejoinedhis companion.- "I presum^the engineer ha&~ it by

the throttle. "-Smart Set. -

."Whew There's a Will/* Etc.The maiden priced a diamond ring,tt sparkled Hkethe_ Sun.

But didn't have theThe maiden had no time to lose.

Mon.

Tucs.

Wed.

And folded up her ones and"I've got a scheme," she coyly said,'/••I'll go and find a be*u and i _Sba bundled un in cloaks and f ursb

md him at an oyster Fri.

todtaoSbrluTetheT 8at

WHKNiJMSPEMAlKS^interest it would ever earn are gone forever.

A SAVINGS ACCOUNT- • . k •

if opened now, and consistently and syste-matically increased, will some day bebest friend.. . .- \ , ~ ,

FIDE LIT Y

N E W A R K . N. J .

pays 4 per cent on amounts up to $1,000,31 per cent, on amounts over $1,000.

Union County Agency,233 Broad St., Elizabeth

STANDARD CONCRETE BLOCKSare sold and delivered In Cranford, Wcstfleld and elsewhere, and cost no more than thecommon cheap-looking CEMENT BLOCKS. We contraot your Job, sketch out.the-iwork and supply »Il,sizesljind,,sh».Dp5L>^9^^9TJ?£C%U^l^;,!^,:J^.i^.Jln,fflitUii|...and'btirig Hlfe BloicfeB;. ' WBLOCKS for jour next Jobfyou will save money. Send ns your plans and specifica-tions for an estimate by mail.

Standard Concrete Stone «,. ,829 Elizabeth Avenue ' 7l2(W First Ayenot

|i.v'f.,t<t^*Mii(,v^'--'-.>t^\«.->'^v-r.>-!-.'.*--'-^'r.'!'*-«"-*'^7 •'^''•'^>tf" * * * R o s c | t e •-"'"•T'*

IJ. D. Phone, 545-W, Elizabeth. . '

ifiirti^ti'il

ISLplB »i MILLER,

Tinning.- :-: .NEW WORK AND REPAIRS

.IAP0BTCB3-THE MOST INDUSTRIOUS STORE I

TO 01

H W J i >&••}• Vi;•*;• 'i rff -

—7—DEALER IN

Carriages • Harness

—•--Customers of -20-yeaTff Standing In"Cranford who will vouch for satisfac-tion received. Repairing and paintinga specialty. ' •

i4o Elm Street Weatfield

,,1icfl7ottiran^ gov& hon»«nindecnk'ud'pics leave jour order. We do gocbaking, everything nioe eflW clean, up-tdate.

LEHIOH VALLEY COAL

ALSO KINDLINQ WOODNATIONAL BAN!

Office 11 E. North Ave.

— V A B D , ' CCHTINNIAI. AVINUI—

CBANFORD, . New Jersey

CRANFORD, N. J.

I Shareholders" Liability. $50,000.

SATURDAYHlalf-BCoildayEXCURSION

T O

August 27th, 1910TICKETSRound Trip

Tickets ,

Childrcn,55c

aridL

August 27th

Round Trip•'• Tickets

Children,55c

On Speciat Train,Which leaves Cranford at K22 p. m.

^~rRETyRNINOrtEAVBT«BURY PAKK AT rTPTMT-^

I THOS. A. SPERRV^ President .N. R. FOSTER, Vice-president.

6. Mi HENDRlCKS, Cashlc

DIRECTOUS:

I Thos. A. Sperry, • W. M.^perryP. B. Uynn, S. R. Drbe«ohiH.N. Fiske, / '• P.. II. .Crary>

I R. J. Mix, / '• J- C. DenmtN.-R. Foster.

I COME AND SEEThe now and improved Bi-SiRht T o

, ud Pebble Eye Glasses. Two doctorsI _»ttcndanca.to.prescribo^!n.ssej lorjcorre1 tag visual defects. 9. a. in, to 5.80 p. m.,

The genuine crystal TEHDLE! oycglas;the CODL kind that never JJIST or SCRAT

"tkeAPI.AtlATIO, INVlBlBLB Bl-SlOlIT, TO«ttvptoK and other lenses in "IlilKlmountinaor trames. The EASY, COMFO»BLB and STYLIBU glass that fit the

. ud never pincli tho nose.Glasses repaired. Spencer Lens-den

..BWrWe have no agents or traveling re|Rntites and only OHK place of busines:

tt Maiden Lane, New Y

NEW JERSEY CENTRAL

WAINS Foil ELIZABETH.

NEW YOBK.

The Granforci Gas Light Co.,

205 EAST BROAD STREET,

Supplies Cranford with Gas for Light, Fuel

J-Jj- 125?, 141, 258.84VS68, 705. 863,

6BK 7M.-8M, 1B t d a y only)

.Arnatalleld-loJ. iM. 6BK 7M.8M, 1i1j« A. w. 12 4i, (i Si, 300 Batnrday only).»e.(J0»8atnrdiiy.oBlj)^M;8 38,4 in,« <i>,5S 5M, tO57, «l».tOS?, 8*3. 688, 718,!£.»a), 1007,1110 P.M. 1S»«, Sundays! S l 9 a i J ' »»V, 1048. 1148 A. M. 12 40,?H4,*)> 5S0J ° >»•««, 7 S . 814, 9 87, 1

17, 1139,P.il. 107A. Ml

Easton. Bethlehem, Allentown. Mtto 769 11S5 A M O 24 Satu

«A. M. 143, BSO. 047, P.

i S g Wllkes Barre and Bcranton-4 60,8 68,•M t- M. UundayB.» » , A. M. B 20, P. M.

tml ^kewood-860, »IO A. M , 1 « ,'"P.M. Sundays,741,1003 A.M. 141

.'<TXtlantloClt»-8&8,04l>A.M. (U69S^<n<» ,«01P . l I . SondayMO03A.M.

JUeept SaturdBj*. xBxoept Hewi

Page 5: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

THE MOST INDUSTRIOUS STORE IN NEWARK-THB CITV OF INDUSTRY

ARE YOU9 . - . - • ' / ^

TO/OUR BIGBIRTHDAY

,n(/i{i»,«>/l»"«

'R'^'frJ j

HAHNE&""CO".""BROAD^^.NfWANbHALSETsTS., NEWARK

LOCAL AND OTHERf ITEMSMrs. Fabrici'- and^fisg McCarter

have gone to-"SsTnf£a Spjings for-amocth. ' -. .». ;::r. Escavitigw;««for the cellar of Robert D. town-send'sntfw residence on Holly street.

The Field and River Club expect tohj^fe their new clubhouse open for in-spection on Labor Day.

A Chicago, girl was asked by herBoston cousin whether she likedTugueu. No, was the reply, but Iadore clans.

A party ol boys ami girls*, membersof the I D. C. Club of Jersey City,were guests of Mr. Pcndorf this week.While here they enjoyed a ennoo rideon the river.

Thi death of Mrs. Jane B. Ste-phensoh last week will permit thesale of- the property on Denman ave-

of which it was a part to the twelvegrandchildren of the late, owner.

Tickets for the bridge whist at theCanoe Club on the 3ist are on Bale,and as the proceeds are to be uecd infurnishing the elubroom, the friendsof the organization are expected tomake tbo contest as pronounced a BUC-ccss financially as -it i s - bound to-besocially.

On Tuesday, _.AIr. ..Heins' touringcar, driven by his Bon, knocked overand crushed the rear wheel of a bicy-cle belonging to the Chamberlain boy

mployed at Berry's store. The bicyclehad-been left standing against the

urb in front of the^store.The return of school days is her-

ilded by the •steadily, rising .,tide ofuppilerirthB~cxpreM-aTnd-1:fre!gtiit

- The prtze*-for the raiea on LaborDay morning under the auspice* ofthe Canoe Club will include paddles,I«ciita5t»,;eii»hior8,-(md. numerous

or deiir*ie?tr6jfn*B,; ;Afhereto^fore announced, .the morning racesare open to everyone, while the after-noon events will ba contested by clubsin the N. J. Canoa Association.

Waldo Rosencrantz and family areregistered at The Tourraine, AtlanticCity. They expect to return Sept.5th. •-

THJKUS1U /"How many ribs have you?" asked

the tea'cher."I don't know, ma'am," giggled

Sallie. "I'm so awfully ticklish. 1could never count 'em."—Lippincotts.

Beware <>fOintments"fdrV&tMrSthat Contain Mercury^

M mercurr TQI surely dretroy the mue ot smelland completely "denwRe the whole system talicnentering. It tbroueli the tnueoiu surface*. KucbartU'ltt itiottld never be uat*l except on prcarrlp.lions tram reputable phrolcianj. us the dara&eo theywill do u ten laid to the ffoo4 you can possibly de>rive from them. Hall'i Catarrh Cure, manufacturedby F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toktlor©., contain* no mcr*cury. and li taken Internally, acting directly uponthe blood and mucous surfaces of the' pystcm. Inbuying mil's catarrb Cure be sure you fret thejtenulne. It Is token Internally and made In Toledo.ODU>. bji.F. J,Ct»oey i C o - TraUmaut«)» Ireo.;,. -.

Bold by DruSRlBts. Price, 7S«. per bottle.Take HUlt Family fills tor ooutlpatloo.

iffices^ 'It isn't necessary to visit the Met-

ropolitan Museum of Art in order tofeast the eye on pretty pictures, sincethe covers of tnagazinesineet the re-

Saturday and Sunday next havebeen designated as "opening inspec-

|Tflien a good iherf 1» wuirtM sfojv In U

RESTAURANT4

. . l i S i f j w W good - home«mnde-crik«iind pies leave jour order. We do goodbaking, everythingnioe SIM clean, up-to-

"WOTlCfeft On? Second

Election Di irfctMOTICK Is hereby jjlvtn tUat a special dec-A^ tion of tlio li-iral voters of the second

fn tjiu County of Union will be hold ut the usu'£1'1M ilffl r : O >t li'uo' T iV'liftM ""Gist li ef r"ii *ufiiol V'tliBTov/nslilp ItoouiB In t lie I.tanonlq Biiip Itoorns In t lie LtaHonlq Bu

t cornur of Union Ayt-nuo innilStreet, on I

TIlUnSDAY, HEPTKalBEIt 8.1010,

Aldcn

•??-''VoV-»'-V»fifr;V!

I THE CRANFORDNATIONAL BANK

CRANFORD. N. J .

Shareholders" Liability. $50,000.00

| THOS. A. SPERRV,N. R. FOSTER, Vice-president.

G. Mi HENDRlCKS, Cashier.

DIRECTORS:

I Thos. A. Sperry, • W. M.^perry,P. B. Uyin, S.R.. Ditcher,H.N. Fiske, / F. II. CrorR. J. Mix, / - J- C. Denman,

N. R. Foster.

I COME AND S E E, The now and improved Bi-SiRht Toric

ud Pebble Eye Glasses. Two doctors in

tag visual defects, 9 a. in, to 5.80 p. m.

The genuine crystal rBBDLif eyeglass• the COOL kind that never JJIST or SCBATC.I'lheAPI.AIIATIO, INTlBIBLB Ml-SlOlIT, TORIC.

UHTOK and other leHees in "ItilKIToounting.or frames. The EASY, COMFORT»BME and STXMSU glass that fit the cyi

• ind never pinoli tho noso.Blasses repaired. Spencer Lens • Clennc,

-BMrWe have no agents brtraveling repro-1 Kntkes and only ONK place of business.

I I M a i d e n L a n e , - N e w Y o r k

NEW JERSEY CENTRAL

| TEAlNSpon ELIZABETH.-NEWAHK A N

NEW YORK.

J-Jj- 1257, 141, 258.841.Sli8, 70S. 863,

,,F«Plalnflcld-lBJ,4M, Ooi; J BH.-8 59, 11105l i? , A ' M- "*««• O « . 3<»Botardoy only).20'g(50!r8atnrdii7 O B 1 J ) ^ M ; 8 3 8 4 - i » - « «! S 5M, tO57, « l » , t o S ? , 843. 058, 71S,r5 ;!£.»'•», 1007,1110 t . M . 1S»«, SandayB 1C»». 820, 887. 1048. 1148 A. M. »»«! . :>*•},*!•««. 5 20. 018. 647, 7&. 814, 8 57, 10 5!1 ' » , 1139,P.il. 107A. i l l

Burton. Bethlehem, Allentown. Jtaijctto 7 9 1I A M II *lBatntun

, B A - M.' 143, 5 20.0*7, P.| .'wWllkeaDarreandBcranton—150,858 A. MMM t. M. 8und«T»,» P..A. M. 6 20, P. M.

i l •.»« A.M.. !«,„»?iAKewood-8H, •.»« A. M., u s , ••Hv 8unday».7«,JI)0il A.M. 1 « P -

£>r Mlantlo C!ty-» 8S, 0 M A. M. ( « B» Battt.on|y>, 301 P.M. 5aad»y», 1003A.M. 1

•boept Bttntdsn. xBxcept Newark.

the Voting Mucmfte iu eaui ulstrlut. .Tlio l'oili will ranmln'lonvn from 0 o'clock

ALVAN i:. DENJIAK,Township Clerk.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCEFirst Church of Christ, Scientist," Cran-l N J t i l f U l l l

iln" SMcctr "Ssrvicus-S-umlny-ot-11-A; »:•fedncsdny evening, 8 P. M. Keiuliiig Rnomn daily, 10 A. M. to 12 M. and Fridayvenings trom 7:45 to 0:30 where nil Cliris-iau Science literature can »e obtained. Allro welcome both to tlio services and to theeading Room.

B. A. DOYLElectrical Contractor.

prompt attention>to all wiringBell Work.

'el.'230. Centennial Ave., Cranford

HARDWAREIlcnilquarters for

f,roiti?«w{4lciiKlai;iiitock),,JdIyGlasses,,llubbore,'ParafBiie, Preserve Ketttcs, etcMso Oil Stoves, IcoCrenm Froezers (75cHid up), Ilammocls, \yiro Screens am)oots, Croquot Sets.

OPERA HOUSE BLOCK-Te l . 138-R.-

TBAOK MARKSDESIGNS

COPYRIGHTS AC.

TSmjmtf*... L._j.nn,Bi« iiinntrmted weekly- S*w?fs-,

NOTICE OF INTENTION.MOTIl'E la hereby Klvontluit.lt Is tlia Intcn-•*- tionof tlio Townshlli t'ommlttfe ol theTownship of Crunfonl. Union vouuty. New Jor-aty, lt» puss "An Urilltiulico lor thy Improv* -mtnt of Lincoln Avenuo, troiu CVnlt'iinlul Avt;--nuu Wratcrly to tlio Trucks of the Ccntrut Kali--roud of Now Jornuy," utid thut

WEDNESDAY, ALWST31,1010, "'alSu'clock, p. in.,Is llio time, and tliu Town-ship iuioius, ooruLT ol.Lli4pu-AVL-uuu umt. AUiuii

Clerk

easterly side of the river from River-side avenue northward. -

No tBss- thanfive "yo^ng •"'lawyers' dfPlainfield are aspirants for the cityddgeship about to bo Tcllnquishud by

W N Runyon, vsho is ecking thecon^reBSioml nomination The wouldlit, -judged ura 'ft'lilKun (<J».D«1Ietti:Harrj C Runjon, Franci J Blot^V. _ W . Nash, Jfe, ~«nd 4* Honrjg

hijn," said the man in thejiewoffice. " ' ' . '

lh here' said (the fighting editor.

A POSSIBLE EXCEPTION!Wife—Isn't it a fact, dear, that

•handsome men are proverbially disa:

always try to be pleasant.

L L. MANNINGTHE LARGEST . STEAM MARBLE AND

GRANITE WORKS IN THE STATE

Monuments ami Headstones for Cemetery Plot:All Orders Delivered and Set Up

PLAINFIELD, (Oiuioslic First Huntlst Church:

EVERY SUNDAYEVERY FRIDAY

Lake (IH«ppatco»g=ffiA

Children 50c

Special Train leaves Cranford Sunday* iO:J7 a. m., Fridays, 9:05 a. tn.

tiTUaoo?.Trt>crca.ti«i\t^j a l l poMoiwlaturiMtoil—li^

iwsttl urdlnutluu.JutuJ, AU£U9l 17, 1010.

ALVAN It. UENMAN,T

NOTICE OF INTENTION.TIOE!stele»yirt'o»itliaMtlth<)i«r<!lrtluuot the -TowiMlih) C'oininltteo of the

Towuhblp of crunford, Utilon County, XewJer-hey, to naBs *>Au.Ordlniili(.-e'for thti ltuprovi'-mun.tofK Izubuth Avenue from North Avumir»~ Uniou Avt Hue," «Md tliut t

at8o"cfoijk.p. uu, lhtfiii lliiu, iiud fli6"-*T!««i-ship Kuouis, eonier of Union Avunuo and AldulHlrvL't. Is this plnce. wbere n flunl .heurliiK willbo filveji to ail perilous Ititcreuteu li) Bum pro

l ^ U

ALYAN K.-DKKMAN,Township Clerk

NOTICE OF INTENTIONT.HJE:iirJrt!WfrT,*-l*i!n tt)Ut Ir fe tim jut'fftlVi'WCllie'Mowiiitl) *.oittdAK ±*£ t .

Township of frulifor I I 11 11 u t> N 1 r

; i l U t - * l ! l A Y V I I U f , M l l l i t l l l l l

WKUNEaDAY, A I ' U U B I ' SI, 111.10,atSo'clouk p.m., Is tho llniv, und tub Town

el, la tbo place, wbero a Iliml bearbiKvvi'iiTiirIClVH-T^flUf»"'"'»ln^r^ttli'ft In JUlUlirupOriCdotdiimnou.

d A

TowDablp Clerk

JKOTJCE IriUBtahcreli , -tlon of the Township Cbmroittuo of th<

.....H3hl|i of Cruurord. Union County, New Jer.wey,toiiuw "An Ordlnunoe for the lmiirovt1-tnent ol Contrnl iVyenuo, from Hprlustlel'1 *'•mo to Klehth Street, anil that

WEDNESDAY1, AUGUST 31. 11U0,atSn'clockp. m., Istho time, ami tlio Town

- •' -•- Avennu uml "'••

bo given toipohCd drainDated. August.l-.llllO.itir, into.

ALVAN It.lDESMAN.1 Towiiflhlp Clcjk

Ladies ! Save Money^andKeep* in Style by

Reading McCall's Magazineand Using McCall Patterns

M«SUIMliclp you dtvss BtylIslily at a modoratooxpenso by k o o p I n gvqu postod on, tliola tes t f a sh ions inclothes and Uats, COK«w Fash ion Do-slk'ns In ench issOb.Also valuablo infur-mntfon on all homoand personal mat-t a n i B 0 Ctcta—_aniy_B0CAyonr, i n c l u d l n i ta froo pnttoru. Sub-scrlbo todny or sondfor frco anmplo top?.

McCaQ Patttnu wHl cnnblu you to mako In yourown homo, with your own hands, clothinirfor yoursolf nud children which will bo per-fect lnstylo and (It. 1'rico—none ufclier than•16 cents^-- .Bond.-for freo Pattern Catalocuo.WHirinc'Yb'n^^^Mt'for : itrotilr^JalP' ;Wtirinc«YbBni^^^tifrtroiri^HalPscrlptlons amonc your frlontls. Bond for ftcorromlum Catalouuo and Cash Trfzo Offer.TBl •cCAUCDHFANT, 239 to 249 Wol 374 St. HEW Y0H

JOB W

Peter Markusson

GARBAGE COLLECTOR.

p. 0 . BOX, 183, CRANFORD.

Reasonable Prices.

"\i^teyer^oS^wer neeitsm^Wetectiiot^will supply them. .

. . _ • . _ " / .

From running a dentist's drill to furnisninganything up to one thousand horse power in^the workshop, no method of drive surpasses

-electricity.

It will not only work in factory, office or homehut it can be utilised to advantage in theopefatiori of motortrucks and pleasure vehicles.

Central station power is clean, elastic and con-ies^no-

energy. It is always ready and is better andcheaper than steam. • .

Public ServioL Electric Compan;

ATTENTIVE. . ,r aad,pkiriag; drugstore scr-.

totrer.' No effort is over-looked, no act left undoneto m?ke buytns here a pleas-ure and SAtisfactior. Thisservice cos s nothing extra.Why not take advantageof it?

Cf anford Pharmacy, J. R. REA.Y, 13 Unmsi A«ci)us

EVERY WEDNESDAYUntil September u t h . InclutWa -

Via NSW JERSEY CENTRALAMU

Albany Day Hue Str. "Albany"Dlrvct Cuiinectton at Jtm-y City SUllua

JOHN DOYLE,

PTUniMilg,'OtH Flttiin, Sfeiai.

Hot Water and Hot Air Hestlnr,

Tin, Copper ind Sheet Iroa Woik.

Agents for Itichardaon & Uoyntnno., Furnaces and ltanpes.

C. R. WHEELERDealer in

FLOUR, FEED, BALED

•Uphon* 44-L. Cranford, U. J.

K. BAUMAN,

Near R. R. Station.

Vo miike high-class pliutoRrniilis ot every

iiscriptioti anil gunraiit™ ii|i-tCHlnte work.

PICTURE FRAMES.

C. EILBACHERBuilding Contractor

C6VJEJV|T f

AND GUARANTEED

Manufacturer, oi All Kinds .ol ArtillriaStone Produt.s. .

"~Offic£Vt33Tpur

BlilZABETII ' - Now Jersey

UP THE HUDSONSPECIAL EXCURSION

Leave Cruufurd ti:lil a. m.CnlHren 58 C:oh

I 01 tl| «pl. IS

FEED, ETC

308 K South Ave. Tel. BO-R

CKANFORD, N. J. .

J. Raymond Lambert

Funeral" Directorand Embaltner

Office: Z0 Eastman $)., Cranford. N. J.

Lady Aitlitant ,

FRED H. JAHN,

HOUSE, SIGN, AND FRESCOT

Plain and DecorativePaper Hanging

AND DEALEtt tN

Glar;, Oil, Paint, yatnishes andWall Paper. C

TeU'|ihoiio

Ctarford, t

V Wflfffllf, ~-

D F \ L E R IN ICE

Quality Unrivaled. 'Service Prompt.

PRICES LOW.

Store Qoses Saturdays at 12 noon. Open Friday Evenlngi Until JO o'clock

- All Cranford and Newark Trolley Cars Pass Our Door.

.NewMeraay**ghopplnfl.Centre.

Have Your New AutumttSuit Made To Measure

Every woman will recognize that value—the delight-=the charmoFhaving her-suit-madc by-a responsible-tailor and*'fitted to her measure. There seems anatmosphere of elegance in the very thought. Our

"_tailorirjfg section offers you now an opportunity«which^i£ taken^^^to haveitor the''firsl1bf)enYn^^aysl)T'FairaJBeaMfuiry*artistically and perfectly tailored suit that, if ordereda fortnight hence, when the rush begins, will surelycost you many dollars more. For the next few days,then, we make out; patrons these two special offers:

$30 FOR MADE TO"MEASURFSUIT——

WORTH 40.00 to 45.00

OR A MADE TO"MBASURE-SUIT—-^

WORTH 50.00(0 55.00

, i i r i t ^^hsEd 'a t iQh^Ke^t^aEtJ^^suits will be made up in a choice qfsix of the verylatest models for the Fall and Winter of 1910-1911,you can easily see the extraordinary advantage ofhaving a suit made to your measure now, at theabove prices. The materials consist of

BROADCLOTHS, CHEVIOTS, SERGES,

The linings are of, finished yarn dyed satins, peaudecygne and Skinner's satin. These suits, repletewith all the style and workmanship we embody inthem/actually could not be secured from any customtailor in the city, or from anjr metropolitan.estabHsh-ment for less thai) 15 60 to 2O.op more.

An extra charge of 10 per cent, will be made forabove 44 inches.

This is without question the greatest offer ever madein a high class custom tailored, made to measuresuit. •; •

OBUVBRIRS DAILY BY OUR OWN WAQOKS TO CRANFORD AND VICINITY.

V..

Page 6: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

The Chronicle.C-"":~" '^-injBusHKb^^wDMXir'*-"':

CRANFORD, N. J.Keep cool and keep your temper.

Beware of the pure spring water at(he summer resort.

A new airship record, also an air-•hip, aro broken every day.

The rases of short weights seemsto be Just as clear as the product.

Thcnr are breaking aviation recordsrather more rapidly than the limbs ofthe aviators.

i 5 jto Venezuela appears to be taking;a"summer vacation.

This Is the season when manythings happen that make a man clodho learned to BWIIH. :

WfflllflE

It has been demonstrated that nmonorail car will not stay oa a rail(balls not flrmlxJald.

A Massachusetts university..pros!,dent wants to conservo the reltabUold fashioned spanking.

It seems doubtful If Virginia's newantl-ousalng law will be any more ef-fects vomeat

HERE Is an underworld notInvaded by novelist or play-wright Yet In It . occurstrange and often subtle dra-mas, of survival and destruc-tion. Nor Is It a noiselessunderworld.^.^Every eveningafter a hVr'siinset'Ttf'fdrnY*5'an orchestra which shrillsout Its prowess and flaunts

ts coming achievement And in all the worldthere la no orchestra so well paid. To be sure* gets tittle in the matter of attention, but Inrays more substantial it Is rewarded hand-lomely. For It Is permlttod to levy toll uponlie corn and the wheat the cabbage and thoipple, as they grow, it Is allowed to eat thoprofits of the miller and the'graln dealer. Cer-lala members of tho shrilling tribe go farthermd demand greater concessions In their greed.Hot Satisfied with money tribute, they exactluman lives. Their gruesome tracks are madelpon the faces of little children. Then from

Just thJnJir-pfvBte.allng;tbe ttllk of. a-j-pow-cow-when »h» iwai-iniereBted'In '.tlo beautirui strains of Beethoven orWagner. .

Explanations from the weather bu-reau" that arhot^wave 1s something In

„Uw.nature ,ot,ta flare;up ^ould do, nog o o d ' w h a t e v e r . " " ,;'•"••••"•'•'?••"•-'-•'*•••••.•>••

A West Point cadet has been pun-

"iffifrnpners4"*'OWiii'"lutlons of sympathy.

. ,;.It JRlU be notlced.that.UiqsQ would:,be nude fanatics up In the Saskatche-wan always select tho summer monthslor their demonstrations.f

to pay" tor1 th*'

feles Into filth and Blckness, they take wingind they bear their death message into homes^alr,j»nd lean^hpmesjyjbere.the;, Inmates, cans,;

jnes. And so nature u her Inexorable circle!rom which neither tho proudest nor the poor-•st can escape, herself supplies tho link which,Wings tho miserable home to the fair one.- But reducing It to a -dollars and cents •---Sails which all of us understand, what: wouldrou i»y;,UL0.tnsect3 of this country cost uslaeh yearT Millions braotlarsPMbr'otn' fact••••*±ut our entlro system o[ public Bchool edu-•atlon, from the. klndorgartoa ta the-unlver

this « , «

A substitute for radium has been In-—»isaT6d.-~-v7e-BhtttrTeTu8r to-unr trun*- ..Ul- w« can be aasured-Uiatlt doe«n:t,

contain bemoate of soda.

Moreover whole sections Intended by ria-.ture for the production of particular cropsjfton are compelled to abandon them for noJthef reason "thani" Insect "rrifestaU6£ "'Thisisespecially true of horticulture. Myriad, In-Iced, aro tho Insect foes that Infest vegetablesind fruit. If over the life of this underworldIs brought upon the stage as that of the bam-Tstti-rjE&s jV&cif, It \Tro$$ S,WIG1*.,JPJSWI wfth.* jtbis1

ililnt of the truck grower:

--"-•nj«tBi»tu.r.r«-bair-tin?lo«r *»*-*««; - - -A-hBtchln' Out Surrer for my garden Buf,Th«y'r» happily hummln* this giddy r*>

frtln—:

ii.»7

Pennsylvania reports the appearance^CTe^0f--a«-ntfw-blooii-l»i«oolnBJ-bug.'pennsri»anl» should l o o jiottaB In

Baltimore Is having an undertakers'war. Baltimore people, who intend toeat Ice cream cones should do It nowand got the benefit of cheap funerals.

X l K p pvut the name of the man who Inventtd tho cocktail As he must be dead}y now, why, Impose the blot on his[somoryT

Flights over} the English channelAbould be encouraged. An aviator'.«ith a good cork Jacket la much safer> w a Isrgo body of. water than he Isabove land.

A young woman In Washington Isso beautiful that sho can't get em-ployment. They won't even give' hera chanco to. prove that handsome isas handsome does.

In view..of iho_bad_chanicter_thathas recently been fastened upon thefly the man who Is referred to by hisMends as ono who "wouldn't barm aOy" Is finding It difficult to retain pub-lic esteem. ..'...

Tho -gas works -of the "Zeppelin A|r-ahlp company at Frledrlchshafen, Ger-many, have been demolished by anexplosion which Injured seven people.There are men .who would get discour-aged If they wero in Zeppelin's place.

Attacks upon children by dogs and

nowadays, probably because of neglectof the animals during the hot weather.

! ;jtaYmaJ*-iiat a r a ^during the heated term are as apt' tobecome deranged as men who are sub-jected to extremes of heat and cold.All owners of animals should exercisemore than usual care In looking aftertheir comfort while the weather is un-comfortably hot. - • •

Now the farmer has found hlm.elf help-.«!• before this foe which must bo foughtwith microscopes and laboratory mysteriesConsequently no has appeaTeTTo fne mail j , , to tbATdtlne com-

dw of prosperity and rushes to' conrolt whek "' ,^ t the de»dcoveredthe world is awry. • . . with a .white mould.

L«t mo tell you of what has beon accom- 'pushed by one man with a microscope. Hisnun* Is Stephen A. Forbes and he U state u n t v e r s l t y fleUB ^entomologist of Illinois. His chief work in . s n •.„_- lnn]r •, _ n . +tw».posIuonv.M_to.,exterinlWte._*'econgmIfi,J]B^. obligingly and••cti,".. as those which damage tho growingthings • are called. He ts also head ot thestate laboratory of natural, history and pro-fessor ot entomology In the University of Illi-nois. He has held these offices 25 yean,which means that he has spent a quarter ofa century -fighting .the predaceous instincts oteconomic Ineecta, barring an occasional shortlapse to "fight tho economical instincts of Btatelegislatures. Naturally he la on Intimateterms with a vast number of bugs.

For a practical knowledge of an insect, theability to recognize it' In all its phases Is amere beginning. Its dietary muBt be known, 'not only what It prefers but what It likes nextbest and what It will eat to escape starvation; -how the weather affects Its health. Its temper,and. Its power of multiplying; Is It subject tocontagious diseases?—1f-sor~how~maylt""bBr-Induced to catch one? Also it Is well to knowhow Its neighbor bugs regard It Whether thesight of It arouses the Instinct to protect orthe Instinct to kill. For there.are bugs sokindly disposed toward, other bugs that they

£>y&E&rE-POWELL

the fretful soilwhich V t s sourlike a colicky ba-by and there

:risismLW.E

5iwhat wcro meant Ibe their banquet

"As for- sprays,bugs throve upthem. Dr. Forbhad his assistantJn the fields betoi

. i t , was . found thjplowing the Intograss In the autiiwould practically 1

'••awnywlth'ffleOf all the foc|

rUt "must.'light,(presents a more Oil11 cult -problem- "tlafthe white grub. Fdone thing, there an

~many' Bpecioi." lidnols has about tbl[ty—differing In talj

b i l !

attiness. TheyplanU-at-t:and it Is not at 1ulcominon""to!"whole acres ot 1Corn dM-Ougs. Grub of Some and Corn

Plant sAowlng OHHhigyajury. ^ ^ ^

''' te^^!arpet»-ay:.,8al!?i£5c«455l

w h y no t' s p r o a d , t ? nw a 8 t r , e d t h e

u n t v e r s l t y fleUB

Ifflfte Grub in —four itagn t June Beetle.J i G t ana'Pttpa

sent" among theof sound' bugs.

most successfully. Be- .fore it could be con-sidered more than anexperiment however.itwas necoasary to tryIt on a larger scale.Consequently letters werefarmers, asking tor boxesThese.bugs were to be given the disease andreturned with directions for spreading i t Theresponse was surprisingly immediate. Boxesof bugs poured into; the express offices andyet more boxes of bugs. Farmers from neigh-boring states beard of the. offer and they, *>o,went bug hunting. The express companiesworked overtime. The assistants in the ento-mologist's office became mere undertakers for

Over. two hun-dred ot these at-tack corn, fortycapable ot doingnotable damage.

It is In discov-ering the way to conquer a pair of theseprecious rascals that Dr. Forbes has madehis most valuable single contribution to sci-ence. They are the corn field ant and thecorn root-aphis or, as it Is better known,the com root IOUBC For a long time theywere tfie particular scourge ot the corngrower who supposed that they, operated eachon Its own account Through the research otDr: Forbes It Is now known that ono Is help-less without the other. . The resourceful and

bugdom. The.mouldy bugs were sent out on industrious ant lsjentirely tunable to extract-,,_-,._..• „ _ - , - - , _--,•— -, _. - - - - : c o y e t e ( i - ^ p : from tEe "corn root. "Mdlho

stupid aphis would, It left to Itself, starve Inthe very presence of the corn. But the antcan carry the aphis to the com root and de-posit It thereupon; the aphis can extract the

their beneficent mfsslon of destruction. Thenthe results came in. They varied; they did,Indeed. Borne thought the entire entomolo-gist's oBlce should be fitted out with a'golden,glorious halo as the rescuer of Its country;

plantations, woodlands, and,situations. They are especially dlfflenl to,,bat because the life history- la hard to foil

„, „ „ _ _ . . from the first to the last stage. Only a sirare - sturdy,. hun-_ ^specimen has_ been_bred fromi tne egg

- soTtar"fhobe8t-reraedrba»*e«n- .W-be in cropping, especially, to planting thetested ground to clover. Well-known encBof tho white grub also are tho festive porkwhich will dig a foot for a nice fat one, •crows and crow' blackbirds. ' .

Occasionally a farmer notices that a Iwhich has been brown from a grub ravagecomes green and alive. He Is Inclined to thttIt a clear case of the Lord remembering-1righteous; as a matter of fact another inshas appeared and is working out anotherof lnittacts. This is the Tiphla, a member.the solitary, wasp family.. It stings the gro|Into submission and then glues to Its thickan egg which In a'few daya hatches tatoveritable vampire.. It sucks from Its hostlife juices, leaving the shell to crumble D

Trees, both those in natural foreststhose which have been planted, "noblehelpless products of nature," to quoteForbes, are often drogsedsto a Blow and

thotr eggs for them, and bring up their off-ipring. The sole duties they leave to thosethey protect are breathing, eating and multi-plying. : ™ . r

First let me tell you about the fight againstthe chinch bug. As everyono knows, the chlnphIs a devil-devastator whose evil Intentions arebacked with energy and resourcefulness. When

bugs that they 0UiCrB alas] thought a fool's cap would fit the sap'and then exude It. thus_passlng It on to t sightly death through Insect Infestation. H

But although the disease project could notbe called a' complete ' success, means werefound which make It possible to* raise graineven in the very worst of the chinch out-breaks. Tho barrier methods.and sprays witha kerosene emulsion, will catch them everytime. Just after harvest the scarcity of foodr est e y

lt-starts-to-takeJ-hat lt-wanto-from.the,.farm_in -the-wheat-fleldsarouses "trr thff chlnchanthere Is Just one thing It leaves—the mort^jnstlnct-ja! migrate: On foot It sets out to get(ago... For more^lljaa a-s^n^aUon'TcIentlsts "TnTTOPetite.fpr,corn,;.!rhte Isthe-tlme tomake

B5ji£otMt5ctfiti^

exterminating two foes but ot outwitting theclever little ant Were It banished, tbo aphiswould soon, disappear.* The wretched littlesoft-bodied hunk o* creation can do nothingfor Itself except lay eggs and suck corn sap.The ant gives It a home In its own burrows,hatches Its eggs for it, carrying them to thowarm surface if they are slow, bearing_thein_

-•farther•"Into"tbe"ground"lf"they threaten to"hatch before Its food supply Is ready. And

-this .protection' extends, through tho aphis' life.

The government chief chemist saysrrenrn la very Injurious to the

youth ot the country during the heat-' ed term. The next thing some scien-tific iconoclast will be holding forth ontho deleterious nature ot the moon-light excursion germ and tho dangersot the park concert microbe. And theyouth of tho country will continue Inthese germ-lnviting waysi find -will sur-vive, as it has-done since romance andIce cream were Invented.

Ugence; against Its Instinct; and Instinct wontho victory. It seemed that reason could notfathom the cause of the outbreaks nor find away to prevent them. In despair the men oticlence wer* for saying as did the old Irishwoman ot the rain that spoiled her potatoes,'There's no raison In It, it's just the will ot

God!" • ' , • .And right there It teemed the problem

wouldhtve to rest Bat an occasional pact

early riser cuts tho most grass.

The announcement of the discovery,of an anti-typhoid vaccine which cornea(rum Paris may mean the addition ofanother important means ot prevent-ing disease to a list already ot gratify*'la s Migth: Typhoid fever Is so pro-

; sod sor Insidious and carriest'(tenter of, sc many compUci-T - - " .-which helps to b *

j ^ a TnTTOPetite.fpr,corn,;.!rhte Isthe-tlme t o m a k e t h i s p r o t c t i o n e x t n d * t g a p lfe , considerable experimentthat act f i t i^I t i t d I t i t on th t fid' It h t t d It ill d b

•latent brain waa unable to aocept this solution. Observations went on not only week byweek but day by day,1 and often even hour byhour. Even so It was a work that proceeded•lowly. The chinch bug was hard to makeroles tor. indeed, it seemed more an excep-tion to rule than the French language. ForInstance, scientists flattered "themselves that"one thing was proved concerning his chlnchahtpvis., the abandonment of wheat culture meanttin end to chinch bug; ravages. But farmers

j e sad discovery, quite unintentionally.

the chinch desires to Infest This 1B done byplowing a backward furrow which is packedwith a light roller or by hand and bos a lineof' tar poured upon It from a can with atubular spout Post holes are dug at Intervalsof about twenty feet- By .keeping the tarlino fresh his chlnchehip cannot cross, but willfollow It to the posthole, tato which he speed-ily tumbles. It then Is merely pleasant rocre1

atlnn fnr th<» fgrn pr to travel 0"> wnda weak solution/ of kerosene upon his accu-mulated enemies. Kerosene Is an excellentdeath dealer for these pests. When they get.tato the cornfields the tanners of Illinois sallyforth with an emulsion containing four percent, of kerosene and halt as much whale oilsoap mixed by fivo minutes simple beatingwith a stick. This la flirted by hand upon the

'com In the cool ot the day when the insectsfeed most thoroughly ana when there Is lessdanger .of Injury to the com. Sometimes a

_____ .^._ . . single application does .the work; when theISairbVsWeT^SPairaiF^

enlightening the men ot science, that the aban- may be required. 'theJonment ot wheat may even Increase

chinch devastation. For If they have becomenumerous arid can find no wheat, -they willacceptj oats, barley, grass or corn. The aban-donment of wheat to bo effective against the'chinch, must tako place at the beginning otan outbreak. ' « ^ >

Therefore Dr. Forbes straightened?^ mor-tarboard, polished his microscope and prepared

- Now let ns talk, about: corn exclusively fora while. With that staple at its present priceand with the grave gentlemen who producestatistics, .asi hens produce eggs—tho louderthe cackling, the smaller the statistic—assur-ing us that It ts on Its lofty perch to stay. Itseems that the farmer, .frill have to cultivateautomobiles and bad bihtta as obesity curdifor.hfcjhank M«n*ftJ£s&MM Nature]

•am)

the ant finds'Its charges scattered. It willcheerfully ' collect them and reconstruct itshome it that has been molested also. The anthna nothing else to do and It is as active asan. outraged Puritan conscience. However,methods of control.have been found. The useot the disk and crop rotation will exterminatethem. The root-aphia refuses entirely to oc-cupy ground planted to oats, so this crop Is

_ofthethem. Also by disking two or threo timeswith a 20-Inch dUk~ln Bpring. especially on asunny day when -the ants are likely to havetheir charges near the surface, they will bekilled'and scattered and their nests so brokenup that even-the enthusiastic little ant cannotreconstruct the: colony. ' ' : '

Another enemy of the corn that Dr. Forbeshas caught by cultivation is the bill bug, teacertain beetles are colled because ot theirlong, hard: snouts, which they poke tato thefanner's business to runt i t This time the

JitrJfitg

and In the fields of grass where the bill bugsbreed. These bugs are distinguished by abelligerency which Is only equaled by theirBtrength of claw, One variety appeared Innilnols which looked so large to the harassedfarmers that it was christened "elephant bug."Chickens, tamed into tha fields to feast npoa»v . . > k | | I m^M^Jn

Among the Insects injurious to bealtcommon housefly takes first rank. Dr. *"has found that 75 per cent of the comnhouseflles breed In horse manure. As thedies that will kill the housefly maggotsi ardangerous to be used In stables, except. Mwater, which Is hardly practicable, theprotection seemsVto t*, la, screening «»

by « Jinl|«, »h«: HUB WhoBeeomo a Suprtm* Court

Nearly Abandoned thaPractise of Law..

|i!ov that Uoyd W. Bowers, the so-rfeneral of the United States, Is^ t s d tot^MAJimhaitoiition for the Supreme court, I

reminded of an Incident In Mr.career, which furnished the

1 of bis life, and of that Incident1 personal knowledge," remarked

|i»7er of national fame who once1 very close himself to. becoming

•ems court justice.1 think 1 am safe In saying," con-

liny Informant, '.'thai there isIit therbar of the United States','

has been, a man ot greater' of sentiment or of more con-

I ud perfect recognition of the1 and feeling* of others than Mr.

He also has a high sense ofI. honorr and It-was due to the

istlon of these characteristics(there arose the crisis in his life

A 20 per cent" emulsion could bo uBed inIf the roots of the trees were protected, anaj10 per cent ta summer. It Is made by dlssotag one pound of common, soap in ono garot water by boiling. This Is removed tronifire and two gallons ot kerosene pouredWith a spray pump the mixture is then foiback into itself for about five minutes, whenwill look like a thick cream, and no longer sejnrates on standing.- Seventeen gallons of wauadded to the three gallons thus preparedglvq a 10 per cent solution. The costbe 4"* cenfs a gallon and three or four gauwill save a targe tree from destruction.

DoubUess you have noticed upon the sryou brought homo to a paper bag andthat fell from your own cherished tree acent mark. This means that a busy little cur.has had Its beak ta your apple before youhas probably laid an egg at the sign •«crescent curcuUds. A spray compound oi "^ounces of acetate of lead and four ouncesarsenate ot soda to fifty gallons of water.

Jlowlng U s graduation from thembla law school, he had been for1 time managing- clerk of a lead-

office In New York city.1 be was highly esteemed and ait career was predicted at the bar

|llm. And there he appeared one

M41 of humiliation, the manner of aLwho had met with a grievous perr

friends flocked around him—twss the matter, they .asked T\ In effect. Mr. Bowers told them

|t he bad that day had such an un-r experience in court he had de-1 to abandon forever the profes-

I of tho law. He had appeared In, he said, to ask that a long-

, itattng that It was of no real33hi

(decision 'should be made, that the wHUB in queBtton"lm1ghtrrbe"vottied* ^

_L~_ the living c**-. tii of his client be released.! But

blhi

Iftcner had he made his statement,\ Bowers went on to say, than the

Ung. nnd, bumilia ting. himvSO .that

ne he did not wish ever againnjlaced In suth a position where

|mold be Insulted, while at thei time it would be Impossible for.

I to resent the Insult .fr, Bowers wa». perfectly., .elneer*i' expressed" purpose—to ••glve'iip

| career as a lawyer, despite theitfuturo that was before him, and

watii

ctb<scaiIn

BlhiatPiSisiyeyehithtli.ta

4*

When Washiral Broke Down, Fearing He

IWould Lose the Battle of the[Brandywlne Unless Dlscour-

iged Soldiers Were Paid.

|L year or so before the venerable!• Clarke, now In his eighty-eighth

f, retired, In 1900, as vice-president[ t a N l ^ b d , he-

1 me Into his office and pointed toaph In a newspaper contain-

inoe reference to Robert Morris,) binder of the American revolu-

»the late thirties when I went to

shade trees little wads of cotton? Eachyou will see, if you look, projects from a 1cap. which is the female maple scale, lnative Insect parasite of tho soft maple, it iInfest besides the maple, the linden, box eltelm and honey locust These cotton wads !the soft bed ta which the careful female.hex._eggs...and_each-femaleLi!anJe_reUeajto deposit something like 3.000 eggs In her o»|particular little waa. Dr. Forbes found att«considerable experiment that -a .kerosene em

J then, one day, my, aged friendMe this Btory of Robert Morris" rge Washington, which I have

en in print- afternoon, shortly before the

* of tho Brandywlne, which took•In the fall of 11,' said Mr. li"<. 'General Washington, unat-

camo to Mr. Morris* offlce,. Heto Bo In groat anxiety, andrher s' »o explain to Mr. Morris that "!o could have some money

to make at least a partialbis soldiers, he did not be-• would be possible for him

i a victory In the approachingThe soldlera, he said, had been

'months without pay. they bad**lmany hardships. Their prlva-* weir dire need of money had

•neasuro demoralized' and dls-"Jthem. • " ' . / ;

r|ght here, and all of a sud-' Mr. Brown.jaenOTalWash;

i, "I made the acquaintance of atot the name of Brown, who had|Bus boen postmaster ot the vll-Kud who was then well along tal.ttthUes. In tha course of this ac-

nco i found out that he had• • clerk in the offlce of Robert*'»t^B6'^lnW'wnenT^was~e1if-

; hla fortune In behalf of- theI colonies, and many an hour I

s to his face so that be mighthis emotion, but I sawkll down between

thehis

.Ho was completely overcome,JM BO awMtrlcken nt the spec-

* t commander-ln-chlof ot thearmy In tears that I stood

11 were transfixed - ia the

Page 7: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

"Anyway, aoon after the incident Inthe;, courtroom. occurred, Mr. Bowerswent to .Minnesota'~'ana '«!

by « Jui||«, »h«: JlUn Whoff Beeemo a Supreme Court .jtiitlc* Nearly Abandoned the

Practice of Law..

|i!ov tbat Lloyd W. Boweri, the so-rgeneral of the United States, Is

d r I l t o_ (or the Supreme court, I,rtmlnded of an Incident In Mr.

irt career, which furnished thei of his life, and of that Incidenti personal knowledge," remarked

ner of national fame who once• very close himself to. becoming

Iggpreme court justice,j think 1 am safe In saying," con-

I my informant, 'Ahat there IsI it the bar of the United "Stales'."jjerer has been, a man of greater

' of sentiment or of more con-t snd perfect recognition of thei and feeling* of others than Mr.

He alto has a high sense ofil. honorr and IMras due to the

nation of these characteristicstthere arose UiecrlBi, In hla life

I 1 j lUUflf^ r ' i i | i i ' i

u I flpvClm. '' . . 'owing U s graduation from the

abta law school, he had been fori lime managing- clerk of a lead-

|tiw ofBce In New York city.i be was highly esteemed and a,it career was predicted at the bar

And there he appeared oneM4

ot humiliation, the manner of aI who had met with a grievous perr

friends flocked around him—twas the matter, they .asked Ti, In effect. Mr. Bowers told them

|t he had that day had such an un-/ experience in court he had de-,I to abandon forever the profes-

i of the law. He had appeared In. he said, to ask that a long-

(decision should be made, that theh

£JJhaJMiIKI of his client be released.! ButInoner had be made his statement,|: Bowers went on to say, than the

Ul nnd, humlllatlng.hlnuBQ that

he did not wish ever againdjlaced In snth a position where

|mold be Insulted, while at thei time it would be Impossible for.

I to resent the insult .IT, Bowers wa». .perfectly, .elneer*i prBssed" purpo»B"to •giVe'iip

| career as a lawyer, despite theit future that was before him, and

6^^^eotherway. His friends, realising his sin-cerity, attempted most earnestly todissuade him from his purpose. Theyasked him to come to no decision un-til he had given very careful thoughtto the matter; at last they gained this5o .n5 e" l o n»M«SJUnwaiuKHiave a*ways believed that It was this advicethat finally persuaded Mr. Bowers toabandon bis purpose to leave the law.

4? "Northwestern railway syitem.Within ten years he waa general coun-«el in Chicago for the whole system.Now he is solicitor general In the de-partment of justice, and In all prob-ability will be named within • fewyears at the most as an.associate Jus-

, $?£. SLih«.i5»Pt«ma»caurX,iJf »V. yoosee how narrowly he missed the dis-tinguished career he has made as alawyer."

(Copyright. 1810, by E. J. Edwards.)

Story of Old Baseball Days.SSSSJjr,,. Bullulsyfa Dlseevery of tlttt*

William Barlow, Who First Dem-onstrated for the Hartforda

tha Value -of Bunt

One day, In the early spring of 1874,when Morgan O. Bulkeley, now sen-ator from CpnnectlcHt, was backingalmost single-handed the Hartford(Conn.) baseball nine, which ..two

^ gchampionship, being only two gamesbehind the Chicago*, he took me tosoe a game between the Hartfordsand a semi-professional club. We aatIn the scorers' box.

T'have brought you here," saidBulkeley, the most entbusiastto fan Ihave ever,known, "that you-might se«at work the new youngster. I foundplaying with the old Atlantlcs of

9'slop "now; and I want you to keepyour eye on him. I don't mean thatTouihould keep your eyes glued onhim while he is playing shortstop, al-though be is very 'good in that posi-tion. But when ho comes to bat don't•take your eyes off of him." v '

' Pretty soqn the youngster In ques-

stating that It was of no real

have never seen before. I don't knowwhether It's right or not.-according

1 6 " ^ ^ ^ ^ " d

The boy stod at the plate, with thebat oustretched directly In front ot.him, like a musket at present arms:Thu*holdlng-4h«-bat,-.hel«t the-ballhit It squarely.after, one or two halls

bait dropped, Jumped In front of thehome plate, and Barlow waa withinsafe striking distance of first basebefore tho pitcher could recover theball.

y beamed.'"Now;""'he"Bhoutedtabove-the -uproar;"you will see the captain of the othernine making vigorous objection." Suro

enoogh-vigOfOUs"protesis"werrmade1

hut. withnut-avalL --'-'- , •—•Again, in his proper order, the

youngster stood at the home plate.But this time, Instead of holding thedub' rigidly In front of him, hetossed It at tho ball Just before Itwas over the plate. That swerved theball so that It rolled rather slowly to-wards third base. 'He will get to

^ p fley confidently. And' the youngsterdid.

I looked at Mr. Bulkeley In wonder;In all my baseball-days I had neverseen anything like the batting of thislad. Mr. Bulkeley smiled enthusias-tically. "JOiw, cal> that a- bu»t# he-saW.' "Some baseball players thinkthat It is all right Bomo Insist thatIt Isn't fair. It i s an- entirely new

vented i t His name la Barlow."Jn these days, when tho sclentlfle

bunt la on* of the important feature*of the national game,. It Is probablethat Morgan O. Bulkeley, senior sen-ator from 'Connecticut, when thingsgrow a little dull in the senate, cham-ber, recalls with a considerable de-i r^^rt sa t t s taWbw^i^t tJWM.^tbrlils firit Hdrt iordta ie to l nine thai"UtUe;WUllnm- Barlow"-demonstrated:

to the player who knows how to emnloy-lt,aklllfnUy^_XlilsJBaric(w.j4iajn.less thin .one season, for a serious ill

lpwith the HarUords. Yet In the shortwhile that he waa with the team hataught the secret of the bunt to his

fdrd'clttB'oheofa few years.

(Copyright 1910, by E. J. Edward*.)

Poetry Interpreted.

night• are falling^ fast? ••NHIy—Because the girls Inside are

going to bed.—Yale Record.

When Washington Criednl Broke Down, Fearing He

•Would Use the Battle of the| Brandywlne Unless Dlscour-

iged 8oldlers Were Paid.

fyear or so before the venerable& Clarke, now in his eighty-eighth», retired, In 1900, as vice-presidentttsjte Y J J J t l M d . h e -jsjtew^ YpjJtJJentrjalJOaMroad!..hepi me Into his ofOce and pointed toJwgraph In a newspaper contaln-Inoe reference to Robert Morris,| binder of the American revolu-

I the late thirties when I.went toi

floor. I looked at Mr. siorris, to seehow be was affected, and found himtrying to rellpye the situation by ap-pearing to be busy arranging some pa-pers that had been spread before himprior to General • Washington's en-trance. Then, as suddenly as he hadbroken down, General Washington re-gained his composure, and went on to

-Baythat-lfMr.-Morrlg-oouId-flnd-wlthr.in twenty-four hours sufficient moneyto pay each man in the army a littleof what was due him, this paymentwould do much to revive the army'scourage and morals, and, If this were

jhere.,wa8r.llttle.doubti

\ "I made the acquaintance of atot the name of Brown, who had

llurs been postmaster of the vll-Rud who was then well along InIfthtles. In tha course of this ac-^tuce I found out tfiat he had• « clerk In the office of Robert

: his fortune In behalf of- theI colonies, and many an hour I

n, one day, my aged friendN» this Btory of Robert Morris|korge Washington, which I have

»«een in printtos afternoon, shortly before the• "t tho Brandywlne, which took

the fall of "77,' said Mr.\ 'General Washington, unat-~\ came to Mr. Morris* offlce,. He1 to bo In groat anxiety, and:"si to explain to Mr. Morris thatha could have some money

P*Uch to make at least a partialJ N t o his soldiers, he did not be-|Mut It would be possible for him

' a victory In the approaching"" ' soldlerB, he said, had been

'oonths without pay. they had«* many hardships. -Their priva-* weir dlro need of money had'.tneasuro demoralized' and dhv"•dthem. • ' . / ;

I right here, and all of a sud"i Mr. Brown, 'General Wash'

U^-to his face so that he mightemotion, but I saw the

tag down between his• .Ho was completely overcome,

|"JM BO awe-stricken nt the spec-~ the commander-In-chlof ot the

' 1 army In tears that I stoodI were transfixed - to the

:Bffcnmp1Mhyj.-there.,wa8r.llttle.dbbut that the British would be held Incheck.

'For a moment Mr. Morris was si-lent; then he replied that he himselfwas without funds, that he did notknow where'he could raise even the

small amount usked.on such short no-tlco, but that he would do the best hecould, adding that he did not feel Jus-tified In encouraging any hope in Gen-eral Washington's breast that themoney could be secured.

" 'General Washington's reply wassimple. "I know, that yon will Jo allyou can—aaycu have done already,''he said. Then be took Mr. Morris'hand, held it for a moment, and. wentaway without again speaking,

" 'I never knew whether Mr. Morrissecured the money or not/_Mr. Brown-added.—•I-doknow-tbafBe^went-out-ot-the office Immediately after GeneralWashington had departed. Two dayslater, I think It was, the Battle ofBrandywlne was fought Genera]Washington was defeated, and tha^British" occupied. Phlladelp'hla... Maybatit was all becauso Mr, Morris was notable to get tor General Washingtontba little money that be-needed'sobadly for his soldiers. But I cannotsay for a certainty.'" '

XCopyrlght, 1910. by E. J. Edward*)

Dumb Sense of Humor•Two incldonta that come under my

observation in the.zoo seemed to showthat birds and animals have a keensense of humor which comes to thesurface •when they are not worryingsurface™ , d u o b s e r v .

few feet of

f

Thenh ^ a few feet of theshook himself, as a dog does, and

would

>iT/:;roiYf^"^*^'*'^'^^-^r'^^-'>'^''y^:'A:'//fT','\"-''V'/'.':''^'rj'-' •'**•'

the onlookers anif'kepT on dolng"n'fsstunt until the visitors caught on tothe fraud and stopped laughlnB.H

Bitter.Miss Anna Held, at a tea on la Prov-

ence, praised the French."The only French quality I dislike,"

she. said, "is .cynicism, and sometimesI think French cynicism Is preferableto-Anglo-Saxon sentimentality.

'"The mushy Anglo-Saxon idealiza-tion of stage hero or book here is.In my opinion, falser to human na-ture than the cynical French woman'sremark:

•"Nothing equals the skepticism ofa married woman, unless! Indeed, itbe the credulity of an-unmarried

, World's Wine Production.Last year the production of wine in

tlons were scored in Austria, Bulgaria,Hungary, Italy, Portugal and Spain.The United States kept pretty well up,Algeria producing six times as muchas this country gained.' Greece andSerf la gained. Chile produced M, per

thl* —•«•—" *• •

tEOPARD MOTH MOSTJ

Pronounced ass One of Worst Pests Attacking Shade TreesAccidentally Introduced Into This

Country From Europe.

Female Leopard Moth.

(By VT. E. EIUTTON', Ph. D.. Entomolo-f U t Connecticut Agricultural-Ex-

periment Statjon.)A brier note was printed In the last

report of this station regarding the oc-currence of the leopard moth In Con-necticut- -.Since this- note- was pub-lished considerable evidence has beenbrought ' y o u r attention of "serioWfl&msgo tt>' shade trees, especiallyslms, by this Insect. Pruning/of thetrees and especially the'removal ofdead branches reveals the tunnels ofthe leopard moth larva, which Is aborer in .thO-branches.and trunks ofmany species of broad-leaved trees.Several specimens of .the adult moths

: lh»tsy!nwaFeai^e^l^'Ww?-Hiye5?"KuFlt was not known until recently"that the insect Is doing much injuryto t i e trees In Connecticut

The leopard moth Is a Europeanpest, and like many other very. Injuri-ous insects that we now have to fight

country, being first noticed In June,1881, at Hoboken, N. J. Three years*ater Dr. E. B. S6uthwlck found It In-

and In 1694 pronouncedone of the worst Insect pests attack-Ing-shaded trees. Tho leopard, mothwaa soon found In other cities nearNew York, and In 1907 Mr. A. H. Kirk-land, then auperintendont In -chargeot the work of suppressing the gypsyand browntall moths In Maaaacbus-

In Boston. During 1909 the writerwas Informed ot Its occurrence InProvidence, H, 1, and also that manyof the fine elms of Cambridge, Mass.,were threatened with destruction bytSJ.s .jnajBct.^Th.o.. leopard motb la-re-ported by ProfcBsor Smith as occur-ring as far -south as Lon^ Branch, N.J. As It first appeared in Hoboken, N.J., it will bo seen that like many otherEuropean Insects Introduced Into thiscountry it has spread northward muchmore rapidly than In any other direc-tion.

The position of the caterpillars tun-neling In the branches, especially

trees; TeffdeT"Them~eiceedlngly~afffl"-"cult to reach. If the treeB are prunedor otherwise gone over ayatematlcallyever year or two the burrows will cer-tainly be detected and can bo treated"by "Injecting^ a few drops of carbondlsulphlde .Jrpm, an,pll caiijnto ench.ahd' cloalng the opening with clay, put-ty,-grafting wax or newly made hardsoap. The poisonous tunics penetrate

" " "" ,w^uya!g. Wilting branches Indicate the prosanco of, tho borers,and. should .be ,re;moved and destroyed. All twigs andlimbs tbat break off during stormsshould be gathered and burned, thusdestroying many ot the borers In theirtunnols. All female moths should be

VARIOUS MINERALS AND GEMSJ

Collection In National Museum atWashiogton Finest In This Coun-- . try—20,000 SpselnVons. " ' ' . .

TBo mineral collection In the Na-tional museum In Washington is saidto be one of tbo finest In this country.Its growth and development have beenInteresting. Originally It was the prl-vato collection of Charles U. Sheparil -of Amherst college. To this as a nu-

collected at tho World's Fair held inPhiladelphia, Pa., In 1878, and alncothen accretions have come from thefield collections made by tho variousparties sent out by government SUPvcys and from donations from privateindividuals. Tho collection as nowshown Includes about . 20,000 speci-mens on exhibition, und It contains oltanuptcuoua inUwst-much- of-tiietype-- •material from which the original de-scriptions of minerals have been writ-ten.

Among the specimens that Are like-ly to attract the attention of one In-terested in mineralogy Is the completecollection of zeolites from OreatNotch, Passalc county,• N. J., and Itmay bo mentioned that tho serlcs-olzeolites from tho Ilorgen tunnels In

'n flfcconsideration.:.:finme;. Jhic.-. -

California aro shown, and tho extra-ordinary largo bowlders of copper,known as the "Ontonngon bowlder"from the Lake Superior region, show*tho crystallised faces of that metal.From Ulsbce, Ariz., are the beautifulgreen -and1 blue'.^cfys'tfilllxatlans of' 'malachlto and nrtirlte, while from Jop-lin, Mo., are interesting crystals ofcalcltc.. There.nro.in the collection —

f^-Wr^iKW^

A good concrete mixer can easily bemade. Take a pleco of timber six bysix or five by five Inches square, cutdown the corners, making it eight-cor-nered as near equal as possible. Havethe blacksmith make about 80 wingsout of flat Iron about one-eighth of aninch thick and two Inches wide. Cutthe pieces four inches long, cuttingabout miter slant at each end: Drilltwo holes about one- and one-halfinches from one end, bent strips Inthe middle to a right, angle with tne.same slant as ends are cut. Nail thesewings onto tho eight-cornered timber,going round and round, making anauger like a conveyor auger In a millor" tEreihIng"~mfichlh"C Thisshould be about seven feet long. Inthe mlddlo of each end of the auger orcylinder bore a hole for a short, shaft;a piece of gas pipe will do. Head endof the shaft must be fastened secure-Jy;~-Or bore-a-ho!e-4hrouga-«nd. ofcyllndor and through shaft and fastenwith a bolt. On outer end of this shaftfasten securely a pulley ten or more

Inches In diameter, depending onspeed and size of pulley on en-gine. This pulley should have >not lossthan four Inches In face and Bhouldnot run more than 100 revolutions perminute. _

Make a "though for this cylinder t<?work In, using a plank tor bottomJust wide enough BO wings work free.Uso 12-lnch boards on sldo. Leavotop open. Put in head at eachend, boring hole In center of foot endand making slot nthoadend so cylln-dor can be removed- by lifting at i>ul<ley and puling endways. Leave open-ing at foot end of box for mortar todrop through into a mortar box or ona platform. Make a email hopper on1 d ^ y la box large enough to hold a sack ofcomejnt About hair way to the' otherend placo a barrel with faucet to sup-ply water. Use measures of propor-tionate size. A boy puts In a meas-ure ef cement tb a man's moasnre ofsand, pouring In slowly together.Regulate water by faucet,«nd the ma:chine will do the rest

TURNING WASTE— — I N T O VALUE

(By J. B. PAYNE. Colorado Agricultural"Colics*.)

The history of the settlement ofWestern Kansas and Western Ne-braska showa that the people whokept milch' cows were able to holdtheir claims and make themselveshomes, while many of their neighborswho refuoed to be in partnership withthe cow failed, ThlB has been foundtrue of tho early settlers of'Coloradoand other states.' Some people arct,ble to get along without COWB, butthe, chances are against the personwho makes the jittempt.

It Bocmo to bo one of the foundationprinciples of agriculture that no sys-tem can long be followed-, at a profit

elements of fertility taken from it bythe crops. So no system of farminghas ever been successful for any greatlength of time hi any climate which

.does not Include the keeping ot live•tock as one of,tta Important features.The Buccesafnl teaa< be he manager of

1MB «;Mw«fi» »"• » * * •

plans to- turn waste products Intovalue, * ' . - . . .

Kafflr, mllo, sorghum, millet,.stockbeets,"~st6cK" in"elons,"thi6"Btraw-fromgrain, corn stalks and all other roughfeed which is produced on the farm is

,ot,a.gnature,ihi>t,.mar.ket tor,,tt:-ls :«x^rtremely limited. And some variety ofthis rough feed Is produced in largequantities In .every community everyyear. So much is produced that ifthe growers tried to sell It all directlyfor cash, it Would not bring enough topay for hauling it to market. Asmuch Is produced forty miles from arailroad as In the "community Joiningthe shipping station.~TEe cow wiinifrnlsBrSTiome "mdrltetfor all the bulky feed which the farm-er con raise, and will take It, deliv-ered at his yard—paying about asmuch per ton as the care of her ownerand his management will permit. Thecream produced can bo "sold for cash,and the farm products will be mar-keted In concentrated form. Whatwould have required a four-horse teamto take to market can bo hauled tomarket, when reduced to cream, in aone-horBO buggy. ,

Bush Beans.Try bush beans ' in bills and see

whether you like tho plan better thandrills; that Is, drop four or fire beansat spaces of about eight Inches. Theadvantage claimed Is that better op-portunity It afforded for Ullage; aa the!how can be worked with case sftrattheluThV _ _• i

famous colored nxurlte from Cumber-land, England, and full BUHOB of crys—tain of topaz from Siberia and lira-i l l . "' - : ' •*""""••• - • " - • " " - - • '

Dr. Isaac Lea of Philadelphia was afamous collector of genm, nnd on hUdeath tho unique collection, so rich InAmerican representatives, made by

described, and as Intorcst In lnlnernUogy grows, specimens will bo collected1

itirto~tl«rmuBDunrfoT~ldcntlftc«--tion.-- vDoubtlciHi-from -gems will be found rivaling In beauty,if not the diamond, certainly mau,y of!tho lesser well known gonm

tnm\m THE "mm PERFECT1

Clamp Holds Miter' Firmly TogetherWhile Glue Has Time to Thor- '

oughly Set.

ters and cabinet mukcrn la the miterclamp designed by n New Jersey man.and shown In th« illustration. It IB acommon cxporlenco among,theso work-men to find that a miter slips at itsJoint when It Is being made fast, andtho slightest Inaccuracy spoils tho Job.Tho clamp Is made of two angularmembers hinged together nt the bot-tom, and adapted to receive betweenIhom tho corner of the miter. One ottho numbers Is stationary and tho

Miter Clamp.

^gjr;;:^ig^ted;Tint^:y;gtauonajy:;position by means"of^aloctlng lever!•'To Join the miter tho ends are coveredwith glue And the corner placed in thoclamp. The two pieces are thus firmlyheld together till tho glue sets, whenthe lever Is thrown open and theclamp-drops, away, leaving tho mitersolidly and accurately Joined. Thiscl unp can also bo used to hold thotwo pieces of wood togethqr whllo .

l l g o r screws nrc-belng^arfven-lnto'them,: holes in the arms of the devlcopermitting the Insertion of the. nailsor-screws. ,

Produce Chilled Iron.Tho chilled Iron produced by tho

process of E. A. Custcr Is reported tobe a graylah Iron, and-not tho usualwhite, chilled Iron. It Is mnde fromcommon foundry Iron—fairly high InBilicon nnd .low In sulphur and phos-

...nhortiua—jvliklLj3-.i:.uu.,J,»UJr,ecl.,:,Xcam.l,.tho foundry cupola Into a chilled mold.In a few momenta, aa soon as solid!-lied, It is qticnchod in water or othersuitable bath, it is claimed that thnjcasting makeB a cutting tool of ex-cellent quality. It is suggested thatithe chilling produces a One and unl-iform structure, and that the quench-,ins Use 't- ' -

Page 8: A. SHAPIRO, - DigiFind-It · bornvtc.' 'Mrv'-jand

i of the B«rd of Chosen Ft*©-holders of Union County*

The regular meeting of tht Hoard of Frce-boldcrt of Union county wai held on Thurs-day, Auguit 4, at a.ju P. M.

Roll call showed. alt viembcrs present withtbe exception, of Freeholder Crane.

On motion of Ftrrliulder Wilbur it wasordered that the minutes of tho meetings ofJuly 7 and 15 be ni-cruved &* t*r jamicdcupici on members' ueJiS.

COMMUNICATIONS.A communication «.is received frcra ttie

Union County Medical Society coitiptn.l 111*1tbe board on it* actiou in regard to fhc inberculo»ii bi>*iiiul and tittering the assistance

ff accomtncKlatc ibj^iciana. nursesand attendants, it-ady to treat from .one hun-dred to one hundredand Mty patient*; thai

l

f tht<t I>a1u»liTiilrsts, thr

therefore, tlie

Gentlemen—Cy* t*k*lialf v{ GeptKG ' B. V;dcrpwl, you are lu-ri-by notified thai,. >and each, of you tnuK fojtlmitli rrtm.\e thrbattistratlc at llie norlhrasl corner ot the newbridge on Alain street, Chatham, N. J., wliUlibridge crosses the 1'assak Iti*cr, this'balustrade bring erected in frunt i»f a : h<»u»i.owned hy Mr. Vandcr|K>«.l, and |.rcvtntinn)ir»i>cr CKI-CSS. thereto,

Mr. VandcrftKil, duriujf the

tests again*! the cumtrtictitrade, but, notwilhsianJiiicname wai constructed. I'it-' . ....same is furtlmiih removed, legal .ink's will be lakui 1~<T the rt-nu.val o( the

•lame A. I.. VANDKItl'Oor.On motion of Freetml«li-t_ Wilbur recriveJ

ami referred to CumtuiiUf on" tiiathallt-idge, the engineer 111 tliarnc, ami tl:County Attorney.

Kfum City Clerk McMurray, i.f IMamheM.renarding new hallut boars:

»Jentleipen—At Hie h|K.iial t . id i .m held theday MI this city, in tlie first election distncot each nf *ihr i i . l irV'wafdC^r' tae-rrtrmi' jHor rejection uf tlic voting machines, the- vuteVM fiT thr rejection: therefore, it will .henecessary to »iip,'1y lliis city with three ( j )

"iiii>fe ballot boxes: " -—• -~Will you kindly bring ihU mailer to the

attention of Hie Hoard of Frvcliobk-rs. amihave tbe three boxes forwar-Ii'I at yurtr carh-tst convenience. ; ,

Yours trulv,J. T. McML'RKAY

tin motion of Freeholder Krousc rvccitnland referred, lu Ihc IVnimiUrr "n Klectioii.

• Front II. C. Auktin rcK.-irilmK payment of-J;-C-I 1arks: r — L

Major King. Elizabeth, N. J.1 iJew. Sit—.\t tlic .r-c'iu"? ..'"'- - Ja u l c* •..-•£•

(lic f o u i i l y f r f t " . - . " W i l l ' y.Ai'Elijilly |ir<icurc action nf the, hoard on it as s"i>n. aspossibkv anil • ohliyc .

Very ,ru I y your,, c ^ ^

On motion of FrcclioMrr Wilbur rcrci^eilni'L '_e'f_rrc(l 'hi the Omimiftcc on CmintyItoads, CountV"EhKiiicer~'an'i! "t\ntniy "A

r c o x r H n t rHy Committee on Creed Avenue, Ijnden:Your Committee on two bridges in Crecn

avenuev Lindrn, wyiild rt^i-cttiully reportthat a t ' a incctink--lit-lil ,<".' J |in"e **• " " " ' acontract was awarded 1 to' lr. l-\ Callaliiiti -t*»

j i d ^ j ^ j b i

\V, GARHISOA. GUUENEK.-

Cominiltee,•w<)n-»iMrtiOT'*t>f l>rti1h lilc>'l!™SWiIir""r'AcJvc<Vand placed on file.

]ty the Committee on Hillside Avenue Cul-~ At a meclinK of the Conniilttce on IllllsiJc

Avenue Culvert, Lyons l;arm«, heM at theCourtliDiisc, on Thursday, July 31, the com-mittee awarded the contract for a new CHI-

I l ^ d X r J lT . v '&ijtfi&L$$$$'J$$

twi» hundred and sixty-seven uolars'(~

.<rliavi5rtfarr-On motion of Freeholder Wilbur received

and placed en file.--lEy-C'mimihtcc un-'-€hffrtTHif'-ttl)k»-CuUjctti.

At a, meeting of the Committee on Chestnut

at tne Courthouse, Tuesday, July l i , the corri"-mituec awarded- the contract to the lowestbidder. lJ. V. Clashy, for'the sum of five bun-drcd and twenty dollars ((;=<'•> .'• ' Xours truly,

o Parts *of the ftccl. work are1 very ''ad order, ocinpr disintegrated and" V o ^ c m m ^ t ^

mpndujobc_c^nstruct|on ci 'a new steel draw-"idee ui»nT "\TicJ*i>r*5ti.>ftt"Ti"tf[in'u3ifion" atL Suiny,cr street, and would ask that Ithey b« in-tructcd fo jirocurc plans and the probable>st of bridge and report at a fixture meetingMhe board.

and placed on fde.By Road Committee on Bridge at Moun-

Uinsidc. - 'Your Committee on County Roads would

respectfully report that at a meeting heldon July 13, 1910, a contract was awarded toA. W. Stiles for the extension of a bridge

t—Mountainside -on - l S A i d R L

that a contract -was-awartlcd-trT~\V;--rvKirkfor the building" arid extension of four cul-verts," Palisade avenne and Karitan and Madi-son Hill road for $3,496, they being the low-est bidders.

H. KROUSE,'.I \ MEISEL.5 . WILBUK.C. SMITH.T. HAVILAND,

* ' ' Committee. •On motion of Freeholder Smith received

and placed on file.Ity Committee on Wood Avenue Culvert:Your Committee on Wood Avenue Culvert,

linden, would respectfully report that at *ameeting held June 1, 1910, a contract wasawarded to Charles Peterson •' to constructa* new culvert for $568, he being the low-est bidder.

IT. KROUSE,W. RANDOLPH,

1 • - " Committee.f \ On motion of Freeholder Crucficr received

and placed nn file. V11''1 '-

\ our "Committee1 on Collector's Accounts". begs leave to report that it has examined

his books, vouchers, coupons, warrants andreceipts, bank and check books artd findthat the same are correct and agree in everyparticular.

We find that his receipts from January 1,1910, to date amount to $1,1,32,403.35, and thattin disbursements for the same period

Amount •ito^iT»^s5t^^o,--loR.viug-^:r^Ia!^e..^i£1Ti S&VsiiV^wu'ic'h' Ts ori tleposit" iti'ilie baiiEato the credit of the County Collector.

Respectfully submitted. .»S. P. WILBUR.W. II. RANDOLPH.

' 1 Committee.On motion of Freeholder Darby received

and placed on file.The Auditor's report was received as fol-

lows: . • •Your Auditor respectfully reports: -.

of the Surrogate, SlieritT, Registrar andCounty Clerk, and find the- same correct.

The net receipts are:Surrogate-.;-.........».»-.r,4.....«<.v.-r-|i>ii

Kegistrar . . . . ; . . 1,786 roCounty Gcrk 398 61which amount has been turned over to theCounty Collector.

Yours respectfully,- «..„ - BENJAMIN KI?»G.

On. motion of Freeholder Swain 'receivedand placed on file.

By the Committee on Tuberculosis:Your committee appointed at a mecttnR of

the Hoard of Freeholders held on Match 5,1910, to investigate the cost of the ercc-tion of at suitable hospital to be used as a;uticrculosis > hos;»EaX to ;'armnc into the

Cost of malntainins such institutions, to in-vestigate institutions of tike character and toreport to the board the. result of their In-\estigatiojj, and raake such recommendationsas they may deem necessary, would respect-fully rcportt

That thsy have visited several, institutionsin and about the city of Boston, Mass., and-have been in consultation with Dr.. Carring-ton, expert on hospital construction, of* theSlate of New York, who is also the assist-ant secretary of the National Society for thePrevention and Cure of Tuberculosis; thatyour committee has attended hearings sirenby mayors of the several _municipalities inthis county and that as a result 01 their in

—Testl(ratltjn-they~fi«di — ^=^- - - — r(1) That a tuberculosis hospital, b neces-

sary to check the ravages of tlic jfreal whiteplaftue; and that the building of '.such an in-stitution should be commenced forthwith, inorder to safeguard the health and welfare ofthe citizens of this'county, as your .committeeis Informed, that in the city of Elizabeththere are about three hundred cases of tuberculoiis alone; and 'the physicians informyour committee that for every one case ofadvanced tuberculosis, two are usually con-taminated with the •disease; ami that the ad-vanced caw nhtfild be removed to protectotbtr,members of the. family;

j Vi (*)liThllt oft* administration bail ding andrat erected to scconwo*

that the admUbtiaUon

the number of r^units infrca>ec; #.(4) That we iinJ the cost of one admin-

istration building .-""I four lean-tos, inclu'iiiija trait of land wf. fifty or more acre*, docm»t exceed t i e stint «f fif'/ ttiousand dollariand "that the ciM <f inaiui^nancc for earn Ntient sUould not t-xc«d the sum of ten dol-lars per week.

Vuur coroniiiU't. further reports that thefmake the atn^r recoinmendat'ions (iccatj*ethey do nt.t think it advisable to eject build-inns tf accomitluil.'te uu-re than fifty patier.ts

Your coii-mittrr furiljer re[M»rts that it i

• duntecrcd M in-.pt.ct the btisWor'«Ue Buii^i v>h<n suhmitted t<> bini by (be Urchiti-lt-ctcd by yoyr committee. i

Your ci.nimtme would ihftnefnre »"««lend that the (Vtinty Attorney l>e autb•*.l and dirct-n-i.M tlraw up suiuiile rt-so

,i«.ii-. fur the i^siiam'c of bonds in the sumi-fty thousand dollars ''"" ihe"i>ur|K»** «* 11 h;i*.inn land and the r.w»lruc

i purhtiildV*nA and the construction or htiil

pru\ ;dcd by law: tli.it, your cuintn^ } 4 j ^ « a ' ^ a N ) k U c « t ; ^

lie i'iirp.)sc of tlrawinK i^ans and . , - -•i.nis f.-r tii^ circiiim of slid tiuildin^s, whicl..lid plans shall IK- Milimiiud to (his boarij',,r final a<<t>n a1 an*l to \Uv ?tatc Uuard olMr.-1l.l1 a*, provided l»y law.I'KAN. i"ITIZKN— -'—II

I1.1t >(.ur cuimiiitttc IK- .Tithnri/i-'l to nc«..ti.iu- fur' the punhuHC "f a si'it.-.Mc tract

l.md. whrre..n to t n c t said buildiuc-.. andrr|».rl In this boaid lli- I'rMilt ft ihcir ueK<>luti"iia fur their a|>i>ru\;.1. '

\i,ur C(immitt<c frel* that t i c citi/t i* andtaxpayers *»f-this tomity ajc IH.W *th(irnugh-ly iur<inicd rrsjt-ctinti tliis t n t i r i r i s e ; that ai

tee ' ' has hri'M ^irpriM.l" to "karii that the,rc-conU nf t'lt State Tuhrritih-sis Cunimission.how that there. Arc iwUvc llmiiMnad cases

iiuiulred of »hu-h are in t'ni. 'n T ' l tuty; thathe ilcatfi r.ile fr.tin tlii;. «IUe.uc is l*o liun-trt ' l j.t r aniumi.

Kc»iK-ctftilly M.l.iniltfd,I. II. "HOANK.H. KUOUSK.J T. I". IIAVIT.ANP.X. It; J.KAVITT.

• • • • ' • - • ' , • Committee.

'

and the . recommendation adopted.n rulj rail WJS eo ordered without

« na i• v 'I'Vfintn'iitct? -,Vr.ur (•*.niinittCL> on LihuKham IMacc Brulge,

WottieM, would rn>"rl having received bidsm the cimstriiction oC'saiil bridge, the lowestf which was f»>r the sum of seven hundred

:i:id "(islity-scvcn dollar! {$?»?) from C. I I .l-iftwli' Jind'they have .awarded tlic contract

to-tlie ajn>roval-of-tIiis-Jmard._

stVoT'lmmireil" dollar* ($700). and we thcrc-fnrc recommends that said ai'proifriatiim be in-

•«1 by ciKlity-siven dollars ($87) andfie contract, awan'k-d an atwvc U> Charles I I .

IVeiu-h, WcstticM, for Ihc sum of seven hun-dred and eighty-seven* dollars (T787).

FrcrhnUcr . Randolph moved.' the report beticiveil and the recomendation adopted^

ili»scnt. .Ity Committee on Suriimer Street llridpc:S'our t'ftminitte ai'jKiintcd to examine the

iiitiiinrr- Mreel -drawbridge over the EJixabcthliver. Klixalieth, respectfully reports that it;is nu't at the bridge and has nude a careful

•x.imination of the same.The present bridge has pood foundations

FORESTSASPLAYGROUNDS^"WafihiTigton, j iDf "C^flftfbw""the'car's outing season .is over nearly

half a million persons will havesought recreation ant): health In theNational forests of the United States.According to tho record of the U. S.

place. The • present steel work is- not

ihuchrof""tEa" best rTsfiinggame hunting in the United States,"

more-accessible- each—year throughrotection and development; by theovernment, are'fast becoming great

S. W1LHUR,. - •Comirtttee.

Freeholder Smith moved the report be re-ived and the recommendation adopted, which

n roll call was so ordered by an unanimouste.liy the }ail Committee:

"~^ViVTf~CninmUiee*~Pii--Jatl—Inspection"-would

atl, "also the•'booT(s""i>f"'l1ii§"warden.*"'utuhcr of prts>oners in custody Avft. I 40umber discharged during-the month.. 88umber in custody August r .-. • 62umber of days' linard. • . . . , .!• . . . . 153^Maintenance—-Mrnts, provisions, drugs and

salaries $56,172. ' \Cost per tlay per prisoner, jq, cent;

. . Kt-spi-ctiully Buhmitled,• ' J. PERRV,

J. II. DOANE,J. MARTIN,

Committee, vOn motiun of Freeholder Jensen received,

nd placed on file.NEW BUSINESS.

Ity -Freeholder Wilbur: - I * . .Kesnlvcd, That the! Director appoint a com-

ittce' of Fcvcn to take cotnplcte charge ofricction. matters, including the purchase andeuair of ballot boxes, stationery, etc.; thatIUI committee immediately after its appoint-tciit ihall meet and organize by tlic ejectionf a cluurman; that the clerk of this board

hall divTHc the. county nTt'6 seven 'districts',""me member to take charge of a district; thai

hill shall be ordered paid unless approvediy the member from the district where thefork was dune, in addition to the auditinguinmittce.

Freeholder Krouse moved the adoption ofic, rcsulution which was carried. The Di-

rector appointed as said committee Freeholdersft*rillHir^JL":fX££*^rUU.K^:m and Krouse . • . •

.Mr. Cubby, one of the .assessors from Rah-"ay, .api>carcjd before the board, asking in-LiminttuiL on some of the items in the taxudtrct. Mr. Lcavitt answered the questions> the. satisfaction of Mr. dibby.

Freeholder W'ilbur was at this time cx-uscd by the Director.

The ftilluwitiK bills were read and on rollall unanimously ordered paid:

Courts-J-:. S.. Atwater, $Soo; C A. Swift,

.•.50; George Angcn, $50; Robert Light->t, $187.50; Henry $chu[>iK, $100; Fred

L'ci|tcl/'$jo; James Crann, $43-»S; G. W.'cek, Jr. , $84,60^ $15.50; i'cter Weaver,

-'•••;-; 'wM^^^^^^&a&.fefeCarey, $jo.J5; Henry Tease, $35: John Scc-lanil, Jj-'.so; Kotx-rt Walpole, $43; \V. II.Tnuccy, $17.39; Walter Ilctficlil, Jr., $^08.33;CliarU'S. Sheclcn, $4.45; Charles ltauer. $"-99iThymas Carry, $« .8d ; Roliext Kirklatid,$ j i . ^ i ; Alvin Eaton, $5; Hubert Katon. $37.50;Anth{i»y Crippo, $34. $13.64^ John CiallatiaufJi.l. ?!72.9ij; W. S. l'earcc. $3.51.

l!ri.lp:es—,\. T. Smallcy. $46.50: M. II .Cleaves, $-M; Jacob & Allen, $19; II. R. Pal.ner, ?ioo; l'nblic Service Electric Corpora-ion, $3.40; StandzftL^Qil Comiiany, $3.80;•"rank I'reyer, $77-6j!; lMirHui'rechauf, $^0.85;->avi<l—SkillTnarn—wol—l>oilK^te~*A—Strieker,$5; J. M. Wot»<U, $5.75; E. L. Alotire, $^7.45,$37; 1". *K. Dkkinsou. $147.16; Jacob I_ltaucr, $36; Paviii ToUen, $14; KobcrtClark, $3(>; Roltert G. Kouers, S i8 r KautnanSc l 'kl la, t w , W. T. Kirk. $^7.04; C A.lYlcrson, $J5o; F. J. Ilubbard. $75: Ed-ward "Jutinstnn, $67.15; l->a/ee Kyno, $.H.62;S. 11. Winter. Ji7.(?i: Elizal>cth l)aily Jour-nal. $5.44; t. 1. llubt.aril. $50, $50; A. \V.Stiles. $34i; Lhules French. $130; C. *IVtcrson, ?=73: F. J . HubbarJ, $150; ^MSicklcy. $53.75, $41.50; Moore llros., $155;John Woll.c. S6.-.83. $S=OJ: J.. I - Cook, $24,S31.511: Milton Caskill, $41.50: J. M. Han-kins. ? io ; Price & Tcrrill. $30.50. $75; GcorfieU. Avert, Si4S-\VjJ. ll.illi.lay,,;^^^jlrrTTrritina^-Tltuf^ttiflt.iitii: _. .yon. $-*;: K. !„ Moore. $94.45, S7.30: UumseyPumit anil Machine Coiniviuy, ?_-S; Henry I'.VamlcvctT. S11: Clark ' Hardware Comrar.y

45: \V. J. Fowler. »6.<io: Umilcr S Co.50; New York. Telephone Coini*any, $£.85:

. - .41. $0.10, $10.55, Sl l .3". $i-.15. $J.95. $J 20S.t.75*: 1'ulilil- Service Electric Cori^intion$14-14. ?oi.;,6: Western Union Tel. C»>nnian\$6-» James Carey. $60: John Conrad, $0788Albert Slein, $7.80; Victor Mfc. Co $6 25Stratum iltg. Co., SO.60; IlaitR & Hetrhcr.$13»."5. $1.75. $2.80^ Johnson Service Corninliv $31)45 rhubc th Ice Comtuny, Sfto 53\Nilliim Trewin, $ i 6 o t Charles Kurtr, S u 50Ilen»y Cook. $47$: W, II. irnltfamper;fl«J<J, tiiy, Rclukle Slitm LxindrT Conr»nyi I750; Btudtlacaer ""

$3MS6.50$

l>yer. $75: Jasnc* Johnston.$32.67; Thomfti Peterson. $35.

Ctildren's Goardum— N. J. State Board ofChiMrcn's .(luardiaos. $19.33.

Lunacy—N. J. State Hospital, MorrisI'lains, J3.1jo.74; N. J. Stale Jloipital, Tren-ion. $10.94.

' itTy—Elizabeth Kovdty Company,. - . . . ^ j . Advocate Publishing Company, $16;Henry Ciwk, $J.I5; F. E. Norfu, fij-go; »il.

Publication—Elizabeth Dailr Jonnul,$41.50: Summit Rec«trd, $37.50; Standard. Pub-li hiup Ctnccrn, $t.8o. $*^51 Cranford

«i P»rit8 apwroMhe*. The report vtUrt yetr'l »dininiBtr«tioo , by

1 t f A g * i c u l t a w

:ia oaiir j u m u u , 1 o.vo. •_ nci'ientalft—John Keron & Son, %4i» Ko-

lrsch & Co.-, $9.60; Columbia Trast Co., $3;W. II. Meeker, $9.80; Peter Meiiel, $8u;Ilentllntn Kintj, $34.20; Jacob Bauer, $40; J.Marlis.n Drake, £j8.oo, $50; Dr. F. W. Weit-ewtt, $111.50.

Tax JtoarJ—Sidney Eldridge, | too; FloranceStiles. $50; Claire I'ollard. $30.

W II. Winan.1. $402.51, $277.03; Weldon Con-ractinB Co., $758.56, $3,502.04.

State Aid Roads—C II . W m u t , $97°.02.Surri>Kat(?—<n;yrKe Parrot, $4S8.)S; Anna

Ililks. St'O; W. 1). Parrot, $208.34; RoubelAllin. $100.

Members' Pay—S. P. Wilbur, * | 8 ; W. J.Tin hiixon. $42; W. II. Randolph, $36; Adoli'h".rurncr. $40; Charles Jensen. $41; Elstnn>artiy, $24; I. II. Doane, $.16; John N . C»<i>\

$J2; Thomas F. Ilaviland, $40: Jo«(ph Perry.$j8; C. A. Smith, $48; W. II. Swain, $ J I ;llra.ll.ird Jones. $38; Peter Meisel, $34; HenryKroOse. $46: K. K. Adam.. $34; Jacob Maj-

Salar>—-James \V. Kink. $roo; BenjaminKing. $133.33; K. R. Leavitt, $151); r. W.L V o l c t t . $225. J ' . -.'i ••

1% nillee - E»r*nse«—W. J . ^TBO|ip»on,$15.49: S. P. Wilbur, $13.45; J. H. Doanc,$0^0: Klston l>arby. $7.15; J. N. O d y , {9.60;Tli..mi« llavilanil. $8.70; Jacob Martin, $6.70:osel'li Perry, $6.15; C. A. Smith, $14.30; W.I,. Swain. $5.2u; ltradford Jones, $13-40

IVtT Mci*W, $10.70; Henry Kroute, $43.05;K. K. Adams. $1430; \V. II. Randolph, $8;

SherilT's Account—Robert Kirkland, $458.33.2ji. '9o; AV.-11— Wright. j j n 8 j j ; Jamra t iark.108.33. "Itf-giMrar—Ftank Smith. $458.31; Edwarb

Gartll<raite. $70; Ottilic Reuler, $JS!Ma Courser,' $70;. llenriette Mcincke, $70;Ella l»ccker. $70; . Louise StaufTer. $70.

County Clerk—James Calvert. $458.33; Z._. Norman, $208.33; Irene Calvert. $70;•ranees 'McCalie,. $52; Neil McLeid, Jr..S6.67; C. W, Itunyon, $100; Ilele.n ^yhelan,

V'rceliolder Krouse moved to adjourn which<t ' carried. * The - Director declared theird ailjourned until Thursday, September

,"at 2.30 P. M.BENJAMIN KING.

Clerk, •

tion. '•_. •_

TTMNlTYTitVRCH NOTESAt Trinity church last Sunday

morning the sermon by Eev. Mr.Cameron on tbe subject of "Lightin general and Christ as the/light ofthe woYld" was closely listened to,and Miss Florence Parky solo, "Gndbe inerelf el; ti» m . *' M .beautifully..

sweet, tnw and/well-trained voice,and it is expected that she will favorthe congregation with another solonext Sunday. Mr. Cameron will offi-ciate next Sunday at 11 o'clock, andthat.*ill:be the_concluding servicjTofhis present engagement."" —'"-*•

LOCAL1 AND OTHER ITEMSIt is reported that Charles L. Em-

mons, superintendent of the Aeolianworks at Garwood, will build aresidence here thlB fall.

Towerman James T. Dockery andwifa have .reiurneA Jtpm their jwetl.-ding trip. ,

Christopher Westcrsaard of Walnutavenue arrived home on - Sunday froma pleasant trip to England, and Den-mark, hia birthplace.

Mies Louise Kuhlenschmidt enter-tained a number of friends at her homelast night, in honor of her sixteenthbirthday^ .;..;___.; _._2__^_l_L-_

Local political dope is scarce, nota squeak being audible from the <ave

No Dodging ThJi

and ,Peniuylvania; for whether IheCandida)? «*•»!• Tor-Asti**"**^''*'''''individual! decide (unfortunatelynearly always in the interests of tholiquor meir rather than for tbe goodof the community) as now.

Second:—When the present gover-nor of this state was urged to take aposition on the Local Option question,which is the main, moral politicalisBue in the state, he declared that

In striking contrast to the 0DB]A atwnia hn.~l _ . _ _ . . . °I*II

prior to his nomination and election,and to tak'e such a position after elec-tion would be to betray a larga numberwho had voted for him with theunderstanding that his public pledgecovered-the. extent .of his endeavorson this question. To this poiitlonmoat of the party papers in tbe statehave said, "Amen. It ia right thatan official should not be expected togo beyond his campaign declarations.''

Third:—We apprehend the possibi-lity of 8 candidate assuming that hewould not belong to the legislativedepartment of our government, and

that pursued in; Westfield, „,Leader, which under its newship U very far from asleepneceisary to ask tbe followictions in tbe hope of gainingtion that the public is cerUinl.entitled to possess: • nljr

1.' Has the town of Weatteuleased the building now used as . 7 ,bouse — formerly Barton'sstablfr^-to where all the i'fi -jbaa been moved, telephonesappurtenances have %eenthe town's expense?

2. Has the.town signed a l e u e

for the former Standard buildiwwhich is at present used for town

ast year was, in close figures, 406,775.

,Tbe Dseof.thcJaresta.far- recrea-Ibnfs ae jet<n itfibegihhlhK"fcat-iBtrowing steadily and rapidly in somef the Forests at the rate of a hun-

dred per cent, per annum. The dayeems not far distant when a millionjcrsons will annually visit them. ..

use of the forests runs from twomonths in a Colorado Forest, Bach asthe Routt, to twevle months in an

laskan, such as the Tongass. Buthe uses differ. In Colorado the!,000 visitors entered the forest toish, to camp, to climb, and to drinkhe medicinal waters; in Alaska the,000 almost solely to hunt and fish.%e 21,000 who went into the'Conco-.

niuo Forest, Arizona during, ninemonths went to camp or to enjoy thescenery. „ During four monhs 50,000icrsonfl visited the Angeles, Califor-lia. The most popular of the forests

icak of that name. The various lit-factions within its limits, Includingthe scenic railway, \ drew 100,000tourists and others. By principalstates the naional forest visitorsumbered 23,000 in Arizona; 103,000,

9,000 in Montana, 10,000 in NewMexico, 33,000 in Oregon, 22,000 indaho, 16,000 in Utah and 12,000 inWashington.

Of the natural wonders and land-marks of interest in the nationalotestsr.'sev'eralhave-been-Bet'aparrasNational Monuments, among themthe Cinder Cone; a great lava basin

ings, extensive remains of .a prehis-toric race in New Mexico; the unsur-passed Grand Canyon of the Colorado,-in Arizona; Jewel Cave, South Dakota;L.assen Peak, the terminus of a longline of extinct volcanoes in the Cas-cades; the Pinnacles, a collection ofremarkable jagged peaks in California,and the Tonto, a group of prehistoricruins in the Toiito Forest in Arizona.Tho Big Trees, ( Glacier Park, thePetrified Forest, the Oregon Cavesand numerous other phenomena serveto attract other hosts of visitors.

The sportsman finds his paradise inthe National Forests. In imany ofhem big game abounds. The rangers

and guards, besides the service theyperform n^ainst the spread of fire,

crats.are supposed to be stationed,and all that any Republican can beinduced to talk about is the, Free-hpldership and the vacancy, in theTownship"' Cornmit'tee'.' 'Tdr'tRrrormerplace, George G. Teller will make acontest against Emmor K. Adams, thepresent incumbent, andJ. W. Heina"will accept a nomination to succeed

question - by such a statement. Thishas boon done repiatedly and Immediately the same man would proceed toadvocate, other forms of legislationignoring entirely his assumed positionon this one. We fully realize thatby custom, if not by law, the gover-nor is the directing power in legisla-tion andTby "sujgg'estibns'Th'His annualmessago and by tho power ha exercises:. - • - ^ - ^ - ^ — - of^hij pojjtjonlibiotigjtthe^flufejieej ^ j p o i i t i ;as well as through his appointmentsin the state, he is the most powerfulsingle factor in the enactment. orhindering of legislation.

g ^ ppersonal preferences, but the im-portance of the municipal water plantquestion, with which he has been sostrongly identified, has persuaded himthat his duty lies in the path of con-tinued public service, provided ofcourse that a majority of the voters

First District, Jesse Wheeler and•Walter—-Irr—Paekerr-^-republicans;Herman-Kuh.letwcb.midt and- CharlesH. Beadle, democrats. Second Dis-trict, Alfred H. Miller and WilliamN. Gray, republicans: Bernard A,

electricians are associated roust bea live wire.

The Dixie Giants will' play theWashington A. C. of Elizabeth onthe. Cranford., avenue . grounds.. next

The Republican primary for theelection of 18 members of the town-ship executive committee was held onSaturday by candle light, owing tothe failure of the electric service inthe township roonrs. 'But as therewas nothing to do except deposit aballot already printed,.the scarcity oflight made but little inoonvenience.Tbe candidates unanimously chosenwere: C. B. Pierce, T. S. Cline; F.S. Hale, G. A. Watson, R. C. Plume,Wm. Gellatly, Geo. Hughes, G. H.Hansel, J. E. Warner, T. N. Wrenn,J. W, Heinu, S. M. Scott, E. B.Crane, W. S. Kendall, Jas. Stansfield,H. P7 Wood~AT~Vr- Haft~Er*ATCruikshank.

OLYMPIC PARK, NEWARK.' From the most modern of musical

comedy occupying tha 8ta'gethiawiek,the Aborn Comic Opera Company atOlympic Park will turn back to operacomique of the standard variety nextweek, presenting for the first timein three years Daniel Francois Auber'smasterpiece, !'Fra Diavolo," whichwas capably _ presented, several weeksduring the earlier Aborn seasons, andwhich, after its long absence fromtheir ..repertory, ,..will. be.most... wel-

i

camper and the easiest route. Accofdof 9,218 miles of trail cut,

1,236 miles, of road laid out, and 4.851miles nf telephone line strung tellswhat the Government his done in thenay of pushing the conveniences ofcivilization into the primeval forest.The day of the wilderness of thesavage and the pioneer in swiftlypassing; tbe day of National, ~ ' "at productive *MMK*B *Od ai

be the appearance of Edith Bradfordas tho bold, dashing robber,' Diavolo,for the yoiinger generation at leasthas never seen a womarf in this fam-ous role. The two ludicrous bandits,'Giaeorno pnd Beppo, will be- assumedby Fraiik-Wooley and Robert Lett,respectively, both of whom have givenexcellent., presentations of-the-sameparts before at Olympic. John Hen-derson, will be cast as Lord Allcash/John O'Donneir in tho tenor role ofLorenzo, Bernice Mershon as LadyAllcash, Blanche Morrison in theprima donna role of Zerlina.

1 " - SWEET."I think your wife has a sweet

voice.''So~aoX She gets $1,200 a year

for spilling part of it in a churchchoir. "—Boston Transcript. ,

This week's/ bill at Proctor'sTheatre, Plainfleld, is an exceptional-ly good one, the artists being Belzac,violinist; Ross Lee and two Bell

[Boys; Bert Banlon, singing come.; mnd Walter Bedell I* Co., Jn *•Sketch.- „>. ., , y .

are hot requesting your attitude onthe Sunday law. This Is not involvedin this mattor at all. It is not infre-quently the case that candidates when

of majority rule on the Iicenaa-^jdea-tion wllL attempt byJlBLJierv^ veho-mence of their declaration that theystand in'favor of the Sunday law andfor righteousness and the gospelgenerally, to win the friends whostand for Local Option into the belief

morals of the state.. May we sug-

'pa^I^1iSln~recbenizes~thlirt'7ltSHecan be no change in the Sunday law,nor any--po89(ble--weakening-of-thatlaw in all humnn probability as longas our present constitution with equalrepresentation from each county

least there is no sentiment for_ thestightestweakeningjof present ^nndaygovernment. More than this, lastwinter at tho Hearing on the LocalOption Bill, the brewers,' who ownat least'se'venty- five percent, of thesaloons, officially; through their attor-

that they favor the present Sundaylaw and were against any change inthe "Bishops' Law," and since noone officially desires any change,sincerely hope you will' not in yourresponse to this plain, fair - question,endeavor to evade or avoid the issueby strongly affirnung| other matterswhich are not involved or questioned,

Trusting to receive from you aprompt, and favorable response thatour friends throughout the state maybe able to follow out their wishes sowell voiced in the accompanying reso-lution, I am, . . i

. .Yours very truly,•-"•^tSigneaf J.-FRANK" BURKE;

. State Superintendent.The resolution referred to in the

letter was adopted by the Laymen'sAssociation of the Newark Conferenceof the M.E. church, and 1B aflfollowB:

"As citizens we rejoice that theissue has, been made so clear and.decisive that every candidate for thelegislature, regardless of party, isnow forced to declare himself on thisquestion, which we realize is destinedto be a dominant one in the approach-ing "carhpaignitdr "tlie" election* of alegislature and a governor of ourstate, and y*o call on those who, as

take such an unequivocal position onthis great moral question that wemembers of God's church and loversof~our brother man may boablescientiously to Bupport them, givingdue notice that in our judgment tltime has come in New Jersey whencandidate must choose between • our Tw

JwpnorJt_and_that-of-those—who— ar» —iTtoendeavorng to, protect .the saloon """•from the people. "•

Dr. Itwin has returned from hisvacation in New England.

ESTAHLISHED 1893 .—NO

imount of money has been spjnt f i |improvementiT ' I

3. Has any action been.'uiitnlwhich justifies the statement contain Ied in Mr.-Low's address to the voters!at the time of the last school elec-ltion-That the • Town was about tolpurchase the Thompson propertytwenty-thousand. dpUars»...f,.,,t,,.

4. Has there been in existence ,1certain colored gentleman .»ho r»-|ceives two dollars a day for doing!nothing but turning on water hy-ldrants while the water wagon driver!holda down the seat? I

5. Has the town signed a contract!for lighting with Tungsten, or willthe Public Service return to" tHe old]lights at the same price . of, $18

'A Lightning-Change ArtistThe filing of his petition for

U. ,S. Senatorship apparently - take(ibai'^NiV^owlieraiiror'^fteTdf''

TEIEPH

'AW, STREETS

candidate for Congress, as he cannot]in good faith be a candidate. for toffices at the same. time. The pri-|

The candidate"or'tne':'teff6rt;1niideTJhis behalf by his friends, for what-lever the office - may be. 'This ae-lceptance involves his guarantee tolserve if nominated and elected The!constitution prohibits him from hold-Fing two offices, and as 'Congressman!Fowler has agreed in good iaith tol

' w;:S«HitoTanipanfl ai*-m»hl*hid« by his decision io I

contain 8 and 9 rooms, \wood trim and .floors, hi

open fire-places, dining re

Our plan for theinteresting.:'."" ..Call, write, tcleph

of the Senatorial questions may not be Imade before next February, Congresi-1man Fowler, i t is figured, naturaUfltakes himself out of the congresstoiial|race. " •

Postscript: Since the above wailueW3|

gresBional n e e . Ho therefore putilhimself in tbe attitude of tho dog, Iwho, carrying a chiink of meat across Ia bridge, saw in the water what ap-lpeared to be another dog. with ano-1

Ttltphone.75 Cranlord

200 5th Aye

" In .bfor""everylBlug" in sight,"tKeanimalileaped at the shadow and was drown-"ed. Look out, Mr. Fowler!

Work has been begun on an over-head bridge at the Center street Igrade crossing at Garwood. In view Iof tho fact that nobody will climb thesteps necessary, to use the bridge the Iconstruction must be regarded simply Ias a device on the company's part to Iescape liability for damages arising Ifrom injuries to - persons at the |crossing. '

HEW AUK, N..I.> - . . . .

W'RKK OF Kvcnliiss ill f:!5 .HKl-T. 0 Mat. Weil.. 8<u. lind Su

A B O R N O P E R A CIin "The Bohemian Girl"

• With .loacph Smith and SpoolnlGlnboruto Bcunlo I'roilucllor

—NOTICE J O P ~ P R I M A R V - E L E C T M _VJOTICB 1s tieteby given that a Prlmarr Ii N Election forthe nomination of candidate! Ito bo voted upon at tho Gonerol Election to M Iheld November 6th, 1010, nnd (or delegates »the State and Cong-reailonal Conventions will Ibo held on ,

TUESDAY, BEPTEMDEIU3,1010. .Tho polling Plaoo for the "Pint Hlectlon Dl«-1

irlct will bo in tbe Opera IToiueBlocIt; „ '„'The polling; plaoe for. the .Second Election

District will bo the Township Booms, BankTboofticcs for whloh nominations are to bo I

made at this prliunrr are a» follows:Tbree mombirs ofthe General Assembly from

the County of Union. -A Coroner for tbo Connty of Union.Two Delegates to the Hcpubllcan

lonal Convention of the FffthDistrict ot N»w Jersey from the Flrat - - -Dl»tifc!t(- and - two-f rom- toe-Second Klectlo?Dlfltrlot. -<

tine Delejato to tbe Democratic con«rM>-lonal ConvSntlon of. the Fifth CongressionalUlttilot-of Hew Janey from .the tot. ffl«j!!?i..DIUrtot,. and-one.from. U>«- s.ocond.,]ElcctlOT

OnoCDcIcK»te from each Election District lothe Henabllcan State Convention. . . . . .

one Delegate from each Election District tothe Democratic State Convention.

A Member of the Board ot Choaon Free-

A Township Clerk for ono year to Oil nnex-

Proctor & Sanderson, Less«s t

G R A N D OPENINGf ol the season

with' Proctor & 'Sanderson's Permar

• Stock CompanyMonday, Tuesday and Wctlnes

Sept,. 6t3a. &tlo.Ss- . - - - -A-ComoayDranift,of .Western 1

•THE THREE OF US"

:—•priICES:1SIntlr(b6*-'0rchcstfra«»

P ^Member of tbe Township Committco for Jfull term of tbree yean.

Two Justices of the Peace.Tbree Constables.Two Surveyors of Highway*. „The Pnlla will be ormu from 1 o'cloclc, I. J l -

Kv"nl'.W-O«hestra85cnndScolly 25o" Onllory 16o; Itox I

, TICKETS OM BAtB NOW!Thursday.Trlday and Sntttnlay, the be:tlz.tl.mof AaBMtaJ.Kvans' Powerl

M * © M

Myuntil 8 o'6lo«t>. Mr . „, ,,,„„

Tb« Board of BeirUtry for each Hoc My"District will meet at tbaaame tlmo and P"™for tbo purposo of addlni names of w*mvoters to tbe reglstrr list.Datod,

Sunciay, Sept. ••nd

•••"— "•J- Twenty llTnntes Street Car IUde From neart of S«» "*OPKN BA1LY AHD SUNDAY, FIIOM 9 A. II. UNTIL MIDNIQDTvWEJSK OF Kveolnin at »M

ADO. 20 Mat. Wed., Sat. and Bnn. 915^ A B O R N ' O P E R A C O .

^ la • Wr» D I k v e l o "with SdUh Bradfort and Anmnented CutWeO of Sept o-TanliM HaU 1tt."BOBdA8"

T R E E

Oct. a to 8-«Etlw -Week

vr.H.r°o1

. f-

HopatconBChll'drtn goc ^

Special Train leave* Cranford atvo

$1.50, | S K I IOLEN ONQKO^ad the SWjTCjSpe«W T™i*4eave»5raBlord«t9