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W T O 5!
'J', H u U n jL E G A L P A P E R O F T H E T O W f y O F N U
" ■ ■' . ■ • '■ r ■ ' ' ■ ' " ’■ .. .■ .
V o l . X I . N o . 51- N U T L E T , N . J . , S A T U R D A Y , O O T O B E K \7 , 19i3i5
NUTLEY DAY BY DAYF oxes in S outh Jersey are so
num erous th a t they are an annoyance to th e farmer.
Mr. C. D . H erm an, of C hestn ut stree t, has returned from a trip through th e W estern S tates.
L ow ney’s C hocolates and Bon-Bons received fresh from th e m aker at M asonic H all Pharm acy.
A sm oker w ill be giveD by th e basketball team of S t. M ary’s L yceum a t S t. M ary’s H all, Tuesday even ing, O ctober 10.
Mr. E d w in Probert, of M ounta n "View avenue, th is tow n, has been engaged to audit th e books of th e T ow n Council.
Our Sulphur Lozenges are an effective and speedy remedy for pim ple s and blackheads. 10 cen ts a box, a t M asonic H all Pharm acy.
Cold Breakers w ill cure a cold tw enty-fou r hours w ith o u t causing buzzing- in th e ears lik e q u in in e. 25 cen ts a t . M asonic H all Pharm acy.
T h e regular m onthly m eetin g of Y an tacaw C hem ical E n gine Company w ill be held in th e com pany’s room on Thursday even ing, th e 12th inst.
Mr. Charles V an de W ater, form erly c le?k o f th e Board of E d ucation , is reported to be confined to h is residence 'on Prospect s t ie e t . w ith severe illness.
A p retty ch ildren ’s party was held la s t Saturday afternoon and even in g a t th e hom e o f Mr. and Mrs. H enry A . Connolly, of H ighfield lane. .T h e party was g iven to their son, Sarto, and h is l i t t le friends, M iss Flossife F reem an, M iss Evelyn D onaldson and M aster Morgan Johnson.
T h e D em ocrats o f N u tley w ill m eet on W ednesday night-, October 11, a t 8 p. m - a t C onnolly’s H all, to d iscu ss th e cam paign . T h e town t ic k e t w ill be Dominated th a t evenin g and several candidates for county offices w ill be present and address Jhe m eeting. A ll D em ocratic and ini’ ^'pcndeat voters are requested to
atten d .
On Tuesday n ig h t A ivin Cunhing- 11 am , accom panied by h is m other, w as d riv in g along C h estn u t S treet, near h is hom e, when tw o w heels suddenly cam e off h is veh icle . T he oecupaots were throw n out but xieittiei was badly hurt, T b e borse f m away, go in g ea st along tbfl streak I t Was ca u g h t near th e T hird R iver bridge. T b e a c e id e b t, i t is sa id , was du e to th e fa c t th a t a fter applying grease to th e axles th e w heels were n o t properly adjusted.
C o g a n D ie s o f I n j u r ie s .Jam es Cogan, a n ig h t worker in
th e hosiery m ill on H arrison street, th is tow n , who was injured a t four o ’clock on T uesday m orning, by h a v in g h is arm torn from th e socKet as the resu lt o f being cau gh t in the m achinery, died in th e M ountainside H osp ita l, M ontclair, on Tuesday night, from the effects of an operation th a t th e physicians deemed necessary. T h o deceased m an resided a t 261 F ran k lin avenue, Bloom field. H e is su rvived by a w idow, tw o sons and th ree daughters A burial perm it w as granted by D eputy County Thym cian Sim m ons, o f Orange.
T b e P r iz e "W inners.T h e com petition of th e Et utley Im
provem ent S ociety for th e places best kept during the sum m er has ju st ended. T h e com m ittee has awarded th e prizes as follows: T h e first prize of S10 goes to Mr. Clarence B. I llfe , of Colonial Terrace. T h is award w as m ade largely because Mr. Hi He having only been on h is place a year, in th a t tim e h i s done rnu.h work on i t and th e im provem ent has been very marked. T h e second prize of $5 was given on the contrary to Mr. Frank B. Speer, w hose place, often called w ater-eress fafm , has been noticed for years by passers by as being particu larly a ttractive .
T he th ird prize of $3 w ent to Mr. S, T. H . L ange and Mr. B ridgem an, of H aw th orn e avenue., who worked to gether. .T hey were closely pressed by Mr. Louis Grant, of H aw thorne avenue, of whom special m ention should be Uitide.
T h e sm aller prizes of $2 were given to R oscoe Sym onds, Mrs. J . T . Faith ,' Mrs. W. D . Crukett and Mr. George B D ouglas. T h e prizes o f $1, in ten d ed chiefly for th e jun ior mem bers, were awared to W alter Woodruff. Charles V . L en t and M iss Josephine T iffany.
T h e society is very m uch gratified by the number of en tr ies and thegood show ing m ade. I t hopes n ext year every one w ill com pete and th e n u m ber of b ea u tifu l p laces in N u tley be thereby greatly increased.
. F ir e m e n to V is i t NyacJk.A n in v ita tio n has been received by
th e m arch in g club of th e N u tley F ire D ep artm ent to v is it N yack, N . Y ., on W ednesday, October 11, and partic ip ate in th e b ig F irem en s’ Parade th a t w ill take p lace th ere on th a t d ate g iven . D rills are being held n igh tly a t th e h o u s e o f A vondale Hose Company. R obinson's Band of Paterson w ill accom pany th e firemen. I t is expected th a t a com pany of fifty w ill be present from N u tley . A special car has been chartered from th e E rie R ailroad for th e occasion.
St. P au l’s C o n g reg atio n al Olm rcli
On Sunday th e pastor B ey, Q< 0 , H elm in g w ill preach m orning and even ing. M orning service a t 11 o ’clock, even in g service a t 7.45 o clock. Sunday School 9.45 a. m. and 2.30 p. m . An adult class for th e stu d y of Paul and h is le tters, under the d irection ol P rincipal W. C D avis, w ill m eet a t th e m orning hour. Y oung P eop les’ m eeting , 7 p. m , topic, “ S erv ice” leader. Mr. T hom as C lem ents. M idweek M eeting W ednesday, S p. m.
M e th o d is t JO piscopal C h u r c h .Ou Sunday the pastor R ev. E lbert
Clem ent, w ill preach a t both services. M orning service a t 10.30, subject, ■‘T h e P erfect C hristian , T ried by Severe T e s ts ’’; 7.45 p. m . subject, “Men as Trees W alking” ; Class M eeting!) 30 a. m.; Sunday School 2.30 p. m ., Epworth League V espers <5.45 p. m. General P iayor M eeting W ednesday, 8 p .m .
T lie K el'orm eU C h u r c h .On Sunday th e pastor, Rev. Wm.
Stuart, w ill preach. Quarterly Comm union at 11 a. m. 7.45 p. m . subject “ Periodical P ie ty ” Sunday School and Bible Class 9.45 a. in.; Sons and D aughters of th e K in g M eeting 1 1 5 p. in .. Prayer M eeting, Wednesdif 8 p. m ., leader. E lder Barr.
T he nex t hardest coal to Lehigh is
P IT T S T O NI f y o u don’t b e lie v e i t , ju s t t r y a n d b e c o n v in c e d
Nut, Stove and Egg - - #6.oo per tonI,arge No, a Nut - - * 4.50 per ton
Less 2 per cent, cash discount if paid in 3 clays
T h e rap id grow th of our business should be am ple proof th a t our coal is of the best quality.
HBTLEY COAL & SUPPLY CO.H ead O ffice—High S treet, W est N u tley , N, J.
BRANCH OFFICES:O w osi+ t; N x j t l e y S t a t v n a n d in C h a s. E. J o f ’ G r o c e r y
•>’OKr ' vOi'r>1T-E*10 ~ '•T>
T o ta l......... 839 ~ 876 955
B o w lin g ' O u F oi-llyu ig-liM y A l l f y s .Ou Saturday n igh t.
B en n ett................. ......139 144 177W ellm an............... . . . 223 197 181I l lf f e .....■........ ..... 142 169R ead........................ . . . .1 5 8 160"Wiley.......... ............ . . . .1 7 6 169D a v is .......: ............. . . . 177 . . . - ‘ •W assell ................ . . . .1 3 1 164C onger...... .............. OQ H-t ...........Barnard.................. .......133
On W ednesday night,.F. D a v is______ _. . . . l')2 127 150.Sherlock ................ . . . . 1G9 188 149W iley ....................... ....1 7 7 ,166 176T aylor....... .............. ..... 168 )l76 181W oodford............... 1 164 . 145S t. J o h n .................. j 136 163
TLi BUSY PINKNIGHT THE ACTIYE PIGSKINOn W ednesday night, a tean^ from
th e E xcelsior alley* of PateMUn play-, ecf a team composed of IS u tle y players on th e th e M asonic H all ajtlevs tiii-- th is town. T h e N u tley players look th e three gam es played. T h e sc o n s follow : y
PATERSON (R. B aer...........................147S te ig er ................. .■------162J. Baer........................... 167S ton er............................. 156Ilau sin ..................157
,1177 161211133138198
T o ta l 789. NUTX.EY
J. B 'u m ..........................ISOR u sb y ..............................201H allid y ................ 131L eyser........................ ....137S. B lu m ...................... ..190
841
.2 9 222 177
174
S u ccessfu l C a rd P a rty .
T h e bridge w h ist au'1 euchre card party held under th e ausp ices ofj'the N utley Im p rovem en t S ociety a t the house of th e N u tley Uiuu,|Wi'Tcesdarj afternoon, w as very su ccessfu l and largely attended . There* were e igh teen tab les devoted to the players T h e w inners were: Br dge w h ist, first* prize; Misg E , H iy, who wasawarded a handsom e pillow ; second prize, M
ilk covered s ..P ierr e P .
Lahens, a g lass vase; th ii i prize, M issP rout, a glass d ish . 1 prize, Mrs. Guy J . Edwoi g lass bonbon d ishes, st Mrs. R obinson J . M. C broidered centrepiece; Mrs. E dw ard W righ t, a
UClH'e, first ds, Si pair of «ond prize, dasej an ern- hird prize, guestbook.
U o ih 2futi«\y T ra in s 'Win F irst Osvinef o f Season.
A lthough out-w eighed alm ost to a man th e N u tleys played th e E ssex A . C., of B elleville, la s t Saturday a fu rnoon and celebrated th e opening of th e season bv d efeatin g them 11-0.
From th e sta r t N u tley kept th e b il l In E ssex territory and i t was m an ifestly the short halves w hich k ep t the score from ruuning h igher.
H aw kins kicked off and B ellev ille was held for downs before five m inutes of play. Once in possession of the ball, N utley k ep t going s tra ig h t for thr B elleville goal until H aw kin s was pushed over for th e first score of th e season. H aw kins kicked th e goal, .ujiikiug it-6-0. T h e half ended w ith th e ball in N u tley ’s possession on the lie ilevelle tw entyrfive yard lin e .
T h e second half, on account of th e h eat, was shortened to fifteen m inutes. I t was m uch like the first, excep t th a t B e llev ille m ade a more deLermiued resistance, ai,d although they were never w ith in str ik iiig d istance of th e ir opponent-,’ goal, several tim es th ey held th e N u tliy s and secured th e ball. They w ere u n able to gain , kow ever, and N utley scored its second touch down and fa iled in th e try for th e goal in the h i't few m in utes of play.
T h e Dover {N. J .), A C.' w i.l m eet the- N u tley A . C. on ih e Park Grounds th is afternoon.
T h e N u tley Jun iors played th eir first gam e la s t’ Saturday afternoon- w its th e Esler A . 0 . of B elleville. In sp ite o f th e heat th e gam e was hard and snappy throughout.
T he first score was m ade by Gould a fter the ball had been carried down, th e field by hard lin e p lunges by W itbeck and B assford. T h e ir iek plays and end runs were not accom plished as sm ooth ly as la s t year, prob- ably-oa account of th e la c k of practice. T h e score stood 6-0 a t Che end of th e first half. ,
T h e second h a lf was not fa irly started before th e B slers p u t one of the E ssex A ,-G players in as ha lf back. T o offset th is B lum w ent in a t end on th e N utley team . A nother E ssex in&ii was also pqo in and N utiey reta lia ted w ith B fiiefi a t fu ll. A fter lo sin g the' ball on th e live yard line, N utley held for downs and pushed Bruen over for th e second tou ch d ow n W itbeck k icked th e goal and th e score stood 12-0.
MA
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. ■whj•wbereli
■■ ' ( wirit abse sen a. of T atri
MAS1Ft
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F r e e T r a in in g oi'INurses. \By th e term s of a fu >d to be ad
m in istered in connectfcin w ith th e P hiladelph ia School Io r N urses, W itherspoon B u ild in g , IP h ilad elp h ia a number of young wonilln from every county w iil receive f r ® tra in in g in nursing. I t is p la n n e d lo u ltim ately reach and help iu t lf is way every village and tow nship .
T he young w om en vtlll be provided w ith room, board, n u r® uniform s and all th e refinem ents of » w ell-appointed C hristian home, ft-t graduation th e d iplom a of -the Jehool and th e order of th e Red Crfcss w ill be conferred, q u a lify in g for P ractice in any S ta te or country; this railroad fare w ill then be paid baclf home.
■ T h e school is ten wears old and is endorsed by ptiysiciJans. lead in g educators and p r o m in e ft men throughou t th e country
W ish es T o E x p r e s s T h an k s.T o th e E d itor of T i* e N u t l e y Su n
D e a r S ir : —Mrs. (S . S ilverburg, of Park street, W estl N u tley , desires through th e columjns of your paper to thanlc, on beha/lf of th e L ad ies’ A id Society of S t . / P a u l’s Congregational Church, the! unknown donor of a h a lf dozen large Ibisque dolls w hich reached her by esp ress la st Saturday.
mmg and EnrrtTfaz &f poster*catalogs, JTbooWcKS* ad*, and all c«tax&«relal are {JurpMe*. We -unite copy, do uf prtniinj’S. JlthopiapSJn and r»gnriag j all proc|es*e<. Everythin? that’* done 'with pel & brusb, graver and type. W« also cnf|'n>9i&nd Illuminate. Studio opph ' City HI *11 Subway nation. Call, -mu** »phone. Telephone, 3530? ;Cort. >45 S’way, New Yotk« 9
W ill .Not O ppose l>ry<len.For som e reason n o t clear to th e
average observer, certa in newspapers p retend in g to be friendly to th e in terests of th e R epublican party in s is t thab Governor Stokes in ten d s to enter th e race for th e U n ited S ta tes Senatorship aga in st John F . Dryden when th e tim e com es for h is re-election . W h ile Governor Stokes believes th a t h e is not barred from becom jng a candidate for th e U n ited S ta tes S enate by any provision of th e S ta te C on stitu tion , be has declared in plain words th a t he has no in ten tion of co n testin g w ith Mr. Dryden for th e ottlce —T renton S ta te G azette.
B o u n d t o C o m e.A form er plan for a trun k sewer, it
w ill be recalled , was se t aside by the courts upon techn ica l grounds on su it in s t itu te d by P aterson. T h e project w ill again com e up before th e n ext L egisla tu re , and N ew ark w ill push it for all th a t it is w orth. T h e trunk sewer is bound to com e, thou gh many obstacles leg is la tiv e , leg a l and o th erw ise, may y e t haye to be surm ounted. — Hudson Observer.
ESJAlljtxsHKD 1897DR. II. 1##EYWOOI>}
D B j i v T l S T, 277 BROAD/^A.Y. NEW YOBK
N. W. Corner of Chambers St,Only one speelJ^tj! doing each piece of
work, big or Uttlelfps'yreU us It can possibly be done, regardless ost tirno or trouble, anti *-.t moderate e.xpoj^a jto the patient. Plionc IMSFkln-' ' ‘
Branch officef Nutley on 'comple •tfoi( rrwltleuj
i
T h e people w ho sp en t th e sum m er a t th e seaside resorts and li^ve retu rn ed to th eir homes w iil be edified by th e reports of th e inspectors of th e S ta te Board o f H ea lth , ju st subm itted . T hey w ill find th a t they have heen drink ing m ilk of w hich 25 per cen t, w as adultered. O ut of th irty - tw o sam ples of cream tested six teen were found to contaiu preservatives. T h e sam ples were gathered in As- bury Parle, Long B ranch, Red Bank and other resorts on th e coast. T h e Board of H ea lth was q u iescen t all sum m er w h ile th e sa le of th is ad u lterated m ilk was go ing on, and i t was only a fte r th e season had com e to an end th a t th e inspectors w ere se a t ou t to in v estig a te . ' W h at in th e uawic of compvon sen se is th e use of 3 / fcate Board of H ea lth th a t lim p s s<5 lam entab ly in it s d u ties —New* ark D aily A dvertiser. 1
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TOPICS OP THE TIMES.A CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER
ESTING ITEMS. 'Com m ents and C riticism s B ased KJpon
t i e Happcningrs o f th e D ay—K letorl-ckl and N ew* N otes. /
The Equitable is gettiV , more so every day. ,
Love and philosop,’ .y have nothing In common. .
Most people ^ylien they buy experience don't geji' a bargain.
■¥ — ■ . . 1 « ■
The V^ship man is never a pessim ist. He is alw ays looking up.
A w ife's yearning capacity is usually far in excess of her husband’s earning capacity.
Both Japan anil Russia are In for a long and monotonous experience “working out a dead horse.”
How many other nations, in the hour of victory, would have been as magnanimous as the Japanese have been?
Nothing makes a woman w ith a new hat so angry as to have other women pass her without looking a t i t
Courtship has been compared to strawberries smothered w ith ice cream and marriage to a beefsteak smothered w ith onions. • ,
Then there Is the mortifying reflection that the astronomers on the planet Mars must have discovered our north pole ages ago.
General Linevitch w ill probably never ^et done:talking of the things he would have done to the .Taps if the war had only been allowed to go on.
In Albania when a girl w ants to marry she collects all her money and displays it In a pile. It would seem to be time for Bradstreet’s to establish a branch iu Albania.
Mrs. Frank Leslie says women should not marry until they are 28. Editor Bok thinks men should marry before they are 25. How under the shining canopy can this matter be compromised!
Au American promoter says Russia has been grossly misrepresented and that the internal situation there is not at all bad. H ow these educated Russians persist in misrepresenting their own country!
The telescope reveals the fact that the landscapes on Mara are subject to sudden and frequent changes of the piost extensive character. Map making must be the most profitable employment on that planet.
If M. W itte actually said “Russia w ill remain in the far E ast the great power which she hitherto has been and w ill be forever,” he w ill not be selected as the historian to write a truthful account of the Russo-Japanese war.
There is a bare possibility that neither a spirit of bravado nor a desire to do something spectacular led the President to make that trip in the Plunger. He may have wanted to gain some practical knowledge concerning one branch of tbe navy with which he was unfamiliar.
If you want a flint-lock musket you do not have to Irnnt round the old curiosity shops or in the attics of the old houses. A factory In Birmingham, England, is turning out tw elve hundred muskets of this kind every week. They are sold principally to the natives in central and east Africa, to whom the possession of modern firearms is denied by law.
Theoretically a college match provides an opportunity for generous emulation between young men in some form of recreation which they follow for its own sake. This conception is retained in England better than in this country, where the national tendency to make a business of whatever is undertaken works against the best form of amateur sport. It is thus that'great expenses are felt to be necessary in training; there is a tendency to take professional performances as the standard, and with this goes of necessity a desire for elaborate training and the erection of what should be a recreation into a solemn duty of winning. And from this in turn arise most of the troubles which have attended the growth of college athletics.
There is no truer martyrdom to one's duty and fiiith tlmn that of Archbishop Placlde Louis Chapelle of New Orleans, who died In that city of yellow fever early in August. When the scourge appeared among the Italian fruit-handlers, over whom he had great influence, he set him self at once to visit the infected districts day nnd night, allaying panic and preaching methods of prevention and cure. In this he had the co-operation of scores of other men and women. Protestant nnd Catholic. The arch- episcopal palace was in the danger zone, but he refused to desert it. There, after a tour through the fever ccnters of the State, he came dewii with the disease and died. He w as a man of great influence in his city and church, had been honored by tlie Pope With the post of Apostolic Legate in Cuba, Porto Rico atai the Philippines, and had done much in those places to make easy tlie w ay of American oc. cupation. I
— i-:Wht nplicity reigned and a blanket toi k- , . place o f trousers and a boiled sa rt l i e is one of those fellow s who thj nk th|at a Greek costume means i s lie happiness. Every little while somebody starts a crusade to force mi n in t i knee breeches, or smalls, w lic h would be pretty tough on our bap-legged men. What nonsense. The good old days are a myth. The Greeks looked as! sloppy as a reservation Indian, andjthe fashions of the so-called good old flays were generally founded oh the fool Ideas of some crack-brained monarch., j A t one time the m ost fashionable c<ilor w as called. “ L ’Isoeau,” or the Isabella. There Is a story connected with that. Isabella, daughter of Phillip l i . , yowed not to change her Ifnen untiij Ostend w as taken, \ siege iastetl three years, which w as rather toufjh on the Indy, and the linen became v e iy dingy. But it gave rise to this fasqiohable color. The fashion of wearing khe hair short became the correct thing-|because Francis I. had to have his. haiJr cropped owing to a wound. The flecollete gown was first worn by Isabella of Bavaria, who had a neck and shoulders that were worth going miles tolsee! She w as so proud of them that ^he had to parade them. In the time oi Charles V. short and tight trousers became so much the rage that the government of France banished them by ed ict Never sigh for the good old days. Modem -tones are saner, healthier and better in every way. We are slaves of fashion, but our slavery Is mixed w ith common sense, which Is good for us all.
The problem of the unemployed working man is one o f the m ost Important questions of the day in several European countries. Among the measures introduced by the government a t the present session o f the British Parliam ent was a bill for the relief o f the unemployed, but it did not become a law. The Belgian minister of labor has published a document setting forth the facts In his country, and measures have been adopted for the solution of the problem in Sweden. Hungary and Russia. The most significant of recent contributions to a knowledge of the subject is the report of a committee of the French Chamber of Deputies on the conditions in France. It shows by numerous facts and figures that the introduction of machinery nnd foreign competition have made it impossible for the small farmer to earn a livelihood by the cultivation of his land. Consequently he sells his two or three acres to the large proprietors, and drifts to the city, to sw ell the ranks of the great army of idlers. The only remedy suggested in the report for this disastrous exodus is to give the villager and farmer em ployment which shall add enough to his earnings to make him contented; that is, 'to organize tepid promote house ar.d village Industries. Attention is called to the methods adopted in Russia for fostering the earning capacity o f the rural population.1 There ■ are about fifty domestic m inistries in that country by which fabm laborers can earn small sum s aw ay from the farms, such a s’locksmitlilng, shoemaking and painting icons. The government encourages these ill dustries, called kont- sari, by the establishm ent of factories for apprentices, and of schools and salesrooms, in w hich pupils may be trained. As far : s possible’ it reserves to the koutsari the m anufacture o f certain government work. B its and stlrrOps, for insta nee. are made by the peasants o f Yaroslav for the military service. A t St. IVetersburg there is a permanent exhibition of articles made by the system. \One estim ate of the
'if peasants by these kh as fifty-eight mil- laill has been intro- rench Chamber, ap
propriating monejf for. an inquiry as to the expediency! of establishing a similar system in iFrance.
annual earnings < industries is as l)i lion dollars. A duced into the F
Can D etect H um an Blood.Consul General |iunthe'r, o f Frank
fort, reports that tlj 3 Prussian military surgeon, l)r. XJhlenl nth, who has been transferred to the h|ygienic institute of the U niversity o f ^Greifswald, is the discoverer of a neHv method for distinguishing human Jrom animal blood. In 1897 Dr. Uhlenhlith w as assistant at the institute ror ijpfectious diseases at Berlin, and is a mftmber o f the commission for investiga mouth disease.
In the fall of 10OC published important with reference to dis tw een the albumen oi
ing the foot-and-
Dr. Uhlenhuth investigation*
itinguishing be- eggs of various
birds upon the basis ol modern science, which is mainly the result o f the researches of Bordet of ' France and Ehr- licli of Frankfort. Uhlenhuth found
" can be differ-that these albumens entiated biologically.resulted in the importt .nt discovery of
1
l i s : researches
to distinguish 'Od so tnat it is th absolute cer- en the .smallest i dry or also in thod, w as soon
A writer 1m a New York fashion magazine pleads for the good old days
a new forensic methoc human from animal biq> now possible to tell wi tainty the origin of ev traces of blood either ii putrefied form. This m< confirmed in February, 'lOOl, w as soon confirmed on all sides,! and has become of fundamental iinportanee for forensic medicine. . ■
By this method he canl toll the presence of horse m eat in i sausages and other smoked m eat ai}ti<i;les, ' which Is a great step in advaiicej for the examination of foodstuffs. A
----------- -,1-^h ------ . - -. :.An ImpressiOttj a f j Toil.
“Why don’t you go tp {w,rorkT’ asked the man who is philanthrope but practical. N [ J
"Mister,” answened jPiojidiiig Pete. “I have to answer mat i lestlon so much dat it’s gittin’ to | e as work.”—Was'^ngconi S!
^ j
t de s a r '
VCMer Erasts of tha Week Ttaogkoiit
. the Garden State. •
B R I E F S FROM E V E R Y W H E R EBig Price for Riparian Land'—Jury
Doubled the Reward—Keeps Cupids Secret Well—Suicide Drives His Mother Mad. . ....
Big Price for Riparian Land.The Stale Riparian Board, Trenton,
made a grant a t Bull’s Ferry, on the Hudson River, opposite 100th. street, N ew York, at the unusually high price of $1.50 a foot. >iThe total grant includes 850 feet, for which the State will receive $127,500. The. grantees are the Bull’s Ferry Chemical Company and the River Front Improvement . Company. '
SCHOOL
INTERNATIONAL lessqn com m ents FOR OCTOBeV a
Jury Doubled the Award.Mrs. Laura Hum phries,- at New
Brunswick,'was awarded a verdict o f $15,000 for the death of her husband, a conductor in the plant of the Raritan Copper Works, at Perth. Amboy, who. w as thrown from a car and instantly killed on April 17., 1903. It was claimed that a defective switch, caused h is death. In the first, trial in May last a verdict of $8,009 w as awarded the widow, but the case was sent back for retrial on the ground that the verdict w as excessive.: It is the largest award ever made in a damage suit in the county courts. .,
Keep Cupid's Secret WeTl.Inquiries at the Hommonton post
office for M iss L utie-“Whitmore, a popular clerk, were m et .w ith the announcement that she had been married at noon and gone ,for her wedding tour. F ive minutes before the hour set for tlie wedding she had been on duty. The secret Had been w ell kept by not only Miss Whitmore, but her husband, Hervey King, had worked® until within a few m inutes of the tim e for the ceremony. Miss Whitmore gained som e fame a few years ago by resigning her position on being informed that she .m ust sweep the postofliee. She returned to the place a year or so ago.
Suicide Drives His Mother Mad.Peter Smith, a glassworker, com
mitted suicide at Millville, by shoot-J ing him self through the h eart He had been unable to secure employment. W hen his aged mother called him to breakfast he said, “I w ill try once more to g e t a' job, then I am done.” After the meal he w ent to the factory office, but was told there was no place for him. Returning home, he took h is rifle and w ent out under an arbor In the yard, deliberately placed the muzzle against his breast and pressed the trigger with his foot. When h is mother heard the report she rushed to Tils side and found him lifeless. She fell on his body and refused to leave him. It is believed she has lost her reason,
New Way to Raise' Funds.Justice of the Peace Rouh, of Cam
den, is searching for Harry Parker, colored, of W est Haddonfield, who palmed him self off as constable, and for whom he has issu ed a warrant on a- charge of obtaining m oney under false pretenses. Justice Rouh had issued a warrant for Thomas Golding on a charge of assault and battery. ■ Parker called on the ’Squire, gave the name of “E. A. Budd,” and represented him self to be a constable. He .got tho warrant for Golding, but failed to bring In th e prisoner. The ’Squire started . s,n investigation and says .he learned that “Budd” collected* $3 from Lewis Quinton and a similar amount from the defendant’s friends to ‘"settle” the case. Quinton’s mother says the bogus . constable also demanded $11 from her. Golding meantime w as arrested and held in $300 bail by Rouh.
Farmers View Fair Sights."Farmers’ B ay” at the Interstate
Fair, Trenton, brought thousands of the craft from all parts o f New Jersey and from Pennsylvania to inspect the exhibits oE farming implements, agricJ ural machinery and farm products! as well as to take in the* sights. The-M idway was the favorite haunt, for the youthful members and they "passed from one show to another in great glee. The live stock buildings Were among the greatest attractions. Men largely made up these throngs, while in Exhibition Building No. 1, set aside for fancy work and hom e.pro-: ducts, the women gathered- in • sucli -throngs that it was'im possible to pass through except w ith the tide, of the crowd. At 9 o’clock, when the grand, stand opener), there was a great rush for seats and the half-dozen policemen assigned to the gaf.es were unable t,o keep the crowds back. Before 10.30 the stand was com pletely filled and the paddock, was crowded, to its capacity h a lf-an hour later.- .
Brazil’s Prize for Cancer Cure., The Brazilian chamber of commerce has devoted the handsome sum. of £400,000 as a prize to be given to the scientist who shall discover a really enduring method for the cure of cancer. An international committee is to be (formed, consisting of two members of the Medical Academy in Rio Janeiro and. of four eminent pathologists chosen from London, Paris and R om e.* These- six gentle- nwn wj.ll jury in the caseo i| ndr”- *?alf
Subject: Damcl in the.Xion’i Saw .V i., 10^33—G old en X cx t, J?ia. x x x t v . , >7 —M e m o r y , V erges, ^ l-S S a -q o m m fr n tu j . o n th e D a j ’s X e g g o n . >
I; Daniel praying (y, 1!3).|10. '“When Daniel knew,” ete. Dan
iel knew that the king's edicts were! : irreversible. "Open—toward '■ Jerusalem.” This was not an act of super- stitimiy but • a recognition ot--God's.-'
’ promise to Solomon (1 Kings 8:35-41), who-, had. in h is prayer a t the dedication of the temple entreated G’od to hear the prayers o f those wlio m ight be in strange lands or in captivity, w hen they should turn, their faces toward their own land and city and the temple. I t w as an'aid to the spirit o f devotion. “Kneeled.1’ Compare 3J; Kings 8:34; Ezra 9:5; Eph. 3:14. Kneeling'.is a fitting attitude for hum- Me prayer. “Three times a day.” See. Psa. 55:17; The three hqurs of.:prayer,t. were the same as the hours of sacrifice in the temple. "As he did aforetime,’* H e did not swerve a hair's breadth. H e could have prayed in secret anil been heard, but that .course would- have been a public confession of w ant of faith in God and of yielding to the enemy. Daniel simply w ent on his daily, path of life, ns if no such order had!1 been given. There w as no tim e wheni he needed to pray more than at th is time. .
11. Wicked men plotting (vs. 11-15), 11. J‘These men.” The princes who had been plotting against Daniel.- “Assembled.” Ran hastily, so as to come upon Daniel suddenly and detect him in the a c t They had heard h is voice and now- rushecl^n ;upon him.
12. “Law—which altereth not.” I t w as quite common in ancient times to worship th e king. J'o alter, tiie lawi w ould be a confession ,o f fallibility.' arid an abrogation of godhead.
13. “That Daniel,” etc. The, accusers do not mention the high official sta-. tion of D aniel and h is intim ate official) relations w ith the king; but merely re- t er to h is foreign birth in order th a t>; they m ay thereby bring, h is .conduct under the suspicion of being a political" act o t rebellion against the royal authority. 14. “Sore displeased.”. .Vexed:': at thus being overreached; for h e saw;- that it w as enmity toward Daniel and.-', not anxiety for the maintenance "of h is authority, which, had led: .to the p lo t - , “Labored.” . Endeavoring to find some w ay to evade- the execution of the sen-:: tence. 15. “Know, O king.” Their.' tone w as masterful now, for they fe lt able to compel the king to work their : will-: K ings are the slaves o f their, flatterers. . ^Pnese- w icked men were11 determined to get rid of the holy D an-; Lei. They hated him.
III. Daniel among the lions (vs. IS-, IS). 16. “They brought- Daniel.” Ac-: cording to Oriental custom the sen-: tence w as carried out on the evening?, of the same day in which the aecusa-, tion w as made. “Thy God—will deliver.” T he -heathen believed in the-' interposition o f the gods in times o f calamity. AYhile Darius did not ree- ognize Daniel’s God a s the true God, yet he w as “a god,” and Daniel’s char-; aeter was- sueh. that the 'king believed1' his: God would .deliver him. 37.. “Sealed it.” In th e days w hen very; few could read or write, signets were used instead o f writing the name. -18. “Passeel' the night* fasting.” , The soul'; of the pleasure-loving- king w as so stirred-that he had no care for food or sleep. H is grief w as greatly, increased' by his consciousness th at this: - evil came from his own weakness and sin. '
IV. Daniel’s deliverance (vs. 19-23). 19. “Went in haste.” A strange spectacle for a monarch of (he world thus . to be attending upon a condemned ser- :. vant o f God. Yet the k ing had never : appeared to such a good advantage. - -
20. “Lamentable voice.” Deeply distressed; and in an agony of anxiety.: H e cried out betw een hope and fear. “Servant o f the living- God.” D ariu s' borrowed this phrase from, Daniel. God extorted from an idolater a confession o f the truth. “Is thy God— able.” Full of concern, he trembFes to ask the Question, fearing to be answered: w ith the roaring of the lions after more prey. 21. “O king, live forever.” The common salutation iir..: addressing a king. Daniel m ight have indulged in-anger at the king, bu t didi not. H is sole thought w as that God’s glory had beeu set forth in his deliver-, ance. .22.. ' “Sent H is angel.” Daniel' had ooinpanyin the den of lions. Tliere was no music nor gladness in the palace, but celestial joy in th e intercourse1 between Daniel aud the angel in the den. Daniel.'takes care to aseribe his deliverance to the living God, th a t H e may not be confounded w ith the fa lse gods of the heathen. H e speaks of the , angel as God's instrument, not the- an- - thor of his deliverance. “Shut the lions’ mouths.” AngelSvhad held th e:: lions’ jaw s and paw s and made the nr peaceable companions and harmless as: .: doves. >'This was a-new and wonderful- experience for Daniel. H e delighted: to relate i t to the king,’whose voice betrayed his agony. “ Innocency w as found.” By 'this wonderful deliverance Daniel, learned: how God estimated faithfulness and : &ow: H e is pleased to reward it. God had shown- Daniel that his disobedience to a: heathen k in g .w as not 'Sin. H e had. l)'eea‘fM thful’ in -w h at heJielieTed. to : be right, and in the test God,'.declared him innocent by his wonderful deliv- ■;erance. “-No hurt.” . Daniel had -been misrepresented before the king as hav- ' ing evil: designs against, his authority, but to the : king him self Daniel declares he could not be guilty o f snefi.’ : designs when h e w as faithful to his G ol.
23. “Exceeding glad.” :• That the ev il consequences of his folly had been: w arded off; that' h is .best counselor w as le ft to stand at the head of h is government. , .
A l l M e i-a u se S h e I l e l u i t d .to K lo p e .MIDDLETOWN, N. Y:, O ct
Doiumick Agosto shot Mrs. Rose Fa hia >f this,ijlaee and when .chased'into the ivoods by tlie police turned his revolver igainst his own- head and killed liiifil- self. The woman’s recovery is eonfiitl- sral doiibtfui. Agosto, who had gilce neen a sfoiitor for her hand in m arA ge, lame ,-y her'dem anding that Bh^jeiope-
- ^ fOF.refusife thigy;
ACCIDENTS
Broken Vertebra Fooled Many Surgeons.
means of a broken vertebra, re- during a career as a circus per-
r, Edward L. Pape, 24, of New, has succeeded for three shears
ulcting railroad and trolley comes oat .of thousands o l dollars in
damages. .a signed confession obtained in
ladeiphia by the Rapid Transit ipanv, Pape tells how lie worked big companies of Nevr York, Chi-
0 , Cleveland and Buffalo success- 11 y. He lad' turned State’s evidence
tile men who were connected with, im. Two of these, John Burns and ohn W ilmoit, were arrested, while he police are after a New York law
yer, who Papa says, did A e gang's le gal business.
Pape was held under $2,000 bail for court,w hile.h is two confederates, who are confined in a workhouse in Cleveland, will be taken to New York -where they will face a number of serious charges. .
Pape, who was the leader of the gang, has a peculiar physical asset that was most valuable to him in these schemes. Time* after time, after he had apparently been hurled from a moving street car, he has been taken to hospitals of various cities in an unconscious condition. Doctors at these institutions, after making an X-ray examination, would declare that he had either a fracture of the sku.ll or an -injury to the vertebrae.
With b is confederates for w itnesses to the accident' and the endorsement of the physicians, Pape would have a case for damages that could not be attacked.
He did have an injury to the fifth verfn'bre, hut this was received as a result of diving from a height of .forty feet into a vat containing six feet of water. A miscalculation caused Pape to strike. Ills head against the side of the vat. When Tie recovered from the effects of this accident, which broke a verfabra, there was a lump on the back of the neck, and the m uscles of the front of the neck had taken a peculiar formation. By stimulating the actions of a man who had his spine injured, he could, by the aid of these physical evidences, fool any doctor.— Philadelphia Correspondence of the New York Sun.
Prosperity in Alaska.Aecordirig-to the statem ents of Will
Wilninski, who has just returned from an extended trip in the north, in which he visited all the important points along the Yukon, Alaska is enjoying far greater prosperity than is generally supposed. Mr. W ilzinski stated''that business in the Yukon district is booming, and that all indications1 point to a steady and rapid improvement in trade conditions all through Alaska, w ith the exception of the more remote districts. •
“The large amounts of gold that have been taken out of the claims along the Yukon and the prospect of an exceptionally large cleanup next spring have resulted! in a state of prosperity and stability never before seen in the northern districts,” said Mr. W ilzinski. “Merchants and miners have been heavy buyers of all foodstuffs, implements and clothing, and th e majority have laid in a supply which is calculated to last them all winter. During the winter season the business in the northern part of Alaska Is naturally restricted to some extent by the extreme cold, and most of the miners and prospectors lay up enough provisions and other articles to. last until spring, thus . avoiding tha higher prices that they are compelled to pay during the season when navigation on the Yukon becomes Impossible.”— Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Force of Habit.“They’re certainly jumpin’ on John
D. It ain’t fair, is it, sir?”Silence."Razor hurt you, sir”Silence.Say, do you believe all that there
talk about W itte kissin’ the engineer?”
Silence. :“Hair’s gettin’ a little thin on top,
sir. Try a litle of our Scalpene-Dand- ruffia?”
Silence."I was reckless o’ Teddy to go down
in that submarine, wasn’t it?”■ Silence.
“Witch hazel or bay rum, sir?” Silence.“A little powder, sir?”Silence.“Facial m assage would do away
with them there nasty folds and wrinkles around your mouth, sir. Try it, with our Flib W hite V elvet Cream?”
Silence.“Brush it dry, sir?”Silence. A long silence. Then the
barber, who had been .shaving and shampooing a French poodle, untied the animal and handed it to the groom in waiting outside. Force of habit, had kept his tonguo; awag.
.Sh .'iGHT AT SEA.V
First Elsctric Cable to Iceland.The Great Northern Telegraph
Company, of Copenhagen, has obtained a license for laying out and operating a submarine cable to Iceland. The cable is to he laid from the Shetland Islands, which are connected with Scotland.
Possibly the mikado waived indemnity because of l>'s krowleda* that
V
An Exciting Battle Beween a Whale, Shark and Swordfish.
Passengers of the White Star liner yesterday from Liverpool, 'witnessed an exciting battle between a whale, several swordfish, and a thrasher shark. The fight lasted more than an hour. '' The combatants were first sighted
about 11 o’clock in the morning. A great disturbance was noticed in the water dead ahead about a m ile from the ship. - Just what the trouble was was not ascertained until the ship was within half a m ile of the scene ol the encounter. Then the passengers saw a big whale beset by half a dozen large swordfish, and a monster thrasher shark, the fiercest and most., voracious of his kind. The water was being lashed into foam, which was tinged with blood. It w as evident that the' fight had not been in progress long, as th e . combatants seem ed to be active.
The whale was lashing the water with his tail and was standing off his antagonists, although he was greatly outnumbered. Several of tfie swordfish would attract his attention In front while others would steal around to attack him broadside. The thrasher’s great tail was busy flailing the w hale’s back at every opportunity.
The passengers were spellbound by the sight, and their sympathy was with the whale. As the battle continued the water for several hundred yards about was dyed a deep red. The whale was terribly gashed in many places, by the swordfish, which moved, with incredible speed, and it was only occasionally that the whale was able to strike with effect. Bach tim e a swordfish was hit it seem ed to take no further interest in the battle.
Before the sEIp was out of sight the thrasher was disabled, a blow of the whale’s tall striking him full on the head. One of the passengers who had a strong pair of glasses said he saw the whale swim awav and that the swordfish did not follow i him.—New York News.
A Life-Saving Coat.A London tailor has invented a new
life-saving coat and gaiters, With which It is possible for a person cloth- 'ed therein to maintain an upright position when immersed in the water, even if not possessing any knowledge of swimming.
The coat resem bles in appearance an ordinary pilot coat, but it is fitted w ith an air belt, which is Inflated with air through a tube. The gaiters each weigh two pounds and are fitted with two brass w ings or blades fastened to the back of the heel. As the wearer moves His feet in th e water these wings open and shut, and not only propel the wearer along like oars, but enable him to maintain an upright position from the w aist upward in ths water.
A practical demonstration of the utility of the invention was recently undertaken in th e ' River Thames by the inventor and its efficiency and life-saving qualities clearly shown, even when moving against the tide.— Scientific American.
Taking His Turn,The other day, as I was walking
along the Strand, I alm ost ran !nf"- the arms of one of my old parishi.ia- ers from a parish in the non;’ of Yorkshire. ; He was in gala dress and looking radiantly ha^py nnd pleased with him self. “Halloa, Mr. B lank!” I said, in greeting my friend, “and what are you doing in town?” “Oh,” said he, a bit bashfully, “I’se on m e honeymoon.” “Dear me! That’s interesting new s,” I said, “and I am sure I congratulate you heartily. But where is the bride?”
“T’m issus?” said he: “oh, shecouldn’t come. Her mother was taken bad on t’wedding day, and she had to go and nurse her; soa I thowt I’d come honeymoonin’ m ysel.’ Ye see, sir, it was t’chance of a lifetime, and I warn't goin’ to m iss it.”—Suburban Vicar in Tid-Bits.
Washing Sent From fndia.M. Aublet’s remark at the dinner
to the French launderers that he. had know n; Englishmen and Frenchmen send their-linen to Paris and London, respectively, has aroused a good deal of curiosity. But the practice is not altogether, unusual, says ■ the ■ London Mail, which quotes the manager of a big London laundry as follows: “Once we had shirts sent to us from Calcutta. In one regiment stationed in India the officers used to,send their linen home to England once in six weeks. At this moment we have a customer in Ireland, and many in distant parts of England.”
Advertising Via Paris,This is the tim e of the year when
women, even if they have no friends touring Europe, are certain to find among their letters one or more missives with a French stamp and the Paris postmark on the envelopes- The “letters” are nothing but invitations to dressmakers’ “fall openings,” the mailing of these; inclosures from Paris being.considered in the light of a good advertisement. It shows the woman who receives it that at least one of the dressmakers she employs has been to Paris—where tiie styles come from.—New York Press,
The girlless telephone Is coming and ttoe horseless carriage i3 going— at a tremendous rate, observes the New York Trrbup' .
* , r i ' — . 1 .' orrespond with
The Recession of Niagara ffalls.
, Horeshoe F^ll Has receded more than 260 feet within the mejinory of living men, and Is now travelling to-» ward Lake , Erie at«tlie~,rate 'of fully 500 feet a century. At present the crest of this fall, as its name implies, has the general outline of a horseshoe, and its length is about 3,000 feet, but if the present rate o f erosion continues the length of the crest may reach 8,000 feet or more within the next half millenium. Now the Canadian end of the Horseshoe Fall is a Sew rods upstream from t h e : spot whence Table Rock has fallen into the Gorge, but the indications are that th is end of the cataract w ill gradually retire toward th e Dufferin Islands, leaving a bare cliff as the apex cuts its way. upstream.—Alton D. Adams in the Scientific American.
3HARLES A. KEYLER IEDERICK KEYLER.
JOBk G. KEYLER’S SONS
iP DFuneral directorsand^Embalmers
8 8 6 - 5 5 8 BIOOmflol<S.Avemt<$
B loom field , N .J .
!'; : T elephone 3!
To Extinguish an Electric Arc.The blowing of a fuse recently on
one of the trains of the New York subway gave rise to considerable smoke, and for a tim e alarmed tho passengers on the train.; The alarm w as further increased bjr the electrical display which occurred when! one of the station men attempted, to extinguish the fire by throwing (water over it. The car was not damaged,- and at no tim e were the passengers in danger/ as they, probably realize now. It is just as well, however, if the many employees of the company were fully instructed in . t'he proper methods to pursue to. extinguish an electric arc. A bucket of sand is of more value than a barrel of water.— E lectrical Review.
Reasoning Power of Animals.Men apparently conceive ideas
from a “clear sky,” but such. geniu3 could not m anifest itself were not the mind already highly cultivated by much conscious effort—reasoning— and experience. On th e other hand, animals and sm all children become conscious of much knowledge "by m erely w itnessing ’ th e intelligent movem ents o f others, and In time, without thought or effort on their part, they suddenly discover that they also are competent to do the same thing, or, in other words, they begin to im itate. It is a general impression among psychologists that anima's probably! do not reason; they have no id eas'as we have—A: F. Shore in the Scientific American. .
Hosnital Cars on Prussfan Railways.The Prussian Ministry for Railways
has placed at every Important railway center throughout the kingdom a magnificently built and appointed' car for the transport of sick persons. These cars have been specially fitted up from plans supplied by sanitary authorities. Spring beds and 'every^ medical device 'for the'’ alleviation of suffering during transit have been utilized. There are i i e safes, gas stoves for cooking, ro >ms for attendants and ingenious d >vices for muffling ,the sound caused by th e ; motion of the train. It is i ot intended to make these carriages iay; they have b ee- instituted chiefly on the ground of humanity.—New Yc -k World. .
England’s Whe' A preliminary state the Board of Agricul total acreage under grass th is year to be S is a. decrease of nea compared with last gard to cereal crops, to notice that the ar th is year shows. an i 701 acres compared the total acreage un 1,796,985; hut, on there is a decrease
Fields.lent issued by are shows ths 11 crops and 1,286,832, which y 31,000 acres ear. W ith reft is gratifying a under wheat icrease of 421,- arith la s t ’ year, er wheat being he other hand, .f nearly 330,000
acres under barley and oats. There is a substantial in crla se in the . number of horses, cattle, fend shaep. P igs show a decrease o f§436,725.—
Baneful Modeiii influence.“The influence o f these here golf
girls,” said old farm er. Cornhusk, "spells ruinr-rdowniight ruin- Take my darter Sal fo r i a sample. Sal’s got a-holt o? s’ech” Af-durn fancy golf girl notions tiiet, Ify.- jinks, it’s all I can do any m-ore te fg it her out o' bedb y . 5 in the. morn it’s nigh on to imp milk the cows an chickens ’fore b w eek she " actual! told-her to-clean
“It’s all these tions. Sal’ll be if- I don’t let he sundown.’’-—New
Along o’ that, Isible to make her feed the pigs and
sakfast. an’ ia3t kicked cause I stable. . '
Lrnal golf girl no- ism" thunder next
[quit work sharp at ork Press.
Protected tfy White Socks.The Jerseym aii listened serenely to
the gibes and jfiji's of his friends overliis white socks get through bei you som ething i last. Then he
“I don’t wea
“When you people ng so funny I ’ll tell important,” he said at continued:• white socks for a
fad, neither a m /j trying a rheumatism cure, but th sy 'fe a protection against mosquitoes. I ((was tortured to death w ith the little Ipests biting my ankles until som e oni-itold me of the white stocking schetfeev.and it works to acharm. Now and put my, f no danger of 1 chewed up.
X can loll on my piazza jaet. on tho railing with laving my ankles nearly :New York Press.
Tht|A s0ft Answer. ,Canada hr.L ejnacted a law provid
ing for the rpWment of a salary to the leader opposition. There isan idea wl/ijciij xiu^sion bure.iticrats will find f j£c(niinreh2n slbTo, Tli<5ir plan is to J-imp,risen those who dare oppose |-government.—-'ChicagoNsws Heirasii , .
DUCK SHOOTING IN MEXICO.
Great Numbers from This CountrySpend Winters Along Pacific Coast.T h e . duck shooting on th is coast is
Bpiehdid during the months of November, December and January. W e get a lot o f migratory duck whicb, I presume, come down the coast from California,. which is only 2000 m iles north of us. I have shot teal, widgeon, sprig, spoonbills and butterballs, besides our two varieties of native ducks, the pijoje and Muscovy, .
A large 'Mus’covy drake w ill weigh six pounds, . The first year they are coal black, and after the first , year tho w ings are ikbout half white. They are very ni£e eating. The pijoje is about the. sfze of a widgeon I do not think that i% is the Mexican wood duck, as I have ^ e ter seen them in trees. But ' the Muscovy sim ply lives and nests in trees.' T he nests are built in some hollow and they bring the young down to the ponds. "
There are some lakes aad ponds down on the coast which a breechloader has never been fired over. An Indian does hot shoot ducks, as there is too little result for him in such sm all game, and h is little $3 gun does not do mnch damage with small, shot. He much prefers to load w ith either ball or buckshot and get a deer or a wild hog.
I have seen dncks in snclt numbers on one o f these ponds that I am sure one couldihave fired five or siv hundred shells . in a. day’s shoot. The great drawback to this shooting is that it is a long way from civilization, and the heat is great. There is no Ice, and game w ill not keep longer than tw elve hours, so one has to lim it h is bag, as there are no towns or inhabitants near enough to use the game. I have at tim es and in suitable places given a y ay as many as fifty to some Indian hunters, and they then made a baroe- cue and just half' cooked the Ijirds. They tell m e that they w ill thenf keep for days, but of course they ,gre not
singedand smoked over the fire. .
I have an idea that more American ducks come down every year to these mEignifieent feeding grounds, where they pass the whole w inter without ever having a shot fired at them .- I was told by an American plume hunter that he had seen canvasback down on these lagoons, but I very much doubt it, as I have greater opportunities than he for having m et w ith this duck. Nor have I ever seen a mallard. The varieties already mentioned are the only ones I have ever seen here on this coast. .
I presume the more shooting done in the United States the more the birds w ill be driven down into these countries, where they have complete rest, and possibly there w ill conSjS a , time' when some of them w ill stay here and breed, though they w ill have to learn, to keep out of the way of alligators.—• Tapachula correspondent Forest and Stream.
1
Bobbin’s Extravagant Wife.“Have a cigar?” said Bobbins. “Don’t care if I do,” said Robbins. The two men were seated in their
luxuriously appointed club, and had fallen in to that intimate and confidential conversation in which men occasionally indulge.
“You appear gloomy,” Robbins . remarked.
“W ell, I don’t mind telling you, old man, that my w ife’s . extravagance would be enough to make any man have the dumps at times. . I don’t like to say it, and I should dislike to appear small, but” : . /
“Tell me about it, old boy.” '“Oh, it’s pretty constant, but the lat
est thing she wants is a! new. hat. O f course, I want her to be a credit to me, but, as I suggested to her, she had a new one only last spring. Women are expensive luxuries.”
“So som e of my married friends tell me.” '
“Yes, they have no conception of a man’s necessary expenses—have a lemon and selzerV”
“Don't care if I do."They had it.“For instance, w hat do they know
of one’s club expenses? I only belong to three clubs—and you know how essential it is to keep up oO that sort of thing—and although the three combined cost little more than my fam ily expenses, still they count, and a woman cannot understand -it. It is a pity they are so extravagant, for otherwise they would be quite' desira. bio." ..
“So some of my married friends say,” said Robbins. “It’s too bad about their extravagance. Have a game of poker?” . .
“I don’t care if I do,” said Bobbins. ■‘Fivo dollar lim it?” .
/.■■‘"Sure.”But although Robbins said so little,
it should be evident to anybody that he must have been sorry"- for Bobbins. —San Francisco Call;': v ;
RI sc
M
AU :
OnlJ As kg suvdl
P -
GenPiaoc
parts o f { pastured I lag prom§
INewsf
CAFITJ
S A F E 1for ren
VA.UI/TS . A l
Three af eat allowe|
each
D eposits
WM. M cK HARRY 1 F R A N K T[
John 15, bureau’ of h busiest clip ness. too.
iru- «rk Ex- ui ii die ^Sed ting 3 an
si
his>'tbecches,:ntedspent
raneewhafc
peop'eing!
lngrav- jw $20 rk tlie! t. H e ike h is
a few
' L IK E
BMABK- -,A TAB- 5TION. em edies we can
noth in gCtlOU (lii lot only a grand JN utley
3 a good i t a lter boxes of s if they t too. imrnend- 'edy for j actual
10 other ve sour
i m uuth,> sieep li- >ther dis- ligestiori. cure you
T hey w ill >ur nerves aeart, im- ew life in ) more to r genera!
•er heard
N. Y.cs’ engrge- i ” a t th e York, be
, is a ttract- t th e pcpu- jhis clever is ter ’s book gem ents in
i the loyalty fa sc in a tin g
tnous A m eri lely re id and i since being
T h eo r ig in ^V irgin ian1 id a lm ost a ll .at have add-
<3 first. T he □ um Includes lefct Musson, illxday, Chas.■ F ran k V ail .on, V irg in ia and A m anda
'WAEK, N. J. Jber 9, fo r th e e w ill be pro
T heatre, N ew - ■al p lay th e o d u ctio a w ill m tio u s of th e r th e d irectio n
our best know n u berts, F is h e r t t h a t th ese
• com bined to th is ch a ra c te r
ihe m a gn itu d e ihe p ro d u ctio n .
seen on th e nes and a ll th e
J hands o f an I ca st in clu d in g
les D alton and ning in N ewark ffne” w ill go to tended run of expense w ill be
:tion and tw o 60- tecessary to carry md effects.
'T i e - k t e r t d e d
SrteU m riG e^
P'oVfeionso f 1 policing is-aml by Th i Prndentia! apply wif hour a .-Hon <-!i ilm P'ijt of f lie Jnsiire.i, protecting those who, ■after a c.i iniiii time, are unnble to continue Iheir puieii s .
Writs for Information of Policies. ■ ;
T lie P ru d e n tia lrXSUKANCE CO . O P A.HEKtCA. H o m e G f f i c .. N « w .i r k , N , J .
Incorporated as a Stock Company- by the State of New J -rstsy Jokk F. Dryden. l-'resident.
Lest-i e D. WaHD. Vice President. . Kbgar B. ^ aho. 2d Vico tV.-ssidentForrest F. Oitv-DBX. 3j Vice President. Wrcstra'S. Jo mi o;s, -itU Vicu-fredideat
Edward Gkat. Secretary. . . . . and ComptrollerSamoed Sapbbsxbih, Superintendent Winter Ba .dlug. ■33i tl^risoa : Arenue,
UiirriaoLi, N. J. 2X3**
MBEE HIVE/' N e w J e r s e y ’s . S h d jp p in g C e n t r e . NEWARK.
W 1 o . D A V I S ,Chestnut Street and Pass.iic Avenue, NUFl EY. N.
Fail and W inter Announcement wiii iv in this space later. We are making arrangements for ji LAHGER and BETTER A»'OLiTMEJJT in aii our d i ffe.ren t 1 ines of goods. ■
Now is tbe tim e to prepare for a LONXi and COLD W IN T E R .
T h ank ing all for past, patronage and hoping to give a B etter A ssortm ent and Service in tlie future
Yours,
W. O. DAVIS,NUTLEY, N.
Bee HiveSewing Machinesiy H a v e N o P e e r
A c t u a l E x p e r i e n c e —proves them best; they have » « * point, of superiority than any other one m a o h in e - L v do more, do it more quickly, with less trouble, are more e a s i ly understood and wear lo n ger-C om e and see it run. You w ill
l l gZ T k e l t ^ ° nCe" Here ^ ^ a ew things it does botter than any other:__’ . ’
t , r ”"™w bc™' “ o -<“» * » » <,Ur‘ » " » N » M to h , m oa
bi,a - dr6SS 800ds w ith th e sarae or oth er m aterial e ther scallops, points, squares or stra ig h t.I t w ill ga th er w ith ou t sew in g on I t w ill .sew on a t th e sam e tim e. gd ther andI t w ill ga th er betw een tw o bands, .show ing th*
. on the righ t side a t one operation . 8 tCheS
I t w ill m ake and sew a ruffle on any part o f a dress sk irt ■' and sew on a bias fold for heading,- a t on e operation show ing th e s t itch es on th e r ig h t sid e. °P er<«.t>on,
I t w ill sew a band and ruffle on a dress sk-irt in p ip in g a t th e head of th e band, a t one operation. ‘
s tr a T ih tT n i6 P laitM tr in jm in^’ e ith er scolloped o r - stra ig h t and sew on a band, ed g e-stitch in g th e band i t one operation. . . u<ina, a t
I t w ill, w ith one operation for each variety , w ith o u t bastm g, execu te tw en ty p ractica l varieties ofrufflibg be ng tw elve m ore than can be produced on any o th fr
, m achine w ith th e sam e number of operations.Iu w ill make a m o r e e la s t ic s t itc h than any other m ach ine :
tension . fr° m ° r leath6r Wibh0,lt eh a “S in g s t itc h or
. JTor tuck ing , cording, braid ing, q u iltin g , em broideringbiioefitting, dressm aking, ta ilor in g , fam ily use or general m an u factu rin g . general ,
S o l d o n E a s y T e r m s ^NO CLUB FEE - $3 .0 0 DOWN
$ 3.00 a M onth on any machine, no matter theprice $15.00, $18.00, $20.00, $25,00 or more. '
Daily Wagon
Delivery | LS.Piant&Co.707 to 721 Broad St.. Jfewari, 5. j.
s
t f® '
T h e
r Children’s HourTheevenings,aIongai Joutstory time, are beginning to have a chill that welcomes a small fir a but does not warrant the starting >f the furnace. This makes a Gas H« >ater a necessity. Consuming a small quantity of gas it throws out a large amount of heat and can be turned on and off at will. We selU these small stoves at $1.50 , including tubing and connections. They can be
carried from room to room..C A S D E P T - P u b l i c S e r v ic e
drug store it m ig h t surprise you. L axative T on ic T ab lets are a perfect com bination of dandelion, cascarin and every other vegetable ex tracts known to have a peculiarly beneficial action upon th e skin. T hey open tlie pores, enrich th e blood, aid the natural changes of tiie sk in , quicken th e circulation , put new color in i he cheeks and cu ie ctironis con stip ation by regu lating and encouraging the action of th e bowels. Mr. Lefferts would not continue to recommend th is remedy if it did not possess uu- urual m erit, and unless Laxakola Io n ic T ab lets do benefit you as claim ed we w ill return you 25 cen ts w ith out tlie least argum ent.
FROM THE!BEES TO THE TABLE
Comb, 2j0c and X5c B ox Choice e x tra c ted . 130c Jar
AND CHARM.1 CHARM IS A FISSION.
im. should be to ooming complex- e may not have
in form and a clear skin and can bebad if she ie greatest eoemy a is constipation, n how many Nut- proved their ap- using a simple
n sale at Lefferts’
Y o u r W a n t M a y IJo S u p p lie dII you w ant posters,I f you w ant by-laws,I f you w an t b ill heads,I f you w ant programs.I f you w ant envelopes,I f you w an t note heads,I f you w ant show cards,I f you w ant sta tem en ts,I f you w ant ball tick ets ,If you w ant letter heads,If you w ant ca llin g cards,If you w an t address cards,I f you w an t business cards,I f you w ant in v ita tion cards,I f you w ant business circulars.I f you w an t job prin tin g of any de
scription done in a satisfactory way, you can have i t performed by ca llin g a t th e office of T his N u t l e t I§\yn.
■ . i
Call before J>», m. or after 4 .3 0 p. m.
Ifcli BEEIDCor. Prospect Und C hestnut S tree ts
N U T L E Y . N . J.- ■
W. F DITTIG,NUILEY’S LEADING CHER
Chestnut Street and Hamilton Place,
NUTLEY - - - NEW JERSEY
S p e c i a l S a l e o f N a t i o n a l B i s c u i t C o . ’s C r a c k e r s
B u t t e r T h in s , W a t e r T h in s ,S o c ia l T e a s , F iv e O ’c lo c k T e a s ,Z u ib a c k , G -rah am C r a c k e r s ,
IO c . , 3 f o r 2 5 c . :H a l f lb . b o x e s N a b is c o s r e d u c e d t o 2 2 ^
r e g u la r p r ic e 2 5 c . * -
Z u Z u s a n d U n e e d a M ilk s '2 c . f o r 9 c . ^
BROILER FOR SALEF. M. UNGjKB, N u tley , N . J
Cor. F ranklin Alve.. and H arrison St.
P R O P O S A L S .
C r a c k e r s o f e v e r y d e s c r i p t i o n t o n u m e r o u s t o m e n t i o n , a t r e d u c e d p r i c e s f o r t h e S u m m e r ,
A l l t h e L e a d in g B r a n d s o f C o ffe e s , T e a s a n d F in e G r o c e r ie s .
S p e c i a l i t y o f F in e s t B r a n d s o f Winp<? L iq u o r s a n d C ig a r s .
WEALED jeR O ^O SALS, E N DO RS- ed “ P roposals for W ater M ain 'Ex
tensions on W ayne place, from A von-d a iero a d to Gra\nfc a v e n u e ,” w ill be tji i t -r • x . .received by t h e .rfo w n C ouncil a t it s ’U -Ll L I H 6 O I F r u i t s a n d F r e s h V e P ' P t n h l f l c sregular m eetin g fco be held on 1 .. — . . . ,
W e d n e s d a y , (p c to b e r II, 1 9 05 , until 9 p. ni. Plains and specifications Ban be exam in ee afc th e office of Frank T . Shejpard, T ow n ^Engineer.751 Broad streotl N ew ark, N . J ,w“u XT* (P<Bids to be aMrtssed to Wilson Gr.K ierstead. Council, ftu tle i
rnanJ .
of Town
TIP . ;e ■
Haline & Co,Broad, New and Halsey Streets, Newark.
Thti New Silks and VelvetsUnending variety of splendid weaves and tone in
all the fashionable and appealing designs; likewise the plain, substantial and dignified numbers’of renowned
character.P o m p a d o u r C r e p e d e C h in e
—T w em y-fuur inches w ide, for even ing wear. New F all designs on w h ite and tin ted , n r , grounds, exclu sive sty les I / Q al- - - - "
P o m p a d o u r M o ir e s a n d S a t i n B r o c a d e s for even ing gow ns and w aists, new and ex- j p n elusive design s for th is "1 n i j F a ll and W inter -
R a d iu m —45 inchs w ide, black, w h ite and even in g shades, an ex cep tionally soft, lustrous j f j n q u ality , desirable for "J en tire gow ns a t per yard *
M o ir e B r o c a d e s in B l a c k - Im ported and exclu ive sty le s , one dress of each, of th is' season ’s desirable h igh -c lass q n pnovelties, a t per yard, ( ) , | 0$1.75 to - -
P l a i d s —W ith printed warp and plain grounds, d isp lay ing sa tin cross bars o f con trastin g color, w ill be found very . desirable for w aists 1 HM a t - - - "
M o ir e 'V e lo u r s —P la in and fancy effects for en tire su its or w aists, com plete color « n nLSiortm ent to choose 1 (IIIfrom - - - *
Black and Colored Dress GoodsEndless assortment of all the new and seasonable
wool gown fabrics are here in variety of choice; the most extensive collection we have ever shown.
P h a n t o m C h e c k and Plaid S u it in g , 43 in ch es wide, m ake, m edium w eigh t, in b eau tifu l new , _icolorings, a c lo th exclu sively sold th is 1 M U Q^jjQ season, a t - - - -
S c o t c h T a r t a n —44 inches w ide, various clans, lig h t m edium and dark colorings—T artan s are classed am ong the' leaders, a t - - - - . *
C h if fo n B r o a d c lo t h —(French m ake) 50 inches w ide, m edium w eigh t, com es in all th e new shades of green, w ine, garnet, plum , e tc ., special value . . .
French
2 .0 0
1 .0 0
2 .0 0
BLACK GOODSI , M e lr o s e —42 to 48 in ch es w ide, p er fec t in w eave and j h a
fin ish , good black, wear . guaraneeed, per yard, a t I 0 0 1-10. 1 -25 and - - - - - '
T a f f e t a C lo th —P riestley made, 42 and 44 in ch es j n r i w ide, a rich , guaranteed black, m edium w eigh t, a very popular cloth a t 1 .0 0 and - - - -
P r u n e l l a —P riestley , 44 inches w ide, beau tifu l bright silk y fin ish , s tr io t’y a ll wool, p erfect black, a t 1.25 and - - - - - -
Dr, Charles P, raiuS-DENTIST-
WANT ADVERTISEM ENTS.
532 Broad S t ., Opp. C entral A ve.. N e w a r k , » . j . ■ ■
Crown and Bridge work and -Sets of T eeth Guaranteed*
If 1 f illOwn Your Own HomeC hoice B u ild in g Lotjs a t very
reasonable prices and m ost liberal _ term s are offered c-u sh e M iller
tract in th e v ic in ity /o f C entre and P assaic ayenue, Eisfc N utley .
For maps and M is in f o r m a tion , inquire of. V(
ANDREW T. fICKHA|lF b a n k lih A t . . n e a r V r e e la n d Av.
N U T L E Y , N . J
Artistic PhotographyWhy go to th e trouble and ex pense o f v is it in g a photographic gallery and trying to “ look p leasan t,” when you can have an a r tis tic portrait a t your own home amid fam iliar surroundings a t no extra cost. .
Send P osta l for P rices and Specim ens.
E. AUSTEN SNYDER,Cathedral A ve., N u t le y , N. J.
MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY PILLED
H a h n e & C o . , N e w a r k , N . J
A. L. YAN WINKLE & CO.R EA L E S T A T E IN SU R A N C E
Commissioner of Deeds and Notary Public
H a r dle a n .S . COAL K in d lin g -
a n d G r a teOffice—Columbia B uild ing, N U T L E Y , N . J
WALSH’S DAILY GANDY SPECIALSIs one of Newark’s great shopping attractions. Each day we
offer several fresh-made candies at a cut b;low their regular price. A stop at W alsh’s for one of these specials is the first thing down on the systematic shopper’s list. .
For their deliciousness and refreshing qualities try one of Walsh’s 5 cent Ice Cream Sodas., They are tempting, healthful, nd gratifying to the palate as well. Be sure and visit W alsh’s when
you come to Newark.
671 Broad Street,
157 M arket S treet,
NEW ARK, N. J.
T h e S ta n d a r d V is ib le W riter.
Record Continues Unequaled.
TTje.O LIV ER
T y p e w r i t e r
THE OLIVER TYPEWRITER CO.
3 1 0 Broadway, New York.
i
THIS SPACEReserved for
M A I JACOBY
CIGARSC h e s t n u t, S tr e e t .
Opp. Post! Office
Prescripts Double CietM
• T h e rule in jb u r . store is to double check a l l prescriptions, m aking th e com m fesion of an error so rem ote as to v irtu a lly im possible.
We use th e fleshest. and pure- e s t drugs on ly , niB.Sa.apy circum stances a l lo w in g poor stock to rem ain about t h * store.
Our prescriptions are exactly w hat th e ph ysip ian orders. We run no ch a u o e# OUr'ou-stom ir ’ h ealth is irnpoJtaot to us. Send your prescriptiefcs to -th is store.
HENRY T. LIFFERTS, PH. G.S. E . Cor. P a ssa ic & N utley A ves
T h o m i s P. D a yJUSTICE [ Of1 THE PEACE
C om m issi/oner o f D eeds. N otary Piiiblic.R eal E sta te and ln su r
an ce C o llec tio n s M ade D eed s w ritten .Office: C H es’rf.ffUT S t ., N u t l e y , N . .T.
w i l l i / lm h . p a r r y ,A nil)R W E¥ AT LAW
F irm of fi-jiainpsqn and Parry, Office—8 0 0 1 Byroad S t. N ew ark , R esidence—(fr a n k lin A venue, near
Vreelii'nd A venue, N u tley .
HOUSEWORKgeneral housework girl f(ir
> . fam ily of four;,wageg, i5 to 20 dollars. F or address enqui rfe\NuTLEYHuN offi ce. 10-7.-3
IG-K A D I N(j\ L A .TIN G O U T L A fT N S,
PrtfneitigW id p la n tin g of treeli also general:- gardt^) work, .wanted by a practical m an; ^peri^m -e.or t.vvn contin en ts; goiid : ^efeiwit't;. Address DA W 80N , N U T tE t\S u N office. N u tley, N. J. '-. 10-1-1. .. . | . , £*h a v e b o a t e r , f o r h o u s &• o 'f !
7 room-; ui.provenien ts; i"WJ 1 acre ground; sm all am ou nt cash , rest m ortgage or m onthly paym ents; m ust be b u-irii.ui S. II FLO CK , iS is t Nut-icy. N . 10-7-1
D R E SSM A K E R W IS H E S A F E W engagement.-:; $1.50 per day; c u t
after T aylor sy.stetu. Address D R E SSM A K ER, b o x 50. N u tley , N. J . 7-3
SIT.U A 1 IO N — D R E S S M A K E R Jadie.s’ aud ch ild ren s’, by th e day.
MRS. E. A . SM IT H , L ynhurst, N . J ., R iver1 Road, sou th of A von aa le Bridge. 10-7-3
FO R S A L E —A GRA N D F A T H E R ’S Clock; in good order, keeps good
tim e. Apply MRS. L . M l.T H A T C H E R , Frank in A ve. 10-7-3
LOST— W H IT E A N D T A N F O X terrier, answ ers to the nam e of
Guess. Reward for it s return to GEORGE li'. N A P IE R , H ighfieid lane, N utley, N ,-I . ’ 9-30-3
F O R SA L E CHE VP—TWO M ODern H eaters (burning coal) w ith
zinc, pipes and registers a ll com plete. Inquire, D . B A T C H E L O R . K ings- land street, N u tley . 9-30-3
TO R E N T — 2 L A R G E F U R N IS H ed rooms. Apply MRS. H A L L ID Y ,
H ills id e A ve., W est N utley . 9-23-3
W A N T E D —C A P A B L E G IR L FO R general housework. Good p lain
cook. R eference. A ddress, W. C. W O O DM AN, W est N uriev, N . J . 23 3
FO R S A L E — TW O C Y L I N D E R stoves; one large and’ one sm all.
Inquire MRS- R. T . -STAGER., High street. N utley . 9-23 3
MRS. II. M. M A D D E N — F 1R S T - class Dressm aking. F ran k lin A ve.
N utley, 'N. J . P. O. Box 69. 9-16-3
W A N T E D KY A Y O U N G C O U PL E a floor in w h ich to do l ig h t house
keep in g. S in g le house desired . A pply N u t l e y S u n oftice. 9-9-3
G I R L S W A N T K 1> — C L IS A*N stead y work. Good wages. A pply
H A R D M A N R U B B E R CO., B elleville, N .J . . ; i t
TO R E N T —A N IC E L Y F U R N IS H ed room on the upper side ot H iil
side avenue, betw een-C hestnu t s tr e e t and VreelaDd avenue. In q u ire of MRS. G. F. R IC H . 9-16-3
SQ D A B S FO R SA L E , O N E 6 0 cents; tw o 90 cents; dozen $5.00.
JA M E S W IL SO ^, gardener for Wm. J . K insley , P rosp ect.S t., W est K a l- ley. f ; : t f
ROOMS W IT H B O A R D , ALSO table board, a t H. V A .S W L V K LE ’S.
‘C hestout. S t., (over W. P. D ittig-’s •'Grocery Store.) 1-14
F U R N IS H E D RO JMS — W IT H and w ith ou t board, in Colum bia
Building. Inquire of A. T . W IC K HAM , Fr.m lclic avenue n'iar V reeland avenue. N utley . 12-24
N O W IS T H E T IM E TO S P R A Y your Fruit, T n es. Try a b o ttle ot
Lobb’s N ew D iscovery for. San Jose S ca le , or g e t him to spray your trees ,,for you. Apply JO H N LO BB, .Steward, F orth igh tly Club, . 8-26-8
JOS. FINPURQH(Sucessor of Chas. E . Johns)
d e a l e r m ’
MILK and CREAM A vondale Road, NUTLEY, N. J .
Plot For Sale5 0 x 1 5 0
North East Corner Terrace and Glendale Avenue,
$ 3 5 0 . 0 0
W i l l i a m C a r o w302 E ast Jersey S treet,
E lizabeth , N. J
t h e
•losegOV-and
i. ar-:uuer‘ . ac- i t of
f 1\TV0
‘s iff 11-_fjl6
t(> cert
At liesVOUlllB had ■xpeet
it was ion to Cuban
’ i with
1 nd the ;e than !ven in
Wey- in and
i thinga will be
_ rule.” '■ y such
lez loft
.p even 1a that •et mis- m Pres- lrned to
'Train
■ ;ast- train
. held up ■les from is blown of dyna-
hare seed c a r ..
of moro have sur- 5each, ten
ivas eom- f his car, charge ot st it and :e the cm w as then
its of the off in an
•obbery be- oaehes and gers. They
C a a g H t.’he identifi- ;d at Butte, limping the er, Edward made coinsent to ths dicers. The •d againsl ighway rob- ard A. Cnd- for his son's , t the prison- returned to
ihooting Gffl-
1’e r r e H a u te ,Oct. 4.—Thu-
iland, Cinciu- lis (Big Fouri t the cross ins Belt line hero r w as killed
The engine shed, and the r 100 yards, he derail the lankment, and irineer Brown eckage.
e a r t D is e a s e .Oct. 4.—“I
Id to go hunt- White of this
ie sank to the heart disease, ght years old. left home with • in the woods ie about three
jan complained 3ii sank to the
. <* W a t e r C u re.e t 4.—Ambassa- d here to take a ■lent In order to ?h has been im- mre of business ' incident to his
.' Washington to exiean embassy, ■rs liere if he is dor w ill depart
. States,
n a n D e ad ., Oct. 4.—Henry dest horsemen in 1 o f heart failure ■•-eight years. Ho r, for which rea- o drive President
j president made Catskills as the neral George II.
?S1,000 Stake.Oct. 4.—Thethlr- ing of the Keu- ; Breeders’ asso- ltly inaugurated the opening day
iturity for three- Iss Adbell, a com- the betting, took
BOWEN MAKES REPLYLate Secretary Hay Quoted by
Ex-Minister to Yanezuela.
ROOSEVELT OFFERED HIM PROMOTION
“ E v e r y O ne ViVTUo K n e w M r. H a y K n o w * T ls st H e C o u lil N ot P o x s l-
b l y H ifve Been, a F r ie n d to " a 3fon L ils e M *. L o o m is .”I y •
WOODSTOCIt, Conn., Oct. 4.—Herbert W. Bowen, former American min ister to Venezuela, has issued the fol lowing statement:
“In answer to the letters that were exchanged recently by President Roosevelt and Mr. Loomis in regard to Mr. Hay and published in the newspapers I have to say only this:
“After I had sent to Washington al:- of the documents which I found in th« legation at Caracas relating to Mr Loomis I received a letter from Mr H ay stating; ‘I have been greatly surprised and pained in reading the documents you sent me.’ The following month he wrote to me a letter containing these friendly words, ‘I have alw ays taken your part not only from personal liking, but from a conviction of your merits, your ability, your courage and your integrity.’
“From a high official of the department of state I received a letter written this last April stating, ‘Secretarj H ay remains your stanch friend: From the same high official I have in my possession a letter dated July 8. 1905, eighteen days after I w as dismissed from the diplomatic service bj President Roosevelt, stating, ‘I had a few words with Mr. H ay the day be fore he le ft Washington for New Hampshire, and he spoke of Mr. Bowen in the same kindly and affectionate manner he alw ays did.’
“Every one who knew Mr. H aj knows that he could not possibly have been a friend to a man like Mr. Loomis and that no power on earth could hav? induced him to denounce as a traltoi an American official who refusetl ta shield corruption. .
“In conclusion in order to show President Roosevelt’s attitude toward Mr, Loomis I w'ill simply quote my last remark to him and his to me in the presence of w itnesses the day he dismissed me: ‘Mr. President, you w ill remembei that after I sent to you all the information I had about Mr. Loomis you offered .me a*, promotion that was intended to lead to an ambassadorship." 'Well,’ he answered1, ‘I would ba.ve done a great deal to hush up the scandal.’ ”
M u rd e r N e a r C a iu p r iU c j N. Y .BINGHAMTON, N. Y„ Oct. 4.—The
body of an unknown man has been found beside, the Erie tracks near Campvllie, a few miles w est of Owego. Death had evidently been caused by a long knife wound in the abdomen, and the throat w as also cut on the le ft aide, evidently by a knife. It is thought that the man w as murdered by tramps ou a freight train and then the body was thrown from the train. Seven dollars found in the man’s, poekets indicated tliat the crime was not committed for robbery. The body w as found within a few hundred feet of where the body of a man iiamed Dwight was-found a few days ago. It w as supposed that .He. Dwight had been killed by falling under a train from which h e ; attempted ta alight. ....
F a t a l l y S h o t a t lS x liililt io n .PITTSBURG, Oct. 4. — Milo.Belter,
aged twenty-two years, of Benton Harbor, Mich., w as fatally shot by Joseph Bain at the exposition last night.; Sel- ter, who w as employed by the Truscott Boat Manufacturing company with their exhibit, bought a revolver and called Bain to see it. Bain, thinking ths cartridge cylinder" had been removed, snapped the trigger in his examination of the gun, and a bullet entered Selter’s abdomen. Physicians say he cannot recover. Great excitement followed the shooting.
S tu d e n t K i l l e d l>y L i v e W ir e . ■NEW YORK, Oct. 4.—As he and
liearly 200 other students o f the Sacred Heart academy at Clason Pont were marching from the main building to their dormitories last night Samuel Howard, fourteen years old, touched a live w ire with the tips of his fingers m d w as instantly shocked to death in light of his brother Edward. '
RIGHT ROYAL,
stretch, vine, bli di*ve, 11-
S c c o a i C h o ic e "Won B 'ttlr v le ir S t a k e s a t X lclm ont.
NEW YORK, Oft. 4.—Right Royal, second choice, a t 3 to 1, won the Fair* view selling stakes at Belmont park, defeating the heavily played favorite, Gienecjio, who was backed down from 7 to S.jto 0 to 10. Black Prince was third. The mile and a sixteenth was run in i;45 flat. ■" - - >
Rose pf Dawn w ent to the front at the start and made the pace to the
where she stopped, and Per- inging Right lioyal up under a on by one.length. . :
Ivan von tlie Corinthian steeplechase for gentlemen riders. The favorite, Grandpa, w as second and B uck O’Dowdj third.
Santa1 Catalina in winning the last race sft one mile and three-sixteenths wune<’ within one-fifth of a second of thd world’s record when she ran the distance iu 1:57 3-5. The record is held b y ’Scintillant It, Summaries:
First Race.—Grapple, first; Columbia Girl, second; Platoon, third.
Second Race.—Ivan, first; Grandpa, second; Buck O’Dowd, third.‘ Third Race.—W ater Wing, first; An- netta Lady, second; Samson, third.
Fourth Race;—Right Royal, first; Glenecho, second; Black Prince, third.
Fifth Race.—Rye, first; Birmingham, second; Flavigny, third. :
Sixth Race.—Santa Catalina, first; Outcome, second; Louis H., third.
B A SE B A L L SCO RES.
G am es P la y ed Y esterd a y l>y th e n a t io n a l and. A m erican le i i f fa e Clul>n.
; NATIONAL, LEAGUE.A t Cincinnati— .
New York 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 2Cincinnati 0 2 '0 0 0 0 1 1 *— t
Hits—New York, 9; Cincinnati, 9.; Errors—New York, 0; Cincinnati, 2. Batteries—Mathewson and Bowerman; Overall and Schlei.
Second Game— . -New York .’......... 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1— 4Cincinnati ........... 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0— 4
H its—New York, G; Cincinnati, 12. Errors—New York, 3; Cincinnati, 2. Bat-,terles—Elliott and Bowerman; Ewing and Street. ■
At St. Louis—Brooklyn __ , __ 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 0— .4St. Louis ....... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0— 0
H its—Brooklyn, 10; St. Louis, 3. Errors—Brooklyn, 1; St. Louis, 1. Batteries— Scanlon and Bitter; Taylor and Shea*.
Second Game— ,Brookivn ...... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0— 3St. Louis ...... 0 0 0 10 0 0 1 0— J
Hits—Brooklyn, i11; S t.. Louis, 9. Errora —Brooklyn, 2; St. Louis, 0. Batteries— Scanlon and' Bitter; McDoughall and Leahy. .
At Pittsburg—Boston ........ 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0— 3Pittsburg . : ........ 3 3 0 3 0 1 0 0 *—10
H its—Boston, 8; Pittsburg, 12. Errors— Bosto'n, 1; Pittsburg. 1. Batteries—Young and Needham; Lynch and Peitz. -
Second Game— - • . ' .Boston ........ 0 ’2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0— JPittsburg ..: 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1— 4
Hits—Boston, 7; Pittsburg, II. Errors— Boston, 3; Pittsburg, 1. Batteries—Wiilis and Moran; Leifleld and Petta.
At Chicago— - :Phila.... 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0— i Chicago 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0— 5
Hits—Philadelphia, 8; Chicago, 11. Br- rorri Philadelphia, 4; 'Chicago, 1. Batteries—Pittinger and Dooin; Pfeiffer and O’Neill. .
TABLE OF PERCENTAGES.
New York- Pittsburg ,Chicago ...Philadelphia CincinnatiSt. Louis . . . , \ .................. 57Boston ..Brooklyn . . . . I , ................ 44
• AMERICAN LEAGUE.At New Yoifk—
Detroit ........ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0— 8New York ...1...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0— J
w . ll . P ,Cm • -.4 5 - *• -.695m 52 .651m 61 .59180 67 .mm 73 .51057 93 .38049 99 .33144 103 .299
H its—Detroi Detroit, 1; Ni len and Warn
Second Garn - Detroit New York
Hits—D e t r o i 7; New York, 12. Errors—Detroit, 2‘;' Ne and Drill; Gri
At WashingChicago ____Washington .
H its—Chicag i orS—Chicago, Owen and Sul
At Philadeij 3t. Louis .. Philadelphia
H its-S t. L6
, 5; New York, 8. Errors— w York, 0. Batteries—Mul- r; Orth and Connor.
0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0^-1 . . . .3 3 1 2 1 0 0 0 *~10v York, 1. Batteries—Wiggs Bth and Kleinow. on— 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0— 3
0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 —1 3. 6; Washington, 3. Er- 1; Washington, 3. Batteries ivan; Wolfe and Heydon. hia—.... 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0—2. . . . 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 »— 5
j is, 10; Philadelphia, 9. Er- i ars—St. Loui 5, 2; Philadelphia, 1. Bat: eries—Sudhoff and Sugden; Henley and Uehreck.-
At Boston—j ~Cleveland ....J .... 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0— 4Boston . . . . . . .1 . . . . 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 2 *— 7
Hits—Clevelajnd, 10; Boston, 5. . Errors— Cleveland, 1: Koston^ 1. Batteries—Dono- 'iuo and Clark ;l Barry and Armbruster.
TABLE, 1>F PERCENTAGES.Philadelphia Jhicago __ClevelandBostonvVashington
W. 1*. P.C.89 54 .62289 5S .605Ti 73 .518lb 75 .500TA 74 .497
74 .490i>2 84 .42552 96 .351
X’ in a X. a P a tr o n o f S p o rt.ROME, Oct. 4.—Pope Pius X. is com
ing out as a patron of sport. The Catholic gymnastic societies of Rome will hold a meeting in ihe C-orte della t’igna of the Vatican gardens. ■ There will be foot races and bicycle contests, »nd ou Sunday the pope will give a re- eeptlon to the gymnasts and distribute prizes to the winners, '
V e t e r a n D voT rn ed In Itao«T pay.OGDENSBUUG, N. Y., Oct. 4.—Al-
fred Spooner, a civil war veteran, aged seventy years, w as found drowned in two feet of water iu the raceway from the power canal liere, having fallen over aa embankment.
F orm er* C u r a to r F o u n d D e a d .RACINE, Wis., Oct. 4. — John T.
Pearce, who for twenty-five years w as curator of Racine college, was found dead in his room at the Hotel Racine. Tlie cause of death w as apoplexy. Mr. Pearce w as very wealthy.
K n i g h t s B a r t h e R e d M an.RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. 4.-C harles
E. Shively, supreme chancellor of the Knights of Pythias, in an opinion rendered last night holds tliat an .Indian is not eligible to membership in the P ythian order.
W e a th e r P ro b a b ilit ie s .F air; south winds.
W o rld ’s t ’Ua m p lo n sh ip G am es.CINCINNATI, Oct. 4.—Chairman Au
gust Herrmann of the national base- Sall commission gave out the following letails which w ill govern the world’s championship spries to be played be- rween the New\ York National league m d tlie Philadelphia American league •lulis: In.. Philadelphia, Oct. 9, 11 and 13; in New York! Oct. 10, 13 and 14.
F n n lcn la lr ie a t L oniH vllle.LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 4.—Funieu-
laire, the favoritel, easily won the Fifth Avenue Hotel ha/firticap, the feature at Churchill D ow nd In spite of a very heavy track form players had a good day, three favorites coming home in front. .
Ir e n e F lo w q r a n d A in tr e e .N A SH U A , N. l i . , Oct. 4.—W hile fa-
ssfui <it the opening eting at the Nasliau forced to go extra
heats. Irene Flowin’ won the 2:17 trotting and Aintree tlie 2:u9 pacing event.
vorites were suec of. the October mi track, they were
J o s e M a r ia d el H e r e d ia D e a d .PARIS, Oct. 4.-4M. Jose Maria de
Heredia, a poet ajid member of the French academy, is Bead here. H e w as born in Cuba in 184|! and w as educated iu Havana aud in France. H e w as a you of Senor Jose hlaria de Heredia, who w as considered) to be the greatest of Spanish-Amerieaw poets.
CHINESE! iMtr.Cabinet Discusses. Relations
With Celestial Empire.
INJUSTICE DONE WORTHY CHIMED
S ecre ta ry T aft, F r e sh l^roin Orient, Toole a Leiidinfi' P art—E x c lu s io n
L a w s N o t R i g h t l y In ter p r ete d liy Coium lar Ofllcern.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4.—The chief subject discussed at the cabinet meeting was, first the - Chinese boycott against American goods, and second, the consideration of complaints mads by the Chinese against the method ot execution of the existing Chinese exclusion law s. ; . ;
The important fa c t developed was that the president’s effort last summex to allay the indignation of the Chiness by a circular of instructions to th« American minister to China and consular officers therein had in a measure failed o f . its purpose and required considerable amendment to secure the object sought. • ..
Minister Rockhill ..him self reported that it had not. been foxind possible t« carry out the Instructions contained in the circular without doing great in. justice to worthy Cliinese and imposinj burdens too heavy to be borne upoB the American consuls. : .
Being freshly back from the orient; Secretary T a ft took' a prominent pari iu the discussion of this matter, when i t w as broached by Secretary Root and. presented' some of the results of hia observations on ;his recent trip. II developed tha^ the requirement that American consuls identify the -Chinese seeking certificates admitting them' to American ports imposed a task upon these officers beyond their ability. The Chinese applicant frequently . camq from some place far distant from the American consulate, and the consul w as consequently obliged to refuse to identify as proper persons to be admitted to the United States many wor thy Chinese, -which of course led. to bitter complaint and fostered the boycott feeling. ■ :
The session w as the first regular meeting of the cabinet held for some months, and it w as one of the longest held during the administration of President R oosevelt It w as attended by all of the members of the cabinet except Secretary "Shaw, who is absent from tlie city, and Secretary Metcalf, wlso is ill. It was the first cabinet meeting for Secretary Bonaparte of the navy and the first as secretary of stat«for Mr. Itoot. ........ .
“Ail I d id /’ said the former jocularly, “was to listen . -
Secretary Root spent some tim e with the president at the White House Iasi night, when they had a general cliscus- siqn>o£ m atters, pertaining to the stat« department. "
It is understood that an .exchange ot memoranda on the subject of Venezuelan affairs has - already occurred between the .state department and the French embassy, covering probably tha main points touched on at the conference between Secretary Root and Ambassador-Jusserand.. .
M utual L ife E x tr a v a g a n t.NEW YORK, Oct. 4.—It is' likely the
affairs of the Mutual L ife ; Insurance company w ill come conspicuously to the front in the early future. It is said that the salary of the president of the Mutual is $150,000. Mr. Hughes has also been informed concerning various alleged extravagances.Jn the furnishing and equipment of the company’s main of&ces in this city. Members of the committee have been told, for instance, that the rug on which stand the desk and, office chair of Mr. McCurdy in the Mutual cost the company ¥12,000. -
F o u n d Iron P o t F il le d W ith Coins.DES MOINES, la ., Oct. 4.—An iron
pot containing coins of-goid and silvet valued at something like $500 w as unearthed last n ight by George Brown upon some rented land in a suburban addition known as Hyde Park. Th* coins were dated before 1S60, and it is presumed tliat they were buried for safe keeping by some farmer who responded to the call for volunteers iq the beginning of the civil war and who never returned. :
H eld an “B la c k H an d ” K id n a p ers .BALTIMORE, Oct. 4.—Vincent Lu-
daca, whom Brooklyn detectives, accuse o f being the head of a “Black Hand” gang, w as arrested here last night, and the police believe they have the man wanted for the kidnaping of Tony Marendino, aged six years; son of Vincent Marendino, and probably Anthony Marento of Brooklyn.
MIsfllnK Man a S u icid e .HAVERFORD, Pa„ Oct. 4. — Th«
body of Peter H. Thompson, a wealthy N ew Yorker, who had been missing from the private sanitarium .of Dr. R. P. Roberts in Llanarch, w as found In a clump of bushes in a wood near here. In the right temple w as a bullet hole, and beside the body was a revolver with one chamber emptied.
J a p a n e s e !G»ifl U m I u k .•NEW YOHK, dco. H.—Asma Anna, a
japanese w h o yu a rears ago when she i jy Mr. and Mrs, iWil
Japanese who YaS years byof Brooklyn, is njiiss tieved she has been beld for Yansom.’i
adopted sixteen ij'as two years old
iam Henry Stone ug, aud it is be-
dnaped and ia
W o o i I r a K W i l l N o t n o n ,SYRACUSE, N, Y., Oct. 4.—Former.
Lieutenant Governor Timothy L. Woodruff arrived here last night from his Adirondack camp. Mr. W oodruff was asked whether or not he would run for m ayor of N ew York city on the Republican ticket and said positively that he would not. ........
F ir s t P r in te rs ’ S tr ik e In D ayton .DAYTON, 0 ., Oct. 4.—The Reynolds
& Reynolds company having- posted st notice that hereafter their printing department ^ •' 'ld be conducted as an open s b .' ; printers *ir»“nedtiately w alked oiftjf: " ' "orinters’ strik'i
S t a t e '’ o f N e v a d a . It e v o k e s M’U e ir■ c e n s e t o l)o B u s in e s s .
CARSON,. Nev., Oct. 4.—State Comptroller and Insurance Commissioner S. P. D avis revoked the license of the Nmv York L ife Insurance company in this state. The follow ing ■ telegram was forwarded to the N ew York home- office by the comptroller: *'
“John A. McCall—Pending the' investigation of the corrupt management aud fraudulent disposal o f funds .intrusted to your company and as long as yourself and George P eriih s retain offices of trust in the management of the N ew York Life Insurance company ilie license of the company to do business in the state of Neveda is hereby revoked. Upon advice o f a change of management and satisfactory proof of honest management the license w ill be reissued.” ’
A notice has been forwarded throughout the state warning all agents of the fact of the order and giving . the agents two w eeks to close tho records.
The reasons that prompted the order are the alleged : m isuse of money in j general, the accusation o f giving $150,000 of the poliey holders’ funds to the Republican campaign funds :at .the last presidential election and other questionable dealings brought out by th« investigation. ■
A F T E R MONK GIBSON.
M ilita ry C om p anies E n ca m p ed at E d n a to Protect. H im i f C aught.
JSUNA, Tex., Oct. 4.—There is little new in the situation, regarding tha - chase for the negro Monk Gibson, elisirg-ecl w ith the murder of four members o f the Conditt fam ily. There are still :200 men in the bottom, who havo been searching for miles, w ith no trace of the negro. - <. F o u r . companies of military are encamped here in command of Adjutant General Hulen, who has had a numbei of conferences w ith the authorities^ but there are no developments as yet.. There are now many who believ*
that the negro m ust have got away from the bottom or is dead. Every county in this section of the state is now represented among the searchers, and every nook and corner of the county has been gone over. Lynching has been threatened and a stake and fire prepared. .
S aid H er H ea rt W as B ro k en .STAMFORD, Conn., Oct. 4 ,-H en rj
Emrich o f Long Island City identified the girl who threw herself in front of a N ew .York train at the railroad station as his sister, Lizzie Emrich. Mr. Em- rich had -not seen his sister,for sixteen years. She was the daughter of Bienry Emrich of New York, who died about six months ago. H er brother showed the-following letter written by the suicide to her father last October: “Pardon me- foy causing: you. so much- worry. My heart is broken, but it is no fault of m y own. I f anything should happen to mo bury mo with my mother.'’ ' • ' ■ . V
-. W i l l N ot T r u a t ,G e r m a n y . ; .LONDON, Oct. 4.—A dispatch from
St. Petersburg says that France will enter into no political combination as to the far east ot which Germany forms a part. . 2 ‘ . 1 ■
Crime Preyed o n -His Mind. , .Troubled by h is conscience and fear
of arrest, which he said deprived him of peace and sleep, .'William Haywiod,
-of Burlington,: stopped Policeman: Gusrang on >Ms. heat,-' confessed-; t.o
.having1 attem pted-to rob the office of Price & Craft, coal dealers, aiul n'flk- - ed to be arrested. . Placed in a c e i l at the City Hall, he made a sworn statem ent to M agistrate Smith,- in w hich he implicated tw o others, Henry Haley and George W. Slocum, both of Burlington, in the crime. The others wore easily apprehended and the trio were held for trial. The men broke into thS pumping station: of the Burlington Sewer Company and: sto le ' tools with, which they attempted to crack the safe in the coal office, hut they were discovered and frightened, away- In the excitem ent Haley, led the police off h is tra il; hy . mixing the crowd searching for th e -burglars Haywood learned In som e way ths t h e . police had - -him . und e r . suspicio^ and fear of , arrest preyed upon hi mind. Slocum, who keeps a hous- boat on the river front, is alleged have acted as a “fence” and tools stolen from th e , sewer pumping station were found in h is retreat. • ' ’
T rain 'tl-Ield T J> by Bandits^SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 3.—The east-
sound Great Northern passenger train •caving Seattle at S o'clock last,n igh t ivas held up by a gang of bandits ten _ oiiles from this c ity .; Hundreds o f ' shots w ere exchanged between t tlie’ * crain crew aud the robbers, and the ex--, jress ear w as blown to pieces by three rharges of dyuamite. - -
P r in te r s S tr ik e a t M ln n eap o iia .MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. S.-^Fal-
lowing the strike at St. Paul, a printers’ strike is on here. An open shop notice posted in all the . Job printing offices precipitated the Minneapolis branch of tlie strike. The Minneapolis Typothetae has imported strike break- ' ers and have opened som e of the shops.
• Jn th o M>U C ity .Social Notes— Old Sol Frldayed., ln .
our burg. Ye scribe acknowledges a , call. -Jup®':; Pluvius has been out o f'' to-wiu for'*;"few. -days, but is :eipecfeii1' back any' ’ tim e now. Don’t hurry, * Jupe.— Minneapolis Tribune. :
y Such is the nature of things that flit?$ 1 i f to inherit th i earth are .
/ SUFFERINGS UNTOV- "t~s'‘k, • --- -
>M«i9 C ity W om an’s Ter*— i *" / ience W itli K id n ey S ic k lie s t ■«,.
| Mrs. Mary Oogin, 20tli St. and Cieve- i-lancl Ave., Kansas City, Mo., says:
"For years I Was run flown, weak, lame and sore. The kidney secretions were too frequent. Then dropsy puffed up my ankles until they were a sight to behold. Doctors gave me up, but X began using Doan’s
Kidney Pills, and the remedy cured me so that I have been well ever since, and have had a fine baby, the first in live that was not prematurely born.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a bos. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
ffi r V L ' P l T . .v J
A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMOM BY THE REV. W. H. RAMSAY,
S u b jc c t : T h e R e lig io n or Jegu « ,
Many Millions in Fans,, The export, of fans of several varieties from the port of Hangchau, practically all of which are of local manufacture, has assumed proportions which merit attention, says United States Consul Anderson. The value of the exports of fans from the port in 1904, as reported by the customs authorities, is considerably over $500,000 gold, and this probably does not cover more than half of the trade.
While the vast bulk of fans thus exported are rated as paper fans, most of them are known in foreign markets as fancy goods. The fans above rated as "fancy” are silk creations of more or less beauty and novelty, greatly desired by tourists.
While practically all these fans go to Shanghai, where they are controlled' by a guild, as is the case with most other Chinese products, a very large number find their way to the United States.
When New York Was Riotous,The riotous scenes at Tokio yes
terday were not by .any jmeans the first, demonstrations of their kind against an unpopular trea ty .. In fact, a reasonable parallel may be found in events that took place not more than seven blocks, _from the site of the Evening Post Building. On July IS, 1795, a mass meeting w as called to protest against the treaty which Jay had just negotiated with England. While the speaking was under way an enthusiastic band, who had been burning the treaty at the Battery, came marching up Broadway, headed by the French and American flags and joined the crowd. At about the same time Alexander Hamilton addressed the meeting in favor of adjournment. Stones were thrown at him from the now turbulent crowd, and one of them struck him on the forehead.—Evening Post.
Speaker Cannon Pricks a Bubble.Speaker Joseph Cannon, in respon.ve
to a toast at a recent dinner, began his remarks so as to create the initial laugh which is so much desired by orators as a preparation for weightier matter to follow.
“Astronomers tell us,” he began, “according to the gentlemen who has just sat down, that an express train moving a hundred m iles a second would consume several million years in reaching a certain star.”
He paused and looked toward the guest to whom he referred.
“That, was the statem ent,” said the speaker’s neighbor, nodding.
“I was just thinking,” pursued Mr. Cannon, “what a predicament a man would be in if he should m iss the last, train and have to walk.”— Success.
How Swallows Build Nests.Swallows and house martins build
by sticking together pellets of prepared road mud. Most of the material is obtained from the drying puddles on the high roads. If not mixed with anvthing else tiie tendency of these
- pellets would be to crumble when drv. But the swallow tribe is supplied with a mucous secretion which en-ables it to gum the particles together. The swallows’ nests, from which the Chinese birds’ nest soup is made, are constructed of this mucous matter only. An Indian swallow, which builds little boat-shaped nests against the trunks of lofty frees, practically makes them of di'ied saliva.—Brooklyn Eagle.
• N O T IC E D ITA l o n n e L ativ F ro m N o w J e r s e y F u t'R c r
W ita to W o r k ,
"Coffee gave me terrible spells o f iu digestion which, coming on every week
'Or so, made my life wretched until -Some one told me that tbe coffee I drank w as, to blame. Tbat seemed nonsense, but I noticed these attacks used to come on shortly after eating and were accompanied by such excruciating paiiis in the pit of the stomach that I could only find relief by loosening my clothing and lying down.
“If circumstances made it impossible for me to lie down I spent hours in great misery.
“I refused to really believe it .was .the coffee until finally I thought a trial would at least do no harm, so I quit coffee In 1901 and began on Postum. My troubles left entirely and convinced me of the cause.
“ Postum brought no discomfort, nor did indigestion follow its use. I have had no return of the trouble since I began to drink Postum. It has built me up, restored my health and given me a new interest in life. It Certainly is a joy to be well again.” Nanie given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, (Micb,
Read the little book, Hoad ’’' ” in p-' ' ' u~ ''
Louisville, K y. — The Rev. W. H. Ramsay on Sunday preached a powerfu l sermon entitled “The Religion of Jesus.” IIo took for his tests: Her sins, which are many, are forgiven; for she loved much.—Luke vii., 47.Love took np the harp of Life, and
smote on all the chords with might; •
Smote the chord of Self, that, trembling, passed in music out of sight,
—Tennyson, In the midst of so much confusion and
perplexity about questions relating to religion, nothing is more helpful than to turn to the words of Jesus and find w hat Ha taught and believed. We shall find little difficulty in doing this i f w e confine ourselves to the first three Gospels. I f w e include the Fourth Gospel, w e shall introduce an element of difficulty and confusion. The Fourth Gospel sets a wonderful philosophy about Jesus and H is mis sion, and it relates incidentally some of the events in the life of Jesus. But for a simple statement of the words of Jesus Him self, apart from any theological theory about Jesus, w e must turn to the other Gospels. There is unquestionably much in these narratives besides the words of Jesus, much that betokens -misapprehension and misconstruction on the part o f those that heard Him, and an attempt to interpret H is words and deeds as a confirmation of the materialistic hopes and expectations of H is followers. B ut the utterances of Jesus Him self on the great and vital questions of spiritual religion are so exalted and so self-evi- d en fth a t w e shall find no difficulty in discovering them.
W hat does Jesus teach about God, about Han, about Sin and Righteous ness, about Redemption, about the kingdom of God upon earth? We m ight include other questions, such as the nature of Divine Revelation, the Church and its Sacraments and Elites, etc. But these are minor and subordinate matters.
W hat does Jesus teach about God? Strange to say, Jesus has nothing to 6tate about God, after the manner of the theologians and creeds. He entered upon no metaphysical discussion about the nature o f God. H e never mentions the doctrine of a Trinity. “H e had unquestioned faith in God as a living, conscious, intelligent agent. This faith came to H.im by inheritance, and w as received by Him as the indispensable and indisputable presupposition of all religion.” Jesus took the highest thought about God in the H ebrew religion, the conception o f God as the Eternal Father'of men, and expanded and purified it. R e interpreted th is idea by H is own sublime and spotless moral consciousness. H e saw the truth of the D ivine Fatherhood through the medium of H is own loving and righteous soul. The thought of God as the ever-present Spirit of righteousness and love w as a constantly besetting thought w ith Jesus. He lived and moved and had H is being in this consciousness o f the Father’s presence. H e saw the'ceaseless operation of the Father’s love and goodness and care for all things. The whole universe w as encompassed by the Father’s love. H e loves and pities and provides for all. E ven H is w icked and unthankful and prodigal children are provided for. H is rain descends and H is sun shines for the evil and the good alike.
Jesus did not think o f the Father as a far-off and inaccessible Deity, but as a near and indwelling Presence. H e did not offer any explanation of the mystery of this wonderful truth; He simply believed it, and lived and' wrought and taught w ith this thought perpetually in H is mind, w ith its inspiration in H is soul. God was a living reality to Jesus.
W hat did Jesus teach about man? The thought o f Jesus about man and human nature might be summarized in the words, “Man is the child of God.” This truth had been expressed by others before Jesus, but it had never been taught in the w ay that Jesus taught it. No prophet or teach- *r before Jesus ha„d ever drawn such inferences from the belief, or made it the basis of such an appeal to man’s faith in his own spiritual and moral possibilities. Jesus shows everywhere that H e had a deep and unshaken faith in the essential divineness and worth of all men, whatever man’s character might be, w hatever the outward and accidental deformity of the life. No matter how far the prodigal might have wandered from his father’s home, he w as still h is father’s child. H e might deny h is birthright and eat w ith the swine, bat the fa ther’s love never ceases and never .wanes.
Jesus, faith in the essential divineness of man is shown in H is treatment of all m en ,; especially of the outcast and the sinner. H e loved t i e outcast, the fallen, “the lost sheep of the house o f Israel.” H e had compassion upon them, because H e knew how they had been tempted, how they had been taught and brought up, how they had been neglected and left to wander “like sheep without a shepherd,” losing thmnselves-in the wilderness and m issing the true goal of life. . Oh, the divine compassion.- ot Jesus for man, the deep-veined humanity, the eternal love of the Father breathing through Him and looking out through H is pure eyes!I t is this last that has made H is name forever blessed, and turned the hearts of the lost and fallen sons of men to Him as ihe dearest pledge and symbol of the eternal love and compassion that is at the heart and is tho great heart o f the world.
W hat does Jesus say about sin? Strange to say, very little. Jesus never speaks about sin in a formal or theological w ay. H e saw it; H e felt its presence and w itnessed its degradation of the lives o f men. H e saw it as the negation of goodness, as the absence of the abundant life, the blindness o£ the lost child, the impotence of the ignorant and foolish, wounding them selves against the terrible rocks of the world. B u t *v* (‘original sin,” of “total depravit- ■ V "fall of the race in Adam,” oW l«*?;ed ' guilt,” ofthose .doctrines o' basis o f th e entire o t .R-il/’ati>J ■” 1:1? er
at form the ‘’reheme
ilab/e
Jesus everywhere a n i alwajf -sumes- the- essential divineness j lf th S human soul. The lost sheep lieiongs to the fold o f the Good Shepbeyd; the lost coin, though'battered and bruised, is. o f precious metal{ . and bears ' the linage and superscription of th e king; the lost boy—the prodigal—is his fa th er's child, no matter how far lie has wandered or Jtow deep; his moral degradation. •• 1
W hat did Je^us .teach about “Salvation 7” H ow is-the lost restoredT; ' How is the prodigal brought back to his father’s home? ; '■
W hat does Je'sus1 say about this? Is there any elaborate creed, or any creed, to be accepted? Does Ho tell us of any scheme of salvation or o f any atoning sacrifice? Not a single word. .The whole thing is simple and natural, and true’ to the fundamental, facts and law s of the moral and sphv itual constitution of man. Take the parable, o f the “lost sheep” and the “prodigal son.5' H ow does the Good Shepherd seek'. H is lost sheep? How does the Father restore the lost child?
The Divine mercy and love seeks and influences the children of men in countless w ays. God seeks man in the very fact that sin itself is foreign to man’s higher nature. The life oC sin, o f alienation from goodness, is a disappointment. Its pleasures are apples of Sodom. The evil course, in the end, exhausts itself. The prodigal gets to the end of his resources; then he recalls that h e .is his father’s child. It is so with all kinds of sin. In the law s of man’s mor.al and spiritual being, it is ordained, that there shall be a reaction of the divine,' the good in man, against the evil within and around him. I do not know how far men may go toward destroying the possibilities of good in themselves. No finite mind can dogmatize on such a question. I only know that Jesus never despaired, and that H e.teacbes us to despair of no man. '
In seeking and restoring sinful men to their true lives, the ministry of a loving and sympathetic humanity has the largest place of any other instrumentality. It is a continuation of the ministry of Jesus. H is ministry was not in H is words alone; it w as chiefly in H is wonderful personality. . H is gentleness, H is faith in man, inspired faith and hope and courage in those H e ministered to. Men are sought and found through goodness and love and pity in their fellow-meu. Jesus said: “Do good, despairing of no man;” “Be merciful, even as your , Father in heaven is m e r c i f u l “If ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father w ill forgive yon.” Make the heavenly Father real to men by being incarnations of H is love and goodness.
The love of God is seen chiefly in love and pity in the heart of man.
In the ancient liturgy of the Church there is a phrase that says, “God hath given power and commandment to H is ministers to declare and pronounce to H is people, being penitent, the absolution and remission of their sins.” There is a w onderful'truth in those ancient words. God hath given such power, not to ordained clergymen alone, but to every sym pathetic_ and ministering soul. The law of divine forgiveness and spiritual renewal is the central law of the evangel of Jesus.
T stand by the side of a l jian in the spiritual agony o f remoraj;. H e has drunk the horrible cup of iniquity. H e is sin-sick. He feels the cdashing burden of his own wrong-doinij. H e longs for deliverance, for ease oil conscience for a sense of divine forgivfjpess. H e is sorry for his- sin. The i: ness of his soul has upon th e heavens. H e thin is angry w ith iiina’ H e i! his Father. I
Love re-creates * he man becomes “a ne”r .ere begins to live a new', “ie a winning battle witlAfein tion. H e knows and feels t‘ is in him that is all sufficieij need and every emergency
All this is o f the free graj of the Father. “Not by! righteousness that w e hav| according to H is mercy He
The relation of a child to; ‘ not stand upon any legal is not conditioned upon that may be done by the is pre-eminently true of between the Heavenly FatJ human children.
The love and grace o through no contract. S of those who live as ser Father's house. Their spj bondage, not o f joyous tr itual freedom. Tiie effort sense of forgiveness and si .and joy by a diligent discharge of duty leaves the tender cbnsciJb.ce in doubt and fear, because “the cfcmmandment is so exceeding broad” Ithat a t best man’s endeavors m ust befimperfect, or else it leads to P harisaic self-complacency. I t turns the ltioral life into a legal routine of duty. (B etw een that kind o f legal service wlhich w e may render under hope of jffvimiins God’s favor, and the free serv i*e to. which w e are constrained by the #ense of divine sonship and love, the iliistance is immeasurable. It is to .tesus that the world is indebted for sleowing us this, and enabling us to pass! from the state of servile obedience to al God whom w e fear, to the joyous servfice of a Father whom w e love. We acejept this view of the relation between o u t souls and God upon the authority o f Jesus as our great Master and Leadler in the things o f the spirit, as from lone who stands supremely above us fn (spiritual in s igh t Love creates a loving d|nd obedient life, It destroys selfishness It makes'character: salvation, in this aud
The kingdom of he: the kingdom of love, and women who livChrist-like iife; who ^believe that this is God’s world, and w h o live upon this principle every day; I,Who believe that all men are brothers j [and sons of God, and act toward all | l men as if they really believed this.
Irani dark- Jcted itself
; that God afraid of
and the !ion.” H e d to fight ,d tempta- t a power for every
f his life.|e and love works of done, but
aves us.” lather do?s irmality; it n v service hild. This e relation
Ser aud. His
God come - Paul tells
pants in the Icit is one of list and spir- !o obtain the biritual peace
from the heart, nd character is
all worlds, veu on earth is
society of men the loving and
liu
These principles Jesus are gaining the world, in spite
If the religion o f faore and more in If all that appears
to tlio contrary. Tl/ j kingdom of God is surely coming onj 'earth.
The Fatherhood ol . God, the Brotherhood of Man, the lSjjoral and spiritual Leadership o f Jest jus, Salvation by Character, inspired jjy love, the Progress of Mankind o forever—this is th and spiritual Chri day it w ill be acce .ternretation of the
jrvrard and upward » faith of essential gtiauity, and some f t e i as the true in- i&l&ieu Jesus.
When the Troubles Began.“I was in Russia,” said a Japanese
at Portsmouth, “when war w as dec lared .: * never saw such arrogant solf-eonfid?ut'e a s the Russians had at that time. N ' ; :' “A . p u b l i s h got out maps of Japan,' and ' thesS; ihaps, .were hawked through the.: strSet,s by men who cried: ' ‘J a p a n e s e ; giving Russian troops’ future V ^ te into Tokio.’
‘Tn the bdolc s h o p s \laPanese =ranl" mars rand lexicons.' werdk-P11 011 sale, and over them 'were slip® saying: ‘Qualify for a government new island conquest by learmS? Japanese.’ ■ V-
“The day I left Moscow the cabman who took me to t i e station saia as I w as about to hand him his fare: ‘Are you going to fight?’ ■ ' ' : ' ■'
“ ‘Yes,’ said I.“ ‘Then,’ said he, ‘T don’t want your
money. No man should pay for his own funeral ride.’ New York Press.
A South African Warrior.Lerothodi, Basuto chief and .last of
the great native rulers, is dead. 'D esperate .fighter, keen diplomat and able ruler, Lerothodi made h is mark in the history of South Africa from the time : h e . became chief. He was the leader of a nation of 200,000 people jealous of their freedom, bom fighters, keen for battle, and in the troublous time when the government of Basutoland w as. shifting between Ctipe Colony and the imperial government Lerothodi proved his leadership. He was a big, stout m an,-who in his later 'days wore European clothes even in the kraal He was described as the “Paramount C h ief’ of the Basutos, a position largely due to the fact that he was descended, from the chief who founded the tribe in the early part of the century.— London Mail. . .
They Called Her a “Clipper.”Lady Minto, the new vicereine of
India, like her husband, is devoted to travel and adventure. The trip which she and Lord Minto paid to the Klondike region, in the course of which they had many quaint experiences, has often been referred to, ar.d when the miners of C ose parts called her a “clipper” for the spirited way in which she tof^t snapshots of the scenery from her place on th e cowcatcher, as the viceregal train sped through the Rockies, they expressed a common sentiment in racy language.
RESTORED HIS HAIRScalp Hmnor Clir.ed bv Cuticura Soap and
Ointment After A ll i:ise Failed.“I was troubled with a severe scalp hu
mor and loss ot' hair that gave me a great deal o£ annoyance. After unsuccessful efforts with many remedies and so-called hair tonics, a friend induced me to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. The humor was cured in a short time, my hair tvas restored as healthy as ever, and 1 can gladly say 1 have sinee been entirely free from any further annoyance. 1 shal 1 always use Cuticura Soap, and 1 keep the Ointment on hand to use as a dressing ior the hair and scalp. (Signed) Fred’lc. liusche, 213 Hast 57th St., N. Y. City.”
Professors’ Salaries.The official pay of the foreign pro
fessor at first glance seem s absurdly sm all in comparison with; the pay in American institutions.
In Prussia,, for example, a full professor receives by law $1,000 (in Berlin $1,200) the first year, to be increased ?100 a year every fourth year for twenty years. In addition he receives an allowance for house rent.
This is, however, only the fixed part of his income. The honorarium which he receives from the fees of his students w ill vary greatly, depending on the subject taught and the attractive power of the teacher. Incomes of $5,000 a year, and even larger sums, are received in the larger universities by certain well known men.—Henry S. Pritchett in the'A tlantic. ’
Fish Balls of Live Fish.At a boarding house where I was
staying the, landlady was noted for her excellent fishballs, which she made every Sunday morning, says a writer in the Boston Herald. The guests on one special morning were praising them profusely, especially an elderly lady. Sitting next to her was a young man who remarked:
“The only trouble w ith fishballs is they are made of dead fish.”
“Dead fish!” cried the horrified elderly la d y ;.“I shall never eat another as long as I live.”
A Rich Find.Two stamps were once put into on
offertory box by a lady in Georgetown,' according to the Philadelphia Ledger. They. were, two-cent stamps, issued in British'Guiana in 1850.. The lady had come across an envelope among her papers bearing two of these stamps. The incumbent, Canon Josa, sold the envelope, w ith the two stamps on it, at auction) and it realized $1,000. The following year the sam e two stamps changed hands at 53,250. The new purchaser sold them for $3,900 to a German dealer, who sold them -to a Russian nobleman for ?S,000.
A shop . in. Strasburg, called “The Sign of the Stag,” has been occupied as a chem ist’s business1 for 700 years. :
The usual number of tourists have been killed in the . Alps th is . season hunting edelweiss. Up
On I Jatioil
Thewqrlc
T h i
AU wihomes, the w h if m ills anl on the n l their daa
A lla rJ . law si’' physK their \ drifts tt'n kinds of troubles, ■ placem ent! or perhapsi of “ montlf ache, ner lassitude.
Women day are it troubles th l
T hey espl ing-, su sia il strengthen! enable then o f the day,! to rise refril
H ow . disij struggling’ form her h i back and h j tired she oil stand up, anl pain, th e o | some dersc ganism .
Miss F. OrLydia E.
Why H»j I once hetj
cussing a na said to his fectly well
“Don’t you unreasonable! “Your dislikij not answer and you founl ter w as hung pocket of youij er sent to him!
“Yes, I knej joinder, “but ij found it out tl his rudeness, j him, and I dOni There is a goo this world that foundation.—Pr
DON’TA Cure For Sto
Aletliorl, \>y AijDo You Belch.'1It means a dise|
afflicted with Sb Eructations, Hear.tL pepsia, Burning i f in P it. of Stomacl tended Abdomen,1
Bad Breath or .' ture? .
Let us send yov Belch ;Wafera freq cures . . :
Nothing else lil and very pleasanfl Harmless. No dq can’t be cured oth! Science.' Drugs wd Stomach and make!
We know Mull’s f and we want you offer.’ .
.Sp e c ia l Of f e b .-I Mull’s- Anti-Belch but to introduce it ers we will send t\vf ceipt of 75c. and this! Will send you a .sampli
114 A 'JfEJEE Send this ci.uipo:]
and address anti dij does not sell it for ; Anti-Beleh Wafers M uix's G ra v e Tc
Ave., .Koclt| Give Full Address j
Sold at; all druggist:
Belgium’s TojGheel, in Belgiu
fools. -Imbeciles arl an asylum, but, insfl up.and deprived ofj liberty, th ey ,. are them selves like real
Mrs. ’Winslow’s SootMi teething,softens tbegul tion,allays pain,cures t
A man’s hair turns i than a woman’s.
Iam surePiso’s Curefo my life three years ago isitTS, Maple St., Norwi
Aquatic birds are n land birds.
P U T N A M F A DColor more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dy«. Qao tDo paokase can ttye any tranaent without ripping-apart, Writ* for Ires booklet—How w i>y8,!
j7 -•.clb c lb !c 1 b le lb
2c lb 6c !b 7c lb
i a ls
, retr le 29c
itnous a sale
N ewpecial
of our 'la,
ported jls sale
7c
^ “ 5e S ta te
N. J.
in
pi
t
£ e t
DLER,H E Rtley, N. J.
HallH igh S treet. -
new assem bly Id ing m ay now urpose of bold-
ts. reception!-,
made to
DWE,( Committee-. ■<
N. J- i
T A X N O T I C E / f ' T. Hi
N O T I C EVan Rip r: C ollector of t lie
ublic vi'Wlue all tne lands;, te hereinafter meDi.Joned,PU B L I INOTH’E is In-rtio^/given by A
Town of N utley , i l ia ^ h e w iil sell a t p tenem ents, herediiaiji, m s aud real est,
fur lh e sh ortest term l<i'r whicii any w rson(cr persons w ill agree to take th e f-iiine. and la y t,iie/iax>K ass, s-ed ag i>,st, ?he sam e for tlie year 1904 w a ll t l .e in tere st Vfien-oii accruing and all costs, fees, charges and execu tes m le ia lio o to the levy, a ^ esa n u n t and colle^ ii n of said- ta x is . '1 tie ta id sal.-w ilL take.pla.ct*. ‘t Council Cham bers, ;
M o n d a y , M o v e m b e r 6 , 1 9 0 5 , a t 2 p - t n .
Th® sa 'd lan d s, teu- menus, hererlilam ents and real e s ta te so to be sold, and tlrg nam es of th e persons a ga in st whom th e said taxes h ave been la id on account of the sam e, an.l th e a n o u n t of t i x s laid on account of each (.•areel are as fo llow s, viz:— ■ , - . ■
DELINQUENT TAXES, YEAR 1904j ■ . T ax
Henrv N. Spatz, lo t 50x15'', e. s. can a l S t 3 4 76Henry D aily , ■ r.. 1 48 acres, s. of M ilton A v e 3 96A ni.uniuPegnatore, 3.58 acres, n. & s. s M ilton A ve 7 93Dan (Jabuua. Int. 25x100, n. s. M ilton A re...................... 63
E st Oh as l .e ita er , 3 lots 25x100, n. a. M i'lfii A v e .. 1 .90A nton io & Gu*seppe P .g n a to re , 12 lo ts 25x100, Dn-
fln. house, n. s. Milton Ave ........ ;........... . . . .Julin L ai.zilio . 5 lots 25x100. s. s M ilton A v e . . . . . . .A m anda K iiigslan i, 5 acres, house, barn, w. s.
Bloomfield A v e ................................- ............................Atunnria ICingsland and F rank C. E dw ards, 11.03
acres, s s. Centre S t ..................................... 60 28Charles W. Maudell, lot 50x150, house, s.s . C entre bt,. 31 70Georg*3. T'. C lem ent, 29 loi,s, 25x155, blk. X) , s. s.
(. en tre Sr, ....................................................... 19 81G eoige T . CUnf=:nt, 8 lo is, 25x100 bik E ., s. s.
C entre S t ................................................................ -•George T . C lem ent, 72 lots, 121x105 blk. A ., s, s.
Mt. V ernon S t ................................ • ••• ....... ............George T . C lem m t. 57 lots, 124jft05, blk. H., n .s .
Mt. Vernon S i .................................- ■ .............................Get rge T . C lem ent, 36 lots. 126-161, blk. E ., w. s.
lt id se A v e ............................ ........................•••......■■••••George T. Clement-, 8 lo ts. 12£xl003 e. s- Ca.ua! S t ..George T. C lem ent. 24 lo ts 121x100, e. s. Oaoal S t....Jam es L. Payne. 4 lots, 121x100, p. s . Canai S t ..........George T . C lem ent, 9 luts, 109x117, blk. E .. e. s.
Canal S t ..........................................................................George T C lem ent, 58 lor,a, 121x105, blk. B - s s.
C ernent, S t ............................................................. 15 65George T- C lem ent, 25 lo ts, 121x105, blk C., n. s. ,
C lem ent S t . . ..........................................................' • • • 7 13George T . Oienient, 26 lots, 121sl0o, blk C., n s
C lem ent S t ............................. 7 15John Studem an, 9 50 acres s s H igh S t ................... 22 19A lexander G. W ilsie, lot 72x!53. Louse, blk E ., n s
JET i nh S t ..................................................................... 11 HOi to S itzm an, lo t 7*1x150, blk F , house, n.s H igh S t 17 44 O tto S itzm an. lo t 50x 140. bin F., e s i iexandpr A v e 95E st. Jas. W. Sargent. 3.5 ) acres, blk C., w s F rank
lin A ......................................................................... 19 02Mary N. Booth, lo t 60x80, house, blk F ., w s Frank-
Tin A ve................................................ ............................Mary N. Bo >r.h, lot, 168x177, blk F , s s S tager S t . . .Maryl3N. Booth. 2 2.9 acres, bik F .. s s S tager S t -----Mary N . Booth, 2 51 acres, b k E ., n s S tager S t -----Abraham R iker, lot. 50x125, blk E ,, n s S tager Sr—Mary N. Booth, 1.6 i acres. blk D-, s s Cpntre S t...Henry D aily , .1 r., lot 2 10x110, s s D aily S t . ........C. I M arkham, lo t 100x200. house, w s P rospect S t.Mrs. IS. T . H um phrey,1 1 lo ts 50x140, house, w s
Prospect S t .............. . . . . 66 01jfcst. R- V . K ew ton, lo t 50x125. blk C , hou-e, s s
H igh S t .......................................... 24 15Frank T. Lloyd, lo t 50x145. house, blk B ., e s
Cathedral A ve .................................. ..A . B Coelln, lo t 50x145. blk B , e s Cathedral A ve.A. B. Coe/lu lot 50x145 blk A ., e s C athedral A ve..John Oorh. lo t 197x145, blk a , e s C athedral A v e ..John J. Barrie, lo t 60x145, b lk B., w s Terrace Ave.Albert, G. Li ndslay, lo t 50x150. blk A ., es Terrace A v Marv O ’K eefe, 2 lo ts 25x102. bli-.G..sn sN ew a rk S t.J . Fruent.e 31 lots 25x80. blk B , n sW ewark S t ___K utiey R eally Co.. lot 29x150. w s H illsid e A ve-----E st. M agdalene V an R iper, irreg ., 50x200 w s
H illsid e A ve ...... ............ ...............................John H . Sim pson, lo t 125x99, boii-e, e s John S t . . . . .Mrs. Mary A. Conroy, lot, 50x397. house, n s Cf ntr^ S tMary N . Booth, lo t 200x150, blk B., s s C entre S t__E st. Mary J. D onaldson, lo t 40x104, blk A ., s s
■Willi: in S i ............................. ......................................Jotin Conway, Sr., lo t 40x100, b ik B , house, s.“ N ew S t E st. P a tk co iin o ily , lut.4 xl00, blk B, hs, § Kew S tJohn Lam bert, lot, 50x23o, w s Franlklin Al i ............P atrick M cK enny, irreg., lo t 225x75, barn, w of
F ran 1- lin A v e . ........................... i
Map No. L ot K1 1001 701 442 662 60-622 82-93
3 89-93,5 176
5 177
5 1935 336-365
5 11S-125
5 1-72
5 162-218
5 126-161
5 73-805 81-104f, 105-1085 109-117
5 219-276
5 277 301
5 310 333
10 13011 1
11 1911 1717 2
22 23
22 1222 J322 1122 722 929 1930 231 1 of 4-5
31 23.■
38 62
38 6338 6438 5738 7439 9>)4f> 323-32440 279-28244 i o f 10246 35
4S T49 2750 451 34
51 5251 5953 255 70
56 30
58 1259 9
59 22
60 1573 174 6174 SO74 33
76 7176 92
76 87-89
77 2977 55-5877 63-61
77 32-3877 34-3577 29-3077 50.5-77 52-5577 46-47
79 D80 24081 10
81 3581 45
81 75
81 77
81 7684 9S4 20.21
85 1786 10
86 20
8® 33
86 4
95 2496 1497 fi9& 31
58101 1
101 7
lo t 45
io l 87
io$ 2I'OS 12t o 25
8 24 3 17
60 23
3 96
19 02
15 06
9 513 9fi
12 682-36
4 76
16 10 3 22
12 88 12 08
1 61 3 17 6 44
80 50
43 47 4 83 4 83
17 71 4 S3 4 83
.3 17 4 443 22
4 83 22 54 30 59 25 76
2 42 14 49 12 88
6 44
H enry B aechlin , lo t cSxl!2. .. ic ft-, £ ]nouses, e sFranklin A v e ....................... I____i . ......... ..........
Mrs?. Carrie G. Page, lo t 61x162. h s., ,ws F ranklin A v Mrs. F ia n ces Osborne, lo t 60x172, blk B. house
g - Franklin A r e . ! ...............................George W, H anneo. lo t 75x150, blk B, house, s s
JKingsland R d .......................................... ..Jerom e T . C onglet >n, lo t 240x150, vs E st. Ubas. Staii.stield. ir rg, lot, 149s28vJohn J . B reslin , lot 178x339. house, w s P assaic A ve.
s P assa ic A ve , es P assa ic A v
6 44
74 06 46 6(5
46 69
41 863 224 76
22 19 22.19
19 02 1 27
11 10
e s P assa ie
(irreg) s s
uofin house
■MS 7-17-iS)
10S 20-21-24-25
M ichael J. Gorman, lo t 90x339. hs, w s P assaic A ve.John Jam eson, Sr, lo t 5 xl80, house, barn, n s
Harrison S t . .........................................................Christ-ian B oehm , lo t 25x105, vv s E n tw ist le A v e .. C hristian B oehm , lo t 25x126, hoSse, barn, w s
E u tw ist ie A v e ............................... j ...........................A ugust F elrath. 3 lo ts 25x125, hjjusej w s En-
w istie i v e .........................................j............................. 15 85A n n ie J . Sr;hura, lot 25x100, w s G is s 'A v e ..... i 27Jam es Crowell. 2 lo ts 25k1i>o. e s E n tw ist le A v e _____ % 54John & L"ODtiQe PiiUita, 2 lo ts 25x1)00, house, e s
Ent.w{st1« A v e . . . 35 ggMiciielt* Cofonp, 2 lots 40x100, blk A, fcs flarrV-on Sc Elz-\v E . Me chem , 2 lo ts 14x100. s s iriarrison St C hristian Roelim. 2 lots 14x100. bik B, ss Harrtsou S t Leonardo Ma’niero. 2 lots 14x9!, blk A ,w s Moore piE zev E . Menehpm, 4 lots 14x91, blk fi, ws Moore piE lzey E. Mea hem, 2 luts 14x97,': blk B. w s
. M em phis P i ......................................., .........................E st J a n u s W. Sargent, 2 50 acres, e s jfTranklin A v John B . ."•carlpt.i. ifi acn s, w s U nion j Aye E st Mary Murren, lo t 29x164, 1 of db,'s boiirffe. e s
P assa ic A v e ....................................... 1 .... !E st Je iem iah Ford. 1 07 acres, h ou se,'e lsP assa ic A v Mary A. Conway, 2 89 acr_>s, 2 houses
A ve ...............................................Mrs. E lizabeth Pow elson, lo t 569x75,
C en lrj S t ................................................Mrs. E .izab etb Powelson, lo t 26x65,"
s s Centre S t ..........................................W ilscot Land Co , lot, 50x65. « «. 1 vnr,-e Mrs. A nna B utler, 01. I t0x202, h, use. 11 John Fiohns:c*, 2 lots 50xzuut house,I
C hostnut S t ...................................T ni.y Riccn. io t 50x152. e s P assaic A vei........Wm. Ban-insr W ells, lo t 100x500, hou'se. blk C
w s Whitl'ord A v e .............................. ..j 'B ertha E. L, O^teype, lo t 75x150, house,! b lb 'c j 's s
T liglifield la n e . . ..........................................................P . F. G uthrie lo t 50x120, house, blk D , n s H ig h -
fijld lane,„j<ui,........................................ L . ................ 77 28E st . M argaret (Jarroli, lo t 200x150, h ou se , e s
Passattt A v e .......................... ................. ..Mrs. S. S’. N airn , lo t 100x200, house, ns Hiutley A v
■ Mrs. S. F . N a irn , lo t {irretr} 175x386. s* Nlutley A v J, S. Sattertl.w aif.e . lo t 100x200 e s W hitford A ve H . G. Chur-, irreg, lo t 50x100, blk C, fciouse n s
■Biirtiett P I ..................... . . i ..................H. G. Chur, lo t 60x130, b lk B, house, w s U u ran tp l Wm. Joeree, lo t 77x!77, jitt A , houso. barn, 11 s
C en t'e S t ...................... 1.................. 41Mrs. C harlotte H aigh t, lo t 267x140, blfe A . n s
Cen’re S t . . ’.................................... 1Mrs C hajloi te Haifjiit, 1 05 A , bib A, s s (0 unai
ham S t ............................, ..... i . \ .........Mrs. Oh-'rlotte fla ij/h t, 1.60 acres, bijlc B.
CunitioaliMm S t ................. J|.i. ''oh i B. 'ioarlett, lo t 106x61, irreg, s s Cer J • 1 hn '1. Scarlett, lot, S0x 178, s s Ceni re John B. S carlp tt. 9 acres, w s Avoedi1 " ' 'Mrs. Sural) A . Su llivan , 12 lots 25'- ,r.n W i
A voo'la le R d ............................. JM s “ f A' w sEflbt. A . Brunner & Addison El ...T -.-yl^tifiR -biir'
A ,d s C e n t r e S t ; . . 4 !05* 25ixl1bo blic
S t .................G rant A v barn, n s
1 2711 io:79 25
7 93 19 02
55 48
22 39
5 55 3 17
80 50
43 4712 88
84 40
64 40
FURNISH YOUR
H o m e , S w e e t H o m e
BY SAVING
S. & H. Green Stampsand dealing with
H. F. MORSEC a s h G r o c e r
liSii
Double Stamps Tuesday and Thursday
SPEC IA LS ALL NEXT WEEK
B est Mocha and Java Coffee, 28c, 4 lb s $1.00
Pure Cider V inegar, 18c per gallon. .
V erm on t M aple Sprup, Sc and 23c per b attle
H ew Packed Tom atoes, 9c per can
SO A P
8 cakes 25c
B est A m m onia bot. 8c
Gall and sret one o f Our K itch en R e m inders F R E E
H. F. MOESEFranklin Ave. and High St.,
WEST NUTLEY
T-A-IX! N O T I C E | T .A .IX N O T I C E
108 42-47 R o b t-A . Brunner. & A ddison E ly. (H ots 25x160 bite !A . s sM elrose S t ........................................................... 14 491
108 67 F rank H , S ch m itz , lot62x87. blk C, s s A vondale rd : 9 441C9 31 Mrs. A n n ie E . L ynch, lo t 29x100, house, w s Jersey
s t ............................................................................. i a 3a109 32 Mrs. Mary E . L ynch, lo t 411x100, house, w s Jersey
, S t . . . ....................................................................................; 20 93’."109 , 19-21 ' John M. Woodruff, 8 lo ts 25x202, e S M iller S t . . . .T 3 . 2 2 '.1 1 0 . ' 61 M |SV K ath arin e lie Bei, l o t '80x200, blk B. h ou se(>s>s
G rant A v e m i» : ii;> .............................................. .. 78‘ SS1U S § G iovanni G ingarelli, lo t 25x100. bik F , n s A von
dale R d ............................................................................. 2 42!116 2 N ickroprochi, lo t 25x108, blk Ej n s A yondale lild. 2:4)2!116 16 Frank V . R ita cco , lo t 35x65, blk E, n s H um bert -
S t ................... ................... ................................................. 1 28 .117 61 Mrs. S. F . N airn , 4.29 acres, blk J), house, n s
If u tley A v e ..................................................................... 6 0 2 3_ c, __ _ A- H. VAN RIPER. C ollecto rH ui'L ist, N . J ., O ct. 2, 1905
Fortnightly Club Housetd r e n t fo r
Etc,APPLY <?6
S . D. CONGER, S e c re ta ryBox 9S, - NUTLE s , N. J-.
m g -.
n s
41 86 69 23 48 30 22 54
48 30 51 52
8G
32 20
12 88
9 66 3 22 G 44
7:3 45
28 98
U . E 3 . D C T j V l _ e
L adies’ and C gen tlem en 's
t A I L < 3 R i n G
SU IT S x o ORDER
S tirrat Building -i-hertm gt,reet and- Passaic Avenue,
NUTLEY, N.J-
-T H E —
12 88
‘ JO S E P H S T IR B A T .
LiVERY STABLESO h M tv a t B trea t, S a tlttT i S , J .
rnxnltura u l PIabm wlUl
i k l i t rf '
Fashionable Finis},FOR YOUl^ ■ '
COLLARS And c u f f s ;.is th e
D u l l1:allfor work in
N u tle y and A vondale.
l i l L t i T E R & c a . vSteam L a u n d r t ,
‘665 Broad S t. N EWAR 1C,
Mattresses Made Oyer Carpet Laying
Postal Receives Prompt Attention.
H . R . L IN D E B E R G r47 C arden S t. PASSAIC, N. J .
lan d F lo w er SEEDSReliable and Tested. Catalngu* Maifcsd Free
, W E S B E R & W O N3®*d "4 CHAM s e n s STf^CET