10
r l I- that lopSlU l i V e x * * * hi wwUdal (eUjpa about »fr when »b» 4 H lbi ^kdwv" tatad? and ^oagluwti, to,» for Winter HEtHRIFTY housekeeper knows gejtfing the hiome in order after the sum- ^-vacation. , -I-— Jy. «inlef Town folks, do get lav. 1 ' •h» ^nought, -and they probahfit doa* get up tlU B." Shtf dressed and went dowastalrs.alid watched tto-ctoek'oa- 01 &, Kot'a iouad. Then ibe waited git a, and at 7, between banger and, - ie was almost enced. been murdered In 4bdr ••at 8 tfetoertrusa thr trodt step*. And soon the house wai ailed wjib-pebpla rushing In to see -^- A . ~-9?he telephone is the messenger,ttiati^oes all sorts of errands. ' It brings thd^lumber, the gas- {j_^ inian, the paper hanger, the butcher^r the iceman. lL _ Jti? hpr domestic economy agent..*' _.__ ^'^ ^*°yr°^ *hese matters can be^arranged before h b 'f h L D i reaching home by means' of the Long * Distance ' Bell Service. , v i Have yoA a Bell Telepjwne? ' N E W A R K TELEPHONE COMPANY Every Bill Tilepioni it a Long DUtane* Station V »•••••» ,4-,'-.. "—.- New Jersey Central. . SPECIAL EXCURSION DP THE HUDSON ^ Y TO WEST POINT ?-:„•-. Ancfoff NEWBURG T . Sunday, September 18th, 1916. •j._._ Sjieoitl Train leaWCraiiford 4t 9.08 a. m. .,' Tflnrtft F Where the la>a' forest It bas left c arche». bridges and vases were [^Wt5£S^ H_ ;_Frpm $12.50 to $30,007 . , ' CONNECTED. ' ^ , No Dirt, *l«at, of Asjies to Carry Out. Cfanfaird •hi wwUdal (eUjpa abut » » irrote boto» next- 417. "He mlgbi 4h|njr: we. b»Tt Mica into rrll » « • . " ab» HU (• herself M sb* w«* toln* Off 4b sleep./ " 2 (end to hls-dutlitt. Bulne-ntud^nts of (be word thlnt.fi proMI.l} was fuelled Orat to men tflt'h, rwl faces. A( r tying a suldier tbc-tcrtlt 'Upbati " -•, old as Cfumhell's ri.iy. Lord 'Jen, BlsfFltiii uf the civil witr ... —~*t land, explains thnt It niif au|il|pd' to tbe "RauuUbead culrumlrDtV'betiusi'.of slit-llH nllli wolih, the/ were corerrd. Aficr\«imrHrItlflh sol-- tiers In their rrd uniforms wi-.^xallod lobsters." 'i'licu cuiue uuotberj dervlop- ment. Tbt uoldlor Ju llioKtllciiut bo-' came a "boiled lobster," whlty ibv po- lf»nmn In l)|ue TVnS^fif. i j p p W a t bad 4»Dpened. wiqirlaM «M. lilt dlgnant.wheo policy .market .__ T era, newsboys, etc, rusbed Into tbete bedroom* and woke them up. tSk this explains wby the old fashioned woman came home that dig, "-lnerer eipecwd." »be fobbed to pa, nhat any girl would talk to her ma as Jane talk- ed to me."-A.tcblsoa Globe. HAWAII'S BIG VOLCANO. Curious Relies ef Lav* It Has Left In "- tNe Forests. ^ -i- Hawall possesses one ot the greatest natural' wonders of the present day . r , An Eye on theTutufe. A mnn with a Hwullen llugcr thnt mtd a drvp^ubriiiiluu under thfu ring iptied itt u Jewelry store to get tiio tine cut-off. iK'furo tho cporatloii was B l l l flos and-twice Its diameter. . Kllaaea. ofe.vthe,l«Un4 of Bawslk auada tblrtr miles from Uw sea to a." mountain range In wblqb.aM tturN deAd volcanoe* and on* partially kilt*. Tbls taat, called Mauna Loa, froofttn>a ia-ttvat saodli' atreania of Uva 4ow8 (te'slopcA, Inl881thjree»tr««mi'lrai»t forth from the side* of tbla motnltau, and one of.tbem came wltbtn tl(ree. qoarten of a mile of Hllft Jbt~«bt*f Altr of the t»lan£. There. naT» pM« several ontbnaka of Kllanea to S * O f Hard ldck.ls geui>rnlly ^ j to rtlis tblug Hint hnpp«ui l _ tbroalb'tlie isreUcs'lntata itTsses. These the lava piling burning away/the wood within and killing the upper part of the tree. . lh_ the course of time seeds were deposit- ed In the open top;filled'with decaying bark, until- now there is~a gigantic Uva'-vase, holding- ferns and Oowers and vines,—Exchange. / ~ A Coin Worth Millions. / Somewhere in tbe world—poaslbl/ among the" relies kept by some'Iorer ot the great Napoleon-there is a fortune, perhaps unsuspected. Among the coins Napoleon bad minted were some mil mined to popularise these In an sx- "tmordlnary,way. In one ot tbe coma, folded to • tiny slcs, was Inclosed a note signed by*Napoleon and promls- Jng..the.somj>f MOO/NO francs to the finder' of tbat~ particular' coin. Nat- nrally eterybodj who changed a large A J coins In exchange and, a* • j ed and dug and sounded the metal In eager search for the bidden note. But tbe years went .on, and yet tbe note 'did not appear. Napoleon's plighted word is a sacred trust ta the French nation, and tod#-^the government stands ready" 1 to~par-tbe~debt,~whlcb, -with Interest, Is now wo^ttt many mil' Boos.—London Answers. » ..,?...- ' A OflMla Bout. It Is noTalways tbe largest foe who can make the greatest disturbance and. cause tb» moat confusion. In his, -Hunting Grounds of tie Great West" rhfcBaWTrrlnr incident ot the'Mexican \war wblcb prwss thatJt STqnaUtyj not qnatrttty, Wfifcb U most etfectlfe. ~* ~'A ' * WhiW.Oeneraf 1 Taylof * littb/army was nttrcMns; from Corpus Cbtlatl to •Matatooras a 1 soldier of the/nafik. ot O e colwrnnflreii a t * bun. Cranfqrd National Taos, A/Btwimr,' ROBOT J, MIX, rlates^ edition* of ry" ohe •nnSa'nlijg'of or* undeslnttle Mew." „ TUia M jsilppgeetl' lij mo»f fifldtlg Jrf U6werer, '^lotarteR" WHM irftt wjeltp term of abnie aoraujc Encllhbiupii of gn££B_ Slllhi 'day, ana SlmkiWaro may «t- 1 toJnter" v wltrn tli? -"tinbollnl" or" "raw totmlfr."! Again, •JtO boll u lobster" V.-Q4 {or n man io •aunt In the nroiy nnil pin <jn} ! a red LCIt'Xwgr " ,JX'aii tbh-rlnjrlip nivtuU'4 so n imwn- n will gH e mv tue usunl umqunt , #lt I«D be nieml«l,",8iil(l the jeweler, '/but 1 donbt W you emi mer porsuaila ^ pawnbrokor to accept 1t uftor« nrd." , 'KThcu I guess I'll tuku eliniici'S on t^fljiger gqtttug well jvith the ring '.«ttld the young twin mid loft the / ' cldenta (Ike that" aalil tlm'.Jowcl- ^jbow .TrbatX.'Wtlii 11 ? 1 }, '"fU* aber of l'hjliidrluhltiuii lira, nlth, ewnaboiK loonilnn up Just nbeiid em as aq unovoldnblomil. Of nil "awllo ucpd their rltiiri cut <ilT », of-them nsk tlmt vary (HJM- a large percvutitgv of thrill hoei on blood'itelaoiilngrntlicr r .. dwtroy tbe ring's value OR.a iwntbl«*ataet a -Plillnucl|ihlH LcOeor. Laughing cheerfulnenr throffH tuiiy jgh't OP all the paths of llfo—Itlebtcr' 'Ready for School Opening! HAVE A FULL LINE OF W. L Douglas Shoes _2_ * FOB BOYS." - " " . ' \- i :ATOR SHOES for Boya jindOirls. / .Shoe Repairing; Neatly Dona * zrtr Urce-Assortmeait-ol -Boys-' Suits, Caps and Blouses, Prices For the Cool' Evenlhgs—Blan, keU and Quilts, Big variety'of colors. .Reasonable Price*. Carpet Departriient. Rug* and Floor CarpeU, OH Cloth Window Shades Reduced. SHAPIRO'S MENT STORE. ve.—CranfonfrNrJ. DEPARTMENT STORE. Anchor Posts Are Driven Into the Solid Ground-No w , Is R94|tdred .-- _,TJ»t->»li»-iessBB-wlir oor fate •mttMHatrut.y*«rlnandycsrouu Tbe posts ate braced by «ht dtln aoclien. They cannot Mg out olliu. Thty sra abwlute- JyjHW!?W^«*OALyANlZEIL prices made fa Firm ana Poultry Kwingi, Una Gusidt, Ac- ( Write for catalog. Anchor Post Iron Works V , Salesman •„ <JA«W0OONJ AOBNTS FOR The OVERLAND PULLMAN \ 'AND A card will brltif? a demonstratlua, with no obllnatloQ. . Onlora placed now will Insure early delivery, 4 •Catalogs furnished upon request. NEWTON A; BAWETTr PfopT r ihono 24i. ,27 NORTH AVENUE, East. < •••»•«••• . » » < » » ' » » e> • » > ' | • New Orange Park, Strictly a ronulentkil dovelopniont for families with moderate' Pure- water and modern convenience*). .- HOMES FOR SALE, $3,000 and upwards, on easy terms. HOMES -fOR-RENTrS18, $20Kftd $2Z. Onfy¥ few feft Tim »pd BironldhD-Beottttf'be BppT»oi«eii."~*ppry to ! J. J, D1X0N, 5uper|ntendeilt,-on the promises. oooeooooooooooooooooaoo Ket\M6rt\i Inn C. K. NEZU, Proprietor. Japanese Service Kenilwoptlj, -.New Jersey oQoooooooooooonooooooaflioooonnnnnnrin.SM.iMiMiuuuuutMU •••• Concrete Building Material , Any Deslzn. Alt Colors, CUARANTEEirfc ^u,Jt.youwvanL.tha.IuMl >—TPIAINFIELD CEMENT STONECo 1 \ ' ' ' ' * r i Telephone.'aa-J'-f ^ Citizen W ^ t Ads, Bring Results. 2 * ^t

io - digifind-it.com · •h» ^nought, -and they probahfit doa* ... stands ready"1 to~par-tbe~debt,~whlcb,-with Interest, ... New Orange Park,

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' v -

r l I-

thatlopSlU l i V e x * * *hi wwUdal (eUjpa about »fr when »b»

4 H l b i

^kdwv" tatad? and ^oagluwti, to,»

for WinterHEtHRIFTY housekeeper knows

gejtfing the hiome in order after the sum-^-vacation. , -I-—

Jy. «inlef Town folks, do get lav.1'•h» nought, -and they probahfit doa*get up tlU B." Shtf dressed and wentdowastalrs.alid watched tto-ctoek'oa-01 &, Kot'a iouad. Then ibe waitedgit a, and at 7, between banger and,

- ie was almost enced.been murdered In 4bdr

••at 8 tfetoertrusa thrtrodt step*. And soon the house waiailed wjib-pebpla rushing In to see

-^-A. ~-9?he telephone is the messenger,ttiati^oes allsorts of errands. ' I t brings thd^lumber, the gas-

{j_^ inian, the paper hanger, the butcher^r the iceman.lL _ J t i ? hpr domestic economy agent..*' _.__

^'^ ^*°yr°^ *hese matters can be^arranged beforeh b ' f h L D ireaching home by means' of the Long * Distance

' Bell Service. , v

i Have yoA a Bell Telepjwne? 'N E W A R K TELEPHONE COMPANY

Every Bill Tilepioni it a Long DUtane* Station

V

» • • • • • »

,4-,'-.. "—.-

New Jersey Central. .

SPECIAL EXCURSION

DP THE HUDSON^ Y

TO

WEST POINT?-:„•-. Ancfoff NEWBURGT . Sunday, September 18th, 1916.•j._._ Sjieoitl Train leaWCraiiford 4t 9.08 a. m. .,'

Tflnrtft FWhere the la>a'

forest It bas left carche». bridges andvases were

[ Wt5£S^H _ ;_Frpm $12.50 to $30,007

. , ' CONNECTED. '

^ , No Dirt, *l«at, of Asjies to Carry Out.

Cfanfaird

•hi wwUdal (eUjpa abut » »irrote boto» next- 417. "He mlgbi4h|njr: we. b»Tt Mica into rrll »« • . "ab» HU (• herself M sb* w«* toln*Off 4b sleep./ "

2

(end to hls-dutlitt. Bulne-ntud^nts of(be word thlnt.fi proMI.l} was fuelledOrat to men tflt'h, rwl faces. A( rtying a suldier tbc-tcrtlt 'Upbati "

-•, old as Cfumhell's ri.iy. Lord'Jen, BlsfFltiii uf the civil witr ... —~*t

land, explains thnt It niif au|il|pd' totbe "RauuUbead culrumlrDtV'betiusi'.of

slit-llH nllli wolih, the /were corerrd. Aficr\«imrHrItlflh sol--tiers In their rrd uniforms wi-.^xallodlobsters." 'i'licu cuiue uuotberj dervlop-ment. Tbt uoldlor Ju llioKtllciiut bo-'came a "boiled lobster," whlty ibv po-lf»nmn In l)|ue TVnS fif.

i j p pWat bad 4»Dpened.

wiqirlaM «M. liltdlgnant.wheo policy .market . _ _ Tera, newsboys, etc, rusbed Into tbetebedroom* and woke them up. tSkthis explains wby the old fashionedwoman came home that dig, "-lnerereipecwd." »be fobbed to pa, nhat anygirl would talk to her ma as Jane talk-ed to me."-A.tcblsoa Globe.

HAWAII'S BIG VOLCANO.Curious Relies ef Lav* It Has Left In

"- tNe Forests. ^ - i -Hawall possesses one ot the greatest

natural' wonders of the present day

. r , An Eye on theTutufe.A mnn with a Hwullen llugcr thnt

mtd a drvp^ubriiiiluu under thfu ringiptied itt u Jewelry store to get tiiotine cut-off. iK'furo tho cporatloii wasB l l l

flos and-twice Its diameter. .Kllaaea. ofe.vthe,l«Un4 of Bawslk

auada tblrtr miles from Uw sea to a."mountain range In wblqb.aM tturNdeAd volcanoe* and on* partially kilt*.Tbls taat, called Mauna Loa, froofttn>aia-ttvat saodli' atreania of Uva 4ow8(te'slopcA, Inl881thjree»tr««mi'lrai»tforth from the side* of tbla motnltau,and one of.tbem came wltbtn tl(ree.qoarten of a mile of Hllft Jbt~«bt*fAltr of the t»lan£. There. naT» pM«several ontbnaka of Kllanea toS * O f Hard ldck.ls geui>rnlly ^

j to rtlis tblug Hint hnpp«uil

_ tbroalb'tlieisreUcs'lntataitTsses. Thesethe lava piling

burning away/the wood within andkilling the upper part of the tree. . lh_the course of time seeds were deposit-ed In the open top; filled' with decayingbark, until- now there is~a giganticUva'-vase, holding- ferns and Oowersand vines,—Exchange.

/ ~ A Coin Worth Millions./ Somewhere in tbe world—poaslbl/among the" relies kept by some'Iorer otthe great Napoleon-there is a fortune,perhaps unsuspected. Among the coinsNapoleon bad minted were some mil

mined to popularise these In an sx-"tmordlnary,way. In one ot tbe coma,folded to • tiny slcs, was Inclosed anote signed by* Napoleon and promls-

Jng..the.somj>f MOO/NO francs to thefinder' of tbat~ particular' coin. Nat-nrally eterybodj who changed a large

A Jcoins In exchange and, a* • jed and dug and sounded the metal Ineager search for the bidden note. Buttbe years went .on, and yet tbe note'did not appear. • Napoleon's plightedword is a sacred trust ta the Frenchnation, and tod#-^the governmentstands ready"1 to~par-tbe~debt,~whlcb,-with Interest, Is now wo^ttt many mil'Boos.—London Answers. »

..,?...- ' A OflMla Bout.It Is noTalways tbe largest foe who

can make the greatest disturbance and.cause tb» moat confusion. In his,-Hunting Grounds of tie Great West"

rhfcBaWTrrlnrincident ot the'Mexican \war wblcbprwss thatJt STqnaUtyj not qnatrttty,Wfifcb U most etfectlfe. ~* ~'A '* WhiW.Oeneraf1 Taylof * littb/armywas nttrcMns; from Corpus Cbtlatl to•Matatooras a1 soldier of the/nafik. otOe colwrnnflreii a t * bun. Cranfqrd

National

Taos, A/Btwimr,' ROBOT J, MIX,

rlates^ edition* ofry" ohe •nnSa'nlijg'of

or* undeslnttle Mew." „ TUiaM jsilppgeetl' lij mo»f

fifldtlg JrfU6werer, ' lotarteR" WHM irftt wjeltp termof abnie aoraujc Encllhbiupii of gn££B_S l l l h i 'day, ana SlmkiWaro may

«t-1toJnter"vwltrn tli?

-"tinbollnl" or" "raw totmlfr."! Again,•JtO boll u lobster" V.-Q4 {or n man io•aunt In the nroiy nnil pin <jn}!a red

L C I t ' X w g r "

,JX'aii tbh-rlnjrlip nivtuU'4 so n imwn-n will gH e mv tue usunl umqunt

, # l t I«D be nieml«l,",8iil(l the jeweler,'/but 1 donbt W you emi mer porsuaila^ pawnbrokor to accept 1t uftor« nrd.", 'KThcu I guess I'll tuku eliniici'S on

t^fljiger gqtttug well jvith the ring'.«ttld the young twin mid loft the

/ 'cldenta (Ike that" aalil tlm'.Jowcl-

^jbow .TrbatX.'Wtlii11?1}, '"fU*aber of l'hjliidrluhltiuii lira, nlth,

ewnaboiK loonilnn up Just nbeiidem as aq unovoldnblomil. Of nil

"awllo ucpd their rltiiri cut <ilT», of-them nsk tlmt vary (HJM-a large percvutitgv of thrill

h o e i on blood'itelaoiilngrntlicrr . . dwtroy tbe ring's value OR.aiwntbl«*ataeta-Plillnucl|ihlH LcOeor.

Laughing cheerfulnenr throffH tuiiyjgh't OP all the paths of llfo—Itlebtcr'

'Ready for

School Opening!

HAVE A FULL LINE OF

W. L Douglas Shoes_2_ *

FOB BOYS." - " " . '\ - i

:ATOR SHOESfor Boya jindOirls. /

.Shoe Repairing; Neatly Dona* •

zrtr Urce-Assortmeait-ol -Boys-'Suits, Caps and Blouses, Prices

For the Cool' Evenlhgs—Blan,keU and Quilts, Big variety'ofcolors. .Reasonable Price*.

Carpet Departriient.Rug* and Floor CarpeU, OH Cloth

Window Shades Reduced.

SHAPIRO'SMENT STORE.

ve.—CranfonfrNrJ.

DEPARTMENT STORE.

Anchor Posts AreDriven Into the SolidGround-No w, Is R94|tdred. - - _,TJ»t->»li»-iessBB-wlir oor fate•mttMHatrut.y*«rlnandycsrouu

Tbe posts ate braced by «ht dtln aoclien.They cannot Mg out olliu. Thty sra abwlute-J y j H W ! ? W ^ « * O A L y A N l Z E I L

prices made fa Firm ana Poultry Kwingi, U n a Gusidt, Ac-

( Write for catalog.

Anchor Post Iron WorksV , Salesman •„

<JA«W0OONJ

AOBNTS FOR

The OVERLANDPULLMAN\ 'AND

A card will brltif? a demonstratlua, with no obllnatloQ. .Onlora placed now will Insure early delivery, 4

•Catalogs furnished upon request.

NEWTON A; BAWETTr PfopTr ihono 24i. , 27 NORTH AVENUE, East. <

• • • » • « • • • • • . • • » » • • < » » ' » » e> • • » > ' | • •

New Orange Park,Strictly a ronulentkil dovelopniont for families with moderate'— Pure- water and modern convenience*). . -

HOMES FOR SALE, $3,000 and upwards, on easy terms.HOMES -fOR-RENTrS18, $20Kftd $2Z. Onfy¥ few feft

Tim»pd BironldhD-Beottttf'be BppT»oi«eii."~*ppry to

! J. J, D1X0N, 5uper|ntendeilt,-on the promises.

oooeooooooooooooooooaoo

Ket\M6rt\i InnC. K. NEZU, Proprietor.

Japanese

Service

Kenilwoptlj, -.New JerseyoQoooooooooooonooooooaflioooonnnnnnrin.SM.iMiMiuuuuutMU

• • • •

Concrete Building Material, • Any Deslzn. Alt Colors,

CUARANTEEirfc^u,Jt.youwvanL.tha.IuMl

>—TPIAINFIELD CEMENT STONE Co1 \ • ' ' ' ' • *

r i Telephone.'aa-J'-f ^ •

Citizen W ^ t Ads, Bring Results.2 * ^t

r ' ^ l .

' \ '1 " ~ ' , . V '

--• * . rV,

v •

Ep.'Jfe '• THE. CITIZEN,

CRAWFORD, N. J.

'" ! Just at present that sectarian Insult1 *«cUon in Spain looks like atfisser. .

~" It seems that tht tussock: ''moth |kooroa to put »» egca in coM^storsge.

i Per.'an afTeea&Te summer Job now- «ro«U you. lika< to -demonstrate ham-

tnockst - . >

• The German* are uslag heavy ,artll-

by air gunsi • . i 1' j

No matter how the weather f*dtemperature change, the j humiditynever falls-to ©on* baefci' •

But <iren old Home before It feUnever lad to contend with- coW-stor-ace egia an Ox. year-row*'l •

~ By DoroOnta DeaMa,Authorif><a*>rglt,»t"Th*Xr**i»oZt»o,»n*

0 I Cherry- Lane, andAt

Are you glvinc proper Mffrredationla th* clan of sammer iwjstber tlM

--man In charge li~bandlnc port

Trance pants an inspiring'soa* lor'' |tt soldiers to line ai they march.~ (Thar are mdeonw-to-etog "Keny^-.

' "And still the patient henrcoes onWHboUt asking,whether she Is wort-

- W tor-air roCTibator or • cold storageWant . ; ' s

"Apple crop outlook good." Seemsto nt that wo heard something about

. Si1 certain failure just after .thoseE frosts: > .i ' i

Continued.-"Her clothes,are most extraordi-

nary," Mrs. Hay saW eagerly; and

"M'tn nKorm of some ^\^*X*S**»i»**-I feel Buret"4she said with authority. T»«"Of course I cannot say'what kind ofa home, although—"

Llse laughed outright."Noniense!" she-said. "Yeu talk-

as It sbe/d come out ot ^reformatory.It's only the child's physical culturedreu that she's wearing out becauseit's eo comfortable." _

Meanwhile Tormentllla was taking-steps. 'Audrey's unhappy pale facehaunted her.' That two lover* shouldbe separated ,by such trifles as a dte-"approvftg"pareatr ixasperatedTtef.She felt thansh? would have madeshort work of her father If he hadraised objections to her choice. An-

-So a d l .--sbe <dt4That oftght to b» m he»6V TUB

Bolemur be jhookrhsnds, an?. « s at that laoiaent fbat a bl* seatmotoi

of wild-roses to give to Greenta. —hthe end ot the half-hoar she grew im-patient and began to think Of tea.and It waa then that abeftaw comingtowards her from that end of (he lanewhich led into theTWinder road theypuog man Michael KenwortSy. Biscap was in his pocket, so were^Msh'anOs, and bis fair head'waa bant de-jectedly, ai he walked along. Hiseyes were moody, his mouth sulky.and he won Tonnentimvs heart atonce by the_dreadfut unhapptnest ofhis manner and mien. '

•I must take the bull by the borns,"she said at once, and beldly Intro-duced herself,.-! He looked surprised,but his surprise at this frank Intro-duction was as nothing compared

had tvstevto moid it.

* CTtowatHi them,

a d hastily lato—,,-T—Tbe «rt»*had tkrun

d rilfl « t thito moid it. Tbe «rt»*had tkruntn life eyes, and riwlfl «ot »e» their

—CBAPTBB'V.' TesvItom«>tlfiisiwhlin-

duction was as nothing eofflparea-with hto-«urpriaer_« tn^renutota-she

t b to ake

y«b%w«teheagnsttns -war

J Mthe,

- ~rwith hto«upwent ob. to make. - ~r

"Audrey has told .me eTerythlng,BatdJhe boldly.^TaTo^uWerBut^glve lOctojfrwa ST

her courage,1' she t^ld herself. 'i'lTl' TiU.spirits seemed,buck her up. When "I've put .the rfnlc-Xhlng to her In a clear light «he'll,un-d d h t h ' d in 'Sh

Plymouth has' the rock, Provtads-' town the tall tower, and the country, Jpmerally the rest of the. monument

In men and women. , >

The rubber acreage In India It saidto be Increasing, but then ft Is to bebaturally expected that sucb a prod-uct would stretch out

At some of the eastern hotels, we•are told, they serve.re«d-bird* Hut

can scarcely be distinguished fromgenuine English sparrows.

Singing songs while fishing UlUmake the fish bite, n, dispatch says,and. In most Instances, small blamecan be attached to the fish.

X g e clear igh «hderstand what she's doing. 'Shedootn't evon seem-to realize jbowmuch she has at Blake. With so ntuchr-her whole life's happiness. In fact,hanging In the balance, she must betaught to see—made to realize. 4f Icould only give her more grit!" a

And she-longed, We burned, tomeet the'beloved object^jto point outto Michael Kenwortby his clear duty;to show him.what lie-waa in suchdeadly danger of losing-. But al-though she knew hto-ty sight,' hehad never yet been lntiodueed toher.—' '•. , ' c : v1

She hid been,Invited to Join,theBrowning Society, but had politelydeclined. Bhe was dfrald the wasn'tclover J enough, Bhei said,, and Luevwho Was going merely to kill- time,laughed and told her that she envied

• -her—sincerity. "Ajidrey thinks this

anything; to

i, she has, has she* Hbtrfrlght-Xh, she has, has she?.ttfly interertmg tor you!- "I want to help yoa," said Tor-mentllla candidly. She was, in fart,dying to. "I can assure yon that Ican help you, if youil only.glT.e methe chance." , ,

"No one on Goo's earth can helpme how," he remarked with hittergloom, and TormentiUa felt'as If shecould have shaken him for the- wayha revelled In this certainty.

"On the contrary," she eald fcrlsk-lyj "I can, If you'll only behave likea man, Instead. of a maundering

-T ,Jl^r»irt UroelyO^ A»ld» forf, Oarment* Ji Whlch Younoiter. May

Romi^llluKtrtlofl' Shows -

of the floral trimmings thetKmt are v»ed for;b«h sex

boy is at all bltw* years

rompers to be in_a plain color—*,*— ,,striping on white, dr 'white on, bine o*-,/(<hrown. Jhe-colprs..tBfct fin BW» *fethrown. Jhe-colprs..tBfct fin BW» *'freahment to the ey» are enosen ore*.

th d thir hint of'coolness tan

_i*a". xi» amall child's flpef suminer rai-ment la set aside' tor the "mottienW thechief-thought sow pting.for thej'"'-ona'a eomfort In the country'anthe"sei*ho»e*tte-Uny frackrwra t -

""worn by batty lada-and lasses are ixi. a tub' agrtand «verr ttyle pernLaslmoeh bare »Mn being seen.as,

^ ^ O l U ' d * -*1

' An Instrument whloh Is being used' tn London hospttala enables» doctor

to «eo the Interior of a patient's stom-ach. Being a Ixmdon doctor must be

man Intellectual becAHse jie has start-ed a society to expound* Browning,"she said. "I think It Is BO Insultingto a pW to oxpound him, dpn'tyou?" -, / ' '-'Tormetttilla"«grced/,

iJ and-all- ihat—; i-i afternoon She wandered about 'the

It ts estimated that Americanshavo .park and the sun was not too hot.been swindled out of 13,000,000 In 'She trespassed once mora In ^theMexican rubber schemes: i (Think -of t plantation, and had an interesting

- the automobiles or duck trousers that [interview with a-pretty little houss--firibney would have bought ' I maid who was leaning over^he heflge,

• ' I ,i crying her eyes out, because some'one' In Newport a fashionable woman I who had .faithfully promised to be

in alighting from her, runabout andon her face, cutting It-Bhenow cut the hobble.

• • * •

e t <. -At lost the had sueceededtln rous-

ing his Interest, it seemed.\ "Can you!" he said.. -"Toil seen*quite enthusiastic about us.' I 'won-der why." . , ' . '

"There's only one way open to yonnow." Her passion for getting to thehorses had taken the bit in lt» teethnow. ' '".

"And what way** thatt** He le -garded her suspiciously as he spoke.

"Tho way of Gretna Green!" the^ . - Th» «iinonne»-

' d i h i f

Scientists announce that people .canoeoomo energetic by eating raisins,ffhe trouble la that most of, the. ener-gy produced by eating raisins has tohe expended in removing the seeds. -

A Missouri convict mathematicallyInclined hopes for pardon because hehas discovered how to reduce equa-lloni "f '*"* *"n*h <le«rree. A study ot

ereTtsf l tCt^Bnm.r i r"The new'parson's been at him.

Minnie said sadly. "lie's beenthreatening- to speak to Mr. Oroveatt -ho wastes his time hero Jnstead of

| looking after the young pheasantsover the other side of the. park. AndMr. Groves would turn him. off as likeas not It he know."

"He would, 'would hot" Tormen-tllla $sid -BofHr.- - Mr. Brctasgrovehad beeter keop 'to his Browning. Ithink, Where Is Mr, Groves!"

ment appeared to'deprive-him ofbreath for a few minutes.

•The way of wtfatT" The horror tohis tone-was refreshing: . -

"Qretna Oroen. Why dont yoncarry her oft and marry her? -Thatwas the way yon woed ypnr wife tothe youth ot tho world. How changed.men- aielm Elope!.','™., „,»„ , „ « , ™ .

"I never thought-of that," he ad-mitted, truthfully. "By. George!"

studied bar1 Jace In _ ^ _ „ _ _ ,Thar* had been plenty ot room'fortht) ear to pat* them. ; . ; , v A . - ,

She bad attend s name'shaiply,with a Qjflck fadrawlas «t her breath,and the car bad bien'toWy'near tothe pair» Had fareed-tnto the badgeihattbe^teKW-iuust bive"h«troV-;ttrYet tbe-ssa waa-to ht»-eras, as - Ib a n saU. and be ttvMn't possiblyhave seen thetr.taces!- He went ondomr-tha ««rrow'-laii«,-aseVat-flrstTormeattnk 'was Ttoo 4*»d to notice-that be was gradually siowln* ;O ft.But Michael noticed U. hPfact, hewaa Tnrt"""'g to'grasp the sttoatlonaltogether.

T o * know the vasal" be asked,with a half smile. "He is slowingdown. Looks as If be'were goingto atop. He ts going to stop. Hasstopped, in fact. I"m beginning tothink Td better make myself scarce.Good-by. Thank you very much inrdeed. I suppose I had better go,hadn't It" - "

"Tea," said the, with a desperateeffort ta> regain, her self-gosseaslon."Do-rdo go, please."

Her anxiety to see-ibe- last « t him.-as not flattering., hnt be-under-stood tbat thB WM mot a moment,tor mere manners, and disappearedround the corner before the i ownerof the red motor bad come dp to her.He was an experienced youth. Some-thing in the poor glrt's-eyea perhapsbad told him tbat the best thing hocould do was to leave her now. -

Bhe waa sun leaning against thehedge when the stranger reached her.Oreenie's little bunch ot wild roseswas pitsscd-toJber braasU. ,Her wide1 =—;-—_ , •

* at him -wit*--Tempers are cut-square necked and

freahment to the ey» are enosenothers, and thir hint of'coolnesswhite, blue- and apple-blossomaamlrablylmppjy. ". - •

Linen~canvas,erasb; which Is a vftqfl,cod material, !a much used for'thf?smartest^ ot the' boys' suits, / •»•—-^made often in cunning sailorwith or without shields as the)ttkes. For-everyday play suitsdartUjlnecroottons. such aschamt«nd galatea, are much used, these r«%sponging very satltfaetorily to. whIU.?,trimmings. _ '_ j

Ajglrl's play frocks and aprons Ibe In the same serviceable - —but for •afternoon dimity, hat ,—„*,linen and white lawn-are employed. :-with suitable trimming, even if <" ~"model'U the same as that used for jptaytrock.—In~fBct;-a» far aa-theytmer child's "getoip- is concerned, tTU.almost-entlrely a,jnatter of material:for theieast little change in-a. i "

kJU^blf "^tp .The UtUe slip dress IHU

be Worn belted or loose, and It is*«other model tbat can be turned tatoan apjm by merely opening It (tho tuU-tength ot the bacE Th«.

, - j {rock Is one of the. papecdoll *tjtJu-, -I as the models-with sleeves cut In o«j«

' are sometimes called—and it to i -» -*I to either'boys dr girts ot th»

Blip Drsss of White'Linen, Trimmed' With Apple Gresn and White.

_ frightened, reproachful Mare.Through her parted red typs herbreath

The motorist waa a short, atocklshyoung toatcteryinoad In the shoul-ders and ruddy and "weather-beaten inthe face. He had small, twinkling

d

tlilflPtl "•• Mfl" >?WtM f .ff* i,,.^^ i i , 1

fenglUh mltW show him how to shlen hlB sentence.

Fears for tne.leantag tower" ot Pisaare shared "only1 by admirers of the

h^houldtappen

"Ho'a 'talking-to—Mrs. Gramper

fpreBenfly."" ". bore, Minnie, you're not to

Don't-take1*any notice

lit W * 4 _ • * • • •»* w ^ ^ WH w r ^ _ 1 — , u ~

"Isn't It time- you- did think of It.then?" Bhe asked in an exasperatedtone. "Oh, if t were a man!"

"You might feel quits differentabout it if youwere," he suggestedbrilliantly. "You never know. To»fb'rget that I haven't a penny In theworld. It's a minor detail, batstill—"_"Wbat does-that nyrtter." cried

TormentlllaJieartlly, "If you lore

quickly.

short sleeved, skirts and' little-'trdu-pr qterl are.very short and socks andv sUppers or sandals take the^laefrpf•*•** blgh shoes and long stockings -

verwsdVgJit^eloseliMroipe.hair.' Ho wore no goggles, and hisbig-coat and uglr_caj> were ot BJ&IB-Unetly sporting cut. But his facebore aTcnrious complexity of expres-sions at that moment,1 Joy and,dis-

In almost equal proportions*

high shoes end long stockings. - ,In the way-of combinations of mate-

rials these ready-made garments givemany ideas to Inexperienced sewfrs,JorAiha- mp»X, daringjmUturos aremade. For Instance, a little frock Ina pale blue cotton will be trimmed

Here the attractive little get-op - - .of coarse-.white linen with A btttdlag'tin pale apple green and'white, but i%.0,';>j'may*fte made of the simplest cotfott-s>'^jand self-trimmed, it-it 1B to be, f-'" •"*'•rough wear. Where It Is to be A fii~garment, something,«say, needed tai.ivery hot'afternconja? fingrit of paIeTari~or • „pongee. In this shape, \wlthx stitcheibands of the same, and bloomers an,,,,.underbody matching; there could-"M*'*Jnothing copier for the chlfd whojtwjU,.wllh4he heat . , •~l't~

The-2-yearold would need two yards.jot pongee or rajah In the usual ~-"™"

' . Latest In Petticoats.Dress underskirt, are of fine'

llnor-Datisler-Uace^ts more-'ut*trimming than embroidery,, all*/,—mlngs being neatMra{her than «ta•orate. "Allover embrol!|ery,i^—*~duny, torcHon- and hmrftonand Insertions are beit^'j •,-Under wash'drosses, color^.—chambray and batiste; petticoats'most popular. These are —*•—*

and colored ribbon headings. _, * • ^**a pale blue cotton will t>e tnmmea aua » " ' " •—— _- -, -!,pe"rtaps,wlth black ond"wini5^tllli-ln —Among novelties -are^hUe-m?)*!^-;-rcheck; stripe or dot ' ' ' petUcoats with a flounce, reaching • t j .v - , ,

On White frock, every specie, tf the taj^jj-tegfad to color u*%*,

narh nVthri Be»lde9,enough for.you both.

her .father hasHe'll have to

sa»tlaue-^lf~the.w/^_Bhouldtappen^a modern ekyaoraperwouW unaerfp,<rto m' PI«a out with ah' even more re-'

tftUreji

keepyoujiotbj of course, if,be'» potto it. And he'd be sure to find you

to do then.'

1 ' A minister in New' Bnglanil has the-' audacity to suggest that ttere wUi be

• - baseball in heaven, Probably thinks' that It tho streets are gold the fields* Say be diamonds. But what will they~ • dolor umplresl_They_have all bee»,

-told to go to the other Mace.,

' ' A rich California lawyer has hireda'WOOO.pri***8 «•» t 0 t""18!10^ n U

- - net 'dog across the continent And* • " . . . . .».« AM. »«a4Qtf from h i s

i the freedom«na p f »»-»~ •«"« e u r h a

sees exercising his muscles in a free-— --for-ell-flgnt-or - luxuriously-lunching

on a ragged b'oae picked out of acasual garbage can. Foi* dogs are

"much like humans In the_way-of non-appreclaUon oj luxuries forced uponthem or procured without A struggle

, The census returns now coming in-- «toadUy~l*sverno dduUt that the coub-* try is growing -in populatfon at a

, rapid rate. The gains In some or-the• - i arewery notable, several of the

•"Sandy!""Leave me alone!" She spoke

childishly, petulantly, and her. mouthgrew sotty and hard". "I've been try-ing to forget all about everythingall this. Ume—lfB Just like you. to

line JM»d spoil emythlng-when-4-wa*CUU1O ?nil" i y w n ^ • »9 w m » w «••»•• w • 1. • ••

lieglnxdnsto take an interest in doinggood to others, and -finding somepeace ot mind. Ifs Just like you.'j •

"Jnst like toe? Oh, Sandy!"

flowere^"or°otherwise patterned jgoods I finished with a beading run with rib*will be used, and wlth-the exception boirof the Bamo shade.

DELICATE POINT AT ISSUE

'whether Gufct or Hostess 8houldsMake First Move for-Betlrlng

•—TJntll the end of time it win probably"be a mooted auestion,whether guest or

• J K u n a : wa, OBUU*: hostoBSshould make the first move for•JntWDto the batefulness of every* " ^ . ^ - • m t — l . » i - i - »When'staying-

one

place for a'girl to meet her sweet-hearten! J t Is really." _ t

Her'earnest voice brought *a lookof amated.delight to Minnie's dark-eyes. ' - -

"You don'-t think U'B wrong, then,m l s s T Y ! i u t t U i t m T " *

"Tell!" said, Tormentllla sharply,tossing her plait back. ,"l don'ttell.!l -J. „ " , -v ,,','' "Wish you mjty-dle?" , —' "'Wtshrm^y dIe?!!-fQ.rraenUllare-pcated in gurorised ln^ulryn—'- ——•

-'"Wish* you mdy die if-you tell, Imea'n," Minnie etplalned. "It's whatwe alwaysjBay about secrets.!' w •,,'

"Oh, .1 see. X wfslfTjfiay dle7intell, then." Tormentllto. didn't smile."Minnie"," she pursued gravely, jt'youdop't seem to. understand, Lovo laa beautiful thing, a sauedtthlng^ If

-you have a lover, and be' 1B true to-you, you ore the happiest girl in thewo*ia-.->Bon_* listen Hd anytiodytelse.^(ic^'to.'bfm'-ana marry" him whenbe nsks^yoUjjUnd^neVer, wtw givehim up.' - k v j^' t -

eyes grew radiant, ' '

^It'ifhows locali i iu ixn—A Btttdy bfitheit<'can*«B-vreturne^ must t help, i to,nUi>^>nv~Msslmtstio Ideas a t t o

>T'«Idoubt.iather-"nll aauce ifmy place," "sfid'she-glqomlly.^T p -

VJfever," mind, what your •fatfiersays?'* Tormentilla' pursued eagerly.."It's! 'your happiness.' hot hts, that's•^ »tio hoinnra " And vn%~sh1ii<i't lose

ISTSSC IPTpIwaysrhbiieTesunbecoming virtue, especially I? alover.--! can lay my handtfon a hun-dred pounds, which I'll lend you withpleasure It you'll only buck up."

"Can"you, Indeed?" His voice wasfull off rank envy..—"1-shBll love "tor-lend yon'a helpinghand," Tormentllla cried eagerly.She looked very Jolly, he thought, asshe stood there, her red llpsrparted.her brown hair Sung over her shoul-ders. • •

•'IVC.awfnlly.good of yon," said he.much flattered. "I'm sure I don't de-serve such—" , r—"{-woutd-help-any- lav-en." ,Tnfcmentllla said earnestly," "to take theirfate Into their own hands.'! I sddrecourage, and yon must put np withpoverty at first for each ether's sake.Think ot Audrey In a dear little cot-tage, with roses climbing up the**alband noddlngStbrough the windows.It's a beautiful .idea. love in. a oA-tage.OThtdkotJt.1?,. ( - < - 7 • V '

dldj think of it'yet oWotaly

•tamg.~~vtBKu • w-»»^»'-"™o^--~»-7-6i-8;Tiouseforttenrst ome uimysettin other tblags, and*eglnnlng rf ^ tt0Bt^|mcpit paints forto be happy again." _ _ • ' t"-1-4-M", ""•< » »«fc"« a treal

reproach In his tone infuriated her.reproach In his tone nHer egres Maxed.^, , . ,:

"1 ppose you think no or egres Maxed.^, , . ,:.r—.. f-

r "1 suppose you think no one couldpossibly be happy without you? Howlike a man! I waa beginning to think"of other things and other people.And wrap—now yon come-to Uallnderand wake op'all the grisly wretched-sesa ot •everything.' How lflce a

He plunged bis bands Into bis bigpockets and planted his feet far apartwith an attitude ot dogged determina-tion. - - - -.,., —. . • • "

"Look here. Sandy.-- he said, "youmirrtnt speak to, me like that., iwon't have ICTreaBy" woaf l -won' tbe honied. I will explain everything.You didnt give me a~chanee before.rve behaved llke-aJiouBdi bnt I ad-mitted that before, and I'm .ashamedto have to confess thaU dldnt knowwhat I was dpiiit-.1 ?o»t my.hjad.I can't ,«ndei»tandilt-r It's ».thingr te never done.before, in"my.life,sod yet I wasn't -dritnlc, And,"?ouknow what Dolly'-is—t, hadn't timeto draw baek-4o explain that r d ' - "

teet-ttni-dlsberament-to-correct conclusion, _ - . , '

In'the summer houae at country orseashore, the chances ore. If the hostgoes to town fof business every, day,that the trhofojiousebold i t up early.The hostess'Is certainly, "ai i rule, Ith*er husband is a business-man. Inthat case It Is nhnost essential thatthey go to bed early. Logical as thtoconclusion may seem, a guestjears tosnggest going too-early to-her ownroom, lest she should seem to be boredduring the evening, and thus It is,whin boUTreslly would like to turnin at a reasonable.hour, they and oth-ers: are kept _up by a desperate' at-

ttofbeji©Ute.tT-- . —any rule of procedure may be laid

-n for a stranger in the house it is".find" out, as "soon .as,.possible, atlat time breakfast ts served and.ten the.hoat goes to tows. Mt ls»8jJe method, U-he gpes^eariy/and'ea-xlally if breakfast Is served for aU

•^ an early^how,"to suggest retlrmKfcy tenrp*cldck at the "latest, -and inmore thanMnS household to the jram;W.the.'samitpsoHe.tfho, turn 'night

* ^ ' a * W 1 « t « t a « SBVI tn tnMl

aow,v ana^TBS.vBnjrjannKiiis Athe'door,-"-said'he sadly, y . . ,

L"Bread.|md.chees» aid. kisses!"'cried she to.enoodrage him.. ~ ^ . .. ".Water coming through, the rootandwris in the cellar," said bek - *, r*.'tfnTroo<marygu fcumanttanrItke an aid wdri(tinl"\TormenUlla wsjsKetUn^ImpaUeat^and <JnIck aeOpjaaetiok

any on* tesawt away; with Andrer

" marry\aer. like:» . » *—-Ubn^and a peirt-LavacythtBg iteeeaarr, and" " " •"'•-•• " r i t h e - ' m n s l e

MJ u u m H w n i o ^ * w^#4 i s't>a4M#tatSv • ta^

fled Ms hair'in untzemeui, rth«•glrtmustba^eraty" , ' '. , • • - , - - -

^"BefJIS-fH«d-Tomi«Utti to fctrlJ--',- - - • - »

TEA GOWN

3y iasqed iotho{ office n:™-WeTer-

, . formally-]pinventors at lei^ , It would B

•V--of them had I

boor.- H4- i to tnost -thins r»e ever done to xnyjlfe/j?^Tmsure I nerer lost my bead w»» s ^ i-•' Toneentina's cheetoi flamed." 'Shetamed on her heel and^watte*,-^

ac<Wn^^fflmHj»trang«» more harnesswpSar/thafl^^wertarn ,tk«i c6n»5|-to,<thei

ends "of ribbonaretitaken.fromth i t lbbh' >flt*Vf"

voice: *Ht»l-*J«t if . are4^ed fto>tax;i^tt^ ttTMgei;-iia&s;nojnc«toiiBHTe,v^''* *&JMW m-»i.i • nwifatia*

tat bis hjfirf»»e™ stflli* htoand he didna *•—•-» «"t*<"

fAre-Loiia))Jklrtt»l™t hi»*tJie v t

j^oi&Mx

fv.f.. - ^ j ' . T m.

* . • ( . /

r- <-{

* , .••«.

O J,' -W'A-- ; - * - . *

1^1• Li-.*'''-V A •ll*i+i'riv«.-i»«ifc. i-i — — , . , - . _ n- * i j r«i- «—r i.

T t

v

. - • - .

"V--** f ""

"OntO the day ofaaksrand Jb* shadows, dm away.**'

Rosedale^ LindenPark

- r ^

"York several, an4_s-man from Baltimoretiptoed Into the pati-ent offlce not,longago,, c a u t i o u s l ymade bis waV. to theofflce of the chiefexaminer of tbe air-ship '•' section, shuttbe door securely-and Informed the as-tonished examinerthat bis secret wastoo valnable.; to com-

Mr

F THE publishers of the,PatentOface Ouette ever conclude toadd a comic supplement to theirweekly edition,- we can supplythem with all the material with-out thejr having to hunt in otherdivisions."„ So spoke an official-In theaeroplane and airship section

writing signed by(ho bfficlal, not to

. ' divulge or take nd-v a n t a g e of t b e '

. . knowledge. Tho ex-\ amlner declined tho

honor," the • Balti-more man insisted, and upon further refusalwaxed wrathful,- whereupon the examiner calledthe> bouncer.

An Inventor la Highlands, CoL, recently ob-

Into boat, aeroplane or antwaoilSe.\rlth a rapid-ity that would arras* the envy of a, vaudevilleartist. . \

—This craftJa, operate! by wines, an* ~«rltli-*n\'<aeogtetltf taste characteristic of Brooklynlte* shehas fastened them on realistic figure* of\«blr<<-. Igriffons, angels and Untie Sam.- wnlchAsU. « taround the eaves ot the ship, -to rende* t> imachine attractive,- as ahe stated la her i W

' catlno. • m \'Oklahoma City, to show that the newest fc. \ *

Is also in the rmitac, sends a son of Vent" 1blind, the slats of which, being moved back ^forth by the aeronaut, caste him U, die swiftlyIn the air and sail away to faroff lands. ButBrooklyn, bent on Improvement, la a patent latelyobtained by a man from that city, baa addedfeathers to these slats, whether to aid .la -theflight or*"U> render the machine more attractive"the potent does not state,

_ Indeed, there seems to be an epidemic of airmIF"J° J'aper. and_ _ shlpjhugs. la Brooklyn, doobtieea escaped fromhence he hod come __ Mlneobv. Still a third flylacjaacalnp baskccntlyover to confide It to been patented by an Imagmative man of tbathis ears,-Which he town.- This one stands up In hta. If you vant towould do only after' fly In It, you plant your lect flrmty npon tbe platfa solemn plirfw la —form, grasp the Jointed rods that run from this

to the wings overhead, wcrk them briskly backand forth, so -as to flap the wings, and there you,are—yet! I%ient offlce experts estimate that IPwould tike forty fool-power to lift this appliancefrom the groundV <

A 8J. I/>uls Invention closely resombies a«clothes pin with the operator sitting between theforks. Where the bead of tbe pin would be is setsthe electric dynamo, showing, a contemptuous dib tregard for tbe laws of gravitation. The machineis moved by the flapping ot wings, which are

lained a'patent upon an airship that contains all ,. b u l l t °n the plan or the cellar door of childhood,the comforts of home. In tbo drawings it re- ' rht"> ** something realty unique In the patentsembles on enlarged picture of some nort_of a_ obtained by a Cleveland man. Tte device con-

when asked asv

_of_lnYfiniions_iiow_. being offered."i - ' / f o r patent In this line."Before Wright startled the country with his

),'-BJght ot more than one hour over herd at Fort

bug; with a row'or eyes along the "side and a 'rufflo down its back; on Inspection the ruffle re-^SIv!tl".".?" lnto

f&Z "WteMJ<inB.t!».unBen deckh-and the eyes Into windows of the various state-rooms on the ship.

The lace curtains _pf" each window oro care-fully looped back so as not totobscure tbe -view.A staircase leads down from tbo hatchway that

emetenes*CARQC8T IN THC'STATE /

Beautiful and Accessible«. .MiL.es

ILINDEN. NEW-JERSEYBU^ABBTH; v MILES PROM

14 MILES FROM NEW YORKNBWARK

On Main Line Pennsylvania RailroadWhy lots In these 'Cemeteries commend themselves to

Heads of .Famhies and Investors | 'BECAUSE of the 91,000,000 Truat Fund provided for by.the Trustee* In"eacir CemttftyTinr tnfoin«-Trem-*nTcn-<*lirT*»'p1i»-6|H ~

pstually beautiful at NO EXPENSE TO LOT OW .8.BECAUSE such a guarantee, not found in any other cemetery, aisures lot

owners thst the grounds WILL RE, MAINTAINED PERMANENTLY~A» BEAUTIFUL-PAlRKa^AFTER-THE.JNCOMK FROM

BALE OF LOTS HAS BEEN'EXHAUSTED, . . - -r

IQTS SHOULD BE PURCHASED HOWBECAUSE MORE ADVANTAQE8 APR 'OPFBRED TO LOT

BUYERS In a new; Modern ?ark Cemetery than in tnote eatarillahed' many yean and, In most cases, no provision made for perpetual c a n

without extra expense to lot owners. THERE ARE A QREATERNUMBER Of IDEAL LOCATIONS TO SELECT FROM, PRICESO P LOTS ARE ALWAYS LOWER AND TERMS MOREADVANTAQEGU8. < „

BECAUSE life is most uncertain and EVERY ONE 8H0ULRANTIC-IPATE THE INEVITABLE BY MAKING A- CHOICE NOW OPA FINAL REST!NO PLACE. a

LOTS WILL PROVE A COOP INVESTMENTJ8E they are sure \o increaae In value and can be purchased NOW

, INITIAL or LOWEST PRICE and upon the MOST ADVAN-TAGEOUS TERMSr - - " "

BECAUSE,tBe properties are ACCESSIBLE TO 4,000,000 PBOPLR,and considering the RAPID GROWTH OP OREATBR NEW TORKand its TRIBUTARY CITIES and TOWNS, it is only a question of m'SHORT TlMB wbeo LOTS in RO8EDALE and LINDEN PARKwill EQUAfc IN VALUEi'those of our MOST NOTED cemeteries.

LINDEN LODGE I«TH«,LARGEST, HOST tfODRRNand BEST EQUIPPEDCEMETBRV LOPOB In (ha country and provUad with KVERVxaqulalla fartke COM-FOftif.nd CONVENIENCE °< Lor OWNERS an! VISITORS who coma to fnaputtha propertlaa. \ ** *

F O R I N F O R M A T I O N cone«rrdr.rlwainthewbeaii»irul ParkCaroaleri..,a«4FREE tranapomtlolt to proipactiva lot buyRiT^pply at onc« to may LEADINOUNDER* A£ER or oljtcaa «Mh. A.iocl.llooi I

(.loom Lodge, Undait, H, 1. «*87 Broad Street, Elizabeth, N. J .

Prudential Building, Newark, » J,\ TM Bergen Aveniu, J^rtay City, N, J.

~ ' \ 10 WAt-aJil SlrtatV-NiW Vork Clfy.

, W 1sr

•' -clal, "there were not many applications ot thisSled. Since that lime, however, they have

steadily Increased, until now wo are getting themfn at the rate of more than ISO a week. They

' are now for ahead of all other kinds of Inventioni n number filed, and, J. may add. In freaklshness.

"The large majority offered are not allowed,in of these the public can know nothing. But

V| •'.lose rejected ones have Dy no means »a monor>-^«Hy as examples of an unique form of.lunacy.

| tV( .Many of those for which we are obliged to issue'patents would be -mighty dangerous evidence if

i V , 'offered lit court against the sanity of the laven-" •"tot." . - . - ' -

offl. — "West numsn-'may- alight without undue 'expo-sure dMlngerle. ' Everything man con want Is

,BhoWD, even, to the buffet—that Is, all except themachinery, which 'Is probably la the cellar of thecraft with tbo laundry tubs and the furnace.

A ban of Bergen, N. J., has patented whatlooks like a large metallic box turned upsldodown. There 1B no bottpm In It In the sidewalls ore circular- nnnnlng? nnAJn-ih/inn . ~ r~ •

ns, which suck tbe air into the box. Tbo

Blsts'of a- cigar-shaped S"*"C touch like that In T-the Baldwin or Zeppelin ainhlp. Around. It, from Istom to stem, rnns^a spiral lh^,or Tsne. like the

""Inroad's od" a" screw-r The aeronaox sits oa a"saddle suspended below. When the machinerises into the air he propels himself by operatinga pedal which "revolves the gasbag. Toe-fin orvane, thus revolved, bores Itself (orough the airlike the propeller of ah ordinary aeroplane. Thisinventor 'carries along a sort of aerial bathingsuit with auxiliary flying atlactaent. whereby hemay disport himself la tbe great air ocean above.

No one can gainsay the foresight of the "im-provement In airships'" c a d e by a resident ofHot Springs, Ark. Tbe first eUiai_l3_hl»-jiatentla that bis balloon hi so cooslrocted that if itbursts the

SAFE

aeronaut sits In a Car suspended from-the box.•When the Bergon man wonts to fly be turns

tbe power onto his fans; these pump air into thebox. It can only escape, downward, .and tbe reac-

, tlon from this•AK-mspe«fon it rnumbeToTtJie"palentsTrite-~" "'opwardrfciUsTng-1

- • - - specification.An flipfirt of the patent offlce figured out that

| q 6 p a B Y e"3y iisqed io-those aspiring to-soar shows that tbe

tftafs^nf nfflpQ man trnow \ybttt ho ~ wnB i

faot that-heated,"But." he

formaUynpatented,~and that II had "cost the o l machine and aeronaut would blow a hold In^Inventors at least f 100 apiece to obtain such pat- - t h e ground big enough to hide an elephant What

- i^snta , It would seem,' from examination, tbat many happens to the unfortunate hero who sits belowl£{ -of them had been trying to perpetrate a prac- l n t n o t»»th of this tornado will probably be toldg«- tfcal Joke on tb6 patent office officials. ' * . in the supplemental application recently filed.

> '-"The wildest flights of whimsical imagination A «enlus from Clarksville, Tenn., would flyJcannot reach beyond some of the crazy comblna-

ffons,recdr<}ed'as*'airahlps and aeropUtnes in the 'Washington archives. Could the claims .made

ne. of the fathers to'these'weird fciacnlneailly-reBlizedptbe magic carpet of Prince'

and'tbe fabulous rode of the "Arabian'lights" would hide their, chagrined heads under

• bedrOnd go but of the 'flying business.t jWhat adds"'t(rjhe-grotesque'humor of these

"•-patents Is,that their claims are all couched in-WrlcUy-solenUfic^Janguage^readlni: like-a-report—;|«t ah aeronautio'Boclety. v '

i the strict "attention, to minutest detail is

W P R I C E .SOLD AT ANY PRICE.

and form a parachute whereby the aeronaut maydescend sately to the earth." Thi» Is-crcaaiendedto anxious mothers whose s saU boys hare theairship bug. - - ' -, ,

A Boston lnventcr cphcUs tbe reputation of

ft u«hthaiaeoto»tt}jafc.cr CUJCJ tn&lror inflammable material as a receptacle for suchair In balloons and airship*.- He remedies thls_by substituting therefor a "large cyHlide* ot«>rofrl i h t l g g y d * t«>rofrlight metal preferabfr aluminum,- as his speclfl-

Thai benefit Is thr'ooiisuiner'i, , .The Blade Is of* the finest •teal, aolen<

tlflcally mddo and tempered byr

.luanslngj railings.to irevenf the passenger from--falling.over Of tba scenery, >muffs to keeiT bands'

lifears warmxwblle soaring, through, tbe- (eratT^des of .the "upper "atTi,comfortable sleeping . /

f l l 1 d l t h i t h t th

wings filled with llQuld air. The release of tho •air through valved vents, dewnward. and' back-ward propels him upward and forward. There "are no eyeholes"in the casing, "but,1.! naivelyremarks the inventor, "the air pressure fromv

without wilt enable'the aeronaut to "determine if,dtrectlpn," which is rather a vogue'sort of com-pass,. .; /• "• i

^=^J*onvgay -Paree-comee-Bdouard 'Wulffr-Drffh^a -patented scheme for flying by means of "eagles,vulture* or condors." True to tbe instinctsof his native city, he fits, out hls"! birds with "cor-"sets," the specifications of which as to trimmings,binding, etc , are carefully set out.

B, Ssantmlklosy, from &dapesL Hungary, also

seoretprocess..and the blade, of pours*,-Is the Impor-

m « - i , « — . . i taB*P;i"tof • n > " " o r . The frame Is of satin finish,Bee hia name In the toner a * £ ^ 7«rt I S ^ I ""»•' P'*»^. •"» r'singl.d" eorreotly for safe|

-bullds-aHlre-ln-tMs-fur^er-TMs beats tb«"r4-'u I e k-"n < f «?'"n •hWl«g- Ths lough beard.d manin the aluminum cylinder, the tcated air rises, i ™*u tMm R " x o r * b o o nJ l h » *oft" H«"«le< mantaking along cylinder, furnace and man, and away [>fi*as '* • f •»•'»«• J'hese Jblade* earl be strapped,they go? This principle, atceonUhg to-a patent! Buy ,pn» and you will recommend It to all yourofflcs man, explains why many boilers go up with Mends. That Is the best test of any article,furnace and engineer, ^ ~~

An Qmaha, Neb , man shows a western predl-Iectlon"-for firearms by {rimming the rear of hisy f s

. airship with cartridges. ^Tfeen these are explodeif^ ^ f i S B j ^ s a s e ^ toJdl t h h t h

jawi&uei OIJOI upper nri .comioruL __ ,___1twds;carnfully1mrranfed.-wlth springs, so that fbe< baatpatented a bird-driven airship,'bat limits his

ftot .alighting ,w«Ufot Jtwa a the. folks, tela- motors to docks; why ducks is not set forth.)pe* arranged onrsw|vels at cobtenlent 'places < - Of'course Chicago has" "t Tshy be* castor I

i to^e_dxlvefi through the_lsir to Ms desjtlsatloa with neatness and Ji^p*'^.the exploding cartridges ieadfaic a toowUxe jdrto the surroundings. When his. cartridge* s reexpended he Iqads her tip- «ga& ms one would thechambers of a revolver.

With so many bizarre atrahlos ta cmbryd lnher midst. Washington had to take s band. Toemaq. of the capital' goes coe better than the Ar- ]kansas Inventor mentlooea. who tnrns Ida. "bust'ad" balloon Into a paracbate,\ Thla maTs sir-

n o o K BOMB,

l^JiWdil'^lacidIr/raj,d fwm^water'to ,*lr, Without dlstfarhtn.- the I Z ^ • U™ »"water to sir, irjtliout disturbing- the r again. more hannotrma; be

This ship ate; has « Intel attacfcmeM, wlfttwelve rooms-te the drawtaes, a ts propelled"

lias been^ aluminum bonstogB.''<ao that ladles* skirts will

not become entangle!/ He too; provides all man-ner^of coinfort* on board, each: one* peinfuuV dt>'tailed In the piatenf. ~ ) \ ' r ">

- ,- —- 'JP^P*,' "'" These **e but a'fev of that freak parentala parting flirt of Us.,!/* lately Issued for airship, and seroptaaea. tat they,

nearest - •< i)(e enough ta'eoavtnce tnr feventor that If fts>''»«=r"i"^a>LJL-'-'B" hwrf l )> w a n l s to-ntiag anytUoj; norH JOB the people'.:;*?• H S ' - * ^ Brooklyn In'the line of .hand-made btrds of bttnfea he's sottn^in-E.. 4 .- .^_. inven to "••*—~ ~i-»»— • — J - * « - •<. ±JZZiZZ.7zr,

change as

y m ^ ^ i eifin.mutatiott;LmtaftaTalwaya counterfeit the genuine article. - The

•genuine ii what you ask for,Jbecause genuine articlesare the^advertisea ones. > ImitatJon«,arB pot advertised,butdepend iorvtaw'bu»iness on the ability otthe dealer

in postago stamps ,.or eastf-brlngi it "

by mairinprepaida speolal box

Ah Imitation Takes For ItsPatternTttie R&9I Article

TsAtaLjnou 8B^ for ttargemiine; becatue, ha'makes =mon! >"profit ontJieimitatk)n.'"'Wj^Jac<^^ta^ri^Vh%n 'you can get tl« genuine by" insisting? ;,, .. > \'-,.,;

Reluse Imitations^For!

l-V- .i

;iV is-: - •" , ri , "•> '4" ~ * ^ - • "

f^r •>>,,'

p . . , • * '.

' J '

"''**": 1 , i

• ' • \ ,

-"% 4

* . , : • j i _ l ^ - r * - '' ' 'i ' j____Ik._._^_'_io^.*_f

THETB01ID4T1I

0III2EI,

Daisa ATSMB, .

GtaaJMUcr.

To serirre publication, ctwtmuniea-fbldtuepaHUdbfttouiWMtfbttlgmedortueompaHUbf

lag wr««r»-mo»« oa a guarantee of

K

BotoaghOo6adrwaab*rd laHall on-Tueaday eraning,' Mayor HOUMandOoanoUmenflutcbiDOT, Nltsobke,KrtttU and Johnson .being- present,- -A

IUUOD signed by ten property ownersla New Orange Park requesting tbatNewark Avenoeftorn Ihe power house

4comantwirnttgM <w > jr /g*nmli*Urr$ttoikepeopU Of Crwford but doem mot thertbi 7u*nat« a»»

ftopuioaM vaicfc-«*ajr— 6«

• - t , TIU7BSDAY, BEPIEUBEB 8.1910

Tmr*d#AH.vs.All the. members of the Township

1 Comnuttee Wtnprejeot atmeatingvat which little but routine bus-iness came op. For the Italians,of

- - -Cranfprd. N. Eoltdom ftppbed for per-- nut. tar boh) a parade and eelebntioB-

willj ttreworks in the craning on Octo-ber lSth in honor of Christopher Colum-baa. This waa (rranled subject to ap

of the polire committee as to' where and how far the celebration la to

W. A. Shaw presented a. protest.. ™.s«-sln9tihe cjoein* ofjha East Lmooln• avenne crossing which be understood

to be part of the 'imposed undergradeorosuxttr East of tbe river. In- the dls-

1 cuaaton following tbe-Wilnweoua oon-dlt^na fltiUiniii}? at *lhia crowing werefully goo* over- sc«? perfaspa some -peT-maasnt good will result.Z New eitlewalka ordered-at |tbis meet-ing were for Orchard street, bolt) sidesfrom HoHy street to Weal End , Place.8. J. Cox was granted permit lo buildgutter culteit for dnraway. Intereston delinquent taxee waa fixed at Iweitepercent. L A. Jossellwaa appointedinspector al tbe nominal salary of $100't i look over the street wiring of tbe

~~ Electric tyght and Telephone oompanlea. Juasell spoke of the rerf bad conditiona about town and mentioned oneplace at Clsremuqt and Prospect areawhen leaning against a tree be received

_ a abode.

graded «sa read by lbs clerk, acceptedand a co/nmlttas tp'aot ss appraiwra ODtb« work will be selected aad appOtntwlt the next regular meeting to October.

The ordioaooe"regulating tht salsr/ otlhsAsaBakorat«47tipd th* OoUeolort »2Qb per jresr.ln llea Of all ezpejpses,hich passed first and second readingn Auy. 2nd, was paaaed. at the #flsl

readlnftoUkaefloot J«8. 8. Ruth, H. It. Pinkel and W.Antro-bus were appointed t« serve m ^wallcoommltleeon the- adjustment ofthe aide walk aessesmenta on the gOUftreeLflagstona side walk. T 'e High-

way Committee were empowered to empowered to employ David Stain to mowVbe weeds and. olesn up along all tueprincipal ur*et« in the borbugb,.' Anassessment of $76,000 on a shipment ofpipe, In the possession of, but not own-esV'by tbe- A«eriOood«>ulM™tiOom

2 9 i tidd

Post Office Notice..By direction of tbo fust Ofllos-De-

partment, tbe atlmtlon of patrons.6ithe Crsnford iMUifflp* U Invited! to tbeadvantages of providing; facilities for thereceipt ot their mail by erecting coovenlently accessible boxes or cutting suit-able slots In their doom. Such actionwould enable the'postmaster to give aprompter and better delivery- servicewith the means at his disposal, since

. th* oarriers can coter ranch more tern'tory in less tine if not compelled to waitfor an answer to their ring. Private're-ceptacles for mail are «lea a great ooo.venienoa tb ths householder, obviatingthe necessity ot responding u> .the car.rial's call at loeoaveweot momenuuuidpermitting the SBfe_deliTer*/ of mail intbe abaenee of members of thatiou<te,-holcU They also preTeot the/occasional

-necessity-of-ahia route without delivering mail be-cause of failure to answer his ring witlvIn a reasonable time, and enable him 1make deliveries to patron* living on or

.naarthaend op'toe route-tionr> l^i_

II has been abown.% aeTiisl experi-ence that the benefits) derived by pat-rons of city deKfery from the use ot

==BOcbvr»oep^aelea far outweigh the smallexpanse Involved. A* this office is in-Xensted in furnishing the best possiblelerrterar-thwleaatptiaaee with tho foregoing auggeatioos

-will he miw»h appreciated.Nome—Neither, the postmaster no

any ot bis aobordinaten is authorized toact an agent lor boxes, bat Ihran may beaeeured from or through Uwi kwal hard

" war* dealers.. ^4

There was* a good aUeodaaee on Moo.. day at the gntt>1groas>de and the various•T.DU Were*very inlerWing. BesiiWthe golf and tennis jraaara, a social" timewas arranged by the Ladies CommitteeanddUringtheaTUmoon Mrs. Vf. M.Bserry acted as nosfroa in clubhouse,A

- In tbe golf contests handsome prizes'were awards* tbe winners. " W. H.•Haysarwon the par hanaica]i contest.Tbs priza,VSB a grass vase. Edward

" Wild and Miss HilUn- roc the mixed-fonraoassv Tbs prizes were a.sirving

p l a n 'S . J. O a . with an arerege of'j99Dyardsv won the drl»iog/«)mpeUtiofl

spoon fa th* eroenan and a cup to theIth an averageriting/compelit

'"wot)A. EdgecOntbs.aqd

twsta closeaeoood ana

oa lbsl^delaafllng T. Vrana'sVl

iVSLr d EiVSLrn J. Estea"iSSSH

a man' tothree of TilsIlk*'to i's-iiii>

KENILW0K1H NOTES.,

serrt-on the petit, Jurr for The

l, was addedthe tax duplicate In Elizabeth, sub-

Beuueot to its approval by, lbs OonnoilCompany—are protesting,

against the payment ot taxes on thisshipment which was sent them throughmistake, the Finance Committee gnfiAssessor were instructed to be -presentat tbe. bearing before the County TaxBoard and gusrd against a possible re-"duction ot *37S from tbslr $6,800 budget,in tbe event of ths American Circularl/>om Company securing tbelr reduc-tion, ^ h e Collector's report showed sbslanoeon hand of $412.82 and bills .tolh« amount of 965 were "approved andordered paid, Tbs report also Showedthat $790.^ had been rooelved fromColon Township ss" the apportionmenin the Sinking Fund, as peTssttiemenieffected at the time Kenllwotttra Through; also that ths Countybonds amounting to »2,559 with *interest had been paid. -/

8kool wilt open for thsJfall termnext Monday, tbe 12tb. Toe following-instruotois will be m-ziwurge, all ot

id. Prlnoi-

Notlce'ot Sin.'ofJOB -C

will supply them.

a. wwthaTown-

A t « M a)B AkUaanything up to one thousand

Mas elesUan. district

„ . It will not only work in factory,but it can be utilized tb\ advantage inof motor trucks and pleasurevejucleg.

Central station power is dean,

convenient.*" It uses per floor space

energy. It is always ready am) is

than steam. • '

oeMOjMMtKiUaa OtatAet |o tto.

A a u t i o u Cqpcnto Co-. Ux dot M4.t 'BI7

a d s and wife,. Uz do*asW. ~- -v

Ux doe WcU. Lot 1«.

t a i . d ? . tUW LuU2,I.

i i ,J lr . ltuda*- |I«) . Loui

a ro, pn lou i , i , m » .doe tf

B*0.lot

Notice of Primary ElectionB03OUCIH OP RBNll,\VORTH.PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY

Bcbunakt. taidUe tMJft HoojiloU»J8pta« l , ia , 10 BUS.t E B l d

whom have beenpal, Joseph E. Bosh^Mlasss JosepbinElAroy. Mary Gee4nd Helen D'Aroy.

Lawreocef,FJ(ordsttom has resumedbis duties ss/olerk in the post ofBoe1

after'a twofmonlha' absence In EastB£'I.. during wbloh tjroi

ha wasXtetoher ID'S parochial sohool.Yesterday was tbif.openlngjiny al

TJwMa College. s.nd a number ot thiinner Btudenta have returned to oon'

ot students who are new to the oollege.Tho teaching force haa been strength-ened by ths engagement ot additionalinstructors and the school -under theleadership of Pror. A. R. Wallin baa

" ' L oLhnving a sucoesstulyear.• Prof, and MrVF. U . Eranlf returned QO Saturday from Orompton, BI., where they have Bpent thefiumtner.

Prof. L. A. Lnwson arrived in towcon Tuesday after a two months' en. tament as-a t,esoher In.ia.achobl in Pjrbvidence, B. I.

GARWOOD NOTES. ^Th'oV. M. VTiO.basebullnine ploy-

ed • tie game with the WSst Ends siNorth Plainfleld Friday attsmpon. Theaobreistootni toTTat*'tE«rend oFtEsmath inning.

" " " -the Hankes of Bllzabeth, by a score o7 to 0. at Garwood grounds Saturday.

Assessor d H Beadle and < familyhave returned from a vacation seasonat Asbury Park. ___ _-_'_ :_

W. Bogaski and Al. Stutnpf hareturned trom-a vaoation in Oonnsctlout.

Tho portable Bobopl house la now s1

1ar«ood and is being put up on thischool grounds and will be ready for^hKindergartMi class on Monday. "'

Mra.~Harry Henry ot New York cUjlsBpepding two weeks with her sisterMrs. niotiBrd Watt.' _ ^~AlseesoF0fiifl5r6r BsaSIs hastnrnsd boms from a twoTveelts-visit alAsbury Park.

Mrs. H. M. Bull is spending a,weeka( Aabury Park. _ .'

Miss Alice M. riternstt ot'Ne>ffaven.CnnnT, has returned to her borne, ," itt. Q. KjeUmsrk aqd, family tiave'paved'oo^pruee sVe.' from Orantord. ^

The' ClKsens J^esgue will meeV.Fnda:lgbtatBritaUallfcf^aOp.rn. ^ ;Ths JefferwiTSohool reopen oo'.Wed

oekday wUh;en lllisaWllismaon charge of, tbe

lai Brodlsbn,;theHrstgradefMiss sfsollenry, 2d.*nd 3dKtsdA; $$$£*&

Cranford Canoe OubThs regatta of she branferd Canoe

(Hub on Labor Day was largely attendedand the affair brought tasny visitors lothe town. It waa rut/under tbs rotesot. tbe Mew Jsrsij/Oaooe Association

nd was woo b^tbe Oranford CanoeOlub, whlob sooted 34 points. UlblgbOuoosClubseoxed 13 points;' PalisadeOaooe Olub^tJsrsey City, 9 points, and

Canoe Olub, of Bayonne, 3points/ By scoring tbe greatest num-ber ofpointa .the Oranford Oanos Olub

Umber, I»io7at U. The BepobUeaa

beapearnmaBstoBlaeP.al. Hembenof theOoontr Oeaualnee wUI a* eWud trom eachl i d i r i t l th l Xb A t

Ooontr Oeaualnee wUI a* eWud trom each•lection district la the oral*. Xbs mmAer atdalexBtei to each coimotloB to which the m*

Oeaualnee wdistrict la the

dalexBtei to each coimotloBdjtMUMStisaneBUUsAsveaa

the handsome oap put ap by thevernors ot the club ss a prize for Ust

score. The result ot Monday's reffatt*leaves tbe. N«w Jersey Assooiatbn pupwltb.Klhlgh Oanos Olub, wbloh' is elilltwenty-live points ahesd ot Orantorda^b. Tho events resulted ss follows:,-' Oae-<jusrter-rnlle . slniles — Won byEric Anderson, U. 0 . 0 . ; A. B. See,0. 0.0., second.. ~ '

One-qunrter mils tandem—Woo byA. B.*and J J , Bee, 0. a : Brio Ander-son and Foster Smith, TJ. 0.0,,Nssoood.

Tho quarter mile fours—Final baa.won by Brio and Ernest Anderson, Fos-ter BmjttLand Brti.HunUr, V, ,O. O.;A, B. and J. B. Bee, V.Bakar and W,H. Wagstaff, 0. 0 .0 . , seoond^ .*

Tilting match—Fifiat heat won by D.Dsggittaod.iB:. W.' Smith. O. O. 0.; 0.8. Edneoumbe and T. J. Nolan, ,V7. 0 .auwnnnJ.Hurry sourry rsoe—Wonby>H.Winok"

lor, 0. 0 . 0 i 3. Brown, P. O.O., second?Louis Cnsssll, P. 0. 0 , th.ird,

tiwlmuilng match) 100 yards—Won byA. 11. Krohne, P.fi di H._Widokler,0. C. 0., second.', _* 0. A. Qardnsr. V. 0 . 0 . , was rateree jJ. Bremner, O.O.O, starter, and I.'V.8. Hlllier, B. A. Msrshall and W.*_t.Welah,- fudges.

Standing onno« race, 110 yards—_Wonby 'Pi.Psgflltt. Prito, a oanofpsjldla.'A-program ot eventa for email boys

and boys tn tbe High school was run offin the Warning heginmog at 10 o'olobk,J. PotteT and W. Helneoke acted asjudges. J. Plummer waa referee. Thseventa resulted as follows:

ahsr and Fredbipk«resta •

O tt

Hstns. Prize, oanos

p 1 3 7 ^ t

One quartet mTle singles-Won byKsnnetb Jones. Prize, a medsL

One quarter mile doubles—Woo byFranois Hansel and Kenneth . Jonss.

Backward race —Wo6 by. FrankChamberlain. PrlseTa osnos cushion,

Tilting match—Won by Wilbur Mae-Connell and W. Bell. Prize, fishingsotal - " ^ \^, J '•*_

Standing on'gnnwals race—Won byWilbur MaoOoonell, with Obsrlea Gilmore'ln osnoe. Prizej^Bteel^lshicg rbd.

Hurry Scurry Bace—Won by Fred-

W.Bell.Maond.- Prlzs a canoe paddle.

watob._ Swimming matoh. 60 yerda, for l^ighsohool boys—Won by W,Bell. - Prize, awatch. F.H^lM^seoond; . .' Wsr canoe raes— Won^y 6. Beves,

a Hopkins. W.Oakey and F. Hsnsol,Prize, a watermelon. ,

. A Handy Snuffbox.' >4 curious stpry^ls^oia as to how theKothsebJlds 5 supported Carols, toncomposer. 'The Jitter tras, far-,fromrich,-.'Hid j>rlu«lpnr, Incomejtas d«-l a from a snuffber. • And this' was

frlrea from a snuffber. And t athV tray ot lt:"wTbe «uuffho«-was glfebj b l t •'Tj.-.nthmi-d Tallin-

as arBrtrnii JHUim qp-Rotbfelilia,of eSfeem^Oarnfa wlaT itf biturs"'-latcr.Cfbr ,7&>tiia

; trim"POfafwlln »^i •• *a*^f ji^w'"^eT^v7"^^" -"""™wf i r T "—

•Vhani'lt'ifeil, been^-bofcsht^TuufMi,crme^knowu totlioi;h*ciilld,who gave.It agttlo"16*lhenii^lqlau bu tbe foll6w^Ing year, fl'he^ext a«j lft returned ,to

rthe' iew*lerrs;5^I!l!?i"twfflc (cootlnw "" loni

Rqj«b8c-«s. Atteatioa!the Bute OMntBiioa *m be held IMTvtof*

iar3w»>l>»7i*7n*a:~i^oua^rui

OntaiDtaveatkio. Omns | tkn

I"

' (B^sefl) RANK SfrOT- Cbalnuta Untoa Ooast#

fiepabuwJAMM E. WAMIKB. 8ea iUiT. sefciu

11ABTDT SCBATU,oamroBD. _OAawooj>.

ScKafer & Neumann.

c o n D , a jBaUmwto.twntaheaoolUehMw.ol wort

Yard-ljforth Ave. and Maple,Sfc

Te^phooe 165J.Oran,foroVDuring the week brginniqr. with the

matinee on Monday attamoocLTher vSb, there wUI be a « # L

weirbaUMed pncraaa'js:rtfflaos Theatre,.torJlew-

srk. ^^twineaaUtoa odmberarai.tba, bmwUl biooo'ortbe big Lsskey sesbio"aQ.mosiosl .prodnetloni^tt< la^enUtlfi,"TbSAThotui8oop"a«Mj;ia • Tiot oprettyf.girts, -beautiful ooetuoias;, and,t ^ S lb B

Made a w at follow*!ThnCoenitiei* of tbe (tenets! AfcmnbljT from

tbe Cimxi of Upton, • „ _ *A oSroser tor tbe CbuntT of Vnlon.O n I M t n t c to the BepaUkas OonimilonalO ^ W l t U th DaapcniUo~Cbs<fleik>iialto the I

''OoeDehwats to the Republican State"Uon-mtlon..One Deletate to the Pemoeratle BtaU Oon-

A nKmopr of the Board of Ct»«en Fraeholden.Tiro Oouncilmen tor three jearterm, \ABorourn Oolleotor for three rear terra.AHorourb aawawr fi)r three rear tem»AJnatloaotthePeace

~A.roundkoe(ief ~~ h < ' "-One Manner of the Bepubllcan Countr OonvOne Member of the Democratic Conntj Cora-

mlttea. ^ 'TbepolUwUlbe 9pen tram I o'clock p. in.,Tb.polUwUlbe 9 p n t

vnUlf o'clock p.m.The Board of Retbtrrwll)

Umeaad place (or tbe puipoThe Board of Retbtrrwll) neat at the u m e

Umeaad place (or tbe puipoeBof addlDS* balnea.-e^-^-ssUt^gJ^fW^SDated Annut 90. Mitt. - Boroogh Clerk.

OARWOOD BOROUflH.Notice of Primary ' Election and

_, Reflstratlon. | _^ "Totbtkcal voters ot theBoroufh of~aarm«l:

MoUcali Imeby siren that the Board ofBeaittntion and Election In tne Boroach of

TOBaDAYTSCrTBHBEB W. IHl)between the hoursof one and nine n. m., at theBoraurh Halli on South avenue, for the pur.pose of maklnc a ncbtrallon of voten.

Hollos Ja tin btrebj siren that aelsctlonofdelawtaitatbeBUte andatonal oMTeatiou and candidate" for tbebamtaaMr-asmad will be-feeld In the polllncplaotahoraMtforth o s the date amt-between•the hi 'Bhoun

TO BE FILLED. .UoHed state. 8.Three Hembenof Genera) AKMnblr.A Member of the Board, otchoeen Fhwholde

jrlotte E. Bmnlw, tax iloa Ml. UOUH and

iiwirl-liiuvi, tail dustj ill." l,ot »* B I*. ™7^"".^nobert'U HoXlalna. tat du» 111 ill Hlooai' '—1

and liite l«.ai, B11. - - -Uonart A. UcAdaon, tat -dne $1 iW Lot IS.

B74. . - , ^ , i>AlttetfA. Tano,taxdneH» liuute and lot ' " i

Lot 1188 BSU.. friak Vaunt, tax dneSgeL-.Ausuat tbrahanuon, tax flaa t> JO UiU 471,Loolaa II. Curtla, tax do. t»JO, DOOM and

lotU. B S t ,Nloouu Derlto, tax due (U. Home and lot

On onjarenuecorner Lincoln annne BrT>Thomas Moore, taxdn.WjM. LoU1.2,pU «,

B. Williams, t a i ,11 acne Lexington sTenosB. UUt. 4.

HoawandWwtartalti

ALDBNffSKOTlONAUred Atommun. tsirdlM (ISO. Lots 1181,

118S. BUI. t. GHeBojuutelii. tax duett eti. Lot 408. £118.

O.B. DeUaroo, tax due II80. 1*>M 407, 4W.B ltOsr "*•

Oeo. B Dnnh,taxdile|li.'liokil8n to 1B81.Bias.

Uora-*. Orasber, tax dn. 1160. LoU 017.018H in. , " j , —

H.A E. HtanWh, tsx due » cU.—Lor 14«>.H 14V

I K K , Btaauacb. tax doe SIS). Lot. 14W,Ual, 1 * , UUU, »14« » .

All rtoTe deeorfBtlon. |according to "Tax

UNPAID HEWEK»AaSE88MKNTB DUEYBAR180S.

Charlee VanDeirer- aaa't due S10.M. Block

Em°l' Lofnten, an't doe I51W. Block 171,

"wilbnrT'.Kldsewsr.aa.'tdas. 155.90'. 9lock

Wlfbur T. B i d s m r . SM't doe I B 90. BlocfevTbeabovrdewriptinu secorduis; to"8*mr

AHMment Maps." , .UNPAID SIDEWALK AME8SIIKNT DOB

.811a. ptoit.a«Jt(dns MM. Hqrtt Afsaae.

X.k;i

amo trie to Allanyr-»ad other points.

Collector. •Tirollouncrlmen for three yean. ,On. DelecmtetoCongraaifonu ConvniuonOne Member of the Benubllcan Countj Com-

mittee.One Member of the Democratic Countj Cam-

bllTFire Memben of the Local Bepnb!BxeentlTO Committee. ,

' ' .notice ii-heirtu livCTKthat a Oaneral.on wUI be held on Tuadai , the

day of NoTember, l»10,at which timeU l M l t d t flll-tba aboin.Auiinented

WILUAK DABBOCB,Dated Aurost 90, IHO. Borons Clerk

Bank ReReport ot the'xondl

rtQ ot the

CRANFORO NATIONAL BANK,NO-T17I .

at Cranford in thefitate of New Jersey,at i the close, of business September1,1910.

Resources:Loam and flfajeonnta. . . . «144,gM.48Onnlimfta. aeoarad and omMOred-.P . B.Bond».to»ecui'o circulation. - . . a.OOOXO

BanklagDMiM, fanntare"ancT"fiit5re».Doe Irani NaUunaLBsoks (not reaarre

acente)

RotX ol other National Bank... . . .Fractional paper ennencf, nickala,and

WXSp

i,«»56

Ifer and VorMt, 48 ten.mud be mads before tin ennolnaton

- tbctrSqmmerTac1 Vr tt Wagstan-; tlon with a Boche:

JtTor that placef'Harry PHtz, whol h Bhrhardt'a H.

, /paratiooa to opm- _ Anchor- fbst Woib

Tuoooak A, CaAiia. - -

/Aug.is w.- Ad».re*,Hue. '* *""•?!•BHEBIFF'S HALB-In I

eer- Betmen Katheli_ . ,nlalnant, and John l^Moore et al, cFt fa tor •aleof mortcagivl tra rises.

ilrtne of the aburntaUd writ of fieri— j a t o me directed I shall a i p o u tor aala

t'ourthouM in the Qrtv of Bltaabsth, N J..4>nWKDNllBDAy.THinWESTy-ElCBTH i l l *

Of BBIT'KMBEB.A. D 1810,at two o'cloefe In the afternoon at Said day, all

— or parcel of land, and vting and being la the Townint the Coantr of Union and

Jiatanthelnt

it in ths nortaweatariras laid oat en,

Idabf rioora«d in l b s ' ,-. ncountri New Jersey,)

— l a n d ntenti 'Siefeet fromof the northwMterlj line of v

va* a. *v* .aauauji uX

_ premises and < cud-, atone for sale re. Joseph Holland. Pi( ; Aag.Qrube.ot L

force, kit. for Atknesdsjr lo completealso expects to al

.SConventiou^Ij^fcsissaslorfth^re.' OwrtCranfonl ?J

uj^-' planning for anoihcthe evening or "Sep

i members will be adi.fv A-<larKe attendaco

redandttalu" B*_ _ aTeadt oat han-

thiuww •oattiWMtarlj*

Bedentptionfond with O. B. Treaanrer9 per cent, ot clronlation U3&00

' « TOTAl

Liabilities.k paid in.- . - ^

S4U.U1.U

BU. lew expense, and-•»» •*< „ « , , „ , „ , ... .«•> M i I&tS2S>7Lnotes outstanding--.-- .i4,40OM

to athar Nationa. BMQICBH.............On* to BUta and Print* Oaulu and

2,012.07

One W TraaiiOompaalM and Baring.1,719.11

47US4.W

t-r ** aT?32sai

(mm

•nd-thenc* «Mthexarenne one hnnond

to the poiaterphuie of 'BOBBBr •

L i M IEBT & Isnt» 8tM •

— Surrogate's Notices,DEr-

I T. BUTtft,fy ivvaHvuvi a»aaay-Main i ilf]lsW#- Hisjomim^ Ut BaW'JIceued. notice UharebrsiTOrto th . oredttomeald dectaml tosxhlbirtotfaenibecribarvan-

r:1?-anlrmatlonUwu-claim, or demand. .

ladeeesa** within s i n sr-ninutdarot Jane 1910,^be firetiFfiifredfrom

r t h e a i s t hths -ES Broad N.w :

yq*that'data, when >

ij amendments w the'discussed.

I being pushed ra* « » . , These hou

baa each, trtth''other improvp

|Boi-eon«tracUon Is design 13 nnusaa

A Republican ral^spiowofthe local IKitlvp committee sill IC'aoditoriam at Ganr>4t 8, o'clock.

r- r&\>UP THE HUDSON

8PEOIAL EXCHTRSION

itSNeiWEDNESDAY

TJntll September 14th, lnoluslve.'iVU NEW JERSEY CENtRAL

' -", and"Albany-Day Jana Str,/' "'•

.DireoUonnertlonatJCTe7.atT'»*-"^t

tCranford, wiU addressL local Icaadldates

a ontae localaitt

> been:

t,Vv

iiBS1

t*r> bm!•ortion oti | walled, tat thiit

_ i _ _J.-»_-cJi^rl.. ;' , . » _ , Jv i 1. * '-•'* ".'*•!**; L" " *"*-• = -

~lmiT.

, ;4 ,

' , I

, > • / . — :

„ • ' ' " ' • • • - - , / ' r ' '

' = — ± " - 7 f '•.: ." ,",;-, '• • ; , • , " ' ; ' . • \ .

'>•':• '-'-'.'. - .— .-•-----•.— v'-;• .:.•. :... '". .-: t-r-nzr- -

' •¥'<&•>

' f '

' • " , ' .<

•Ha

. ; . . - • ' - ' , - -

' i(t. ' :

• . • • ' . £

- - - - - - ' * - , -

-'.• Ml

?

r' •" • • ' - i T

'J~ -

- • ' • ; % • . - — ' - . '

• . " • ' ; • . ' > - ; •

' • /

rmm mWorewtel? of Jlamptbni nakt month*- on a trtp

**' W • ' 'Aldrich, aon and daughtoV.

tBlthirt dfstrloC

o u t *

Indications«» M>rown

#*toatA^ U ^t f^f t i n K ^^ hhrBhul:

. Oanttht

h

Councilsat

IthsSecowl)Jr^bjsV«tronHly toluj u

'» f«n^wl |y ;« l l .q»*r6;_fotluw(p||eirjoiilaj jet,

iled tS eVery tote'r iliby MriW.'fi Wild,

il been objectinc

mi *tkitg£s

*b*N

Hot Alan. B»«*.

! "TSnTiMt u-rlsttlnjrte]Rosto^j^g:g^••^;?^jS!^"»>i(«W^Nwtyi>er •^ss^^'f.fwas'sflhfinw; * a t ^ n : S | ^ . ^ ^ ! g r ^ | ^ « , ^ ehnnjjyow d a * ^ wk>; . „.....,...,_.,-.i i lh^^eaj^d^-^'SDoVai lS i : - ^ ^ J ^ ^ w f t ^ ^ ^ E M ^ o j a 'M^loyTngtheirvacifloo toUMr&tiih ffi^W?ni«R^fln*«^dn.Stini|fto^; ••n,u*ui»

tft^f.-'4•'.r ^s ! ^ ~ |S°» DWrIcl,,6f iJraqforuVtof d»ui»Hte«.'fr«i ^l'fV5he, ^"K machine ob«i qtqgnter Helen, of |*at<| distriot jihall be, retained

m

3.9%;fv'Si^er'haa7 aeoo^S:- «!'pott2

^^^fW^i^-CCBnitevireW'-ah*afitomoblietopto "PhllodeTphiaiindB a l t i m o r e . '-:':^' "' • • • • • • • • •

. v^t8?;:Mary; TrXgiii "6ffSomervIue,*»*'«»."recent jrnest of: Mni; H*S!^rouch,ionw#plaoe.;"-4:^^'v.--j.;r'^ e F r e d ^ ^ f i e locil pinfcr; haiw-

- •-•• -~i I «*»W" ft contract for the^entlreiWorkof,Nlnang:Ro'seribaum Bros, factory

""" ""A,"Oiilke

«C

*.«? MRhter'Heten, URd di.Irta?5hSrtnreS"^WMa^^ n j W B .we^P^TW^ti^ l ^u '^ i n i f ,S ;.Mint, Mr^giue Brophy, In fern CofflmiuS to.cB™SS-m?y£btook.TT^cr-x^~^n~~ j »»r<»Wp«*1iy temy: orireliiSlIStcllU>.'•«»••" - - - ' • • ' : : - - - s * '••• '. I* 1 . 1 1 ? O f ~ t h « i t o w n * h n n a r a n n a l l u v . . ^

-. 8lh,l£led.

•h»?

:': ~ ' In use all pyejp the United: States, Afe -the' best heating apparatu$ poa ilble to >riake.They heat whereother* fall-giv > best satisfaction.

?•-:*.•-'-,' -' Send for descr^tfyujdtcuter*,^ --- - • — •-: i •>-•;; SOLD BY A U ; FIRST-CLASS OBALERS.

^ a -Pike and children, re-turned on Saturday from Connecticut

: Mr. and Mrs. Theodore • Crane ofWalnut avenue are back from a vaoatlon trip to Atlanllo City; whejwtheyapont a couple of weeks. •;'•' Three of the clergymen of; the local

Protestant churches have ' returnedfro'm" their vacations and occupiedtheir respective pulpits on Sunday

8.8, Swaokhamer of North Plain*field,a oo'usln of. P.'"

igbed ty teiny of Ufo leadiri?ii tl-» « oMh« town »ho pareonally andfreely expressed (heir vle»e againet Usfarther retention. If you are not, infavorof (ts further uae at our auttfi*-"queni eleotloDi, will you kindly make a•peclsl effort to jiaelyour vote againutIt. ^

You™ respectfully,> Witus; T. WILD,

305 Union Avc, ,

!|»p|?>i:fcabar t^y'.al. Boston, Mass.^o^.|r\Holir;gtte«tiias* > * ^ t « . i>iniiBylvar.i4^

^jBa;jii».:,Ji.'-ts, WoidUma te-I TtMiday from a taqaUon ftip at

; tbb-fawe,'

ierja.'al. HendrickEandifamily-loo Salirday from their va-

•te. -K, . • v : ^ . . ' : : , v • • : • ; • ' , ,[P " ^ *° •*"> s*a(etnerit

"' Xatiaoal Bank %

herBitter," ot

-MiSffAvenue, liaa b e e r eOOUSID, Miss : Marion. • A.

He'rrri-J.KriappIs btjiltl!.._on hja premises on South Avenue,' "^;'wili-liter house. >'a new.auto-

Jardes lle'nhessy of the local policeforbo, leave's this week for' 'AtlanticCity,,to atten'd the annual conventio'nof the Suito Patrolmen's.AagooIatioD,

Labor Day WM.qBletly' observed InL»linnJirnn<liii.'-H.» «-••- <- - « - - —

- >*'Me" e » PafV w»«fteld

ay aftr t th h

1 D?mocratJc Slate Rx6d./The .Democf-oU loo«ll/ failed to llle

^O^-be-votedr^r^tT^hB-prrnnjryTieitToesday, but fhe Eieowtive GoiuniiUeeKottoSetherlJTuesdoy night' and madeB | e s d a y night and made

* 'Me" e » PafV w»«fteld ob^afUCr Upaslate.~rU\T°wniihfn Clerk Ibeyday afternoon at the home of-Mr. and endorsed Alvan It. Dennmn, olrendyMra, B. B. Power on Hampton street, nominated by th R l l

———« ~» *•*• """ A n It Denninn, olreiiJy'Mr*, a B. Power on Hampton street, | nominated by the, RepuWirnnn. but ex-In honor of their son P|»mp, wlio is to oipting this put up a full ticket -as M-i»n»e soon for school in Canada l ;

gFg^i"-•»-' : <r R r E -^^wff - -re - f^nopMondyy( - the principal attrac-i « ^ > * " 1 ^ yeslertay from Nortli-1 "ons being the Canoe regatta afld the

Sqmby morning^expected home

u

«n<: Mra. J . A. vies?lr*;a^

j ^ R ^ f *»!B to-Atlantic CMy4 Phlladelig«*ljO>UierrpoSnto«r Interest

: qfoif; Unks.,;. ,,.... ....,„, ,,„,,.,,,,,' Scrylo^a will be held 1 at-tbe t^nlil.iE. Church on' Sunday at the usual

i 'M^^^^^blnesmlth-prej tchint. at ihe:mornlng and' eventag^Bervlces,

0 ,'.•;• Bey..JJjfWtEUlnesmith,pftstorof^bV-Fi^'t£^{hoal6r^CKurob^'*lia4i*Bp'attrtck.fOf .aciite indigestion: We forepart of, the week',1 but Is now "fully

I recovered.^MosBfs, A. h- Miller and P. R,

„ .^-^awiniii iaj, 'Ibis week ftom|tk«|ria(mni«rraeaUoa. ;: V_ :';'""'..:'I j i ' | fj fl. Wagstalf has accepted a pooi-

I*:. Uon witii a Bochester. K. V., ilrm and*-^fo | , ; tD«t pjace-on TueBday:-.^ ~* ,r.

a«TTj Fritt, who t— bean'rry FHtz, who h—betm cooneoMlEbrhardt'iHoW,"is'S»«kInjr pre-

pantwos la op*n lb« Uvara oaarAaebopPoa Woila -v,'_

< Dirt forBUinR la and *bout yourpremises and'Cinders ror driveways,

^**J!fe,SR»J»l*». baHdi«»..*u4-,fleWalone for sale reasonable Address

. Joseph Holland. Preibo, N. J.Aag. Grube, of the local pott office

' force, bft for Atlantic jCSty on 'Wed-nesday |o complete hn vacation. Healso expects to attend the .National

*—JthnwnllnnjtJiMliimlm whiclris in

" trfh

Swackhdnier, iiccompanled' by theirwives?'leave tomorrow morning on anautomobile: trip through SouthernJerstHt 09 far Cape :M»y,\ ?• •,! «; H; B^TViMnnp^e; WestBeioVi grocer^

has m a w ah..,assignment^ principally

l»a»o soon for school In Canada.Peter Krauser and Mlas Elliouom

Muhl, both of.this place, were marriedby Rev. Father MuelleratBtMlohoel'srectory ob^unday. The couple are toreside on Burnslde avenue.'.. . '

Mrs. Fred Gay hHSRone to Californiaw^ere^hjJwJlLjssJda-Untll^aprlogrPrevlous to her departure laat week,she was tendered a reception by tReTuesday Afternoon Club, at tbo home

|of Mrs/Wetherill. ; v "'. ;% V ^\.:'.: The^aanuarnieetlDK and elecllOQ^f

'Blff^n^of'''11e^'!nroinM^I)nlrlati«DI Temperance Union, will beheld at the!home of Mr«r P. W. M.West, Ufl UnionAvenue; N.,'1 Tuesday,.$ept. 10,at| 3p . n i • • • • " " • •

^uo to bVd book acobu'nta.assigned tK, W.H. Roberts, of this

p yHe has

t \ . H. Roberts, of thisplaco, who gpresenls a New York

h l lp , wh.wholesale

The MenpUiy.a.return^ _Bnptlst CUiirch-lcaiyriin'y afternoon ong d A d

's CIuW base ball team will

of Plalufleld, Sa.thio Walnut Ave.

I S

£#^««M?nMi«ohI*i.l68l.-t;O.'P.,-^replanning for another big Initiation on

|^«nrenliigr«nSelBt atthy when it le

grounds, A good Rfli-the teams are pretly ethe preyiou?' game %h_^._D ~»^-eleven inninKS to-decide the .winner.Gauwjallebrat 3 o'clock,

Oavid.Jonos.^cplqred, emrtloVed for

is expected asly' matched,vi taken

— » r -rr" VtiUUlO AlADJftJIW

of Koselle.tn WlUlam Dltzelof CentralAvenue, took place but: Thursdayevening at•• the. home of the bride'sparents, Mn and Mrs. Henry Meyers,onRnritanRoad. - • '; -;

Last nlgbtMr/aud Mrs..Cheater MlBrlgKecelebratedJheffrsfanniversaryof their wedding at their home otfBerkely Place 1b which they werepleasantly assisted by a small convpany of filends. •• " ;" '-•.; i-.r

The first panel of petit Jurors for the

•pting this put up; a full ticket 'as fof-l o w a j ; ; ; . , . - . . - , , ' - , . ' • . ' ; • • • . ; . . " • • ••.••"•.•• '

;,PoisFreeholder,Ijoseph A.;Sporry. -For Towniihlp Oomn^ittemun, h. A.

M a t h « y , \ ••• - r H - ' " .. • • • - , • • :

r For Justices of the Peace, Walter H.B i d u t , 8 . J . " C o i i |: . • " . • ' • " . • . • . ' • "

.For' ConstnWjea, j Albert Crane, P. J.;BlBieJJbarger^--^4^_ : — ^ —

Fbr Surveyors, Lnurilz U8slne>. l>. Tisripn,: :,.;"•". ji\; \~'-_- "' "Members Countj^Cdinmllloo, . „ ,

S. J. Ooii 2d dial.>fo3. ^,"8|ierry.' Deleg8tj> to HtnUJ Convention, mi

dhtf8^C^rWfS«'-"J<*vAT 3porryr.D«lfl«ato to Coiiftreualonnl Coiivpn-

..oriifiitTiuitrU-EiraiiiliriHii JiJ di»t.Kenydn Messiok. ''•-•.I.:;-'.--. X' . ;.'.

AipprotltiBtldnB, Bonils, MfiW; Streoitrinkling,x»500i Polico," •>, Poor,

LOST, Near RiversideDiIvo, nimbybuggy cushion^ liuinni to Mrs. II. 8.Morton, 308 Prospoct street and ro-oelvo reward. ~

AAR0N D. CR/^NE,Deaie^n FUmr, Feed, Qrali, Hay, Etc.

; CRANFORD,Nc j . -BLI2AU i l H f N . X

iBIevatornnd Warehouse, : : r , -PARK.N. J.

_ tJNT)EiferoNEI> l)Og»«toN»niiounco that he liftH,thq businosa,,bf .tiiollafo-jrABBY-G -BOWpfiS

'.•:' •"•'•'; continue' thai same- nt the old lor-Mi >u, Jlunk"]Crnnfonl, N:'J. IiibtdasoJ-famlitipH for Its MlliuK nii<liaf; ROOCIB nfforded hjr.myflrninu Elevate IK^IMV^ Stor«(f»noselle Park gtvoR asBuranco tlidt;'nil ordci « wiU'lio jand satisfactorily lilJetL . •. . ' >

A contimianoa of your palronage is s»li( itcil

D.-OBA^E

aooooooooc

•• • • • • •»• •<

Chalmers-Detroitand HUDSON CARS

By far the Bist Proposition for 1910. Let us calland Demdnstrqte

A.C.THOMP50NAUTOCO,NoT4l'3 ParkAve.,. Tel. 991-J Plainfield, N, J.

stroetV

dawn on Tuesday. Sixty Jurors wereselected which Included the followingfrom Crapford: James W, Faulkner,Joht^J; Ludlotv, and Fred Iloake.'.SlsoJohn Stiff of Qarwood and William A.Busbfleld of Kenllwortb. .

The local -baseball—tearh-oaptaluedby Ed. MoMabon gave tho TriangleClub at Roselle a bard struggle for

members will be added to .the order-A .large »ttendance of members

yreqeM'data, when

Ismeeting on

several projiioaed

f amendmeDts to^the :bv-Iaw3 will beidteoased.^:.;;.;_• r---.: .^~-::"

I h e two l ia t tu cofonUI bouses ber""g«;irwst«d;iB,

guesday while driving awagon jjroue throw

him about

oiiThuout, ln|iirin(r hlru about the, body,ond tearing; Ills clothing.» The-hOrsedid not rtin away.V' •• " .V V' . / ,

a' A severe electrical storm swept overCranford on Tuesday evening and forabodton*""~ '

I nf t,fjron n n Jof a series

SrSSP^-^^ss

_ , .: m,.compftnloabya. higli wind.' An' un-Pil'tdieldI street, bfcar I "sunl phenomenon In connection with"' " " '"' " ^H^swrn>-was-t^«tT)fTrbwortfnt'-sinF

while It was

liday crowd., The game resultedIn ajdefeatTbLOranford byji scure ofWo l.-nnd the Triangles thus wonJhe

Nesor Helns got back Monday

out an e»tended'aBtotnoblle

oqdpboooooooooooobodoooooo >•••»*•»*••<

R aJ Estate iqugbtrSo^

Telephone 160-4.

etxO 081MB II. IIES1

oTTblm through Penn-I New York^State as far

"K luftuj iHoaacoombeing poshed rapidly (ovani cam-

•eaeh, w<lh bath. Warn _heatother improvemeota. The ex-r^onarruction i3 frame, and the

hdealten'-iaunusual. -*•'-—:- - - ->--'•'.

BepubUcan rally under' tberau-piplotff of the local Republican eiecu-g t l v e committw wiU bo heljlal Becker'si|»adttoriuin at Ginrood. tba eveningfy&!$Vcipelt'%-fMga W,' JI. • Kunyon|rfJPlaInBcl4-»nd OeorRe^J. TV-iler,. ofgCnnfpid, wiU oddrcs? the voters and

* Jbc^ lasBdldatea^wiU.-inalEQT brief" » on the local 1i»u«>.

sethouses contain elgfit I raining the" hardest.; . The ltgh.ln.lng runs of frc

i family and made dally>ylOO to SOO mile*.! He

fornshbrt'tlniir-;^^''" -~. , tof 8 < )«J^^>?^ther;encountarea

cwaKloKaaboat townbeen'jin the rampage the past,—OirSMflBgay two persona we're

by the diR

for nshbrt ffm»rMiss Paullue'Sliaplrowaa Riven a

surprise on 6(flulay. evening at herborne; 17 Union avenue. The occasionwas the young lady's foUrteojith birth-day nnuiveruary nndwoa attended bymany, of her friends. ; Games vwereplayed und there were piaDO RD3 V'°-IlnSelceliona, (is well as dancing. Kefrtshn^nls connlildoit-' 'the." pleasant

!jajgM>t{;; ^.;";:; !!;j:^.::^~~:^rfrr-£

Messrs. Eddy and JJemple of the" • • " •-•—•""•••• " : 3 i i n V t b e

enroutST . , • • • • .Charles E; Pobley>.who W secondin

command of the Trutfk Co., was veryhandy and, valuable a few; days.'since-iin putting out'a Ore In the kitchen ot\a hpuee In the hill secUok near'where,be happened "to be worklog at the

" Ironing Was'goingToli and_a

Jooooobooooooooq1.0H9 M IIRHS

I i-NORTH AA|ENUE^»•>•'•—•••• OOObOOQOpOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ^

He$s Bros.PLUMBING,

Heating and Tinning.

'., 7~,S7 Urilon Avenue

CRANFORD, N JTelephone 1933.

OOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

HISS RICHMOND'SCollege Preparatory

.. - ANli " "

f^i^gpJClub.^plnyed. . in-tbeUnion County r Cricket and TennisTournnment tjt Ellzabetb^on Monday.In the seml-ilnnU, the Cranfprd tennis

^ a boil terrleJ^Kliile deli w i n gSp%JtBry*nMtS^^tClAwt^ ^ ^ - - - ^ j ^ ^ t l i f t i e j i o e S i s a

Kgaj__!r.__...FjWh*an. .v Tho":wound»S*W«ft»rt. and the iBjary"*""' ""^SerioqB.jP^;K^j:|v ^u_

?,;setoofci rojwaiBd*; jtf•

«or«aibfi*2Sncl.0f4.J; The Hnals of thetournarnsntare" to be played off this»t ^oon;- ;;::-;;?yft!J;' ':'«'-3*;;$' '';/ij^mi^l^pr^yitod^^il'^Failo]iJi^^|l%^(>|!^Ae^IanTfa^ry;

1 got I^o^;Wte^ilbni:^bil6BaMitoir^^T^^a^Ve^inj^^dlth^Sargumentwiis cqncliiaed-by iFallo striking

Jl?**_PJwr-.»- «aa-stov»' sMrtlng-aHveJyTlre^tlfat qulokly caught on thewindow trim.- Dooley threw thoburning:-clothes n u k - o u t ^and~ b y | _quick work put' out the fire in

WANTED—Thirty-I! ve to one h li n-dred acres, adjacent to trolley qr nill-

,«,i mj4- —i—• • • - - 1050.

Ad-wind had blown clothes^ f r o m ^ X^immediate, Journnr'ofnVe;- El z i-

Jl?**PJwr-.»- «aa-stov»' sMrtlng-a be^Jf . J. —lre^tlfat qulkl h "FOR-SA'tE—Five-ltaoueund loads of

dirt. Apply O E. LudlqVr, Itrooireide ^ Telephone 30-R.

woodtitons.

FOR BAl^E^TenemenPhoilBO."•"-:•"" ,v»» IUO ure in -tne «<-»« BAUK — Tehemont• hoilBO. Awork befgre-It got;ln the: psr^ } 2 P»r ?•?'• inyestmentiT- EOBT terms.; ' ~ ^ • i, ; •; - -: • -Si - - O.Dwight Stone, Chronicle Jiuilding.

^rnin^r^^af^^" Aoth

ROOMS—With, board. Excellentbl Special arrange moots for 'per-

rnanent 'guests.Cranford. ' :'. '.

18 Forest Avenue,s74t

-AttTOMOBinE FOB KALE-flaveawo'-Overland" t y t V f i r i

S 2 t a « V C l 0 C S : ?™80h<nff * » * -AttTOMOBinE FOB Kmorning and jvenihg by the-pastor, aawo'-Overland" toy tonSunday School at H o'clock. Epworth. £?'jj£P0<l.and practlnaliy,League vesper'aeryloe at 7 o'olock !?i1(M; 9 '? l e r l e a v l D K I o w

U s

S u y # i ^'MercyWtoCthe",fallen.V^a^efeQeb^Klckmy^s«: '^aW^cfc I- The-Ladles Teawlll be, held,: Friday |a(tara6onfrom,3 (o'5 o'ciock In the

neaVfuirihew. - Cost

o w » w»l <w-

t " > ^ - W'B<>s»i»ywajl-faadlyhruIoodbontrthe;4 hmd ani-shouidewTandrefarretf-chaVsof'issHnlt'Spallo

il^lhroi^$ig!iQ^;1^b;PWtSb^

teSbi2;AtaaMfc fi#^^#Jil^s-i^!^n^ryi ^

•n«i o* mJdrw *o ^•?^n iPn*r«n«ebnt^UbBarottnC

" ^ «w«d*i« be held Iptto5r|qay evenlnfl;>tLelgnto'clock.

( f o I i etto chapell k

t^ew;^J«,ftjiBr^JisJ6h^^

^^vt&orougily4^dem;'thoinB;, J'gnt roonw. lardjybod floore, steam|heftt cpai andgns•rangeftp-LaunVdry, gtiajimd electrie; liglit;&;t i-iS:

'P^^o{n?:Sp^)|tor;tho^^ii;

105 Union Ave.) Cranford; N. J.• AI,1- ()l(ADK8-It)iicl«wr«Dl PrtniWr, Intir-w*limi, AcmrtfBiiloaDd Onll«n Prep»rutor/.

^ D a f i m i Boafdliig Pupllf1^Thom why l»t«Dd to traMflorlnir tbfl'-wlntor

.tiooths will find tlili • U.tifriu«li. ctntaUrelmtriruaed lioiue «clri>pl for LtMlr ffirli. . • -.

*•• UloliDinnd will be-ki'-hiw olllce well•*'~"a!» lor.!!. Cn%tAonaeK mat- upon

BeginsFall term Fourth Year

•'> Septem'be "'as.-J- .•

ffTTTI

fCT' Dealer in

| Flour.Feed, Baled Hay-1| "SJiaw, Poultryf«ed,Be'- |

202 South Ave.,

> . l i i i l i J i M i u m r • i' IM In n'.Bi 'i|'i j,j, iiim I'W.ii'i

liiMiii*&K

actor.

%CwKi^£^6ii^

•You who do n> t watch .the eyes ofyour ihililren are •

v Guilty of C iminal Negligence -NeglecUd eyei ight in children maylend to partial >r total hllnUnnSH inlnt«r life. Cb Idron have no ineailstojiidgo whetter theirWght inor bad; pnltli ir have yfiu. --•!

-^'hnrWarnlnS' BH(rjf«t^B eknminij;Joiir chjldren'i eyes',i'.Ws nrn (txperts

jQmt tf; WIRTH;4^ . - . - . - • O l » l o l l l l l , . . ; . : . . . , / • . < • ; . . • • •

v.',. IM Brood i t«&kJ5iiznl>»th. :

OpenJEyenlng :»lll:'«:oo WcXmikS

CARL WARSINSKI

Painter and Decorator

- ~EsttMate. Furnished,

ter will rent at a nominal price toforty who will give property

* If so, Iiiok us K

, -H«v« Plana and Moneiawaiting yon.

For partlcujais. Bee

JW -." • " . , ,,.,' ' r' -,.—•';."^»"*V"Jifc;'

J *~* -VU*—

, Vf

3^3

CONSERVATION ADECLARES PRESIDENT TAFT

Members of National Congro* at t Paul FindHim Thoroughly in Accord with Their >.

., ~. Ideas—His Speech.

St Paul, BepV fcArh*. NationalComerraUon congress listened: with

i

I? -

' dress today. The chief eieeutlv.•px>ke substantially1 a« follows:

' O n t l t o n Of th* National' CanserrtttoaCongian:Conservation as an acohomle and'po

litical tan b u coma to mean, the preeer-p vatlen of our natural • raannrrss' for

economical uaa, t o u t o secure the great-est food to the greatest number.

The danger to the stats and to the peo-ple at larf* from' the waete and dleelpa-

, Don or our national wealth, la not on*vhlcfi crnltflUy Impresses Itself on the peo-

ple of the older communities, because-Itamoat .obrloua taatancea do not occur tatheir neighborhood, while In thepart of tlie country the sympathy witheipanaton and development Is ao strongthat the danger la seoSed at or Ignored.

- Among eoleatlflo 'men andLthnughtful ob-servers, howsvar, the danger has alwayabeen preaent; but It needed aorae one tobrine home the crying need fof'a reinedof tbla <rrll f o u l i Impress, limit o»' (

" public mind and lead to the formationHUhuo- opinion aad-actlon-ity-ta*aentativoe of the peopler Theodorevolt took op thta taak/ln' theyears of his second admlnlstrai

_ well did he perfornTl£At president of the United -States

hare, aa It were? mnerlted thla policy,ami I rejoice In my heritage. I prlae myhigh opportunity/to do all that an ex-ecutive can do/to help a great peoplreallie a gnat national ambition, Forconservation la national, H atfecti everyman of us / every woman,',every child.What I can do In the cause I ahall do,not na president of a party, but as presi-dent of the "whole'people. Conservationla not a question of politics, or of factions, or of persons. It la a <|uaatlon thaaffects the vital welfare of ajl of UB-OL

• our children Hnd oilr ehlldren'a children.- I urge that no good cut come from moot-

lnga of thla •sort unleaa we aecrlbd tothoae who taka part tn themrand whoare tpparanUy atrtvlnt- ^rorUilly In thicauae, all propfr .motlvea, and unleta wiJudicially conaldor every measure "ormethod propoaed with a new to Ita effec-Uveneaf tn i«ehIiv(nK our 'common "pur-*poae, 0^4 wholly without <ttgarit to who'propoaeaMt or who will claim the creditfor Kk adoption. Tbe probloma are of

' sight. Mail/ of tho questions Presentethave phases thkt s n new tn this coun-try, and It Is possible that In their sola-tlan-we/may fiave to attempt first oneway and then another. What I wish toemphasise, however. Is -that a tatlslactorr conclusion can only be reachedpromptly If we- avoid acrimony. Imputa-tions ot bad faith, and political'contro-versy. _ _ _ , i ,

The public domain of th* govornmeniof .tho- United States, tBClbdfng 'all Hie

\ ceaalona from thoae of the thirteen statesthat .made ceaalona to the United Statesand Including Alaska, amounted In all to

- - about 1IMO.OOO.OM acrea Of-thl» there la"left as purely government property out-

' - aide of Alaska something like 700,000,000 of. . _ acrea. Of thla thcunottonal forest re-

Mrvea in the United States proper em-brace 144,009.000 seres.

I shall divide, my discussion under the.heads .at, O)-.a«Tl<mUursl-l*ndsr"(I7 Mfn--eral lands—that Is. lands containingmetalliferous minerals. (S) forest lands;(4) eoal lands; (O oil -and gas lands? and(O phosphate Wanda.

Agricultural Lands.Our land laws for the entry of agricul-

tural lands are now aa follows:The original homeatead. lawNalth the

Mnjilrenients_of_r«ildenEfl_aniLcuUlvatIon-"Tor floe yeara, much mon strictly en-

forced than over before1.- ^The enlarged homestead art. applying

lo nonlrrlgabla lands only, requiring rive>eara' reatdence and continuous cultiva-tion of one-fourth ,of the area.

The desert-land act, which requires onthe part of the purchaser th* ownership

: )> mM^of4«.^«6n^nah^hirt^tm.>!l«'u'*'" ton.. j,f ou» foreat landa. It wae' probably the

or a water riitnt and thorough rec&ims-"rlon of the land by Irrigation, and •>*!

payment of tVtS per acre.' The donation or Carey act. under •• ^Ich

the atate aeliicta th* land and" providesfor Ita reclamation, and (ho title vests Inthe aettler who resides upon the land and

(The national recliunatlon * homeatead4)». requiring five, years' realdence andU l J U g t ' ' » » > ^ t M U t t l t h J a ~ i =

*?TT; ^UlJUgt''»»>^tMLUettler-ou.theJanair=

riirated by the government, and paymentby. him to the government of the coat of

' * the -reclamation. ' - , s

, , TnVprcaent congress paused a bill ofgroat Importance, nrertne-the 9wnershl|>

• of coal-bj" the government In the groundCram the aurface and permitting home-

•atead: entries upon the . surface of. th»•4nd, which. When perfected, give the

,aettls- <be right to farm the'surface,while the coal beneath'the surface la re-tained. In ownerehlp~by the government,and. may be disposed of by It under otherlaws. - —'~~

There la no crying' ne«d for radical re-form In the methods of disposing of whatare realTy agricultural landa. The pres-ent laws have worked well Tho en-.Urged honleetead lat?~ha* encouraged the•ucccMfdl'rarmlng of landa In the neml-irld-regtonat "«• ~'"V» "

Reclamation.By the reclamation act a fund tins bean

created 'o( the proceeds of the' publiclands of the United States with which toconstruct workj for storing great bodies'of water at proper altitudes from which.'by a sultatjle- syalem of canals and ditch-es, the water Is to be distributed over the

. arid and aubarld landa of the government. to be aold to settlers at "a price sufficient

lo pay for the Improvements. Primarily,the projects are and muat be for the Inv-provement of public landa. Incidentally.Where private land Is also within reachof theiwater_sutol»,_tti» fjlrnlihlng atcoat ,DT-prone o«-th!»- water l T l U

thowners by tho government Is,held by th*federal" court at appeals not, to ,be aUsurpation of power. But certainly this

, ought not * to be done except'fnm our*plus water, not needed Jar governmentland.' The total asm already accumula-ted in the reclamation fund (a J8UB,-SOU and of that, all but tS,IM,K6.» has

sursd earnings jby tbs projects,,the projects, worthy and feai'

completed, and

that^ mlglit

ie-prompUy compl.ted, and the settlersmight bu relieved from th«lr/pree*ot ta-oonrenlence and hardship. Jsf authortsins;tbe (SSIM of theses projects/congress lim-ited the application of tbelr preoseda tothose projects wj)lrb a board of army MHg1neera,-to be appointed by the prestdrot,should eiamlne and- determlse U> bsfeaslttle and worthy/of completion. Tinboard baa been appointed and soon will

k It /make Its report .Suggestions been mad* that th*

bt to aid in th* draln-sAt to id In the drainlands, belonging to tb«-

aU ownars b e a u ' > l f

TTnltedaits' of swistates «•- ortraU -owners, - because^--Ifdrained; they would be exceedingly vsl-nabls fot/agrteultun and contrlbuts toths general welfare by- extending th*ana. 0 / cultivation, t deprecate th* egl-UtlmMn favor of such legislation. .11 I*Invldng th* general government Intocontribution front Its treasury toward en-terprises that shouH bs conducted eitherBy private capital or at th* Instance of>the state. In these days there Is a dispo-sition to took too much to ths federalgovernment for «wrytWnr.""r KttVuoerarIn ths construction of tb*_ Constitution,-wlth-nfsnncs—to—federal power: bnt 1am firmly convinced that the- only sat*course for us to pursue Is to hold fasttd the limitations of th* Constitution andto regard aa sacred the powers of th*states. We.hav* mad* wonderful prog-ress and at the same time have pre-served with Judicial exactness tke re-striction* of the Constitution. Then Isan easy way In which the Constitution^can be violated" "by congress withoutJudicial inhibition, to-wit, by -appropria-tions from th* national tnasory for un-constitutional purpoeea It will be a sorryday for thla country if tho time evercornea when our fundamental compactahall be habitually disregarded In thlamanner. •

Mineral Lands.By mineral-lands I mean-those lands

bearing metals, of what a n called metal-liferous minerals. The rules of owner-ship snd disposition of thssa lands -wanfirst Axed or custom In ths weak andMien wen embodied In the law, and theyhave worked, on the whole, so fairly andwell-that-1-do not-tWnlc-It tr-wlse toattempt to'chang* or better them.

Forest Lands.

ptws>

'congress, aa alnady «*I4<-tbt surfac* af coal lands,

' Wlrsfir tar T — - ^v^^tt^ Jo* M |O

_.._ uwastsad Jmtrtmof lands useful t V aa>

coal to tb* «u**>iun—t. Tns qass-"dt'rsnulns to b* wmstlena la

th* existing law for theV'sale off»sff«il- in th*> nouod ttibotjUL/ponthtm

In fere* or be repealed and a arfr mvthodof disposition adontod. Coder A * present-Uw tb* absolute tnlf la tWooal ,be-neatb^tha surfac* s*s«s l 3M^a.smnt<t.of tb* goTSrajpsnt. Tn*<pnoe- fjssjd laupon an estimated,-amount! of'th* tonsOf ooaTpsr acm beneath tb* taffac*. andth* price* a n fljwd so that-th* eeralngawin oolr'ba a nsfcovM* Brant upon th*amount paid and tb*. Investment noces-sarrr But, of oourse, this b> mor* t r lasrguesswork.- and. Oa?; auisnftiasat partswtth th* ownership oFthTTooaT to th*grennd absolutely. AotltorttiMof tb* ge-ological snrrey estimate ' tfouWto -th*United State* today them Jr sKsuapry ofabout thre* thousand ;Wrttoe>« of tons ofooaL and that *i tWsene-thousand billionsare In thepubttq domain. Of sours*, th* oth-er tw« -thoonsna-bUlIons a n wi|a|n,prrrat*o-irn«r»hfp-*nd mdsr no mori central ssto*tin us* or 4b* price* at which th*ooa) may be sold than any other privateproperty. If (h* government 4l*s»e* th*ee*4 kands.atodracts a* any landlordwould, .and Imposes, conditions. In Itslemses'tfte those wblpn a n Hojr Imposedby the,,ow4*n n fee of eealirfna* Inanevarieus coat regions of tn* east, then Itwonld .retain over th* dlsposlUon of th*-coal deposits a> choice aa ta' the aaskmesof the leaser or of reromlng poasisslon atths end of th* t**m of th* Use*, whichmight easily be framed to

In the disposition and *e.teT>f the"eoal te.th* pnblla I i has bean ur\red~tn«-lW

plaata, tne prosMvowrssopmsnt or asssV•m mtaUg BMtbads of to* pssaaiussil d d'tnsi-as* «c srsrr kxwao ma*

&ei t

tan'b the

ruthless destruction of ! forests In" theolder states that first called attention toa halt in ths waste ot our resources. Thllwas recognised by congress by an aotauthorising the executive to reserve fromentry and set asld* publlo timber landsas national forests- Speaking generally,'then has been reserved of the existingforests, -about seventy per cent of allthe timber lands «of ths government.Wltftln .three. fiirasts-flnoludlnsj-jlliOW.OOO-seres In two forests In Alaska) a n 1M,-000.000 of acres, of which 168.000.000 ofaens a n In the United States proper andInclude within their boundaries _aojn«rthing llEe 12,090,000 of acres that belongto the atate or to private Individuals. Wehave then, excluding'Alaska fonsta, atotal of-about 144.000.000 acres of forestsbelonging to the government which Isbeing treated In accord with the princi-ples of scientific^ f o n a t r y . ^ ^ * ^ ^ ^ r »

'"The' gb'vernment"*t!fmber'' In"thla"'e55un-

estimated that fire alone destroys SoO.OOO,-000 'worth of timber a year. ,Themanagement of foreata not on publicland la:beyond-the Jurisdiction of tho fed-eral government. If any thing can~be" donebylaw It. must bo done by the state, leg->lttures. I believe that It Is within theirconetltutlbnal power to require, the en-

1 of regulafluiia • in Ilia .gent "publlc Interest, as to flra and oiliercauses ct. waste In th*"management offorests owned by private lndlviduala'.andJorporallon*. . -I nave shown sufficiently the conditions

aa to federal forestry-to Indicate that nofurther legislation Is needed at the mo-

l_>eac*pt -*n*4n«wse-tn~ th*rfln-prO""lection to national forests and an-actresting the e-ieeulhe with full power tb

" s—ferost rgacrvatlflna In^everv^ajmy^^ 6& erhment'Iarfflf Ie~ilmbeP-covereit,

when the land Is needed for forestrylurposea. " — * '

Coal Lands. .The next subject, and one most Impor-

tant for our consideration. Is ths dlapoal-lion of the coal lands In the UnitedItatra and In Alaska. First, a* to thosen tho. United States.^ At the .beginningit this administration they were classl-led" coat lands amounting , to B,47B,O0O

and tttpre w e n withdrawn fromentry for, purposes of classification 17.*W7.O0O acres. Blnco that time then have,been withdrawn by my order from entry'or classification 77,648.000 acres, making-

total withdrawal ot $6,611,000 acres,eantlmX of tho acres thus withdrawn,

l.jn.teoi have been classified and foundlot to contain " " ' . »nrt I?1"" *

leasing system baa never be*q adopted, lathla country, and that Its adoption Wouldlargely Interfere with th* Investment of

'capital and ths proper development andopening up of the eoal neoure**,' I Ten-tun to differ entirely from thls'ytow.

The Question ss to* how great sjL.araaought to bs Included In a lass* ta *neIndividual or corporation, ta net f n * fromdifficulty r DUt In'view of'In* fact thatths government retains contrpl a* owner,1 think then might bo some liberality Inthe amount leased, and tliat-UM acreswonld not 4* too gnat a maxlnitim. '•.By*the opportunity to readjust 'th*terms upon which the coal ahall tx'beldby th* tenant, either at th* end of •eachlease or at periods durlhg th* term, thsgovernment _m»y secure—th* Matflt Ofsharing ln_th« Increased price of coal andthe additional profit mad* by-the tanant.By Imposing conditions tn respect to th*character lit work to be done In themtneSi the^government may control- tn^character' of the development of Ui*mines and thetreatment of employes wfth_

right to transfer the leas* except by'thewritten permission ot th* govtmsaentalauthorities. It may withhold the, neededconsent wh*h It'w propostd-tj> transferthe leasehold to persons Interested tn es-tablishing a monopoly ot eoal productionIn any state or neighborhood. The changefrom "the absolute grant to tha leasingJtj-stsm will Involve a good, deal ottrouble tn tho outset, and th* training ofexperts In tbs matter of making properleases; but tha flung, will-be-a goodone and can be made. Tb* change is Inthe interest of conservation, and I amglad to approve It.

• - ' - -AlsskrCoal L«nvigv-iS"'=' r—

The'Investigation of th* gaoloxtcal anr-vey show that th* 'coal -properties la

Uf o of tba-OH'and

ta ths last ^onmMratlao Hasrti was^withdrawn frsea afrmmanl entry sJOt.-M0 acres of suwiasd oil tend! ks Csltnsr-ala; about a mlUlsn «n]d s, half acres, aslotflaians, of wnlcb {only uaf

bs v s j o a s t u s tt* land; TS.WO acrs* la Oregtm '00* acres m WyomlnsJ. raalfng a> total atnearly v<OM0» acres. In Bsptstnoer.-lasa,1 dMcted tbat all labile eti laassnwbstber tban wrmdrawn or not. saoaMbo srttaasM from 4k>»osnsoa pandtasreao-grsssliinal action, for ths reason tbat tns>axlsttngj placer •-mining lasr, attbsaahmads kppUcabas ta deposits of this •char-a c t e r . I s n o t s u t t a b t o t a s o e b > - l a # d s . « a « tf o r t i t s f u r t h e r r e a s o n M t U d '

s at aosa aot astbettas» 1hi»i,tr OX • tsjrsate slaw tolmss* avaa

-fn'h* a'about 15,000,000,000 tons. This is, however/an underesutnata of th* eoal In Alaska,because further, developments- will prob-ably Incnass this amount many time*;but we can say with considerable cer-

Taclltc' alop*'Jjrhloh~cah be reached byrailways-at a reasonable cost from deepwater—fn' on* cose about fifty miles andIn the other 'case of about 1C0 mile*—whicb -will afford certainly 8,000.000.000tons of coal, mon than half of which I*, hch Isof.* v a c nljrh grade ot bituminous andof JuthradteZ-irUastlnSted-to be worth.

« cry amounts to only one-fourth of all theImlwr, the rest being In private owo-irnhlp. Only three per cent of that whichs In private ownership la looked after

properly and treated .According to mod-rn' rules of forestry. The usual de-tractive waste and" nrglp?&*continues in —•—. . , . — , .

the remainder of the forests owned by •» '"• ground, one-half a. cent a ton, years over a certain tract of governnuite-persons-and-oorporations.- Jt-ls- -whjcl»-mal(es-lt» *alu» per acre from-WOr 1«Ha-r6r"the"dIicovery'of oil."tho right

— - ' - to KOO. -The coking-coal lands'of Pens- • •••--• ••• •• ------ -sylvanla are worth from WOO to P.OW anacre, while other Appalschlan fields araworth from HO to I3S« an acre, and thefields In. the central statea from no toll.MO an acr*. and In the Rocky moun-tains HO to «0P an acre. Tno-doroond rotcoal on th6 Faclfio cqaat la for about

-fcta>,COO-luu» a years-the competition of

It would ehcounlercheap fuel oil, of

which •the equivalent ot M.000.0W tons otcoal a year Is used there? It la esttmated-that the coal could be, laid down at Se-attle or San Francisco-. Tl Mgh-graas .bl-tumlnoua, at H a ton and anthracite -4t$9 or H a ton. The price of coal on theEaolflo. slope-varies -BTo«tly_frojn'tlin«'(o*^tlm& In the year »"^ fpnm y»«r t» y r _from M to tit a, ton. With- a regular coalsupply-establlahed, tile, oiueri. St.. tftt-ljlnaU-.faadCtnja^Sa-Untted SlaTg«6TogTc"al"Bu"rvey7Mr. Brooks, Who has tains the greatest kn

" congress'At Its' statements mad*- JO -projects -could-

' >»?Uh-

froM thop , that these

jM-promptly-com-remaining "oirf •"• T " . " '"*- uie/vHuuiG«; reiDaimns; on

^,--—-;hand or wltB the (funds likely to.accruea,' .' ]n_thi! near fHturel'Ilt'was found;'.more.1 ^ * '~ over that then jareimaivr settlers who

] _ H r e l l t o ; .over, that then jareimaivr settlers who

K F-tJ;

have been led.r|l»..|>ope, and

ifatex furnlr1 - '

•JUK'Unds wjthngvpt- havingtime,' who are'f/sltuation. 1h auitaotity.

l t

torea-toTCgrlcultural entry. and-4.SM.000acres have been classified as coal lands;whllo r»,7!S,000 ajrea remain withdrawnfrom entry <And await classification. Iniddltion W.000 a c m -have been class)-lied as .coal lands without prior wtthdraW-

thits Increasing tha clasallled coalIs/to 10.im.000 a i m

Under the laws providing for th* dlspo-iltlon of coal lands, the minimum ptica*it which landa a n permitted to be «old• |10 an acre; but th* secretary of thanf*rlor-haa the power to fix a maximum

price and sell at that price. By tho firstregulation* governing ^'appraisal, ap-proved, April S, 907, the minimum was 110,

was two.- amf th* hisJieaT price actually-placed upon any-land sold^waa H5. ,Un-

H ths new regulations, adapted April 10,IMS, the" maxlnidm price was Increased totsopi except' In regions where then arelarge mines," where no maximum limit lafixed, and the .price la aetermlned by the*estimated tons of coal to the act*. Thehighest uric*, fixed foi

made a.nport'on the subject'.,does notthink then would bo an-excessive profitIn tho'Alaska, eoal Mining because theprice at which the i eoal could be soldwould be considerably lowered by compe-tition from these fields and by the pres-ence of crude fuel dll. The history of thela.ws-sJrectlng-th» (tlaposlUos-bt Alaska,coal landa (hows them-to need amend-ment badly. '" . ,

On November II. 1S06. President Roose-.v<*lt laaued' an executive order " with-drawing all coal lands from location andentry In Alaska., On May vll. -1907. bemodlAed-fthe, order so aa to permit valid

locations mode prior to the withdrawalon November 13. ltot, to proceed to >entryand patent Prior to that date some M0claims had been filed,-moat of them said

b l l l b h

for tb* us* of tb* American nary- A cftmHngt»',.u» form of an eaasttasTdnwais *ms abanasd, and n**rdEawala aggregating z.1S0iS9> s e n s w*r*mad* tn, Arisona. CaMfomia, Oohiradhv'New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming. FMdexamlnatfcraa /Iur|ng ^th• year *»b*wsathat of th* orlrlnal wttbdrawaJa, UNL-

JMO acres wslr* notivsluabl* farZotV a a jtTiey wen nstorod tor agricultural entry-Maanthn*. other wttbdrawola of "pubUcoil lands <n th*ss state* wsra %uU. so.that July'l, UtO, th* outftandm*; with*drawmla tssn ameunted to t»MM acfea,.

Tb* naeflsd on and gas law^l* assaanally-a-leasfbg-hrw-.Tn their natural occur-rence, oil and gas cannot be measured fattarn* ot acres, Uk* coal, and It follow*that ,exoluarr* fttle to th*** products cannormally b* setund only after they reachths surfac*. OU should bo disposed of'aaa oonunodlty In (arms of barrels oftransportable pnduot rather than Inacre* <»t» real aatat*. This la, of courss.th* reason for th* practically a n i m a ladoption of th* Isastnr systsa-whsavrer-oll land I* tn private ownership. Th*government thus would, not bo enUrtngon-sA-eijurimante - but "simply -psiuin,-mto effect-* plan successfully operated tnprlvat* contracts.- Why should not th*government as a landowner deal directly,w»j|i th* oil producer rather thanithroughthe Intervention of, a middleman lo whom.the government gives (Itle to the land?

The principal underlying faatun ofauch legislation ahould be th* exercise ofbeneficial control rather than th* collec-Oon of revenue,. A* not only JB* largestowner of oil landk__hut,sa Cpraspscttr*large consumer of oil by nason of tk*Increasing use of fust Ml by the navy,th* federal government Is directly con*cerned both In encouraging rations! de-velopment and at th* same tone tnsurngtturianastt poeattile'Tlfe to'th* on sup-Ply. " "

bne of ths difficulties presentdally In th* California fields. Is that

tho on field.Seems to*be la

of isseiign tha o!T>draining' of" " terrl-

Wt'tnIs Im-

bavo

H at da* atata estty a( th*rs,iSiaiiiiaan>• aa* to • tbM in tba aansarJoa land oV

" as all tsds tamssas* S o u s tbe W

,sjsusaa>ulyf,aaslcfcarg**, Wnleh

of aabaopotr, Tns- aaatur la ac-. or tM iw^w

wassr, tb* tan sad flow ofi th* power. In tb* state*sate* ara, tb* riparian own-usatrnl or own Uw power la

" lew* pMt-bla land,tb* uuiitrvl

ISmii*

IronoJe. I sjwpt opt »W0.W,itorlnf bnt to DO anlL I M l itfUr whin I scon UXUt OoMsf 1

jwy HTls tat soon fett Uttu.- Tortcm years I bare bora tne '

b *Itomsaaber the i

«Je by all dealer*. » cents *1Co, ttaSalo. N.'

* sJnnuscit Jow. ta* x<os>ot lbs) oaak or wsier-powmr atu

VSSSkaSBBI S*Bb,^ ^im* • • • J ^ m - • . .

as»wya OHI WtUsaX tM XO VW O W T C T " '

to sssJta tho psaac useful, gtvsa

on tKo

> tbs'poirer.

other - section -of.and In those fieldsa common . nservolr,-votrar^comniunlcatjn]sands, so that the'oil atone .well,. or on. the

tho

ths government land. Hiportant that If the governmentIts .shore of the oil It shouldopenlnr of wells on Its awn '

It has been suggested, andsuggestion to be a sound one,,thatmlts be leaned to a prospector tagiving, him th* right to prospect for

government

absents* of nWrrtaa at whichwbsa tiasassutid, 1* ta b* fttt» r/abekv aarfforsaddta*; tbe^oroon'oftb*'Hp*iitsi|ai' ponr wltt a ooraWnatibn

a«* far th* purpose of monop-*ty by lasjaMiltiai aaalsiuntut of th*l u w s m by csnasut ag-th* gorarnmmt.- ' • oaaseaJMes ara- *atjdp*tod by

laisaea aa attasnpt on tb* part oftba gtmral-giinrsiiiiti bseaus* M the

•trs) of-tba state over the'warei paam la Its aattiral condition, andth* mar* proptlstorablp of th** govern-saeat ta tb* rtparlaa landa, ft !*>cbn-tasa*4 tbat throaga its is*r* proprMaryrtcat la taw alt*, thy central government^** .55. B*J?'*€l_ *--s4?VWBt.tPiwcerclss->isoj-.Be* JwMlrtloa wits, r*f«renc» to bow

-tn* water power la a t i n t owned andcontrolled by th* stat* JfcoO b* used, an*\that It hi a nolatlan of tb* state's rights,t question tb* validity ot this •objection.Tb* covenmiaat nay Impose any conill-Uon* that It cbooasa^tn Its lease of Itsown pmueity. area tboogb It tail "bavsitne'sasa* porgaae. and In effect accom-pnab Jnst what tne stats would accom-pBab by tb* exercise of Its sovereignty,Th*r*an tbos* (asjd tb* director of tb*s»pK)a»tajfJc*ti itttmTr Mr* fliulilf, who liuf•tven a gnat deal of attention to thisnutter. Is on* of then) who Insist thatthis matter of transmuting water power

.into flectrktty.-wtdchfoan-be conveyedjell *mr tb* muntiy and across- stat*

hi a matur that ought to b* n -

' ivainteetf of- th* owner-jow«r-*He*"fof:;h»;very.

! of "1 if^natlrg la one generalplan the> power generated from thes*govanmxBt owned sltea.

Arfunwrts Against Idea.On tn* otbar hand. V hi contended that

ItIf

tobs evidenced by a license for, which hepa>s a small sum.—."When the oil la dis-covered. l)ien he acquires title to, a cer-tain tract, much In the same way as- hewould acquire title-under a mining iaw..'Of course If the. system of .leasing Isadopted, then he would be given thebenefit of a lease upon terms Uke tbatabove suggested. Whatt nas been saU Inrespect to oil applies also to governmentgas lands. _ i_ ; '/.

Phosphate Lands._Fhosphorua' is one of the three essen-tials !o'ple,nt growth, the other elements" " " "" • « k * * S ! 1

_essll/

extrscted In '.Uaeful. form fromthe-.phos-

Praltal-value of the t lands «lassuled' as'coal lands And valued under tho new-andold nguUtlon* Is shown ta b* as- follows:4 03 11 acres, vklueil4inderiths old Mgu-lailons at »77,6KS3. an average ot IU,an

J^ijs-. and t,6M,70i nenssi classified andvalnedjilBder-the new regulation at IS4,.20«tt or'A total of.JGW.Sa acres, val-iued -at »47t»4T.67J.- •*•>(!. •"• * ,' . ti

For the. year: ending "coal entries were

lently by dummy entrynien tnttto Inter-est of one Individual or corporation, orbecause of agreements made prior to lo-caitfon between the applicants to co-operateIn .developing the lands. Then a n 33claims for 100 acna each; known as the"Cnnhlngham claims," which are claimedto bo i'»II0|-on the groun4 that they wenmade by an attorney for ,33 differentand. bona fide claimants who, asalleged,, paid their money and took theproper steps to locate their entries andprotect them. Ther-representatlves ot thegovernment In. the hearings before/'th*land "office have attacked the validity ofthese Cunningham claims on the d

S ; t l i

tb*~ control of th* water-power altoand tb* control of th* water w e n vestedJn tn* sam* sdverdgnty and ownership.Tlx*. tbm ssmte*. 'and then w r o disposedof for d*v*lopenent to private lessees un<<Wr tb* restriction* needed to pnserv*tb* tatmsts of. tbe pubUc tram the extor-

and abeae* of monopoly. TherefoWAbav* been Introdnead In congreas:

deem a water power useful theyapply to the government, of' the' States for a grant to the state

of flas adjacent land for • water-powersite, sad -that tbls grant from ths fed-eral government to the state ahall con-tain " *; roattlUoa. that the stats ahall

wtth (be title to the watcr-V tlw —trr.r"-^-; '•itt thnK-

leas* itceedlnclsas».bjr

rrtrW.a term'of years not. ex-

srlth prortslons In tBerental ••and tha ratesr Is fnrnlsned to the

pablle shall bs rsodjuated at periods Jeaathan tb* Una of tt> lease, say, every ten

A-against:"tfiat, legist

i a n more subV

for wtdch ,th« ishaD be

and «Sxtte aoJect to- corporal* and -control

of th*. term* of Is:weald aacuitt to tbe publicJnst and eqollabls terms.

1 dd net ^assess an opinioncontroversy thus mad* or *,as ta tke two metbvds of ireatmipower sites. I stall submit the

ten yetars:nown aepoalta ot thisrock In the world. They are found InWyoming, Utah and Florida, ss well asin South Carolina. Georgia, and Tennes-see, The government phosphate tands a nconfinea to Wyoming. Utah and Florida.Prior to March 4, IMS, then were <.«OO.O0daens withdrawn front agricultural entryIn the ground that th* land covered phos-phate rock. Since that time. 1J3.000 acre*of the-land thus withdrawn was found-not to contain phosphate In profitablequantities, while t«TS,000 acres was claeel-fied properly as phosphate lands,thts odmlnlatratlon (hen has bednwn and classified 437,000 acre*,-,today there Is classified as phosprland 2_UG,00) acres. , Thts*_roclc

Important In the composition "of .to Improve the soil, and as thft-fntara-ls- -shrotarb* ear puiyuset It has produced

of th* two plans be adopted.Tefcrnd' to tne/course/tif the last

n- to ureJitu'.'iin enprmous'"Ldemand-througltout thla country for fertilization,the yalue to the'public of such depositsai these.can-hardly bejaaggented. Cer-tainly with i.reapect' to: these deposits acareful policy of conservation should befollowed. 'A law that would provide aleasing system for_the phoaphat* depos-its, together with a provision forlh*'s*p>» — *>s.__Hn ^si a Ik. -^ ^ ,—^ £ ^ A ta.lju - a * ^" - ^ ^aratlotj1 of the surface and nrif'tral rlghti" n*^tm%>-iiss»uta of the government foras Is already provided for In ths caM.afc Jndseast* wltabaHtec from use and th*eqat would seem td meet—th*i need ofpromoting .the development of the** d»--posits and their utilisation la th* agri-cultural- lands of the. west.,.tit It •»thought desirable to discourage th*",expor-tatton of phosphate rock and ih* aavtng;*L J t f l J t M T f

understanding between the claimants to' (Ipoorthelr^dalms-after they had,beanperfected'and'unit* them In one com- I Its lessees,pany. The;trend-'of 'declsron seeme-toll tutlonshow that such an agreement would ln^

v r t s T f j•could be accomplished by condition* Inth* lease granted by tbo,gov*rnmsnt* tojts lessees Of course rader tho c o t Ka y o , g * r n n t t

Of course, rader tho conatKhow ha c g would ln

valldata—the—claims*- although- under-tho-subaeqMent law ofHay X^WS tha '

e . f , d r tho conatKton the government i could, not-.'tax

and conld mrprohlMt-jh* mpartatlon of'

subaeqlMtl

heclaims* although underthot law of,Hay X^WS. tha cpn-',of sue* claims'was permitted^t l * d t J S t

ft ^_a«J8fc=Ja»tloiu*od^ai)trr^JnS«tr*ctr-r<7rJ,S«racrea.' -It'.wonia'be; of courseK,|ni-proper for^me to.lnt'mate wbat'thSi-n^salt ot th* issue as b> tha, Cunnlngjiam

h A l k l l W i l fa t t th

nnd-other; Alasksrb t l t ht: t b

hSins b> tha, CunnlngjiamclalnW ia likely' to 4wf

distintly d t S dn d o h e ; ia ely to 4wf

but.lt ought: to.be distinctly undoratcSdthat'^no private clalms.^fot Alaska coal,lanosi h«veftas-yet,b«elLflJIowwlrBr-per-fectod.,aM also that, «;b«torer the'resultas to pending claims, Uia existing coal-l*nd l«tn0f Alask* ara most'uniiUWtas to pending claims, Uia existing coal-l*nd l«tn,0f Alask* ara most'uniiUWto-tjCandsshouI* be r a d i U l > a

. pJW)»phat*,r bu( as-proprletor-andof the lands In which th*' pboapdeposited It could Impose con

at* b>

•nestle; which th* fatho phosjHiata mined.

i might make vt

• site*.

--and-nrtne present ana innablng; withdrawals, of lrorernnient landafront entry nsder .noseswaa and otherlaws, and of u»wi«aa tn /removing alldoubt aa l o t h , validity of these with-,orawals as Z^real sfep;ln the directionof practical jtomei rattoat Bat It Is onlyon*'of two. ' — ~ '

status QUO aad prenzitad waste and Ir-revocable dlsposltlsn'ot theL lands untilth* method for U«o--proper dispositioncan b* formulate*.,' But It Is -ot the ut-most bnpntsac* that such withdrawalssnoBlernot be regarded as th« final steptat tn* cojBxsa ot'uiusuration, and that

Jh* U H sbovU aot be allawed^to spreadtnat. Lwsisanailnu is tb* tying op or the

toi I to decidewhat ooght to be done wttu these moansoaT tsutuuUus; ia i ami general human com-fast aatl iliiiarasa. Por. If so, tt la certainto aroosavtb* greatest opposition; io co»-assnajtiai aa a cause, and U it

•srratlesdats It oqght ia aronar tUs 'op-'posMaan. <As I^ban said dasjwben, thepr~ulilsai,ls haw to- saira.and how to utO-Izsv bow to" < uassi 11 *4>l stffl develop;-for aw saa* psraaa^csu toatand that« Istor tts* cassasaa good taat-natan's bless,rasa sbonM ba stand only Cor unborn

—Prior to1«*cb t-H0t> thers-had-bosivoiv ths ncommendatton of the netamsnDon services, -withdrawn: from agrlcnlturatentry, because, rV»y--w»n.j»ganl«a aa-useful for wat*r-noHrcr sites which oughtnot to be dftj»«edT)f;as agrlcnltrsl land*,-tracts amoontlii«'to about four mllttmacres, * The Wtthdrawal*. were ."hastilymad* sod.lMlud^lcspgnat dJSaLlitOaST

power aliML.do th*-pow»r

jsraJBaant aad teyaSBTwbaa ssMi'paeaa forward to sagjgest evilsthat, tba piotiwuVai at «juusei latJon Is to

ttssaatbo spiciemrlt* them to'ean*

d t t t b t. ^ ean*t i n «» astslbViB ordsr.tnat. tbatr,*usena-stos* x«a* Oomr ata chattels tbat shall ba

.xsixbsr.tsan xatOLPzzlods tbat anal]and .eoterSfjri. , without ~

1 ***** t»«-*DMaci., Tho,»

WHERB HE SAVED

EfciS'

rTou gay it costs l eu to :aqtoiiicblle thaa that trotting•you awnedT" ^," "Yea; I used to hot oa'the I

horse."

^.PJit'-ReiulMcat

. .^^Stoneoutter—B

ifTOQ to sign It "H

A' Shipping Error..The_yoimg duchess ot.Wesi

wife orthe richest peer tn-srecently gave birth- to her third ia dafigbter. Thus there Is no ithe Immense fjrosvetior fortuno^SOrosvenor, the duchess* sectrnflTchavlag died at the-age qf.ronrr"?:.

Apropos of all'this, a ratTstory Is being told in NeLady Ursula jQrosvscyear-old daughter ot the . __^ess. ' * , -'/.VLr3

A friend,, ftte story goes,Eaton pall,_pand, W she ,Srawlng-room, little U ' ~tared.^0h7;gi^TtfKrn^^

gravely.-"Mapina can'ttday^,ShoV i/pifalrbaby. Tbeyieent her,when -she'd ordereaao upset that she's

tipsialrs ,wlthv(hertaow.sll

boy.ill."

Edna thoughtfully consideredthat was calmly iraxlng In aacross the way./"Mamma; howthat cow?" ahe/flnally inqulredVlabour -yearsyold,"-answored "mother. Edna considered the1

and from time to time .comparing/herself with ,T»."Well," irila her partipg comnlentthe question, "I'm five and thatIs big cn&ugh to be fifty." ' r'

Anita was listening to a ate

made I,t?" she naked._'«h, the-dam .broke," replled-i-eL,'The next morning theirothcr's

i

f-"J.w < Talkln.i

, .-.In*^** JftyX-S-tarlttiJe girrc%And it was

jj/r,**—• Is a very;RVaajJi *ould be gre>•• '''*otila, .hear the

yt She has simply un, f.iiarsh tone of .v

^children. Tb^andja-

V''«lhiI)wem tq think,line,. The moth

^ . g m e t ^ u V f l r m is'-'"—T'^ucoessful^

liareh-voleodr^ommands in aSJiwsBjiftver <p

ttabby indecision, i'-for kfndoess, wblcl

. ' " Try to Ci, Not long ago l o

JSJ5«rstf,a.qtj,ye.ljr Jnfr-.., *work, paid a- surpifW, sistf'flchool In tho itJ;and4told a rilalrol

&rj S*mson. Introducll ^ ", Us lordship .added:" was strong,

regained histo destroy h

•jj-r^PWeWfiFbadraire•* - 'Lyoq^advise me to d

te'T 'A' little boy, after,*«e«ret, of that grta

'-"shot OP his hand an*U«tleof-'afrrestc

crs rponxiitidujcliinblnsT.r—inquire*—mnUonsly;, "Burre

-wasn't it just drefful 'bout that.ibreaklDg'*and killing all doae-i

' "NO'.FRILL8" lS\A}•Just Sensible Food Cured Nlml

Sometimes a good, healthy1*dal traveler suffers from' 'lected ^ood and la lucky-ft ne Lihat-Grape-Nuts-foov'-wlU-pnt-lriKnt , • -

A Cincinnati traveler says:'*,.year ago my stomach got in a-1

I had a headache :id suffered' misery, "Pdrjorers, I ran down u:

i in weight tiiy r t

k-i*t 4s* not, as" somiWit one to infer, a

,. J-ia always sphericsffalKtronra'thtaffler"

gravity; sometimes,,strla1iig the ground^-

Any food that 1 might nse a i-to.

My wife, hardly knowing what tt>,do, one dajr brought home o pa-kafeof Orape-NuU food and coarid maSp •try i t I told her it was « o UM btttfinally to bumor'lher J tried • Uand they just struck my tastewas the Urst.fooJ I had eaten <n IMBV- .ly a year that did no{L causVany suB«»>|

."Well, to make a longsiory short, T ^began to lmprov«-and stuck to I

hi-

Nuts. .I,Went up frrnn 135'poundjl 1DeMraCerTd J6i pounas'thb foUowli-OfStobef. ', , ' •&*:

"Myjoraln is dear.' bloodright ^uiil^appetlte-twnilrach tor iman's pockethoofc. In fac^I am 'pugffly made over, and owo ItGrape-Nuts. Itallt so much'«Hpe*Wfg.-Wtfl do 'that -men on. th» Toad hars 'ri _"Orape-Nuts/ hut "I standAealthy^roay-cheeked 'ijood.eiambleof-fopd-wlU.,.. ..^r-.-JTou 'can publish thls«jft la a, true-statement"ifrills."' .'*,!*' * "&r**- Jt-

Sead the'Uttlei

t(• to!

STATE.

i' &'i,.i*

^jTOnswr' •BM f. c*]j£~*;<~-•* -,.H

. ^ ^ - . - f A , ^ - ^ ^ I , / .*

,» : / : 'f .' — ' '

fcTHTOU. OF A FL'OWER

L|»»HX-U>»» An» l e s t V««rty In-Quest• of Thla Contmonplaca

— Alfita* WoonC—

Zartch, Bwltsertaqd.—Though

IP8YJ

and

BELIEVES * that: QOTernorHughes has been support-ed by the bulk of U_ wis-est and most disinterested,poblNj- opini d

most disinterestedpoNj opinion u retardsmost of his measures and

« d r t M K "_ , « B d r t M X h a aJMSII markedly the caw ss regardsdirect primary nominations. 1 knowthat many,hones* and sincere menare mi principle opposed to .GovernorHughes on this point, sad f know also.*hst the T*opos»d> refbnn l t t t

majority Jn both houses of the fegls>lature which refused to carry out theRepublican gnrernpr's, recommenda-lions;-anor~ although it war only •»minority of the R«puWtc»n memberswhjch-brougi(('%CtUfi

—tt year, in common with the r u t of-Europe, the Alpine death roU hasmounted Ugh. I» manjr parts of tho

COMING MMf? (5f BUSINESS

Lw^Haadstf, YniMstsr Who Bidsr»lr to Ofsjdaata Into Racka. -

• ftJIarCUat " '

8o many panes of glaas.ln old Mr.

. -MM tts-lweaaia. oontmbg- an*«ji of-,us mix our aaaguage someUmes. bat* • prefliratlon ,of u old negro •pretcheta -semon .was the greatest- -confusion of metaphors 1 erer heard.aayt a trsTe|er. When the lengthy dls-eoursB-xrafnearinr iS~cWa and he "had reached hU "TwentymUrt" and

In

Stonecutter—Bat that means "I rest

V Henpeck—I know,, and I wantttf sign It "Husband.

Talking t» the Ciilld.Jfc—talksrto Uttl

J l i v X - - ' lalks vrHMxiabt/I l e glrrbra ne|ghborlns.fam-

It was Indeed true. • Mrs.li§®<i^d;-1t;w—''indeed tn»e.Vjgs.,^ ^ ^ ^ • • " t S r y ^ w p l l - m ^ n l n g ^ w p m i u i^ ^ ^ S * ? ™ * be greatly surprised if sheKK*»Quld hear the faremlnv. «»n>»*<..it

g s on this point, sad f know also.*hst the T*opos»d> refbnn wltt'tery>o«flhly;aoeompliah I—• !»»_'»•* ex-treme advocates'-expeoi; while I amwe}l aware,. as of oounH^m-'ttmen must'be,"that jthe^sstttflf-any

• «i)eh-tnBasere7TS~the"last resort,de-pend| upon, the character of'the. vot-ers, and. that no >aten{ device' willexer^secore good government unlessthe people themselves derote

whjchibrougi((a%PHCtUjLj»fBsair.thapartrrcannot escape a measure ,of re-sponsibility for the fallttre; but It Uonly' just to, remember that a dearmajority of the Republican, membersof each house supported the Li!twhereas- three-iourths or orer of-theDemocrats o p p o d It Thi

lastly,foUowl

. iren," be wound up by theelaborate figure: •:•" s? brwWtt;- vmm'SiTltir'

dawn de untrodejep paths '. /we s ie de footprints of da"

ityTband.'1—Human Ltfo, ^ v : *

•«*_!?__Jiffi:'JtL.**!*-f *M-1 «<_*«•» there have been exception-1; ""* " Q M l n o n l l t«in« «>ere have been excepUon-ta e a t l e r to ap- <U atorma, with the result that severalparty reaponsl- pa,tles of-vlsltta* cUabershave been

clent' energy, Mtne, Land Judgment' tomake the deVlce 'work.- Finally,. 1freely, admit:.that; here/ and' there,where'the principle of direct ^ nomina-tions- has' been applied in too crudj*shape or wronghesdedly, It has. while

!-^bollBhing cortafh evlls/iproduced orUs>»^nitua^grd9^^^l'C«ri^.^wes,iorinstane*, putting'% premium uBon

uupii tone of, voice In dealing with::a'chlldren. This is altogether, un-

... . . -——B v ftvulum uponthe; (avlsh Expenditure of nloney.-

l-L&ltjrtfBa I freisiy-admlt all this, InevertheleMi. feel.-in (hei nrst ptoce,

- r r - • tB>t;:gnltheLfuiidani«m^ Imnyof-atr.acquired!?.1"004 .primary'"nominations the* CWver-I*HW _•••. .1 nor. ffi M»h* an i t . ^ . ' t l . . -m£-l*-±~~*z "

J f . j :— fi -"i-fl ta ?"", «ri _mnr*y-|TimiU

eem to think, a mark of good dls-•-J; The.mother.whose manner Is

~ * - - ^ is. generally a Mnuchaful ^disciplinarian-than

pmary nominations the Gover-nor Is right, and, in thoseeond. place,

... rtoriiney%iHtSby; their; action they have definitely checkedthe movement for direct popular pri-maries are. In my< Judgment, mistaken.In Its essence, this is a movement tomake the' government more demo-cratic/more responsive to the wishesand'>needs' of _tho people as a whole.With our political machinery It Is es-sential to have an. efficient party, but'the/machinery ought to bo suited ...to1.democratic and not oligarchic customSjondhablts.; "The question, whether, lnj»_>i!t-gav.et^g^flp~uit^wft~_oaUhave; self-governing parties Is largerthantbe particular bill. We hold thattho right of t«pular solf-so vert mentisIncomplete unlenaUt includes the- right

"of 1 he voters not merely ba chooafl.be'-tween' candidates when they havebeen nominated, but also the right todetermine who these candidates shall-be^—Pnder-pur system, of party govr

>.wept_a*?* l-^avalaacliejt,jiut-tha[failuring "edelweiss remains the most.fatal attraction ct- the summer tour-

l a t , : • • - . • . " . • - • ' • • . _ . . . . ; . ' . - • " .

/ . N o t in Itself a remarkably beautifulBower, edelweiss nevertheless appeal!to that side of human desire thatcraves' the difficult Generally • i i /grows in rock corners that are ..prooftlcally Inaccessible. Invigorated bjthe mountain air, the c]lmberocsplc»the, blpomi; In £ thelr_-.dangerijus

[crevlce_andd8tQrmIncs to claim themfbf bis own. Sometimes be succeeds

Need Lydia E Pinkham'sVegetable Compound

that, as the measure finally came upjnrj^lnp In iha »)atA logialntn^-j' I u» -Hnnig-fflir avnmfti hf party fov-WOB well-nigh free from all objections LernroontffTherefore, the: voters shouldsave those-of the men who object to f be guaranteed the right to determine» _ • - — - - • - • • • • - • - • withta the ranks of their .respective

organliaUona'who-the canoTdafeS'bf

It because they are fundamentally op-po^ed to-anyehaBgo whataveriln thedesired diroctlon: The bill -provided

f •

. / . Indecision, sometimes mistaken I WSPhlca! an« ;pollHcai:,DBommunlt_s,^fdr-kmdOTss;=whfch'Wol--eiC v: thereby.making the experiment firstX*-.v-:»; -x.;T'^-.: .••.'.. ... . • , -where there was loost liability to-se-

., Try'to Come Back;-' r ^ rious "MwUon, and avoidinfe ordefer-?^6?longago^raKlnnalrd;whQJ« -ring tho tosk o j dealfjg with^those big

a^urp^rvls7rto^^s-l;i*?n«en' to •» overcome- would bein- tho easLsnd of, London. vKreat—t Moreoyer,_wbUeaaiarantee-

_ _ a c-IiSrtif-boys thestdty^of -jr^irtilll libertyrpf radirtdual acUon, Itisamsott Introducing his narrative, i *iBO . provided rfor; the easy malnte-iWIbrdship.added: > v i . : f naance of .partyrorganlzatlQn, and""'—«) was strong, became Weak, and thereby,-: avoided some very real dan-

• regained, his-strengtii, enabling j:BW»/T—a&PsT.-.them' that of'toAdestroy: bis

ganljatlonawhothe canoTdafetho parties will bo, no less thanright to chooao .beiween the

turns; sometimes a loose stoae, trust-eed for. a.foothold, slips away, and theend U deep down In the ravine below,;^6n*by-one-theEdeVwe1si( claims Its'victims, till the total Is higher thanthat of:the avalanche, which. destroystl(e mountaineers In full parties. Thlr-':ty -flower pickers Bacrlfl£ert thmmuiifM^To7^edeTw^issdur|n^!iub', and evory.'Week during summer'brlDgs"Its tragicQiiota tltt^the Ajplno jnows fill thenooks whore. nowjncflowBra.,bloo~.i

that h« had at last offere* a Mward-of10 shUllngs to anyone'who should givetnformatnn as V> the identity of thelat««,oa_dw^ Thebalt'sooa*ew.A. youngster called on Mr. Vlner andinformedhlm that a lad nkmed ArchieTfaompsoti was. the guilty party. Hereceived Us reward.' went-away re>ioiclng-'uid the. old gentleman forth-with wrote- to the loaa schoolmaster,demanding the production of the ssMArchie Thompson, .to makegood-j^e.

Nextd&y U» infonner <^led ig«in.r

• "The. schoolmnrter, SMSOI mi/V' liesaid briskly, "1-ve »een a gtaxter andhall pot- in your glass for threesn—tnga, Hera ltj»,and—-/. , . , . . ,

it so fast, my Ud," sail Mr.-yi-nnr. "Have you. come on behalf ofArchie TbompsohT' - / r - -.- -••-;---

-WeU. yes, sir. in-* way.* said theboy. Tact Is." he continued, confi-dentially; T o . " hlntlr—London Tlt-B i t s . • . . • " • • • • y - • • y .

HOW A DOCTOfl CURED SCALP• ^™^'DI^«S_^^~"^

"When I was ten or twelve) years;old I had a scalp Jiseaso, somelhlnglike scald head, thougu it Wasnt thatI suffered.,for sevortl^ moaths, andmost of my: hair 'came out Finallythey had r> doctor to see mo and he'reconimcjided tha Cuticpra Remedies.They cured mo in a few weeks.' I_ive-ns«d thftCut*curarEetnedles,aUo:for. d breaking out on my hands and

'was' benefited a grest deal I haven'thad any: more trouble: with-the scalpdisease. Miss Jessie F. Buchanan,i t F. D. S. Hamilton. Ga., Jan, 7,1909.'

Kept with Barnum's Circus.P. T. Barnum, the famous circus

man, once wrote: "I havo had . the- _

jhowsifor-the last thrWaeasonsrand I Imbws'tp B 0 _ _ i i o ^ i 0 5 ~ w ' i l « o L -can-cheerfully'certify^that^isy^wero' cetgfujly carry women ChrbURti thttl' •*-

-J caie-wbleh •tl^BrpoTW'irXyttDrK*!*'''''*""1"1""VegQibulB CoupoiuidAOiQAdOi

' For SO-yoars It hai|bcon ennhif wo. -pen front tho worst forma of f<Jmnla._Ills—lndammatlon, • uloeratlon, uis.

intents; fibroid tumora. lrregula«-iJeg,perlodio pains, *~-*nervous proatratlon. • - ii

If yon would like «peclal od«W•bout your case trrlto aconHden-tl«l letter ta Mrs. Pinkbam, «t

MM

t—M that womenmar expect tattreto br ing on them1

the Change of I_e.iIjrpt jTjottle oit|LydlaE.Plnfcham's1

Vegetab le Com.1pound and It madsmefeolmuohbeUar,!and I have contin-ued its ttse.-I am«ryjBratefnltoyoa'

T!!

,?*•C^SO o f W7o Is the mqst orlU 1u period of » -oman's^ristenco, andCBleot of li«ftl«, «fc this tlmo invUflS

f x iRccUM.-ra,*called for their use.

ACCOMMODATING.

^>yyei-tfHnhBji an-enemy;jMSflSadyls? mo to dor^'"-•- '-..• V V-.Ss^A'littlB bpy^jifter jnedltatlng on theWW*f§i pt :~at "grtat giant's, strength-,gjnbi^upihls hand and'exclaimed: "flet^b^^air^torw..--

sente'd them,- There ls^no dosire tobreak .down 'the responsibility .ofparty ojganliatlon under duly consti-tuted, party leadership, but there ia adesire to make this responsibility real

the right to say whom thoy desire to-ejtsejte-ttls leadsrshrp." "lh"New' Tbtkstate no small part of. the strength of,the-movement has come-from the pop-ular, con vie t Ion ;tbat many o t. tho menmost. prominent In -party leadership

-tend at times to fbnret thm h j

Globular Llohtnlnfl". ..;•'• ; •lay- the inhabitants of Lewis-

^e¥o;-prpvldea'With^ar*ipecintiBn*"L "Hoiis phenomenon known as;

««ghtnlng," : It is what''_:llea^J^^TOe^tialP^SHiFi

, _ _ .fer-ieverat-secomw-lrirfof a "totally different charac-•',

. . „ ,«.^. to dictatethe actions of the majority party.'1 In

:Otberlworda7 the proposed bill-whileIt marked a -very real: step in advance,was tentatively,. and, cautiously' fram-od.. and. provided . all potslble Bafe-'

Sgh^iit Vhiippii Tf In p—ffltp^it had failed to - work In any particu-lar, there would have been' no possible

vdlfflculty-lmnaMBg WBSleve.r amend-ments, or changes were noceseary. '

The- Republican 'party- wwn In tha-

leader must normally be to lead", notto drive. We, the men who compost,the great bulk of the community, wishto govern 'ourselves. -We Welcomsleadership, but we wish our leadersto understand that they derive their.»treogth-froni' us, aud tlmt, ulliiuuglf]!we 1oo$.to them-for guidance, we ex-pect tnlaguldance to befIn-accord-ance with our Interests ' and duriUfials. ." / - <";

Peculiar v;8hoe String" 8trlp That lia P»rJ of Greater t ° s

' Angeles.

""Los "AnselB?,"caf —•"This city clalmithe dlstlnotlon of being one. of th<moot curiously shaped- cities Jn theworld, the reason far Its pecullarlt}being the doslro to mako a senpott oulof an Inland city. Tbo part of theIllustration doslgnatcd as A Bhows thtc.lty4s_lt_was_in-1908. In- 1909-Wil-lijgton-Trftg-'adiled, and In 1910 Sac

ttal letter to . . . . . » » _ _ I . av[Lynn, Mnas. IXer odvloo is free,s—d.alvrays helpful,™™p—••—•

I W. L. DOUGLASmars «.oo, swo, »3.oo, **.», HM,«SXO.

IDEAS ABOUT THfl/UNBOWJJJ...^^^, •fmy>i lees brilliant than ordinaryajgUghtnlngr and Its brlgniness appears•** ^^-gUhs.trot.Jrpn ,at..tha,r"red;. hot:

t>lt"js- not,' asK some'- accounts/might•^fope.to^taferV a soUd miuulW but

- alWays spherical and appears toa^tro_^tttnfflefcI6ual>y l S o w n

gravity; someUmes rebounding afterStriking the ground.—-London Globe.'

Queer Notions Held by People ofDifferent Countries Regard- _ ^

Ing tho Bow, •

In many countries the rainbow Isspoken of,asj>elng_a_gceat.bent pump

l^f-ireakfasf!

PostToasties

with cream;

or siphon" tube, drawing water fromthe earth by mechanical means. ' Inparts of Russia,'in the Don-country;and also' In Moscow and. vicinity, ItIs known by a name which Is equiva-lent to "the bent water-pipe." Innearly all "Slavonic dialects_it_la

^taowtt-er-tCTmT-s!gn;ifyTnir'itbe cloudsiphon," and In Hungary It Is "tne-pump,". "Noah's jump" and "God'spump.'* Tbo Malayan natives call Itby the same name that they do theirmanded water cobra, -only that theyadd "boba" (meaning double-beaded),

.the equivalent In our language being"the double-headed water-snake." -

They'tell you that the bo* is a realthing of life, that it drinks ,with 'itstwo nAojiths^aad-that--the~wnter*irtransferred 'to the- clouds, through anopening )n>tbe upper side of thfr"cen-tra of the-great arch. In the provinceof Charkav, Russia, the. 'TUlnbow Is_sald to drain the wells/ and to preventthis many are provided with* heavy,tight-fitting stone platforms.;;-, ;•",'~ In the. province of Saratov .'tbOow

Mnhul

ten"

Is sold to be under the controlH».ngajgi.flna.uf>«hu—i>umt)iHha-,-TOtor;UuMiScoDd '-'feedV' thel-clouda. andthe. thlrjLsends the rain, M.fuiy im-

. probable. and-.tapoBsibla'thlnga.wouldhappen if you could only get in reach

• o f " t h o bow.'?: > v; ••'.' ^-4 '•/•- • ";- '"'The little Turk la : told" t^al If "he.

wonj^^reVsJIy^head^^tb-ioldl ,leetSTaSi ruby eyes, he. ,has,r but Jtotouch the orange: stripe. In Greecethey, say teat 'the<Person so' unfortu-nate'si to stumble over (he end of thebow will have his orr herl' sex.Jmme-,dlatejy"changed, jjz-'y- •"'•."i" •

••'•*•''; • o'rfly'ciisilfled, •• - •:;.;'-''' ; "I confess, to; be,liig rather particularabout'inypajamasi"-sald the fastidi-ous man, "and I had an_ experience

"laat week that nearly gave me nervousprostration, until. I saw the- hunior ofthe situation: 1 wss staying In a littlecountry town down In Maryland, andIt ^ai^necessary to'sead -some soiledclothing ftp"the .lfl'andry, the one. laun-

^.Sj^ch^erjrillBg«a>o«ste4.=feS)»?i7%i'Jj<djis^of;.myJ.:B'uiiirterwhen-iBiystta was returned to me to. find thatmy -pajamas;'. .'vhad 'id ieiBn',:'.5 'eaviIyslirebidji with, decldtfd creases-Ironed>»«_/in~front^t^M^ei3iW"'"e.i

_._, but mystified as well,'until, li-'|nf\kiTTP'-yy<* ;thd hU r-T—ffTfrr -tff tn-lj

—liarduppc Oayryon tompeainTo meand knocked jne down .with your autoand r want damages. ' . • .

.-Showfurr^Dh,-havcirtfc'you "gotenough? Well, start up an'd I'll bumpand knock yoii a g a i n . ' • . ;

Active Possession; •Ubinev.ere, aged four, was going out

to walk with a young lady, of. whqms a r was-rery4ond^"^^ tffeyTbpcngdrthe street door thoy were, met by'aBwlrllng cloud of dasl

wrzapsgWaiB..

^.Keep ynnr lips tightly-dosed, Gwen,•or you'll get -your lungs full of ml-

ynima' \*A*

-Ouineverc pondered a moment andthen, looking-up, demanded': '

~ . "What are your crobesr'—NationalJtfonthly.,-.^^M>«.™-, .-.„„,„-,»•,,., ™-.-rf.

C1—.B.

. Outline. Map of LQS Angeles.

Pedro was annexed. Tbe'seettphIgnated•as-ji 'wai annexedTfirI90SCand E and f were made parts ,of thoeltyZthis year.""-The const annexa-tlons, Sari/Pedro and Wilmington, ar«connected with Los Angeles propc>byitheip^arrow'strip known^ijs ih?^ ' S h o e ; S t r i n g . " , v ^ ; - ' . ' - ' : ' ".•-'•.••':-..-•'- 'i'.

, Scandal. 'Mrs. Slmmonds glanced at the scare.

headline:" "Bant Robbed! Police atSea!" and laid down the aBtiot

"Naow, look at that. Ex1." she ejac-ulated, repeating the headline' aloud.'•Here's a big city bank broke Into byburglars, and tb' city police force, alloff nsbln' somewhere! What a-scsa-dal!~—Judge.

^^n^tenfflis^sulti^;: V:35; c e n t s ^

Not .Then.••I see a'uateut

granted for an attachment to rocking-chairs to operate a fan to cool theoccupant*. _ ,

Egbert—And when a man goes* Intothe'dark.,roaaxond vstubs his 'toeagainst the rocker, we do not thinkthe new attachment will cool him off

-an/>—Tonkers Statesman. "-*' -

sv'rrgSThtf.Commoii'.Tfiitioij.,,..,., .-.l3.,^1

.;; P?hat's;:ypur'; idiaipf ;JBicgixar\*0ii:J5Qe^f:;*5q-.ijMr--a'i'nl('"l;---""- '•-'

SbrkMSStfiSSarfS

Ues, good morning. Iome and give _ e " a

; A.piunoe Into the- Prosaic. - "Bee the beautiful sunset cole%ha >ater,-!i^-s_d-^_B-poetle-^

.woman. \

.polprs'on'-l«.: young;

^ V 4 j-u^jy •bCAScleni-EBBS. V:'\- ~y Chlcagb*-A~chef;' discussing;: th«e*Ils.of coMitorage; saldjKlUia imlle:• 'AnH^HtUha-C_Uie'ser/who^"aregreit

pi; adore eggs three or- four^~~. pJd,^eggB-that'hava turned oulta

;." "^^i^^i^r are- prdta>ry" bideggs.-these"green cbsps; thougt-i Ifyou've eaten Chinese food youll know

Jafttter:1; t^nn ' >h t iaaic—«hti^»STmr,gourmets and thelriandent; eggs are

.ripened like flne'eheese. ; :i•;&tWi.lailence^ -The e g g f . ^ u u ^spend nine, months.In a hot.tempera'

^^^^I^^ywi ther , -^ 1

-ttontttsJn.il CiMOemperaturs, burledin- chalk, andso jtbrtS ana so on. s V?,v,r.They:«re. green In ihekendi «n i the>fiave;an JunpleasaM^putrid odor? fiat

.Then. ;t.Happened."What mndelxon-thlck—ha—would

propose lo mer'; • ' '.;.'• "Why, when.I refused him ha said•he.didn't, care .What.became of him;*.but perhaps,_he_,wain't-'^ serious,51—Houston Pott.: i : ' ' , . -,. ; !

The. undertaker usually flnlsh.es allbe -undertakes.

MnrmeDoesn'tSmart-o

PU6ET SOUNDSiJSKl^_€

have an unpleasant. putrid odorV But-Roquefort- cheese-is—greenrand " its 'odor, too,- Is puirfd and unpleasant

. M*4* W.S'iWflet* t^Umt d l"ed-told me that green eggs" of thevintage cost-two" and three MAPLEIN

THB8VANDAHDFOUfaO-VsTWHB^

. They an *bMlot»ly,.tli*most popdluuiil hMtsowifor tM prfc* in Ameri«.Tbey «n tht lesdera svary-when btutntthty holdt—Ir stup«,. fit better,look tetter and we«r lon-— than other mfkei.

t art cwtslsly th» ••SSJISSWML- „•—•.-amt tcooomlttl shoes for yoir tn tmyr wTt. [VmfUm DUB*ini null prlc* tnrttmptioa !tBe4wttaar-TsliiigasrutMd./'<Hio>iM'2wK<i!T«KS NO suasTirura • u y«r. tma :HO SUaSTITUTCI K n » OMltr

snpjily you writs fa Milt Ordsr CtUtor

"CucsreM srt orriauly Soe, I n w i frlrtuleo«wbcii tlw doctor wss inaiwfmn tqt csaccr ',.o> th<jrtom*ch: The n~t mnrnlaf-h* pa—ri —

XSuphlo Co, P». Uraaulle • worfctrtor QtiA-

J"_!_'_o_fclI«wl5on^Klx2_lIn Co.) •

MACIIKIST APPRENTKES WANTED1IKOWN & SHAWE MPO.-CO.

BOVS 18lo 18 rttnmCnamu School' E_catloii..Foary<*n)(Oiin«,Tccbii_l.

IrutnicUop Included, m _

EasyMoneyio Canvasserstfentg H_it» oitr lino 'mk-o M«T. n L

liriffht Bonpofiipejiiitn_

FAIEIIIS3sS|S|!~-a-

AXLE GREASE

ARD O(tacorpomt^)

— • B—

Mm:liiiisV£-iiIi£i

Wmmsss

M——/-..

"^^-y-WfifrS;

'~M:%r

,;4^*-,4:,i. _:|

"'ffif**'.

"Vr'rf'^

•:•*" ' % ' " ' . f ' .

. , * • - - - . : • / • '

• '-'"si :'*StS'5S

THE CEANFOBD.i

m?^

'" i "'"7

CONSERVATION A DUTY; " > -DECLARESPRESIDENT, TAFT

Members of National Congress at St Paul FindHim Thoroughly in Accprd w'th Tteir

Ideas—His S

' S L - F u l , 8 e p C - i » ^ n i * NfctfeoUConienr&Uoa congress Ilst-aned withdeep interest to Tresldtnt Taffi «4-dresa today. The chl«f executive•poke •ubftttttlallf u follows:

of th* National c«c*err»-tioo~

ft*

ntMiConserrttlon ft* an sconomle and |*h

_- Jltleal tarm ha* com* to meatuthft prCT-tr-v- — vitlon of our natural' rMOurc-rt for

economical UM, to a* to Mcur* the gr*M->est rood to tha freatcat number.

The dasffu- to tha atata and M> tha peo-ple at larfa^frotn tha waata and dlMf pa-iion. of ouf .national smith.,IM'.not. on*which quickly imprwiaa lUelf on the p«O-pte of th'o older communitlw, b«cauM It*moit obvtoa* lttitaacea do not occur Inthslr oelfhbofhood, .while.In the newerpart of' tha country [tie iympatnjr withexpaniloir~and-davelopme.pt la no atronfthat tha daiifvr id aooffed at or labored.Among tdenttflo tiaen and thoughtful ob>vervara, however, the danfer ha* eJwayabeen praaent; but-lt needed aome one tobrine home tha ciylog need for a remedy

- i — of thl* eftf eb aa to tnfpraas ttmXt on thepublic mind and lead to tha formation ofpublic opinion and action bjrthr.repre-•eatatlyva of tha people.' TTteodore Rooae*-velt took up this faeiTth'the laat twoyear* of hie-a«cond administration, andwell dM he perform U*.

As preaident of the United BtatM' 1have, aa It -ware*- Inherited - thfansolte^.-

, anil I rejoice In my herltaire.~^Trprlae .tpjr-hlgfi opportunity to do all—that an ex-vcullTe can do to help a great people

^realise a'great national ambition. Forconservation te national,;-- It'aJTe-cti ~ev«ry*man of us, erery wbman, every child:.What I. can do ID the.cause X 'shall AoKnot aa prenldent of at party, but s ipr f t l -derit of the whole 'people. Conservationla not a Question qf politics, or of fac-

* tlotn, or of persona.. It la a Question thataffect a the vltal/wa'lfaro of all of us—ofour children ano^our children's children;,I-urge Chat no"*|ro d can coma from, meet-ing*'of this sert unless we aacrlbe tothose who tali* part In them, and whoare apparently striving • worthily In thecnuie, all "proper motives, and unless- weJudfptolJy consider every measure \ ormethod proposed with a view to Its effge-

, Uveneas In fachiavlng ~our-common-pur<-poae, ftpd whollx JCUhQ^t-negata to « h a

" propose! Itor who* *« 114 claim th* creditf I ti T h V•"To/. It* adoption./ "The., problems eije,1 ofvery great difficulty and call1-Vfor. th*calmest consideration and .clearest =fore-

' tight Man/; of. the questions presentee-. have.'.phases that are new In. this coun*'

try, and It Is passible that In their solu-tion;.we rnair have Jo attempt first one

'way .and then• ahoiher. What I. wish to'

. tor? conclusion can . only Mbe : reached;T- ipromptr;jrif~;weT*jvold"acriirio*Ty7"lfnputa-"

• tlons of' bad -faith, and political* contrb*" • • • . • * e r » y . f - - , : ' : . . ' - . * - ' , . _ u . : .-..;• . ' - - . i . ' > . . • .

The.public domain,otahe.r#oTerntnent"""of* lh*~"Unlt*d State* Including.all the• -cession* from those of In* thirteen state*

that mad* cessions to the United States'and Including Alaska, amounted In- all toabout 1.900,000,000 acres.;. -Of this Were-Is

-left a* purely ^government property out*I '-•Id* of Alaska something like 700,000,000 of

ncrca, Of this the national forest sf*-- serves In -the-Urilt*d-Btaleerprop*r=-enf-

• .brace 1K.00O.00O acre*."" ' , ••:•-•--•

; eral lands^-that Is. -.lands containing' metalliferous minerals:- (3) forest -lands;' (4) coal lands: <6) oil and gas lands; and

.(€) plroa'phate lahdsr' ,: rr.' ' .'. . '.' •.-.-..-: Agricultural Lands,- Our land law*, for the entry,of agrtcul-

-'4 tureFlarids are 'how. as follow*.*- : • • - -*• --The: original, homestead law,, with tho

, '^feqiiiremerit*"of*resldence-and* cultivation-for- five years, .much, mote' strict!/ ,en-;-

-:- forced than over before.- . -, .^y-;; The enlarged homestead act, applying

mtnd 'tmrpmi* by t ie pro|ects7'» thatth* pTOJecta, worthr ana tMstbla, might

.b* promptly comi>l<t«d. and the settlersmight be. relieved from tn«tr,present m-conTWileoce and hardship. In aathorMngth* tame> of these projects, conkrees flin-Ited the apvlleallon of their prooeeds tothose projects which s board of army en-gineer*, to be appointed by the pne«d*ptshould examine ana" 4etermlae_ ta- MfeutMt «nd inm*«-0f completlen. Tbeboard has been appointed and soon wQlmake Its'report

Suggestion* have been mad* that the"troltad SUtea audit to aid In the drain-age of swamp lands bejeurlng lo theatalu or priraU owners, beoau**, If1drained .they would ba.«ceedlngly ral-nable for agriculture and contribute tothe general welfare -by extending theare*, of cultivation. I deprecate th* agi-UUon In faTprof such legislation.Ml IsInviting the general government Intocontribution from It* traeaurrtoward en-terprises that shouU be conducted, either

.by private eaptul dr at the Instance orth* state. In these dare than Is a dispo-sition to look too much to the federalgovernment for everything. • I am liberalIn the construction of th* CcmstltaUonwith reference, to federal power; but Iam firmly, convinced that the-only safecourse for JUS to pursue 1* to hold fartto the limitations of the Constitution, andto regard a* sacred, th* power* of tb*state*. We have mad* wonderful prog-reu and at the- same time have pre-served with judicial exactness th* re-strictions of tha Constitution.'. Ttisre Isnn easy way In which the Constitution"cm be violated by congress withoutjudicial Inhibition, to-wll, by ippropHa-tlons from tta* national treasury for un-eonstttutlonal purposes It will be a sorryday for this country If the Mm* ercomes when our fundamental oompi.ahall be habitually disregarded In thlmanner. . /•

Hintn\ Land*.n y mineral lands I mean thoee land*

bearlnc matala, or* what are called metil-Uferoua mineral*. The-rule* of own«r\•hip and disposition of these lands wantfirst fUed by ; custom' In , Ai* west...andtnen were embodied In the law, an*, thhave worked, on the whole, so fairly a

two

"jj!JS"Ll- i=Ba=r.,BlisooVdown i _ _ ,* o t « entries, wfth *» ere**whichaolMbr feM&W,.•itlon of th* coal bassr*ar*.o« about «W» acr* The .present iiongi***,

fc*ar separated th* surface, of coal land*,either rJ*.*lf^ er"»rltl-4r»«wi«*r»-«t«»*WBeatlon, from the need baotfatte ae ** topermit at o i l - t taw to«se»1sMv^eotrle*upon the »ort*c* of l*nd» useful **» *g-

M * "" •"rtmttinV ao4 to^men».to«la th* eaaTta to* govemmentwqtlon whlcb-Temalns to b« oonrtl«red-l»*hetBerthr««lng-lawlor to. l^S*th sl'l th d h I 'tli* ecajT ia the-.ground-: ahooid eoetJmi* jIn tore* or" be repealed and t * n methodof: dtoposltloo aulcpted.1 Pad*rli^e_yra*snt

eath tin curfac*Of'tlW-'

a g or better thePefpjtTtihii.

.___yeurs' residence and continuousI'-e'Suva-._.".. tlon-jof .one-fourth of" the ar>a. ' A

• The dosorf.lahd act. which reguire»\on"?,.:.,'"•" the.part of the purchi»ser-the own>m% j

Nothing can be-'rhon'Important Jn thitnatter of con**fve,U6n than'the'trestmenof our forest latids. Jt war probably th.-ruthless d*stru|ctlon lot j forests!) In tholder state* that first called attentiona halt In tha waste of our resource*. Thliwo*. recognised by congre** by a°h* avlauthorlxinglths. executive te reserve from

"eBlrr~aSd,set said* pobllo timber .land*as-national forest*-, Speakings generally,there has been reserved of the eztstlniforests .about seventy per cent ofthe Umbtr lands »f the governmenttVlthln-thM* foresU dhchiaing' W,0O3.(l0Oacre* In two forest* In Alaska) are 1M.000,000 -of aerie*, Bf which. JM,00O,O0O o:acre* are In,the United States proper ian<Include wltjln tlwlr boundark*. some-thing like': B,OOO,0DO of acres that belbni.to the state or to^rlvete Individual*. Wihavethen*1 excluding* Alaska forests,total of about 144.000.Ort) acres of forests

(-belonging to th* government whlch~1s"being treated .lq accord with, th* prtncl-

scJ*nUO<iv<*eelr»»Th4 government Umber m thla coun

ftr amounts' to only one-fourth of all thi-t1mber( the rest;1 being1 In .private owiwershlp. Only three per cent of that which.la^ In : private oilrnenihtp .Is looked afterproperly and trea'ted according for mod-ern rules ofv forestryV' The usuaf'ttda-structive waste and neglect continues'Inthe remainder of the. forests owned byprivate persons and corporations. It I

-wotM limn »hd thorough reclvnarof tho l a d b I i t i " d ^

j m d t h o u g h• lion ,of tho land by Irritation, a n d H

paymtnt of 11.15 per acre., 'J The donation or Carey act, under * aich

the' state selects, the land' and prwldes/or Its reclamation,' and the .title, vasts Inthe settm- who reside* upon-the land and

l t u t j j. cultivates It and pass rt^^^^i^t^^^^-^^v^w?~is~'a^s^yi-^^Ju^'"•VTOnKailon; ---<'•'*•". rr11'«»!'-ln*jj jneSt except an Increase-In the^flre pro;

\

The lialluuai . m'huiVation.-.homeitesdlaw, requiring.five -years* residence and•eultlvnllon'-bj1--«ie'-sertl»i'i1Iflvtlir«-TCfla'Tf-*;rjirated by the government, and paymentby him to the government of the.cbst.oft h o r e c l a m a t i o n . ..-••.•-.,.-. •• • > • - • ; ' - T - ' - ." ' :

_-_!JiiJJi«,BMSMt^anpeiiapassed, a bill- ofr1 • .vtfrcat Importance, asve'rlng .the, Ownership.; ycf..cbal'by-the s/oVernment lii-the ground

. ../.fromvthe.* su.riace. and permltllflg''tioroe-./ s t e a d entries - upon, the ."surface., of the

.. / . , Jandi- "..whlclv when _ perf ec tod. - give•_._ thfci/ sett\«> "<he right to farm the surface!

!'- while'the'coal beneath" .the surface Jsr*-'.'..""- talned In ownership by the government" ;.' and. may be disposed of by^trunder other". . - , • ; , l a w ' * . - ' < , . . - • - ; ' • • • > : - ; , : -:••'•';•' • ' • • ' ' • • r J

.;;..Therp Is' t\6'crying need for"radical re-. . . . /ormiih the. methods of disposing of what-" r are.. really-.'agrlc.ul.tural lands.-1. -The -pres-•'-•:'.: en£' laws' have worked woll. • Tlip eh- ,

.-. larged homestead law has 'encouraged Lthe'. tuccessful farming of lands In' the seml-

•'.-•'.;. » r l d r e g i o n s , i ••-•. ".•.•" ; > . ',. " . - . . - . " . y -

.-•; •'•": Reclamation. '-•:'•'• •• .:'' _ „ ' : By the reclamation act a fund has'been'

:. ' created-of -the v proceed*- of the^puhllc_.:^_ lands Jf-the-TJ'nlled :8ttles'wTth"whlch-to_, i conttruct works for storlhg-great, bodies

ofo»ater at proper altitudes from wh.ich.— r/byraJultaWe sy*tenlofJcanaui:«nd dltch-

. M. the water |> to be distributed over the. arid and subarld lands of the government

'.••'-'• to be'*old to settlers'at a price aufBclent, ••',- -- '*-pa 'fpT"V(hB'''tn^^B"IMinf*^r lB 'i*ll)r,'

,-,tl-« projects are and muat be for Ihe 1m-';' prdvemenf of public lands. Incidentally,

- w h e r e private land: Is also wKhln reach'•.'•'. h-'ot^ t"»*:iwtter' supply, the furnishing, a t*I^iw^ipr;:'|to(ltrotitl!liij{ater«to-prlvat*-]

cjmers t y the governmenrim^jjid by -the;.'iW'"W?"W''1coM.rt-V'e^.-'a^*rt'-i'i|pPrKQ;b*sia;j >-. usurpation of power. *• But certainly this' • Sl9"*ht-Hot iiL.pt ;;done 'Oxcept <fnnn>sin>i

'plusiwater,-njit-isijeded Mr governmentjaiuir^Th«"Total .'sum already < accuniula-

estimated that fire alone destroys toO.OlM,000 worth of timber a year. Themanagement of forests not on publicland la beyond tho jurisdiction of the

rnmenL If anyTgovernment.: If anything cai>bx. law It must tx) done by tho state l«g-Matures.- X' believe that. It *!«• within' iheliconstitutional power to 'require the ' en

no -generalDUbllc Interest, aa to flro and othercause* of * waste' In the management * offorest* owned J>y private Individuals andcorporations.* I have shown sufficiently the cqndltl&ia* to federal forestry'to: Indicate that.nofurthsr J*gMl»tJonJi.n*efl.eA t h

Iwllnn ti> ustlonal—fortst*--«-vestltog the executlxe with, full power to

JandrWnrTotal sum alreadyted In the rtclsmatlon fundan and of that nil but

ta

'. congress ^t Its Tost session, from tho_ statements mad* &£. experts, that these

90 project* could .not be promptly ctfm-pletcd with the • balance remaining-, op

— hand or with the ("fund* llftcly—to^aeerup-Irr the near future.jiltjwa's found, ,more-jivcr," that, then sirofmany "settlers whohave be«n led lr»t&5'takior<UP'l*nds_with

~ the hope and kUnderatandiag; of. hafingiratw furnl«hetfiinj5»v»h0Tt Urn*, who^r^

j.Jeft In a mo»l''ijl»lr«»slng'situation. IjTeeqoimemled Uo;conjrr«»Uh»t authorityte i t f t t h * J » W t M / t h J t r t ?

For th. year ending March » . IMO,L

where'^ovorjj.ment land lirtlmber-cdvered,or Vhera the land; "Is needed for forestrypurpose*., • ,.- ' •...- .-• ..__i^,^\;>^Coi(J=an,ds,i;:

Thelhext. subject, and one.m6st"l,mporrtant. fof-auV consideration, Is the disposi-tion, of. the\coal lands" In (tie'.-UnitedStates and in Alaska. First, as to' thoseIn- the.-United •Stales.-* At the b«elnnln«of this administration they were*c1assl-fled .coal. lands, ampuntlijg '. to. 5,4701000acres,,-and 'th^re -were, withdrawn fromentry" for .purposes of-.clasalflcatlon^lT,-8g7.0CO acres. -8lnc» lhat-llmf there have"been withdrawn, by .my order, from entry.for-.classification 77,648.000 acres, ^makinga total- withdrawal\ of, 9C.615.000 acres,Meantime, of tho' acre> thus withdrawn,11.J71.000 have- been closslHed'and foundnot-tb-contain eoal,;and have< been re-'stored to agrlculturalentry, and '4.SM,6ooacres have been closslfled a* coal lands;whllo 79.7tS.0OO acre* remain 'withdrawnfrom entry and await classification. Innddllloa 0 , 0 0 0 . acrea-cave :-»een—elassl-

.fled a* coal ;landa without prlor'wlthdraw-al,yth»* IncreaslBgr theTJlassiacdJ^aJal-landi/to 10.1B.OOO acres. V?"-i c i . 1

sltion of <oal lania, the' minimum prioe.at which UixJa *re pernllHed";to' !b» «oldIs HO on acre; but" the secretarj-of. theInterior'has the power to fix a mmlmunrprice and sell at. that price.''By" the flrstregulation* governing ^ippralsal. -ap-proved April S, HOT, the mmlmum was HO,«a provided, by-tow. and,the mailmum.wM-W,^i*^«ie««*J!eat-i>rlce'racjplsced upon enr land sold-waa |7 l ."Bn-der the new reguJaUons.i»*optpd. April 10,190»j the maximum price wa9 Increased toIS». except In regions whtro. there "arelarge: mine*,?where no maximum limit ftHxed.and the.price la aetermlned by thecftlmatedtona ofcpai.to thi acre. Th*

* « *regulation, ha* Deen/fttt. Th**.ap-.Ml value of the land*, classified'M

cojtfcnd* «nd valued under the newandold regulations Is sh6wn to,M as.follows•J.8O3,oa acre* VjUuM^nderVarald » « :taU t » J ^ ^ avtfage.ot TO an

sai claulBed alid'new regulation fltHaw.-6t ***&*• '

J.83,oa actaUons at•ere: andrftoa't

upon en; •etlmated, aawunt. •«<.. .tba too*of eoal per acre bwieaJh the I m M and.th* pHce* ere fixed *o that , .WSat la t^-win only be a reaaonaM* ptsat-tajnD th*amount paid and tb* lavestatest Bece*-sary. But. of mursa, thM W Oora «r lewgiie»wor"t. and Uw«w*reSe«A. t partswtth the ownership,'«?<7h«X57tB7Bwgiwind abwlately: Autforltlw^ the ge-ological survey - *stln(*t. "Sat In t SUnited atal*. today .Uw»4«s-*i«ppty ofabout three thousand unions Of ions «tcoaL and that ot this one th«u*and WUloo*sreinthepoMto domain. Of oeure*,ll« oth-er twothousaad «lllon» *r* wiiWnprivateownership aad endar no n»or* oontroi asto th* u»* or the prio**-at whloh thecoal may J>e*old-than any otherprtvot*prouerly.' If the: government ,l»*aae th*«4a|' land*Tan«; act*:; a* any laadlerdw&uld, and lrapo*e*, coodlttnw". In It*leejee'Uke^toeeaLWhlph *r* now bnpoeedby the, owBer* Infe* df.ooaltnjjna* la thevarteos coal regions of th* SSt^lhm itwould-retain ;over the.dlsposWfln of thecoal de>oilt* i choice as lo th* assignee..of the i e ^ or of r&mfnrpos***rton atth* end ofj the' term of th* Uas*. whlohmight ea»l|r be framed tn,ana*le. IV te>nerdaa a limited "but etteetrv* controlIn th* dlspoemon and ear* "of;OI* 00*4 t*.the pubUoV^It has been urged-that thVleasing ayatem his never been adopted Inthis country, and that It* adoption wouldlargely Interfere with the Investment ofcapital and the proper development aadopening up of the ooal resource*;'' I ven-ture- to differ entlrely-from tlujKvteWi- —

Th* queeUon gsvld'Siiw great an areaought to be included In a lesea ta oneIndividual or corporation, 1s not free fromdlfBculty; but In 'view of thefaot thatihe government retains oontrol a* owner,-I think there might tM some liberality Isth* amount leaned,'and that MM acreswould not .be too great a maximum. •

By the opportunity to readjust theterm* upon which the coal shall be heldby the Unant, either at-the erf* of'each'

Lleae* or at periods during the term,, th*'1 government may secure th* benefit «fshining In the Increased priee of ooa} andthe additional profit made by th* UnantBy imposing oondltloa* In respect to-thecharacter of work to be done InVthe

' les. the «ovcrnm»nt-njay oontrontneiracter of the. development .of the

and the treatment of employes witht- to safety,.--.By^^tsnrin*;—rth*, transfm the- laaaa toeept^by-thy

^ft m j i g 'planta, ttMpam^deveiopinent;{tsjr:mod-ers mtalat mSbod* of th* propertia*leased, and tb* see '.of «*wr knewn andvraotleal meauu and cVevtos f or aartnT tn*Uf* of^OirsataarS.", • ::-.fS~-••••?;*£•

-• In' Ui* last adjnJnlatrm'cUm 0>ere"we»*withdrawn from, ogrlcuttural entry UH-.Ota acre* of *uppssad oU land to Csairor-nla; jafeoet a amUlten and a,' half oore* tat«al*tasB, a t , wtleh only;, 1,010 sere*»er*i'ln»d#n to1 be vmoant; unaptroprla-t»d,land: ».«O) acre* Is Oregon *a4'Be>'00» acre* In Wyoming, making a tot*) efnearly 4VOSM00 acre*. In Beptember.Ues,I dfntcted that all imbllo oil lands,whefter then wltMrawn or not, *hooM**> withheld from disposition pendlwtoon-graselunsl action, for the reason that tne•xlstlna*, plooer mining 'law. altheuah

Tnad* atplleabl* to depoaSts of thl# char'

n'permission bf 1U» i governmentalr tle*. it may withhold th* -needed

writaut!consenKwhen It JS proposed to transfer,the leaaMioid to persoa* Interested In «t-tabllshlngva moRopoly of coal produotHonIn any- atata' or neighborhood,' The changefrom th* Absolut* grant to the leasingsystem wjll\lnvolve a good deal oftrouble In thiVoutset, and the training ofexpeMe In theXmattsrof.maklng^propertease*; bat th*\Aang* will be_a goodo * d b made The change Is fa0n*~ana t

the Interest o f .glad tq;approve:|

* will be_a goodThe change Is faU bdX am

The Investigationvey show that th* 'Alaaka cover aboutand that there are knoabout IS.000,000,000 ton*.an underestimate of thbecause further d e l

'-ably-lncTea**—thl*but we-c*n_say-wlth '

4 i h

geologteal snr-l properties; la

sauara miles,to be available

Is,'however/al In Alaska,

will prob-«r~flinn|}~

; cer-

U not suitable ta aneh laada, andfor the further reason that Ifaeemed d«-*aqry t-to.ijsiii» certain fUI-oUfleporiWtor the u*e of tb* American navy. Ac-cordingly the form of°aa exhKing wtth-drawab was oaonged. and . new with*antwala aggregating t1*Ri«W acres werenude in Arhwna. California, ColoradoMew Mexloo, Utah and *WTommg. JTMdexamlnaluas .during itbe year showedthat ef the _oc1g1na4 withdrawals. JUnV-

MD acre* were not I valuable for otL andt&er.wer* restored tor agricultural,entry.MeaaUne, other withdrawals of publloott land* In thss* j taUe-wen mada, aothat-July a IN*, ut* ont«tandM« wtUi'drawal* then .amironted to iMIMWO aoraa.

Th* needed oil and nuj law 1* easenUal-ly a leasing bkw. In their natural occur-rence, dU and gas cannot be measured Interm* of acre*. Ilk* ooej, and It follow*that (Sxciuotv* tttlo to theee product* cannormally be secured only after they reachthe surface. OU should, be disposed of aaa oontmedlty In term* of barrel* ' oftransportable jpraduot rather than , In

"Mr** of real estate. Thla Is, o r course,tha reaaon-for the practically universaladoption of the leasing systsm whereveroil land I* In prlrat* ownership,.. Thegovernment thu* would.not be..enterln*Ton an *xp*rlment,_ but simply j U

TMo «ffeot~a,p)*flprlvat* oontraota

Pacific slop* which can berailway* at a reawnablo. cost from deep-water—In one cose about fifty mils* andjn.the other case of about IBwhich will • oHord certainlytons of coal, more than half.of wL..of a very high grade of bltumlnauaof anthracite, n Is estimated to beIn the ground, one-half a cent » .shlch make* Its-value per acre*from „to •»».. -The coking-coal load* of Penn ,aylranla are.worth from M00-to n,(M anacre, while other Appalachian 'fields 'oreworth from HO;to tM» an acre. and^thj^lVneiaa in tne central state* from'lno to 'IJ.WO an' acre, and In the Rocky, moun-tains HO to|600 an acre. The demand forcoal oh the- Paclflo toast If f"- -.K«,||

It'would encountercheap 'fuel: oil, of

h tt;nX),000 ton* B year.the competition of chsap fuel oil, ofwhich th* equivalent of M.00O.O0O ton* ofccal a year la used theref It Is estimatedthat the" coat could be laid down at Be-atUe ar Son Francisco, -a high-grade bl-tumlnbua, at U a ;ton and anthracite at"ft.pt K » toiv,,Tlie prUse-of'«oal on- tb;*Pacino slope' varies greatly from time to,tlme-ln -the-yeai^an^l-tfom. year toyeara~;from 14 to til » ton'. With a regular coalUltlUtofcth tjUMlyrltiaUfcr«twl vtttiz

gcologlcaT^surviiy, Mr. Brooks, who ha*mod* a report on the subject! does notthink there would be an excessive profitIn 4he Alaaka coal mining because th.price at which" theTcoal could be soldwould nrronslderably lowered by compe-tition from these fields and by tne pret-ence of crude fuel oil.' The history of thelaw* affecting the' disposition of Alaakacoal-lands show* them'to need amend-ment badly. _ r•On-Novetnbor U. ltOS, President Rooee-

mlt Issued < an executive order .with-drawing all coal lands from location andentry In Alaska. On l&tajLJla, ,1*7, be-modified tho order so as to permit validlocations made prior to the witho)ra*wal

-oru November 12. 1106, to proceed JO\*ntryand patent prior to USat date aome.KOclaims had been filed, most of theriCtolUto be Illegal becauss-either made-fraudu-lently - by dummy entrymen In tho Inter-est of one Individual of corporation, orbecause of afeft!ements"mad6 prior td116-•atlon between the applicants to_£ikoperaten-developtng the land*. There a n »

claims for 160 acres each, known as-the•XanninKham claims," which a n claimedtp be valid on the ground that they

prtT«t*"oontraota. •Why ahould not the(ovarnhient aa a] landowner' deal directly• M l the oil producer rather than Hroughtn* Intervention of a; middleman to Vhomthe government gives-title to the lanw

The ' principal. underlrtiis" , feature ? ofsuch; legialaUon should be the exercise ofbeaeflclal control rather than the collec-tion of revenue. As not'only the largestownsr of -ell. lands, but »»-a prospectivelar*» consnmer, of ofr by reason of theInc»*s1ng;ilse tjfvM*loil by the navy,th* fedenU government U.directly oon-cerned •• both.; in ;• enooucagin* ratlc-nal de-

: velopmeat. anA.jLt>the- sanae.- tltne-usurtag-the longest poaslble" life to the oil aup<ply.''';;-':.tr''i-;V'v-.l;:' -i"1---; . ' " ' / v v 1 >:

Ons,ef the dlfflcoltles presanted, espe-cially In the California^fields. Is that theSouthern" Paclflo"; railroad own* everyotterraeetlon of land- In th*. oil field,and in the** field* th* oil ae*m* to "he Ina common1 rsaervolr, or sertM- of. raaer-volr*. communlcatlnii'. thronich the* nit

*> isa^jTrnmcahl* psnrttttt puMM bud* te deccrloal power

<i*m|s>iil*«L hot Otf« «mat» ht wgetnlly to.•gj '^ i i j . W s m * It dos*"*«t author***» • oaOectJon at -a eh**** or fix a tarnof -fear*. OtaftaJ Is slow to hniM la*an e m t M ^oonded «n » permw revocable

II fa- the Plata doty vt ihe governmentt o r n to It that In th* vtniaatioa and d»/retosneat of an tal* Inunene* anwuatof/water power, wnWBtleaa (hall b* inl-poaed that «fll prevent tooaopoly, anawin pnveeA •xferaonat* ehergee, #hkl3ra n t h * MBoeapaahnent -o< monopoly, The.,dMteotty ef adjusting «b*, saatjer I) a sJcaaAtaM.pw th* retatJo? of the power1

iritfUtn OM «Mer. the tali and flow- ofwbfch creakt the power. In the *tatwwhere the** site* are, the riparian own-er doe* not centre! or own th* power Inthe w*t*r w-hlen-nawa paet hi* lano.That powe* (a nndenth* oontrol and -with.In the g n a t at the state, and-groeraltyg»naMMIr«t.ttie-fti.t w»ie»«a*r-l.*fc.

4 th* enjoyment Ifur, tn*~noe-eteehmof the bank, or wat*r-p<nrar alt*ore* wWch the1 water la to be conveyedto order te oak* tb* power useful, grn*telt* * * M an advantag* and a eertalnkind of costnil, over the oa* of the. waterpow*r..and It J* prep*e«d^*« th*i«OT«n»

issJS

•*»n»s?

rek ftaIroaNa. t gpent orer |700.W =torlac bat to no avail. I « u Jhgpalr wb«a I betas taking Doani

t f l t t t t Tat\jurr HUjrtmt soon fett better.en ^esral barf* t*en bee bomi:tmr troablt i" : - ';.••.'•.'•'*, -:v->'-.f^^"

"B^member tlie "aams^-DcnuiV/,aJ« br aU dealers. 60 cents (kbdxgJkmtgpJIWxixii Co , BOJIAIO, N. T.

tb# power; MMji.ii

dB *ba!4gV a n d S a * IknoV for

the*, who wfenld derelopI ditl th

WHERB?HE 8AVED MONKY.

^K|g;f;^Hiar:

fenlnditlo

pth*leasehold wtthT referenoe to the, fesson

•blenees at th* rate* at which tha^power,when trsarouted. 1* to b*-farn)xh*d Ifthe public, 'and forbidding the union ofth* particular power with a combinationof others made for the ptirpoa* of monop-oly by foTtHdffln» aOTignmeot of the]<*** mm by coolant of toe gorernnmt.Seriona dlOe\xUla>,^an,- anticipated - by;•OPS* In sneh an attempt on the part ofthe, reneral (oyemaeet, because of thesovereign' oeatnl of the state over, ths"water power In It* natural condition, andthe m»n proprietorship ol ther govern-

-mtnt |n < th* riparian land*. It la con-tended that through Its mere proprietaryrlgttl in the jrtte, ° " central governmtnth*a no power to attempt \to-exercise po-HW-lur1*UteUon wiln...reference .-to—now-j^ h u * 4 ^ l b>

sands, so that th* excesatve draining.ofoil at one well,, or on the railroad terrl-

"myi(Huitra}tK-1nWF rtrtnKiit' (Ht '5(r Tn"the government land. Hence It'Is Im-

t h It ththe goenment nd. Hence I t I s Important that It the government Is to have

4ta,*hare of the oil 1t should begin theopening of walhi on- Its own property."

It has been suggested, and ? ballevsthesuggestion to be a sound oBd, that per-mit* be Issued to a prospector for oilgiving him the right to prospect for twoyear* over a certain tract of government^land for the discovery of oil, tho right tobe evidenced by a license for,which hepays a-small sum.; When the oil is dis-

covered, then he acquire* title to a cer-tract, much In the same way M he

ld-acquire.tltlo-under a mining |aw.course If the; system of leasing U

.pled, then ho would' be given toe

controlled by the stale shall Mused, an*Jthat It 4* a vlolaUon tot Ibe state'* rif ht*.I qUMtlon the Validity t>t this 'objection.Th*—government may ;lmposo apy condl-tlon* that It chooeei.ln Its !oo*« of ItsOwn property1, n o though It maj1 h*veth* same purpose, and In effect accom-plish lust what, the atato would accom-pUsb by the exercise of Its sovereignty.Thtre are thoae (and the director of th*geological survey, Mr. Smith,".who ho*given-a greet1 deal of attention to this,matter, Is one of them) who Insist thatthis matter' of transmuting water powerInto electricity, which can be conveyedall .over-th*. .country1, and- acroaa istateKnee, Is a matter that ought to be re-tained by the general government, «ndthat It should avail Itself of the ownar-•hlp of these power site* for '.ha veqrpurpose of co-ordinating In one generalplan thiSt power generated from iht*egovernlnent owned sites. .

ArgunUaU-Agalnat Idea, '

- "Ton «ay It coats leu toaatomoUle thsn that trottingybu* ownedf

"Tes; I used to bot oa the '

\ A Shipping Error,The yonng diicbesi of Wei

"On the other hand, it Is contendeil thatf t l d V I

la lour

i. lugieated: What ha» been said In: to oil applies also* to

Pho«ph*te-L»nd«.; . ^ - V r ';W'Js ;pn».;.ot the three essen-

tial* •lo.'pljuit growth, "the otherselement*•b^g^mnirew^TTiBt i iwi . J ut '^fiSse'throe. pho\5hjiru« Is By air .odds the'

made by an attorney for S3 different"^and bona fide claimant* who, "'a*alleged, paid their money and; took theBeefier steps to locate their entrie* andprotect them. The representative* of thagovernment. In the hearing* before, theand office have attacked the validity bfhese Cunningham claims on the ground

that, prior to their location there wji* an

sjistBMt ejlt\n*eJii.L-lB na'ture-MtrljTiiBriyextracted'ln\useful form from'the'.phoeX^ - ' " A ^,t*»-KnHe<t-«»te»^iefe:

it. known; aeposlt* ofTthls".-.They, are^ound'.raFIorl(Ia,>*s well as

"„... .,J&nn*»-.it phosphate land* are

Jtab r and Florida,.there were OOO.OOOagricultural- entry

land covered1-pho*-(ntlp#,i;M*«""Xracres'^hdniwn *,Was found(hate . In-'profltabjii

it th* control of th* water-power siteand the control of the water were VettedIn th* same sovereignty and ownership,vis., the states, and then wen disposedof for development te prjv**te. les*M* un-der th* restriction* needed to presernthe Intenst* of the public from the extor-tton* and abuaea of monopoly*- Therefore,bllla have>t|«en Introduced In. congressproviding' that whenever the state au-thorities deem a water power, useful theymay" apply to tho government, of theUnited 8Utes for a grant to the etoMof t,he adjacent land for a Vater-biKrtrsite, and-that thl* grant froinXtherfed-eral government to the stato shall con-tain- a condition thlt the >fato shoUnever part with the tltlexto the water.-power site or me watei^poleata It only for .a topm of years not ex-ceedlng~J!n?T~wmp provisions in thelease by which JHie rental and the rates ,

for which the^pwer-1*-furnlMiwno" the""") I***public shallops, nodjusted at periods leas

f th l tj porm of the lease, soy. e^ery ten

tains"the triirock In the"Wyoming,In South' Caroll"ster-The";confined toPrior to Marchacre* withdrawIn.the ground;phate rpek.of,not to^contaln

d g n « V ^ a J m *Pool their claim* after ithay hadperfected. > nod unite- them, ta

T h 1 t * f - d l

been

sUbMO,u«rit Uw.of .JJST.^W- th*"ion-= Ij q u o J y tt^lXolMatlon ,of auch^clalmc was

W'pWi;*^^^ll»'ta»ta:»"^tf«WlMB»f'fsulf of. the'taoo^as1 to the? Ounnlngt '

•iUtVlt,bugh<to;,be"idlatlnctly;undBT*t!iM

not t o c o n a l n p i M p jquanUUes, while i.8T8.0O) acrca wo* cl»s«l-H

\Wa properly as phosphate lands. _]"MrtngJthla administration then ha*-beel8*rtth-drawn and classified 4I7.0M seres, Jflfethattoday then 1* classlflci'raSLBhoaphaUM'ockland S.l'6,00d acres,- Thts\ rock lsfjnroslImportant In the composltlflii of fertilizersto improve the soli, and as\ the future h"certain to creato'ian enormous demandthroughout this country forVfertUHatton.the value to the/publlc or slich depositsai these; can hardly be exaggerated.,: Cer-ialnly Kith-respect to~th**e-\deposrts -acareful policy of .conservation-nhould be

-followed1. ' A law that would provide aleasing system for the pho*pha\e depoe-lt*, together with a provision for ther sep-aration of the «urface and mineral right*as 4* already provided for In th* case ofcoaU would seem to meet th* need ofpromoting the development of~ theea^de-poslta and their utilisation In the agrt-cfltturaUJand* of the weet. „•<!!; tttMthoughtdeslrahle to discourage th* expor-,tatloa of phosphate, iw-k and the «avlng-of' l t for our Own lands, thl* pnrpoee

l™M^Mtf-t/TSflU-|

irgument-HsT^rged'1 against-Ispoaltlon.of powerrsltes that legia-upd *wfyt ' mnh9r<*i»»y.yy rrore' eiiH--

"ject;\:to corporate - Influence -and:- control^fo'sj^ji i

1*tfrp'

reply <lt Ts^clalmed that. a .readjustmentof the' terms, of leasehold every. ten yearswouldVeecure).to the public and'the stateJust and' equitable term*.' j-'. '-* '•' '-.sfT. I"doJ.' i&t.•expressman .opinion uiwn tljiT-controversy'thus mad»or a prerirence-a*,tb -tlie. two methods of treating water-power sites. I shall submit the matter to'CoVgres .and. Ufge thatr .one** or; the .other; of •tli»^tww-pl*4i*'be'-adoptedijisft''-^r^s:^Vt h a * referred'to thocburae "of the laaYiadmtnfttratlon'and of the present one ln\•making withdrawals of government landi\from: entry under hbmeateod and. ^ot er

Tawa.'a1na"«fcongreej-In re moving -alldoubt-as t» thS;V»41dl{y. of-the** -with-'

.dr*.wals';a* a gresTT"Btep Jn .the direction

.ht -practical 'conservation.' - Jiut .11, Is • onlyon* of two necessary steps to effect what,should t e our purpose. It. has. produceda'jtatus aUQ-ahd^prevented -waatCand IN!revocabft dl»po«ltlon of-the lands untilthe"me.tlu>d for thelr^proper disposition'can be forraulelted. But It la of the'ut-

^saasi.g!»«e"^-»«aw«'*-«'w:' •""'recently gav? birth to her thtrfl <alt^ljghtcfr, iniu's there Is -'' "-"-the Immense brosvenorOrosvenor, theXdnchpss'.havhj^dledat tbe-ageot :

Apropos of aU^thls, a raii ifrlstory Is being told In•J^47-tJraijl»_:qros*,eoBr,a

i vearold daughter o f t h s jrounit^

'•'"•A :frl«ia,/fto''Btory~%oe«i'!:i'EWOT HOI. and as s ^ s t t U t f ldr»wliij;-room, HtUo L«dr t J m l a j e

^Oh..' '-gojid: •>. :iii^o<m.>!tXttM§gravely. "Manama can't ;• .*ee\ anr'^today. .She's upstairs wlthXtfisSbaijy.', T|»rjs«nt J»or,:'jrbu.*np'»r^iwhen she'd ordered a boy;.

B»na thoughtfully (xTcuilderea jtclW/^that-was calmly, « a i l n g la a m » a 4 racros*1 t i e Way^Mamma, "botr^fadw™that cbW?" •io^iaUy'tafloireot.SiStaiS

_old.". Srdna'a

rodtheiy^Edna cbD^der^-iiboJiL^,, ^^and from time to time appeared ttf b « *

npariuir hprseU ,«rlth .m-m^Wrell," 'was "Ser partlng";coinmTO"Si'^a

the -question, 'T.m flve and .tluit''ffmrSIs blKotfoiigh to be flttjr.". - - • ^ • ^

Something Dreadful,Wee Anita was listening to a s

but MMUI I ut Uiu JulmsluAvii UuodT' T"What made ltt" shB aeked. •* ^',0b, the dam broke," repUed (rand- ,

The next mornlog she ran Intot h ' l

ay,.>_aiio would^tie; gri^Sw<aid]^ar :thf

rosf?lftt)rjicn}|dreii. Ti

i^^».;|M8rt5ferttlik.^g^pWM#Jl>fcindtl

• :«®ttoy#~mi(SceSijfulhirah-volced

fr^ortunatfdslnIndness never a

/»flabby Indecision," for klndneaa, whli

JB-SJ n B -..w,.? Try "to •(g^i-^fjeit Jong ago U' " " ilWayji'actively IES-•a--SVf|C\:W"a^a« BUT]f||:.s|«f;Sohiool-.ln thep?lpO^fpla"Ti"~clasg" ifliPi^&Kkt •; In trdtbiiPflii«>lortshlp.>dde(:|^MHgg[e\ was •. strongs-5K«ren-regal ned-hlsp^Bjpt'i'to.VdBitrpy-AiliiSfisyB^lfT liiad' an'

:ijroC*.<Ivls^.me-topllttle, boy, a"fU•^j;'ot / thatgre

- a - , , , , , J PP his hand o^ ^ g ; a ^ b o t t l e of'.'alrros;

GlobulariSllflt'eaterday the'\lt

^S:Pai%*«lre ••-jirdvito

g e n Inbrother's room and, climbing upbe^—iHiaw^d—maiae

breaking and ktlllnc *U dpBe'pebpiet^

d Him. *•">_....; ;.:.'--:;;'-«Np.; FRILU8"' . . Juat Sensible Food Curei

SometTmes'a good, heaithy1 conunejdal travelar Buffers' from;B^ri^leeted .food and Is lucky U ^io lethat Qrape-Nuts focru.: irlll^But";

"• . A1 ClnclnnnU-traveler BKti.i;J0w*a,year ago mr .stomach got -In-»;way^ v«I had a^beadaclie^WWtsi^itjjct and Buffered misery. Ffers

onthk I ran down until I-lOBt:pounds In weight and finally;

up argpod positlotiTand 'gcrfood that I might use see

,te.me»,:^v^;k 'A-i^W*!^^^wife, hardly lmowlngr'Wh|it|i^

day brought boi&o .la pisokal^l1

tlie-Uaseigranted by the government toJta:l««»e«s. Of courte;;anJer-tee ,con«tl»;tatlon^hei*Tyv*rnm*nt>,"<ouM'*notitax::^ " "<r" notfprohibit'the^ ^xpor(at|o.n'»biei•ndToutt notprohibitthe exportation ofpbcsphate.r but 'a* proprietor asdj ownero f > e lands In which th* phosphate Isdeposited, UTtouid. Impose .comMtlons

mtstlc. .which th* lekMeStlw phospjiate mln*4-'v

on,the recflinroendaBoa; of/Jh^'rectams*-U0« iMrrvice^tld^n frpm"ap^tSal

^ttio/l^dlsvos^d^^^c^iiirjl^lacre*. .Tha-withdrawah -mada ai

In the-.coflrae'of conwrvaudn. and that,lh* Idea ahould not be allowed^ttf spreadthat conservation 'If the tying dp of' thenatural resources, of the government• forIndeflntte-withholding from u*e and '«oremliWon to remote generations to decidewhat 6urhttd"Wsdone with these meana"of promoting preaent general humah com-fort and pftrreas. For, If so. It I* certainto arouse'th«^ greatest oppo«itlon to c o *

•ervalleBl-aa a caus«,;and;.lf It jirereia1;l^»cfc*xiiti«*»lpn"Bf Jh*.'—'—'- ->—"" ""

po*Kmn.1*rAs;.rhave* aald.elsewhere, the•}^WW»r>^«Et<r>«ave.5aiM t e w to^ianil^^"w/^j.cwu«i;r»*Ja^.ryi«^fdevelop;::ftr^oja*^;Per««niCan;*0B^4;tliat;lt I*for .th* common, good, that-narWe'a ble»s-

.Inge-should^bestoredionlytfor'unborn

* "itSiBrBfor^BSiSSSS^Sffi^W^yan^V^In^iuftofornuU'iisA/u^ojM,<wh*n men com* forrord to mntast evils:thatjthe'prombUSn7»tT!onseriraUon'(Is.toi: r * i i ^ l l S * i y6u^lSlt»--'tlimnV-'to;polnt;;-

^"^sjjj^j yo^st'* itt^n^ifr <'dx4iu^

•lo'nacmiy flow IntoU*stut\t*)thar.t)tui Intoetut.Tather.t

f eloiraant «Aliii^Hlal *

cluuiejs tillitn -period*

CQIOQ9t sHall bet u t a"nalTand >nt«rtaitiin*,-".,w1thod«

1 lurht'CTi th»-enMecLi T h .

mmi

tolS

I^oM^her^ltHrai^^iS^to humorijler I \rjed itSlJS

:afia tteysiiisfTftruc^fiajVaStfS,was the first fo< I had eatetfl^eijlir^>ear Mt.dW'nqi,«ui*e)iijw?^^Ihg, ;•,-. *!•; •;•,<';.'-.f:-*&l'M-'?&§¥

beg^;to jjnjirove a^**atiSlMp.._Nut«.-a.Went'up:ilrr''m-13S?p<raS^

-right and appetlto too ;muohKf^i; & a V s j K ^ t ^ k ^ | l a ; j t a ^ i ^ ^

s i *

WMi^'.

;«ij^Jiriada!OTer.V.iffiaS""•• " I g e s f t ' " ' " """•""••

tt^jW'ttfl^^ibia'TSafS

• 7 " - ' > -' ","'-- J ' * I lf

t ,

e *_,«•{.* •

£_". ' HIS'COMEBACK. '

"I" I,-

i-

.. •?

May Lives Ani'Lost Yearijt In Q* " r - . * r • TM»--C«>mmq!ipla'sr"

ui'-\t,..

Govtmor Hqg^cs, hic Legislature, and1 i_i_y

___. \l'a-K

„ , (?v • * £ "'*i»Mr,!-Uenpeclt—I don't want you to

Put "Bepulescat in'ipce" on.my wife'stombstone-.-Make. lj^''Req.uieseo In

nrare on ptiqdtate oM^MTHughes on _ts patau n «tt tte

V Zurich. Switzerland,—Though BWtt*• _ _ t * _ » | T r T » a >*t summer.this year. In common with the-rest of_ r o p e . the Alpine death roll haT"_p_, ted high. " > . r r -

/!.

majority Jn both haases of tbe legis-lature which ref_«a to carry oujt the IRepublican geVetnor's recommend* ftiona: ana>«Jthough It was only 'a

, Republican members Iabout this refusal; the I-

t that means "T rest

frj.- J _ ; Renpeck—I know',, and rK ' -.^rm tp sign It "Husband." j"Husband."

Talking to the. t X tallufto^aftUeJust «a Mr. X-

. , -U a*od would,ShofcidShol '

.. the failure; but? lit top. remember that a, clearthe Republican nwrdbers '

r house supported the cblll,i three-fourths or over ot the.ita opposed It This Is1 one

i cases where- It la easier to an-individual than party reaponsl-

. •> (*-

, y _ n o a e - w h o believe- _at -by-theta-_ last resort de- Action thfey have definitely ctfeiked

- f * * " g " ' * _ » ^ o V _ e movement for direct popular, pri• » » • _ _ fcvJce.wm' « a r i _ ' _ e . In myiforlgnW ml.f«V.n

r*s greenhouse had been broken_ - t h» had at last ottered a reward of10 •hillings to, anyone who should giveinformation as to the Identity of -the

"" ^ bait soon drew;MtosCTrtfanderr t l » teittboodfeV.JL youngster called on Mr. viner andIntnnned Mm that-a-lad named ArchieThompson was the guilty party. Hereceived his rewardrweht away re.JolclBg and the old gentleman torUj-wlth wrote to the local achoolmaster,demanding the production o t the saidArchie Thompson, to make good thedamage he bad done to his windows. _—Next day- tb» Informer called again.

*Th« schoolmaster sent me," hesaid briskly. "I've seen a glailer and-hall put in your glass tor thrpeshining*. Here it Is, and—"

^Not so fast, my. lad," said Mr» Vner. "Have you come on behalf of

' T h i ~~

epexzy. tfme. codmake the _ f fc» _ k .freely admit Oat hero _where _ prfncjple ot directUona haa b o a appliedshape or wroocbwdedry,

eenata « _ ,

it w&xf Indeed 'true. • Mrs.XT well-meaning woman

He greatly surprised lf she_ „ the foregoing statement, i

t Simply unconsciously actralred'"I tone of.volco in dealing with"dron. This la altogether un-y, and Is not, as many moth.

. _ to think, a mark of good .dis- [8»-.-The.lno_er whose manner ls-f

. - >J)Ut firm is genetajly a much ',',lnor»' successful disciplinarian than -

' t harsh-voiced mother who Issues !rr,f onunstTds In a dictatorial manner.

.-Indnees never spoils children. It Is/ flabby indecision, sometimes mistaken~ tor kindness, which spoils them.

-*. i T r y t 0 C o m o B»ek.r "Nat Ions ago Lord Ktnnalrd, who ta

aSr came op—te kdslatore. Itfrom an objections

to obhet-to

whatever In theh _ provided

.poB_u-.action tn therelatively aoall few

_ polHtcs! comannttles,_ making-. _ - experiment Drat

. there- was leaet liability to-*e-j objection, and anHdinr or deter-r the task of d_ttng witi those big

_ visit to a mls-ln tho east end of Londonclass of-boys the story, o

Introducing his narrativi

became weak,,

V• *

•v

, i him. 1o\_stroy bis enemies. . ,jL^jboys, If I hod an enemy, what/would. '•yen advise m e l o do?" . /'

!_§»* little boy, after meditating orrthei . Sjpret of that great giant's/strength,v jhot ap his hand and exclaimed: "Getr~, a bottle of 'air restorer."

- —, would begreatest. Moreover, while guarantee-ing fall liberty of todtrldaal action, 4talso provided for the easy malnte-naancs of party org—UaUon." and

, thereby avoided aonw very real dan-l gers—among theai ihat of eacourag-1 Ing the use of masses of tbe minority

par^y. It *»T gtveo dUtttat to dictatethe actions of the majority party. Inother words, tbe piupuwd bin, whileIt marked a very real step In advance,was tentatively and. c a _ m s l y 'fram-ed, and provided "an possible safe

In Ita essence, this Is a movement tomake the government more derno^eratlc, more responsive to the wishesaadi>needs of the people aa s whole.With our political machinery it is fcs-sential to have aTefficlent part/, butthe machinery .ought to be suited todemocratic and not oligarchic customsand habits; The question^ whether in"a self-governing -republic we ' '"

thanthe particular hill. We hold thatthe right of 'popular 'self-goveAunent IsIncomplete unless It inc la2eL_ rightof p e voters not merely to choose be-tween candidates .when they bavabeen nominated, but also the right todetermine who these candidates shallbe. _ Under our_jystem of party gov-ernment, therefore,' the voters should*be guaranteed the right to determinewithin the ranW of their .respectiveorganisations woo the candidates oftbe parties will be, no less than theright to choose between the cand:dates when tbe-candidates are pre-sented thent There Is no desire tobreak down the responsibility—ofparty organisation under duly consti-tuted party leadership, but'there is adesire to make this responsibility real

Sdelwelas, Death Lure of {he Alps.

mountains there have been exception-al atorma, with the result that severalparties of visiting cUmbort taTe_been•wept away by avalanches. But thealluring—edelweu*- remalna-tbo-most-fatal attraction of the summer tour-ist.

^JKoiJiLJtseIt«-remarkably beautltut-Bower, edelweiss nevertheless appeal!to .that aide of humaa- desire thaicraves, the difficult. Generally IIgrows in rock corners that are prootlcally Inaccessible Invigorated b>the mountain air, the climber csplcithe tlooms In their dangerouscrevice and determines to claim themIbr his own. Sometimes be succeedsIn the qtiost, only to fall aa he ro-

nfcleThompsoni"Well, yes, sir. In a way," said the

boy. "Pact Is," he continued," conn-deatlally, "I'm him I"—tendon Tit*Bit*.

HOW A DOCTOR CURED SCALP' DISEASE.'

ed for a foothold, slips away, and tho'end Is deep down In tbe ravine below.i O n t by one the edelweiss claims ItsVictims, till the total Is higher than;«Ut of tbe avalancbe.'Whlch.destroystha. mountaineers In full parties. Thir-ty sower pickers sacrificed themselvesfor edelweiss during July, and every-Tfiek during summer brings Its tragicquota till the Alpine snows fill tho-nooks where now the flownrs bloom,

CITY HAS^A CURIM/S SHAPE

jeseuliar—ShoVatrlno" Strip That li~~ a "Part of\'Greater Cos ~ i

. . _ _ I was ten or twelve yearsold I had a scalp disease, somethinglike scald head, thougu It wasn't thatI suffered for severe! months, andmosfofmy hair'"came oilt Finallythey bad r. doctor to seo n>o and berecommended the Cutlcura Remedies.They cured- mo In-a- few weeks.—hhave used tbe Cutlcura Remedies, also,for a~bresktog~<Qut~ob my'hanasamwas benefited a gre, t deal. I haven'tbad any more~troublo with tbe scalpdisease;—Misr-jBssio"Tr~Buchai!_r,'R. F-, D, S, Hamilton, Qo., Jan. 7,1009."

Kept with Bamum's Circus.P, T. Barnum, the famous, circus

'man, once wrote: "I have bad' theCutloura Remedies among the con-tents of my" medicine chest with myshows for tho.I_t three seasons, and tcan cheerfully~ccrtlfy that they werevery offoctlvo, In every coso which

•called'for-taelr'use-/1"-'-—"- —«~J

' '-All of i i become confused and "all of

—e preparation of ah old* ~ negro (

pretcheris >aarmao was tbe greatestconfusion of metaphors' I ever heard*

_ _ _ _ _ _ < J K h e n the jengthy ttlsj „course was nearlnf 1U dose and hahad reached his "T*«nty-t_nl andlastly, bretfiren," he wound up by 'thefollowing elaborate figure; ,- "Sverywha, bredran, we sea de Al-mighty—a)l down de untrodden paths 'of^Hma,..»ea,»e9-4e-leotprlntaAlmtghiy hand."—Human Life,

WOMENOF MIDDLE

_ A G ENeed Lydia B. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound

—7 - '

f

'-: "44

ACCOMMODATING.

AnrMles.

Of

* \ ,T / Globular Llght/lng. >*AT/Testerday the'Inhabitants of Lewis-

*•— ~J" provided-with a specimenmenon—known-a»

Is

grtsrglBsttf lraiw. If 15It had' failed to work tn anylar, there would have been nodldcultr .In '""Mii' whateverjaeatS-Or

If 15 tractlce

The Republican Duty vas tn <Use

the right to say whom they desire to I theexecute this leadership.'-In New York most curiously peistate ;na small part of the- strength -of world, tho reason tor 11the niovement ban come from the pop- being the dOBlro to makenlar coflvlctlon that many of. tho men ot an Inland city. Thom&et prominent In party leadership Illustration designatedtend at times to forget than In a r " ' ""> " "n"1- '" 1nni

prty adtend at times to forget than In ademqeracy the function of a politicalteader must normally be to lead, not

/to drive.' We, the. men who composqthe great bulk of 4he-communltyt-wishto govern 'oucaelves. -We weleomsleadership, but we wish our leadersto understand that H»»y fl.-iy *y |strength from us, and that, although,we took to them for guldancer we ex-pect this guidance to be, In accord-ance with our Interests 'and «ur-Meals,

THE0D0REJl008BVEJ.Tv

IDEAS flBOUT THE RAINBOW

_ as Ajlty as It was in 1008. Jnmington was added, and In

'hte-citrcifflnwr one of UMcities In the

peculiaritysenport oul

•t -of thejhows the

109 WllSac

, fTtjrmucIi le'lightning; an

: that

t/briUlant (ban ordinaryIts brightness appears.Iron at the ,"red hot'

i nof, as some accounts mightI ODeio Infer, a solld^inlsslle, buti always spherical and appears to

\ a thurJder clouS by its' own3|r'soinetinies~rebOTmrlmg™8fter

, strlkUlg the ground.—London Globe,

~ in many coonc^sa tbe rainbow Isspoken of as beins a great tent pump

•-••-- '-"--.-dnwtBg-water-frcm-

[ Good Breakfast!X- " L ',

.]

J: Instead of pr^aring aflW'mcal^ have some ' "

|-Fpst;:--ToastiesV.i-'.

V

•witb-creain;

^A^-soft^faoiW egg}' -D toaste' '

i of Postusi*

is pretty-to win you. - ,

Queer Notions HeW- by PeopleDifferent Countries Regard- ~"

. . . .ins U

parts of Russia, ia the. Don -country.«nd also in Moscow and rtdnity.ltla known by a naiae which U equiva-lent til "the bent wattrplpc" Innearly all "SlaionJe dialect* it laknown by terms signifying "tbe cloud

••siphon." and' fa Hungary It. is; "tbe" smd "Cod'*

Is said to bo .under the-oontrd-of-thnaiiguls, uiiu uf wnuiu pumpg tn* water,. .— »»j_«.. ^._^_« loud_ fbe~clouds, anthe third sends the rain. Many im-probable and Impossible things wouldhappen lf you could'only geMn-reachof~thebow?'~

Tbe little Turk la told that if hewould have va silver head., with goldteeth ana ruby eyes, he, has 'but fo

-T— - - - - - . . _ . . _ i i . . ^ H ^ «• - ^ ^ • ^»- • fy»« - ma ^/^f ^ ^ r

they say that'tbe person so unfortu-nate as to stumble over the end of thebow will have his 6r her sex imme-diately changed. - .

ar^*Mar* — • • _ *—y«mj HAS • * * » * « « I_B>S • %

by tbe- same name that they do theirmanded _^ater coarajjaaly Jfcat they

'"add "boba- (meaning do_t»beaaed),thfr equivalent _ oar tangaac_I|jdag"the double-headed w»I___r« .~ -

They tell yon thatt&ebow tea realthing of,Hf«, that: ft drlcka wtth Itstwo 'mouths, and that tbe water istransferred to'toe dkodc thrash,anopening in tng-uppta a_s of tke cen-tre of th» great arcb. _ tbeJJujBartftceof Charkav, Soatla, fbe rm_bow "is•aid to drain the weist, aad to twmatthis—many-are- -ptovMed-wltnrlieazyrtight-flttiag Bfan*''tA4bbrqkair-''--

In the- proitucc s&Smta* the bow.

- - Only Classified.."I confess to being rather particular

about my pajamas." said the fastldkous man, "and I hod an experiencelast week that nearly gave me nervousprostration, until I saif-the tumor oftoe situation. I was staying in aJUUe

-country towmlown-ln "Maryland, andit was-'necessary to'send" some soiled-clothing to the laundry, the one laun-dry of which the1 village boasted.

"Judge of my surprise when mystuff was returned to mi to. find thatmy" pajamas h»d.\b»en* heavily•starched, -with decided -creases Ironeddown ln~;front._ I was not oily en-raged, but mystified aa -well," until,'intoflrtnsr^rerTKfrsUi; I came "to this- -

and E and F were made, ports of thocity this year. The const annexa-tions, San Pedro and Wilmington, are

-connected-wjtb -.Log- Angelea-pcopofby the narrow strip known as the"Shoe String"

fine. . i I' "X)ne tennis suit.'. 1 35 cents."

. ' % '^ i f

granted for aft ottachBCBt to rqcUng-chain to s p e w s m fan to cooT theoccupants. 1 -7- >-

, 'Bgbert—And wien a. op* spur Intothe dark.ropia and .stabs his 'toeagainst'.tne rocstr. -we do bet tahik.

•thJ9--ncw %ttachn>est-wffl eoolidBi offanyv^-Yoitkers Statesaaaal . " ' -

, -«•••

A«tr«BJn^le»;T»»am(»rhTng7Tttant yon to come and-give me afew- sittings'some time. .1 supposeT»u cari MtTj v 11 Giles-Can J.»et? ict>, yes—likean old hen!, 'r

^ [ A Plunge Into the. Prosaic ,-See the beautiful sunset colors on

the jrateY.T _d-tn» v -poet le young

•'what they are,-

[uppo—Say, you bumped Into moand' knocked me down with jour auto'and/I want damages.

Sfhowfurr— Oh/ haven't " you ' gotenoughf-Well,'surrrup-nnq"~ni bump"«nd knock you 'again.

may expect nature!to Wing on then'the Change of I_e.| ,I got » bottle ot ,lT'5"-1_.P___t_i l

le Com.1

feel muoh better,1

. — Its we. I an' ,

E5_*___«v^-Brookfleld, ft

The Chanfo of I i fo Is tbe most crlU 1cal period of a woman's oxlatenco, nndoegloot of health at this tlmo luvlte*disease apd pain, _j' WomBn everywhere should remero.

we that there is no other remedyknown to mcdlclns that will so tvS.fJM'ullf carry women throacrh thto •

riod as Lydla E.vHnknam'i' -

/For io years it has been curing wo.'J?,en {r9.m t b o iWorat forms of femaleIlls—lnSajmmauon, aloeratlon, dls.f lacemenU, Obrotd tomors. lrregulari-ities, poriodlo pains, backache, and'Jierrous prostrauonT-S ^ F 5 u

« ? n ? ??*"" aut> OTltlo a oonfldml

W. L. DOUGLASmBBOff* SHOES

Oulnevero, aged four, was going outo^walk with a young lady, of whom

1 she was vary fond. As thoy opened,the streot door thoy wcro ' met 6y"askirling cloud of dustr blown up fromtbo thoroflghforo."

or you'll got your lungs full of-CTobesr'-warned thn ~ _ ^ - -

ml

thon,' looking up, demanded: ,"What aro your croues?"—National

Mouihly>-

_ Outline Map of Los Angeles.

Podra wa»-aBflexed. Tie Bectlon des-J ^ _ * e - D . . w s e ;

''8candaL •Mrs. Slmmonds glanced' at tbo scare

headllno; "Dank. Itobfcod! Pollco atSen!" andlald-down the shoot;

l at-that, EzJ-'^iho^.Vaow/look at-that, EzJ-iho ojiVulatfed. repeating tho headline alou37'"Hero's a~blg city bank broke Into byburglars, .and th' city pollco forca all

xsit flshln' sornowhero! What a* scan-daTP'—J(udgo.

- Then" It Happened."What mfdo you think ho would

"Why, when I rafusod him he saidhe'didn't caro what became of him;hat jerhupa he -wasn't- serious."—Houston Post — ' •*"- ~ ~

Luxury of Ancient •Chicago.—A «hef, discussing/ the

ivils ot cold storage, said with aiinile:"Arid yet the Chinese, who areWeal

gourmet*, adore eggs three or <(pufyeara-oldr-eggSrthat have turned quitsgreen. " _ - - —

,"Don't think- they are,ordinary -badeggs, these green chaps; though. Ifyou've eaten Chinese jfood._ou'llJaiow"better than that The Chinese* are

ripened lik'e fine cheese.""It is a science. The eggs. I.be'llove,

spend nine months In a hotEtempera'tore,' buried in sawdust. Another ninemonths lri> coot letnperatnre, buriedlb chalky and so^forthTand so_on. . L

"They are green fn the end, and theyX putrid odor. Butis green, and Its—Id unpleasantte/Iaat dined here,

J 'fgga vt the 1906_?i_>»e dollar,

Mm. Win«law'» Soothing fijrap lor ChildrenIrethlnz, aoftena the gnnu; n<lac» lnllamm»-Uon, aUaj . pain, r u n w^ail coU», He a hotUe.,

The undertaker usually finishes allhe undertakes.

Xkty««Tat«litt«ly;tkrmo* t popuUranabMtiluwtfor tat pries la- Amtrkj.T b lfor tat pries la ATbsyanthtltwlirsfnry.wh«ra Mcsius they holdthtlr ihspd, nt (Wtter,l k b dthtlr ihspd, nt (Wtter,look bttttr sad wesrloa-

th tban etrtalsly tk« UaasMBaos

tconomlc«l>lu»iforyodtobuy.

—a Utatt ttaaped C c >-.eua-of yow nuosy Hei.

MACHINIST APPRENTICES WANTEDDROWN & SHARPS MFC.~Ca «

EQY3 18 Ift lg-yan _ . C r _ m r School- Eduanon. F _ y u n 6 > _ e 7 T c l I i n _ l

IiutrucUon Included, miteBROWN & SHARPE MFC. CO,

Easy Money to CanvassersBBSmS

W. N. U. NEW YOHK, tfO. S7-19W

AXLE GREASEhave an tmpl._Roquefort, cbeodor, top, i s pai .*i i f . ,Wu, w"told me thai

.apiece In"'C

•it:z——-—_,

JCecps the spindJe1 bright and "'^^U'Jfree-from-(ffftT Tiy » b b _ " • ' ""'^-t - -'Sold by dealers everywhere.' , , r . . / * - , .

L STANDARD OIL CO. - • ' '

ii;

-r

' I, ' '* I I r-

t ' 4

_;_ ., \ J j/

x '•>••,i^rC

• - - .

^^:§ial3*ai

r V - ' - l -

! * • WB*h RfisWThree buudrWr year*'ago Ibe boat-

s e n fff BudlnfjABt wttfbls w l s WettM T & e p t e f f in conrbt_<g

lia^naTTO* mBBtratBTOr~" XJfifis renoritfiST wtjs 1>egan to MjBOTt ^tneraUy worn, and to QaecsAnns'* v i4» *•>•> became tbe mcwtcostly iteto of gentlemen's wardrobes.

black wig" cost, 80 guineas (about~ 1385). and -tns" fiWhlon became so cum-

brous that Oolle'y ClBber when play-

f"li--

IIP 'Hasp*-'

—-* .

ajUO atfyIM iftuTduiitcou a vp*tc o i flax 90large that It was brought od tbe stags

. In a sedan, chahv As a matter of facttbe stageeoaeS ltues" were compelled torestrict the length of wig boxes M

.John Taylor, one of the English mi-nor poets, thus depicts the beaidi ofbis day: _ _ _ 1_Boma aatni a* U»»)r wera atarcbad anil

One,Uka to tba briitlaa ot an ancry »wln».And some, ja u t their lova* deslra'oa

11

' 1 i

K1- " >

'Ara <ut and pruned like a quick acth e d t s : r . • . • . " ' • • ••• . . <

Bom* Ilk* a iptde, «otn« ilk* a fork, «omtaauara, -—

0ome round, aoma mowed Ilk* stubbla,Kma qulta bare,.

0am* sharp •Uletto (uhionad. agtttr-Ilka /

-That mar Jn whispering a man'ji ex* out-pyka; /

Boma IU« a banimtr.eut or Roman T;Thaw tMarda «itrmv«i»nt reformed-mull

-«~ ba; /- Borne with the quadrat*, aomo trlancU

fusion. •• . • /Boma circular* loma oval In translation;

-Some parpend|cular/1n longitude, /Boma like a thicket for their craaaltude;

J 0 4 t l K * H J t l t l lM.4Mtfl!K» (pH1*•qmra, oyal, roun,

.And rules awunttrlcal In boards abound.—National Magazine.

II ri

..; COLONIAL VIRGINIA.

Tba Haughty Plantar* Ware FitF«*» of Royal Tyranny, -

In no'parTof tb? wprld" were" socialdistinctions more rigidly deflned ihauin colonial Virginia. Tlie7founders o.that colony stepped from the .brilliantcourt of .RllMheth into the fcfrestS-OlVirginia. Tbe lord proprietor transported to hla estate a little army olgentlemen and - iDdcntureti servants,aud afterward came thq/nogro "slaveEaeb formed a class apart from theothers, and almost at/bnee there wancreated a quasi system of aristocracy.'Tb« •proprietor- obligated himself ti

protect his tenants^ from the Indians,They In turn ugrwdTo follow blnr to

w>-

h- I

' -~ZL~ , _,,] "by-Wiilittinytiie^ComineroV fop tSe'military <jlef<>n/q ofj hla realm. Ills on

, j ,Tlrontnept naturally bred* certain hab' Its of comnYnd,' fostered a capacity foi

directing we efforts ot others and lmposed a /ense of responsibility uponthe plabfer for the lives that were fa)

ilng. -^ • ii all else the planter jealouslyI Us rights as an English free

When liberty IsnguisUea in BugI the'VlrglHlansturtniy resUteder-aggression of royal tyrants. One

•band, one wife, one home, one "king,/one ifrfa+thts was the planter's creed

But he reserved the right to renouncea monarch who violated the ancient

"compact between king "and people. pNoother people numerically as unimpor-tant as tbat group of Virginia settlers

fr- A

g r rmen, soldiers, orators, patriots and phi-loiopbers.-BTcrybody's Magazine.

Baring the Faat at Wershlp. -In India Hindoos and Mussulmans

alike wear botll aana>la and shoes (slip-pen) and the hitter boots also, but theInvariable rule U to removo them afterentering a private bouse Just whqastepping on to hs mat.or-carpet-onwhich tbe visitor'takes his seat TheymuJt bo cast offi the right boot or shoe

t h ' l t

ft *. \ t-

i gfirst, before the' WoWliltkSP enters atemple or mosque, and It Is still •re-garded as an absolute profannUon toattempt to enter either fully shod. Butthe domestic habit arose out of Its ob-vious pfAprlfftyi ftp1! th.g r*>iiginini xlu»l of "the shoes of the faithful,

^ «, r L , _ . . .- ..throughout UIatn.,csn bo demonstrat-

<d-to-lu»ro'J»eea-dlctated-by^-it-lnJeed

• V

veraal social etiquette of the east

- Did Hia Bait.'~- - Too yoolg.polltlclan -was as obliging

as possible, but there was a limit tobis poasl6lirtlci Whett tbo reporter.asked him what hbj wife would wearat the mayor's reception be assumed a

" , confidential air.T i l tell yon Just as much as I know

' - myself." be said. "Last night abe toldme sbe should wear white. This

"morning at breakfast sbe said she'd• decided on her rose colored gown, and

when 1 'said goodby to her, sbe hadspread a gray one beside the rose col'ored-oir -one-chalr-and-fier- black-Ja.ecbeside tbe "white on~ Another .and wastaking; something else out of the closet

- I f herbalr hadn't caught on a hook aasue lurned~roahd I TSIghrfinve been

—— able to tell you more."—Jonth's Com-panion. ~ . - rff

Th» Parfaet_Elgtira.,e, />' '"John, dear," queried the young"?'£;,/wife, glanclng_up_jfroni ^BQ physicalQy ^culture msgajdne, sbe'was perusing,• •*"' - ~ t bi,your. Idea of a perfect flg-

cattle. England, lent to Scotlandan 'expert witcn flndei1. r"~ "person proceeded tU incfW

l asl ttul asnit

Primary Bedio-, Sqtmktr \X f 10OialKr, -

Ing tbelr conviction.. One ^Hopkins was-a celebrateu 1of that period. It was easy

and then detected by tbe well Knownfact tbat a witch couM abed only threetears and those frorp tbe left eye, orshe could be pricked with plos to dlsycover the spot inieofrtble-to pain, whlrb

[uant'to an' act entitled! "Ani t to regulate Eleolion*^' ~ '

iian of 1888,) approved A1898,with th dt

devil." lljot women werelikely to dabble In witchcraftmeir was conceded. Tbesatisfactorily "explained byGerman text book on witches,,.In the fifteenth century. II' was. sim-ply that wontten wire Inherently wick-ed, whereas men paturaJiy Inclined t ogoodness. * /

Thi Caio«a.'Tbe coyote Is tbe little brother <bt tbe

Iqdlan. Wben'Utt buffalo vanUbedfrrmr-the i)l»Jns/the- Indian-nbot'blsrifle luto1 the W, wrtppM his bl«nk«tcloser about Jbim «ria~-eame!. Into- tbercserintlon td grow fat and onplctur-cs()uo under federal auspices. Whentbe Jack *nbblt and molly cottontailvanish "from the -plains and foothillstbe boy/l of tbo lost coyote ~wll| link

tions, and -the eonstilvision concerning the rightfrage,1' notice is hereby givthe Distriot Boards of W~Election District in theElisabeth, will meet on tha2nd Tuesday InSept 1910(13th)at one o'clock in the Jafter8P»niyatthe places i s their" respectiveElection District* wher« the^OitjrClerk shall deai^nite.and continuein-40ssloii uti^il ninfr 'tfl ffTt in thfEvening, for the pimoife of.iiring tty&nuSr&JUiregi,in tbe raajnner resoribsd by* law,whoaie eBtjUed to the right ofsuffrage at tOernext'eUetlalbv

The DistriotBoflrds of Registry

tJnU/_lhnt fnt.day arrives, however,hanR tbe bncon high, for while tbe rab-

reinnliV the moit skillful fournl forager' tue world ever knew

will bay at the moon by night niiil Justcop bpt of r|fle>range Vy day. The

"toyoto kjionn more about traps tbim nOniinlllnn "voyngeur," Is an expert «Dstrychnine aud never falls for thedeadfall Do is .rather foud of lambsitnd>cahos, but rabbits are .the oat-inenTof this phantom hlghlandefjand.us "Plamond Vlefd' Jack Davis wouldsny. "where two or three of these oregutlieriMl togethpr tliere you will findtho (oyote. necking to stow one ot theminto, bis inldnt."-PhirmIe1phla Tele-

Whan a Burglar Calla at Night.,"If a burglar brcuks Into your house.

lit night don't try tp corner him," suldnn old Ifeaaqauftsri liolleijuiuu. "If tlie

clitmgli to ncuro him away, but don't"go ufter him with (i gun. Teu to onehe'll 'eel' yon before you can hit him.It's better to' lose u tayr dollars' worthof goods than your lite. I'm iglvlug Itto you straight. Tho average, man,waked up iti the diddle ot th'e night,nlwayB badly frightened, hasn't adunce, 'against the "man -witli-'nenrecfiougb ta break Into p.n occupiedbouse. Every "burglar is a potentialmurderer and will shoot to kill If youtry to catch hini;. And wliyiipt? He'sgot » big, long term In prison s . . — _trim In the- face if he's nabhed, andhe'll tnke ,a chance on murder every(line to get nway. Leave the captureof Rticb gentry to the_^cop8' Thcy'if

"t'ltv srar."'"""' *"' 'I-'1-'"

FRED H. |AHN,(Huoceeaor to Philipp Jahn) "

Hou^e, Sign, and ,- Fresco Painting,

_ r*l«lr^aridBeooratl»»

Paper Hanging

:, Varnib..eu- and Wai) Paper

'.tmnfotd.

Iff. FiWBEELER. -\r"JDJMUIULIk...

LCEBox 1 Vrtotfofil

5 Favorableconditions and appointments,favorable c|n#» and quality,favorable prices — all ioviteyour trade that yon may par-ticipate 'in tl e satlafsclloqhundjreda_of_ customers al-ready know. I t is easy forjou to tlnd the reason for this

t satisfaction, Try.

R

ip 1v> not be perfection, but^ifsng%'Jto,»aUflfj a man of my

•-kShlcago News, i - "

them1'

W. Wi Men

Carpenter and Builder,

RealdMiOfi, Walnut avenue Crsnfont

TelepfaofteJOO-L.-. - ' . - '

r

— • ,2: HWmi&L •

'I •/.

Elizabeth will also meet for pnr-poBes of registration'at their-re-spective places, on ~ •'

October 11th and 25th, 1910between the hours of.l and|B<)x.nir

And the Boards of Eegistry^andMec'tionln and for eabE and everyEleotion Distriot in" said Oounty ofUnion outside ol the City of EUza-beth, 4»ill meet on " _»-

Tuesday, Aug. 30, 1914)—to elect one of its members' asjudge, who shall be chairman* ofsaid board, "and another obits '

bers osinspector. AIM q,n .

Tuesday/Sept. 6,1910at ten o'.glo'ok in the "forenoon.Jntheir reapecfive Eleotion Districtswhere the next' eleotion will be

truly and accurately ontwin oatl-vasBing books, to be prdvided' for.tliat purpose, the sanies • alld refti-donoes and street numbera, if any,of all legal voters within UiHi1 "rt-Bpeotivo eleotion distrfota inUfliAto vote therein, by making.-ajottuVlinquiry at every dwelling- boune,e'to., in th'e kamier "pfesbrUjSor' bflaw, ttnd shall oontinu»v-sn«h-smqraeration until the same. '" - - * - ^

« P rtarins -uierahon

Bball • terminal Sta'oibeforo the Friday vest succeeding.

The Distriot Bparda..of Begisuynnd Eleption, outside of the City.of EJizabetb^wilLftiaomest (or the.

respective p,lace» On

Tuesday, Sept 13,1910 .and ••

Tuesday, November U1910between the hours of 1 and 9 p.m.1,for the purpoBe of registering tWnames of all legal voters in. themanner prescribed by law» whoare entitled to the"rjght of sutfrageat the next eleoiion.

fnrfr.nrFrimary> Elootion will bo. held,'oft

T i d t t S ^ t i 3 1 9 1 O

*-»-»

MADAITE HARRYi*flBHAJBDRE88INO

lOUWNOMPAWiORa.

* -*l'-jAjJtkiWdtxrf aWrr«v^i-I»ll-Wltt9made to order BCcts.- anlj upwards.

Wovfnc Vans for City or Coui^y

TeUphon* Call or Postal will bring aBeprewoMtive

OFFICE": 6d ELM STIIEET._d, - . - - - . New JerseyTKUPBOWI wo d,

, It. j .

ui. . . i J

Choice' Abuses and StoU for \Sale ' ••'.

0OUMIB8IONER (JF DEEDS !

- - J —oanos—< 'Cot. Boulsvsrd aad JOth St.. ',

KfiNH-WORTHi N. i, . !

. Oracloat* American Veterinary .,'

Jbr. ft. H. BUTLER,_Pet Animals a Specialty.

• Residence, Dowqar Street,t WE8TPIBLD, N. J.

JOHli DOYLE,

aJuv&Alir PLUMBING.firniia. Ari^

EFI

between the'hours of 1 o'blootland 9 o'olook p. m., in the various I

oonventiona oFpolitiosl parties,ii

T)otTi~aTIno"rca8e'inay"bre.'"' ~' Also on " . ' «•

Tuesday,Novigrtbcr 8 , 1 9 1 0thre"DiBlriot--Boar ds" "of "EliSHop*throughout the Oounty shall 'meetat six o'olook in the forenoon andcontinue in session except betweenibo'hourr&f ojne and . ' tw' o'olookin the afternoon, until , seyefao'olook in the evening for the piir-poae ot condnoting the generalelection. ; .. -

UallotB, to be used at saia Prim-ary to be/ furnished to_ DistrictBoards of Itegistoy and El6ctiO&by the different city, borough andtowimbip clerks in the County ofUnions- , -^ . C

OEOROK ^ . SrawAlar, <- •E A £ P B L. MOBEOW, "'" k

* 'flUBD SSlOB,'" ' »"Union Oounty Board of Elections.

1 \ < BU*-,North Avanue, Crdnford, N. J.

Carriage Repairing and Painti

HeneralJobbing

Tsl. M'-L.

Oea cr in Hardware 4 Housefurnlshlftg G oods.GARDEN TOOLS. ' - ^ ^ . " Q W J E B S , ^

POUI/TBI NETTING, .?•. , 'J&u w u u . . n . w , AGATEWARE,-' . . _££

msyrsBBrJ ' —MECHANICS TOOLS. '^75.73It will be worth your time to try me before buying elsewhere, si a>y | "

at*low and quality tbs beat , ' ' ' , • -CHRONICLE BLOCK, CftAN^ORD. - •• ,

_J_JDIEO«|5«JIREIE. £*<£S$£L*3tiU^™L£t$^

ON INLAND SEAS IYOURVACATIONTIRIPUK^D«(ffiipom o . A. Cnsi

m ^ lent itniSe H tbv --- — •—r—

|.TVl«hop +*wm ct d»fa* ar. rfawd.

a-ano hxto an nswu.iniavn, .. and coBbft Tin UniiTdttraphScrmuMdabawL— . — •» -

TU D. V C UU liaa s|tt«l« Ub HiriM

rrtDWt,

i OtktO attOaate wr MtaSMts. /

THE COAST LINE ITO ft

MACKINACDetroit & Cleveland Nav. Co.

V

GEORGE DITZEL.General Contractor

Teaming of All Kinds. ^ ' '

kSDB« ' 8*HD , / DIBT.

CRANFORD N. J .

Lehigh Coal, Lumber, D1<AIN P I P E ,

LIME. LATH, PLASTER ETC,

OFFICE: 'WALNUT AVENUE.

CRANFORD, -

E. K. ADAMS,, F1R.B IJI8URJIJJCB.

308 UNONAVENME.

JAMES C P

Contractoi11 Jtrib Amu CmfiH, ftw Jerftf',

J.O.

Lehlgh Valley Coal ';t&Kindling Wood I

Offloe; Srerry Blook, North Ave.'^l* vYard: Oenlannlal Ave.. Qranford,K;|.^

J. L. BAUER,

«..rfor Cranf.rd TkwaaM^igl^'P

M«ir»_om<fe^s^Bufiaf||?gELIZABETH;..!*- j$*j£{^f l^A^^ e r i 8 E Y

-four Kinds NbV in St(kk.

14P.P««

the Season for Canning them has Arrived, and •*%

we ay6 Recfeiving Large Shipments Daily ^

- )'• r

* j-

THOSE jy iGt WHITES AND YELLOWS

!$.

" v.' 1~ -'.-•h

•a^tsA^itXei^r.

Send in Ydur Order . ; ' > > %%

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