+ All Categories
Home > Documents > COFFEES. - DigiFind-It

COFFEES. - DigiFind-It

Date post: 30-Jan-2023
Category:
Upload: khangminh22
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
8

Click here to load reader

Transcript

THE CHATHAM PRESSVol.. XI)I. XI). 32. CHATHAM, MOKMS OOL'NTY, K. J., OCTOUKK h1., L9UU PRICE, FIVE CENTS.

( •> •

i;

CHATHAM'S GREATOPPORTUNITIES

Rev. W. A. Keyes Gives StirringAddress on That Topic Before

the Board oi Trade.

MIDSUMMER DAY MADE HOLY P U B L I CNAME RALLY A GREAT SUCCESS

UNITY IMPORTANT FOR TOWN

The largest attendance at a Boardof Trade meeting since its organiza-tion was present on Monday night,the occasion being an address givenby the Rev. \V. A. Keyes, pastor ofSt. Patrick's Church, on "The oppor-tunities of Chatham."

Unity, Father Keyes said, was oneof the most important essentials fora town's betterment, ".lust come outto this section of the State," he saidi"Morris Comity, with its natural,healthful and invigorating air, andthis town, situated among its hills'.It lias been especially laid out wilhits low lauds and hills, and can bebuilt on anywhere. There is no otherplaces like it. Compare it with Boon-ton, Summit, Madison or Morrlstown.and you will Had that they are not sohabitable as your town of Chatham.Here we have municipal ownership ofboth water and light; gas is beingsupplied by the Public Service; a newschool is to be. erected soon, and nextyear a sewerage system will be in-stalled. With this, also, it has all

With a bright blue sliy and sunshinelike a midsummer day. upwards of1,50(1 men participated in the aiinusilHoly \unie demonsuaiiuii, lurid at Doer. lusl Sunday, representing the til NI

illvision of the Newark Diocesan l'u-on of Holy Name societies.

The same sights iiud scenes of oth-T years were in evidence again. Old

age and extreme youth rubbed shoul-lers, vied In manifestations of enthu-siastic ardor for the cause and swungiroudly down the lines formed by the

WEDDING BELLS.

V\

would cause peoplethe beauty thatto resido here."

There uro usually two classes In acommunity, those who take interestonly to find fault, and other peoplewho take no interest in the place atall, because as they say a "certaincliipie" want to run it. Chatham, 1think, however, Is free from this. Insome places there are two factions—the hill and the low land, if one isin favor of anything, why the other isagainst, and I am sorry to say that itexists partially in this place, dot to-gether and work as a unit and in har-mony, and it will be found that great-er results will lie accomplished in thetown. Religious qualifications shouldbe left out of public affairs not onlyin Chatham, but in every place. Dig-otry is hurtful. If a man. no matterwhat his faith, Is honest and deeplyinterested in the town, why, put himinto office.

Father Kfiyes nlsn ppolse of thecountry and stale and their great op-port unities. "Takeinstance," he said.

New Jersey, for'Her railroads

are a net work with the great metropolis, and look at its manufacturingcentre. See how nature has providedit with the Hnckensack and PassaicRivers that enables the manufacturersto produce their goods."

In conclusion he said that he hopo.lthe Board of Trade would continue togrow and grow, and that Chathamwould conduce to grow with her.

The extermination of, the mosqui-to was again discussed. It was an-nounced that several books relatingto the exterminationjust been presented

multitude of onlookers. The onlyijmbols displayed were the societybanners, the Stars and Stripe-;, thesocletv colors, blue and whita in the

inions, and the badges worn on meapels of the coats of the par-i:k-rs.

St. Patrick's Holy Name Soci"ty. ofthis place, was among the intrudersand they, again showed up credit ibly,for the purpose in which the rally wnsMended, namely, to honor tile HJy

Name. Both the junior and M-inrsocieties of the church march' .1 fromhe school house here through Olive r

street, down Kali-mount avMiu, laMaple street, to Main and tlien'-'t; linoI'assaic avenue, to the station, wherethey took a special train for Dover at1:35 o'clock.

The parade got under way at 2 43.It was headed by the two societiesfrom Dover—St. Mary's and the Sac-red Heart. Then followed the socie-ty of the Church of the Assumption,of Morristown, St. Vincent's of Madi-son, St. Patrick's of Chatham, St.Teresa's of Summit, St. Virgilius ofMorris Plains, St. Joseph's of Mend-ham and a division from Bernards-vllle. The line of march was throughthese streets in the order named:Down Blackwell to Union, to Richardsavenue, to Bergen, to Blackwell, toWharlon, and thence to St. Mary'sChurch grounds, where the most im-pressive scene of all took place. Herebenediction of the Most Blessed Sacra-ment was given, and 5,000 peopleknelt on the ground in reverence.Previous to this Congressman JamesA. Hammlll, of .lerse City, gave astirring address on the "Holy Name."

It was estimated that the demon-stration was witnessed by no lessthnn IS,Olid people, and the decora-tions exceeded any since the affairWHS first started. The business hou-on, especially, presented a beautifulcene.Next year Chatham will witness

such an affair, it being decided to holdthe next rally here.

lif the pest hadb the library.

William H. J,mn stated that the besttime to use the oil preparation was in

it should beand outbuild-

November, ami thatsprinkled about hum:inga.

Township Needs a New School.The agitation which has been going

on In Chatham Township for the pastyear regarding the building of a news.:hool near Hickory Tree, and theclosing of the l.oantaka school, is be-ginning to take concrete shape,the last meeting of the BoardEducation, on Monday evening, Coun-ty Superintendent ,1. Howard Hulsartwas present, and outlined the stepswhich would have to lie taken to accompllsh the desired result.

The Board has already secured esti-mates on the proposed Improvement,which will give them a line on theamount of money which will be need-ed.

An election has been called for Oc-tober 2fi, at 1). m. to vote on abond issue for the erection of thenew school, and at the same time thequestion will be submitted to the vo-ters of giving the Board of Educationpermission to dispose of the l oan-

- take school property to the best ad-vantage.

As we have stated before, the newschool question has been agitated fora long time. Most of the childrenwho attend the l.oantaka school re-sido at or near Hickory Tree, andhave a walk of over a mile to schoolKor the older ones this is no hard

V - ship, but for the little tots It meansthe depriving them of a school educa\lon during the time they need it;»ost, because It Is only in fine weathI that they can go to school. When

considered that the avorago childves school at about \rourleen years

it will be seen how valuableearly years of school life are to

is to bring the school nearer tohomes of the children, and to

possible better and more regut to..dance, that the Board of Ed

km Is pushing forward this planwe are glad to say It has the un'• Support of almost all tho sub

,IH:I1 citizens in the township.

ROLL OF HONOR LEWIS R. BROWN WEDS ROSEVILLEGIRL IN A PRETTY CEREMONY

M»_._ i n .< f , , , , A verv prettv Wedding was solemn-Names Of PupilS Who Were Neither ized on" Saturday afternoon I., the

Absent nor Tardy During theMonth of September.

BIDS TOO HIGH.The bids for the new school build-

ing were opened by the Building Com-mittee of the Board of Education onTuesday opening. Twenty-seven bidswere handed In, for various portionsof the work, and one or two completecontracts. The latter contemplatedthe construction of a concrete build-ing, and were all too high.

On the general bids J. B. Corbet! ofMadison was low man on the masonwork, RuRt.in & Rohhins of Newarkwere lowest for the carpenter work;C. H. Van Wert of Chatham had thelowest figure In for the plumbing; M.Chrystal of Summit, I lie heating andventilating, and .1. L. Clark' ofham was low imm on electrics;The lowest bids when putexceeds the amount available, $40,000.

Aft or the bids hud been opened thehoard was called together in specialsession, for the purpose of discussingthe situation. It was the opinion ofthe Board that nothlng^could be cutdown on the building to lessen thecost, and as material^ was advancingIn cost steadily It would not he wiseto delay the awarding of the contractstoo long. There 1B no unnecessaryelaboration in the plans, and the ar-chitect stated that he did not Beewhere hn could change anythingwhich would lessen the ciwt unlessthe Board would consider a framebuilding.

The stale department, from whoma considerable part of the money forschool support Is derived, determine(lie minimum dimensions for schoolrooms, and requrlel all essential de-tails to be In nccofdaneo with theirrequirements. *

As it is Impossible to build n suita-ble building with the appropriation,the Hoard will he compelled to go be-,fore the peolpe for more money. Justhow this will be done was not deter-mined at Tuesday evening's meeting,but the Board adjourned until lastnight to consider the question, and de-cide upon a plan of procedure.

Second Herman Presbyterian Churchof Newark, when Miss Margaret M..Schinitt. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.William Schmitt, of Roseville, andLewis It. Brown, of Chatham, wore

SCHOOL ATTENDANCE IS GCOD miilei! "' »»'»rriage. Kev. Frederick

September, lMu.i.High School—Principal, Kuiily

Boardman; teacher,' Ethelyn 1.wards—Number enrolled, boys

S.Ed-it

\V. Hock, D. I)., officiated. The churchwas handsomely decorated for the oc-casion with palms aud chrysanthe-mums.

The bride was gowned in white sat-in trimmed with lace and pearls, and

girls 11, total Tr, cases of tardiness, s n o wore a heart-shaped diamocd lock-C: percentage, of attendance, ,'J5. Pu- vt- t l le gift of the groom. She car-pils neither absent nor tardy, S, Jos. ri('1' a Itouquet of lilies of the valleyGlynn, Preston l.um, Norman Smith, a m l t i r i 'le roses.Mary l.ees, Marlon l.um. Mildred s t l e w a s attended py her sister,Baldwin, Addie (ireen. Harriet Pelou- M i s s M a v Schmitt, as maid of honor,bet,

(irammar SriEighth Grades. Teacher, ulive A.Deming—Number enrolled, boys IS,girls 14; total 3!!; cases of tardiness,2; percentage of attendance, .93. Pu-pils neither absent nor tardy,Fred Ford, Burton l.um, Emer>'Brown, Norman Pollard, Robert jScharf, John Blatt, Donald Talmadge,Clarence Broadwell,

and by two bridesmaids, Miss CarriS. Schinitt, another sister, and Miss

.Henrietta liross. Miss Gladys Steinerwas (lower girl. - The bridesmaids

:were gowned in white .silk mull withpink trimmings, and their bouquetswere of pink chrysanthemums. Thelower girl carried a h-.i i.ei i,f pink

rnationH.

Howard Trow- m a nbridge, Marjorie Strong, Gertrude I FollowinShields, Ellen Smith, Marie "" '

The groom was attended by hisClarence E. Brown, as best

r- the ceremony a dinner.Mead, , w a s h e l ( , a ( r)O j ja m i l .- s , i a l |o rs . covers

Olive Ogden, Helen Clark. Etta >Moli- i|,eing laid for ninety'tor, Elsie Montieth, Ruth Hesselgrave, I X l r a m l M r g - B|.(|WI1 ,,.,., ( l in. jnlr ( h eEmily Rich, Anna Thommen. g

i evening on an extended wedding trip,

; BOWLING LEAGUE GET HGHTCLUBS; SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED

As was hinted last week, the Uickawanna Bowling League wilof eight clubs this year, thelaBt. Tapkaow of Morrittown decld

I consistsame as

Fifth and Sixth Grades—Teacher, i during which they will visit NiagaraBessie M. Morhoiis—Number enrolled j Falls, Chicago, Toronto and other—boys 24, girls 19; total 43: cases ofjPOints about the (treat Lakes. Ontardiness, 3; percentage on attend- j their return they will reside in ('bal-ance, .97.5. Pupils neither absent nor'ham.tardy, 29, William Edwards, George iEdwards, \joule Blatt, AllleWilliam Stollery, Paul VaGeorge Pollard, Dudley Barber, Lewis jZiegenfus, Layton Simpson, NormanMlllor, Fiank Mead, Stephen Brown,Floyd 1/iyton, Carleton Lum. An-drew Conklin, Thomas Smith, DonaldRichmond. Marlon Wilier, Ada Smith,Helen Muchmore. Gayneel Smith, An-na Carter, Eleanor Hopping, KuimaBrown, Annie Loree, Maliel l^erch,Inga Laulerman, Anna Molltor.

Primary School—Third and FourthGrades. Teacher, Elizabeth M. Bea-ty—Number enrolled—boys, 35, girls.17; total 52; cases of tardiness, 1;percentage of attendance, .92. Pupilsneither absent nor tardy, 2t>, AlwinBlntt. Raymond Couklin, Eddie Moll-tor, Teddy Muchmore, Gordon Much-more, Willett Pollard, Willard San-ders, Kenneth Shaw, Robert Stollery,Theodore Blatt. Howard Conklin, Jo-seph Conklin, Leola Snyder, DonaldKilpatrick, Matthew Maloney, IrvingMauley, Steward Richmond, Herbert,'Terrell, Willie Van Wert, LeonoraDarrah, Martha Hatton, Louisa Loock,Gabella Smith, Adelo Clark, DorothyCoon, Helen Sayre.

Second Grade—Teacher, MyrtlePrice—Number enrolled, boys 25,glrlB 15; total 40; cases of tardiness,3; percentage of attendance, .92. Pu-pils neither absent nor tardy—Win-field Shaw, Henry Ryan, CharlesLapp, Richard Hall, John Edwards,Lloyd Smith, William Goehner, Wal-ter Molltor, Ralph Ford, George Sny-der, Fred Molilor, Richard Lum, Wil-liam Whitefleld, Fulucliio Spagnollo;Teddy Brown, Raymond Miller, Kath-ryn Hall, Phebe Conklin, Edith Locke.

First Grade;—Teacher, E. MelissaWoodhnll—Number enrolled, boys 10,girls 10; total 26; cases of tardiness,0; percentage of attendance, .94. Pu-pils neither absent nor tardy, 20—Charles Wliitefleld, Walter Shields,Henry Pihlman. Harry Hattou, FrankTorrell, Carl Blatt, George Lock, Fer-ris Johnston, Roy Cowan, Raymond

ed to enter, and the Eureka teamwhich it was expected to be droppedthis year, was again admitted to makeup the eight-team circuit.

The League is composed of Chailvam, Waverly and Alert teams of Madison, Tapkaow of Morristown, Summit, Hollywood, Orange Valley Lyciu»i and Eurekas. The league wilstart on Thursday. October 2swill roll every Monday and the secondThursday of each month, completingthe schedule on Monday, March 2S.The schedule for the Chatham teamas follows:

Oct. 28—Chatham at Tapkaow.Nov. 1—Eureka at Chatham.Nov. S—Chatham at Alerts.Nov. 11—Hollywood at Chatham.Nov. 15—Waverly at Chatham.Nov. 22—Chatham at Summit.Nov. 29—Chatham at O. V. LyceumDec. fi—Tapkaow at Chatham.Dec. 9—Chatham at Eureka.Dec. 13—Alerts at Chatham.Dec. 20—Chatham at HollywoodDec. 27—Chatham at Waverly.Jan. 3—Summit at Chatham.Jan. fi—O. V. Lyceum at Chatham.Jan. 10—Chatham at Tapkaow.Jan. 17—Eureka at Chatham.Jan. 24—Chatham at Alerts.Jan. 31—Hollywood at Chatham.Feb. 7—Waverly at Chatham.Feb. 10—Chatham at Summit.Feb. 14—Chatham at O. V. Lyceum.Feb. 21—Tapkaow at Chatham.Feb. 28—Chatham at Eureka.Mar. 7—Alerts at Chatham.Mar. 10—Chatham at Hollywood.Mar. 14—Chatham at Waverly.Mar. 21—Summit at Chatham.Mar. 28—O. V. Lyceum at Chatham.It will be noticed that the Chatham

team will start the season away fromnilley, Lionel Darrel, Eddie Shotwell, home, and will not be seen on the loRudolph Flliiger, LMlian Parent, Mar-jcal alleys until Monday. November 1.

However, they wind up the season athome, the tame as lost year, playingthe last two games here, the firstwith Summit and the last with OrangeValley Lyceum.

gart t Trowbrldge, Eleanor McCartney,Charlotte McLove, May Smith, PearlWhltoman, Elizabeth Straus.

Kindergarten—Teacher, E. MelissaWoodhnll—Number enrolled, boys 11,girls 12; total 23. Cases of tardiness,0; percentage of attendance .835. Pu-pils neither absent nor tardy, S—Ed-ward O'Hara, David Ransom, Willie

Board of Health to Enforce PlumbingCode.

Over a year ago, in deference to aMuchmore, Anna Goehner, Thelma demand among peolpe of Chatham forShaw, Adell Reilly, Mario Hendrlck,Cecilia Murphy.

RECAPITULATION.BoyB In school -..142Girls In M'hool loiTotal . . ..JTardiness

Small Fire.About eleven o'clock Wednesday

night an alarm of fire was turned In.and In response to the call the fire-men hurried to the residence of G. H.Kirkpatrlck, where a small fire wasin progress, the bricks having becomeoverheated, selling fire to the weath-er boards outside. The flames wereburning fiercely when the firemen ar-rived on the scene, but were extin-guished after n few minutes' soakingwith water. 'I'hOj^Ajflfflfl1 was notgreat.

243• 15

Percentage of attendance .93Number of pupils neither absent

nor tardy .130

a uniform plumbing code which shouldrequire that all plumbing to he in-stalled be of a type that would bepermanently sanitary, the Board ofH

yHealth passed such a The codewas not put into immediate effect.

Last January the Board determinedto take steps to enforce the code, andthe duties of plumbing inspector wereaddod to tlm of Inspector McCor-

Days school was open lg. mack.CHAd. A. PHILHOWER, Supervisor. I Recently a numlier of flagrant viola-

. |tlons of the code have been reported

Saved Drunken Man'. Life. I" ' 0 ^ ° a r d - n m i h a v e b o n l

c o n n r m e ( i h*_ , , ,. . , „ the Inspector. The violations wereBut for the assistance of COBIDIO i n r e e a r d t 0 t n o „„„,„>. of materialSimone. of Passaic avenue. Thomas

Driscoll, a Madison carpenter, wouldhave been ground to (loath under thewheels of a train on the IvickawannaRailroad here Monday. Driscoll waslying on the tracks near the Mapleavenue srossing in an intoxicated con-dition, when Simone came along. Heshouted to him to get up as a tratuwas apgroaching, but he refused. Stui-one

1 him owhlzned by.

over to him andhe tracks just as the train

used.On Monday the Board of Health

mot in special session and discussedthe question at length, deciding final-ly to rigidly enforce the code, requir-ing all plumbers to be registered and \furnish bonds, and the filing of plansand specifications for all plumbingwork done. The work will be in-spected at stated intervals and it willnot be allowed to be used until a cer-tificate from the Hoard has beengranted.

CHARLES MAMLEY

REAL ESTATE AMD INSURANCE*COMMISSIONER OF DEEDS

MAIN STREET CHATHAM

N. KELLEY & SON,Distributors of

High Grade

COFFEES.Samuel Wild's Sons'

None Better

25c. Ib. to 32c. 1b.5 lbs . 1.15 5 lbs. 1.50

L

HOTEL ASTOR COFFEE

A SPECIAL BLEND

28c lb. — 5 lbs. for 1.2

N. KELLEY & SOPf*MAIN STREET,

Telephone 622. CHATHAM, N. J.

DUCHESS PEARS BALDWIN APPLESQUINCES

Pork & Apple Sassis pretty good oat ing lliis time oftlie year. Ma knows how tocook it, uiul pa. and the hoys cuiikeep up on the eating.

We Have Pork atThis Marketthat's fresh, tender mid sweet.

All Meat Sold HereIs Guaranteed theBest.

' "ill bo

CAULIFLOWER - HEINZ S A U E R K R ^ ;SPANISH ONIONS inDia-

GIANT PEPPERS HOT

HATTON'S MARK?CHATHAM, N. J.

o attend

''om 2 to •'•evening*,

ing.

•Pain Pii

The Chatham Press.B8T*«USH(.D

A weekly uf »»p ' I1" i'lil'l'*1'"1 * v<%r>li».ird*T ifierucon in the. mlm-«nol*« nui'druM of Clutlmm Uoro>^k.^•rn. County, N. J.

K><cr*4at tka Ckktham P.O. «aevvad «U« »'»«'•

i Mr will bt upeclcJ u itltle »ll «tn«'»§•<f CJQ b« diicoBtinucJ

f One Year. |1 .MXJ Six Month*, .80.

' " " " j Three " .&0.I Single copies, 5o.

J. TH0MK5 SGOTT, Cd. and Proo/^- - -3

in the old time it was said. "It tigood for a man that he bear the yokeiu fcls youth "

A ife, cast upon the waters, afterny days, preaches the Christiangister, will com« back again.

A. man would rather be bored toith at the theatre, confesses thesw York Press, than enjoy niaisela lecture.

rt ti one thing to marry tar love,muse* the Philadelphia Record, audquite another to curry out th« schema

Any one who didn't sail lu theRoosevelt naturally falls Into the An-anias class, assumes the New YorkWorld.

Flying U soon going to be so com-mon, prophesies the PhiladelphiaLedger, that to «.Uk will K- a sign ofdistinction.

A man will lie up how much moneyhe has to make people admire himand lie it down, observes the NewYork Press, to get off making a char-ity subscription.

In Arliona a man shot two linotypeoperators, which la well enough in itsway. admits the New Orleans Times-Democrat, but why discriminateagainst the proofreader?

Calculations as to the date of open-ing the Pamana Canal, remarks theWashington Star, do not take iuto ac-count the possibility of the event be-ing hastened by the earthquake inter-ference.

It » (' calculated to annoy a gentle-au who is laboriously climbing aile to encounter another gentlemaneetully sliding down, confesses theiw York Herald.

A country boy returning to theiuntalns, after a year of study incity, and looking about his native

tlace, said, "For the first time in my••Ijpts 1 begin to understand what peo-

Ble mean when they conic up hereamd Bay that this is beautiful." Hehad taken a long step, avers theChristian Register, in the process ofeducation.

David Lambuth, In the Review tlReviews, states that "China's fatalweakness has been her lack of self-consciousness. This Is to be curedby a common education, by postalservice, telegraphs and railroads."

THE PULPIT.

K SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BYTHE REV. JOSEPH A. BENNETT.

I'liiiur: Kinj;-liii> • f .J.'-us.

Brooklyn. N. Y.—SunJay inontlnKthe Uev. Joseph A. Bennett, of New-ark, Ohio, preached lu the. lirceneAvenue Baptist Church. His subjectwas "The Kingship of Jesus." Timtext was from John 19:M, "llehold)\>ur King." Mr. Bennett said:

The world has had many kings.all ofwhom have been more or less famous.But It has had only one, who could intruth be called King of Kings andLord of Lords Time and time againthe world has trembled, to know whutconception Its sovereigns had of theirsovereignty, for their conceptions iu-BVilably shaped lluir policies and de-termined their actions. Itut never inall the history of the world wa,s It BOimportant for the children of men toknow what conception their sover-eigns had of their sovereignty, as itIs for the child of Cod to know whatconception the Christ had of Ills Uing-ly office. Aud thanks lie unto God,we are not left in the dark concern-ing this momentous question, for wemay easily gather from the words oftlu> King Himself, and the lips ofthose whom He has commissioned tospeak in His behalf, a clear and vivid

All Users Say

Our Lumber is

INTKUNATlONAti l.KSSON COM«MKNTS VOH OITOUEK 17.

Nothing tooWst to Iw hutl

for us. if you wjiut thewrite or teloiihont) us.

At Your Service

•»»»•»••$»»•

The life of a baby, taken suddenlyill in a Brooklyn, N. Y., street car.

Subject: l'aul a IVIsoner—ItafnreKelK, Acts U4—(iohttni Text:Acts a-l:td—IVmunil Verses SKS,SO—CuiiimeiHary on the IA'&SOU.

TIMK.—A. D. 58 or Ml.I'l.At'U.—CaesarenKXIHKS1TION.—1. I'uiil* l>eren»e

Urtorv Ki'lU, 10-aa. I'aul was in thabest sense a gentleman and a diplo-mat tcf. eh. liti: 2). Uy all propermeans he sought to gain the favor ofthose he would win for Christ. One.an he, faithful without being brumiueand boorish. This Splrlt-glven tact;tnd winsomenesa is as much neededby the one who would acceptably !terve Christ as Is Spirit-tilled bolduess : ROWER I ANF OPP FA1RVIRW HMKR)f utterance. Paul took up the terms D u n t n Lfl!U!;> u ' ' • rAlnilnB HUUSB,of the indictment brought against | r«u A nrr A mr w Thim iv. 5) and met them with a tlat I \jU.Ai U&m, JN J .and unanswerable denial. It Is one j • •— —itiing to makeaccusations; it is unoth- i R u b b e r T i r e s P u t O n .?r thlug to prove them (v. 13). Paulwas a model preacher, he believedall things which are written in the

.aw and the prophets" (v. 14). Hap-py Is the man who can say what Paulsays here (cf. Luke 24:27, 44; John10:35; Matt. 5: IS; Mark 7:13). His

BRUEN & MORRIS.Tn» Always usy

Lumber and Coal Dealers.RAILROAD AVENUE,

T*)tpUo»e B»-b M A D I S O N , N. J.

ABNER REEVESHORSESHOEING

andBLACKSMITHINC

.'Onreption of His Kingship. And this .Is the task set for the accomplishment enemies accused him of departingof the present hour. Wo approach '™m nf r anc

YleIlt Scriptures; he

the task with joy and gladness, but I »ho,w^ thf'» «""• ° n | " e contrary,without the {slightest hope of being j he believed more fully thau they did,able fittingly to 'portray the beauties ',' ,is "f^n the ease that the real infl-of the King Eternal, and yet wo wish I l e l s fa" t h e uelieverg heve Ics Asto consider as best we may, "the I »" athlete keeps himse fin rigid phy-Kingshlp o( Jesus In Its ground, its : iUal training so Paul kepi himse (realm, its character and Its influence." I"1 I'Sid spiritual training (v. 1.;

BftBY GflRRIflGE TIRES RLL SIZES

First, then, the ground of His Kiug->hlp. What right has the Christ to bo

was saved by an employe of the line j King? What are His credentials?The kings of this earth have gone totheir thrones by way of royal birth,intellectual force, the might of armsor the glitter of gold. If such creden-

who knew enough to get materialsfrom ft drug store and give the childa hot mustard bath. He explained,to the New York Herald, that he was ithe father of eighteen children.Might be a good idea to employ onlyfathers of large families on all trolleylines.

According to the opinion of Mr.Tjifrnton, who presided at a confer-ence of the foreman tailors of Lon-don, men's dress will soon undergoa great change and the present styleswill give way to "more classic" gar-ment*. Knee breeches and fane;waistcoats will be Introduced, andthe superiority of these garmentsover to-day's long trousers and waist-coats wll) Insure their popularity. ARussian nobleman who visited Lon-

|p a few weeks ago said that beed little whether the style was ln-

A. T. Stewart, preaches the NewYork Mai), did not invent the drygoods business, any more than Aga-memnon Invented the hero business.But ail the little haberdashers areforgotten, and Stewart's name re-mains. It is the way of makingthings turn out tbat counts. Prin-ciples are indeed fundamental, butfame comes with actual accomplish-ment: and actual accomplishmentmay rest more upon bustle and gump-tion than upon inventive genius.

What progress woman suffrage hasmade in this country—and that it Isconsiderable its adoption by society

jduced or not, he would adopt it. ; shows—has been due to persuasionwo things were necessary, he said, ! a nd to a logical appeal, not to force.

*"shapely calves and courage." He ' It has remained dignified and hastook with him forty-eight waistcoats > given evidence of earnestness, boastsmade of various patterns of embroid- ' t h e New York World. But do theered silk. I generality of womankind want the

ballot? The final answer will begiven by the maids in the kitchenAnnouncement has been made by

the Chicago, Burlington and QulncyRailway that it has completed a year jof operation without a fatal accident 'to a passenger. This record is for ithe fiscal year ended June 30, 1909, I

•1o- which approximately 20,000,000 jpassengers were carried. Tbe recordis regarded, by the Chicago Daily jNews, as the more remarkable in >

and the pantry rather than by the

tials be sufficient to Insure a crownand wield a scepter, then surely theChrist ought to wear the brightestcrown and sway the mightiest scepterthe world has ever known, for HeIs as far above earthly monarchs asthe stars are above the ponds whichreflect their shimmering light. No;Christ did not go to His throne'.hrough royal birth, Intellectual force,the might of arms, the glitter of gold,or the schemes of politicians. What,then, were His credentials? Well,first, divine appointment, when inthe Second Psalm, Jehovah says, "yethave I set My King upon My holy hfllof Zion." He speaks of the Christ,and when In the fullness nf time thaChrist comes. It Is not without signsof divine appointment aud approval.

Among these we notice the song ofthe angels, the shining of the star.the visit of the Wise Men, the hushingDf the winds, the stilling of the waves,the opening of blind eyes, the healingof the sick and the raising of thedead. But, again, the Christ creden-tials are "Inherent Qualification." Itis necessary to a successful sovereignthat he have a comprehensive knowl-edge of his subjects. He nrust k>iowtheir virtues and their vices, theirvocations and their avocations, theirreligion and their irreliglon. In aword, he must know aud understandhuman nature. He must also be pos-sessed of a mind legislative anil heable to enAct such laws as shall befor the best interest of his yeople.He must be possessed of a mindJudicial and be able lu execute thoselaws with judgment tempered bymercy. He must have a mind mar-

{ tial and be able to marshal the forcesmistress in the drawing-room. It is ; of t h e r e a l m f o r t h e pro te< . , l on a n d

suggestive nevertheless to beholdNewport hostesses devoting to a wo-man suffrage campaign the energy

defense of his people.In all these things Jesus is pre-

eminent. He knows mankind as onlythe Creator can know. He knows the

and interest that once went to the ! weakness of the flesh and the strengthPlanning of a dinner or a cotillion. | Toito £JZ7 1% T t

In consequence of the increase ofments of the world. He knows thestrength and temper of the devil's

view of the company's statement that | the mice of meat in Germany, the i 8w°rd, for He hast often crossedits fast train from Chicago to Denver Berlin restaurant keepers have in-showed a perfect score by being on ! demnified themselves by serving atime at terminals every trip. During I smaller quantity of flesh to etchthe previous year the road carriedXJ>JC\454,000 passengers one mile,as sbo^n by the annual report, sothat even if one passenger had beenkilled the chances against fatal in-Jury would have been over a billionto one for each mile of road traveledthrough eleven States. The company'strains in that year covered 15,000,- ; discharges the double functions

blades with him. Jesus knows allthese things and He is able to makelaws which, if obeyed, will make ushappy here and hereafter. He is ableto, and will, execute the laws which

diner. This, notes the London Globe, , He has formulated. Nor will He for-aroused the phlegmatic German pa- ! &et t n e rewards and the p. nishments

. . . . , . belonging to those who obey or dia-trons to action, and they made a joint o b e y , £ ,g a t ) ]c a n ( , w j | | , n g t ( | m,(r

protest and banded themselves to- j shal all the forces of Heaven to pro-gether to prosecute if necessary. Therestaurateurs have for the time sat-isfied their clients by getting the car-ver recognized officially, and he now

p gI Cor. 9:24-271. The object ofthis spiritual discipline was mhave a conscience void of uf-fense"—that Is. a conscience thatlid not stiiiiililr or cause others toUumble. He Minion diligently andilsciplined himself strenuously tohave such a conscience, not only to-A'ard (!od but also toward man. He(ought to have it not only most of thelime, but all the time. The kirn) ofithletics Paul cultivated are sorely Iniced of cultivation to-day. It was todrlup alms to his nation ami not toio wrong to his nation that Paul had:ome to Jerusalem.

II. Felix Terrified, 24-26. Theu-hemes of the enemies of Paul and>f Christ had already resulted In glv-nK Paul an opportunity to preach?hrlst to persons who would other-wise, been beyond his reach (cf. Pa.Zti:10). There were few who more•orely needed preaching to than this»ame man Felix and this same womanOrusilla. How many preachers havereceived inspiration and Instruction(rom Paul's dealing with these twoprofligates In high society. Howmany hesitating people have beenwrought to an Immediate decision forChrist through the study of the follyDf Felix. Kellx had a mere specula-:lve curiosity In the matter (v. 24),but Paul gave a very practical andpersonal turn tu his exposition of'the faith in Christ." lie showedFelix It was not some faraway thingin the region of metaphysics andspeculation, but something closehome to his own misconduct. Paulalways adapted his preaching to hisaudience, but not in the way somemodern preachers adapt their preach-ing to their audience, studying to saynothing to offend. He went right af-er the conscience of the people beforehim. Righteousness and self-controlwere just where Felit and Drusillawere offenders. Paul had an influen-tial audience of high social standing,but he preached the preaching thatjome would have us believe is onlyadapted for the slums. "Felix wasterrified." Well h(> might be. Hewas conducting himself In just theway that makes "the judgment ofGod' a terror. We would do well ifwe would so preach that we shouldstrike with terror offenders In highplaces. Terrifying preaching is great-ly needed to-day. Indeed, just asmuch In our fashionable churches,where there is many a modern Felix,as in our mission halls. It Ic true theterror of Felix did not do him muchgood, but it rame near saving him,and there are many rich sinners andmany poor sinners to-day whose onlyhope Is that they may be so terrifiedthat they will forsake their Bins andaccept Christ. What a fool Felix was.

JOHN L. HYNES.Sanitary Plumbing;

TitinltiK, Steam andHot Water Heating,

Shop and Rrsldcnce turn Avenue,

CHATHAM, N. J .iYlt'l>licii(e No.

Keileu's Livery and BoardingS T A B L E

Horses and Garriaocs to Hire.IO FAIRMOUNT AVE.,

Telephone li-l.. CHATHAM, N. J .M-Curriaeee, meet alltrains-»»

l six, io hire fori l i

PROFESSIONAL

TOWARD 11 MM,

•Real EiUaie anC

CHATHAM AND NEW AUK. N, J.

lteul Ksttite Uouglit, SoM. lien toil or Kx>.•liungtHi. Property tiikeu chart* of. limit*I'ollvotcd.Etc. Life mid Vlre luauraiiic lut'fHt o>iut|>anies at low rulra. t'liuiut UiiiUliutLm» lor sole.

|T t >P. BURROUGHS A SON,

"CUifccvtahers,108, 110 Main Street,

MADISON, N. J.

478 Springfield ave., SUMMIT, X. J.

Telephone 23 Madison,Hiul -oil Summit.

I-Hrutt \v«gn|l!<lti>, lt> ....

wt?ddiiii:& or |uirt!e». iluy oi

\»\l I ull-Slzed Condi to HireWVdtllugs, Funerals, Ktc.

For

CHATHAM P. O. MAILS.IKC0M1N0 MAILS.

From New York—".It. «.<u a. ui .: 13.60.4.40 p. m.

Prom Huston, l'a., and towns west—8.16 a. ui., l.itf, u.uu p. iu.

OUTGOING M11LS.For Newark ami New York-

MCa. in., it.l'.O.; 'll.«5a.m..oloscil |»uu-h

7br Eaatoo. P a -».0« a. m., H. P. O.; I-J.JO p. in., HorrutuwEonlr; i.lu i>. in., Etu-tou. It, 1'. 0.All K. 1*. 0. clerks exchange mail with all

•Alices on mad.•Mail lor Now York nuil distribution onlr.

E. *'. FEHIUB. 1'osluiiu.tei

PATENTSr^uiil mo4i»l s&etcu or i>i oto iliuvuitiouforf frcercixtnoi latentaUlity. Foi free cook> How to Secure' ""

Opposite U. S. PatentWASHINGTON D

Horseshoeing,filacksnilthlng,

Wheelwrightlng.

J. W. CARTER,Centre SI., CHATHAM

50 YCARS-EXPERIENCE

/, nvnno fending n (l k l t l

TRADE MARKSDESIGNS

COPYRIGHTS A.ch Rin!ii«»«crti>tii>ti rn.ir

free1 h hl

qiilrkly us.-ertnlii our o,invuiillxn ir pruhbtily imleulatiln. IVimi.nluilie Blri-llyroiiHdeiltlal. IUIUIII.KIIOM I'IIII-U »cent fri'o. OMost aucucy fur nt-ninni: pa l r im.

faieiitfl taken Uirouatl Muwi & Cu. roix-ivetpteial ni'f k i , without coarse, lu tho

Scientific JtotericattK handmmp'.r Illmtrileil weekly. Ijirowt rli.-ulMiun i>( miy trieiiltan |i,nri:il. Tvruii. M »

BUNN ft Co.»««——* Now Yoi*Uraock Oltk'«. « » V HI., Wuilnuulou. II

THE BEST OF EVERYTHING

GEO. M. WEIMER,

ChoiceMain Street,

C H A T H A M , IV. J.

Telephone 20-

POSITIVELYBEST

ABSOLUTELYCHEAPEST

SAFETY RAZOR

<JO0 miles. A similar record isshown by the Pennsylvania systemfor the calendar year 1908. j

Practical politicians, declares theBoston PoEt, fail to see any of thosewidely advertised symptoms of re-IXfpfug prosperity. The "contractgfraft' is threatened with paralysisowing io enforced publicity of coo-tract details. The postoffice payrollit ceasing to be fruitful for the faith-ful, owing to extensions of tbe civilt^rvice. Even. a pieayunish little

taker's job hasconditions

present few; to actto faith-inethingjobs one of theliticiansew reg-

of

carver aad sworn weigher. Accord-ing to a Paris contemporary, these•trancbeurs jures" are to be seen Inthe kitchens with carving knife inone hand and scales In the other,weighing out with mathematical pre-cision the portions of meat.

A large consignment of live lob-sters has left Halifax for Vancouver,not for broiling but for breeding pur-poses. This ib the third attemptmade by the Canadian Governmentto develop tbe lobster industry InPacific waters. The two previousDnes, recalls the Boston Transcript,have been unsuccessful, anrl i:o Vi-ler fortune hag attendedo f t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s G f ) v < - i : ; i i ; v n i i i j

this direction. The lobsters that ap-pear on Pacific bills of fare still haveto be brought overland from this-oast. There is perhaps gome melan-choly satisfaction over these failures

f t n j s of ln<J country. Shad, bassand other fishes brought from Atlan-v shores and streams hate multi-plied at a marvelous rate the otherside, though growing fewer here, and'.t is a crumb of comfort that thesewaters still retain a monopoly of theiobsier delicacy Atlantic oysters alsobave never been equaled by those olthe Pacific

fldence in His name.Again, the Christ credentials ;;re

mediatorial acquisition. By all thef the cro.ss, by the atone-i blood, He rias won the

right to the scepter over human lives.Bo much for the grounds of His sov-ereignty. But in what realm Is Hesovereign? In the realm of nature.By Him and for Him were all thingsmade. The centre of this universe isnot the milky way, along which count-

fuliH-fs of the judgment to which hewas hurrying; he had been terrifiednnd there was but one wlBe thing to

and only one time to do It—at once.But he waited for a convenient sea-son, which never came. It never doesfor those who wait for It. With manyIt i« now or never; repent to-day orbe lost eternally. In a few days allthat Felix was thinking about washow he could make money out of the

which countless multitudes pass tothe Father's house. He Is Kins altoin Heaven. All the angels of Godbow down and worship Him. Hiskingdom Is higher than the highest

d d th h d

geye. what beauty is there in the facesthat have been lined and wrinkled bytroubles bravely borne, by the sor-rows of other lives shared and light-ened, bysainthood

unconscious heroism andGeorge S. Merriam.

I Ti.-

A Writing in the Heart.Ae men and women add year to

, >''ar of patient and loving service,heaven, and deeper than the deepest | there writes itself in their hearts andhell. He Is King among men. Mil--) in tbeir faces ihe language of a dl-lions bow down before Him and wor- vine and eternal life. To the Eeelngship Him as King. Oh! yes; I knowmillions more refuse to worship Him,saying, "We will not have this man toreign over us," but some day God'sword will be fulfilled, when everyknee shall bow and every tongue con-fess Him as Saviour and Lord.

He is King In the realm of thechurch. He has never abdicated Histhrone or delegated HIB power to an-other. Christ alone Is King, nottynodB, not presbyteries, not confer-ences, not councils, not discreditedprofessors or ex-prfsid'-uts of colleges,>ut .lestis Christ.

He alone is King, and tin; ncpternf His authority must sway in Chris-tian lives. No new religion here. AChristian in one who loves JesusChrist supremely, a Christian ebanir-ler 13 one whose lift; la in harmonywith the Infinite. But what is therhuracter of His sovereignty? Well,It IB marked by purity of matter andat method. No ulterior motives pre-vail in inn ClirUt Kingdom. It ismarked by righteougi.eE.

He is righteous to rewurd all whotoll and labor for Him, and righteousloo, to punish »11 vjho oppose and

5EXTRA

I In' l.mv of Moses.aw .)! .Moses was, In every

I.'Jiit. liiiEed with mercy; it Blood forl i U i t y and it had for Its ultimategoal freed',in from Ignorance and1

despotism.-~lt"v ('. Ross 'Inker.

Save Shaving MoneyR K ' u i r

meaVr°v,:r. '" *"«> !

'Shrp-Shavr" 25c Safety Razor|which fives you better BLADE . VALUE thanraior. costing 20 times the price. The practicalvalue Is In the BLADE. It Is the ben beeaiwemade of the finest steel tempered by a «Declalprocess and scientifically ground and honeddown to the keenest poanlble edge Youpay 25 cents for the best practical Raior ever In-troduced, and you save nlneteen-twentlethsof thefancy prices askod for fancy frames and hold,ers. The "SHKP SHAVR" mzOR I, « ,In the frame as to be correctly "angled" tosuit any face. We sell y o u the whole Raior i?2Dc. so ai to create a market for nL hi AExtra "SHRP SHAVR" Blades"l for Ke ^tlisatin finish .ilvcr-plated «toppers at 10c.'eachWo send the Razor comp, ^ extra

Blades or the Stropper, prepaidby mail on receipt of price

in stamps or cash.BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,

1 3 4 LEONARD STRUTW. Y. CITY.

HE RAZOR It imarvil Itieipm-.H»i of otlcs.

.Mr-, i 1,'W'iund Ijocs Abroad,Mra. Grover Cleveland sailed for

Naples, Italy, on the North GermanLloyd liner Berlin, She was accom-panied by her mother, four childrenand Miss Mary A. Hastings, a nieceof the late President. She will liveindefinitely In Switzerland, where sbowill place ber children in school.

Destroyed HJs Worn*. n

James D. Smlllie, the artist, pro-vlded in his will for the destructionot Ms works which lacked merit.

CHICKENS EARN MONEY!"VD"Kn" """•Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you

Handle Them Properly

P0sTI'.MJ>Book

eeg hetf ' > * " ' ^ r i T OF 25 CENTS IX s] Wig Houat, 134 Leonard St., N. V. City.

PERSONAL ANDLOCAL NKWS

Arnold KroMlmum U building an addi-tion tu lila l-fuiilfiiro.

Mmriimis I'Uir, of Sunniiit iivimuo, isI ' o l i l l m ' t l t o l i i s h o i i u - u u l i r l i i ' U i L i . i l i i i u .

Mrs. Umiui.il Klltitt, nf Miiiu si rout,his ruturuud after H|>t>mling threwweeks at -Newton.

Miss Julia M.iuyvr, ol lloliokrit, isvisiting lu-r frii'lid, MUs k.itlu-rinoW'ulfo, of Main stiwl.

Tho annual fair of St. 1'utrirk's cliuivliwill be hold during tho week beginningMonday, Ortolior iJ, uud eliding Kutui'-day, October HO.

The I'hatham Wheelmen's flub wasbroken into Saturday night and theeontoiits of the money bo\ derived fromgames ol' pool taken.

I'tiiitham people who aru thinking ofpurchatiiiig u lot or lots should deeidoipiii'kly for they are growing daily morevaluable.

PRINCIPAL PHILHOWEF WEDS GIRLTHAT TAUGHT IN HIS SCHOOL

A pretty wudding was solemnised attho I'd)vary llaptist ohureh, Hopow.'ll,X. J., when Miss AlU-o Kdua Hayum,daughter o( the lato Mr. anil Mrs. Wil-liam Waynes, and Prof. Charlivs AlpaugliI'hilhower, principal ol thu ('buthumschool*, mid son of Mr. and t', \V. I'hil-liower, of Mouutaiuvillti, wero united t»marriage, liov. It. ('. liowun, of lliook-lyn, a former pastor of tho church per-

j formed tho i-oiiimouy, assisted by Kuv.I'M win S, Fry, thu present pastor.

Thu uliuroh was artistically decoratedwith palms, ferns, cedur, uutuuui leavesand bitter-sweet, tho color scheme beinggreen and red. Tho ceremony was per-formed undur i largo whitu weddinghull.

Tho bride, who was ^iwiu'il in aitl.itiorate robe of white saliu, with ein-I'oiilered net ami pearl trimmings, was

Miss May Loraino (it'ining,of Mr. and Mrs. Klincr It. llt'iuing, isvibitlng hor grandparents, Mr. andMi'8. J. 1\ (iouuug at Now I'rovldrnev.

In tlio parlors of tho Option Mumoriuloliureli turt>oc|)tioa was tomlored to Dr.and Mrs. J. J. Macuuuglitan undur thoauspioos of the Young People's associ-ation Wndni'sdiiy evening.

Mr. and Mrs. (ii-orgn II. Spoor n1-turued to Chatham on Tuesday and re-opened their rouideiico "(iroystont*,"after an absence of a month in theWhite Mountains.

A small, but deeply interested 'gath-ering of people listened last Thursdayevening to Keeonier Ferris who spokoin the Congregational ehurcli on his experlenoes on the Justice and RecorderoourU of the borough.

Next Friduy evening Miss Ijoarilumnwill spuak to the Young lVioplo's soeety of the Congregatioiril church onsoiuo of her experiences in Hootlandvery interesting sections of which shevisited during her trip abroad lastBummer.

The suit of Gcnrgt) M. Woiuier againstII. M, llnrriumiiii, of Wustby, I.. I., wilouuio up before Hecorder Ferris hereto-<lay. The suit is for damages as :result of a collision between llarriuian'iauto and a delivery wagon belongingto Weiiuer, in Main street, severamonths ago.

A uniiiue game of baseball will takeplace this afternoon on Athletic Klulbetween tho boys ami girls of the YoungPeople's Association of tiio OgdenMemorial ehurcli. Under the rules thboys are requires to dress in skirts andbat and throw left-handed. Tho admission is twenty-live cents.

Last Sunday evening at the mimic sor-, vice In the Congregational church, K. VFlindell, of Summit, sang Dudley Kuck'inunio to Tounyson's poem, "Crossingtho Bar." The recent death of the composer, who did so much for musiu in thicountry, made the selection very nppropriate. The pastor spoko briefly oMr, Buck's life and services.

At a meeting of tho Girl's Club of thOgden Memorial church, held last Kriday evening, the following officers wcrelected for tho ensuing year: PresidentOlive Ogdeu; vice president, MariaLura; secretary, Katherino Wolfe; treasurer, Kdna Pihlman. The club has engaged Miss Mansen, of Kent placschool, Summit, for physical instructothis year and the meetings will be delevery Saturday evening.

The Chatham Wheolmcn will holdprogressive euchre in their club room

- on Tuesday evening. Arrangements arbeing perfected for a most successfulevening. So many valuable prizes havbeen donated that there will bo ulmosienough for every player to secure ourTickets are twenty-live cents and mabe received from any member of theclub.

The Ladies' Heading Circle met yesterday afternoon at tho homo of Mrs.Frank M, liudd on 1'assaic avenue. Thiswas the first of tho special programs ofthe season, and was in charge of MissWoodruff. Next Friday tho Circle willmeet with Mrs. C. E. Hesselgrave, whenMiss Gardner will read a paper on "ThePeople," and Mrs. H. S. Ileitkamp willcontribute readings from "l'onelope'sIrish Experiences." •

While playing in the football gamebetween the Chatham High school andMadison Aoademy on Thursday, GilbertHnbbard, left guard of tho High schooleleven, was bit in tho face by the kneenf an opposing player bo was tackling.It was thought that his nose was broken,but upon an examination by Dr. W. JWolfe, this was found not to be thecase, although it was badly bruised.

Tho attractive and desirable Hartmauor old Day Main street properly, whicl:has been handled by and sold throughMr. Wm. B. Brokaw (X. Y. & SuburbaiRealty Co.) was transferred this weekMr. Brokuw has also rooontly sold someother Chatham properties, details ofwhich will be published by us later.He is also iu touch with parties fromNew York, who are negotiating to buildon some of his lot developments, severagood class houses to sell.

First Modern One Was OpenedIn Scotland In 1810.

STARTED BY HENRY DUNCAN.

H* Was* a Presbyterian Clergyman andWai a Friend of Thomas Carlyle andof the Celebrated Dr. Chalmers—TheRapid Spread of the System.

The tirst savings bunk to invent de-posits In small uniouuts uud to paycumulative Interest was oi>uiied In Scotland in May, 1810. Several Institutionsfor savings existed In foreign eouutrieMprior to 1N10. but there was nothing iutiny respect like the modern savingsbank. Kiigluml, for example, early

Itemlod by her sister-in-law, Mrs. Kd-1 witnessed tin- appearance of mum-r.,iill M. ILiyues, as matron of honor,liss Kiimni Jean Lewis, Miss 1-Miiuiogoi's, Miss Margaret llond and Misslouniii I'hii-k, as bi'idosmaids, uud MissMuhul I.. Iliiyiirs as maid of honor. Shevas given away by her brother, Ki'ward\l. llaynes.

The groom was attended by Kdtvin I.,laynes, as best man. Tho musie was

rendered by Miss Frances L. l'hillips.Following the ceremony a reception

was held at the home of the bride,kvhere a wedding supper was sorved.During the evening Mr. and Mrs. I'hil-hower left amid thu congratulations ofall present on i\ short honeymoon trip.They an1 now making their home onlillsnlr avenue, Chatham.The bride is a graduate of tho Ilope-

.vell High school and of tho State Nor-mal school, and since her gradu-tion has been teaching iu tho Hope-

well school. Prof. Philhower was prin-cipal of this school for two years, and itwas during this period that the romance

»iiII which culminated iu the happymarriage.

The "Press" otters its sincere con-gratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Philhower,and trusts that their married life, andparticularly their stay iu Chatham, willhe a most happy one.

Building and Loan Meets.The local Building and Loan Associ-

ation held a very successful meeting onWednesday evening, thu amount takenin being nearly &JOU. The lifth series isjpen and there is now opportunity tojoin. The association makes local loanswhich are under inspection of tho di-rectors, and nil business operations aresafe and conservative. Amounts ofmoney, as low as one dolWu' may hopaid monthly.

Tho experience of local associationshas been uniformly satisfactory, be-cause affairs are looked after by compe-tent men on tho spot. Moro of youngpeople should join, if only to take oneshare. The money draws interest, andmay bo withdrawn by given proper no-tice at any time. Anyone wanting togot loans may make application at thepresent time, especially thoso wishingto get homes. That is tho purpose ofthis association.

The directors safeguard the funds oftho association, at tin* same time help-ing tho borrower by allowing him topay by installments. Tho local associ-ations desires both contributors andborrowers.

FROM GOLF LINKS TO OFFICE

Bare Poles.Purser—Don't go on deck, madam.

It Is stormy, and we are running herwith bare poles.

Aunt Polly—Well, I suppose that,coming from such a cold country asPoland, they cuu stand running roundnaked, but I think It's downrightscandalous to let 'em.—London Telu-praph.

A FAMOUS SENTENCE.

Steele'a "To Love Her Was a LiberalTo Love Her WasEducation."

The remark which Steele made. Inreference, as Is generally supposed, toI.ndy Elizabeth Hustings bus oftenbeen quoted and almost as often quot-ed Incorrectly. Steelo wrote, "Thoughlier mien curries much more InvitationI bun command, to behold her Is onImmediate cheek to loose behavior; tolove her was n liberal education."There arc two curious misquotations)of this bright mid famous sentence,which Thackeray declared to be "thefinest compliment to a woman thatperhaps ever was offered." One Is Inthe essay on Pope contained In .TamesUilKscll Lowell's "My Study Wln-:ln\vs." "Was It not In this nge," saysMr. Lowell, "Hint loose Dick Steelepaid to bis wife the finest complimentever paid to woman when he said'Hint to know her was n liberal educa-tion';'" Here are two distinct errorscommitted by «> careful n writer asMr. Lowell. Yet he Its not alone In this.Arthur Helps In his romance of "Kcal-mah" bus this sentence: "Steele alsodid not 111 deseilbo. though briefly,the, churn) of belim with n womnnwhom ho greatly ndmlrcrt when hesaid 'that to bo much wl'h her wns InItself n liberal education."' We nronlso (old that U'iph Hunt onec In quot-ing the remark incorrectly ascribed Itto Confrere. Here. then, are three dis-tinct writers of h|pl- rank who linvo(shown bow iu a innmnnt of carelesscomposition they were led nstrny byan Inaccurate remembrance. They hadno desire to mlsqnoto their author,and they save the substance. Butthey grievously fulled In the wordsthemselves and one of (bum at least Intnclr application.—Arconaut.

small cburltuble associations uud Insti-tutions which undertook to invest tin'Havings of their uiemtiers.

The llrst modern savings bank, how-ever, was originated by Henry l»un-enn, u Presbyterian clergy man ofiMimfrles, Scotland, a friend of Thorn-ns CarlyU- and of the celebrated 1 »r.Chalmers, who throughout his activelife wus Interested iu various schemesof practical benevolence. In 1S10, aft-er he had already set forth his viewson the subject in tlu> Inunfilos Courier.he established the Kuthwfll Savingbank. His purpose, us expressed In amemoir published by bis son In 1SS.S,was to Induce the muss of people ofbis time to realise the value of the 111lie savings which by economy could beput uway.

The IMunfrles conmnriity of lowlandScotch was a good one In which tostart such a scheme. During the Histyear savings to the amount of ur>(>were deposited In the ltuthwell SavIngs bank and In the next two years£171 und £-11, respeitlvety. By 1SHthe deposits amounted to £11-2.

As tb e success of Mr. lluiuan'sscheme became known similar Institu-tions were organized elsewhere InScotland and England. One of theearliest was the Edinburgh Savingsbank, still a thriving Institution.

The Huthwell bank had some peeulurlties which distinguished it fromthe Institutions that were developedlater. There was uu annuity fund, fur

| Instance. Most remarkable of ull, be-fore anybody's first deposit was re-ceived Inquiries had to be made ns tohis nge, family affairs and previousmoral conduct. According to whatwns discovered the management decid-ed, first, whether his deposit should beaccepted and, second, whut rate ofInterest should be allowed him.

The Hutlnvell bank's funds wereplaced with the British Linen company,which allowed ,r> per cent interest onthem. Most of the depositors received•I per cent, but to thoso of three years'standing whose deposits amounted to£5 or more !> per cent was allowed,provided the depositor wanted to getmarried or that he was fifty-sli yearsold or that iu other respects It wouldbe especially advantageous for him toreceive more interest. The tlrst sav-ings bank was under no obligation toallow depositors to withdraw fundswhen they wanted. There was a pro-vision that "when the depositor shallhave become Incapable of maintaininghimself from sickness or otherwise aweekly allowance may be inado to himat the option of the court of directorsout of the money he has deposited."

The Edinburgh Savings bank wasmuch simpler iu Its organization thanthe Huthwell nnd more closely resem-bled the savings banks of the preset*',day. Each depositor received the ft%yorate of interest. Thero wus rfupre-limlnary Investigation of his charac-ter, and he could withdraw his de-posits at pleasure. The rate of interest was uniformly 4 per cent.

Widespread Interest was aroused inthe early experiments in Great Britain.Fnrseelng people realized that the newInstitutions were destined to add large-ly to general prosperity nnd happiness.This opinion was eloquently voiced bythe great Scotch critic l-'rancls Jeffrey,who, writing in the Edinburgh Review,gold: "It would be difficult, we fear,to convince either the people or theirrulers that the spread of savingsbanks is of far more importance andfar more likely to increase tho happi-ness and even the greatness of the na-tion than tho most brilliant success ofIts arms or the most stupendous Im-provement of Its trade and Us agricul-ture. And yet we ore persuaded tha'.it is so,"

Laws safeguarding savings bankswere passed ns these Institutions beganto show vitality and tlearly^eededregnlatlon. . Trustees and managerswere early prohibited from making anyproflt In connection with these banks.

The English savings bank movementrapidly spread throughout the con-tinent, France, Germany, Denmark andItaly successively taking up the idea.Everywhere with modifications properto the nationality It has proved suc-cessful.

The first American savings bank wasopened in Philadelphia in 1810 undwa» called the Philadelphia SavingFund society. The same year one wasestablished In Boston, New York fol-lowing In 1819, nnd In 1820 there wereten iu the country, having 8,U33 de-positors and $1,138,570 Io depostts.-Iloston Globe,

We Carry Housesoil o u r list w l i i e l i oti 'er t in- M n l inea lfi ir in oi" i n v e s t m e n t . T l u - v a r e a s t i i u -illfT |Hi«if of t h e l a y i n g t t i n t

There's Money In RealEstate.

If you ' re seeking a home or an <>p-IHitttlliity In invent ,\our l i v i n g s , weadvise yon to investigate these |iio|it'f-tii's. lin it <|tili'kl,v, tim. It is Imnllyiios^ilile for Mtih ehanee- to reuiiiiu

Also 3 Lot Developments at

" HIGH cV HEALTHFUL"CHATHAM, N J ,

Kur llonie Iliiildiin: or I'rotltable In-vestment, ele. All Lot., jll.\l.">ti feel orlurger. l'riees low; terms right; 'Sindiuites from Newark; hour fiv.in NewYork; l.aekuwnmui roiul; Hi' tiiilnslaily; eominutatioii low. llooklets,naps, priees anil literature mi applica-

tion. Improved properly amiIt low liriee:

M

property ami acreageSee or write W B.

BROKAW, lnolliouilwuy.N.w- Yoik.nCluiilmin, N. J . 'Plume , ,,nu,•« lion'-.

Troubl* For P»."Where do they wind you up. Miss

Skreeker.'""Wind me up?""Yes: pa said you sang mechanical-

ly."—Houston Post.

He that speaks sows, but hehears reaps.-AjaWaa Proverb.

that

I'lllli'li

U. A. WIIITKMAN

LIVERY

AND

BOARDINGTABLE.

i . i i i n ! - . r i u i i i -

ANY a man would be unable toenjoy the healthful exercise of golf

if the telephone did not keep him in touch withhis business.

A word over the wire saves him an hour's delayin leaving the office. There is another reason.

The busy man's day is nude shorter by theBell Service, which brings him in instant communi-cation, not only with his fellow townsmen, but withcorrespondents in distant cities.

The Bell System provides universal service tomeet the needs or all users.

NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANT

Every Bell Telephone it the Center of th* Syttem

lurni-.li .-l tor Wfana ruu.-r.tl~.

ul 'KN li.VV AMI Nl l iHTPASSAIC AVE., Chntham, N. J.

I' l iones—«ilO«r Miil ' lc . d i o - j U.-M.liMKV

MISS VIOLA DARRAH,leao«hcr P i a n o ,

P.O. Box-10, CHATHAM. N..1.Terra cottimetiees Sept. t.

Want a Hot Fire?

LEHIGHCOAL...lo I1. O. liox :!Vl willA 1'iiril VMf

\:->rin(j full

J . G. S M I T H ,Contractor and Grading

Teaming o! all kinds,Summit Ave., Chatham.

L. "W. MAKTENIS,Funeral Director A Embal/ner

CENTER STREETTi'lephenw lil-J-J. CHATHAM, X. J.

Livery IliRB lit Short Notk'i'.Open Day inn! Niuht.

CAMP CUAlMe* TO IHHK

I. C. CUSTER,Painter

Estimates ICiven on all Kinds ofPainting and Decorating.

P.O.B.2B7 CHATHAM, N. J.

GHflS. K. JOHNSON,*~ Watchmaker,

Jeweler and Optician.EYES EXftMINE-D

Free of Charge By a Specialist.

PHONOGRAPHSAnd Records. i

SEWIHG MACHINES OF ALL KINDS!Needles and Oil i

2O MAIN STREET,Xt'tir Library, Mad i son , N. J .

Telephone (all 7i'-»

McLEOD&SON,Plasterers,

Stucco Workers. Cement Work, EtcJobbing Promptly Attended To.

STANLEY AVE.,Tct.connection. Chatham, N. 'J .

YOU i\rc inviu-.l t.i lool; over thethi1 hitot i(lt':i> in men's fashions.

W E «>'*• '»'« showing DETflER'S" now and U-ntttifiil Kail ami Win-

ter fabrics.

T*HE lino ooiiiprt-'it'!' ;>n :issortnu'nt of1 500of the newest and nmst fashion-

able designs ami colorings.

TTHE neat (fray effects me especially* in demand.p V E R Y style is j;li:U':iiitce<l "all^ wool." Anticipating :m curly call,

Yours truly,

Frank Gasdia,Custom Tailor,

Passalc Ave., Chatham, N. J.

TELEPHONE 618-R,

The Summit Trust Companyr to THE SUMMIT BANKSUMMIT, N. J.

Capital $100,000.00Interest at 3

Surplus $75,000.00rest at 3 per ivut. per annum allowed on daily balances

of. $300 uud upward, subject to check.TlMl; 1>K1'OS1TS boar interest at 3 per cent, por annum,

/m.yiirtur of Amounts, beginning monthly andpayable quarterly.

SAFE DEPOSIT BOXESto rent at $5 pe-r annum and upward

W M . H.U. I . . - , Jit . , riv.-ii|eiit, J O H N .V. 1'KKT, Vice-President ,

J. K. H A A S , Secretary und Treasurer.

JOHN N. 1'EETJOHN F. THOMI'SON,.1. K. HA.\».

J O H N N. MAY, ' W I. H A I L S , J H . ,

Hit. J . lloYl) HlSK, W.M. C. Itl'NWHK,W. N. Cul.lMt, Jli . , ( H A S . A. l.lMMIs,

Kloclr:o Cofft*e Pt'i-vuia or nialci-sr. i-

Ji

your house^ moderate price

IVAN M. K. SMITH,— ELEGTRIGIflN— •CHATHAM, IV. J.

in lo minutes. $ io.oo Complete Electrical work of every desorlp-ELECTRIC SMOOTHINC IRONS tion installed & repaired. Electrl• II- ii-ii- 700 f.it).irons ... 6.80 L 1 B h t Bulbs, Electric Smoothing

Suvi>Tiiuumid<'oal-TiTOiie. Irons, e tc .K.-.,nl I.)- niuil, or cull hy ti>lvt>houo will t'l-inu Tel. 6O4-L Chatham.

yuiiii Mimiili' of I'ithi'r artivlo. P.O.Box 134.FREE TRIAL.

HoMs Fire 20 HoursUST think of a range that will

bum all day with one fire jthat will save all your cook-

stove troubles and 60 ptr tint «/your furl bill! That will pay back illcost in one year, and continue saving >your money every year while in use. JThat ' i what the CONTROL Range «will do. Built on a new principle. No

front or side drafts. Instead, a lever-controlleddraft device beneath the oven. Hums coke,coal or wood. Hot baking oven in ten minutes. 4

Control Rangeii larked by a written guarantee to save 60 per cent, of your fuel expense •»nd a 90 day free trial 10 prove its claims. Try it free for 9» days. INo sale uuleaa every claim is true.

FOR SALE BY B , , ,

G. H. PADDOCK,Plumbing; and Tinning,

Passaic Avenue, Chathom, N. J-

P.sjing ol Old Brussels.It la disappearing, our old Brussels.

They aro pussing away, the buildingswhich bear witness to an artistic past,the good houses which spoke In Inti-mate whispers to the heart of the son»of the good city, so picturesque andpartlcularlst. Intrusive cosmopolitan,tarn dictates the law to the- stupid pick-axeB, and tho officials of the publicdemolition department assist unmovedin thQ...?*9»P,; of flcvastatlGO.—BrusselsPe t . ^.^u.

1

Christian Science.Christian Science services wij> be

held in the Assembly building, MaV aoo.every Sunday morning at 11 o7 ,ocK.Subject for next Sunday: "Are Sli., Dis-easo and Death Keal ?"Sunday school ovory SnocUy morniag at10 o'clock. Testimonial raectlngji everyWednesday evening nt 8 o cloclc.

All aro cordially invited to attendthese services.

Reading Kootn open daily from I to 5p m., and Tuesday and Friday oveniniafrom 8 to 9 p.m. Same bnilding. |

For headache Dr. Mile*1 ABtl-Paln Pil

j

V

mvpff0'i''i

?>..i a Ivuny to !'«> lor the FullestMfilii il KMIIIIIV»II»II.

if you »re In doubt a» tu the cau4«rf your dUunse utitil us a postal re-(uniting ^!iit-dio.il emuiimition blank,which you will fill out and i-sluru lous. Our doctor* will r .refully dlag-l.uBe your case, ami if you can b<*eur«d you will ba told no; If you tan-no' be curi'l you will ba luld so Youkre not obligated to ue in any way;this advtc» la absolutely free; you areit llberl\ lo lake our advic* or not a?(•on see fit. Send to-day for a mertl-fal examination blauk, fill out andteti'ru to u» aa promptly aa possible.»nd our eminent doctors will diagnoseyour case thoroughly absolutely free.

Munyon'g, 53d and Jefferson Sts.,Philadelphia. Fa.

They blew and blew iheir Par»#r B»fcYfiey blew with all their luinlit,

Till middvnly their Wau blew up,Ami vsuiahed uut ut oight.

And then the Windy Thing w«s t|«u«,Kur euuld a tiiu-e l>e wvn,

Fur nut a uuile •hred uiu> lilt' Of wbal h»a never U»*n.

l l d V'hiiWk. in l.ila.

w

THE ENUGHTENMENTOF MRS. TUPPINS

t By GEORGE WESTON.••••(•••••••••••••••••a***

Curiously enough, Mrs. TuppiUKhated the country and Mr. Tuppins

1 hated the city. They could uot agreeOouaalo ds Quonada, the Cuban • - « least Mrs. Tuppins could not. for

Mlulster to the United States, went to il happened that the Tupplnsea livedLisbon tor the. purpose of lnvestigat- in the country, on the old Tuppins1iii< the possibilities ot emigration to farm; and although this was an ar-Cuha. rangeiuent that suited Mr. Tuppins

AM »»ro U another thing; on*cannot Ucep ttolllg in'o a burn tt>get ct.rn for the chicken* without pat-tln,; the homes and naylng So boiu."to ihw cows.

It iti in utter impossibility, an everynun kuowa who has tried it. Andfrom patting a hurao'a back It is onlya aiep to patting hU iioue, and ofcourse one cannot at a horse's noselong bulon* one begins to |MIS» a car-rot or two, and from that to lump*of sugar l» the shortest of distance*.

So every morning that Mia. Tup-pins went into the. barn for cornvyher«vriih.u> pamper the hens, therettits such a whinnying and stampingof teet aa you never heard, and whenMrs. Tuiinln* caine out at last withher pan of corn- and waa at onceaasatled by her faithful but riotoushens -her face was aa rosy as could,be, and net eyes were M bright asdiamond*

New York t'll>. I'liu oioune. n ui4 made with a uoparaie chumUetto Is ,an exceedingly uncfiil and practicalone. Here IK A model which lncludexthat I'miliin' aiul whi. h is tlnlxhi'd

TOTAL LOSS OF HAIR

Yi

twli

to i

for

Immiut'iit—Scalp Was Veryhi-aly ami Hair Came Out by Hand-

fu l i—Sfalp t'tearvil aiul NewHair (iruwn by Cutlcura.

"About two years ago 1 w u troubledwith my head berns waly. Shortly after(bat I had ai- attack of typhoid lever audI waa uut Ji the hiupu&i |»«wibly twomonth* when I tint noticed the Ions oihair, my aiMlp beiui still scaly. I startedto use dandruff cure* to no elicit whatever.

to a T, it did not suit Mrs. Tuppinsto any alphabetical designation what-ever.

Mrs Tuppins was cky born andbred, while as for Mr. William S.Tuppins, I need only say that S stoodfor Silas. At the age of twenty-nineMr. Wiliatu S. Tuppins had left thtfarm to sek his fortune In the city,C the age ot thirty he had returnedto the farm, hearing no other fortunethan Mrs. Tuppins. And as for his

Auother cannot

1 bad actually lost ho|« of uving any hair experience in the city, I will say no

ansaid, 'begin'«»/; t

trail

*t all. 1 could brush it off my coat by thatamUul. I ra afraid to comb it. Uut

• iwing two cakea at Cuticura Soap andarly a IKVI of Cuticura Ointment, the

change was surprising. My si-alp U nowtlear ami healthy ad coul.l be aud my hairthicker than ever, whereat 1 had my mindmade up to be luld. W. F Steese, 4812Brovl St., 1'itUburi, 1'enn , May 7 mid21, '08 " Totter Drug & Chew. Corp.. SoleZ'rop». of Cuticura Reinedioa, Boston. Mao*.

Since 11B8 the population of the GentianEmpire has doubled.

No matter how long your neck mav t-«or bow ttore your throat, Haiulins WuardOil will cure, it surely and quickly. Itdrive? out all aorcueos and inflammation.

Hoth the French and Italian flovwn-maintain national pawnshop*.

u.ore than this: the morning afterWilliam returned to the farm, whichthe hired mai and his wife had beenrunning on share: he went to hiswork whistling for the first time ina year, and whei. with a stick hescratched the tacks of the little blackpigs, and listens" to their grunts ofeold*y, It seemed to him that sweetermusic mortal never heard.

But as for Mrs. Tupping, it didnot seem that way to her at all. Shelooked with a sigh of regret at herhigh-heeled shoes and her long silkgloves, which were never intended

Mm. Witulow't Soothing Syrup tor Childrenteething,soften*tbe guma, reduces inrlamima-Uon, allays pain, euro wioii colic. 25c. a bottle.

Dsniel aud the Lions.An old negro preacher In Kentucky

•«KIB dilating upon events in the Bible^whlch had a zoological trend He de-scribed the Deluge, and how all theanimals, two by two, went Into theArk and were saved. Then he dis-cussed the Incident of Jonah and thewhale, Balaam's ass. and finally theexploit of Daniel, who entered the•den of ravening lions ami emergedunharmed. His auditors had listenedwith interest, and gome of themseemed to have their doubts as tothe authenticity of the tales.

tor walking over bottom meadows orpicking blackberries out of the briers.She missed the - wds and the lightsand the shops and the cars. In short,she grew to hate the coui.try; andshe did not hide her feelings, either,is Wiliam soon found out.

Well." he said one evening, "thepotatoes are all in."

Mrs. Tuppins sniffed"And the beeu," he continued.Mrs Tuppins sniffed again.'Too cold out here?" asked Mr.

Tuppins. "Shall I fetch you a shawlov something?"

"No," said Mrs. Tupplus, distinct-ly, "I'm not cold."

"To-morrow," said William, "1

keep going into a garden tor carrots ,and greens without noticing thlugs.One cannot enter a garden, for In-stance, with closed eyes and groperound to the carrots and come outthe same way; r.ud especially Is thistrue if there are sl\ hives of bees inthe garden'

So by degrees Mrs Tuppins beganto notice the tomatoes, the plum-treea, the parsnips, the currants, thoMower borders, the beans, the lettuce,the raspberries, and all the other de-lights that lay Juat back ot the house.And when one gels go far. ouo pulUa few weeds, perhaps, or waters theflowers, or eats a few raspberries ;while wondering If the plums willsoon be ripe.

When one is as bucolic as all that,it Is distinctly irritating to be set atnaught by a cross old hen that keepsgrowing crankkr aud crankier, andrefuses to respond to scientific agrl- 'cultural treatment.

Old Spotty remained obdurate. Sheseemed to. think that they wanted herto set, and she would not go nearthe coop. Then she apparently con-sidered that they were trying to keepher out of the chicken-house, and sherefused to come off the uest Stil try-

with the fashionable and becomingDutch collar. In the Illustration It ismade of embroidered batiste and thecollar and trimming are of Irish

Si ruin Km- Nli|)|H'ra.Tho newest slippers have straps

that <Tos» on the Instep and buttonhigh II |i on I Iu- Hide.

Color on White.Color embroidery on whtle, black,

cream and ncru will he- much used, aswell tii white on color. Most of theembroidery seen now In the shops Ismachine made.

Online Hals.Some ot the uut ing huu lire made

of the sort of canvas that looks llkomatting. They are edged with col-ored straw bnild and trimmed with abund and bow of ribbon of the same.

Shirt Waist or mouse.Tim tailored shirt waist is always

needed. It tills ii place that no otheigarment supplies. This one Is luckedmost becomingly and Is adapted totlaunel, moire aud pongee as well asto linen and cotton waistltiga. In theIllustration It Is made ot butcher'slinen and Is Mulshed with ulmplotailor stitching. If u fancy or moredainty waist were wanted. It couldhe made of embroidered pique or otfancy muslin with the tucks sewad byhand. It can be utilUed for the shirtwaist gown, too, made from cashmereor other simple seasonable material.

The waist consists of fronts ilmiback. It Is finished with the regulatlon box pleat at the front and tinsleeves are In regulation shirt walsistyle, with over-lnps and Htralgh'cults. The turned-over collar is ndjusted over the neck-band.

The quantity of material requlreo

1118 IUV8

Hott • Yoiingitowii Mani he re»»liui>l«.

John H. Trube. 34:) Harvard 8^,YouiiKntown, Ohio, BB)*: "in »1>U« ofthree dlltertmt doctor* I waa teUUiSworse, and vis told 1 couldn't livt>

nix months. Theycalled It Hiight'ti dis-ease. My limbs wereswollen uo badly 1had to keop to thehouao for ninomonths. Tha urinewas thick, passageswere frequent aud

•canty and uiy head was sore and diz-zy. 1 used Doiin's Kidney l'lllu onthe advice ot a friend, found com-plete relief In time,, and two .tearshave uow passed without a sign o(kidney trouble."

Remember the name—Doan's. Soldby all dealers. 50 cents a box. Koa-ter-Mllburn Co.. Uutfalo. N. Y.

Tho greatest daily change of tem-perature to be found on the earth'sKiirfttco is In Arizona. There Is fre-quently a change of eighty degrees iutwelve hours.

think I'll start them putting a newlining in the upper spring."

Mrs. Tuppins sniffed again, andwhen William looked at her he saw

Finally one of the younger negroes , h a t hf>r d t m e d , u t , ? noS(, w a grose up and Inquired: ' Siy, pahson.•••lie dem lions jest lik" the kind weJias now? '

"Cone not. cose not." retorted thepreacher. Irritated at having his dls-i»une interrupted. "Dey was B. C,n>' 4nlng befo circuses."

The explanation was sufficient andsatisfactory.—Buffalo Commercial.

Sinco the United States Govern-ment began to patronize expositions,down u> the Jamestown fair. Congressha*" appropriated a loul of J2S.752.-251 for world's fairs, of \ hlch only$485,000 has been spent west of theItocky Mountains, at the Lewis andClark exposition.

ed most disdainfully at the poor oldcountry moon.

"Why, what's the matter?" askedWilliam.

"William," she said "you knowthe way you like tho country?"

"Yes.""The pigs, the chickens, the cows,

the horses, the bay, the corn, and thebarn, and the pond, and the ducks,and everything—you know the wayyou like them all?"

"Yes.""Well—that's the way I like the

ing to pamper her. Mrs. Tuppins jslipped a doien eggs under her, and 'Iu due course of time Old Spotty was jleading ten little chicks around, Iclucking at them peevishly, pecking .at them for nothing at all, and look- ;at them as If she had more troublethan enough.

New one night, when this foolishfowl had been covered up in her littletriangular pen, the same being placednear a similar pen which another henoccupied with her five little chicks,there suddenly rose such a commo-tion that Mrs. Tuppins ran out to see.

All of Old Spotty's chicks had de-serted their peevish and peckingmother, and the other hen. whose ',family had suddenly grown from five |to fifteen, was so puffed up with con- !ceit that she looked double her nat- 'ural slie. and could only with great 'difficulty see out of her eyes.

And they were the merriest fifteenlittle chirks that ever peeped—play-Ing tag beneath the conceited hen's 1wings, playing bliud man's huff and ;puss-ln-the-eorner and hide-and-seek 'and similar games, putting their Iheads) ovit from time to time, as if to {take the air. and popping back In \again, as if they had suddenly re- |membered a most urgent and delight- jful appointment! Rut as for Old jSpotty, Imprisoned in h"r coop and jseeing the error of her ways now that iit was too late, she was almost fran-

That was how the difficulty began.William In vain argued that he was

_ not worth his salt in the city, in vainTho '-arliest Bibbs pictures were he enumerated oil the advantages of

jialnted on. the church walls Instead country life—the fresh fruit andof being bound between the book "*"" ' 'covers.

FOOD QUESTIONSettled With I'erfect Satisfaction by

a Dyspeptic.

, the fresh air. and the milk andthe cream an* the vegetables, to say*nothing of the freedom from worldly

,ooc1

i

It's not an easy matter to satisfyall the members of the family at meal

, as ewry uousewlfe knows.And when the husband has dyspep-

sia and can't eat tha simplest ordi-nary food without causing trouble,tho food question becomes doublyannoying.

An Illinois woman writes:

fares.To all these eloquent arguments

Mrs. Tuppins had a simple question:; 'W.UMain. you know the way you likethe country?" To which Williamcould only miserably answer, "Yes.""Well, then," said Mrs. Tuppins,"that's the way I like the city.'"

NOT.- among the fowls which chuck-ed about the Tuppins farm-yard there

' was a certain speckled hen knownas Old Spotty, and whether or not It

! was because she took offenBe at this

tic,ing!

8uch sntiHwklns' Such cluck-Such terrible threats to the

puffed-up hen! Such anxious calls tothe merry little chicks!

Finally one little fellow, that per-haps had not found a comfortableplace, or had been "It" In the gamestoo often to suit him, tumbled out olhis new quarters and scampered backbeneath Old Spotty's wings. And ifyou had scpn and heard the rejoicingof that hapry mother and the gentleway she cuddled him with her wins.and the tender way she clucked at

"MEMO1HH OI-1 DAN HICK," TI1KCLOWN OK OUIt DADDIES.

Pan nice In Ills "Memoirs" Tells In-side Mysteries of Show Life.

Any bookseller will tell you thatthe constant quest of his customersIs tor "a book which will jnuku melaugh." The bookman Is compelledto reply that the race of Americanhumorists has run out und comic lit-erature Is scarcer than funny plays.A wlda sale Is therefore predicted forthe "Memolra ot Dan Rice," theClown ot Our Daddies, written byMaria Ward Brown, a book guaran-teed to make you roar with laughter.The. author presents to the public avolume ot the great jester's mostpungent jokes, comic harangues,caustic hits upon men and maineri,lectures, anecdotes, sketches of ad-venture, original songs and poeticaleffusions; wise aud witty, serious,satirical, aud sentimental saylDga otthe sawdust arena of other days.Old Dan Rice, as proprietor of thefamous "One Horse Show," was moreof a national character than ArtemusWard, and this volume contains thahumor which madu the nation laugheven while tho great Civil War raged.This fascinating book of 500 pases,beautifully Illustrated, will be sentyou postpaid for $ 1. r> 0 by nook Pnllghlng lloiue, i34 Leonard,New York.

"My husband's health was poor, he familiarity I do not know, but thetoad no appetite for anything 1 couldget for him, It seemed.

"He was hardly able to work, wastaking medicine continually, and as*oon as he would feel better wouldgo to work again, only to give up In a

fact remains that Old Spotty beganto sulk and keep to herself.

"I cant make out what's the mat-ter with her," said Mr. Tuppins. onemorning, seeking for a subject of con-versation that would be pleasing to

few weeks He suffered severely with Mrs. Tuppins. "Doesn't seem tostomach trouble

"Tired of everything I had beenable to get for him to eat, one dayseeing an advertisement about Grape-Nuts, I not some and he tried It forbreakfast the next morning.

"We all thought It was pretty good,although we had no Idea of using Itregularly. But when my hushand<-arae honie at night he asked for•Grap^-Nuts.

«• ""It was the same next day. and 1had to get it right along, because•when we would get to tho table the

take any interest In life at all. Justmopes round all day and pecks theother hens when they come near her."

Somehow Sirs. Tuppins felt inter-ested for the first time since she had

i become a member of the farming pop-! ulatlon. As soon as breakfast wasover, she went out and looked at thedisconsolate fowl.

Old 8potty looked back at her dis-consolately enough, and Mrs. Tuppins

I at once sought the advice of the hired' man, and began to pamper the hen.

Now. even if one wished to do so,question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?' one could not single out a hen fromv a t a regular thing So I began to a flock and pamper that particular.buy It by the dozen pltgB.

"My husband's health began lo Im-•prove right along. 1 sometimes fen

one—the other hens would see thatno favoritism was shown. You couldnot, for instance, throw a handful of

,-offended when I'd make something I ; green stuff at one hen and expect allthought he would like for a change, j the other fowls to stand off at a re-«nd still hear the same old question, | spectful distance and watch the""Have you any Grape-NutK?' j favored one with an envious eye.

"He got so well that for the las* j That it not the nature of poultry.two years he has hardly lost a dav I So it happened that Mrs. Tuppins,

d till ito yfrom his work, and we are still ; etriving to alleviate Old Spotty's dls-; pOrape.-Nuta." Read tho book, "The j consolation, pampered all the hens,lloxd to Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There>

» Reason.". Hver ivad the above letter? A new[it- appear! from time to time. They

|r<- Tinnitus I rue, and full of humanI r rest.

with the result that they scamperedtoward her. clucking In friendly ei-cltement, whenever she Bhowed her-self In the yard. This secretly tick-led Mrs. Tupplas, although she pre-tended the contrary.

crochet, while the chemisette Is of'.urked muslin. Every seasonable ma

him, it would have touched you as it terlal Is appropriate, however, aniltouched Mrs. Tuppins as she wentslowly back to the house.

"William." she said, after eating avery eilpnt supper, "you know theway you love the rows and the horsesand the chicken? and the garden andtho b » s and the woods and everything?"

"Yea," said William, mlserablj;once more.

"Well." said Mrs. Tuppins, wildcheeks that put the roses to shami^and eyes that left the diamonds 8in*ply nowhere, "well—so do I!"-«Youth'i Companion.

And He Suffered.Littlr Willie, suffering from an at-

tack of toothache, had paid his firstvisit to the dentist, accompanied byhis mother. Father, on his returnfrom the office that evening, was nat-urally much Interested.

"Didn't It hurl?" asked father."Sure, It hurt," renlM Willie,"Weren't you scared when tho den-

tist put you in that big chair andstarted all those zlzz - z\%z . z j Z i

things?""Oh, not so much.""That wan a brave hoy. is,jt, s l , rp.

ly, you suffered?""Of course I suffered. Bui i j,IBt

kept repeating over and over thegolden text we hud in Sunil.-iv- clir.ollast Sunday."

"The golden (>•••."Why, 'Suffer little children to

pongee and foulard are being utilizedfor separate blouses as well as forentire gowns while they suit themodel admirably well, muslins arehandsome and attractive and thereare also many sturdier printed Inex-pensive wash fabrics that are equallyappropriate, for trimming can hevaried to suit the needs of the specialmaterial. The chemisette belns sep-arate, can be made of anything Incontrast, and pongee In the naturalcolor with chemisette either of lawn|or net, makes an exceedingly service-1able, practical and smart blouse. Ifthe long, close sleeves are not liked,those In three-quarter length withrolled-over cuffs can be substituted.

The blouse is made with fronts andback, which are tucked becomingly.It is finished with hems at the frontedges and with a Dutch collar at thoneck edge. The sleeves are made in jone-piece each, whatever their length. IThe chnmisettc is separate and closedat the back.

The quantity of material required jfor the medium sl7.e is four yards!twenty-four, three yards thirty-two or ;two and three-eighth yards forty-four;Inches wldo, with one-half yard eigh-teen Inches wide for the chemisette,five-eighth yard of banding.

for the medium si/.e Is three and one.half yards twenty-one or twenty-four,two and three-fourth yards thirty-twoor two and one-eighth yards forty-four inches wide.

The electric lighting industry Isrepresented in the United States by5264 companies and municipal plants.

\ \ \ &i\ W iway be\vkiu\o gcr wx<k<i.as\\\eb«X«$

JvwvcViows .wKwWusX &qpcnl wViv-M v\aat\s\wvei\\.

CALIFORNIAFIG SYRUP CO.

SOLO BY ALL LEADING PRU0CIIT3Wit SHE ONLY- RtOUUUI PRIIE 5O< PER BOTTLC

Hale's Honeyot Horebonnd and Tar

ClearsThe Voice

Sold by Dr

Pike's Toothache ln-OMCure In One Minute

FOR INFORMATION AS TO LANDS IN

The Nation'sGarden Spot-TIATGmT FRUIT and TRUCK

SBOWWS StCJlON-

along the

Atlantic Coast LineRAILROAD

in Vlrtlnii, Nonh ind South Cirellm,Georjii, AUbimi and Florida, wrllo 10

WILBUR MtCOY,ine. - - Jacktontllit. i\a.

SomeSarrow Sleeve*,

of the newest fro;:ks aremade with narrow Kleoven, Rloplnp;shoulders and scarcely any ftilneRs in

(.-omc unto Me,' " replied Willie, glib- ' the bodice. They have turned downly. "I kept saying that over and j collars, round waists and merely aover to myself, and the first thing I I little embroidery as trimming.

' h Iknew it didn't hurl anyYerk Times.

" New

The revenue of I he Commonwealthof Australia for the last financial yearwus $71,750,000. a cktruaxtt of i'ir315,000.

Ijenllirr Wntcli l-'olw.Them Is n fad for watch rubs n[

leather, whether In the shape olbracelet for the wrist, or fastened lothe lapel of inn smart tailored mat, orworn (suspended from the belt of thoshirt waist. Blrl.

Harmony in Cost nun*.Never was the vogue so great, for

harmony of the whole costume, andthe moat stylish women appear wlth| has no rival, for It may he worn at al-gown, tie shoes and accessories of inoBt any hour, from breakfast until

Kor coal and tailored suits, no mat-ter for what occ.uslon, white seiKo

tb« same hue. I midnight.

I It U to pleasant to take—stopi theh iklcough JO quickly. Absolutely safe

loo and contains no opiates.AH Dructuta, 28 cola.1

mem.

tham Buying Gas RangesThe Rate of Three A Day

SINCE gas was brought to Chatham, two months ago, PUBLIC SERVICEhas sold more than 140 gas ranges to residents of the borough.

'THIIS record is largely due to the fact that the merits of gas, as a fuel for* cooking, are so well known that many Chatham people did not have to

be convinced.

t

HpHEY know that gas is a clean fuel, a convenient fuel and an economical* fuel. They know that no money need be wasted for useless heat. With

a gas range heat unit can be controlled and as wanted.

MATCH AND A MOMENT and fire is ready; a turn of a valve andexpense stops.

F you have not bought a gas range, order one to=day. Those who areusing them are satisfied. You will be, too. Cost from $13.50 up.

Convenient terms if desired.

PUBLIC SERVICE CAS COMPANY7 PASSAIC AVENUE

mTHE OLD RELIABLEHOME FURNISHERS

AND

Hoi73-75 MARKET STREET *&&

Railroad Fare allowed to out of town Patront

We WANT COMPETITION

of the Right Sort, Not the Fol-lowing Kind!

A Mrs. S after selecting her outfit and learn-ing the total cost from our plainly marked pricetags, said she preferred to make comparisons else-where before ordering, to which we readily agreed,for it's a thing we always URGE!On getting another store's prices (where they weremarked in private signs) she^found ours were farless, and SAID so. The salesman promptly drop-ped to our figures-AND GOT THE ORDER.Here, where there's but ONE PLAINLY MARKEDPRICE ON EVERY ITEM, such an "accommodat-ing" and sudden price drop would be impossible—here, when you read the priceitag, you KNOW it'salready at lowest point, for ALL prices are madeand REMAIN on the SAME UNIFORMLY SMALLPROFIT BASIS. Wedon't HAVE to run a 'leader"here and there for an hour, or a day, to catch trade,ft! i |LL lines are equally good values EVERY day in'l\;ear!

All we want is HONEST competition that meetOUR plainly marked prices WITH prices you can

READ!

ISNT THAT FAIR?

EASY CREDITEVERY PRICE

6 months, 1 year, or 1$ year's time topay—or 10 per cent off (or ca»h.

MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES.

NEWARK'S BESTSHOE STORE.

We extend you an invitation to visit our ShooDepartment and inspect our Shoos, feeling sure that youwill find the greatest assortment of line shoes forWomen and Children in tho City. With the knowledgeof what our patrons require we leave no stone unturnedtoobtain the newest of this season's styles from thiscountry's foremost manufacturers, who IKIW suppliedthe Snyder store for years.

SNYDER'S FAULTLESS "VICTORIA" $3.50SHOES FOR WOMEN.

Our well known "Victoria" Shoes have the ini|>ori;uit I'omisof quality, eomfort and style, and reasonable price. Ever increas-ing popularity comes from the skill with which these essentialshave been combined.

"REHAN" $3.00 SHOES FOR WOMEN.Impossible to fiud better shoes for the price than our "Kehan."

Fastidious women are delighted with "Rehan" because of the ele-gant, superb style, comfortable shapes, careful shoe o f | f |making, and faultless finish |J*UU

"PEERLESS" $2.50 SHOES FOR WOMEN.We feel like shouting from the housetops about the "Peerless"

Shoes when we see how nice they look. Many staple and a dozennew styles; better shoes at this low price never camefrom a last

FAMOUS DEPARTMENT OFBOYS' AND GIRLS' SHOES.

Our greatest pride and study has been in trying to perfectthe Children's shoo business—to train little feet to row properlyin shoes of perfect workmanship. We have niiv lmt i-irtlmpedicshape shoes for Misses, Children and Bovs.

W V Broad & Cedar Sts.,9 NEWARK, N. J.

SHERIFF'S SALE.

In Chancery of New Jersey.Between Wilfred C. Horton, Trustee,

etc, Complainant, und Kachnel Cal-atruni, widow; Marie Calatroul andVictor CuliitronI, her husband, De-fendants.Ki. fa. for sale of mortgaged prem-ises.Returnable to Oct. Term, A. D.,

PROUT & PIIOUT, S Ucltors.11Y virtue of tho above stated Tit ofFieri Kacias In my hands, I sldll ex-pose for sale at Public Venduo at theCourt House in Morrlstown, N. J., onMONDAY, tho 25th day of OCTOBERimxt, A. 1). 1909, between tho hours of12 in.-and 6 o'clock p. m., that is tosay, at '2 o'clock in tho afternoon ofsaid day, all that certain tract or par-cel of laud ami premises situate, lyingand being in the Town of Stirling,County o£ Morris, and State of NewJersey, described as follows:

K1KST TllACT: Being a portion oflots numbers Thirty-five (35) andThirty-six (3C) on block C ns set forthon u Map of Lots at Stirling, NewJersey, laid out by J. Willis, C. E.,March, 1S74, more particularly bound

1 and described as follows:

Avenue; thence (4) Northerly alongthe Westerly line of Main Ave., fifty(Gu) feet to tho point and plocji ofBeginning. Being tho same preiulMPconveyed by the Stirling Silk Manu-facturing Co. to tho said Ella Calltfpniin his lifetime by deed dated Apr. 34th.Eighteen hundred and ninety-nine,and recorded in Morris County Cork'sOffice in Deed Uk. \V. 15, on pages.87, etc.

Dated Morrlstown, N. J., Sept. 21st,1909.

CAIJ1OUN ORB,39 5 P. P. $27.72. Sheriff.The Jerseyman and Chatham

1 NOTICE.

PUBLIC NOTICE—To Physicians,Mldwlves nnd Parents—Notice, ia jjipxQby given that on and after October 3,1901), pursuant to Chapter 100, I4W8Session 1909 of tho Stato ot NewJersey, it will be the duty of the pjiy-slclan or midwife present at the htythot any child born in this State,,case of tho death or disability olphysician or midwife, then it sbalfltho duty of either ot the parents, otany child born in this State, to trans-mit, within five days after such birth,If the birth occurs in the Borough otChatham, a certificate ot such birth to

M M , A ' ^ ,U , vea,6, ' t h e Registrar of Vital Statistics,ry line ot Main A v e d i s t a n t North- A p h y 8 , c , an . midwife or parent

.-rly Fifty eight 58) feet from its in- w U * \J H „ ; , , bQ t 0 t l t emb

•rsectlon with tho Northerly lino ot•Somerset Street, running thtneo Nor-herly along Main Ave. Sixty two (62)eet; thence (2) Easterly and at rightungles with tlrst course one hundrediind two (102) feet; thenco (3) South-erly (Northerly) and parallel with see->nd course one hundred and two (102)eet to the point or place ot beginning.Being tho same premises conveyed

0 tho said Elia Calatro by ClaudeChaffiMijon and George Mottln andwife by deed dated April Fifteenth,eighteen Hundred and Eighty Ninoand recorded In T No. 12 ot Deeds forMorris County on pages 340, etc.

SECOND TRACT: Being lot num-ber Nineteen (19) block H, south ofthe Railroad as laid down on a certainmap entitled "Map ot Ixits at Stirl-ng, Morris County, Now Jersey,made by J. Willis, C. E., March 1894,and recorded In the Morris CountyClerk's Office as Map number 128."

BEGINNING at a point in the Wes-terly line ot Main Ave., distant onohundred and three (103) feet eight (8)inches Southerly from tho intersec-tion ot the said westerly line of MaluAvenuo with the Southerly line ofRailroad Avenue and running thence'U) Westerly along the Southerly sideof lot number eighteendred seventy nine and(179 212) feet; thence . .along tho Easterly end ot lot numberthenco (3) Easterly one hundred anathence (3- Easterly one hundred andseventy nine and two-twelfths U<J2-12) feet to the Westerly line of Main

whose duty .. _ .certificate as aforesaid, and who shallneglect or fail to perform such dutywithin tho time above limited, shallbe liable to a penalty of fifty dollars.

IX H. CRAWFORD,Registrar of Vital Statistics.

dburcb SenMccs.8T PATRICK'S 11. O. CHURCH.

Hov. Win. A. Keyivs. n-ctor. " " J ™ eX1JSSuuilay ut ».«i and 10.nu a. ui. V wpeewn 1»»2.W [i. in.

8T. PAUL'S EPISCOPAL..OIUUICII.lie

8EIloly

ltt.v.Buildu

PRESBYTERIAN CHUBCH..1. MiU'iiuuKhtiin. 1). I)., wstor

• Si'hoi.l nt 9.W a.m. PreaplunjBi'r-' - . . . . ..i >nil 111?

' METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.

T H E COXQKEOAT1ONAL OHUBCH.t t I « r av f jj

MnndW o'clook.

the constant droppingaway the atone. The

It, the os* who f

taol

The Chatham^ Pressw.

j . THOMAS SGOTT, Ed. and Prop

fox uuliln *ilou »iiimlC U l ' H t

« on buiutss Btucnui»iiimld t» .JJre.icJ in n i t

I*. t>. Ho» aj>, I'lllllMW,ai»ciib«i» who ch>n|c iliili i>o.l ulict «<ldiM»

•huulU Meiu ily notify lUe puMtihti, givingbutt. olu aud uew *ddm*.

\ -uliuribti will tf cjpc.ud U'vcUlolUircjutc.before tbe papci LAU be ttiu*'iiliuucd

I'elephoue 3w Ohttllmm.

CHATHAM, OCT. Hi, Mm

A RUSH OF BUSINESS.

LIVINGSTON NEWS AND NOTI*.

Mm. ArlDiuus tlistiull, of &»»! Orange,has been visiting her |>aronl», Mr, mulMrs. II. W. Dickinson.

Miss Ann i Oaken, o( Maplowiuul, was(lie gutwl of XI1&8 K-iua liiokinsmi. thisweek.

Robert MoHr.tir, ui m.ulum, l..i» lw.-i.-iispending a fuw days with Oscar Carter.

I'rix-muii Harrison, wlui has beou vis-iting his parents, has roturiuul to hi*diuifa at I'rluootou I'um-iMiy.

Mrb. Amelia I'olluis, >>( Moni»t«mn,has been spending a wcuk with Mrs.William Collins, at NurtUfleld.

It Cam* Juot it the Tim* He WanOrfto 8*11 Hi* Pltc*.

Cue of the leading men of Louisville,rejxjrted to be one of the richest, gox abad start In business. He began bybeing a photographer, but found thatthe business didn't come up to expec-tations. He therefore wisely decidedto sell out and start at something else.Ho flually Interested some peopto la

'the. proposition and appointed a timevhon they should come and look thingsover.

Ho now hau the reputation of beingshrewd, and that this Is not a compllmentary designation only Is ludlcated by what happemtl then, ne In-serted an advertisement In the dallypapers In small enough type not to at-tract everybody's attention aud yetconspicuously enough to win consid-eration from those who make a ixiintot looking for bargains, announcingthat on a certain day he would tukepictures free of charge. By n coin-cidence the day he set was the daywhen the prospective purchasers ofhis business were to be there.

The ad., as usual, paid, and thatafternoon his gallery was crowded•wjth visitors. They thronged in andout, and he could not take care ofthem rapidly enough, even with thea|d of several assistants. When thefolks he Intended to do business withrime he greeted them with a crown•f disappointment, explaining that hewas simply so busy that he couldn't«ee them then and asked them to comeback In tbe momlng, when thingswould likely have slackened up. They•greed and went away duly impressed.

He sold out to them next day, and Ithi perhaps superfluous to add thut tiegot more for his outfit than he wouldhave done If It hadn't been for thejjiodest little advertisement—LouisvilleCourier Journal

Moses E. llalsey, of New York, vis-ited his summer homo on Mt. Pleasantavenue, over Suuday.

Mr. ami M?s. Clinton W.ir.l, of l'urthAinbuy, we.ro guests at tho homo oftheir father, \V. 11. Ward, this week.

Mr. llurke, of the Anti Saloon l.twgue,suldrussud tho Christian Kiideavor So-ciety of the hirst lluptUt church Sun-day evening.

Miss liertrude Fund is trr.iujing fora pi»uo recital to ln> held in tin- ni'ivrfuturo in November.

HOW INSECTS BREATHE.Byatem of Tubes That Run the Length

uf Their Bodiet.Landlubber animals huve lungs, and

•en creatures have gills. But Inso<-tshave neither one nor the other. Theyfcave a complex system of tubes run4llug throughout the whole length ofthe body by means of which air Is e<.-n-reyed to every part of the system. Asthey are destined to contain nothing\tut air, they arc strongly supported toguard against collapse from pressure.

This support la furnished by meansof a fine thread ninning spirally with-in tbe walls of tbe tube, much in thename way that a garden bose Is pro-tected with wire. There are generullytwo of these tubes which run thewhole length of the insect's body.

Many flies, as larvae, live In tbe wa-ter. Arranged along each side of theirbodies Is a series of exceedingly thiuplates, Into each of which runs a se-ries of blood vessels. These plates actand jibsorb the oxygen contained intbe "water. The tail ends iu tlfreefeather-like protections. By means oftbese the larva causes currents of wa-ter to flow over the gills, and thus theirefficiency Is increased.

Tbe gnat also lives in tbe water asa larva. But it has DO gills; there-fore it cannot breathe tbe oxygen IDthe water, but must breathe air Thi«Is done by means of a splcade situatedat tbe tip of Its tall. Indeed, the tall

^ U prolonged Into a little tube. Thelarva floats along head downward inthe water with this tube just abovetbe surface to enable it to breathe.After some time it Is provided withtwo little tubes, which act in tbe samemanner.—Chicago Tribune.

l!i-v. Dr. Winaits, of Caldwell, occu-pied tho pulpit of the Second llaptistchurch lust Sunday evening.

At the Christian Kndeavor Meetingin the Baptist church Sunday oveuiug,Mrs. Krauk Hoffman was soloist, andMiss Kinina Uamblo and Mrs. (j. Ho-teeberger sang duets.

On Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs.Isaac Heeves ontor.iineil a number offriends in expectation oi their removalto Swartswood this fall.

At the October meeting at the Liv-ingstfOn Sunday School Association, theBaptist Sunday School roUius the banuer for tho largest percentage of at-tendauoe during the last quarter.

The Northlield Social Club at the lastmeeting elected Horace Ward, president;ChrisUeinbeck, vice-president; HowardCrosby, secretary; Samuel llurnet,treasurer. The annual banquet will be heldat President Wards this evening.

Tho Animal Fair aud Harvest Home othe Ladies' Aid Society of tho First Baptist church will be held in the chapel oiSaturday evening, October "23.

The Ladies' Aid Society of tho SecondBaptist church have decided to holdtheir meetings on tne first aud thirdThursday of e.ich mouth. Officers futhe ensuing year: Mrs. Wiu. Burrullpresident; Mrs. Fred l'arkhurst, vicepresident; Mrs. Cieorge 1'arkhurst, secrotary; Mrs. Oscar Carter, treasurer.

JOE SPENCER'S PITCHING TOOMUCH FOR MADISON A. (

With Joe Spencer, the local boy, onthe tiring line, a pick-up team fromMadison downed the strong MadisonA. C. ou the Athletic) grounds there onTuesday afternoon, by tho score of 3 to2. The young southpaw held the losersin check throughout, letting them downwith five hits. He was opposed byTotten, who also twirled well. Klynn,of this plkce, did the backstop work andgreatly aided Joe in accomplishing thefeat

Take Care ofThat CoughBefore it gets worse

Our W h i t e Pineand Tar will helpIt very quickly.

All o t h e r goodCough Cures areready lor you.

How about thosebargains In spon-ges? We havesome line ones lelt

WEBER 8c CO.,Druggists,

CHATHAM -SUMMIT

Breaking Th*m to tho Yok*.Edward Lisle, whose "Observations

on Husbandry" was published In 1757,described the method employed by his"oxhind" or cattleman to break cattleto the yoke: "He yoked two of thesteers, being two yearlings, togetherand so suffered them to walk about

.the ground where there were no pitsor ditches for them to receive hurt by.He also tied together the bushy partsof their tails, the reason of which wasbecause they should not be able toturn their heads to each other so asto strike one another with their hornsor by bending their necks too much byendeavoring to face one another and

*lheh striving break their necks." Inthia condition the oibind let them goon the ground, If without boles orditches, all night or else turned theminto an empty open barn so yoked andthus treated them two or throe timesbefore be worked them.

"The Best Plan Ever Devised"says a resident of Lynn, Mass., in aletter to ns. This is but one of themany expressions of commendation ofthe Monthly Income policy receivedsince it was put before the public by

The PrudentialLook Into It lor Yoursell.

4

mmAll Advertisements under this

head I Cent a word but no ad-vertihment less than 15 centstaken. Sure results are obtainedthrough a "Preg»" ad. Try it.

W A N A M A K E R ' S —The Store Where You Can Get

What You Wantand You Will

Like What You Get

Autumn Expositionsof Women's

Costumes Millinery SuitsLingerie Wraps BlousesDress Stuffs, Trimmings, Silks, LacesChildren's, Girls' and Young Women's

Suits, Coats and DressesMen's and Boys' Clothing

Hats and Furnishings

House Palatial and EightGalleries of Furnishings for the

Home BeautifulJohn Wanamaker, New York

Broadway, Fourth avenue, Eighth to Tenth Streets

iLOST AND FOUND

LOST—ladies gold watch on Mainstreet. Kinder please communicate withMlts. T. M. LAMBERKON, 287 4th aveuue,West, Hoselle and receive reward. 32

WANTEDMISCELLANEOUS

YOU KK.NT—Furnished room; goodlocation; near station; lady preferred.Address, "itoOM," l'ross ofllce. 31-32

Con*clation.There was once a Blllville citizen

who could never rid himself of thochills, but went shivering through thehottest days of summer. When at lasttt seemed that ail was up with him, hisgood wife to comfort him said:

"John, you've been a-sbakln' an'E-»hlverln' sll yer life, but you'll getwarm over there!"

"For tbe Lord's sake, Mary," saidthe shivering man, "don't talk so!Which way do you think I'm f-golu'J"

Do not •tt'nr rubbUli, wuta ptpei:«te, to to ttrown or Mow* from

f nat*vtf tete amt

We are ready to buy elm timber, allsizes, from four inches in diameter up.i'rices a, 8,10 and 12 cents per foot, de-livered. HOUSTON'S Hub Factory, Sum-mit. 30-84

Cups, saucers and dishes given freewith every purchase of 2 ll»s. coffee and1 lb. coffee; a bargain; come and takeyour choice. UAKTANO SAICO, l'assaicavenue, Chatham, .\. J. 3-1

TO LKT-Kirst floor of four rooms;rent $H; Watchunj; avenue, •Stanley.Apply to 1. T. WAUNKH. 31-tf.

KOK HIRK-C'amp chairs for wed-dings, parties, etc. L. W. MAKTKWH,Center Street, Chatham, X. J. 31.34

FOK KALE Try our "half moon" and"diamond orange cakes;" right from theBakers' Exhibition. At SCHKKKK'S UAK-EKY, Chatham, X. J. 3133

KOK BALK-Tf.'n barrels of nice ap-pies.Hill.

Apply to i{. HoKNHACH, Floral81-34

REAL ESTATE FOR 8ALE

FOR SALE- House, all modern im-provements; also 2 bay windows andlargo piazza; lot 111 ft. front by 245 ft.deep; residential restriction; cementside walk; water; electric light; range;bath; steam heat; large attic; cementcellar; all in perfect order; Watchungavenue, near Hillside avenue; 10 Co 12ininutos from station; price only $4,875;easy terms; possession immediately.See BHOKAW N. V. & SUBURUAN KKALTVCo., Chatham, N. J., or 100 Uroadwav,N. Y. 31-tf"

Wait Urn

H A R N E S S WHIPS & ROBES

HARNESSHORSE COLLARS H A R N E S S

Repairing Neatly Done at Short Notice.

G. A. BEACH,Wolfe Building,

Passalc Avenue, CHATHAM, N. J.

Summit Fresh Air Home's Kirmcss.All of the managers of the Fresh Air

and Convalescent Home are actively en-gaged in promoting the Kirmess whichis to open at the Beecbwood, Summit, onOctober 20th, and their work, combinedwith the skill of Miss Lila A. .Stewart,who is arranging the dances, seems cer-tain to make it tbe most successful en-tertainment of recent years held there.Miss Stewart's success with uitnilafairs in this city in the ( ast is well re-membered and the young folks who areto assist by participating in the danceshave manifested more than ordinary in-terest in their part of the affair. Ite-oarsalu have been in progress for a weekand the dances will probably prove fai-prettier than those which provided michdelightful evenings when given herobefore under Miss Stewart's direction.

The Kirmcfls will continue for fournights from Wednesday, October 20thwith an afternoon performance on Sat-urday October ISd.

High School Blanks Madison AcademyTho High school football team blanked

tho Madison Academy eleven in theopening game, which was played atAthletic Field here Thursday afternoon.Tho score was 3 to Oi Beerbower, lefthalf bank of the homo team, carried thepigskin over tho lino for a touchdownin tho first two minutes of piny. lirid-

|gers played a good game, as did also AH-piuzza.

The line-np:IIKill KCIIOOI, MAIIISIJN ACAIIK.MV

Smith J. HumbertCenter.

•Moore WorksKight Guard.

fl. Hubbard I) MacGrawLeft Guard.

<-'ark CraneU-ft Tackle.

Watt ConlinKight Tackle.

An Inttano*.Kntcker—Time brings many strange

changes. Booker-Yen; the boy whosemother can't make him wash bis neckgrows up to be a rich man wh6 joesabroad for baths.-Hurper'B Baxar.

KB folly to tryu t o ; Ue? won't

try de*fft urn*

mutes M *err-

Right End.Bridge™ Feuchlwangor

Left End.Aspluzza Whiltamnn

Quarter Hack.Clayton T. Humbert

Full Back.Beorbower „ Hice

J-eft Half Back.I'ihlman C. MaeUraw

Kight Half Back.Substitute—K. Hubbard. Referee—

Ptulhower.

Stoiv loses Satnrdiiy in 1'. M. Other Days tl I'. M.

MBEE HIVE." New Jersey'sShopping Centre. NEWARK*

A COMPLETE STORE OF

WEAR AND ACCESSORIESFOR INFANTS.

To one unacquainted with the Immenseassortments we carry for the I n f a n t andsmall child an Inspection of our styles andwide range of prices will be a revelation. IfInterested at all In children's goods the run-ning summary here presented will tell betterwhether It Is worth your while to visit ourstore for a wider knowledge of how muchgood we can do to your purse and sense ofrefined taste In this particular line.

Infants' Jiuunets, 2^50 to 19.98.Infants' Caps, 50c to 4.98.Long and Short Coats, Box Coats, Cooney Fur CoatSi

Bi-arskin Coats, 2.50 to 38.75.French Imported Hand Made Dresses, 1.50 to 29.50.French Hand Embroidered Bibs, 1.75 to 7,98.Long and Short Flannel Skirts, 25c to 5.98.Pillow Cases, 50c. tc 2.98.Outing Flannel Wrappers, 25c. to 79c.Silk, Cashmere and Flannel Sacques, 50c. to 10.00.Infants' Mittens, 19c. to 1.00.Fancy Bibs, 39c. to 2.98.Worsted and Silk Bootees, 10c. to 1.50.Worsted Drawer Leggins, 50c. to 1.50.Toilet Sets, hand jiaiuted, 69c. to 5.98.Infants' Hose, 25c. to 55c.Infants' Vests, 25c. to 1.40.

Dally delivorlt'H by our own wagons lo Chatham and Vicinity.

Mailorders 707 to 721 Ne BranchFilled BROAD STR T Sttres

Southbound Trolleu Cars from Lackawanna Station, Newark, Pass Our DoorI

When a Man PutsAll His Savings

Into real estate, it is of paramount importance

that he be protected against the possibility of d

ComeInandtalkIfover

IOSB, certainly as far as his title is concerned.

Fidelity Trust Gompanu.NEWARK, N. J.,

will search and gttai untoe your title for you—

thus relieving y i m of ,J10 w o r r y or the possi-

bility of 1OH8.

Wnm Mini ' m ^

'MK.\sn{KurKA.\W.VVKS.

' l'»c lliicf t'altlr.Tho only reason (lit; silo bus not

been used bo largely UIJOII the boutcattle am! general stock farm is be-tailBH beef men luivti not give* Itthe trial that dairymen havo. Thosowho huvo used siluiui in the produc-tion of bcuf aro universally in favorof it. It iM-ovtts u nrotltablo additionto a Imrf-ftwdluK ration. Expert-IIHIII station U'aia have presented re-sulta which stand out prominentlyin favor of sllutu* (or bi-nf feeding.TIIB latest evidenco from thissource couifs from the Indiana Htu-ttou, where a series of practicalbeef feeding experiments are beingconducted—Weekly Witness.

Kn^iiies For Kami Tower,Some farms have steam boilers and

t'l-giues, but for ordinary use they aretoo expensive to buy and too compli-cated U> run. If a person only needsa five or teu horse power engine hedou't want to bother with a steam en-gine. It takes too Ions to get upBteam and too much attention whenfunning. What he needs Is a gasolineengine.

The newer patterns of Kiisoliih' en-gines are practically automatic. Youcan start one after breakfast in tlieinornlnK and it will run steadily untilnoon without attention. They startquickly, jump right into full powerand run at less expense than any oth-«r farm motor power except wind-mills, and these are unreliable, be-cause they arc subject to tin; whimsund fancies of the winds.

One mistake often made In buyiiua farm gasoline engine is In seUinuit too sinull. You need a little' re-Bervo power. If you need two horsepower buy a four horse power en-Klne. It don't cost any more to runit to do two horse power worth ofwork, then yon have the extra powerwhen you need It. Tho cost of a sUe-

Puzzling Qutitlon to All S»a-Go»rs Easily Salvtd by the N«vyHydrograpliio Ovfio*.

A i>iw*llng nut'filuu to all »«a-goerB, that o! the laugthuui'd heightof ocean waves mm how to uidiusurethem. Is. anowertd by ,the Navy lly-<ti-oi;rui<hic Ofllce.

Uelermliiatuui of tbt- Un^iH ofwaves at s^a ma> bo obtaiv>.'d by di-rect comparison of the known length,of the observing vessel with the,length from crest to crest of thwwaves o\er which she is riding, ami

rae »,• have, Lut the breed la com-paratively small. This variety, how-ever, la considered out) uf the bestfor croaking on the larger breeds formarket purposes.

Ueuse are very fond of thtlr matesand it Is dlttlcult to break up a matingwithout removing the male bird en-tirely out of hearing. Kor this reasonIt is advisable to attend to the matlni!problem In thu fall. If geese artkept oa grass alone they probablywill lay ono setting of eggs ami huu iithem out, but if given a grain ration ' u10 length of Hue when a buoy at-

Failed (\Uluio Made New.Faded isittou blouses, frocks, <•!•

cau be made to look new if bleachedwhite. Mix three tabiespoonfuls otchloride of lime In three ituarta ofwater, or double that uuantity ot bulbif required, and lit this liquid stirabout the garmeutu until they amwhite. Then at once rinse thorough-ly iu pure water and starch and iron

i as usual If preferred to have lh-garments colored, they may be dyed

when ships are salliug iu company agood estimate of the length of thtfwaves may be mada ky comparing the | bleached, butknown length of it neighboring ship |with the distance from crest to nest iof the successive waves,

Another method of measuring the

the bleaching Is advisable iu order toj get the fabric to take the dye equally

nil over Home Notes.

length of waves consists In towing alog line astern of a vesst'l and noting

In connection with the yusuire twoor three settings may be expected.Uoosu sheds should be provided withplenty of straw during the laying sea-son. They will then niiike their ownnests near the ground mid the mois-ture problem will be taktli cure otnaturally.—lBpltomlsi.

A Kittle Turkey Talk.After successfully ralaiiiK turkeys

for a number of years, 1 am able tu

tached to the after end floats on thenext wuvu crest abaft that on which 'the stern ot ilu- VC.-MI momentarily 'floats.

Heplyiug to an answer regardingthe height of ocean waves the Hydro-graphic office says Its measurementsaud estimates from mariners and ob-servers at sea Indicate that thu aver-age height of all the waves ruuuluiiin a gale In the ocean is about twentyfeet.

"About lorty feet,' it says, "is ayive a few practical and useful hints j common estimate uf the height of theon the subject which cannot fail to be.of groat benefit to the beginner, orIKMhups to the ones who havo beentrying to ralso turkeys, with but poor.•iiH'cess.

Turkeys, as we all know, are con-sidered moro difficult to misc. thanchickens, on account of their beingmoto sensitive to the damp ami coldof spring, and for this reason uaauydo not try to raise them at all.

1 find that If turkeys are nothatched before the first of May, it isless trouble to care for them, andthey are moro apt to live.

The common brown turkey ia themost profitable. 1 once tried thowhite species, but found them poorlayers, and not so hardy.

lt pays bent to start with a smallHook. Never keep over winter morothan three hens and a gobbler. Kit;IIIbore let mo say, be sure to get your

and hens of different Docks

larger waves iu a severe gale on theNorth Atlantic, and this estimate idreally not incompatible with ai-cm-deilaverage of Htile mi,re than twentyfeet."

I'acking Rufllrs.It is nearly always a risk io pack

bottles Iu a trunk. It is no uncom-mon thing to tie them all up, withmuch patleucw and a great deal otstring, and then, on uiipacklug thetrunk, find the side breadth of a per-fectly new skirt decorated with inkor stlrky medicine. To avoid anysuch distressing accident get an air-tight tin can, with a well tilting lid.A baking powder can will do. if thereme not many bottles to be carried, orany kind of a can you happen to havehandy Put the bottles In this anddrop sawdust between them. Thiawill lessen tho probability of theirbreaking, but if they do break, thesawdust will absorb the liquid insidethe can. and the adjacent clothingwill not be mined.—New York l'rest..

larger is not a great deal when com- ' lU

].ared with tho additional service l t ' in starting, and If you have your own.will render.—The Epitomlst.

Supplying tlit* Soil With Plant FooO.

trndo with some one, so that they willnot be related to the hens.

Inbreeding is very frequently thecause of blindness. 1 have Been in-

U3 tO

the probable cause of blindness, •• nilexperience has taught mo that thisis the solo cause.

lt is unwise to sot tho old turluvthe first time she gets broody, for,break her up to lay more eggs, r.iset a hen or two In her place.

When a hen is set, never use morethun eight or ten eggs, and even thenselect a large hen.

tiive her a warm place to Bit, andsniurulo the nest well with sulphurto keep away vermin. Use sulphuron the hen, also.

A hen that is to sit for four weeksmust bo well fed and cared for, Uiveher plenty of fresh water and exer-cise, and a small ration of com mealwet with milk once each day.

When a brood of little turkeys arefirst hatched they are weakly, aushould not be taken from thu nestfur nt least twelve hours.

Warm, waterproof ooops should boprovided for them. Larg dry-goodsboxes, such as can be bought forabout twenty-live cents, ninke excel-lent coops.

Turn these on their sides, withblocks under the corners to keep themoft the ground. Null strips of boardover every crack. The top of the boxforms tho front of tho coop. Naillaths across the front so close to-gether that tlu> little ones cannotcrawl through, and make o little door,at one end, through which to feedand water them.

I feed them on bread and milk fora few dnys, and then give them cornmeul wet with sweet milk, a pinchof unit and some clean sand.

Dutch cheese is also good for achange. They are very fond of it.and It aids digestion. Give themplenty of water, but do not leave ltwhere they can tumble into it, us awetting is almost certain to bo thedeath of a little turkey,

When they are a few days old Itnke a lath from the front of thocoop and let them run out, after theclew is off. If the nights are chilly,or the weather should be damp, covertlip coop well with ri warm blaukct.

should be thoroughly waterproof and Thu last year 1 raised turkeys Ithe bottom provided with a foot or learned something very helpful. Inlore of straw, "it the coop under a large tree wheru

Iu fertilizing any crop the needs of . , , , r sthe soil upon which the crop is to begrown are usually the leading consid-eration. A soil which had recentlybeen well manured, or had a cloversod plowed under, would likely bopretty well provided with nitrogen.and accordingly the mineral constit-uents would be the principal concern.A heavy clay soil would not need thepotash that a sandy or muck soilwould require. The need for phos-phoric acid Is moro L-Kiicral. Afterthe soil, the needs of the crop may beconsidered. For instance, a 200-buBhel-to-the-nere crop of potatoeswill carry from the soil thirty-threepounds of nitrogen, twenty pounds ofphosphoric acid and sixty-two poundsof potash; a thirty bushel crop ofwheat, sixty-two pounds of nitrogen,twenty pounds phosphoric acid andtwenty-six pounds of potash. Foruse upon the same sort of soil, then,the potato crop would call Jor a fer-tifuer richer in potash than wouldwheat, if the store of plant food inthe soil is to be maintained. Itmight be possible to omit the nitro-gen for the potatoes, since the latterare usually closer to tho clover sod ormanure or both in the rotation thaiiwneat.—Farmers' fymo Journal.

I X, (icesi- Fori A goose farm should have a run-

ning stream of pure water so situated,\thnt the fields may bo laid out on

both sides of the stream. The fieldssliould consist of good pasture with avariety of grasses and of sufficientsize to support a gander and threegeese with their growing goslings.

Ono gander nnd threo geese tn npon are often better than any othci-number for breeding purposes. Ashed on the north side of the fieldopening to the south is all the protec-tion the gi'i'se require except in theextreme mirth. In tho middle sec-tions of the United States geese sel-dom will use the shed except duriiiRthe laying and hatching seasons oron extremely cold days in winter. Thesheds consequently need not be verylarge, nor expensive. But the roof

A Witty Ited Mun.In "Travels in New Kuglaud and

New York," President Uwight, ntYale College, tells a good story ofIndian wit and friendship.

In the early days (if l.iuhlield.Conn., au Indian called nt the tavernand asked the landlady for food,frankly stating that be had no moneywith which to pay for it. She refusedhim harshly, but a white man whosat by noted the red man's half-furn-ished state, and offered to pay forhis supper.

The meal WI\B furnished, and theIndian, his hunger sullelled, returnedto the fire and told his benefactor ustory.

"You know Bible?" said the red-skin.

The man assented."Well," said the Indian, "the Bible

say, God made world, and then Hotook him and look at him and say,He good, very good.' He made light,

and He took him and look at himand say, 'lie good, very good." Then

Cleansing Suggestion*.To clean Mark dress goods try '

sponging It with cold tea. It Is saidthat spots and stains disappear read-

' inrd\ si, i L- L- . -1, • 11 for ai-ither tin pviitlne or

Acoat is i-ither tin pviitlne or si rim.1.coffee

; To take nut My specks on giltframes apply tin- white of an em;

' with a camel's hair brush and i'm-\will disappear.

1 To freshen rusty black lace. MMI,[ It in vinegar nnd water, two table-; spoonfuls of vinegar to a pint of wat-

er, rinse and iron, whife still damp,! between ItanDel.; Steel knives not in general use niny

be kept from rusting by dipping them• iu a strong solution of soda.—Ains-: lee's.

[ Try a Hammock.! If yon nre short of room, why not

swing a hammock up in your sitting' room or bedroom for the daily na]> or: the forty winks which every self-re-

He made dry land and water and sun | spectlng woman ouglu to allowand moon nnd grass nnd trees, andtook him and look nt him and say,"He good, very good.' Then He madebeast and birds and fishes, and tookhim and look nt him and say, 'Hagood, very good.'

"Then He made man, nnd took himand look at him and say, 'He good,very, very good.' Then He madewoman, and took him and look athim. anil He no dare say one suchword!"

This last conclusion was utteredwith n meaning glance at tho laud-lady.

Some years after this occurrence,the man who had paid for the In-dian's supper was captured by red-skiiiB und carried to Canada, wheruhe was made to work like a slave.One day an Indian came to him, re-railed to his mind the occurrence nttho Lltchfleld tavern, and ended bysaying:

"I thnt Indian. Now my turn pay.I see you home. Come with nit--."

And tho redskin guided the manback to Litchfleld.

Toulouse, Embden and Chinese arethe three varieties usually raised.Tho Chinese lay more eggs than theothers, but tho birds are not so valu-able, consequently the larger varietiesare likely to pay the heal. Stock" « d s do not require to be renewed

%e other Ulndu of poultry, as geeseare long-lived nnd the eggs fire muchbetter for hatching- afterobtained full maturity.

haveUroedlug

Block is at best from five to twelveyears of age. This is especially trueof Reese. Sometimes It i3 advisabletu reuew sunders after six or seven

-A. ars. Geonn • eighteen and twentyyenrs of agi have been known to layas well as ever, and their egps trimtch satisfactorily, but these ofcourao aro exceptional cases.

Tln> Embden and Toulouse varietiesv lurge-frnmrrt birds, with long,ep bodies. They probably average.•out fifteen pounds iu weight, but

law ganders often weigh as much astwenty pounds or more. The BrownChinese probably are (bo best looking- M. U. Chandler,

here was shade In the afternoon, andfound thnt the little "turks" neverleft the shade, and did not run oftinto the grass and Weeds and get lost,as they had formerly done. Theycannot endure the hot sun.

If you have hens with little chicks,(io not put the coops near the oneswhere there are little turkeys, as ahen with chicks will kill little tur-keys. A hen with turkeys will like-wise kill tho chickens.

When the old turkey hens nre setlater on, 1 take the sain? method withthem as with UK hen mother andbroud, and take care to provide alarge coop.

When little "turks- an1 MN to eifiiitweeks old they can b« lot. out withtheir mothers a short, time each dayIf ino weather is good, nnd by thutime they are half-grown they can gettheir own living, by gleaning in thefields, and will make no more ..oubH1.

The last year 1 raised turkeys Ilost but three and raiBed forty.—Miss

A Remarkable Piny.During the Lower Lakes K"lf Tour-

nament at Grossepointe, Michigan,Bays Collier's Weekly, LieutenantGeorge N. Hayward, United StatesNavy, made one of the most remark-able plays known to the gnme of golf.

On driving from the first tee hosent the ball over the bunker, fullyone hundred and seventy-five yards.It struck a screen on tho second-floorwindow of a vncant parsonage, andwent clear through the screen andwindow.

The lieutenant had a problem toface. He wns followed to tho houseby a large number of Interested spec-tators. Forcing open a window, hoclimbed Into the parsonage.

He found the ball in a back roomtip-stairs, and with a mighty stroketried to send it into n front room.It struck above the door and clatteredabout the room for a while. An-other utroke was more accurate, andthe ball went Into the front room. Athird put It through a window. Thewindow had been raised to allow the

I In Tie Kitchen. |Curried Veal Steak.—Tako the

slices of venl and rub curry powderon both sides before broiling in panwith butter; season with s;.H and but-ter and serve.

Tougue Toast.—Mim-.' >>''>! boiled

through two thicknesses of glass andaut on the green.

Forest Itrscrvrs of ltubber-Troes.It is reported that the Department

3f Agriculture will set asido as forestreserves the island of Romblou,jorth of Panay. and the island ofPauitaul in the Jolo group. UnitedBtatea army officers report that theseare perhaps the richest islands In thoworld for rubber-trees. In Zanzibara new kind of gutta-percha is said tohave been found. It is produced byB tree bearing a peach-shaped fruitwhich attains tho size of a smallmelon.

New York City coruiumej $54,000worth of lea and coffee each day.

well beaten yolks ot two eggs: letsimmer over a slow tire a miuutc,spread on golden brown ton?' w« IIbuttered and hot anil serve on a hotplatter.

Hickory Xnt Cookies.—Two enp:-of sugar, two cg.es, one-half cup ufmelt-id butter, sis tablespoons milk.one teaspoonful o! cream tartar, on.--hnlf teaspoonful snd:i. one cup meatsof the hickory nut <'hi>|> and stir Intho dough. Flavor with almond. Bakein Quick oven.

Uetsy Potato Cake*. — Bull swe-ct.potatoes till soft, mash Cue. then r.dusome chopped bacon, make in smallcakes, let stand OIK1 hour I'in i'ibeaten cj;g, then in iliv: :r i™-.n.<and fry in the bacon drippings, v.hlr-hshould be quite hot. Serve will: ;•.slice of riue tomato as a cuvuish

We know of no other medicine which has been so suc-cessful in relieving the suffering of women, or secured somany genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound.

In almost ever)' community you will find women whohave been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-etable Compound. Almost ever}' woman you meet haseither been benefited by it, or knows some one who has.

In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files con-taining over one million one hundred thousand letters frorj)women seeking health, in whicn many openly state o /their own signatures that they have regained their healthVtaking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. >

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has saved,many women from surgical operations.

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is made ex-clusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless.

The reason why it is so successful is because it containsingredients which act directly upon the female organism,restoring it to healthy and normal activity.

Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials suchas the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy.

Minneapolis, Minn.: —" I WUN a great sufferer from fcmalotroubles which cuu.sedii WfukiKHs and broken down conditionof th« system. 1 reiul so iiiut-b of what L.vdiu E. rinkuam'gVegetable Compound had done for other suffering women, 1 feltBiiro It would help me, und 1 munt nay it did lielp me. wonder-ful lj. Within three tiioutUb 1 was a perfectly well woman.

"I want this letter nmile public to show the benefits to bederived from Lydia K. IMnkhanVs Vegetable Compound."—Mm. JohiiCi.iMoldun, 2115 Second St.North, Minneapolis.Mlnu.

Women who are suffering from those distressing illspeculiar to their sex sliould not lose sight of these factsor doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's VegetableCompound to restore their health.

_4 !

self? It may be taken down or puiup in u minute. Is never in the v.a: ,and if properly hung, is most comfor-table. In arranging the ropes orhooks, have the head two feet lusherthan the foot. This Rives a comfor-table curve. If the ropes ntv u^-l.have the head rope shorter than ;li •other. In this way there is less hi.i-tion of the body, which so many peo-ple object to In hammocks. A thin.flat pillow adds to the comfort. Imteven It is not necessary, if ii u ;itrouble to stow it away. Some of th"new hammocks hav* slightly nu<. asides to prevent falling out—lloftui:Globe.

For the Seamstress.One of the most difficult fo::t.< M

perform on a sewing machine is <>>sew a straight line. Ordinarily anylittle deviation is not noticeable, butit' the case of a hem or tuc!: the

| slightest Irregularity is apparen.' At this point a Philadelphia in.m

comes to the rep-no with a device f":j RRtiginR the width of a hem or tuckI to a nicety, i?nd assuring two perfect-I ly straight lines. This device consiFts; of a scale attachment which projects! across the bed pinto for a sewinp ma-! chine and in the line of feed This at-; tnchment, which is in the form of a1 thin bar divided Into inches ami frac-! tlon thereof, has openings aloni; it1 for screws, by which it is fastened in| the plate. When a half-Inch hem )••! needed, the bar is set tn thnt distanceI from the. needle, and by keeping the I| edge of the material to the v. :. '• •): the scale, the widih of the tn • i! be kept consistent with the u>j which ouly a mechanical <I«'vi. •

sures.—Louisville Courier-Join: i.

FOR PINK EYE MSTCMPCRCATARRHAL FEVERAND ALL NOSEAND THROAT DISEASES '

(\iroh tin- hick and nctt> u.* u preventive for OUUTB. Liquid.ivi'n mi thf tonirue. K»fc for limnl nuivet utnl ail other*. Beatidiii<y rvniedy; S) centK and II u K>ttle; (A and f IU the do>«n.

Sold by &11 ilruKirista and horw ^IHKIB houses, or nvnUpaid, by the munufacturerh.

SPOHN MEDICAL CO..

liryn Mawr College was founded byJoseph \V. Taylor, who began theerection of the college building* in1S71L Ho died In ISSti and left allendowment of JSOO.OOO for the con-tinuance of the work he had begun—a college for women.

In China the properly of the parentmust be equally shared by the chil-dren, on the death of the former.

Chemists, GOSHKN, INDIANA

The American Institute of Electricsd'Knj;iiitt'iv row Ima over tWOO Tnenibeitiwiili |)n;nr-(ift* in nearly every large city

Thu IT. S. Government has bought -3On«9 <a,tiou bin™) of Rough cm Rut* tosend to thf PHIWUUA Cuniil Zoue, boraus?it do*1!* thu work. Thi> old reliublo thatnnver fails. Tho nuboabibla oxt^nniiulor.lie., iV.. 7.V-.

Chenp labor has been the principalhandicap in introducing modern ma-chinery In India. N.Y.—12

FoodProducts

RECEIVED THE ONLY

GRAND PRIZFHIGHEST AWARDS'

At the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific ExpositAGAINST ALL COMPETITORS ON

PICKLES-OLIVES-CONDIMENTS-CALIFORNIA ASPARAGUS-PRESERVES-J?SALAD DRESSING-CONDENSED MILK-EVAPORATED MILK-CALIFORNIA FR^

CANNED MEATSCORNED BEEF-SLICED DRIED BEEF-OX TONCUC-VEAL LOAF-

HAM LOAF-VIENNA SAUSAGE

WHERE QUALITY - COUNTS WE LIYour Grocer Has Them—Insist on Getting Libbys

LIBBY, McNEILL & LIBB'The boa constrictor has 320 puirs of

SOUR STOMACH"I used Cascarets and feel like a new

man. I have been a auffcier from dys-jjepsia and sour stomach for the last twoyears. I have been taking medicine andother drugs, but could find no relief onlyfor a abort time. I will recommendCascarets to my f rienda as the only thingfor indigestion and sour stomach and tokeep the bowels in good condition.They are very nice to eat."

"Harry Stuckley, Mauch Chunk, Pa.Pleasant , Palatable, Potenl, T a s t e (iood.Do Hood. Never Sicken, Weaken o r Oripe.10c, 25c. 50c. Never sold In bulk. T h r ten-nine tablet s t amped C C C. Guaranteed Incure or your money back. 936

.... r« fr~oiuiu J»y n W

niiinnill

rAMRR NU H IT I D II III

AOKNT8.-IFI KKKWJO:

irlnIIIINII lu'ifll.'ili.lk,i of Inlialrr-'

If

PATENTS3S2?

Chicks Doing WeIf Not, Learn Why Trom a Book CostiLess Than the Value of One Chicken....

4

A vBOOK PUBLISHING

jisi* Tsnisbid entirely

b

' ivt'l't br«tttttil«»s KM) hutUni*. .th* wall | - i t i, pt.t«» Batwtte:" be cried tu ttw

\

Fnt waters, tut »be could catch a i o r o w j ot tishertutn and sailors hud- ;

I glimpse of the dour old lighthouse and fd^j about the big wood stove. "Sh»• * • I its round ti'ii above tbe tallest wave, j o n t h e l c f t drifting out to th« take!"

| V O I 1 I I f l i a n J t b e B l s h t » t r e n« t b i 'u e d *u<1 »erv<!d ; In Bve minutes the news had spread. ;* w mm \J 1 * i her fur tbe five mile Journey to St. : sn<j tQ)i 8 n o l > . W M crowded, while i

j Michel. ! the strongest boat la tbe place wa» 'I Suddenly, when scarcely half a mile mumed, mth Landry at the rudder,

an ^ _» _ *J±*-t%t>4~+O l e u t ' l b e t"'at b e e m t l d t o b l r i k e * u e w and stout arms pulled away to theMST€ *f Z#C*A#f?f * t7» | current. BaU'tte caught her breath re ik.ue of Vete's Babette. And when '.

| sharply as she felt the strong, resist t n ( ! ¥ brought her back half frozen •• / IZOLA L. F0RRE8TER. i u>ss power sweep her from her course, i a n d naif j e a j a m j g a T e |,er lato Mine

and she btut over the oars with net. i » o m a U ! , l t t r« ahe told her errand in ;There had always been Pete. At j t.| t i se upH and tense muscles, but lt ; t n e w a n u b*0^ room—told how Pete i

least so the people down at 8t. Michel j was useless. The deep, swelling rush : y dying without food or medicine [laid when a granger would ask where 1tf waters carrted her unrthwurd a n j u o w uQie,^ Belp w a a g e u t there 'be had come from. Even before the j straight on to the middle channel of w o u m i* a u light ahlnlng fromgovernment had built the llghthouseon ! U* strait. The wind had come up ; p ^ q u e IgU . , u a t n l g u t .Presque Isle Pete's fishing hut bad i " s a l n a m l """ f1 O T e r , * : "T h* u S h t «ha" throe." promisedbeen there, and every night he had j ^ ^ e ^ t h e ' j a g g ^ T r u e i ! J j ^ j ^ a*B«b*uV»'lUtle8bo*f boied •huag out his lantern on the ead of a | , l n e 0 , t h e lce» fluft a u J ihe nen mo- : W w e th<! masterful stroke of ten ipole no that the boats rounding the j m e n t t n e w aves had thrown the boat ; ^ o f S t y l c n e l - t gtrougest arms aspaint a mile or two below would see Its as If lt had be«n a leaf full upon lt. ; t n e y maimed the boat that bore Ba- !flicker and steer clear of tbe long Instinctively Babette had risen at that | ^ t t e a n j provisions and medicine ]Hind bar that ran out like an ant eat- last awful instant. As the boat crash- : ( . j . t 0 pi.esvjUe i s [ e ;er-i nose from the northern corner of i *d into the Ice with a shock that made . . T h o u h a s t s a v e d h u m^ M t t l e o n e ; . <

I g l e It leap and tremble she sprang for- M t d Laudry when they stood in the jward acd gained a footing on the I.e ; k l t c n e n w n e t e M e r e U r t e s t l l l j,ravCti. Jfloe, a slight, perilous one. to be sure. B u t Babette only smiled and nodded

Everybody along the strait knew thequaint old figure, but no one knew of b u t o n e t h a l m e a n t g a f e t T , { o r , B e mo n e r h e a d a a d sb'e w m o n t 0 t h e „ M .Babette until they saw her oue mom- ,^tnt a t i?as t . house.Ing fluttering along behind Pete, her Already the little boat had dlsap , T n e w i n t c r twilight was fallingred calico dress the oue bright spot of ! peared in the whirlpool of dashing wa- ' swiftly, aud the wind had gone down 1color among the grays aud browns of j ters, and Babette's heart beat fast as mje o n e tirvd with Its mad play. Far 'Presque Isle The day before Fete bad - she looked about her on her new craft to the west she could see a boat strug-been seen rowing over to the Maeklnac « * » s l a r ^ " s«med as large as gUng slowly up the strait. Its lights. K » » knt «-. «t,o b . . . « MJ - ,„.„ Presque Isle Itself, and at first it ap gleaming now and then like Jewels,riwre, but no one knew of hU return ^ , But when she had l h e lit the lamp with fingers that• s e t * Mere MTte. and she was saold ^ ^ , w ^teT s h e c o a l d ( e e i the trembled, and the broad path of lichtand deaf that all she could do was g l o w g t e a j y n3O,,on a 3 u SWept on to- streamed out over the point. Batxffe'scook Pete's fish and sit out In the sun- w a n l L,,ke Huron. birds could By In safety tonight, andJltoe all day smoking In the kitchen ; A n d n o w c a m e the division of the below Landry Dubots held aloft a reddoorway. channel, aud Babette's heart almost scarf and told its story, even as lt Is

• When I-andry Dubols, from Algonac gtOpped Its frightened beating as she ; told today around tho Ulands of tbeWand, asked the question direct Pete tho u ght of what would happen if the stndt—the atory of Pete's Babette.smiled and shook his head, his dark g^, drifted north of Algonac island .»ye«, deep set in the small brown face, ! a n d o u t o n the great, pitiless waters of Township Committee Meeting,watching Babette build houses with t f l e iafce The monthly meeting of th« Chat-tbe red bark chips around the light- i with hushed breath she waited. The ham Township Committee was heldhouse steps. : fl^ w a t heaving so that she could on Wednesday. Chairman B. W. Bla-

"She has no one but me," he said, hardly retain her place, but at last the z'er presiding. The road overseerswith a dubious shrug of bis thin. , r i C 6 r r ests of Algonac showed on her presented their bills (or work done,stooped shoulders. "Babette, who art ieft> a n (j S D e knew she would pass St. which were ordered paid.thou. petite?" ! y i c n e i . with fingers stiffened by the Township Clerk ^ederick Maurer

Babette stopped playing long enough S c o i^ B^ untied the red scarf from notified the. committee that the roadto flash a merry glance at him under g^^t her head and let the wind blow overseers were not atteading to theirthe shelter of her thick brown hair. ' j t m e t flanger signal above her as duties in having bnisn, long grass,

-Pete'a Babctte," she laughed. g h e c a u g ht a glimpse of the lighthouse t*tc- removed from tue slues of theAnd so, all through the isles "of the o n t h e w e s t p i e r g o n e a r j t teemei r o a t l B i n conformity with the ordi-

•tralt, as far aa fit. Ignace and even , h e p l a c e d h e r ^ ^ t o h e r mouth and n a n c t ' Passed «»rl> in the summer,down to Macklnac, she was known as g n o u t e < i but her voice sounded like a a n d t h a t n e should refuse to issuePete's Babette. Pete taught her all . r e e d b i r d 'g ..ipe tn the noise of tbe an>' m o r e o r d e r s u n t i l t h i * w o r k w a s

• - - ' - "-•- ' done. Citizens complained of the fail-the town now. She u r e t 0 n a v e t n e w o r k d o n e a n d Put a11

the blame on the clerk. The commit-

manner of wonderful things In fish mahlnl waSersIon and ship craft, and before long Bhe g h e w a gknew all the boats that passed by

r o n W „ , t h e w a T e s b r e a k o n t h e pie r ,Isle, from the great iron kinga ; a n d y # t t h e r e w a s n o giga ot h e l p . tee took no actmn at this meetmg.

o f despera-to her feet and

Md gwln boau bound for Buffalo to i w , t h a r(.ar,esSne89the gay little yachts that fluttered likewhite butterflies here and there. Bat,

Ihf old m o n a ^ o f the*lrtJ°°wtS l^"^ZnZ wav^and Tri^Z s t a t l on for l he Purpo8e of la5in« t h e

the, came saUing uP the strait on a '^1 ^ h f i r e ' U a T e f back infran llf8t' H e a l so sa id t h a t

•till summer's eve, like wondrous

waved the «-arf wildly and suddenlyon the lighthouse c ( a ( . . ,. 6 ^ ^ . .

F'resident Linn stated that theboard was indebted to C. Edwin

the

muk OUUIUICI o c<c, u»c » » u m ™ ' alone thephantom ships, with the glory of the j j ^ . ^ j

toward town.

•onset behind, and ihe called themBabette's birds.

And tbe years passed by, ten ofthem, alow and sure and steady, OD»by one, as the wild geest fly to tbesouthland, and each one left Petebrowner and more wrinkled andsmaller, while Babette grew up talland slender and strong as a youngpine tree, with hair and eyes brownaa dry oak leaves. Then came the ter-rible winter of 18&4. when boat afterboat went out on the lakes and nomore was heard from them untilspring waves brought In the wreck-age. It was cold at the little, lowUOUJ* back of the lighthouse onPrr if|Jsle, colder than even Pete

ember, and every week ltfor blm to row down to' provisions.

• came home half frozeukeadful cough. Babette

. and said be should gooust make what food

ntll warmer weather,unshlne and fair was

low and gray likepstorni, and the waves

/g In, with a deep, heavysent a dull, threatening

# /at' they broke, up to the llgbt-_ j^s. And here and there in the*duk green waters could be seen some-thing else, a clumsy, vwaylng massthat glinted blue white.

•The Ice has come," Babette thoughtwhen she saw lt from the lighthousewindow one morning after she badtrimmed the lamp, and there was aqueer ache In her heart as she lookedoff down tbe strait and thought ofhow her birds would have to battlewith It, but she did not tell Pete.

It was three days later when MereMMe showed her tbe empty meal bag.She smiled. There were still baconand rice and dried fish. They wererich. At the end of the week there jwai no bacon, and they hod »aved the |last of the rice for Pete, who lay on jthe old louDge near the stove cough- jing, coughing all the time. i

The following day Pete was delirl-OUS. Babette stood in tbe old kitchen.looking from tbe flushed, wrinkledf«e« on the pillow to where MereSTrle knelt over by the stove praying.The provisions were gone. There waino HMdl'-lD«.

Babette took the fur Jacket from Itsnail- Before she went out of the kitch-en flhe leaned over the old half breedwoman'B bent form. "To St. Michel,"8l)« Mild slowly, pointing eastward and !tljen at the empty menl sack and flour :bag thrown In a corner. Mere M'rle junderstood and stopped hpr praying jlong enokgh to watch the strong, erect jyoung flfure pass down to the shore, ithe wlndplowtng tbe ends of her scarfbackward over ber shoulders like red

wings. t

Her haldB worked quickly over thelines ot he boat and, taking advan-tage of mmomentary lull, she pushedaway *wp t h e B m a I 1 ' tu>ml>le<J d o w n

pier nnd Srnck out bravelV for St. Ml-chol. Bb« bad often beeik nut withpete whet the waves were wi high asnow, and |b» loved tbe excAmont ofIt an. Tfc low, flat shore of%res<ni«

jn N o v e m b

Lacdry Dubois. He burst into s u j n g f

the warm back room at old Ume. Por-

nominationswould be made at the next meetingin November for officers for the en-

MARKET HALSEY

OUR MAIL ORDER SERVICE

Those who have never testedour mail order service have noconception of what a public bene-fit it is, or how we strive to pleasecustomers at a distance. Everymail or telephone ortler receives asprompt and eilicient attention as apersonal visit, and every order isintelligently attended to. Mail or'phone a trial order and see withwhat dispatch and care it is filled.

L. Bamberger $ Co., Newark

Newark's Greatest GroceryBv dint L.f h.r.l w. rk, 1.teaJ/ r . s / i h ^ . a \ supp'.y a \ cur patrons with

t h i v ; ry b^s1: of h )o j . : i i t l s pr'ciiv.1 •, w \\ \i im l t up tha hi^crest grocery

business in N. iv.uk— ik,-lv ;h> V\; . s 11 h • •- ' •, i-i any si i ; rb store.

In uiis r. at 1; OCZTV h • tni >; i >< ; • , c . i .A an i packed fruits, vegetables,

meats and d.'he u •?> ar.: sa I at in. !•: :.* i n . >.

We ciT.r a r r M , r u i iv of . s ' > c .uo^e from fha;i any other store.

W ! d iWe ro;isi cut!;: d ;;r : \v ! i t .W ;;A compel ; D \c ; s e i S.ui. is a :-aturi \vh:ch has r-rov.-n immensely

popu'ar. W ' nnk.1 app • z.n,' po .30 sil.i.1, bi'.ai bians, bakeJ macaroni andi h d I

;<j coiiveni.'nc: ai patrons desiring

v : tll'iJ.

pother wishes d • Iv.

C p . a i i s a •-! i a b i e s , re p n v ' i j J

t o gwt o r J . S .

M a i l ' i ; - ' . - p ! i ;>- . T . i r s - - ?

I

My-But It Looks Good

Makes CookingEasy"

Chas. T. Van Wert, Chatham

1

$3,800b u y s H|ilcii-

ll'ill Ill-Wi-iL'lit-nxiiu

IVHlll'IM'f IIICHATHAM

w Illi Htwuii licat, piM, electricli(,'lit, open lire, city water,iiiDiltrn Imtli. etc.Hplciidld tiiiiltt-rcoiiHtruclloiiIMTIC plot; H i fl« w 111 k H toHlutioii; live iiihiuti* walk.Will be rt-nly Nov. 1, I!K)».If you waul a (!<MMI |uo|icit.vat about what it coht, «U'|>along lively, an it w<ni't HUIIHIICIIIJ;.

Hotchkiss = JobsREALTY CO.,8UMMIT, N. J.

3O Church St., N Y

W . A. HELM,

AUCTIONEERyExcellent rc»iiltrt from all m

tHalcH. HatiHracll gTerniH reiuioimlilc. Drop me fccurd ami I will call. : '•

P. O. Address, CHATHAM, N. J

Verdant ValleyPrint Butter

Sold only in scaled packages.

Perfectly sanitary.

Put up from finest selection of Si ale (Teamenes

Delicately flavored.

Only obtained at

N. KELLEY ft SON.CHATHAM, N. J.

Try an Advertisement In this Paper.


Recommended