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1 ( f o a o f t b c r f s c r. ( N C O W l ' O K A T R D W T H W H C H s T H K C O A S T K C H O l VOL. X V, No. 22. BE.MAR, N. J., FRD AY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1909 THREE GENTS People Defeat Amendments Vote n Belmar W as Strongly Aganst Same CtUes of New Jerse voted Tuesday l a specal electon cy the Ave proposed amendment!! to the State Consttuton. Returns from varous sectons of the state showed an exceedngly lght vote snd t was thought tn poltcal crcles that the amendments would ether be defeated or fall because ofthe lack of a requste total vote. Trenton the state captol went heavy aganst the amendments. Democratc State Commttee had declared ts opposton to the ameqmcnts. All saloons throughout the State were closed for the day wth the excepton of Jersey Cty, Hoboken and North Hudson. Tba frst amendment proposed to take away chancery powers from county and crcut courts; the second and most mportant provded for a change n the Court of Pardons, pnkng t consst of the Governor and four ctzens 'apponted by hm. thrd provded for a sweepng change n the udcary, ncludng the abolton of the Court of Chancery and lay udges. fourth proposed to gve State Senators and Assemblymen a salary of $1,000 a year eah, nstead of $.500 as now.,. Tbe ffth amendment provded for the electon of Assemblymen by dstrcts nstead of by county, and for ncreasng the terms of electve offcers as follows: Governor, from three to four years; State Senators, from three to four years; Assemblymen, from one to two years; Sherff s of countes, from three to four yeors; Surrogates and County Clerks from fve to sx years. Governor Fort and the Bar Assocaton of New Jersey were advocates of the adopton of the changes. vote n Belmar tfas as follows Frst amendment, 13 for and 49 aganst. Second amendment, 13 for and 53 aganst- Thrd amendment, 19 for and 34 aganat. Fourth amendment, 14 for and 33 aganst. Ffth amendment, 14 for and 33 aganst. County Sunday-School * Conventon n Progress County Sdfcday-school Conventon season s now on. fevery county n the state holds ts annual Sunday-school conventon n the fall, begnnng wth Somerset, September 8, and endng wth Atlantc, November 5. General Secretary of the New Jersey Sunday-school Assocaton, RdV. E. Morrs Ferguson, of Newark, and the Elementary Superntendent, Mss Alce B. Hamln, wth a force of other workets, are attendng these conventons and report an ncreasng nterest n Sunday-school work and noteworthy progress, especally n the ntroducton of Graded Sunday-school lefsons n the lower departments. state conventon wll be held at East Orange, November 17-19, wth a program stronger than eyer presented and au attendance exceedng that of the ublee conventon at New Brunswck last year. A Remarkable Ofd Lady \frs. Cornela Cowles, who resdes wth her son, Wllam Cowles on the Mddletown road, s now on her nnety-sxth year, and s very actve, especally wkh her needle. Sewng wthout wearng glasses, her work showng skll and beauty. She took frstprse at the Red Bank Far fo1a qult of saw-tooth pattern, contanng twenty-tyv'e thousand peces, two thousand of whch are n the border. She had another beautful qult on exhbton, but havng taken the honors wth one, she could not wth the other. Mrs. Cowles has the appearance of one good for a cen- tury. Are Physcans Aware of Ths? ' physcans of ths State, accordng to a new law, must report to the local health offcer all patents sufferng from tuberculoss, under a penalty of $30 for neglect. health offcer on recevng the report must nvestgate the case and tdce measures to prevent the patent from communcatng the dsease to others. New Hosptal Patents Feter Messer of Allare, Augustus Maz- a of Long Branch, Hatte Trouer of Trenton, and Mrs. Florence Newman of Belmar are new patents at the Long. Branch hosptal. ce Cream Sanborn s pure ce crealm manufactured and delvered daly. Cottages suppled. Phone, 106 Belmar. NEW S OF T h e COUNTY AND STATK A Collecton of BHef tems of nterest (lathered From Here und re New Jersey Funeral drectors assocaton wll meet at Asbury Park next year. Mrs. Catherne M. Keller of Freehold ded recently o f cancer. She was 11 years old. Arthur rynr and Js*l>au(l played ther farewell concet at Asbury Park last Sunday evenng. Over 2,000 people were preaeut. C. S. Kepner of Asbury Park has sold hs ewelry store to George E. Moyer of Trenton. Mr. Moyer wll move to Asbury Park. Mrs. Maro Seller ded at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Peter Davson, at Glendola, last Wednesdays She was eghty years old. After the sunmer vacaton the Red Bank schools opened last week wth a total enrollment o f 1,081 or 96 more 'pupls than last year. re s a plan beng dscussed at Ocean Grove to move the fence and gales from the western boundary to the east of. Lawrence avenue so as to put that avenue outsde and make t a part of the state boulevard. Mrs. Matlda Snedeker, of Atlantc Hghlandswas 97 years old last week. She receved a shower of 43 postals from her chldren and grandchldren. A»few neghbors and frends were nvted to celebrate the event. John West has resgned hs petton of clerk at the Frst Natonal bank at Hghts- town whch he has held the past nne years, and has accepted thc poston as casher of the Frst Natonal bank of Passac. A new club has been organzed at Keyport to be known as the Jersey Central Tracton Tranmen s Club. offcers Elected are Thomas Ward, presdent : Jas. Barber, vce-presdent; JohnMason, tary. thrty-frst annual reunon o the Fourteenth Regment wll be celebrated at Keyport on Saturday, the 18th nst. Rev. Dr. B. Lppncott, of Ocean Grove, wll make the address. Snce the last reunon thrteen members of the regment have ded. Edwn Popper of Deal s about to have a new resdence erected n Jerome avenue. buldng wll be two and a half stores hgh and wll be 60 feet square. t wll be constructed at a cost of $30,000 and wll be of very elaborate archtecture. contract has been awarded to August Webber of Long Branch. Harry A. Bennett, son of H. Wallace Bennett of Red Bank, s actng as a hypnotc subect for Svengala, the hypnotst. Mr. Bennett s employed by a pano house as a demonstrator. Whle under hypnotc nfluence Bennett played on a pano n a New Brunswck show wndow last week twelve consecutve hours wthout food or water. When awakened from hs hypnotc state he sad he felt fne. Stenbach Company of Asbury Park has acqured the balance of the real estate adonng ther store on the blocks frontng on Cookman and Bangs avenues and t s sad wll enlarge ther already lure store to occupy all the block. Thc. propertes bought arc known ns formerly Doll.and Hetrck s, und they clanged hands a few weeks ago toa H. Jl. Ftch, who evdently was actng for. the- Stenbach Company. tt: Ja, 4.T County, School Tax Rate county tax rate ths year, as fguredby,tle County Board of Taxaton wll be.4423 per $100 valuaton,'-and thc slate scluyd tax rate wll be 96U per $100 valuaton. total valuaton of property for assessment purposes n Monmouth eountyhhs year s $89,288,285. Last year the total taxable assessment w m $86,547, Ths shows an. ncrease ol. $-2,731,- 906 over the assessment of last year. Every Resdent of the town ought to reud the home paper. s your name on the subscrpton lst of Coa>t Advertser. f not, you Should see that t s put there at once. subscrpton prce of Coast Advertser s only one dollar a year, and please place emphass on the "only. Communcaton Canddates For Fall Flecton poltcal stuaton h becomng nterestng and pettons and canddates afe plentful. A week ago t looked as though the Democrats would fnd no one to run aganst County Clerk Joseph McDermott for re-electon. Now there are three canddates n the feld, Free- hold, Red Bapk and, Long Branch each havng a favorte. Thomas V. Arrow- smth of Long Branch, son of the late E. W. Arrowsmth of Freehold, sa canddate, and a petton s beng crculated n hs behalf, Rulff V'. Lawrence of Freehold, who was the unsuccessful canddate last fall aganst Senator O. H. Brown, s out for the nomnaton as s Frederck Frck, propretor of Frck s Lyceum at Bed Bank. Assembly canddates lo date on the Democratc sle are Dr. W. W. Trout, of Sprng Lake; Harry G. Van Note, of Oakhurst; Davd Tantum, of Upper Freehold, and Wllam Curchn, of Far Haven. re yll be no opposton to the present Assemblymen, M. V. Poole, of West Long Branch; Peter Vreden- burgh, of Freehold and Joseph D. Bedle, -t-f Keyport. New Jersey to Get$l05,000 Four mllon dollars, approprated by Congress for the mlta, have been allotted among the several States and Terrtores by Leutenant Colonel E. M. Weaver of the general staff corps of the army, who s chef of the dvson of mlta at Washngton, p. C. Tle enlsted strength of the mlta as shown by tables prepared by Colonel Weaver s 109,761, and the allotments under varous heads nclude $1,472,930 for arms, equpment and. camp purposes, $490,730 for promoton of rfle practce, $628,561 for ammunton and $970,636 for supples. allotment gves New Jersey $105, 000; New York, $306,000; Connectcut, $66,000, and Pennsylvana, $75,000. Y. M. C. A. Roll Numbers 456,927 year book of the Young Men s Chrstan Assocaton of North Amerca, ust ssued, shows that the organzaton now ncludes 1,914 assocatons, wth 456,- 927 members a gan of 10,500 n twelve months. About 900,000 of the members are under twenty-one years of age, 63,000 are offcers or members of actve commt tees, 9-2,000 are students n bble classes and 47,000 are enrolled n the assocaton s nght schpolsor other educatonal work. V assocffeon s property holdngs are valued at $62,800,000, and the aggregate debt s only 7,100,00. yearly expenses, provded for by.membershp fees and contrbutons* are more than $7,600, Tabernacle Servces closng servces were held last Sabbath n the Tabernacle. attendance was unusually good for so late n the season. average attendance has been n advance of former years, and tbe servces have been very satsfactory and helpful, as evdenced by expressons of apprecaton on the part of the regular attendants. Next Sabbath the servces wll be resumed n the church, corner of Nnth enuc and E street:' Mornng preachng at 10.36; Sabbath school at 2.30 p. m.; Y. P. S. C. E. at 7 p. m. and the evenng preachng at * Trplets De Mrs. Gustav Seorg, of Red Bank gave brth.ttrplets on Tuesday nght of last' week, who lved but a short tme. re were two grls and one boy. y were bqrn prematurely by three months, and weghed between three and four pounds. y were ah named shortly after brth. Rosa ded at 6 o clock Wednesday mornng at the age of 8 hours. Matlda ded 20 hours after brth and Gustav lved 1 day aud 17 hours. To the Edtor Coast Advertser : Dear Sr. Voter and tax payers of beautful Belmar, what s tbe scheme' to supplant tle Hon. Coleman A.! Gbbs, from the offce of mayor of ths boroughs Why you could -not -sell a lot untl he bought hs ntercsrtfcre; how many has he employed, put money n crculaton, r* boomed the town? Fdelty to hs eon-. Do you need a new stove, range or. *. heater ths fall? We have the most com sttuents surely must be apprecated, plete stock along the coast/ Prces guar- Do not sell your brthrght for a mess of anteed to be the lowest. Taylor s depart-1 pottage. Look well npd thnk before you ment Store. cast the vote. What retarded the prosperty of the town n years post, dshon- wth trusted theves. See to t that no A New Two Cent Stam p A new two cent stamp wll be ssued by the Pbstofce Department to eommerao rate tle Hudson-Fulton Celebraton from September 25 to October 9. Ffty mllon of these stamps wll be ssued, and t s hoped to have them on sale by September 20th. One cent wll buy one Belmar vew. t brthday, comc, or any knd of post: card at Conover*, barber shop, 90* F St. S t.! carpetbagger fll the mportant offce.. ATax Payer for 20 Ye ATax Payer f Buy the Cotrt Advert serf any one or more persons nterested n Belmar.? prosperty desres nn nvestment n a small hotel, whch s sure to brng good returns, un opportunty s offered one who has had ample experence n such work would lke to have such a hotel n Belmar, f possble, where they are well known and can add much to ts future, by keepng a cood thng here, an nvestment of a few thousand dollars wll nsure a frst-class up-to-date hotel of moderate sze, somethng greatly needed n Belmar, a communcaton addressed to ths offce wll brng about an ntervew, A ll knds-of ABOUT EVERYBODY, POSSBLY YOl Chroncle of the Movements of Your Frends und Socety Generally That Mght nterest You Mr. and Mrs. C. Mortmer Cearman and famly of Newar have returned to that cty for the wnter. J. C. Bloom has returned to hs wnter home n Trenton. Mrs. John P. Grover has closed her summer cottage and returned to Newark. Mss Grace Bemuller has resumed her! poston as teacher n tbe publc school at Lakewood, N. J., Rev. N. A. Merrtt, r., has returned to Rahway. A report of the Frst Natonal Bank of Belmar appears n ths ssue. A euchre and dance wll be held n St. Rose s hall on Monday evenng, September 20, for the beneft ofsljaclwhurch. Some of the hotels are entertanng a few September patrons. Mss Louse Barclay of Newark has been vstng Mss Hazel Groves. noon Sunday mal at the postoffce wll be dscontnue after next Sunday. Mss Mame Steward has returned to Lakewood after a pleasant summer spent at the bome of her parents. Rev. Benamn J. Buttnghsusen has returned to Bloomfeld. * ' coal dealers are begnnng to wear ther usual fall smle. r Maxy Applegate, edtor of the Free hold nqurer was n Belmar yesterday. Several new desks were nstalled n the school buldng ths week. - Mss Jane Randolph of Newark has returned to tbat cty for the wnter. Mrs. W. Randolph and daughters have returned to ther home n Brooklyn after a pleasant summer n Belmar.. Dunfee s erectng a small house on F street next to the Volunteer Hook and Ladder company s house. Ernest F. Person has left Belmar for the wnter. Samuel Strudwck and famly have removed nto ther Seventh avenue dwellng. Don t fal to read our splendd artcle on the Hudson-Fulton celebraton that wll be found on page two. Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Cooper have returned from ther weddng trp spent at L?ke George, N. Y. and other places,, Happy Hour movng pcture theatre next to the postrtffce opened Satnr- day evenng. After spendng a pleasant summer n Belmar, George C. Brsterand andfamly have returned to Rahway. Percy Brown s erectng a house on 12th avenue. Patronze your local merchants f you want your town to grow. Among the seres of Meu You Kno.w whch have been appearng n the Asbury Park Press ths summer, was the pcture of. our borough'attorney, Aaron E. Johnston, n last Sunday s ssue ' of the Shore Press. movng pctures at Sanborn s pavlon closed for tle season last Frday. arrval of a nce bg boy has caused much oy n the bome of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Van Note. Mrs. C. H. Slayback las returned to Prnceton. L. K..Ungrch and famly and Mrs. Lous UAgrlen and chldren have returned to New York, for the wnter., funeral of Mrs. George Ksner last Frday afternoon was largely attended and the floral trbutes wer<<6 ndsome ad numerous. Rev. H. Rdgely Robnson, pastor of the Frst Methodst church of Red Bank, of whch the deceased was a member offcated. Bural was made $t Manasquan. Mss Else Mount s enoyng a vst n East Orange. Gentlemen s attenton s called to thc advertsement of Stenbach company on page eght. A large delegaton of members of Ocean Beach lodge, No. 86, K. of P. of Belmar, attended the meetng of Pearl lodge of Manasquan on Tuesday %evenng. ocosson was the presentaton of the charty altar to that lodge by Monmouth lodge of Asbury Park. Mss Merte Kng s vstng n Atlantc Cty. ss Mary and Patrca.Murphy were Trenton yesterday. Yacht Club Closes To-Morrow fnal rare between the' yachts Mldred and Offender for the Wnslow trophy, whch was to have taken place last Satur day on Shark rver was raled off at the last moment for some unknown reason. Two races had already l)e«p saled off be tween these boats for ths trophy and each boat had been credted wth a vctory, leavng the te to be saled off last Saturday. No more races wll be held by the dub ths year and to-morrow wll wtness ts closng day for ths season. le race wll go over. untl Aet mprovements For Avon Many plans are on foot for the further mprovement and development of Avon, our neghborng resort. 1Avon Property Owners assocaton wll render materal ad to the borough councl n efforts to secura a permanent openng pf the Shark rver nlet, and nterventon of the government and county offcals p r o curng the necessary appropraton for ths purpose. t has been demonstrated after J fathful experence, that nothng short uf a scentfc constructon at tle foot of Sh ark rver wll aval to keep the nlet open un4 free and the rver watesn a desrable condton. Between ten and ffteen new cottages wll be erected before the season of 1910, and substantal mprovements wll be made on the boardwalk. Found Nest Well Guarded Hall Hurley, of Greeuvlle, spent a lot.f tme last week searchng. for tbe nest of some of hs gunea/ who were eatng off hs substance ydrpersstng n hdng all ther eggs. After much frutless trouble he had to forget hs appette for eggs anu qut the search. About ths tme hs frend Charles Burdge came along and the search was renewed. At *la?t the men came across the nest well hdden n shrub-! bery, and coled comfortably about t was! a bg blacksnake. Thc reptle had evdently been lvng n luxury, for most of te eggs had teen eaten. N THE REAL ESTATE FELD ]Propertes W h k h Have kecently Changed Hands n Belmar and Vcnty Wllard J. Sterner, et ux. Belmar, to C. Arthur Newman. Ld. s. sd- 14th Ave. Belmar, $1. Sarah A. Moore, Freehold, to Mary A. Bloomsburg. Lot 836, Ocean Beach Ass n., Belmar, $1. Lucy M. Jones and WUSm A., her husband. Fast Orange, to Jula Schwartz. Ld. Belmar, lots 1210, 1211, 1*12, map Ocean Beach A**n., fl. Arvl Swanson, Behnar to Samuel Mehelsohn. Lots 18, 19, Block 9, map Belmar Park, ftelmar, $1. Trenton Far For 1909 All Space For exhbtors Sold New and Novel Attractons For the Mdway As the openng day of the.1909 Trenton far approaches there seems to be more than the ordnary nterest n the great exposton shown n former years, whch s due to the fact that t s generally known that Secretary Margerum and hs able assstant, Lews Randall, have made greater efforts ths year than eyer before. Three weeks before the openng, of the gates to the publc every foot ofxhbton space n connecton wth the far had been sold. A truly wonderful record! re wll be a small army of spacemen n attendance ths year, and the noveltes offered to far patrons wll be practcally ] Borough s Buldng Boom M any New Houses Now Beng Erected and Plans sand Estmates Beng Furnshed outlook for buldng operatons all along the coast are very promsng and Belmar, ns usual, s one of the leadng resorts n ths lne, both as to plans that have been drawn, others upon whch estmates are beng gven and buldngs that are beng erected at present. Qute a number of sales of property are n process of beng effected and many others arc lookng wth a vew of pur chasng before lv n g for ther wnter homes. No one can go astray n nvestng n Belmar realty as property t not gong up as a boom to collapse later, but t s steadly and surely advancng on sound, sane, busness foundatons and prncples. re are many propertes here, that, f purchased now means a rase almost double n value n tte next fve years. What they are and here they are to be found we refer you t6 the real estate agents to show you and those who advertse n our columns. One of the sure nvestments that yo,n should make before gong home s to nvest o/e dollar for a year s subscrpton to the C&ast Advertser, so as to keep posted n the news, bargans, etc. We have many testmones from ety folks that they read our paper the frst thng upon ts advent n ther homes, n preference to dozens of others awatng ther perusal and are always rewarded by some tems theren that are of nterest. Buy a lot or bouse for next year and subscrbe for the Coast Advertser and you wll be well ftted for what's ahead of you. Publc School Opened Monday l-arger Attendance ol Pupls on Roll Than on Any Prevous Day Belmar publc school Monday wth the largest pupls than on any prevous Many of the scholars wth tber new garment» seemed to be-ddghted to get bock agan wth ther old class mates and to see ther teacher's sweet face. Tbe school buldng has been thoroughly cleaned and aed and' presented a brght appearance. On account of such a large attendance th VStng capacty n many of the rooms s nsuffcent and the Second grade t beng taught n the chapel n rear of tbe Twelfth Avenue Baptst church. Wth such an elegant attendance and everythng n splendd condton, tbe new year ponts to be a very successful one. Followng s the faculty; E. E- Gage, Prncpal; Emly S. Moyer, seventh and eghth grades, Vce-Prncpal; Else Hof- fer, hgh school; Jenne Mller, sxth grade; Elzabeth Matthew', ffth gtade; Helen West, fourth grade; Martha Ackerman, thrd grade; Cyntha Osborn, second grade; Emma R Bryan, fnt grade and sub-prmary. New Y. M. C. A. Secretary Paul W. Garrett, the new secretary of the Y. M. C. A- n ths county, has entered upon hs dutes and wll wage au actve campagn n the nterest of thecounty work. central offce wll be contnued n Long Branch, where Secretary Garrett wll resde. Some Prze Wnners at Red Bank Far tvthout number. t wll be worth a vst to the far ust to look over the.hundreds f new notons the. fakrs wll offer for sale. Mdway, wll be a wonder, n tbe frst place, there, wll be thc old mll. What far-ever boasted of tbe old mll be- Mrs. F. C. DuBos of Belmar, exhbted fancy needlework small' table cover at Bed Bank far last week and took frst prze, a $10 whte wllow plume. Mrs. Wllam T. Sherman, formerly of [Freehold, took second prze for black chocolate* cake and frst prze, $5 gold [ pece, for best elly cake, John H. Van Mater of Freehold, took a &2 second prze foryeuow sweet potatoes fo r* What far except the Trenton far g (M SWKt, u ould ever succeed n securng such a fne (tocs ' - attracton for ts patrons. To sum up the ; Jo5eph s ;. Thompson look mdway of the Trenton far n a cw wore >, pr!e for fantal cock pgeon and s,e use 0f Commutaton tckets, and that the Sut For $20,000 Sat for t#mwo was brought but week aganst Dr. Rchard F. Boden formerly of Red Bank, for breach of promse by Mss Made Whte of Red Bank. Dr. Borden was held n $5,000 ball, whch wm afterward reduced to $2,000 by Judge Voorbees. Dr. Borden gave bal before Wllam Pntard of Red Bank, actng as.a supreme court commssoner. Dr. Borden was n busness as a dentst n Red Bank many years. Hs wfe ded a few years ago and he recently marred a f Ralroad Co. W ns Sut mproper Use of Commutaton Tcket* Causes Much Trouble By an nuncton ust ssued the Court of Chancer}- prohbts the mproper sale of monthly commutaton, and all forms of tckets ssued by the Central Ralroad of New Jersey, for the use of the orgnal purchaser* only, r Whle the nuncton s omnbus n effect t s drected specfcally aganst Tony Lusard, Alexander Lusard, Samuel Bothberg, Wllam Ferng and Jasper Cadmus of? Planfeld, and restrans them and "ther agents, servants and employees, and all other persons n the state of New Jersey, from sellng, hrng or otherwse transferrng all or any part of the sxty trp monthly commutaton tck- eta, or any other form of non-transferable tckets, or tckets lmted to tbe use of the person for whom tcket was purchased ssued by the Central Ralroad company of New Jersey, and feom solctng, encouragng or procurngnr permttng any person or persons other man the orgnal purchaser thereof or the persons ndcated on the face of such tckets, accordng to tbe contract thereon, to use, sad tckets or any part of them. above defend- ants were ordered to pay the costs of the sut brought by the- ralroad company amountng to over $200. t s understood that the ralroad com- pay wll -ssue a specal notce* to the pablc coverng the matter of mproper t honestly.be«m t M ; t wll to U.e fnr lhp hc He au(1 to{)k Secom, for lvng homer hen pgeon, and fourth scale and wth all Ue obectonable fea- tores cut wt, (of be t known that there G,. R udo lph receved frst pre wll be nothng at the Trenton fa,r lh " for tlll. btat.(.n d a r bred stallon, three vears old. dren. Secretary Margerum has seen to t that every avenue by whch obectonable- thngs mght get nto thc grounds has been safely guarded. O f course every one expects all of the old games ht the ngger on tbe head," the Jupanc ball game, rng; the canes, guess your weght, How much can you strked and the legon of other pastmes well known to all Trenton far pat- Fell From Buldng Whle puttng shngles on the roof of the new Smonson buldng whch s beng erected at the comer of Sxth avenue and D street, Edward Klenkanf, one ot the contractors, lost hs balance on Monday afternoon and fell several feet breakng hs rght wrst and recevng a severe shak-»nfc up-, FOR SALE CHEAP One depot carrage. 1 runabout, 1 set of double harness, 1 pony-cart anl harness. Apply to Joseph B. Rchardson, Nnth and Ocean aven- ue, Behnar. Smth's Lunch Room 903 F street, Belmar. Sea foods and lght lunches our specalty. "Heldu- brechtv famous ce ercaft wll be served. Famly and hotel trade solcted. Tele- phone 19 L Belraa G.* F. Red-of Tennent, got $15 as second prze for the cow producng the largest quantty of mlk n 9* hours. Some ofthe other prze wnners were: Horace G. Smth, E- H- Wharton, John G. Schanck, Mrs. Wllam Hoffman, Mrs. J. P. Brower, of Keyport. Jum ps From Tran When he found that the tran he had boarded for Deal Tuesday mornng, dd not stop at that place, Leon Antono, an talan, lvng at Asbury Park umped off the platform where be was standng landng on hs head near the Roseld avenue crossng layng-open hs scalp and breakng one orf hs wrsts. He was taken to the Long Branch hosptal n an automoble where t was found that hs condton,, whle serous, was not crtcal and he wll W. K. Fenn Census Supervsor offcals of the company expect to proceed aganst the persons dsobeyng the nuncton ust granted. Runaway Yesterday On Sxteenth Avenue! Yesterday afternoon at about 1 o'clock a horse attached to the delvery wagon of Y amall & Cov, grocers, of Bradley Beach, started on a dead rqm down Sxteenth avenue toward the ralroad. When wthn a few feet ot the ralroad the horse was stopped by specal offcer Myers, who was. rdng-down Sxteenth a vcnueon hs wheel. At frst he rode n front of the horse thnkng that the anmal mght become frghtened, but seeng that he slowed up none Myers umped from hs wheel and threw t asde and grabbed the rens as the horse passed hm. He was dragged several feet but succeeded n stoppng the anmal, whch, had he gone over tle ralroad would have probably been klled, as a freght was comng along at the tme and people who saw the horse runnng dokm tbe avenne waved ther hands to the drver thnkng be was n the wagon and unaware o f tbe approachng tran. drver of the wagm kndly thanked offcer Afyen for w > h. brave woa. and Fre n Lambert s thanked Wm. K. Fenn, of Ahbury Par been apponted supervsor of cer the thrd congressonal dstrct, comprses, Monmouth, Mddlesex Ocean comtes. Hs salary wll be 2,500; He wll have the selecton of * _ enumerators.from each electon dstrct On Wednesday evenngabo n the three countes, wbom he wll gve a slght fre was dscovered n the b nstructons and famsh wth blanks for Asher Lambert, who lve# at Fftt Oeean avenues. Buna were 1 Fred A g a O l to ld. the takng of the 1910 census. Tbe eaumersf of tbe census on Aprl S next. t 9 on to begn the talnap 1ctagntbrd b l next. ' m a a o w tt c

2 H l/d JO JVFVLTO rt CELEBBATO rt < = = = = = ( From September 25 to OcVbber 9, 1909, the State of New York, under the auspces of the Hudson-Fulton Celebraton Commsson, wll commemorate wth approprate exercses the 300th annversary of the dscovery of the Hudson Rver by Henry Hudson n 1609, and the 100th a nnversary of the successful nauguraton o f steam navgaton upon the same rver by Robert Fulton n plans for the celebraton have been formulated wth a vew to the HENRY HUDSON. nternatonal, natonal, nterstate,; State and local sgnfcance of the events to be commemorated. people of Holland, under royal auspces, have bult a reproducton of the H alf Moon, to be presented to the Commsson manned wth a crew n the costumes of the perod of NDANS WATCHNG THE HALF MOON SAL PAST 6PUYTEN DUYVL PONT. Rendezvous of Amercan and foregn vessels at New York. Fac-slme of Hudson's H alf Moon to enter the rlvor, be formally receved and take her place n lne. Facsm le of Fulton s Clermont to start from orgnal ste w th approprate exercses and take poston n lne. Vstng guests to dsembark and be offcally receved. Sunday, September 2fl. Commsson s of the opnon that n arrangng for the celebraton the people should not overlook the dvne gudance n the two great events to be commemorated, one of whch opened up onr State to modern cvlzaton and led to the foundng of the cty of New York, and the other of whch lad the foundaton for the vast commerce upon whch the prosperty of the cty and State so largely depends. t haa therefore set apart the day for relgous observances. Monday, September 27. Openngs of exhbts of pantngs, prnts, books, models, relcs. exhbtons at the Metropoltan Museum of Art and the Amercan Museum of Natural Hstory promse to be the most remarkable of the knd ever held ln ths country. Musc festvals wll be held n the evenng n each of the flve boroughs of the cty. On some day or days of ths week there wll be a remarkable exhbton of flyng machnes. New York W orld has offered a prze of $10,000 for the aeronaut who, wth a mechancally propelled arshp, sals over the course from New York to Albany traversed by Fulto n s frst steamboat n 1807,. D urng the week t a planned to of the Cty College, Carnege. Hall and the Opera House of the Brooklyn Academy of Musc, Wednesday, September 21). Wednesday, September 29, w lll be devqted to the dedcaton of parks Saturday, October 2. Saturday, October 2, s desgned for a general carnval day n New York Cty. New York dvson of the naval parade w ll return to ts startng pont. DSCOVERY OF THE HUDSON-VG NETTE OF HUDSON N LEFT HAND CORNER. and memorals along the Hudson Rver, and to general commemoratve exercses throughout the State. program for ths day also n* eludes aquatc sports on the Hudson R.ver. races on ths day wll be opposte Rversde Park, New York, and opposte Yonkers. Other features of Wednesday s program wlll be: A recepton to vstng guests at W est Pont durng the day, and an Henry Hudson. recepton of thb dstngushed delegaton, together. as t s hoped, wth shps and offcal representatves of foregn natons, wll m ark the nternatonal phase of the celebraton. Tbe Natonal Government wll be represented by the Federal troops, the Unted States navy and dstngushed cvl offcers. An nterstate partcpaton cannot be avoded when two commonwealths, lk e New York and New Jersey, have so much n common n ther geographcal, hstorcal, socal and commtffy clal relatons, and the appontment by Governor Hughes of flfteen dstngushed ctzens of New Jersey upon the Commsson, as well as the actvtes of New Jersey boards of tcade. ndcate that such partcpaton s n contemplaton. State-wde observance of the events has been provded for ln the preparatons for commemoratve exercses n all the unverstes, colleges, FRST TRP OF FULTON S CLERMONT. schools and learned socetes throughout the State. son Rver opposte Rversde Park, gushed guests *n the cty of New have upon a great float n the Hud- offcal bapaquet n honor of dstn n the Hudson Rver Valley every' New York, an ndan vllage, n and York n the evenng. county seat from Newburgh northward s preparng actvely for one tory of New York wll be enacted. Thursday, September 30. around whch scenes n the early hs day of local celebraton. Tuesday, September 28. On Thursday wll occur the m ltary parade, partcpated n by the n New York Cty and the Hudson Valley south o f Newburgh the features o f the celebraton promse to On Tuesday, September 28, there w ll be. an hstorcal parade n the Unted States Army, the Unted States make t unque n character and of cty of New York-. processon Navy and Marne Corps, the Natonal Guard and. the Naval Mlta. Ths lastng educatonal value. Saturday, September 25. observances w ll begn on Saturday, September 25, wth the followng features: General decoratons of publc and prvate dwellngs from New York to the head of the rver. w ll be composed of floats and movng tableaux representng the prncpal events n the hstory of the. cty and State. Ths parade may be repeated n Brooklyn on Frday, October 1. n the evenng the offcal lterary exercses wll be held n the Metropoltan Opera House, the great hall PROPOSED HENRY HUDSON MEMORAL BRDGE..NEW YORK Ads. Are Good Readng. A water at Versalles. France, named Goldschmdt, employed n a small cafe, was readng a newspaper recently over a customer s shoulder, n the manner pecular to garcons, when he notced the advertsement of a Lyons lawyer who was seekng a person of hs name. astonshed water wrote to the lawyer» d learned that snce 1891 a fortune of $600,000 had been awatng hm, Goldschmdt s uncle havng ded n Afrca and left hm hs entre fortune. m oral n ths s always read the advertsements, for they are news of the best knd. Fourth Es tate- Moscow's Beggars.! Of the beggars so characterstc o Russa's ancent captal a wrter says old cty of Moscow could not easly be dssocated from the 50.00C beggars who haunt ts streets. Th< cty belongs to them- f the cty ratt own the drans, they own the streets y are part of the cty; they are t perfect harmony wth lt. Take awa! the beggars and you destroy some- thng vtal. Some are so old an, weatherbattered that they make tb( K rem ln tself look older,and of thos<. who le a t the monastery doorb somt are so fearfully ptable n ther de crepttude that they lend power to th«churches. THE MUL1?. So you sold that mserable old O ut of ffs Depth. mule of yours? Two men were dscussng the troo. Yassr, repled Mr. Erastus Pnk- ble n nda, and each had a deal tc, ley; "fo h real money, say about ha noton of Hndu charac- Doesn't t wegh on your con* ter. y re such a bellcose set of scence 11 ex* th* other. a\sttrprlse. "1 ; W ell, boss, s done had dat mule on my m nd ao long, t s k nd of a relef to cbangfe off an gt hm on ray parade may contan as many aa 25,- 000 trpops. Frday, October 1. Frday, October 1, s devoted to the naval parade.and ncdental ceremones. t appears to be practcable for some of our naval vessels to proceed as far north as Newburgh Bay. t s planned to have aa many vessels of the *ftavy,» merchant marne, excurson boats and pleasure craft as possble go from New York to Newburgh,.takng wth them the facsmles of the H alf Moon and Clermont. As the processon passes up the rver salutes 'wll be fred from elgble ponts. memoral arch erected by the Daughters of the Revoluton at Stony Pont battlefeld wll bo dedcated on ths day.. Smultaneously wth the advance of the South Hudson dvson, t s proposed to have a counter-processon from Albany to Newburgh, the two dvsons meetng and holdng approprate ceremones at Newburgh. Here the Half Moon and Clermont w ll on the North Hudson dvson. An Uncrushable Toad. An experment was recently made n the clay testng department of a machnery company at BucyVus, Oho, n whch a toad was placed n a twenty ton brck press and was four tmes submtted to a pressure of 1.1, 000 pounds w thout nury. queston at sbue was whether such a pressure would kll the tod or Whether ts ablty to compress tself was suffcent to allow t to come n Newburgh Bay there wll be aquatc sports. n all the ctes ths wll be pecularly the chldren's day, devoted to fetes n publc and prvate parks and playgrounds. celebraton w ll culmnate n.new York Cty n the evenng wth a carnval parade. Ths feature, wth ts movng allegorcal tableaux partcpated n by all natonaltes represented n the ctes w ll, t s beleved, exceed n beauty and nterest the most famous carnvals of Europe. Brllancy wll be added to the general spectacle by the llum naton of the fleet and publc and prvate buldngs and a pyrotechnc dsplay. Dsplays of freworks at varous ponts, notably on the great brdges as n the fetes of the 14th of July n Pars, are n contemplaton. At 9 p. m. t s desgned to have a chan of sgnal fres from m ountan tops and other elgble ponts along the whole rver, lghted sm ultaneously. Begnnng Sunday, October 3. t s planned to devote the week begnnng Sunday, October 3, to celebratons n the communtes along out of tbe ordeal alve. toad the whch f played would make ad was frst placed n a lum p of granu- audence quckly fa de, and there lous clay and the whole pressed nto a brck. After the huge press had done ts work the sold brck was lfted from the machne and tho toad wnked Ub eyes contentedly, stretched ts legs a}d hopped away. Popular Mechancs. Lost of Mantanng Church. t cost the Methodst Epscopal Church about 128,000,000 a n nual for ts preachng and superntendence, ths ncludng about $600,00C that s pad to superannuated mns HUDSON MEMORAL STATUE, New York. Su&day 1 aper? 1 spent flve cents for Sunday Dart, and hauled t home n a two* wheeled cart; pled the Sectons ' upon the flbor, tll they reached as ; hgh as the ktchen door; hung the 2bromos upon the wall,, though there feasn t room to hang them all, and the yard was lttered some ten feet deep 1wth "comc sectons that madd me weep; and tberq were sectons of pnk and green, a w oman s sector and magazne, and sheets of musc were patterns for women s gowns and also for gentlemen s hand-medowns; and a false moustache and a rubber doll, and a deck of cards and a parasol.» Now men arp busy wth dr&y and cart a-baullng away Sunday Dart. W alt Mason, n the Empora Gazette. Manhattan's Dense Populaton. Manhattan s the most densely populated sland n the world. t has * populaton of 99,160 persons to tn souare m le -*- homfl week. Begnnng Sunday, October, such porton of the Lower Hudnon fleet as can contnue th? voyage to Troy, together wth the North Hudson fleet and the H alf Moon and Clermont, wllhbe subect to the arrangements of the Upper Hudson commttee of the Commsson. Monday, October 4, On Monday the naval parade wll be at Poughkeepse, the county seat of Dutchess County, and reman there durng the Poughkeepse ceremones. Tuemlay, October 5. On Tuesday the naval parade wll proceed to Kngston, the county seat of Ulster C6unty, whle sm lar exercses take place there, WedneNduy, October fl. On Wednesday, October 6, tho nft- ROBERT FULTON. val parade wll go to CatskU, the county seat of Greene County. Thursday, October 7. On Thursday, October 7, the fleet w ll contnue on to Hudson, whch s the county seat of Columba County, and s named after the great explorer. Frday, October 8. On Frday, the 8th, the flotlla wll advance to the captal of the commonwealth, the county seat of Albany County, and the oldest cty n the State. A statue of Peter Schuyler, the frst Mayor of Albany, haa been suggested as the permanent memoral bere. Saturday, October 0. n lke manner the rhval parade wll advance to Troy, the county seat HUDSON LANDNG ON MANHATTAN SLAND. of Rensselaer County, on Saturday, October 9, and form the nucleus of the celebraton there. THE HUDSbN RVER. great rver whch Hudson explored has had many names. t was called Cahohatea and Skanehtade Gahunda by the roquos, Mahcantuc or Mahcan rver by the Mohcan n dans, and Shatemuc by other n dans; Una Grandlssma Rvera by Verazzano (1524), whence Ro Grande, Rvere Grande and Grand Rver; Ro de San Antono or Rver of Sant Anthony by Gomez (1525); Ro de Gamas by the Spanard? ( ); Rver of the Moun the Upper Hudson. Ths w ll be somewhat n the nature of an old tans by Hudson (1609), or Montagne Rver on Dutch maps ( ); Rver MauhatteB by De Laet (1625), or Manhattans Rver ou Dutch maps ( ); Rver Maurtus or M aurts Rver from Maurce, Prnce of Orange, durng the Dutch qerlod; and the Noort Rver (Dutch perod) or North Rver (Englsh) to dstngush t from the South or Delaware Rver. Hudson s name has dsplaced al these except the N orth Rver, whch s appled n a lm ted way to that porton of the rver opposte the cty of New York. l H l M f t l H t l N l f f M H t PLA Y AND THE J BO Y. : W hy, we've done evethlng for Um," w ll be our frst ndgnant answer, f anybody asks what we have done for the Amercan Boy. Look at our schools and our colleges!1* W e have looked after the boy as an ndvdual possesson, perhaps, bu.t u n tl recently we have been ndfferent to hm as an Amercan nsttuton. We have cared for the blnd, the deaf, the truant, the feeble mnded and the A young man' who had money was ncorrgble. have had gymnasums, out n a rowboat wth three young amusements grounds and all women of the chorus. boat sud tbe luxures cvlzaton can devse, denly developed a leak. leak because ther needs b a appealed to ganed so rapdly th a t t requred vgour sympathes. Meanwhle, the boy orous ballng to keep the craft afloat wthout a handcap, the ordnary, vgorous, untl the young man could row every day boy, has been neg t ashoro. lected. Schools have been provded New York grl balled wth her for hm, but hs other needs have hat. St. Lous grl uqed he been gnored. Too often he has been hands. And the Chcago grl utlzed dened the nalenable rght of chldhood her slpper.- Cleveland Plan Dealer. the rght to play. W hen t s remembered th a t the "What Shall Dor* playground appeals to the boy n the That s the problem whcb frequently confronts everyone espe«formatve perod from chldhood to manhood, the magntude of our oblgaton s appartnt. t s a cvc oblgaton qte outsdo the doman of phlanthropy, snce t mproves the qualty of the ctzenshp of the future. playground s as much a cvlzed demand as the publc school, and lt should be conducted as.f t were of equal mportance. Well-drected play s of ust as much value as well-drected study. acceptance of the oblgaton to help the boy ln hs play w lll hasten the eradcaton of chld labor. W hen all the factores have poured forth ther workers-rglrls as well a? boys nto playgrounds, then, and not untl then, shall we be ustfed ln boastng of our Amercan cvlzaton. Delneator. twsted ends, and commonly dubbed Hudson Rver s very remarkable n several respects. n the frst sold by the Carlbs, says Lesle s a wfe catcher, s also made and place, for 150 mles of ts length t s Weekly. By slppng the hollow end not a true rver but a ford. From over a m an s fnger above the ont Albany to the ocean ts rock bottom wth the excepton of a few slands, s and pullng on the twsted end, the below Bea-leve. How far below, s! catcher w ll tghten around the fnger not accurately known. Opposte ard the captve w ll be unable to re- Storm K ng Mountan, where the engneers of the new aqueduct for sup ndans formerly employed ths devce lease hs hand. t s clamed that the plyng New York Cty wth water as a handcuff for prsoners, usng from the Catsklls hoped to buld a several for each hand, and leadng the tunnel under the rver, they have bored a thousand feet down nto the captves by the fngers. Few toursts drt and sand that fll the gorge under are permtted to leave Roseau wththe water and have not been ablo tc out a wfe catcher, for whch a sx- fnd rock bottom. shore lne at 1 pence s Wllngly exchanged. Albany s at practcally the same elevaton as the shore lne at New York, A Queer Old*Sentence. and the tde rses at Albany two and eght-tenths feet. Ths upward and! An odd udc a l sentence was downward flowng of the tde, ol brought to lght th e flther day from whch Hudson took advantage n hs a lot of musty old records of Ashe voyage, had, of course, long beer County, N. C. t was the formal notced by the ndans, who spoke ol udgm ent of convcton of one Carter the rver wth wonder as the stream W httngton on a charge of perury, that flowed both ways. and read: Fned ten pounds, and rver s also remarkable for the lad Carter W h ttn g stand n the ds pllsry for one hour, at the expraton ofa rhch tme both hs ears be cut off and entrely severed from hs head, and that hs ears so cut off be naled to the pllory and there to rem an u n tl the settng of the sun, and that the sherff of thb county carry the udgm ent mmedately nto executon and that the sad Carter W h ttngton be confned untl the fne and fees are pa d. ts great natural beauty. tngushed German surgeon, Dr. Adoll Lorenz, whle vstng on ts shores 1902, pronounced t more b t a u t l than the Rhne. Very Sagacous. A farmer had a very sagacous dog whch he had traned to count hs sheep as they passed through a partcular opened gate, aganst whch a ple of stones were placed for the dog's use. As each sheep passed through the dog placed one of the stones asde. One day, much to the farmer s surprse, he found the dog tryng to break a Btone n half, and on hmself countngthe flock he found there had been an addton u the nght of a lamb. Ped Ppng Pays. re a a man n London who can charm rats. He uses nothng but a lamp, a sort of wand, and a cage. Hs secret seems to le n the magc of hs voce, for no sooner does he begn to call than rats scamper toward hm from every drecton. He cleared Patt's Welsh castle and took fve burtflred n one warehouse n London n three nghts. At Cardff he earned 28 n ten days durng a plague Solder s Worst Enemy. A solder who takes part n a mll* tary campagn expects to face danger and perhaps to meet death. t s part of hs professon. bravery of men ln perl a well known. world s hstory s flled w th stores of herosm. No greater shame can come to a solder than to be proved gulty of cowardce. B ut dsease ts far more destructve n warfare than the enemy s bullets. deaths resultng from lt are al-- ways more numerous than those whch come drectly on the battlefeld As a matter of fact, the solders klled n fghtng are comparatvely few. t s always surprsng to dscover the great m ortalty wth whch dsease s charged. n the Cvl W ar, for example, where there were may hotly contested engagements, the loss n klled and n wounded dyng n hosptals was about 100,000. loss from dsease durng the war or mmedately followng t was three tmes as great. Santaton has made marked advances snce the Cvl W ar. t has gone far ahead snce the Spansh W ar. n case of another Amercan conflct many lves w ll be aaved because of ncreased knowledge of dsease and the methods of fghtng t. experments wth typhod serum have specal nterest because of ths consderaton. solders who submtted to the tests were n the lne of duty. f the study of ther cases gves the medcal staff of the army added ablty to cope wth typhod fever there w ll be a great gan. Taken w th other nvestgatons n the feld of medcal research, the ncdent s worthy of general attenton. Epdemcs of varous knds are fastlosng ther terrors. Chcago Trbune. W fe Catcher. As s customary wth ndans th«world over, the Carlbs are expert basket weavers, and many strong and! handsome baskets are to be bought : n Roseau at reasonable prces f one! fnds the rght shops. A pecular n-! strument, made of basket straw and woven closely together so a8 to form a hollow tube, endng n a thong ot London s Shortest Street. re can hardly be a shorter street n London than the one connectng P a ll Mall wth the southeastern corner of St. James Square, from whch the nam e John street has Just been removed. t has only one house, whch s No. 1; for though there are two other doors n the street, one s numbered as belongng to P a ll Mall, and the other s a sde entrance of a publc house. Presumably, therefore, the sngle house s now to be absorbed nto St. James' Bquare and the London drectory s to lose yet another of the slowly d m nshng total of John streets. Westmnster Gazette. Frederck the Great had tender feet fend used to have an old double who n new boots for hm. Gambolng W th the Lantw. How members o f the Lambs Club traveled 2736 mles, gave several performances each day and gathered n one hundred thousand dollars for ther now club house. s humorously told by E. W. Kemble n Harper s Weekly. Maclyn Arbuckle, as an endm an, M artlnettl as a coryphee, Raymond Htchcock as a 'coon, Charles Cleln and Mackaye as Rom an otlzons, and Belasco n the spot flght are among the llustratons whch the author contrbutes to ths entertanng artcle..cvc Characterstcs, d a ly parents wth small chldren. A lg h t llness treated at on6e often laves a long perod of sckness and expense sometmes prevents death. trouble a th a t so lew people can th n k on the nstant what treatment to apply, even f they have the knowledge necessary to recognze the dsease and know w hat smple remedes ad best To meet ths want at small expense the Book Publshng House, S 4 Leonard street, New York Cty, s sendng postpad a doctor book on recept of Btty cents n stamps. book s llustrated, contans 698 pages, explans symptoms, causes and smple means of overcomng ordnary llness'*. t was w rtten by the emnent J. H am lton Ayrea, A. M., M. D. t s a volume whch should be n every household, as n o ' one can tell what moment he may requre the knowledge t contans. Home o f Gloom. London Lancet lles n a horrd world where whatever s s wrong. A ll ts vsble unverse s fraught w th deadly and hdeous perl. t fnds terrble germ-menace n the cellulod collar button, cholera morbus? let us say, n a leather razor strop, sudden death n a blue shrt. W hatever s natural and pleasant and fam lar, that our contemporary holds to be fatal and can prove t. A correct Lancet man would lead a lfe-so thoronghly sterlzed that escape from t ln the bottom of the Thames would be the grandest oy n sght. Lancet s new fear that cheap transportaton by bus and car lne s pavng the way to a race of physcal weaklngs s relatvely sane and sensble. W alkng a m le s good for tbe botty, and most m en wll not do tg when they can rde for tuppence. Hence the relaton between tram cars and splndleshanks. B ut t ought to be.remembered th a t w alkng s not the only exercse n the world. re are men w ho w ll rde flve m les n a degenerate vehcle, only to dsm ount at the end and work them-, selves nto a lather a t tenns, golf or w bat not. A very large proporton of men are rather nterested ng themselves ft." f are m akng them flabby the out and walk. Moreover, m ust adm t that n.any men. pedestranlsm professonally are postmen, for nstance, mond Post Dspatch. Between Tmes. Look here, Jane, t seems to me th a t you re askng for more money all the tme. That s a deluson, John, dear. f you ll thnk a m nute, you'll realze th a t 'm spendng t, part of the tm e. Cleveland Leader. Se n s e a b o c t f o o d Facts About Food Worth Knowng. t s a seroub queston sometmes to know ust what to eat when a person s stomach s o u t of order, and most foods cause trouble. Grape-Nuts food can be taken at any tme wth the certanty that t w ll dgest. Actual experence o f people s valuable to any one nterested n foods. A Terre Haute woman wrtes: had suffered w th ndgeston for about four years, ever snce a t attack of typhod fever, and at tmes could eat nothng b ut the very lghtest food and then suffer such agony wth my stomach would wsh never had to eat anythng. was urged to try Grape-Nuts, and snce usng t (Jo not have to starve myself any more, but can eat t at any tme and feel nourshed and satsfed; dyspepsa s a thng of the past, and am now strong and well. My husband also had an experence wth Qrape-Nuts. H e was very weak nnd sckly n the sprng. Could not attend to hs work. He was put under the doctor s care, b ut medcne dd not seem to do hm any good untl he began to leave off ordnary food and tse Grape-Nuts. t was postvely surprsng to see the change n hm. He grew better rght Off, and naturally he has none but words of prase for Grape-Nuts. Our boy thnks he cannot eat a meal w thout Grape-Nuts, and he learns so fast at school that hs teacher and other scholars comment on t. am satsfed that lt s because of the great nourshng elements n Gape- Nuts. re s a Reason. t contans the phosphate of potabh from wheat and barley, whch combnes wth albumen to malfe the gray matter to dally refll tho bran and nerve centres. t b a pty th a t people do not know w hat to feed ther chldren. reare m any mothers who gve ther youngm sters almost any knd of food, a n f l when they become sck begn to p o u the medcne down them. real way s to stck to proper food and be healthy and get along w thout medcne and expense. Ever read the aboreletter? A ntm one appears from tm e to t

3 Feed For L re Stock. Every farmer who hat lve stock to feed sho uld com«ta touch wth cow peg A n d soy bonne ah often one or the other can be used to good advantage. Both plants are rch n proten and make excellent crops for supplementng carbonaceous foodstuffs, such a«corn. Farmers Home Journal. «, Use of Corn. Our most mportant stock feedng problem n the Unted States s the uobt proftable use of corn. Corn happens to be partcularly poor n m neral nutrm ent, especally so n calcum, the oxde of whch we know as lme. Our most proftable use of corn demands that we consder not only proted, but also mneral supplements. Tbe subect b of greatest mportance, as t relates to growng or m lkng anm als and also to t h W rased most largely on corn, namely, hogs and poultry. Farmers' Home Journal. Potted Berry Plants. Potted plants are largely advertsed every fall and are very nterestng to amateurs. Any one wbo has a tew small flower pots, two and a quarter or two and a *half nches, at hs dsposal, may grow these plants for amself. Tbe pots are bured ln tbe sol be- lde tbe frutng rows n the latter part of June or the frst of July. Each pot s flled wth sol), and a young trawberry plant, stll attached to the mother plant, s set nto tbe bured,pot. Plants so treated should form large, strong crowns by the last of August. y may then be severed from tbe mother plants and transplanted. B ulletn Massachusetts State Board of Agrculture. Cow s Coat. ft s an easy matter to #11 by the condton of a ow B coat n the wnter tm e whether she s gettng slage, ts ts succulence has tbe same effect an a cow's system that pasture grass aas, and t keeps her thrfty and n he best of condton for her every- Jay work. Slage b also more dgestble and nutrtous than the same t mount of dry feed. Another pont n ts favor s ts sonvenlence. W th slage ready for feedng every day n the year much lesselp s requred to care for the h e ra tb a n w ll be needed where t s necessary to cut or shred lodder ln the wnter tme. Ten to twenty mnutes a day w ll be all the tme ret r e d Jp get out the slage and feed the herd. Farmers Home Journal. Crows Kllng Chcks. Rhode sland Experment Staton has receved a number of reports wherfe crows have caused serloub losses to poultrymen. n one case twenty-fve per cent, of the chckens batched were destroyed by crows, all szes beng taken from the tme they were u s t hatched untl they were a pound n weght. Varous efforts were made to keep the crows away, most of whch were neffectual. frst was a scarecrow, next corn soaked n strychnne soluton was scattered bn a feld of planted corn at a lttle dstance from the chcken yard; thrd, a steel trap was set on a pole near the chcken yard, but w thout success. Fnally a whte twne was run on stakes around and across the chcken yard. ThB kept the :rows from the yard, but the small chcks would get out and fall prey to the crows. Ths beng neffectual, a crow was shot and hung on a pole near the chcken yard, after whch there was no.further trouble. ng lt eftects are makng the rch land more valuable and gvng back to tbe crop-worn tbe prceless elements of whch t has been n successve generatons despoled by a conscenceless husbandry. From Coburn s Book of Alfalfa. Crcumvent Sheep-Kllng Dogs. Our experence u the sheep busness for twenty-fve years, and lvng near a small town of nhabtants, wth plenty of ubelestt dogs, and near a ralroad staton where, often when a freght car door s opened from one t<sten dogs are let out, ln a strange neghborhood and no home, to make ther own lvng or starve, we naturally have lots of trouble wth sbeep-klllug dogs. One of the speakers at a farmers' nsttute n ths county a few years ago recommended to take a number of stcks about eghteen nches- fong, sharpened at both ends, and on one end put a pece of sausage about one nch long wth a lttle strychnne n t. Late n the evenng take these and stck them around the place and gather them up early the next m ornng, as ah effectual remedy. But ths s a very questonable practce that would not lke to follow. flrbt got a No. 25 shot No. 22 Wnchester rfle. 1 could ht them every tme, but the ball beng so small many of them got home and made trouble afterward. So resorted to a splendd hard shootng shotgun w th No. 4 shot wth much better resultb. B ut ths s a lttle tryng on the conscence f you do not actually catch them n tbe act. Ths s an age of woven wre fence, and a good flve foot, closely woven fence well anchored down and well A F o r c e N e w to S c e n c e. Tbe measurement of nerve force present one of the moat mysterous and perplexng problems n medcne. t s the meetng place of scence and occultsm, the ground on whch the occult contends successfully wth medcne and conquers t. Mystcs have long declared that the hum an body s surrounded by an aura, depcted n ancent llum natons over the heads of sants as the halo; many apparently reputable persons have declared these emanatons vsble to them, and that they vared 'Jn color or actually changed accordng to the possessng emotou. French Academy of Scence has nvestgated the propertes of the bometer, a lttle machne nvented for the purpose of measurng some unknown force gven off from the human body. machne conssts of a glass cylnder eght or ten nches long and flve to sx nches wde, closed at the top, and standng n a narrow crcular groove on a wooden stand. From the top of ths apparatus depends a sngle untwsted thread of cotton about lour nches long. lower end s carefully fastened to the exact mddle of a copper needle about three nches long, suspended from t horzontally, so as to move tn horzontal rotaton to rght or left wth perfect freedom. About one- thrd of an nch below ths s a crcular horzontal card, dvded nto 360 degrees, whch rests on a glass bob. bn havng an exteror dameter of two nches and restng tself upon the wooden stand. Ths glass bobbn bas been wrapped round wth alternate layers pf blottng paper and fne ron wre. result s to produce a moble needle that can rotate horzon- tally mmedately above a crcut! stapled up around the sheep pasture. \cat Jnt0 360 degreeg Varous other contrvances, such an the sthenometer, have been devsed, H o u s e h o lc l....w a t t e r s M NTON S EM NENT DOCTOR* AT Y O l l HEtVK E F t EE. A Hasty F rut Salad. For a hasty frut salad when fresh frut s not at hand open a can of peaches, dran lt and arrange the halves of the frut on lettuce leaves, sprnkle them wltb shredded almonds and a few cherres f they are at band, and dress them wth mayonnase f nuts and cherres are not at band the peaches are excellent alone ndanapols News. Lemon Sponge. Soak one ounce o f gelatne n a lnt of cold water for sx hours, then dssolve t over the flre. Add the tbn peel of two lemons, the straned Juce of three lemons and one-half pound of sugar. Let all boll two mnutes; stran lt and leave tll nearly cold. Beat the whtes of two eggs to a froth, add them to the elly and whsk all for ten mnutes, tll the mxture! becomes the consstency of sponge. Pour nto a mold and set on ce. Washngton Star. Not a Penny to Pay For tle Fullest Medcal Examnaton. f you are n doubt as to the cause ef your dsease rndll us a postal requestng a m edralexam natlonblank, whch you wlll fll out and return to us. Our doctors wll carefully dagnose your case, and f you can be cured you wll be told'so; f you cannot be cured you wll be told so You sre not oblgated to ub ln any way, f$r ths advce b absolutely free; you are at lberty to take our advce or not as you see ft. Send to-day for a medcal examnaton blank, fll out and Rulng Sprt Strong. nstances of tbe rulng passon strong lu death are very common. t s sad of Dr. Orne. the great Englsh composer, tbat he ded n th* mddle of a conversaton on some muscal W tter, tryng wth'hs last breath to sng a passage the meanng of whch he was too exhausted to explan. CONFESSONS OF A CLOWN. At Last, re s 00 Hale a Book Brmful ot Amercan Humor. Auy bookseller wll tell you that tbe constant quest of hs customers s for a book whch wll make me laugh. Tbe bookman s compelled to reply that the race of Amercan return to us as promptly as possble, humorsts bas run out and comc lt- and our emnent doctors wll dagnose 1enature B scarcer than funny plays your case thoroughly absolutely res. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sts., Phladelpha, Pa. W hle the seeds of the dorowa, an East Afrcan legumnous tree, are extensvely used for food, the pods and leave* form an excellent cement when mxed wth crushed stone. or, better, the whole farm; s as nearly effectual as anythng 1 have ever tred. Ths knd of a fence well looked after wll come as near obvatng tbe trouble as anythng have tred or can thnk of, and rd us of but all on the same general prncples. bometer conssts of a copper needle, th e sthenometer of a su»....a... Pended straw, both completely n- many of th t dl«egreeable thngs n close gla88 Posonous Plant nvestgaton. For several years the Forest Servce, n co-operaton wth the Bureau of P la n t ndustry, has been m akng posonous plant nvestgatons on the Natonal Forest whch have been of dstnct value to stockmen. annual loss from posonous plants n many localtes s qute heavy, and some ranges are becomng practcally useless on account of these plants; or f used, the losses by death are so heavy as to m aterally cut nto the profts of stock rasng. No general plan of rddng the range of these plants has yet been devsed, but t has been possble by close study to determne the partcular speces of plant responsble for tbe trouble** t s beleved tbat some of these posonous plants can be choked out by plantng certan aggressve grasses whch n tme wll take full possesson. Other plants lke the wld parsnp, whch s so fatal to cattle, grow to such a heght as to be easly seen and are not so numerous but that they can be completely eradcated by pullng them up by the roots. Alfalfa Wll Grow Everywhere. W hle experts have been declarng that alfalfa would only grow n certan sols and n certan clmates t has proved ts adaptablty to nearly all clmates and almost all sols. t produces wth a ranfall as scant as fourteen nches, and n the Gulf States flourshes wth sxty-fve nches. t gves crops at an elevaton of 8000 feet above sea level, and n Boutbern Calforna t grows below sea level to a heght of st feet or over, w th nne Cuttngs a year, aggregatng ten to twelve tons. An authentcated photograph n possesson of the wrter shows a wonderful alfalfa plant rased n the (rrgated) desert of Southern Calforna, sxty feet below sea level, that measured consderably more than ten feet n heght. Satsfactory crops are rased, but on lm ted areas as yet, n Vermont and Florda. New York has grown t for over 100 years n her clay and gravel; Nebraska grows ft n her western sand blls w thout plowng, as does Nevada on her sagebrush desert. depleted cotton sols of A labama and rch corn lnnds of llnos and Mssour each respond generously wth proftable yelds to the enterprsng farmer, whle vu accumulated ntrogen and the sub-solmany of the other remedes. J. A. E., ln the ndana farmer. Slo Constructon. A Canadan feeder of large experence bas ths to say on slo constructon n one of our Canadan exchanges: Do not on any consderatoa buld a square or oblong slo. Tbe walls of such a slo are not strong enough to stand the pressure caused by the great weght of the slage, and the am ount of Blage lost n the corners wll amount, ln a few years, to a consderable value. best shape s crcular. A slo should be more than twce as hg h as t s wde. Do not buld a slo too large n dameter, as the am ount of slage spoled from day to day w ll more tban pay tbe nterest on tbe cost of an extra smaller one. m an qualtes of a slo are that the walls shall be strong enough to wthstand tbe pressure and t shall be ar tght. To get ths the frst step s to buld a good, sold foundaton, commenced below the frost lne. Perhaps the smplest and easest style of%slo to be bult s tbe stave slo. Now, when the rght hand s advanced to w thn about one nch ol the cylnder, and there retaned from three to flve mnutes, no one else standng near, and the experlmente nether m ovng nor talkng, the nce- de s rotated.through twenty to sxty degrees, remans fxed for a tm e, and.then returns to tbe startng pont. 1 same occurs when the left hand s advanced. re s no possblty of lluson. t can be done wbethe the room be dark or lght, cold or hot, quet ornosy. H arper s Weekly. New Sea Supersttons. W th the advent of wreless telegraphy there has come a superstton that bad news may be warded off f the mast that s a part of the apparatus s patted thrce wth the palm of he hand. Go and ask the cook a seam an s nevtable reply to all rrelevant questons bas been elaborated n the last year to, Go and ask the cook B Bster, and Jt s related that Captan Turner, of the Lustana, went so far recently as to alter the t "should ~toe made from two J ttoe-honored reply to, "Co and abfe nch nftrrcw plank properly beveled and held together by strong ron bands. Btaves, after bevelng sn th a t when ftted together they wll form a crcle of the desred sze, ar< placed on end on a sold fouhdatoc and properly ftted. se are strengthened and held n place b ; strong ron hoops, whcb are so made tbat they may be tghtened or loos ened at w ll. Doors should be bult at ntervals from tbe top to the hotthe shp s cat. A mnster aboard shp has always been taken as a "Jonah sl gn' by sea- men. n recent years, however, th h superstton has been modlflad-ta a certan extent. A young mnster, the seamen beleve, wlll not brng as much of a Jonah w th hm as an. old one. Men of the salng vessels have always held th a t scrapng or scratchng the manmast would brng a long peton, so that thc slage may easly b.! rj a 01 f od wea,,er-» «>' huge modern steam vessels now smgot out. t s not necessary to put a roof on thb slo, but t s much to bf preferred. Ths style of the slo should be kept well panted, both n sde and out. f properly bult and taken care of a stave slo s durable rgd aud artght. Kssng the Brde. n the lttle R um anan town ol Helmagen an annual far s held on the feast of St. odore. Ou ths oc- cason the place swarms wth newly marred brdes from all the vllages n the dstrct; wdows who have taken fresh husbands reman at home. young women, n festve attre and generally attended by thel mothers-n-law, carry ugs of.w ne, enwreatbed wth flowers, n the hands. y kss every man they meet and afterward present the ugs to hs lpb for a n p. As be take* t he bestows a small g ft on tb brde. Not to take of the proffered, wne s regarded as an nsult to he and her famly. She s, therefore. reserved toward strangers and only ksses those whom she thnks lkely.to taste of her wne. kssng 1? carred on everywhere n the street n tbe taverns and n prvate houses. Chcago Dally NewB. larly beleve that scratchng a smokestack wth the fnger nal w ll nsure contnued far weather. One of the oldest sea supersttons has been connected wth the flyng of brds. f the brds flew hgh, that sgnfed good weather; f they skmmed the water, that meant bac weather. re s gradually spreadng among the seamen a superstton that f an anm al s aboard tbe vessel bad, weather may be deferred even f the brds are flyng close to the water f the head of the anm al s ponted aft and s held n that drecton for Bome tme. Harper :: Weekly. Plum s. Fresh and Preserved, W hle the fner varetes of plums make beautful dessert, belug rch and luscous of flavor, they are not qute so wholesome uncooked as ther next kn, the peach. When t comes to pcklng and preservng, plums can hold ther own every tme. frut s found n nearly every part of ths country, and the provdent housewfe feels that there s somethng decd- 1edly lackng f her Btore of preserves has not Us usual good supply of plum am, plum elly, plum cheese and plum conserve. For there are many delcous desserts to be made from plum s, fresh or canned. New York Telegram. Scrambled Eggs Wth Asparagus. Sx eggs, two heapng tablespoon* *uls butter, one gll of asparagus tps, two tablespoonfuls cream, salt, pepper, paprka and grate of nutmeg.! Bol the asparagus tp n bolng salt- ' ed water u n tl tender, dran well, put them n a saute pan wth one tab l spoonful of the butter, and saute over! the fre for flve mnutes. Break tbe, eggs n a basn, add tbe cream, sea- son wth a lttle salt, pnch of pepper, paprka and nutmeg; beat up well, put n a saucepan wth the remanng tablespoonful of butter, str over the fre for ten mnutes, then add the as- J paragus, str agan untl the eggs begn to set. Dsh up on a hot dsh, garnsh w th parsley and Berve hot. Sloes of cucumber n place of asparagus ponts w ll be found a nce change. /Npnch of sugar should be added when sauteng the cucumber. New York Press. Merngues. To each whte of egg allow two ounces of sugar. W hp whtes tll : on takng away the whsk tbe egg froth stands up n sold ponts or s so stff that t can be cut n two wtb a knfe. Stop beatng at once when ths pont s reached; str n two ounces of sugar to each whte of egg. Lay t n spoonsful on a bakng sheet rubbed all over wth whte wax. Dust them w th \ lttle cng sugar and leave them n an oven for two or three hours, or untl qute crsp and dry. oven should feel ust warm to the hand. f to be flled wth cream or am take them out of the oven before the bottoms are qute frm, press each of theae nto a hollow wth the back of a spoon, then return them to the oven, bottom sde uppermost ths tme, to dry them properly. When qute dry put asde to cool before fllng them.* se merngues can be kept f put n a tn. -Washngton Star. BABY HORRBLY BURNED By Bollng Grease -Skn All Came Off One Sde of Face and Head Thought Her Dsfgured For Lfe Used Cutcura: No Scar Left. My baby wm * besde the fender and we were preparng tbe breakfast when tbe fryng-pan full of bolng grease was upset and t went all over one sde of ber face and head. Some one wped the scald wth a towel, pullng the entffe akn off. We took her to a doctor. He tended her a week and gave me aome stuff to put on. But t all festered and*"! thought the baby was dsfgured for lfe. 1 used about three boxes of Cutcura Ontment and t was wonderful how t bealed. n about fve weeks t waa better and there wasn t a mark to tell where the scald had been. Her skn s ust lke velvet. Mra. Hare, 1 Henry St., South Shelds, Durham, England, March 22, Potter Drug t ( hem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cutcura Remedes, Boston, Mass. four famous Maelst rom whrlpool geographcal mles n dameter. A wde sale s therefore predcted for tlon. the 'Memors of Dan RJce," the Clown of Our Daddes, wrtten by M arla Ward Brown, a book guaranteed to make you roar wtb laughter. author presents to the publc a volume of the great ester s most pungent okes, comc harangues, caustc bts upon men and manners, lectures, anecdotes, sketches of adventure, orgnal songs and poetcal effusons; wse and wtty, serons, satrcal, and sentmental sayngs of the sawdust arena of other days. Old Dan Rce, as propretor of the famous "One Horse Show," was more of a natonal character than Artemus W ard, and tbls volume contans the humor whch made tbe naton laugh even whle tbe great Cvl War raged. Ths fascnatng book of 500 pages, beautfully llustrated, w ll be sent you postpad for by Book Publshng House, 134 Leonard street, New York. re are 821 medcal mssonares n nda, of whom 121 are men and 200 women. H H. Gbees s Sous, of Atlanta, Ga., are the only sueceaaful Dropsy Specalsts n the world. See ther lberal offer n advertsement n another column of ths paper. world experence* 30,000 earthquakes every year. AFTER DOCTORS FALED Lyda E. Pnkbam's Vegetable Compound Cured her. W ll mantle, Conn. For fve years suffered untold agony from femate trouble*, causng backache, rreguar. tes, dzzness and nervous pvostra- M t was mpossble for me ts walk u p s t a r s wthout stoppng on the way. tred three dfferent doctors and each told me somethng dfferent. receved no beneft from any of them, but seemed to suffer more. - last doctor sad noth- ng would restore. my health. began takng Lyda. Pnkham s Vegetable Compound to see wbat t would do. and aln restored to my natural health. Mrs. E tta xsxovak, Box m, W ll man tc, Conn. success of Lyda E. Pnkbam s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, s unparalleled. t may bs used wtb perfect confdence by women who suffer from dsplacements, nflammaton, ulceraton, fbrod tumors, rregulartes, perodc pans, backache, bearng-down feelng, flatulency, ndcaton, dzzneas, or nervous prostra- For thrty vears Lyda E- Pnkham s Vegetable Compound has been ths standard remedy for female la, and sufferng women owe t to themselves to at least gve ths medcne a tral. Proof s abundant that t has cured thousands of others, and why should t not cure yon? P U T N A M F A D E L E S S D Y E S sraar lag FOB NFORMATON AS TO LANDS N Naton's Garden Spot- SVfUraa along de Atlantc Coast Lne R A L B O A O ta V M Norh and South CwoBaa, Georga, Alabama aad Florda, wrte M W o r m s Caacsreta sre certanly fne. ***e a frend one when the doctor waa treatng b n for cancer ot the stomach. neat mornng be paased four pece*of s tape worm. He then got a twx and n three-dsys be paaaed a t m 45 tmm ons. t waa Sr. MVt FreclTaf Mllf r.burg. Dauphn Co.. Pa. am qute a worker for Casca- reta. uae them myaelfand Snd them benefcal for moat any daeaae cauaed by mpure blood." Chas. E. Condon. Lewston, Pa., (Mffln Co.) Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taate Good. Do Good. Never Scken.Weaken or Grpe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold ln bulk. Tbeceno- to«> tablet strmped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or you money back. tfzj Out of 1358 beggng letters receved n London by a chartable assocaton, eghty-seven per cent, were found to have come from swndlers, and of the remanng thrteen per cent, only fre per cent, were found to be really desttute. Secret of Meredth. setfret of George Meredth s mystery may perhaps le n the fact tbat never before has a wrter of such emnence partaken at one tme n so full a measure of the crtcal and the creatve faculty. Shakespeare knew ho1# to wrte a playf Arstotle knew how one ought to be wrtten; we shall rarely fnd n the study of any perod an author pre-emnent both as crtc and creator. That word whch s able to,, make flesh of abstract materal comes seldom from tbe mouth of the scentst, however fne and true be hs knowledge, potent bs voce or sturdy hs fath. W hat a monstrosty ndeed was that Frankensten, man created by the band of m an to scare the publc of a century ago! Nor could ever a workman, however curous hs art, make of any dry bones a Zagloba. Ths t s then whch marks George Meredth as unque among artsts: that beng frst a crtc of m an, he s n a secondary degree, and yet n a degree extraordnary, a creator of man. Atlantc Monthly. A dentst surgeon expresses the opnon n the Dundee Advertser that the chef cause of the ncrease of den- ta] troubles n recent years s that the bread now generally used s made from roller ground flour. Death from frght n the frst stages of ether and chloroform before conscousness s lost s best avoded by lettng the patent >old and nhale tf 0 stuff hmself. Mr*. Wnslow's Soothng Syrup for Chldren teethng soften* tbe gums, reduce* ftfufnmmtop.alayapaa.cur wnd colc.28c.abott«. smelter producton of lead n the Unted States n 1906 was 408,- 523 tons of 2000 pounds, aganst 442,015 tons n 1907 and 418, tons n N.Y. 87 Acrcahnral aad [m s s L t c w Tne loml D A A T f ll a Cream of Cathartc r 1. C aatoro l m M 0 Lnt TH* WOO*. M «artu'»u ;, Kmttm curt* Ookfs, Catarrh, Bay Fe»«r CAMBRNhttsRs: Fr" 'own. Oho- ' Free. Dr. A beautfully bound Postal Card Album ta fceld 800 eerde-~*tlm flm. lend S» eeata attd receve H poetal eard vew*, colored, of Calforna. tbe Eden ot Amenea and partcular) aa to bow yon can (et the A! boa F 1 E Everybody can got one E l D H d l M POSTAL CARD CO., SSC 1 * 8a. n a l way, L m Ang«U», C al. D R O P S Y d s c o v o t D u a r n UTUDU1 FEVB m «U M K M 0 THROAT DSEASES * preventve for other* LquA Shfe for brood mare, and a] otlen. Beat Care* the nek and acta en on te loupe. Safe! ; ao.d bottle: K and HO the doao. t8 0* *oofc kottk* STOffll M P C A t CO, Chemsts, COSHER, NDANA y# 1W z a r d Ol Actual Use s Best Test. G R E A T F O R P A N Athletcs ln Chna. Tbe Chnese have always ndulged n athletc exercseaof a sort, n whcb they have rather prded themselves, though.one ever seem to have taken such a hold on the naton as ours have on ub durng tbe last century or so. re are many stores of strong men capable of weldng extraordnary weapons, of bendng wondrous bows, or of lftng heavy weghts, etc. Even w thn the labt few years feats of archery were done before ar offcer could get hs commsson n th army, and n almost any vllage ther«s tt bamboo wth a perced stone al ether end to test the strength of the rsng generaton n lftng.: But tranng, except for a few wrestlers, perhaps, before foregners came. * Woman s Lfe. Golf Mader. grl a t tbe w lndo* saw her lover comng up the -Btepa sa fr hm slp saw hm carom kerflp kerflop back to the path below. "Heavens!** she cred, turnng pale. Regge has foosled bbapproacb!" Boston Tran* scrpt. Tbe frst pocket tmepeces wera called Nuremberg eggs, after tha cty of tber orgn. Skrt Tree. Before the advance of cvlzaton trees provded the prncpal artcles of clothng for nhabtants of tropcal regons. One of the best examples ol these trees s the Sack tree (Antars lnnoxa) of Ceylon. To obtan the bark of ths the tree s felled and cut nto sectons; these are submerged n stll water for several weeks for the purpose of rottng the bark, the latter beng then washed and pounded so as to separate the parenchymatous tssue from the closely nterwoven layer offlbres. Tbe bark s afterward dred and bleached, when t b ready for use n a fashon accordng to the fancy of the wearer. sectons of the bark may be cut so as to adapt t for ether a ready-made skrt, k lt or shrt. London Chroncle. Thrfty Chnese. W th ther wonted acute percepton of the possbltes of thngs, the Chnese have taken advantage of the ant-mosquto campagn n the French concesson to enrch themselves. One of the methods adopted to destroy the embryo nubanceb s to pour kerosene on tbe waters of the varous there was nothng of regular athletccreeks and pools, and as a consequence most of them now carry a surface coverng of ol. Chnese, who do not vew the work n the same lght as the foregner, have recently commenced skm m ng the creeks of the floatng o l and usng t for ther own purposes. Samese Weekly News. Tbe graat telescope of tbe Pars exposton of 19(10, whch was b ult at a cost of (150,000, s now offered for rale by the recever of the exposton at about one-tenth of ts cost. ts housng requre* a buldng 120 feel loag. To acqure a straght back remember to keep the abdomen n and tbe ; chest out.! Cold water dashed on the fce and chest each mornng gves\the same tonc effect as the cold plunge wthout! danger of shock. 1 W hen the skn becomes overheated, as t too often does n summer, try puttng a lttle bakng soda n the! water n whch you wash. Nothng releves the stng of mos-! quto btes or the ntense tchng of hves lke bathng n a weak soluton ; of carbolc acd and water. Learn to relax f you would be free of lnes n your face and cheat old age. Most of us keep ourselves at! tenson, mental and physcal.. f relaxng exercses w ll take the knks out of your face, relaxaton the knd beat suted to your taste w ll remove knks from your soul. { f you overbol potatoes, you can 1 dran off tbe water and dry them out J over the fpe. Afterward they can be mashed and beaten n the usual'way., A good furnture polbh may be { made of parafflne. ol and turpentne. Kerosene, too, s very good, whle crude ol may be used to darken wood that has not been varnshed. Dandruff arses from dfferent causes, but when t s very much n evdence t s usually a symptom of depleted roots and tbe scalp needs feedng wth grease or toncs.. - Brasses take a most beautful polsh f washed n a mxture made of one ounce of alum and a pnt of lye, boled together and used whle stll warm. W orn brooms or whsks may be dpped nto hot water and uneven edgeb trmmed wth shears. Tha makes the straws harder, and the trm m ng makes the broom almost as good aa new. Do not neglect the value of frut n mprovng the complexon. Nothng equals tbe uce of oranges and lemons to clear up skn and brghten eyes. latter must be dluted and taken wthout angar; a half-lemon to glass of water. A German physcan bae found germ-free horse or cattle serum an excellent applcaton for stoppng bleedng of the nose or hemorrhages n general. 2 5 c NEW STRENGTH F O R W OM EN'S BAD BACKS. W omen wbo suffer wtb backache, bearng down pan, dzzness and tbat constant dull, tred feelng, wll fnd comfort n the advce of Mrs. James T. A gbt, of 519 G o ld b o r o u g h St., Easton, Md., who says: My back was n a very bad way, and wben not panful was so weak t felt as f broken. A frend urged me to try Doan's Kdney Plls, whch dd, and they helped me from the s ta rt t made me feel lke a new woman, and soon was dong my work tbe same as ever." Sold hy a ll dealers. 60 cent* a box. Foster-Ml burn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Safety Razor B e tte r T h a n A n y ' a t H g h e r P r c e s Prce s That of a Toy, But the Razor s Beyond Comparson mo» R e a d W h a t a M a n o f E x p e r e n c e W r t e s o n t h e S u b e c t : Queenstown, Md., July 29, Book Publshng House, New York Gentlemen Permt t e to tay am delghted wth yoar Shrp Shavr Safety Razor at advertted n the Queenstown Newt. Have tred a ll the hgh prced safetes and prefer yours to a ll of them. Professor Upton T. Ranbow. Send 25 cents n stamps and receve postpad one ol these marvelous Safety Razors. Book Publshng House, 1S 4 L e o n a r d S t r e e t. *» e w V o r k C t y. Polceman n a Quandary, Jt s not all pleasure, the lfe of a country polceman, says the London Globe. Tbe guardan of Pgbury- scper-splosh's morals was observed the other d a y o be lookng careworn. L "W h at's the m atter? he echoed. n response to knd nqures. W hy, t s those three tramps 1 locked up [ ths mornng: y are kckng up a, row because they want to play brdge and can't fnd them fourth." Plan to Protect the Osprey. Brtsh Government has ssued a proclamaton prohbtng tbte capture or destructon of Goura pgeons and ospreys for tbe next fve years n Papua. No permt or lcense wll n future be ssued except to duly a«* credted agents of some recognsed zoologcal or other scentfc socety. Ths rule w ll materally curtal the future supply from Papua for coto- mercal purposes of that pretty artcle of headgear, the osprey feather, so hghly valued by women n all counrhe C h c k s D o n g W e l l 1 f N ot, Learn W hy f r o m a B o o k C oatng Less T han the V alu e o f O n e C hcken * Whether?on ruse Chcken* tor Sun or proft, you want to do t ntellgently hod get the beat result*. Tbe way to do' th* m to proft hy tbe experence of other*. W» offer a book tellng al yon need to know on the ubect a book wrtten by a who made hs lnng for 25 yc_ to experment and spend much for the BmaH nun of 25 CENTS n Rasng to learn PbulUT. and a tbat tune necemarl' bad to tbe b«*t way te coadact tbe baron t tals you how to Detect aad Car* for the Bn an nun of 25 CENTb m postage stamp*. t tals you bow te Detect ao l)ura*e, bow to Feed for Egp, 4«3 r to for Market, whch Fowl* to Save for ng Purposes, and ndeed about everythng yon most know on the subect to m SENT POSTPAD ON RECETT OF 25 CENTS N STAMPS. B O O K P U B L S H N G H O U S E. 134 L e o n a r d S t.. N. V. C ty. t s no use advertsng unless you have the Goods, and no use havng the Goods unless you advertse.

4 Coast Rflvertlser Measurng shoe qu«m«{lqh)r K.r«twl wtb whkfc U the Ooaat *>*»») Publshed Hvtry Frday at BELMAK, N. J. J, Q. M U RPHY Edtor and Publsher Vttbuaft «o a 710 Nnth Avea PfO fc 1uuu rtuu 'JfllUHf, N. J Entered as second t-la*s matter, Kabrtf' ary f, l!hw, at tho post offce at B> N.J., Under the Act of Congress uf M»r, S/*. Hubaortptlxu Hde One Y e a r... (Strctly u Advance) Sngle C o p y... ' refull)', you wll fnd that we lead for _ excellence and for cheap prces. best leather and the best workmanshp *»,00. are combned n these Shoes and the vety latest styles preval. Allsasand wdths 3 cents for men and boys at reasonable prces. N APPLCATON. Specal lners of Oxfords n black, tan and ADVERTSNG RATES ON russett for fall wear. We ll guarantee a especally has been neglected n tbe average publc schools crowded out as f of sm all mportance and students arc losng ground n tbe art. Every newspaper offce and publshng house CEMENT W OBK A SPECALTV Beware of Ontments for Catarrh that Contan Mercury aa tuercury wll purely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange he whole System sthen enterng t through he mucom surfste* Such artcles should never be used except 011 prescrptons from reputable physcans, *> the damage they wll do s ten fold to he good you can potmblv derve from then*. Hall s Ca larh lure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, O., contans 00 mercury, and s take< nternally, act ug drectly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. n buyng Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you gel he genune. t ts taken nternally and made n Tuledu, Oho, by F. J, Cheney & Co. Teetmon als free. Sold by Druggst*. Prce, 74c. per bottle. Take Hall'aTanly Plls for constpaton. WORK FOR SALORS WELFARE mmense Amount of Good Beng Accomplshed by "Baptst Bethel" of Boston. Mass. At tbe Baptst bethel on Hanover street, Boston, s a statue of a Jacktar whttled out by a salor. Although lt la lfe sze t s composed of Just AcoBmuBcatl-.t..ureuaeuettb. orotbee u matter to be *uaraut?<m proper nserton, *«H commtame nt. *~fl n do later (ban u<k>o ob Wwlueadty ot each week three peces of wood One makes the Al noueb» "f eftt rtalaaamta by churb#«head, body and an arm other s HWtl"'.41 w,. an admsson fee s W m. H. Hurley & Bro. arm ts made of two peces, for lt s charge 1. h 1»..!*. '<* of organzatons n cases of de«t. <n 11. > rs.or smlar readng HABERD ASH ERS rased so as to have the hand touchng the bat u salute. fgure looks matter trh,m n no* 1 o s rorm of general new wttlbachar.*, for f rateo fve cents per p ctb F F T B E L M A R, N. J. lne fc».-each ma tn *> y u / h s K c c as f t were bronze.ea Koruaa f.»ua«* Adfetser s a legal > O re also a a colossal leg of Chrstopher new9"*pn a> ucb ts th# proper medum Columbus, aald to have been lor a. le<*. uoke* Soma advertsements be-... loug u»» ta,.-, * ml* v llb man; others t s opto.a wt h U.e p oty nterexled aa to what broken from a statue and captured by Bonaparte's army. Thla was gven to psptrs an publun them. Tel. SS a representatve of the socety n tems of Local and Personal nterest nvted Hangng n the vestry of the church W A LLA CE G. HOOPER s the Lord s prayer, wrtten n 54 lan guages and never yet has a salor F R D A Y, SEPT. T, 1909 A r c h t e c t called at the Bethel who was unable to fnd the prayer n ha own tongue. n the man part of tbe church, facng the organ, s an ancent clock. Ths m onth brought about the openng of the publc schools of the coun B E L M A E - 1ST. J. Recently t was repared and the man P. O. Box 1236 who dd the work sad be had never 611 EGHTH AVE, try afd the chldren w ll soon be deep seen a clock lke t and that t must be several hundred years old. n study. changes n teachng Last year eght members of the methods n fft years have been al- Asbury Park Cement church ded and the youngest waa 68 most revolutonary whle the past ten yeara old and no one of the deceased had been a mem ter of the socety for or ffteen years have wtnessed great changes n gradng and the curculutn Sdewalks, Cellar Floors, Steps less than 25 years. re are several persons who have been members for as a whole. re was a tme that a Drveways, Patent Stable Floors upward ot 50 years. Last year 1,140 Bbles and Testa - scholar was consdered farly well ed- Offce, Room 8, Stenbach Bldg. ments were gven away and over 100 lbrares were loaned to shps. re ucated when the art of readng well, Corner Cookman Ave. and Man Street were 760 vsts to famles, 60 chldren w rtng planly, spellng correctly, and smplemnthwetc, had been mastered. ASBURY PARK, N. J. C. A. R O G ERS, Prop. were sent nto the country, over 2,000 garmenta were dstrbuted, 446 comfort bags were presented to sal n tln fa s h to know t al, Formerly wth the Standard Pavement ors and 70 barrels of provsons were r.l w..,.. Company and the New Jersey Cement gven away. Fve tons of lterature same of these H A M seem to CoX, r t o o Comp.nr of N.w.rc, N. J. were put on shpboard. have been sadly negw hfd. Spellng A. K. Wolverton»M ason and bulder*** partcularly s fndng t ncreasngly Concrete Work t General Jobbng 309 TENTH AVENUE dffcult to get employees who can Phone 33 L Belmar, N. J. spell correctly. n the days of spellng bees, and,... «. Subscrbe for aud advertse n the Coast the weekly spellng matches n the Advertser, schools, there was strfe for spellng honors, but that day has passed. best publc llustraton we have seen of the truth of the asserton that we George A. Webber Manufacturer of are educatng a generaton of poor, C l 0,, 0 * n " e a r t f t spellers, s n a test made the present year at Y ale college, a college rom whch we have the rg h t to expect the best. Two hundred and ffty students were requred to subm t essays on a certan subect. One of the professors Dumb Waters Poneer St. and Pennsylvana Avenue N ewasx, New J ebsey Long Dstance Telephone n exam nng these essays took ac-l count o f msspelled words and found Branch Offce mstakes u spellng n all but 2 5; tw o! o f these 25 were wrtten by Chnese students. re were 1237 cases of m sspellng n 171 essays. se Y ale students doubtless showed an 406 5th Ave., Belmar Phone 54 W 1. B.&.1.. Newman exceptonally good average by com-1 Cement Sdewalks and Curbng parson w th the average student o f to-day, but nevertheless clearly llus t O Box 942 H K M» A <(, N..» trate tbe tendency toward poor spell ng. f correct spellng should be made the test of scholarshp.for enterng preparatory schools and colleges, these schools w ould soon be boarded up for lack of pupls because our publc! No at Belmar. n tbe State of New Jerschools are neglectng spellng anl 1«ey. at the Close of buaneft*. Septem ber 1. 1!SK). are uot g raduatng pupls who can k e s o u r o e h. J..., Loans a n d dscounts BS pass an examnaton n spellng. Hd* 0.». HondB to Becm ecrculatlnu... S.OU 00! Premums on t. S. B onds ucators who prepare grades for com-1bonds, securtes e t c *s» 00 B ankng house, furnture a n d flxtures ld.ouo n mon schools, wll do ther country servce f they w ll nsst on g vng more tme n school to the rudmentary elements of educaton. t m ay l.e necessary t o drop some of the many subects now requred to be taken but that w ll not be a loss. O n ly a sm all or for other causes. Every effort seems now to be bent toward the H g h school grade, and n dong there s neglect n gettng that profcency n the basc elements of an educaton w hch both the graduate and the scholar who never reaches the hgh school stage, should attan. C A S T O R A For n&pt and Chldren. DmKndYouNate Always Bought Bears th» Sgnature of D fcport OF THE CONDTON OF THE Due from Natonal B ank* (not Ke- *ert«* Agents)... 3, Due from approved reserve agents... MUH3 41 Checks au d otter cash tem s Notes or other Natonal B anks 1, fractonal paper currency, nckels and cents LAw rc. Moskw Beskuve s bask, vz Spece... 30, Legal-tender notes...4, , Redempton fund wth U. 8. Treasurer 6p e rce n t. of c r c u la t o n... 1, REACHED THE RGHT PLACE Man Who Never Sad an Unknd Word About Anybody" Classed wth Hypocrtes. " late John R. Consldlne, aald a New York hotel man, "had a host of frends. Yet he was never afrad to speak bs mnd. He hated hypocrtes. W hen Consdne was managng Corbett so successfully happened to prase at a dnner a puglst he dls lked. sad: T h e re V a man who never sad an unknd word abquuanybody lu hs lfe. L* Mr. Consldlne laughed. He sad that such men always recalled to hm ra Slck. " ra Slck, he explaned, ded. After death he mounted the stars ot gold confdently, and he knocked wth confdence at the golden gate. But St. Peter, frownng heavly, stuck hs head out of the wcket and ponted down. 'So, very m uch. astonshed and paned, ra Slck descended to the lower regous. He came to a black gate from whch flames and sulphurous smoke spouted. A fend stood at the entrance, a fery trfdent uprght n hs hand lke a spear....w hat are you dong down here, ra Slck? demanded the fend. ' m sure don t know', sad ra, plantvely. 're must be Bome mstake. never n all my lfe sad an unknd word about anybody."...that s all rght, sad tfe fend, quckly. Step ths way, please. At the end of the bottom corrdor, next to the fre, you ll fnd the hypocrtes' cage. *" Why Skat s. Years ago n Germany the people Who played cards dvded the pctures nto three sectons, -the kngs queens and bauern (farmers) or what we now term the acks. Back as far as 1835 a lawyer of Altenburg, who was also a student of taroc, a card game of those tmes, conceved another game, whch s now called skat. n the new game he placed the bau ern or bowers above the royalty and t so pleased the farmng element at that tme that skat was adopted as the natonal game. t was only a short tme after the lawyer nvented the new game that tbe rebellon of 1849 took plaee and lt s qute rea sonable to suppose that the dea cf makng the bauern rule over tbe representatves of royalty appealed to thc growng sentment of the tmeb. percentage ot the publc school chldren ever reach, graduaton n the Cupltalstock pad n , LABLTES. ; a very heterogeneous lot, who have Surplus Fund... 23, found Europe too hot for them, and hgh school department. y drop' Undvded profts, less expenses abd t s a curous thng that the German taxes pad...'.... 5, out n the lower grades to go to work, Natonal Bank notes outstandng element seems to predomnate n ths Due to other Natonal Banks French force. Most of these Germans Due to Stale Bank and Banker*...1 Dvdends unpad... ndvdual deposts subect... to check... Demand certfcates of depost.. Certned c h e c k s.,,,... Casher's checks outstandng... Total... state or Nsw Jersey, 1 Cocmr or Monmouth,.. :'69,4flo et....1, <470,441 87, Robert O. Poole, Casher of the abovenamed bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement * true to the best ot my knowledge and belef. * ROBERT O. POOLE. Casher. Fbed. M. DAVfgOH, Notary Publc, [For N J. Correct Attest: D. L. KTTELL F. S- HUTCHNSON *. E. SEXTON Drectors. Subscrbe for and advertse n the Coast Advertser. «French Foregn Legon. Foregn Legon s composed ol 5,429 ts are deserters from ther own army, though n the Legon they soon flnd that t s even worse than an ordnary case of out of the fryng pan nto the ffe." loglon s now almost the only survval from the days when kngs and governments accepted the servlcle of foregn troopb, unless ndeed another nstance of the same knd s Yurnlshed by the pope s present Swss Guard. A Lmted Censorshp. What the censor cannot do s to gve a certfcate of approval lor the publc, ahd unless the publc approves! hs lcense s of no value at all. On the ether hand, he can deprve the J publc of the opportunty to approve, flnd n that power he s not a protecton, but a menace and a bar to managers. London Mage. CHERSHED VOLN A WRECK a d end gnomnous Fata Mat Wth by Muscan's Hghly Prled nstrum ent. After beng presented, bearng an nscrpton n letters of gold, 'to ts owner ou hs wnnng the frst prse at the Conservatore st tbe outset of hla career aud havng been played ou by blm day by day as be rose to a poston of some emnence n bs professon, a voln net wth a sad Hnd gnomnous fate performer left the voln at the house of one of hs pupls, whose mother gave a muscal recepton that evenng t was taken out of Ba case durng the yarty, ad mred by connosseurs and even played upon by amateurs. n t was forgotten aud lad down upon a char wthout beng pyt back nto ts cabe Unfortunately a stout and shortsghted guest dd not see t an Bat upon the voln. lady of the house. n despar, consulted the best authortea, but the most expert voln doctors faled to restore t to anythng lke a normal state of health nstrument was crushed beyond healng and can never recover owner sued the lady and has obtaned from the courts $100 damages and an order that the mortal remans of hs voln be handed over to hm. For, although the nstrument s dead, what la left of t nevertheless, as the trbunal feelngly observed, "consttutes for the plantff a precous me mento of bs frst successes." Pars Correspondent Loudon Telegraph. REFORMATON NOW THE AM 8ccsty No Longer Dtala wth Crmnals wth the dea Solely of Purshment. v n nearly all the large ctes there have been establshed courts for Juvenle offenders where treatment s gtven accordng to the ndvdual merts of cases and not accordng to the rgors of the law for adults. n some states adults are also treated n ths manner. We have gven up the old draconan sprt. A century ago there were about 100 crmes n England punshable by death. When t was proposed to rase the death penalty for theft from fve ahllllngs to ten t met wth the moat btter opposton n parlament and many men of supposed wsdom announced that tbe country was done for, property no longer safe and socety ncapable of carng for tself. We are now try. ng to treat crme n a twofold manner. To punsh the offender and to reform hm so that he w ll not prey upon the communty so soon as be regans bs freedom. Especally s ths necessary n the case* of chldren. We muat not gve, a dog a bad name, much less a potental ctzen. decson of the New York legslature s one that ought to be generally followed. W e need to learn a great deal about crmnology, a scence whch s ust now n ts nfancy. Artfcal Coffee" Factores. Accordng to the statstcs of * a 1 Pars paper whch has nvestgated the subect, there are no less than 106 factores n France for the manufacture of artfcal coffee. se factores turn out 24,000 tons annually, whle there are 568 such establshments n Austra-Hungary, ncludng 412 for the manufacture of coffee from tgs and n Germany nearly 15,000 hands are employed n ' the trade and the annual output s 100,000 tons. t follows that a large quantty. of coffee whch we drnk has not an atom of the real berry n t. lst of substances out of whch t s man- 1 ufactued s alarmng. Cereals soaked wth beer, brandy or rum, chestnuts and horse chestnuts, harcot beans and broad beans, carrots, dates and, fnally, the hard roe of the cod. annual output of what s charmngly called fancful coffee" for Europe s estmated at over 257,000 tons. Problem of Vagabondsm. What we shall do wth the derelcts s a great and ncreasng problem. t has not been settled satsfactorly n any great communty. An offcal statement recently ssued s to the effect that many thousands of former good workmen have become so enamored of a lfe of dleness durng the last 18 naonths that they refuse to return to work now that occason offers- We could wsh that the statement were untrue t s lamentable f t s correct. W hat every human beng needs s some stmulus, some mental food as well as a care for creature wants. actual necesstes of. lfe are few. comforts are ncreasngly expensve. t wll requre more wsdom than s, now avalable to establsh a system whch shall be wholly satsfactory, but t does seem as f we mght be 1 makng more progress. Skrt Tree. Before the advance, of cvlzaton trees proved the prncpal artcle of clothng ' for nhabtants of tropcal regons. One of the best examples of these trees s the "Sack tree (Antlars lnnoxa) of Ceylon To obtan the bark of ths the tree s felled and cut nto sectons; these are submerged n stll water for several weeks for the purpose of rottng the bark, the latter beng wabhed and pounded so as to separate the parenchymatous tsues from the closely nterwoven layers of fbers. bark la afterward dred and bleached, when t s ready for use n a fashon accordng to the fancy of the wearer. sectons of the bark may be cut so as to adapt t for ether a readymade skrt, klt or shrl Dull London. poet Gray would have agreed wth James t)ouglas. n thnkng you cannot be gay n London. " have been at London ths month, tbat tresome, dull place, where all people under 30 fnd so much amusement, he wrote to a frend. And Feldng makes Joseph Andrews say n a letter to Pamela, London s a bad place, and there s so lttle good fellowshp that the next door neghbors don t know one another. As Boswell amably re 1 marked: " have often amused myself wth thnkng how dfferent a place Umm ta to dfferent peopl,!" Church Notes St. Rosa's Church -Maaaaa 1 Sunday «, A, 0.00 a. ra. Holy days and ft rat Frday, 1.1& andtmm) a. m Weak days, 7.410: and 400 a. m. Benedcton, Sunday*, holy daya, frst Frday, M A p. n. Con fcssons, Saturdays, evenngs of holy days and frst Frday, 4.00 to C.oo and 7.91) to W.00 p. m. Week days, before ua»«. R n. Wm. J. M4C0sm.11. Pastor. St. Elsabeth's Church, Avon, N. J. Sunday masses, 0.30 aud lo.ou a. m. Benedcton, 4.00 p B n W s. J. McC o m k u, Pastor, Frst.Methodst Epscopal -Rev. E. Conner Hulse, pastor. Summer ached ule Preachng servces at a. m and? p. m. Junor Chrstan Endeavor t ) a. m. Sunday school 9.90 p. m. PrnyeJ meetng Wednesday 7.46 p. n. Presbyteran Church Corner Nnth avenue and E street. Rev. Charles Everett, D. D., pastor. Sabbath school at lo a. m. Preachng servce held n the Tabernacle, at 11 a. m. corner of Seventh avenue and A street. Y. P. S. C. E. at 7 p. m. and also the preachng at 7.30 n he church, corner w f Nnth avenue and E street. Twelfth Ave. Baptst. -TwelfthAVenue and F street. Rev. Thomas R.Gale, pastor. Preachng at l0:4&a. m. and 7:30 p.m. Bble school at t :90 p.m. Wed. nesday evenng prayer and conference at 7:30. Frst Baptst Nnth avenue and C street. Preachng servce at a. m..sunday-school at 3 p. tn. Preachng servce at 7.30 p. m. Rev. P. T. Morrs, B. D., pastor, Belmar Fre Alarm Boxes 3- Tenth avenue and F street. Thrd avenue and A street. 15 Ffth nnd Ocean avene.s. 34 Sxth avenue and F street. 36 Ffth avenue and C street..47 Seventh avenue and ) street 41 Fourteenth and Ocean avenues. 43r-Tenth avenue and A street. 44 Eghth avenue and A streets. 45 Tenth and Ocean avenues. 53 Fourteenth avenue and F street. 55 Twelfth and Rver avenues. Specal Taps general alarm. 9 taps, test alarm, : gven every evenng at 7.30 o clock. 1 ' tap, broken crcut. 9 taps, tre out, gven after lre s extngushed.. - Arrval and Departure of Malls At Belmar CLOSE FOB Phladelpha, Sooth and W est New York and all poots New York and all ponts Como, Sprng Lake, Sea G rt and Manasquan Phladelpha, South and W est New York and all ponts Phladelpha, Trenton, South, West New York and all pont* : ARRVALS 1BOM New York and all ponts Phladelpha, Trenton, South, West New York and all ponts Manasquan, Sprng Lake, Sea Grt and Como New York and all ponts... : 2.00 Sea Grt, Mflnasqua, Phladelpha and Trenton Phladelpha, Trenton, Sotth, West New York and all ponts... 6,46 W m. M. Bergen, P.M. Notce Coast Advertser w ll be pleased to receve tems such as engagements, weddngs, partes, euchres, teas, and Buch olher news o f personal nterest, wth the names of tho$e present. tems should be ndorsed wth the name and address of the sender not for publcaton, but as a matter of good fath. Keep posted on the dongs of Belmar by subscrbng for the Coast Advertser. D A Y S COOL, OPEN COLONNADE C E CREAM GARDEN 8 ee Yourself s n Pay's Convex Mrror Laugh and On >w" Fat Eat, ce Cream nnd (Jet Weghed AT DAY S GARDENS 219 Asbury Avenue ASBURY PARK and 48 Ptman Ave. OCgAN GROVE w. F. DAY fc BRO. CATERERS REAL K1TATH l ELEPHONf- 73 Money to Loan on Frst Mortgage n any Amount RANDOLPH ROSS, Jr. rst Natonal H anltb ulldlng, Beltnar, N. J. NUHANO NOTAHV U B.lt $ $ ) F R A N K E. E R V N G - D E A L E R N - - STAPLE AN TANCY GR0GCRCS N o P R O V S O N S, E T C F S T R E E T BEbMAR, NEW JERSEY Orders Called For and Promptly Delvered & P R N T E R S Hotel and Commercal work ol all knds. Note Heads, Envelopes, Cards, Bll Heads, Letter Heads, Programs, Crculars, Tckets, Posters n fact a n y th n g from a C alln g C ad to a Newspaper. - - * C O M P L E T E F A C L T E S F O R H E PROMPT SERV CE. C H E A P G O O D P R N T N G COAST ADVERTSER 710 Nnth Avenue - - ' - Blmat, /V. J. T S M W A ftc tlv U K ABANKACW N T DEPOSTORY So-called "luck s frequently nothng but hard common sense. Some rch men are sad to be lucky when really they have only been sensble, and saved nstead of spendng ther earnngs. Get the habt of bankng your,spare cash, and you wll never regret t. Bank wth us ard you wll easly earn your own ndependence and have the satsfacton of eeng your fortune grow. WE JfAX HOW S l m Y AMKBCAN BANKERS ASSOCATON' TRAVEL-. EBB CHECKS GEORGE E. ROGERS, Presdent ---- pffcer-s---- ROBERT G. POOLE, Casher F. S. HUTCHNSON. Vce Presdent [ H t H M M M H M B e la 1 C y c le E c l a g e 008 F ST. MET. FrFTH a n d S X T H AVES B e l m a h, N. J. SUNDRES AND SUPPLES B C V C L E S ( ( O U G H T, S O L D A N * K U H A N U ' B t K P A N O l l A L L T S K A.N G H E S Lawn Mowers Sharpened Cutlery Ground t Kg»8 ALL' WORK GUARANTEED W. H. R E Y N O L D S, P r o * _ ' ~ V,...'Jg5gs BURPEE S S E E P S G RO W AND WN M ORE P R Z E S than the producu of any other brand Besdes several Gold Medals, they won a Grand PH&. for vegetables at the St. Lous Exposton. N T f yon ntend to try Burpee's Seeds, we wll mal free our Complete Catalogue of 178 pages, wth beautful colored plates and llustratons from photographs taken at our famous Ford HOOK Farms, the largest Tral Grounds n Amerca Wrte TO-DAY W. ATLEE BURPEE CO., prrown; PHLADELPHU

5 Do Your Shoppng at C O O K S B E E H V E BUM O RELLY AT THE BAT Our Stock of Summer Merchandse h Complete. Pry Goods, Mllnery, Underwear, Hosery, Notons. Men s Furnshngs. Huts. Caps ladlex Suts, Skrts und Wasts. Extensve Lne of Men s und Hoy s d o t ) H R. Bathng Suts for Men, Women and Chldren. Shors for the entre famly. Trunk s Bars, aud Sutcases. House Furnshngs. Both need "rngng," but» t have nothng to do wth engagement h except thoae we make to do flrst-dass electrcal work. Th. we do n erery branch, and our work a hghly spoken of by all who ha?e patronzed u«. We nstall complete electrcal plant4 for lghtng, heatng or communcatng purposes, and our scale of charge* s admttedly reasonable. N a r c o t c. L E 0 N N E W M A N Electrcan and Dealer n Electrcal and Automoble Supples F F T H A V. G A R A G E Ffth Avenue and F St. BELMAK. N. J. Plumbng & Heatng TELEPHONE o W t*r<»t «3MM'«fnnl ta rtu. DR. TREAT RESDENT PHYSKAN, Sxth Av*aue ad 0 ptreet Offce ) 11 a. u to p m Hours: 7 t«> 8 p. u Tel. *» A. BELMAK. NEW JERSEY t ST.. BELMAR WM M. BERGEN. Proprety A A R O N E. JO H N S T O N, Couusellor - at- Law. Supreme G*ut Commsson*!, Holletor. Master, Specal Maler aud Examner n Otwncyry. Appleby Buldng, near R R Staton, Anbury Pak N J Telephone No 32aL Re-(deuce Upp R R. Staton, Peluar. N,J. L D W N P L O N Q B T H te T, A T T O S N K - S T - U l Man ua- lu UUaueery. Notary Publc. v>bc«.south St., below v>eoo<-». Uw»»»t»u Nee Jersey. OoUm Uoub (rompur tnadeand legal ouslneaa rauaacted lu all ts branches COR. MATTSON AVENUE AND MAN ST., A SBURY PARK COR. MAN AVE., AND PLORM PATHWAY, OCEAN OROVE CAPTAL, SURPLUS and PROFTS, $250,000 RESOURSES, $1,500,000 Founded on sound bankng prncples. Transacts a general bankng busness. All busness entrusted to us treated eou6denta!. ssues foregn and domestc drafts. Letters of credt. Bank money orders. S A FE D E P 0 9 T B O X E S A T S E A S O N A B L E P R C E S OFFCERS H esbt C. W vsoe, C. C. C.ayto-s, E dmcxp E. D avtov, J esse M not Presdent. Vce-Pres. Casher. Ass t-casher. FRANK M. M LLER, Assstant Casher. DRECTORS T. Frank Appleby, A. E. Ballard, C. C. Clayton, John Hubbbard,.Henry C. Wnsor. - ' B 6 R T Q N B R 9 S- G R O C E R S ' very best n Stsple and Fancy Groceres and all knds of table Delcaces carred n stock. - Strctly fresh county eggs and butter. Prompt delvery servce. Nnth Avenue and F St., Belmar, N. J. a aflaaaaaaaaaaaaauag aaaaa Q. W. W H P P L E. F A R M E R B U L D N G No P STREET near N N T H AVEN U E s Belmar Meat Market -Dealers n the--- Chocest Cty Dressed Meats, Poultry and Provsons M n n n n n flb x p p c c ' /9 V 9 '9 V 9 Law Offces EDWARD C WYCKOFF Rooms 8 and 9, Seacoast Bank Buldng Asbury Park, New Jersey Ttle Searchng a Specalty. / thahleh E. OOOK, V ATTORNEY At U tt. Solctor m Uuauuery. Notary Pu.lc. Noa. 10, 13, 16, Stebbach Buldng, Cook man and Man tt., Aebury Park, N.J. lf ll O H. CRKGO, LU JUSTCE OP THU PEACE. M U T A RV PU B L C ). HHHMSUMKtt O f ttmhm. BOROUGH RECORDER V Street, Belmar, N. J, C. & A. F. COTTRELL. A R C H T E C Y 3, o r n u 8 APPLEBY BUlLDUU, Telephone 114. ASBURY PARK, N. 4 U G U S T U S ECHHORN, ARCHTECT, Oreuge. N ew Jsraey R. FR ED T. HABERSTCK, D DENTST O-FCE Hocas 9 to h FRST N ATON AL fank BLDG. Nnth Ave. and F Street, Belmar, N. J. nggnaagggggna omnye m w M a r r y J. B o d n e U n d e r t a k e r a n d E m b a l m e r Telephone 94 W M A T T S O N A V E N U E Telephone 6 Asbury Park A s b u r y ' P a r k, N, J. Open Day and Nght. Prvate Ambulance to Hre at Reasonable Rates ;k b k c ]x c e g 3 R [ e : E g d m m n c n SAMUEL HABERSTCK Practcal Santary Plumber. Steam and (las Ftter T o Rootng nnd a l K ndg ot M etal W HEATER AND RANGE WORK <? Shop, tfoo F S T K E E T. - B E L M A K, N. J(, Phone 46 W Offce a ud Store, 07 F Street Kuchanon & Smock Lumber Co Lum ber, M llw ork SECOND, T H K D and B u ld e rs H a rd w a re, K A 1 L K O A D A V E N U E S, e a l u t e n»u,pll<n. E tc «*.. A N B U R Y P A R K, N. J. > C o n k ln, Local A g e n t, P. O, Box 4 6, B e lm a r, N. J, 1.. B e l m a r C a s n o.. ( m kg g*' U l m e mmt eomplfp*.wmtdlshment of ts knd on the Jersey Coast. # ) Hroad Vetaudas. M ectly on Shark Rver, at Ffth Avenue and F L Stwt, wth»t s* n -mvlevtel of the Ocean m Two Cafes, Casno, Ball Rooms, Pr- $ 2 vate Dnng Rooms, Evenng Dn- ) ( ners, Orchestra 1») Bllard and Pool Rooms/ New Bowlng Alleys tle Fnest n (le Slate, and Shuffle Boards A L L T H E P O P U L A R B R A N D S O P LQUORS, and CGARS; SODA W ATER, ETC, Boatng, Crabbng and FUhermcn'g Supples. G e o r g e G. T t u s ; D E A L E R N * C o a l, W o o d, H tay, F e e d C o r n e r S e v e n t h A v e n u e a n d F S t r e e t, T e l e p h o n e, 9 - w < B B L M A R N. } J ] M a ll O rd e r* G v e n S p e c a l A tte n to n. DR. s. T. SLOCUM, Tell Your Neghbors f you thnk the Coast Advertsef s a good paper, tell your neghbors. Perhaps they would thank you for dong so after they have seen a copy. Sample copy sent T M B T A B L B H U W M K / t / W U M A A * N e w J e r s e y C e n t r a l TRANS LEAVE BELMAR For New Vork, Newark Md Elsabeth va all ral «.05. «.«. J.14. 't.so, *10, (7.90 Newark and Elaabrll), 8A а. m.. «.»»,,1*9. 6.M, (8.97 Saturday! only), p. m. Sunday, 7.T, a. m.. б.15, 8.97 p. tn. Sandy Hook Route a. m 19.90,!.«, «.51 p. m., Sunday a. tn..*.s»p. n. 'New Yo* Only. : W. G. B u r n, Vce-Pres. u d G n l U p. W. C.H.n, G e n Pa»*. A ft S O U T H S D O P S H A R K R V 9 R R versde A ve. Betw een L a n d B ra r w ood A venue. B E L M A R, N E W J E R S E Y R h o d e s la n d C la u Bakes, B ay S de B ru s h B akes a n d - - Shore D n n e r s RESTAURANT A La C A R T E... C hoce m p o rte d a n d D om estc W n e s, L q u o rs a n d C gars. T elephone 4 4 M T H O M A S K E L T Y, P ro p n = Ttl. 22 A Gunco & Casa grande SrcctssoBS'to Sttv Doynmo S D E A L E R N s Specal Calforna Fruts. Vegetables 1 Hgh Grade Candles Cgars and Tobacco. Soft Drnks g Goods Delvered Free HS F ST. n*«<» eomce R E L M A R, N. J. lll!hhlhllllllllllnllllllllllllu H Hm H M n

6 Take pars of the pennes. advlae* h e Phladelpha Record, and latsr the pennes wll take care of you. Persa wll never know any real trouble*, asserts the Dayton News, u n tl the home team gets beaten more, frequently than t wns. One of the b lu e s t Jobs n lfe, con- feenefl the New York Press, s for a m an to love hla wfe about a m llonth part rh much as t sounded lu ther Jove letters. people need to be educated to the fact, cautons the Lousvlle Cou- rler-journal, that money spent for good roads s notmoney thrown away, whereas money spent for makeshft mprovements s worse than thrown away. publc schools of the Unted States are not perfect, and n many respects they have faled, admts the Chcago Regster; but they have rased ntellgence to a common level unknown ln the rural dstrcts of Englaud. S, When Jones Very submtted a poem, some changes were suggested whch Very obected to, on the ground that the poem was nspred by the Holy Sprt. Yes, aad Em erson, but the Holy Ghost never uses bad grammar." W hen she get three transverse wrnkles across th** forehead Bhe s twenty-seven, sad Dr. Jenne Lozer, speakng of women n the abstract, and when she gets two or three perpendcular wrnkles between the eyebrows she s forty-four. After that the deluge or the face doctor. n a recent number of the Pars Fgaro Marcel Prevost says some uncomplmentary thngs about the summer resorhotels n Europe. "Every tm e leave my house at ths tme of the year, he wrtes, 1 cast a melancholy, almobt affectonate, glance at tw o peces of furnture n my home the table and the bed. Not the w rtng, but the dnng, table, and the bed on whch sleep. se, he says, can be found nowhere n summer resort placeb as good as at home. n some places the table s excellent, but the beds are bad, and where the beds are good the table s poor. seaport to.wn of Great Yarmouth, n England, contans what s sad to be the narrowest street n the world, wrtes the Argonaut. t s known aa K tty Wtches Row, and ta greatest wdth s flfty-sx nches. ts entrance would serously n convenence a stout person tryng to pass throug t. Twenty-nne nches from w all to wall s all the room that can be spared n ths part. Yarmouth s a quant old town, contanng many. streets lke K tty Wtches Row. y are all called "rows, and are more pcturesque than convenent. A hundred and forty-seven of these narrow atreetb, of a length pf over seven m les n all, are to be found n the town. ' Bays the Phladelpha Record: Even the fellow who la left may feel that he has a perfect rght. A crtc. sayb the Chcago News, s a person who s unable to do a thng the way he thnks t ought to be done. Pennsylvana engneer who stopped hs tran to rescue a ktten asleep on the tracks s no doubt an obect of curous nterest to automo- blsts. declares the New York World. A troupe of New York varety actors whch nvaded Venezuela returned home desttute. ncdent s entrely credtable to the good sense and good taste of the Venezuelans, snarls the New Orleans Tlmes-'Demo* crat. Ths s a shrt sleeves and a shrt wast country, yet the decson of the Taft recepton commttee n New Orleans to dspense wth frock coats and hgh hats w ll provoke comment. Bouth, observes the New York World, has been the palladum of Amercan conservatsm n clothes. f lt s now doffng the tradtonal attre for formal occasons for "busness sutb" the revoluton may be regarded as com* plete. Remarkable dscoveres of the bones of prehstorc anmals have been made n theasphaltum beds near Hollywood, a Loa Angeles suburb. Los Angeles Academy of Scences has asked the cty to vote a small fund for excavaton. Among the skeletons of anmals already found are those of a gant sloth, sabre toothed tgers, a prehstorc loh. a gant camel and a large horse. skull of a htherto unknown buffalo was also found. Happness and harmony are not the sole ends of marrage, asservates Century. Surely home s home, to be kept nvolate even f t s not happy and harmonous; surely t does not follow that only coercon holds man aud wfe together, and yet coercon there must be, f that means the asserton and admnstraton of law, hum an and dvne. Surely permsson to separate "from bed and board s not to be confused wth dvorce from the bond. T H E L X V N G How lke the cty a unto the s«a*. ughtv waves of commerce breuks nnd beats n renter surges through the nosy streets, Swayed by the master tde of energy. How many derelcts, long morn to morn, Drft at the merry of wnd and wave flotsam and the etsam of the pave Deserted, rudderless, and tempoat-torn. Here move great argoses wth gold and bales, Stanch shps that dare the cunnng currents mght, And through ther long processon dart the lght, Swft pleasure craft wth sun-emblazoned sals. Yet, am 1 mnded only of one thng How much, how much these smlng waters drown. Dear God. what wrecks ths very (lay went down, Unhaled, unsgnalled, and unsgnallng! odosa Garrson. On the Dstant Prare. B y J. E. f c l B B K R D man dea Of rrgaton s to m ake ard lands fertle. attenda n t result has far greater nterest to the Unted States, asserts the Chcago Trbune. Por the chershed thought of a naton of home owners s gettng steady encouragement wherever ths w ork s beng pushed. word rrgaton s full of meanng to the people of certan of the Western States, ts hstory a told n stages. re s hopefulness as the proect s presented. re s development asts effects begn to appear. re s assured prosperty as the desert blossoms a* the rose. And the desert 13. blossomng, not for owners of vast areas, but for hundreds and thousands of ndvduals who are cafu lly cultvatng comparatvely small farms wth most satsfactory results. nvestgatons of mmgrant condtons around New York Cty have revealed some flagrant abuses whch newly arrved foregners suffer from those who are ther countrymen and should be ther frends. Numerous meats by whch the Bo-called m m grant homes and ad socetes extract money from the trustng foregner have been uncovered. Tbe nspector at New York, relates the New Haven Regster, has taken radcal acton, and Congress s expected at ts. next sesson to. follow t wth more general restrctons. mm grant $ at least to be protected from hs false frends, to the gan of socety fn general. Assertng that woman do%s not want hgher educaton, beng content to get along n socety wth "gossp and a ggg $or tw o, Dr. Sullvan, a St.. Lous educator, attrbutes the trouble to the fact that woman prefers to be admred "for what s on her rather than what s n her. But, contends the Pttsburg Dspatch, does not the good doctor go too far? f, as he mples, woman's besettng sn s the desre for the admraton of men, and she fnds she can gan t more easly by wearng becomng clothes than by spoutng the ologes, s the fault wholly hers? Should not J an equal or even greater censure be [ placed upon man, whose admraton lo co woefully msplaced? felf to every pont of tbfc compass. Emery's party made straght for home, and the grls took W lfred and Henry off wth them. Henry soon dscovered that Mlly was perfectly bewtchng. He also dscovered that to talk wth an unspolt, unconventonal prare lass was as easy and rsky as swmmng down a mll-race. He was told about the people they had seen and the dstance they had come and a lot more, and they soon got ahead of the others. "W here s your home? she sad. He knew at once that W lfred had kept hs counsel, but he lebtated for a moment before he repled n Derbyshre." That s very dfferent from ths place, sn't t? "Yes, very. You ve no hlls near here lke they have, and no fne mansons and bg estates." should love to see Epgland. thnk your father's* E nglsh, s he not? Henry sad. He came here long before we were born, but he knows England when any one talks about t. W lfred was not eorry when he saw Mlly and Henry stop. y were gettng on too well for hs peace of W e have no doubt, submts the Chrstan Regster, that suffrage for women wll preval to a much greater extent than s at present po ssbly Muncpal suffrage wll certanly granted to taxpayers, and n ma&y ways women wll become, more than tlfey are to-day, executve offcers n health departments and other placeb >r whch they are pecularly ftted, at the One great obstacle to the suc- of the suffragsts s, n our opn- u a, the employment of. wrong methods. persons to be convnced are not the men, not even the men who are legslators, but tho women who surround them and whom tbe men represent n legslaton. Every legslator s the centre of a group of women. A norm al group would consst of hs mother, two or three aunts, several cousns, hs wfe and.o,ne or two daughters. Now t s nconceva b le that, f each legslator went to h3 scat to serve aa a lawmaker wth u defnte knowledge tbat three- c.lrths of the women n bs fam ly group desred hm to vote for suffrage, suffrage would not be voted before the end of the next sesson. T h a t the m aorty of the women n the most o f thebe groups are ether ndfferent to suffrage or opposed to t s the one consderaton that affects t!be mnd of the average legslator; and makert hm stubborn n hs resstance. Let women convnce women, d the work a done. Lberal use of plan old-fashoned whtewash s urged n a bulletn ssued by the Chcago Santary Bureau. nspectors of workshops and tenements are ordered to nsst upon the use of "lm ew ash n dark basements and workshops. n addton to addng m aterally to the lght of the premses, t s declared an mportant ad n fghtng tuberculoss. "W hen made of only seventy grans of lme "H! H. there' H!" Henry Frankson shouted. Drat these rags, he murmured to hmself, as he looked hmself up and down and repeated, Drat these rags! But, rags or no rags, there was a m an on the horzon, and a man n the prare s precous. As we multply we cheapen. one man yonder was all Henry cared about, aud hs moment's annoyance was soon forgotten. He waved a handkerchef that once was whte Frantcally he waved t, shoutng agan and agan, H! H! H!" and begnnng to run. H alf an hour earler the prare had conveyed another shout to an unbounded soltude. W lfred Wld- Btnth had lounged aganst the doorpost of bs shanty, sngng snatches of old songs, tll a dreary sense of lonelness overcame hm, by no means for the frst tme. n he shouted at the hollow space, merely for the sake of bearng a human voce and breakng an ntolerable oppresson. frst enthusasm of the emgrant and buddng landowner had worn away, and he looked the very pcture of a bored man.» He turned nsde and lad r. plan meal on the old packng-case that dd duty for table and cupboard n one. B ut n that outlandsh place the heartache of the exle was too strong for appette. He rose off hs stool «nd stamped. "Ths won t do at a ll, * he exclamed; ll ust go mat. Better go JVer to.the Emery s for an hour and shake t off. Harvest was comng 5n, and, he would have to barter labor and machnery. Hs athletc strde along the level track soon made the shanty look smaller and smaller to hs backward glance. Em ery s farmstead lay sx mles.due west. On hs way the fantest of dstant sounds reached hs quck ears and arrested hm. He turned hmself n the drecton of St. W nton, and caught sght of Henry's mprovsed sgnal. t took each of them a Welsh mle or more to meet. W lfred was not one to turn a man off scurvly, but he took no lkng to Henry at frst. Apparently they were about the same age, and Henry spoke well, and Wlfred knew that where men are scarce clothes are of less account; but he found Henry's gloomy brow and snster eye so suspcous as half to neutralze hs obvous? anxety mnd, and he was feelng awkward to make a good mpresson. Stll, twtches at hs heart. He soon got there was a chance of companonshp, Mlly to hmself and drew her apart an educated man out at the elbows from the others. Mrs. Emery notced and beggng for work. He drected t, and nudged her husband the stranger to hs shanty, and re- \Vhat s Henry s home lk e? Mlly sumed hs walk to the Emery s. asked Once w thn sght of the, Em ery s hardly know, he was greeted by the welcome of the -He seems a nce fellow. should grls. Harvestng arrangements were thnk hs famly are nce." settled over the evenng meal, and "Oh, yes, he's tot a bad Bort, harvest antcpatons twnkled n the What brngs hm out here? And glances Alce and Maud gave W lfred, that's your sut he s wearng, sn t For the younger grls were free, as t yet, from that madenly reserve whch "M lly, he sad, laughng, "w hat was begnnng to mpose slken re- eyes you ve got! You d fnd the mss- etralnts on Mlly. ng nk. grlb all walked part of the "re's a mssng lnk n hs story, way back wth hm. n the sweet fancy. Do hs people know he's frankness prare lfe had bred n her, bere? Mlly asked hm f he would be com- " m afrad they don't, W lfred ng on Sunday fortnght, when the answered, begnnng to feel a bar- * Bshop would be at St. W nton, aud haran hmself under her sturdy ques- W lfred promptly decded that to t0ng travel over two sdes of a trangle to. How wrong and unknd of h m,» reach the town was, n gven creum- she exclamed wth a rng of decson stances, much better than a straght lhat fur,,r8ed hm. "Do you thnk so, M lly? Perhaps W hen he reached hs own place hs crcumslanceb ustfy cases some- frst mpresson of Frankson was ds- ;mes «agreeably confrmed. Tellow's. '..0h,t-B unubt lt-s cruel! To T n;h'-ave all who love hm pnng and ufferng to know what has become Notwthstandng hla hgh aplrlta oyer hll engagement, W lfred turned rudely remote and gruff durng hs evenng w alk hack wth Henry, who was at an utter loaa to dvne the cause. But aa evenng advanced W lfred grew worse, and the next day he was sullen as a bear. Henry bore hs absent-mndedness and slence for day*, tll patence w b b well-ngh spent. As they sat down sde by Bde after work On a bench outelde the shanty, H enry was n the mnd to ask W lfred whether he had gven offense or what was the matter wth hm anythng, ndeed, to end the gloomy stuaton. But*Henry got the thrust he meant to gve. For Wlfred blurted out suddenly and fercely that he d lke to know how Henry s mother felt about hb runnng away f.nd bdng hmself. Look here, Henry," he sad, ths can t go on. t s got to be settled. t s wrong and unknd, t s unust and cruel." W lfred, don t hurry me. Don t, please. can t tell yet." Ob. but you must. One tm e s as good as another to end t. W lfred, for pty s sake say no more, Henry pleaded. He swayed on hs seat. Duty confronted hm personal, peremptory, overwhelmng. Hs dstress, however, was restraned by surprse. W lfred suddenly rocked n hs seat, and then threw hm self forward, wth hs face bured n hs hands, and shook wth Bobs. " f you feel lke that about t suppose must gve way, Henry sad, or else must go ou the tram p agan." H s voce was hard and dry. Don t go, W lfred answered. m a brute. My folks are n the dark, too. By a common mpulse both men sat up, lookng straght before them, nether darng for awhle to speak, whle each battled wth the tempest of. feelngs that surged n hm and tred to calm hmself. A lght came nto Henry s face that banshed, once for all. the cloud whch caubed u n easy suspcons. sooner t s done, the better," he sad. y rose smultaneously and entered the shanty together and wrote. n whle the twlght deepened and tbe stars looked down upon X H E HUMOROUSreSft OP THNGS. What we call a sense of humor a a curona H R E E peces of-yarn made from ne fleece of Mary's lttle lamb have ust been sold at aucton, brngng $6, $7.75 and $4.50, respectvely. Even consderng what the tarff s dong to the prce of yarn, these fgures muat be regarded as trbutes to the personal qualtes of the lamb. However, there are other relcs fully as authentc. Bds may be sent n for: One crumpled horn, once worn by a cow of achevement. Also, for the horn of the lttle Boy Blue, wth a photographc record of the note t ddu t blow, owng to the nopportune nap the lad took, whle devastaton ravshed the corn shoe n whch the.elderly female once lved. Jack s beanpole, now well seasoned. R nd from the bacon made of the pg stolen by the pper s son. penny for lack of whch Smple Smon faled to acqure the wares of the peman. A number of others th a t appeal to sentment and are as deservng as Mary s pet. Phladelpha Ledger. 1 f A combned Dansh and French scentfc expedton w ll vst the Dansh West ndes n an endeavor to determne the part played by blood-suck- ug nsecta n the spreadng of leprosy. A Swedsh geologst has explaned to hb government the reason for hs predcton.that all the world s supply of ron w ll be exhausted n ffty years. Lttle more than one-tenth of the deposts, says, are n the Unted States. 0 * A remarkable Operaton on a dog was made the subect of a scentfc demonstraton at a meetng of t.he Berln Medcal Socety last week. Dr. Unger, a Berln surgeon, showed how ten days before he had removed the dog s kdneys, substtutng those of another dog. dog seemed to have completely recovered. W hat s sad to be an mportant dscovery n the gla~s ndustry has been made by Mr, Ltte, w hch wll tend to revolutonze the art of grndng glass. grnder whch he has dscovered s made from one-half best Portland cement and one-half Blca sand. n ths stone there are no soft or hard spotb and t wll grnd glass w thout scratchng. coat of the grndstone s about ten per cent, that of the common grndstone, p ' w n a recent paper W. $. Gray states that the manufacture of tn plates orgnated n Bohema, hammered ron plates havng been coated wth tn n th a t country some tm e before the year Tn plate m akng was ntroduced nto E ngland fro m Saxony n 1665, and the frst tn plate factory n France was establshed n Tn plates were frst made on a commercal bass ln the Unted StateB at Pttsburg n # Ths. potable success of wreless t e le g h y n procurng speedy assstance for shps n dstress-at sea n spte of fog and dstance, best ex* emplfled by the cases of the Republc aud the vernla, caused an applcatpn for lower nsurance rates for vessels equpped wth wreless apparatus to be proposed for the nternatonal marne nsurance congress a t Baden. Success of the applcaton should he m utually benefcal, both effectng a savng n nsurance cost to shpowners and extendng the use ef the latter. nay ft s rather ader t qute rare. Some t** upon a pn, Provded t's somebody you re not nter* t a funny when the gold brck man deludes a trustng aoul And leaves ha cropa n pawn aad puts Us famly n a hole. t s funny when small chldren eat frut and cakes and pe And suffer pan though could nevs t s laughable to see a man n moat thngs brave and strong Break down and seen qute helpless when affecton s hopes go wrong. t's funny when some man n whom the publc placed t* trust Gets o and makes aslly splurge wth t s funny when you stand for hours as on the cars you rde; t a fanny when bg %utos have explosons When you note the tmely topc and the gay satrc flng,» re s no doubt a sense of humor s a very curous thng. Washngton Star. PEPPER D D ES. 5> 1 and fve grans of gat to a gallon of water t has proved a power, the bulletn says, "of k llng germs on dry surfaces. W hen used, on such surfaces t possesses both a chemcal and mechancal acton, kllng germs and bactera by the frst and sealng them n by the other. Tbe resdents of Western ctes do not seem to apprecate the value of trees, as d a those o f Eastern ctes, affrms the St. Joseph Gazette. Nothng adds more to a resdental cty than a showng of lordly elms or poplars lnng ts streets. W hat more pleasant, durng these torrd summer days, than to st under the shade of a frendly tree, ether at home or n the yard of a neghbor? Some householders, of course, apprecate tbe value of trees, not alone as a means of beautfyng one s premses, but as a protecton aganst the heat of summer and the s to m a o f wnter, and gve proper attenton to the matter of growng them. great mass ot our Western people, however, pay b ut lttle attenton to ths hghly mportant matter, and for ths reason few of our ctes are well provded wth trees. pelled hm to say he thought he had no work for hm. " really th n k, he sad. " had better not take on a man tll have had tme to get t all under crops. am sorry to dsappont you, but must " Must not fnsh that sentence, Henry thought, and broke t off unceremonously, wth undsgused anxety and quverng eagerness n hs plea for work. Wlfred was sure of the man's educaton now, and asked hm bluntly, ' W hat brngs you here n such a pckle?" Henry's eyes mostened as the two looked each other n the face. You needn't be afrad of me. * * * You won t fnd me a rotten bargan. * 'll work. * My record sn't Just Shut u p, W lfred repled; "Eay no more; man. don t want secrets. Many a fellow comes here to pul) hm self together.. W ell, ve begun, so ll make a clean breast of t. Perhaps t s better. got a bt w ld, n wth a bad lot, and my mother was cut up about t. *My father gave t me. rather warm, and vowed w ouldn t go home. ve been out a year and got no regular work. Do your folks know where you are? Wffred asked, wth strange, eager wstfulness. No, not yet. Softly, wearly, W lfred sad: Do you th n k they re worryng about y o u? W th downcast eyes, hs foot chafed th e ground before he added Look here, old man, m sorry for you. Come and get nto somethng decent; my tbngs'll ft you. "D o you want me to tell them? Henry ablted. Servce was over at St. W nto n on the Sunday of the Bshop's vst, and the congregaton was scatterng t' hm! But perhaps he was cut up, ashamed, you know, and wanted to 1ull hmself tqgether. should thnk 1! means to tell them some day." c.,1'" "Oh, W lfred, she sad, farfpy hdng from hs mother! ll be bound she's frettng her heart o u t! "But suppose he had worred them ard upset them. "1 should thnk that would make th*!m want hm all the more. should, f were hs sster. t s ust lke the Bshop sad about lovng the lo-t and conscence m akng them coward's. Wlfred was losng hold of hmself through an embarrassment too great to conceal. She looked at hm anxously. "M lly. he sad, don t, let ub talk about Henry now. re are plenty of naughty boyb. dreadfully want to know somethng. "Do you? she sad- W hat B t? want to know whether you can love a naughty boy? he answered, tenderly, puttng out hs hand. Full thrty paces they walked sde by sde n slence* durng whch he took her hand and held t fast. A t frst she went, pale, then a rosy flush brghtened her cheeks and lps, and the sunshne of her bou made prsms of the dewdrops n her eyes. Hs ardor was aflame and gave hm confdence. M dearest, he sad, can you love : e?" do, she answered. He saw that ths rest of the party were well n front, and there, on the open prare, be put ha arm round her neck and they sealed ther compact of love. You shall have a keepsake, darlng, ln memory of to-day. And you ahall choose your ow n, he sad, before he released her. the prare they walked fve mles to St. W nton to post ther letters, and fve mles back, feelng how. n due confesson, fetters loosen and restrants dssolve. y reached home whstlng the songs of Englsh boyhood. Harvest was over and the farmers bad begun ther preparatons for the hard wnter. W lfred strolled out wth Mlly, whle Henry entertaned the rest ndoors wth stores of E n g land and merry songs. "M lly, dear, W lfred sad, do you love a naughty lad enough to forgve.h m?" "Forgve, W lfred? ve nothng to forgve unless forgave you for! wastng yourself on a prare grl." You don t know, dear, what you! say.. You told me was wrong and unknd, unust and cruel. W lfred! Never! couldn t, Y ou re m staken. Not a bt of t, my love. You dd 1 not know you reproached me w he you sad that about Henry." She hung her head bashfully and sad nothng. Forgve me, M lly." he pleaded, my name's not W lldsm th." Hs fath n her was fully ustfed, and hs taste of forgveness was very sweet. When he told her he was the son of Sr Horace Welbourne, he told her»lso that he had a secret that she should share. For what at frst was only a surmse had become so near a certanty that he felt sure he mght menton t to the ears of one who w ts so deeply, concerned. Mlly Em ery," he sad. m ust postve you are the granddaughter of my father s old frend and neghbor, Sr Augustus Emery, and your father s hs long-lost son. and f next week s post doesn t throw these two farms nto the market, you may forbd me ever to prophesy agan. London Sunday-School Tmes. A certan lterary and dplom atc frend of ours took part n a pepper duel at a foregn restaurant. He was provoked to the contenton by the quantty of stm ulatng condment that a stranger across the table ndulged n. stranger sprnkled an unconsconable quantty of red pepper upon hs food, and proceeded to devour t, to the wonder and adm raton of onlookerb. reupon wth studed nonchalance the Amer- can swallowed an mmense pece of chll pepper. n the stranger add- ed more red pepper;'then the Amercan another larger slce, covered w th cayenne, and so on, tll t seemed as f both would explode, w hle the other dners looked on aghast. the Amercan fnally wnnng out wth a prodgous dose defyng an emulaton. Some of the large natons o f E u rope seem to be engaged at the present moment u a sort of pepper duel, each plng up Dreadnoughts and taxes to thc rtm o st of endurance, whle the rest of the world looks on, wonderng whch naton w ll be able to do tself the greatest nternal n ury before the duel ends n actual war or a genune peace. From an E dtoral n the Century. "C ould you learn to love m ev r "W e ll, m y teachers say m brghter thanmobt pupls. Cleveland Leader. Lawyer "A fter the defendant left you, what dd you do n the nterm?'* Wtness "W asn t n any nterm. We was n the stable. Baltmore Amercas. Tommy "P op, w hat s m eant by the mother tongue? Tommy s Pop -"Sh-h-h, m y boy! Don t get her started. Phladelpha Record. Two a. m. By the slent phone She wated wth a frown. Suddenly he called her up And teen (he called hm down. Harvard Lampoon. Patrolm an sw fe "Does your nusband eat frul n the m ornng?" Roundsm an s W fe fto; he's, only on duty n the evenng. Yonkers Statesman. Our Quzzng Frend "P nky, over there, says he ffods ths a great place to clean the cobwebs o u t o t h s bran. O ur F a Frend Sort of ft vacuum cleaner. Judge. Tommy "Tell us a fary tale. - Guest Once h man who had a baby th a t d dn t cry and a dog th a t ddn t bte went ;to lve n a suburb w thout mosqutoes. H arper s Bazar. # "W ere you ever n love?" asked the sweet young thng. "N o, repled the bachelor, but you can t menton any other fashonable dsease th a t 1. haven't had. Dtrot Free Press. "H e says he s your frend for lfe.. Says you loaned hm $50. "So dd. B ut he s not my frend for lfe. propose to ask hm for t next pay, day. Lousvlle Courler-Journal. "T hat lady looked at you as f she knew you. "Yes, repled the gentleman who had been named as fendant at Soux Falls and Reno, "s h e X r s my mother-n-law twce removed. ' Chcago Record-Herald. Md pleasures and palaces. Though we may roam," When tne stomach s empty * re s no place lke home." Lte. He "D o you remember the nght proposed to you? She "Yes,, d.ear/ He We sat for an hour and you never opened your m outh. She "Yes, remember, dear. He "A h, that wab the happest hour of m y lfe, Phladelpha nqurer. Mary Backstoop Dd he toll you lfe w th hm would be one grand, sweet song? Maudle Sdestreet "N o; he sad t would be one grand, beveled, sweet-toned, slver-coated,, ndestructble phonograph record. - Puck. "H aven t you a hom e? asked the sympathetc ctzen. "Y e p," answered Ploddng Pete. " had a nce home, but de frst t ng knew t had a woodple and a garden and a pump. And den t got so much lke a steady ob dat resgned. W aahlngto* Star. Carrer Pgeons as Spes. D p. J. Neubronner, of Cronberg, has had the ngenous dea of employng carrer pgeons to photograph country whch they fly over and there-. by collect topographcal and other nformaton whch m g ht prove of con*, sderable use n war A specally desgned camera of mcroscopc proportons s ftted wth an ngenous mechansm for workng t automatcally. t s fxed to the brd s breast. At the Dresden photocraphlc exhbton the whole process s shown. * For practcal use t s necessary that the pgeons should fly n m ore than one drecton. T h to some extent s secured by keepng the brds n cotes on ralway wagons, to w hch, wherever they are shfted, the pgeons return as surely as to a statonary fea v* Westmnster Gazette. Danced the Mnuet. m nuet, whch s to be a feature of the Bgth pageant, was ever the arstocrat of dances. Before the lady of the eghteenth century elected to step tbe danty measure she had trcuy pontp to mabter, for to dauce the mnuet was to court crtcsm. plunge wsb taken, she wore a lappet on her shoulder to tell the company she proposed to make or m ar her ballroom reputaton. Another pont of etquette lay n the ghve*. A soled par was good enough for a country dance, but ac absolutely new one had to adorn the far hands whch graced the m nuet. And so the lady 0f the eghteenth century on dancng bent set out wth two pars ln her satchel. London Chroncle. Frat and last. W hen a grl begns to call a man by bs. frst name, t generally n d cates that she has desgns on hs last Pleaaed H s Maesty. dark monarch from susny Afrca was beng shown over an engneerng place n Salford by the manager, who, n explanng the workng of certan machnery, unfortunately got hs coat tals caught n.lt, and n a moment was beng w hrled round at so m any revolutons per mnute. Luckly for the manager, h s garments were unequal to the stran of more than a few revolutons, and he was hurled, dsheveled and dazed, at the feet of the vstor. That exalted personage roared wth laughter and sad somethng to hs nterpreter. MS ab, sad the functonary to the» a n a g er, "H1b Maesty say he am berry pleased w th de trck, an wll you please do t ag a n? Sketchy Bts. Jo h n Wesley. A ferce flanne burned n a case o f steel. apostle s zeal was controlled by a bran whch m g ht have been that of a great general or fnancer. Those who eered at hs fanatcsm would have been no m atch for hm ln dplomacy or the work of organzaton. n.ther drectness of am at the very heart of the matter n hand some of hs letters read lke extracts from Napoleon s correspondence. He roused enthusasm, but could not control t. He who sad, Scream no more on the pan of dam naton, was no sprltual-contor- tonst or lover of rant. He who exclamed, Oh, w hat s bo scarce as learnng, save relgon, dd not dol-, ze voluble gporance.... H e remnds one of General" Booth at one tme, only to recall at another, w th hs hatred of nosy thoughts,* some m onk who had walked wth St. Bernard. London Tmes. As t Seemed. "That man, sad the court onlooker, w ll be convcted surely. He s m akng a very poor mpresson on the wtness stand. "T hat sn't the defendant, sad a lawyer: He s Just one of the alensts undergong cross-examnaton. Detrot Free PceBS. A to Auenbrugger, the "father of ercuason, has recently been nstalled at Venna. Dog Attacked by Brds. Lous M ller s fox terrer, two years old, klled a baby sparrow a t Thrd and W abasha streets and then had to fght for hs lfe aganst combned attacks of several hundred other sparrows thrstng for revenge. dog accompaned Mr. M ller ol a bust, ness trp to tbe neghborhood, and wben he saw the blrdlng flutterng to the sdewalk poumced upon t w th hs paws and teeth at the same tme. Tbe owner of the schnabel thought nothng of the ncdent u n tl he heard a vgorous tw tterng all around and saw the terrer dash madly up W abasha street to escape the fury of the vengeful sparrows. terrer was gettng severely punshed. St. Paul Dspatch -to the New Y o rk W orld. Prson W ndow a Gate. t s not often that a gate s m ade out of a wndow, much less out of & prson w ndow; but the gate of Cedd s churchyard, C annng T o w n, East London, was at one tme a w ln - dow n the old Newgate Prson. Many, people wonder at tbe sze of the gate, but when they hear ts curous hs- ory and the use to whch t was put - years gone by they understand the nson of ts massve dmensons.- undon Dally Graphc.

7 N WOMAN S REALM 1 5 H 7 V G S / O R T H K N O W N C STRFE AMONG THE CHURCHES N PALESTNE new convct PROBLEMS., Laugh* at Superstton*. Mrs. Peter Leys, of Grand Rapds. Mch., beleves t s lucky to walk under a ladder and to rase an umbrella n tbe house. She laughs at uperatlton, and never a happer than when she splls salt or breaks a mrror. Thrteen has been her lucky number. Many ot her brghtest experences have (alen on the 13th of the month, and on An ust 13, whch was a Frday, she gave brth to her thrteenth clld, New York Press. Unbound Fgure. Saratoga, was agog at the new fashon of coraetless women, whch the boxes at the races have shown to be the latest departure n the smart et. From shoulder to hp an almost straght lne exsts n ths new, unbound fgure. A brassere alone confnes the curves on any well developed form, and tbe prncess lngere gown s made to suggest rather than to defne the pont whch a trm twenty- two-nch belt formerly adorned. New York Trbune. Black aad Whte Gown. re s a certan charm and dgnty about black and whte that well dressed women love. A dnner gown of black slk flet net spangled wth et was mounted over a whte mesbalne foundaton, t was cut low n the neck, and had ery small sleeves. Bands of net embrodered wth whch fetters them, and we kll them when we can and derde them as cranks*' when they escape our grasp. t s a notceable fact that where the gate of progress les wde open, as n physcal scence and medcne, tbere s no revolt, no anarchst to affrght, only steady progress and rapd advance. Thus t appears that scence revolts unformty and prases nature for havng made human beng unlke. Monotony and unformty are extremely tresome and dspleasng. Jula Ward Howe s Solder Husband. Jula W'ard Howe, who has ust become nnety years old, has been a wdow for thrty-four years. re are few to-day who remember her husband, Samuel Grdley Howe, yet he was famous n the Old and New Worlds. As a youth, he fought wlthh the Greeks aganst the Turks, and n mddle lfe he was wth John Brown at Harper s Ferry. Howe and hs wfe were spoken of as aa "deally mated couple. y were marred n 1843, when he was forty-two and and she twenty-four. r four daughters and one son have all nherted lterary talent. Each of the daughters has publshed several books, and the son. Professor Henry M. Howe, of Columba Unversty, has been honored by unverstes n ths country and Europe for hs works on metallurgy. latter-day fame ot Mrs. Howe has overshadowed that of f Scalloped Tomatoes and Onons. Peel half a dotfen small onons, slce them thn and saute ln butter or ol wthout brownng them. Peel and slce as many rpe tomatoes, butter an earthen or agateware dsh, put n a layer of the tomatoes, season wth salt and pepper, cover wth buttered bread crumbs, then add a layer of onons; contnue n ths order, havng the last layer crumbs, and bake forty-fve mnutes n a moderate oven. Cold cooked onons and canned tomatoes may be used for ths dsh. «t>ld and Jet beads were put on over the shoulders and crossed below the bust. y then extended around the fgure under the arms and ended n ropes of et beads fnshed wth tassels, whch formed a sash that hung to the hem of the long tralng skrt. New York Tmes. 0 To Mold the Fngers. f onr fnger tps are stubby and -we want them to taper, what then? n Pars they sell lttle flnger- hats. y are small thmbles that may he ftted to each fnger. re s a catch at the sde to regulate the sze, and the amount of pnchng whch you. wsh accom- plahed. f you cannot get a "fnger-hat a regular sewng thmble wll do. Have t ust a lttle too small. Fll t frst wth skn food. Ths keeps the fnger tps softer whle they are beng molded. v Wear t, then, as much of the tme as you possbly can. Phladelpha Blletn. Cultvate. A good memory for faces and facts connected wth them, thus avodng the gvng of offense through not recognzng people. An unaffected,'dstnct and sympathetc voce, and avod the shrll tones that one so often hears. habt of makng allowances for the opnons and feelngs of others, af well as for ther preudges. We cannot all see matters from the same angle. f we dd ours would be a ery dreary globe. art of lstenng wthout mpatence even to prosy talkers, and of smlng naturally, even f you are hearng a funny story for the second tme. t really wll not hurt you to hear t over agan. Home Chat Real Suffragette Leader. Kate M. Gordon, of New Orleans, promses to become the real leader o f the suffragettes n ths' country. She ha$ forced herself to the front n the last two years* and now, as charman of the Susan B. Anthony fund for the promoton of equal suffrage, she s ln an offcal poston of great power and nfluence. She s confdent she wll succeed n rasng the $1,- 000,000. Her present obect s to get women to gve $ each and 1000 women to gve $100 each. She has arranged for subscrpton work ln the North, and for the next few months wll centre her personal effort ln the South. Mss Gordon thnks that the cause of equal suffrage s not ganng headway rapdly enough n the South an<she ams to arouse the nterest of the women ln all the Southern States. New Yok Press. Too Much Monotony. n regard to the mstakes of nature n makng all lvng creatures unlke n many ways, Dr. Wllard Watson, n Medcal Queres and Notes, says: f n a communty ot anmals or men all the young were always bom oxactly alke, chldren lke parents, there could be no progress only utter sameness. hope and fruton of progress must then le n tbe brth of unlke, and whle many of the unlke may be useless and dangerous, stll among them must be tbe valuable and the hope of comng ages. Not all men who profess to preach the doctrne of dssent from present condtons are to be regarded as dangerous heretcs n relgon or anarchsts n socal problems; they have but taken the frst step n progress. the revolt from the tame level o f lfe d whch they lve, the tug at the chan of custom and conventon her husband, but hs memory was frst n ber mnd durng her brthday celebraton. Mrs. Howe contnues to be an advocate of equal suffrage. Of the Suffragsts she says: We are not contemners of marrage, nor neglecters of home and offsprng. We have had, or hope to have, our holy fresde, our oyful cradle,«our decent bank account. Why should we be consdered as the enemes of socety, we who have everythng to gan by good government?" Mrs. Howe has mparted the secret of her wonderfully preserved youthfulness of sprt. t s that have never done anythng but what wanted to do, s her smple statement., New York Press. New York Cty consumes more but- fer than both London and Pars, Tbs Average daly consumpton s 7 S,009 (tounds New York Cty haa an extremely weet tooth, for ts people consumed 280,000,000 pounds ot sugar durng 1the last year State of New Jersey has m* ported lve stallons from Great Brtan to enable ts farmers to pro- luce a hgher type of burses By droppng a nckel n he slot of t new machne a motor s atarted whch operates brushes to dean and pollbh ts patrons' shoes. A sngle factory n the Black Forest. makes over 6,000,000 mouth-organs a year, a large percentage of them beng exported to ths country. A new German corporaton has ordered seven arshps of the Zeppeln model, to establsh regular passenger servce among twenty-seven towns. A Calforna company has secured 100 pounds of aus paddy rce from Bengal and wll try to rase the gran on dry land whch t owns. Tbe Government Prntng Offce employs more than 4000 persons.' recepts of the New York post- offce to-day equal those of the entre couutry thrty years ago. Lucerne s to be sole arshp staton for Swtzerland, and a staton house s to be erected at a cost of 700,000 frsncs. t s hoped soon to establsh* regular communcaton between that town and Fredrchshafea. postal authortes of England pad a hgh complment to the stamp collectors of the world when they pro. vded a specal cancelng stamp for use n Manchester on tbe three days of the stamp exposton n that cty recently. At the battle of Fleurs, June 26, 1794, n the French revolutonary perod, the balloon was for the frst tme used n the servce of the army. Austrans, stupefed, saw the t captve arshp Entreprenant above ther heads at a heght of 300 metres. A mortgage on a cat s not often heard of. However, the other day, there was fled n the recorder's offce at Columbus, Oho, a chattel mort- gage, the consderaton of whch was $20. property on whch tbe money was secured waa descrbed as a cat called John.* bggest artfcal hose n the world s the famous Whte Horse ot Kllburn, near Thrsk, whch was formed by a natve of Kllburn ffty years ag0. who cut away the turf n the correct form and then covered t wth lmestone the whole coverng some two acres of the sde of the hll. fgure make* a conspcuous landmark for over twenty mles round. MssatlslaetloD WU the Greek Clergy Aganst Wbom Serous Charges Are Hue-olMce ol Newspapers o tbe Lte ot JerusalemTo-day. By Hev. RA W HENDERSON, n the Brooklyn Daly Eagle. One of tbe notable thngs ln the lfe of Jerusalem of to-day s th? ncrease of newspapers snce the adopton of tbe consttuton. se four- page papers, partly prnted and partly mmeographed, are Al Kouds and Al nsaf. n Arabc, appearng twce a week. Al Ahlan and Mounabhl Amouat, o Arabc, ssued once a week, and two Jewsh dales faled Pardes and Aherout. Al Kouds. or Jerusalem, s the best; Al nsaf s ssued by Greek Church laymen aganst tbe clergy; Al Ahlan. ur Church of tbe Holy Sepulchre a Chrstan. rather than a Mohammedan A thoughtful man mght regard t even as a blessng tbat n the present state of relgous unregeueratenesa the- Holy Land la n the hands of th» Turk. But there are other thngs than church feuds and church edfces n! Palestne. Jerusalem has donkeys that ruu you down f you do not bustle out of tber way, hardly any that hasten out of yours and others tbat sleep unconcernedly upon the Dreamers, comes out on Sunday as a sdewalk, ust outsde the Jaffa gate, sort of scurflng paper aganst the Damascus has a trolley system that Greek clergy, the paper wth the longest name s a weekly nsult to th- L atn clergy, and translated ts name reads W aker of the Dead Onss A daly telegraph bulletn n Arabc and French s also publshed. For years there has been a Jewsh dally called Hazevlr. government has prnted a weekly bulletn half n Arabc and halt n Turksh For some tme the Greek clergy publshed a paper aganst the laymen of ther church wth the ttle Bachr Phlstne. t was recently dscontnued when tbe edtor's lfe was sought. Lke many another novelty the new papers tend to be overdone. r crtcsms have been so severe and ther ablty to report matters of publc concern wth exactness, so nconsderable, now and then, that t s rumored that a censor la to be apponted, whoa# busness t shall be, not as of yore to suppress news, but to see tbat facts are not msreported and matters or personages not msrepresented. One matter of grave mportance s the constant strfe between the clergy and the laty of tbe Orthodox Church, as dstngushed from the Russan Church. re la ncreasng dssatsfacton wth the arrogance, the gnorance and the fnancal msmanagement of the Greek clergy. Ths dssatsfacton publcly expressed not two months ago cost the lves of aeveral men. For several days a determned mob of Greeks lad sege to the ecclesastcal authortes and flled all Jerusalem wth fear. quarrel was temporarly termnated by orders from Constantnople, but the man ssues yet reman as ponts of rabd and personal dscusson. charge s openly made by the laymen of tbe Greek connecton that ther prests are too fond of wne and women. y nsst that t s hgh tme that the clergy secured better educaton for themselves, demanded larger ntellectual qualfcatons from the canddates for the presthood and provded proper mental development for the chldren of the fold. y demand that the money sent n enorh a great convenence, f you know how to use t. t a easy to learn. t doesn t go to ether ralroad sta- ton. and you change cars and pay another fare n the mddle. t approaches annoyngly near the staton of the Turksh Ralroad to Hafa and heerfully neglect* the French staton, whence you leave for Beyrouth. Berut has one lne n operaton, the tracks wthout wres for another and he wres wthout tracks for a thrd Some day there wll be a system, and maybe some watered stock. ( Moslems have learned to drnk Chrstan beverages, contanng one-half of one per cent, or more of alcohol, and they are n a way to acqure other Occdental habts.) t s sad that an applcaton s beng consdered to permt the erecton and operaton of a trolley road from Jerusalem to Bethlehem. and that another beseechng permsson to put up telephones n Jerusalem may b<» granted. A motor stage lne, n compettoh wth the ralroad, whch runs twce a day each way from Jaffa to Jerusalem, a rumored. ts predecessors are ths motor from Damascus to Palmyra, and the two cars that have been makng dally trps from Berut to Sdon and return. success of two Englshmen, who went recently from Damascus to Bagdad n a motor car, has stmulated much favorable comment anent the possblty of a mal route between those ponts. auto does n sx days what lt takes tbe camel twenty-one to do. ralway servce of the country a better than one would suppose. road from Jaffa to Jerusalem s narrow gauge and the poorest of the lot, but ts frst class accommodatons are by no means uncomfortable for a four-hour rde and the scenery s magnfcent. road from Hafa to Damascus along the foot of Holy Mt. Carmel, across the battle worn plan of Esdraelon, through the valley ot Jexreel of Bble story, along the Jordan, skrtng the Gallean Lake upon ts southern ahore. clmbng the rugged sdes of the ndescrbable beautful valley of the Yarmuk Rver, racng across tbe fertle felda P R G T T Y 3 Q H 1 N G 5 TO WEAR Medaeval frocks apparently are leadng back to the draped skrt. newest coat collars are large round affars of rsh or Cluny lace. panner dress s comng back, to the dsmay ot the short women. Ostrch feathers hold ther own, but most of them now seen are curled. Lght, old rose tnts are genunely grlsh colors for mllnery purposes. velng of one color over another s one of the fashons of the moment. Curous and fascfoatng dog collars are made of old cons fastened together. Satn crepes, on account of ther lght weght, are the preferred hat facng. Gowns worn everywhere show a great deal of embrodery done wth the coarsest threads. Plan shoulders are already here, and full skrts are declared to be on the way. Dmty prnted wth danty flowers s lked by grls for lttle pettcoats and corset covers. sxteen-button boot s the leader n footwear. Orental colors contnue to be popular for trmmng. Lnens are the most modsh among the new fabrc hats. Tucks and sbrrngs have crept n as hp decoratons. Black and whte combnatons are all the rage for hats. All sorts of black flowers are appearng n mllqery. Advance styles ndcate that the smart skrts wll be made wth snug- fttng yokes. whte lace vel s now tbe vel of ths day. t lace scarf s used to deck many a smart hat and takes the place of all other trmmng. Many of the new parasols are made wth a fve-nch border of pompadour slk that s very effectve. long, black slk coat, whch s agan modsh, s one of the generally useful fashons of the hour. re s a strong rumor that bats taller n the crown and narrower n the brm are to be brought out. Lnen coats, wth foulard gowns, tbe lnen matchng the ground color, s one of the whms of the moment. Corset covers and chemses ft almost straght across the front, there beng lttle or no fulness at the top. o s A Wld Anmal Farm, f *» M. F. Kendrck, of Denver, Colorado, has a farm equpped for the rearng and sale of wld beasts. enterprse bears the ttle of the Ken- 1 drck Pheasantrea and Wrld Game Assocaton. t grew out of the novel exhbt at the Cty Park n Den- ver, whch Mr. Kendrck mantaned entrely aths own expense, because ; of hs love for wld game. Many thousands of dollars yearly went to the development of Mr. Kendrck's hobby. What was a fancy has be- come a substantal busness nsttuton. For the frst few years only anmals natve to North Amerca wll be reared, but eventually lons, tgers, and even elephants wll be bred. farm s now stocked wth deer, elk, antelope, bears, mountan goat, etc., and sxteen acres of ground are ; utlzed n the venture. Mr. Kendrck says that t does not cost any more to produce a pound of buffalo or elk than t <ty>es of cat- ; te or sheep. Buffalo meat sells at from ffty cents to one dollar a pound, elk brngng tearly as much. assocaton wll not lack a mar- 1 ket at these prces f zoologcal parks and game preserves do not take the entre output. Unted States Government t takng great nterest n Mr. Ken- 1 drck s farm. t wll co-operate wth bm by tellng hm how to cure or prevent any dsease wth whch he s not famlar. From Success Magazne. nous a«unts from Greece and Rus-1 *he Hauran to the oass of the sa and other lands to Jerusalem by Damascus, s provved wth strctly the generous fathful be spent to flrst class equpment n every depart- renovate dlapdated Greek churches,! ent. and, though t s narrow gauge erect hosptals and schools and be de- an(* owned by the Turksh Govera- voted to a wder charty than that ment as s the road from Jaffa to whch. n the case of the Greek El-Kuds s a delght to the traveler clergy, navelybegns at home. B y add a welcome relef to the tourst ths last s m eant that t s'"generally *y ho has known only carrages and reported that the clergy use the do-' horses and donkeys for many days. re are blnd spots on ths tongue whch are nsensble to certan flavors. Alfred A. Pope s Lfe Story. Born n Boston, May 20, Went to work on a farm when nne years old. Employed n a shoe fndng store at $4 a week when ffteen years old. n 1862 be went to Cvl War aa second leutenant n Thrty-ffth Massachusetts Regment, n hs nne teenth year. Served through war wth dstncton and was brevetted leutenant- colonel ot the Thrty-ffth Regment for gallant conduct at Fredercksburg. Knoxvlle and Petersburg. Poneer bcycle manufacturer n the Unted States n Advocate of good roads system. Had been n poor health snce falure n busness several years ago. Founded Pope Memoral Church at Cohasset n memory of hs son, Charles Lnder Pope. Drector n several'banks and fnancal nsttutons and a member of promnent Boston clubs and socetes. Marred Abble D. Lnder, ol Newton, September 20, y had four chldren, three boys and one grl. Mrs. Pope and two of the sons and the daughter are stll lvng. natons aforementoned for the prvate advantage of ther own mmedate famles. t s smply necessary to talk fve mnutes wth an ordnarly ntellgent communcant of the Orthodox Greek Church n order to understand that these questons wll not be settled untl they are settled rght. By way of passng comment, t may be sad that the Russans have the fnest and cleanest churches and equpment n Jerusalem; that the Germans excel all the other natons n the magnfcence of ther colonzng and Protestant ecclesastcal nsttutons, possessng the one outstandng Protestant church buldng n Jerusalem; that the work by Jews among Jews a as marvelous as the Jewsh quarter n Jerusalem s drty; that the hospces ot Palestne, whether Russan or Latn, are models of comfort and order: that the chldsh dfferences exstng between the varous dvsons of the body of Chrst are as well qualfed to make a Moslem dsgusted a3 they are to make a Chrstan wth tbe Sprt of Jesus n hs heart to be ashamed. clergy of all faths present the fnest collecton of elongated har and whskers to be seen anywhere n the world. Russan prests partcularly are as handsome and well groom'd as the Francscans are courteous and cordal. t s dffcult to understand tbat the sort of men one meets prvately wll be so very vulgarly nsstent over nconsequental matters of place and preferment and procedure n ther offcal capactes as representatves of ther respectve churches. One wonders what would happen were the doorman at tbe French road from Damascus. to Berut offers a maestc rde and ac ceptable accommodatons, though not so new as those provded on the road ust named. lne from Reyak, on the man dvson from Damascus to Berut, to Baalbek s apparently between narrow and broad gauge ts accommodatons are entrely sats factory, whle the landscapes to be vewed m antan the extremely hgh average that s characterstc of t t ralroads of the Lebanon dstrct a partcular and of the whole of Pales tne n general t smply remans tc connect H afa wth the Holy Cty to reconstruct n ts entrety the problem of tourst travel n the Holy Land t must not be thought, however that nventon and reform are havc? all a bed of roses. ralroad through Moab southward to Mecca s havng constructve troubles wta the Bedouns, whs persst n tearng up a track that here, as well as everywhere n Palestne, s lad n the fnest sort of easly obtaned rock ballast, and t s only a week ago that troops had to be sent fron Jerssalent to Nablus to preserve order and tc prevent further outrages by the conservatves n tbat town upon the rad cals who compose the organc a :.oc of the Young Turks. -* ccrme la Sontlern Prsm Puwla- Hot nnd r Product. Fpna U* New York Lousana and Msssspp have re- ] eently been brought face to face wth a uew pententary problem, arsng from the great ncrease n the uum-, t»**r of prsoners, especally of the ue- gt) convct* convct farm syntem now n operaton a these two States s' a great mprovement over the old lea>e! ssteu On account of the obectons to convct-made goods the proposal lo employ th»- prsoners n manufac- lurng was reected n Lousana and!, Msssspp, and t was determned tu set the convcts at work rasng sugar! and cotton quantty of the staples rased by the convcts would be. o small that the tree farmera and planters would feel no competton ] from ths source. t was argued n., too. t was ponted out that the bulk : t the convcts, or from eghtv-flre to nnety-fve per cent., were negroes! from farms or plantatons accustomed * to agrcultural lfe negroes who had [ drfted from the farms to the town 1 nly to get nto trouble from cty lfe, experment d Lousana has been more successful than t was ex- pected to be, ffhere was very lttle captal to start wth, but new farms were bought wth the frst profts of bs venture. To-day these farms are worth mllons, all net proft to the State, and the ncome from them promses to turn a handsome revenue Annually nto the State treasures experment was started wtb- )ut expectaton of proft. What was med at waa to abolsh the abuses hat had exsted under the old lease! system, and tq assure the more hu-! xane treatment of the prsoners. mprovement cannot be better shown than n the mortalty. For- nerly the death rate was so hgh hat a sentence of more than fve or ton years was equvalent to the death penalty. convct could not hope Lo lve out hs term. To-day the mor-! tallty n the pententary s lower than outsde less than one-thrd what t a among the negrbes n Lousana towns. n other words, the Average negro sent to the Lousana pententary wll lve three tmes as long as he would f he were a free man n Shreveport or New Orleans. Because of ao low a death rate t ) s natural that the pententary popu- aton should ncrease, but the n- crease has exceeded all expectatons, las nterfered wth the plans ot tho State and has strred up a trouble-, some ssue. When the State of Lousana took charge n.1901 the lessees turned! ver to t 1011 convcts. num-!>er had ncreased to 206? on July 1, ncrease s about sx tmes s rapd a«the ncrease of the popu- aton outst ; of the pententary, and for the negroes t s ten tmes as fast. Nearly two per cent ot the grown male negroes are convcts, and from eegro parshes lke East Carroll and Madson the proporton rses to nearly four per cent At that rate t wll lake ust ffty years to land half the male neroes n the pententary. Ths rapd ncrease n the pententary populaton has embarrassed the Authortes. Although tbe penten- tary board had pad out up to last fear $726,221 for the purchase of property and ts expendtnre tor real estate and mprovements s now be- ' 'ond the mllon-dollar pont, t has aot coat tbe State a dollar money has come out of the earnngs the convcts. Because of the ncrease of the pententary populatcn t s necessary to buy and keep on ouyng and clearng land. acreage s not nearly large enough for the convcts, and only >ne-half of them can be employed on the farms. Sx or eght more plantatons of say acres would not :e too much to gve them all work. Convct farms pay no taxes and the countes and local authortes are flndns ther revenues cut down n consequence. n Sunflower County. Msssspp, for nstance, there are complants that the county revenues have been reduced. State bought the best lands n the county for ts cor.vcx farms and now operates them tax free. opposton to ths system has gron strong among the farmes of t neghborhood y.complan that t s dsarrang e s ther county fnances, leavng.them wthout money for ther schools and roads, that t s deaorallzaa labor, and tha* they are begnnng to fee! the competton a l ths contract labor. t s proposed to brng tbe matter before tbe Msssspp Legslature at ts next sesson on the theory that the State had gone m far as t can safely go n the matte> ol coavct farms. Pupalartty. H-v bu-w &nd blew th u r **p«b*g Tn", btew wth all ther raaght, nkflenh ther B*«blew up, \> vumhed out al aght And (hen the Wndy Thn* w «cone. N ot f uud * trace be S\»r tfjot a Mnle *bred wa* left, O f what bad never been Brand Whtlock, n Lfe. V *1 Thng. "n th s a genune Boston bull te* rer? V "Y ft, tbe bans fde artcle. Kaa> sas Cty Tmes. Perhaps Hhe'e One ot the Rare Ones Scott s Jones marred? ' Mott ** guess no! 1 never heard hm blame hs wfe tor an y th n g Boston Transcrpt. V Battle to Htate. "Does your wfe always thnk before she speaks? " don't know ve never been u tbat early Cleveland Leader. Worn Wll Tara. Barber Your har s very thn, sr Long 8 ufferer And you ve got a bump on your nose, am' one ot yout eyes squnt." Lfe Pat tn New Use. Crawford So your wfe make mnce pes any more?" Crabshaw No. She uses all th* odds and ends aroand the house s trmmng for her hat" Puck. Father "Do understand you tc ssy that you wsh to be my son-nlaw? Sutor No, ar; want to marry your daughter. New York Sun. Not Yet, Bat Hometme. Man From the Cty "You ntend to keep beea. suppose? Suburbante Some day, perhaps At present we are devotng our satn energes to keepng a cook. Chcago Trbune. A atrcal Paradox. re s one contradctory thn* actors seem to do " What s that? longer they are at oae stand, ths mors they ooaader t a run. Baltmore. Oae Wsh Unfulflled W te You promsed that, f would marry o b my every wsh would be gratfed. Husband Well, sn't t? Wfe No; wsh hadn't mar ted you. llustrated Bts. *T dunno how to please these sum* mer boarders ' What s the matter. S? "y re clamorng fer tbe moss- covered bucket, after had ftted ur the well wth sterlsed drnkng cup* ostead. Lousvlle Courar-Jour ual. r What Troubled Hm. Wlle Say. mother, wll t hurt to have ths tooth out? Mrs. 81mson Naturally, but t wll be so sudden that you won t have tme to thnk ust a quck turn, and t wll be all over. Wlle Um that's all that could happen to me f had my head pulled off. Lfe.. Real Spencer. You don t seem anxous to meet ths mllonare? met a mllonare here last season," exclamed the summer grl, and he wouldn't even buy an c«cream cone. Could you ntroduce me to some young chap who has come to the beach wth two hundred dol lars saved up? Kansas Cty Journal. Anxous to Know. Yes," sad the doctor, can cure you f you wll follow my drectons rgdly." All rght ll lake anythng* m not gong to gve you anythng to take. You must smply qut drnkng ntoxcatng lquors and gve up smokng for at least sx months. And sre you gong to charge for orderng me to do that?" Certanly. My fee t $10. Say, Doc. how much would you expect to get n advance tor bttng a man on the head wth an axe? Chcago Record-Herald. For Sum m er Boarders. Scott spent a part of one sum se n the country, and hence was an au thorty on agrcultural matters. n mlkng a cow," he wrote hs frends, alwafs st on the sde fur thest from the crtter, and neares the soft spot, n the pasture." 8 uc entrance to the cess Magazne. FOREST AREAS N THE SOUTH A Secton Whch s Blessed Wth Most ot_the Vrgn Woodland of the Country. longest ppelne n the world s that whch extends from the Oklahoma ol wells to New York harbor. South, wtth twenty-seven per cent, of the total area of the Unted States, contans about forty-two per cent, of the total forest area of the country. forest area by States s as follows: Alabama acres; Arkansas, 24,200,000; Florda. 20,000,000; Georga. 22, ; 'Kentucky. 10,000,000; Lousana, 16,500,000; Maryland. 2, ; Msssspp. 17,500,000; North Carolna, 19,600,000; South Carolna. V 900,000; Tennessee. 15,000,000; Texas, 30,000,000; Vrgna, 14, , and West Vrgna, 9, South, t wll be seen, has stll much ot the vrgn forest of the country. Ths forest must be used, of course. n order to meet the stesd- ly expandng wants of ths secton. t must be used, however, n such a manner that the very most auur be made from ts annual cut, whle at the same tme ths cut s beng re placed by a new growth. n ths wa: ts tmber wll reman a source o ; perpetual wealth. mportance ol forest conservaton to Southern n, terests s clearly understood by the people of,the South. future ot the South s more nearly bonnd ut n the plan of forest preservaton than s anythng now before tht people of ths part of tht country. Not only s the pfo ; tecton of the watersheds, whch Wfll! some day furnsh the power to tw all manufacturng establshments n the entre South, an mportant matte; to the South, but the ndustres de pendng upon the forest products wll also be benefted by the protecton thrown about Costly Thmbles. t «' sad tha the* most valuable thmble n the world s that n possesson of the Queen of Sam, to whom t waa presented by her husband, the Kng. Ths thmble s a magnfcent work of art, beng made ot pure gold n the shape of a halfopened lotus flowef, the floral emblem of the royal house of Sam. t s thckly studdet wth damonds of the frst water, not to speak ot other precous stone?, the whole beng so arranged as to Term the name of her Maesty together wth the date of her marrage. Some year* ago a Pars eweler made a most elaborate thmble to the order of tn Amercan mllonare, t was 80&e»ha. larger than the or- tlasry thmble, m d the prce agreed on was about gold set-, tng was scarcely vsble, so complete- ly was t covered wth damonds. rabes an pearls, n artstc desgns, ; the rubes shewng the ntals ot tbe. recpent. A eweler n London was pad 3000 for a thmble ntended for the wfe of a South f Afrcan Ths, as n other cases, was a mess of precous gems, more for» 1 -Tt-Bts. Playng Safe. * Doctor, sad the caller, T m a vctm ot nsomna Can you curs me can, repled the physcan. Bat before take the case want to ask you one queston. Are yop n busk ness for yourself tv do you work fo others? " m employed as clerk n a grocery." answered the pateat. "n you ll have to pay n advance, sad the doctor. " m not doubtng yonr honesty, but after get through wth you the chances are you wll sleep so soundly you'll lose your ob n you can t pay me. Chcago News. No use of talkng," drawled freckled youth on the roadsde le thar certanly s money n cattle. n the stock young man? asked tbs No, 1 ble

8 M y - B u t t L ooks Good W m. Allspach, G l e n w M a k e s C o o k n g ' E a s y Belmar b a k e d n a o o d Close Evenngs at 8 Saturday s, 10 O UR men customers wll fnd us ready for them wth the latest desgns n the best makes C lo th n g H a b e r d a s h e r y H a t s S h o e s We have a Specal word (or our Fall Clothng, re s class to t, as the boys say, and we feature prces. Clothng stores do not. Nether do they offer you as complete assortments as we do. When you're pckng Clothng, Hats or Furnshngs or Footwear, sn t t a pleasure to select from a stock that offers the whole range of seasonable styles not a lmted varety that represents one man s taste, 'as at the We Sell Regal and lttle shop. Jas. A. Banster Shoes _ >tnnbar (Emnpatty Aawrtf prk, Nwb A S B U R Y P A R K B U S N E S S C O L L E G E D a y S e s s o n s B e g n S e p t e m b e r 2 G t l E v e n n g S e s e o n s B e g n O c t o b e r 4 t h K K N K S T L. B K A N, P r n c p a l Terms n Use by Old-Tme Carvers. A t the banquets cf the eghteenth century the man who carved needed to know words as well as the use of knves. Vcpson be "broached, thc pheasant he allayed, the rabbt and woodcock he unlaced'1, and tbe crab he tamed Dsmemberng a swan was lftng'' hm aud the crane utdur hs knfe was beng dsplayed." peacock was dsfgured. Try the Laughter Cure. f laughter s good for the bodly well beng t s equally good for mental health. We are begnnng to realze thla. Anxety, fear, worry are deadly enemes to the mnd. Fght aganst tkem and aganst every nfluence that tendsqward mental depresson as you would fght aganst a temptaton to dshonesty. Real Reason. 8he: Only thnk. Frau Hubmer threw a flatron at ber husband s head because be accdentally sat down on her new hat! couldn't do a thng lke th a t! He: No, you love me don t you?" She: "Yes;, hayen t a n r new hat." Shoes lk c Hams' rorns. n the regn of Wllam Rufus of England, n the eleventh century, a great swell, "Robert the Horned, tsed shoes wth sharp ponts, stuffed wth tow and twsted lke rams horns. Gets More Than He Expected. De man who, s lookn foh trouble," sad Uncle Eben, generally fnds t. But he mos' always doesn' manage to meet up wf de partcular knd he felt competent to manage. Of Mutual Assstance. "Let me see ddn't "you tell me to remnd you to get somethng when we got to town? &1 beleve dd. W hat was lt? V*-Judge. ' Reforestaton. About the tme a man s 25 he begns lookng for a cure for dandruff, and he kseps t up untl he des. Topeka CaptaL Happy Mule. To be poor and lowly' has ta solaces. A horse would starve to death n a feld of thstles, whle a male would have tham e of s Jfo- - - A S B L K Y P A K K, N f W J E R S E Y tat M l U U k 1* ) -» Affectons Wtnout Ren. Lacordure: alfeotons are lke lghtnng; you cannot tell where they wll strke untl they have fallen. Amercan Toursts. Amercans now go to Europe for three reasons: To consult specalsts, study musc or get nto trouble. Wooden Shoes Worn by the Great- n the nnth and tenth centures the greatest prnces of Europe wore wooden shoes. Gardenng. A great many vegetables Can be rased n about eght nches of newspaper space Kansas Cty Journal. Desgned by Nature. Parents mght as well try to turn back the waters of the Nagara as to degde what professon or busness ther sons should adopt. God plvgs to every man a partcular work he can do and n the performance of whch be can be happy, but the place whch a man can fll wth satlsfactlpn to hmself and others la that for whch nature desgned h ta JUchM ft BOUND TO GET THAT BARGAN O»U% H 852)M' Determned Woman Shopper Would Not Lot Lttle Thng l,lke Closng Tme nterfere. Frank 8. Bennett admluutrutur uf D. l.avm Bennett Aeteaaed. bv order of tbe Surrogate of th«county of Monmouth, hereby gve notce to the cred tors of the sad deceom*! to brng n ther "You re too ste," aald the man. * b ts. ' d o # and clam, aganet the "(her ro Cloaln US" Tho woman of de»-ea»ed, under oath or. looked! at..k the door J - «r of the atore.tnra wh.rr where Ulhd y of wthn Auru#t nne * * month* or the from wu, the «boy w*a drawlns down a curtan for, v«.r barred of anr acton therefor ' t s not»x o clock," she sad do aganst the sad admnstrator, termnedly; they can't close tll sx Fa anr 8. Bkkhctt. o'clock. W at here for me. She tred 1.. ' the door and found t opened to her hand [N CHANCERY OK NRW JERSE Y woman went n and found a To Rose MoElfree. scene of confu.lon Shopper* were By vrtue of an order of the Court of m.. m y y, hu.ued u r n * a. " S Z f dcor wth dun r.'.pe.l lo ther M l nt*.' wheren Joha lt. 7.» U ln. and down o*ery alale people, 0f,., t, y,, re. were coverng the counters wth pro- qure< to appear, plead, answer or demur tool ng cover* Young women to the... bll of of * sad... complanant on or bewth mouthful* of fore thc eghteenth day of October next, hatpns scowled at ber and contnued /1909), or the sad bll wll le taken as to put on ther hat*. Men n shrt confessed aganst you. sad bll s led to foreclose amort- Bleeve* who were carefully protectng gage gven by you to John t. rons, the the stock looked at her and sad complanant, and dated tle frst day of thngs to each other. July, nneteen hundred and seven on lands A processon of employes passed on u the H<-rntgh of Helmar, n he county' U way to outer ar and freedom aud of Monmouth and State of New Jersey, clouds of dust arose. sad lands beng known as lot 9906 on Q plan of lots of the Ocean Beach Assoea- Outalde th. matv atood on ope lef aul lllse M, Elw,, re,.de and watched u. u 11'nun tbe hf curtaned rtalnal door nnor He m,..,,, defendant because you own sad lands ot tred to gve hmself tbe ar of one one part thereof. watng for a car, and hoped nobody Dated August 17, would mstake hm for a 'Johnne o rhn E. ANN NG, watng at the door for the la Solctor for Complanant, des to get through work. Asbury Park, N. J. stragglers grew fewer and few er. T e door opened less frequently to let them out. And at last through Notce the door came the woman n trumph. She had a package n her hand and dd not seem to observe that the man _ respectve boards of regstry for who let her. out.. muttered and *l,e electon dstrcts and muncpaltes of slammed the door after her, securely *»utyof Monmouthwllmeet at the l places provded for them by the townshp.!> *, *» v,......, and muncpal clerks of the dfferent ds- 1 ve got t, she sad trumphantly,rr,s alld n1u.t palkea. on Wednesday, You see ust had to. sale was..september 8, 1909, androceed to make only for to-day, and all ther 50-cent, a house to house canvas ot the voters of rbbon was reduced to 39 cents. each dstrct or muncpalty, and shall complete the same on or before Frday, FLOWER OF TH E TEA PLANT September 10th, y shall hold ther second meetng on Tuesday, September-14th, 1909, between 8ald to Be Superor to the Leaves n the hours of sx o'clock u the mornng Flavor and Hard to Adulterate. and.seven o clock n the evenng, for the purpose of votng for or aganst the proposed amendments of the Consttuton of the State of New Jersey, and for the purpose of makng up two lsts of all persons t seems that the flower of the tea plant s much to be preferred to the enttled to vote u sad dstrct? and muncpaltes leaf, saya the Scentfc Amercan. who shall appear before the nfuson of the flower s very board for that purpose, or by affdavt n sweet and has the same stmulatng wrtng of some voter n sd electon qualtes as the nfuson of the leaves. dstrct. Moreover, the fowor contans only Prmary Electon about two per cent, caffen, whle the.....,., l0.,... On September 28th, 190 nn ths date, leaf contans as much as four per, t v - - cent. Tea leaves must be pcked one by one; the flowers, on the contrary, ace collected much more smply- prncpal qualty of the flower s the dffculty of mtatng t. mtatons of leaves are nnumerable. Most astonshng adulteratons of tea leaves are practced n Chna. oak, the eglantne, the ash, the strawberry, the laurel, the cherry, the chestnut, the olve, the elm, the apple and the plum n fact, almost every tree that grows offers ts leaves freely to unscrupulous dealers for mxture. Even ordnary wood sawdust, properly colored, has been employed. Fancy teas are adulterated wth clay and other mneral substances. tea flower s more or less proof aganst mtaton. Trbute* of Affecton for Pars Dead. Foregn vstors to the cemetery of Pere La Chase n Pars often wonder at the trbutes of affecton deposted on the graves. Many French people <refuse to beleve that ther dead can not enoy the good thngs they UBed to lke when alve. Mothers brng fruts and sweets and leave them on the tombstones of ther chldren. graves of older peo- pe are frequently spread wth wne,! beer and: tobacco, and there s (or wab 1last-year) one affectonate father who leaves a potato salad on bs son's tombstone every Sunday. Parsan street prowlers are of course well aware of ths practce, and despte the vglance of the cemetery guardans manage to plfer many a meal from the graves. Verse Strred Hs Memory.. A young marred woman recently took her lttle boy wtb her to make a call. As they were about to leave the youngster faced one corner )t the room, stretched out both lls arms, muttered somethng and then shook hands wth the hostess. Natu- rally she was unable to understand the chld s strange behavor and 1asked hs mother the reason, een /?and 9 o'clock >. n., the prmary electons shall be held n every electon dstrct n the county. At the close of thc electon the board of regstry and electon shall canvass the voles and make statements thereof n accordance wth the provsons of Secton 270. fnal meetng of the board of regs try shall be held October 26th, 1909, from 1 to 9 o clock p. n., for the revson and correcton of regstres. JO H N C. PATTERSON, Charman County Board Electons. J ohn *. W alker, Secretary. Dated September 3, 1909: BOROUGH OF BELMAR Notce of Specal Electon (Sewage Dsposal Plant) Notce s hereby gven that a specal electon of the voters of the Borough of Helmar, wll be held n the store No. 800 F street, (corner of F street and Eghth avenue), n sad borough, on Tuesday the ffth day of October, A.D., 1909, between the hours of 7 o clock n the mornng and 7 o clock n the evenng, for the followng purpose: To.determne for or aganst the proposton for the constructon and equpment of asew.age dsposal plant and system, for the use n connecton wth the present sewer system, of thc Borough of Belmar. Dated Belmar, N. J. September 6th, Chas. 0. Htonct, Borough Clerk, Hudson*Fulton Celebraton Come to the Brooklyn Eagle Offce, 26 East Twenty-thrd street, opposte Metropoltan Tower, Manhattan, pr Second Floor, World Buldng, Cty Hal Square, Manhattan, /or full nformaton about boardng houses and furnshed rooms n New York cty durng the great Expos- ston. Get a free programme of events. No charge for the servce, and a pleasure to help you. Brooklyn Daly Eagle. Read Phladelpha P'ress For Sportng News f you want to keep n close touch wth the world of sports read the sportng page of THE PH LA D E L P H A PRESS every mornng, lt gves you all tle news baseball, tenns, track, golf, rowng, polo, - - Hence & 0l os R e a l E s t a t e a n d 11 s u n n e e W e have three propertes n Belmar that can be purchased at Bargan Prces and at extremely Easy Terms. AH are near ocean on a fne avenue. N o T k n t h A v e n u e OPPOSTE R. R Ot POT» e e te e e e «m e e e e «O. h. NEWMAN7 Oh, that s all rght, she repled. swmmng, yachtng, motorng. Not ust George uses one hand ust as well the mere facts, but the storv of the game, as the other and he has to face the told so accurately and wth such detal north and say a lttle verse whch that you know ust what Jap ened und taught hm before he can dstngush why t happened. And you re not* confned the rght from the left. to news of the bg contests. THE have told Where Mlton Wrote. hm not to shake hands wth hs left, P H LA D E L P H A PRESS Sportng Fag* last years of Mlton s lfe were tells you about smaller eveuts as well. 4«40 he has to do that frst, spent n a house n krtllery W alk, Wrtten up by men who know ther busness. t s real news, wde awake, alve, Bunhlll Felds, "London, Eng., where Culture of the Age. clean. sort of stuff you lke to read. he, whle blnd, composed * and de-, W e are now passng through the n there are Hugh Doyle s cartoons. tated to bs daughters Paradse Lost, age of the Dstrbuton of Knowledge. Clever, humorous, even prophetc. You Paradse Reganed" t.nd Samson can t beat them. And wth t all you get Agonstes," and where he ded n spread of the Englsh-speakng the greatest photographs that hustle, work 1674, at the age of 66. race snce 1850 and the cheapness and know-how can take. Photographs of prntng, have brought n prmers taken rght on the feld, showng thngs and handbooks by tbe mllon. All dong and the exctng moments. Head Words Sweetly 8poken. Excepton to General Rule. the books-of the older lteratures are Mr. Wseguy s talks n T H E P H L A Only a few sweet, lovng words Lowell says: very gnarlest beng abstracted and sown abroad n D E LP H A PRESS. Buy TH E P H L that s all; but comng from the heart and hardest <f- heartb has some mu popular edtons. magaznes fulfll.the same functon; every one <of A D E L P H A PRESS to-morrow, read the' and gong to the hpart, they would leal strng n t, yec we are told that sportng page, and t s a safe bet that brghten many a lfe and comfort Dr. Johnson had no lpva of musc, and you ll order TH E P H L A D E L P H A them s a penny cyclopeda. John taany a soul, as the speaker of them that upon bolng told that a certaa PRESS delvered every mornng. Jay Chapman, Emerson and Other lttle thnks. Le us not be eo chary pece of musc was very dffcult, he Easaps. of them. Mary H. Perkns. expressed regret that t was not mpossble. But Dr, Johncon was a hu Never Heard of U ncoln He Ddn't Care. n Jersey.Cty Matter Vallone, an tal- Honesty and Happness, man contradcton. $ep how far and whte your ss- an, who s a talor lvng at 407.Pater- world s gettng much better tfr * complexon a. Robbe," sad the J son Plank Road, West Hoboken, appealed all the tme and t s not so much Why the Play Stepped. mother. before Judge Carey and made applcaton process of law as through a growng Durng the perform as;. at the Natonal W ell, suppose my face would.be for ctzenshp. He told the Judge he feelng by ndvduals that they can theater, Marenbad, Bohema, the same way f kept washng t every get no satsfacton out Of lfe unless recently the curtan suddenly went day lke sster does!" was the they are true to themselves. Phla «down on the mddle of an act. Tho youngster s reply. delpha nqurer. Saynpa Aganat Woman. land where women are freest s also the land where they are most respected. nstnctvely we dscredt all the ant-woman proverbs. Havng dscredted them, let us bury them and forget thpm forever. Defntons of Drnkng. A cup of water to the thrsty, a tumbler to thc near-tblrsty, and cutmpagne for the hever-thlrsty are th*three plan deflpltons of drnkng. Tmes-Ufllon.? had been n ths country twenty-two years. "Do you know who Abraham Uncoln was? asked Judge Carey. "No, don t know who he was. "You don t know who Abraham Lncoln was? repeated the Judge. "No, does he lve n West Hoboken? asked the applcant. "He s dead, sad Judge Carey. Wel, 1 never heard of hm, contnued thettalan, "Was he a talor?" Judge advsed hm to go home and study up on hstory and geography and sad: No nan who does not know who Abraham Lncoln was s ft to enoy the prvlege of Amercan ctrenshp." When asked to name sx of the Unted States, Vallone answered, "New Jersey, New York, Boston, West Hoboken, Udlon H ll and Hoboken. A U T O M O B LE S A O K N T F O H M A X W E L L C A B S B C Y C L E S VCTOK TALKNO MACHNES EDSON PtlONOUKAHn** SUPPLES Tel. 13 BELMAK. N. J. RE AKNU 1 S t e n e r & S o n Asbury Park, N. J. W ant 100 experenced operators to make men s nght shrts and paamas, and women s nght gowns. Steady work all the year at good prces. Learners wll be taught to operate. Apply at once. Watercress for Dyspepsa. W hat ths {own ought to have," sad the man ust back from London a a watercress market. Greatest cure for all knds of stomach troubles you ever saw. Over there tbey *have a regular place where they sell watercress early n the mornng. ve seen all kndb of people buy portons of we tercress and eat t wth a bt of bread rght on de spot. y say t s an nfallble cute for any stomach aument. New York Sun. Country-Bred Boys Wn..Fully 90 per cent, of all the famous Amercans have been country-bred and all of them acknowledge ther fame and 8uccess due to the foundatons they lad as 1>oys on tbe old farmstead. re are one hundred country youths who succeed and make ther mark n the world to one cty- born and cty-bred. For every country boy who fals n the race of lfe more than a thousand falures can be lad to the cty. Beekeepqg n Amerca. Bees were unknown to the ndans, but they were brought over from England only a fey years after the landng of the plgrm fathers. t was more than two centures after the frst whte nvason of New England, however, before modern beekeepng began. ndustry of the present day dates from the nventon of the mov able-frame hve by Langstreth u Wash t Surprsng. An archaeologst bas dscovered tho pomatum and other "makeup, of an Egyptan beauty of 3,650 ye'drs ago. T,he nventory shows no advancement n femnne wles up to a late! hour last nght. New York Herald. Constant VVoman. When a woman'fcfe who really f woman, has tm bl truly and deeper loved a man, she crfn never wholly stop lorlnf hm. Fot that man shf wm always feel a certan tenderneaa. Acute Pans J suffered much pan n my rght arfn rrheunatsm took' two of the Ant-P a n -Plls and the pan was gone. Gave a lady frend, sufferng from pleursy, two and they releved the pan n her breast... A. G F E L L, Cncnnat, nd. Because of ther/sedatve nfluence upon the nerve branches Dr. Mles Ant-Pan Plls releve acute pans 6f any nature. y are equally effectve n neuralga, rheumatsm, scatca, locomotor ataxa, or flu- pan due to spna? trouble; Lades who have perods of sufferng tnd that they not only relfeve ther dstress but ther attacks become less severe, and after a tme often dsappear altogether. frst package wd beneft; f not, your druflflst wll return your money. Belmar Court of Foresters nsttuted * Court Belmar, No. 164, Foresters of Amerca were nsttuted last evenng wth about ffty members and many applcatons for future -membershp. grand court dff.eera were prpsent ncludng Grand Chef Ranger, C. Mason; and G. S. C.t R. Luera,'also several members of Court Lakewood. Joseph Zuckerman the organzer of the above court was extended a hearty vote of thanks. Tle followng offcers were elected: C. R, L 1sola; S. C. L, 1C Kasdan} Treasurer, A. Levmsohn; F.S., A. Lloyd; R. S., T. J. Whttond; Sr. W., M. Rouse; Jr. W., H! Wensten; S. B.t S. Newman; J. t. B., W. B. Morrs; L., C. Levnsohn. Trustees, F. Bryan, J. Cohn, A. Wnkle; physeap Dr. H. E. Snow; druggst, t. Kasdan; P. C. 11., F. Styles. manager presently explaned that tht curtan-raser had.receved a telegram announcng that he had wcu $6,000 n a lottery, and had dropped the curtan n hs exctement. Brownes. A small boy s deas or brownes: "y Jve n very hot countres. y eat wth ther fngers and wash ther t$eth.wth sand.and watek Some are lk savages, hunt for ther prey, and tkpy worshp deals. Some boys and frlp who have never seen these brownes thnk they are fares, but of lb ".. V

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