Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6....

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VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w \ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots as * Its Authorities "—Madison. Henry L. Kliner Shot and Killed Himself Tuesday Afternoon mX His Home. NO REASON FOB ACT It Is Sapposed That Kecent Illnei Caused Temporary Insanity-Was i Wife and One Child -Mem ber of Finn of Wtaaaa * KUner. iryU K!i r, of son of Mrs. and Mrs. Jacob J. Kli committtd suicide Tuesday afternoon by snooting himself In tbe right temple. Mr. Kltner was a married man. father cf one child, and a n ber of tbe nnn of Winans ft Kliner, blacksmiths, doing business on Somer- set street, near tbe end of tbe trolley line. Be was twenty-ssvso yeai age and up to .the time of his^death had taken anactive interest in tbe Re- publican politics of Somerset con No direct reason can to assigned for Mr. Kliner's act Be was an bitious young man, anxious to ceed. end his business was in a i flourishing condition gradually grow- ing every year. He was a man with no bad habits of any kind, entirely devoted to the interests of bis family. Monday be hadattended to his work along with htnbrother in the black' smith shop, aud he was apparently u the best of humor all day. Tuesdaj when his mother ami his wife left home at a -J» o'clock Mr. Kliner was to have accompanied them down town, but he complained of feeling unwell andconcluded to stay borne. When bia wife returned home at o'clock shefound her- husband lying on tbe b»dwith a revolver clasped in his band, and a bullet through his right temple. She immediately ran screaming to the shop where brother « M working, but-was so o come with eicitment that sbe could not make known her gruesome dis- covery. 'Mr.' Kliner is stilt prostrated with grief over .the sad event and, lies very m at berhome. Since tbe first of April Kliner been ill with malaria, which bas preyed severely on his constitution and caused himmuch mental worry. He has only worked at intervals dur- ,ni|! the intervening time and on Monday wben-ne came to the shop .his brother advised him sot to work that day. Nevertheless he applied himself to his labors aa usual, bat Tuesday he wits feeling much worse than here- tofore, and it is thought that afitof temporary insanity, superinduced by his Ulnes* and mental anxiety, caused him to take his own life. Mr. Kliner was a member of Frank- lin Council. Jr. 0. U. A. M., and had made application to Join Jerusalem Lodge. F. and A. M. The funeral services will to held Friday afternoon at his late residence at 4:30 o'clock and afterwards at Wil- son Memorial chapel U 1:45 o'clock. The services will be in charge of Franklin Council, Jr. O. U. A. M. Another J*sUc* at Mew Market. R. P. F. von Minden. who recently nualifled as a Justice of peace in Pis- cataway township, is located at Mew Market(on the Hallett place. He is a graduate of the law department of -Yale College and practiced as an at- toraev, in Connecticut. He also was a Justice of the peace in tbe latter state. Hf> was recently admitted to tin. Sew Jersey Bar. Justice von Minden studied law with W. R. Codinttoo in Under the auspices of the Christian Endeavor Society of tbe M M Bapti church a patriotic service will be held in tbe chorch Tuesday evening. July Tbe address of tbs evening will to delivered by Rev. Mr. Sullivan, pas- tor of the Baptist church at Patenon. Hew Hews Stand. The work of eroding a news stand wiU be commenced at the new rail road station by the Union News Com- pany wltbln a snort time. Tbs com- paay bas secured permission to build tHe stand, which wall to placed under tbe shed*. ' Kagagemsat Is A v d The engagement is announced Miss Elizabeth Reynolds, of Rochester. N. Y., to Samuel HoWngsworth, Scotch Plains. KOBBED LOCKERS. Caddies at Park Golf Cl«b Tried Their H*Bds at fteaaSsfcia* Sew. During ' tbe brief absence of tbe steward. Monday afternoon, some o the caddies at the Park Golf Clnb en tend the locker room in the rear ol the dnbbooM. broke open several lockers and helped themselves te tbe golf balla: Tbe theft was soondia covered and the identity of tbe youthful offender* found out. Most of tbestolen balls have since been n- tnrnetf-but tbe case bas bean reported the authorities and punishment if soon to be meted out to tbe partici FI HB_KE MEET THE INDEPENDENCE DAY PUNS ARE ABOUT COMPLETED. Little Track, Hear Westflela, WIU Bee Sosae Good Contests There on July 4. Arrangements for tbe second grand see meet to to held at tbe pretty half-mile track of tbe Fair Acres Driving Club, near WestAeld, on tbe afternoon of July i. an about com Dieted, and the programme for the afternoon promisee to to one of 'great nusement. National Association ties Will govern tbe raoes. Tbn programme will include tli-ee puns ,r*c*» for taoQi Horses will go the a. 2V*•*> and 9.40 class. The 3SS will be the tost three in five beats. Then will be fear divisions oney—«, 35, 16 and 10 per eeat. of purse. Tbe sport will begin at 1 :S0 clock. Entries for tbe noes closed on Fri- day. The, list has not yet beenpub- lished, but there is no question about tbem having filled. The chances ace that the fields will to large. The track pronounced to be in elegant shape. Fifteen new stalls have been added to le stables, and other improvements i th* grounds for the comfort of pa- raor. The Aeolian brass band w'U furnish music for the day, and there will to m refreshment stand on tbe grounds nn- der the care of Arthur S. Flagg. One .f tbe principal features will to Neil Afcyxmer, tbe gnldeless wonder, owned by Dick Halsted, of New York, this horse ,has a record for going: a half mile without harness or driver in .08. Stages will convey tbe people to the rounds and track. Then wiU be no baseball game at Westfleld on the afternoon of July 4; theraoes will to he principal featun of attraction in hat section. THE NINE MET. tun Ion of Those Who Formerly Gave Active Assistance to tbe Y. M. .C. A. Tuesday evening, in tbe T. M. O. A. .hall there was n very pleasant re- ;i of theoriginal Ladies' Nine, an organization that formerly extended active assistance and took a prominent iterest in T. M. C. A. work in this itj. Tbe members of that coterief^have een separated for tbe past six years, but with the, arrival ben on a visit of be Mlaaiis Demarest, of Free port, II., tbe nine were once more all in Plainfield and the opportunity was Immediately seised for a social re- Tbe names «f those wbo were pre- sent at theaffair who formerly com- posed tbefirst Ladies' Nine an : Mrs. Stephen R. Strutbers, Mrs. tt W. Raskin, Mrs. Towosend Kdshmon, Mrs. Roger F. Murrey, Mrs. J. W. Gavett, tbe Misses Jennie L. and Eleanor Demarest, Freeport, 111., Mra. Harry Manning and Miss Carrie Jewey. Room for AU. Many people in passing the, City National Bank admin tbs fine vault which may to seen, through tbe win- dow. Then are ret twe other vaults these an tbeir storage vaults. t walls are very thick and u s lined with heavy steel pits*. Tbe dimensions of tbs largest vault are • than two thousand cubic feet. It can thus to seen that while safety and absolute protection wen first con- sidered, ample accommodation is also Given a Plane. Mr. and Mrs. J. A Baboock. of Clinton avenue, Lwill calebrate tbe fourth anniversary of tbeir wedding Saturday A substantial git* has been received by Mrs. Babock from a husband U tbe shape of a piano. , Fall Fros« Cherry Tras. A few days ago Albert Utsinger, of L. W. Randolph', i>barmaoy, lejl from a bifcb ladder in a cberry tree. That to did not break bis limbs is a miracle. He U very iauM and sore as -i result of tbe tBssbl*. Iffl HI I The Dealers Say That Boat n«M Promise* to b« Paxticu- larly Heavy This Season. THE REASONS FOB IT A NUMBER OF NOVELTIES ARE TO BE INTRODUCED THIS YEAR. After Flrer n r k f n . Wh Utl I ng Pieces Prove the Most Popular—SeuU- meat Is KowAgainst the Use or tbe High Kxploslves. This promises to be a banker year for tbedealers in fireworks * rharffe ot tbe fireworks depart- t of a firm that handles a large amount of goods In that line, both wholesale and retail, dealing largely with Plainfield, said last week that the sales this year would probably to larger than any in the past. The only ibanoe, of bis prediction not being fulfilled, he said, was wet weather. manufacturers aod wholesale dealers are delivering tbs goods, and the retail men an taking them tbe expectation of disposing of tbem without trouble. Other dealers spek* in tbe same way. Rone of tbem conld i any particular reason except that the use of fireworks for tbe cele- bration of Independence Day bas been increased largely, year by year, for tbe past decade or more." Tbe greatest :rease was during the trouble with 3pain, when the warfever ran high. Tbe high water mark in the trade abed in 1800. The business fell off last Tear, but no mere than the dealers expected, as a reaction of the ir before. I think tust the Fourth is toil observed nan fully every year." said dealer, "and as long as It is tbe small boy. and for that matter grown >eople, too, must nave a vent for heir feelings. Then fireworks an >oth interesting and, la most cases, beautiful to behold. As they a n re- served by tbe public for Just one day n the year, it Is only natural that heir use on that occasion shonld be- »me greater as time goes bv. "Another thing that helps bnsineaa s that manufacturers are getting out something newevery year. Thereare several novelties on tbe market this besides a number of tbings hat were tried a* experiments last ad having proved successful, are on the market nowin large quan- tities. One thing that was made tbis year for the first time is the whistling a cracker. This Is about tbe as tbeordinary Chinese cracker of large proportions except that it makes a whistling sound from tbe ime tbefuse is lighted until it ex- plode*. Whistling tilings proved very popular last season sad tbe mann- tcturen have taken tbe bint. All tanner of fireworks that emit a shrill •histliag sound have been prepared n larger numbers than ever. Be- iies tbe whistling cannon cracker, tie newones include whistling bombs, Which explode with a particularly oud report; whistling rockets and cloudbursts and whistling chasers, has run on the sidewalk or any other smooth surface. The latter came out last season and were very popular. Most of these goods are made to retail at one and Bve cents each, according si *e. Other articles that an strictly w this year an dragon flies, eagle screamers, skyscrapers and reporting gold fountains, all of which are in Ive Cent pieces. •Then is Issa demand tbis fear for ligb explosive crackers. The trade Is going back to the Chinese goods, as the latter do not contain high explo- sives and an much safer. These are about tbe only kind ot fireworks made China aod they are far superior to anything in that line made In the nited States. Sotae States banlegis- at e d against tbe manufacture or sale firework* containing; dynamite, which at use time was commonly in the cannon crackers. Tbe old style small cracker Is going out of favor. The maadarina an tbe popular cracker now. They a n pat np in aney packages, an well made and give load reports. They sell at five i n package. They also come in nils of one. two and three thousand. Tbe way to use these is to tie one end rrinn to a pole or to atrstoh tbe nil between two posts or trass and then light tbe rose. The effect is very toe, particularly at night Tbe rolls sail from sixty cents up. ••Another •orslly that found favor Mt year aasd which are, expected to sell well this holds n oap, which explodes 1 struck against anything hard. These canes wen not expensive last year but although there the cheap kind to to had now, some of them an more elaborate, with animals' heads on the top and other . attractive features Another experiment last year that has been improved upon was the marble that had a thin coating of some barm less explosive. Few of these will to seen now. as tbeir pine* bas been taken bywhat an called kango clubs. Tbe latter, when struck together, give oat a load report, Tbey are pat up two !• a box andsell for ten c pair. "There ii not much change in eitbe price or quality of the larger pieces— those need for night displays. One novelty in this Hue, however, is tl Rattling batterr, which merely a I toman candlt-s bunched together It is made with eitbrr forty or ninety shots. Its popularity la already as- sured. The Chinese or Japanese Ian terns, which are nully made in thorn countries, a n to to hadin newertut: e attractive designs." HEJH I E GRID AT Summer Visitors Are Flock- Ing to Aabury Park Detv pfte Lack of Attractions. FEW AMUSEMENTS OPEN BISHOP FITZGEHALD IS TRYING TO INDUCE THE PRESIDENT TO SPEAK. r Recursions Ii Re- •aarkablr La*** This Ye of the Principal Event* A Big Sign an ike Auditorium. Asbury Park, Jose 25— The Jon. crowd now In the twin cities is thi largest ever known. The boardwalk been kept busy for a week in spite of a day or two of bad weather, de- ite tbe absence of lights and tbe fact that only- a. lew of the amuse- > areopen. - Even music is lack Tbe contract with Dr. Conterno. of New York, is oft, and no band bas yet been secured to take his place. Bandmaster Voss, of Newark, whose rejected when Dr. Contenii was accepted, returned a decided when the music committee ottered him the contract. The only band which bas offered Its servi the Young American, a representative of which is in Asbory Park. Mayor Bradley Is endeavoring ive Wesley lake, which divides limsn Grove from Asbury Park, en- i n l y under tbe management of tbe Tbe Mayor owns the Asbury Park side and desires to lease it to tbe city. He bas also written to Rev. A. Ballard, vioe president of the an Grove Association, asking hi. oo-operatiou in having the lake placed under the city's jurisdiction. Postmaster John Hubbard bas leted arrangements for tbe receipt and despatch of a Sunday mail during the summer. The service was in- augurated last Sunday. Tbe mail wiU arrive at tbe Interlaken station about a, m. Tbe outgoing mail'will close at a :30 p. m. One collection, about 1 m., will be made. The postoffice will to open only between tbe boon 13 and 1. There will to a. private delivery to a number of the larger ho- tela Bishop ritxgerald, of Ocean Grove, • endeavoring to induce President Booaevell to apeak at the auditorium summer. Three years ago, when Governor of New York, Mr. Roose- velt spoke to an audience of twelve housand in tbe auditorium. At that bftold tbe bishop that be would make a return trip to tbs Grove. Tbe list of summer excursions this aar Is unusually long. Tbe principal ins wiUcome latex in tbe summer. Thursday, August 21. will to Ameri- Day, when at least ton thousand Of the Junior Order of American Me- hanic» in NewJersey will be in the ity. OnSaturday, August I, tbe em- ployes of tbs Clark thread works st vearny will have, their outing ben. and on Labor Day tbe New Jersey An- cient Order of United Workmen will arrive. There will be daily eicnr- from Newark, New York. Tren- Philadelphia andother cities, as well as tbs usual complement Of Sun- day-school trips. X huge electric sign is to to placed i the roof of tbe Ooeaa Grove Audi- torium, bearing the words "Ocean Grove" in twelve-foot letters, visible miles out to so. ." win GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII Delightful Affair at Mllwion Church of the Heavenly Rest Last Tuesday. BY THE LADIES' GUILD DETAILED PROGRAMME AND THOSf WHO TOOK PART. In Addition to Musical Numbers Mlsa Mary Adelaide Lackey Gave Several Excellent Recitation*— Refreshment. Were Served. Under tbe auspices of tbe Ladies Guild, a delightful and well attended icale was given at the Mission Church of the Heavenly Rest, last Tuesday. All tbe artists with one t oeption were from this city. In *d< tiou to the musical nnmton M Mary Adelaide Luckey coutribut iversl excellent recitations. The programme as rendered was as follows:"Selection From the Opera,' Gounod, Professor Pierre; soprano lo, "Angel Land," Pinsutu. Miss izabeth Forster; tenor solo, "( Restless Sea." Wbite, Fred Tallamy quartette. "Come Where My Lov< Lies Dreaming," Poster, Juan Bab oeok, Miss Grace Phillips, Mrs. K. E. Irown andFred Tallamy : recitation Tbe Musicals," Miss Mary A. Luckey; contralto solo, "The Clang of tbe Wooden Shoon," MaUoy, Mrs Lewis H. Morgan ; quartette, "Come Where the Lilies Bloom," Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. L. H Morgan, Mrs. E. K. Brown and Fred Tallamy; Tarau- j in E minor. Smith, Prafessor Pierre; contralto solo, "A Winter Lullaby, • • De Keren, Miss Grace Pbillips: recitation, "Tabitba Tubba at the Sewing Circle," Miss Mary A Luckey; baritone »olo. "Good Night, Little Girl, Good Night," Macey i Baboock ; adprtno solo, "Perhaps Sometime in the Gloaming," Eve: sole, Mrs. E. E. Brown, final ohorus, Kentucky Babe," quartette. Daring an intermission refreshmeat* wen served and an enjoyable half ' was spent. The proceeds from tbe affair will amount to a neat and will be devoted to church ii ests. The committee in cbaige, listed of Mrs. William VsnNorden, Mrs. E. E. Brown aod William Burke. DOCTORS AT SHORE. Annual Meeting of MedleaJ Society of New Jersey is In Session at Atlantic City This Week. The one bnndred and thirty-sixth annual meeting of tbe Medical So- ciety of NewJersey is being held tbia week MAtlantic City, when a largi number of physiciana from all parts of the State are in attendance. The irogramme comprises a variety subjects presented for treatment and discussion, including one by Dr. F. C. Ard, of this city, on "Radical Operation for the Relief of Chronic Purulent Disease of the Middle Bar. Ka interesting subject for discos ii on omorrow morning will to "What are he Best Methods to Prevent tbe Spread of Tuberculosis?" Among the present officers of tbe society Is Dr. E. W. Hedges, of thl city, who is the corresponding secre- tary. Going Fishing. Homer J. Wightman, principal at he North Plainfleld High School, will eave [or Thursday for Itaaca, 1 York. Mr. ' Wightman Is a devotee of tbe quaint and gentfe Ixaak and tbe greater part of bia vacation will be pent angling for speckled beauties northern New York. Te Act • There will to an important meeting of the First Baptist church this vening when action concerning tbe resignation of Kev. Dr. D. J. Terkes will to taken and other bust acted relative to tbe pastorata of tbe burch. A fall attendance of mem- bers it desired. Private 'Phswe Una. Tbe Elisabeth, Plalnfleld andCen tral Jersey Street Railway Company now bas a telephone w i n for private from the company's office on Watchuna avenue to tbe headquarters at Westfleld. The line will shortly to extended to the Fourth stnattarna. In Kallrewd Sit.p.. Cyras Kinsmsa, of this city, who is a student at Cornell College. U now at Akron, O.. devoting his time to tbe study of engineering in the works of tbe & s O , R- B. Odd reilows to Kleet. Queen City Lodge, No. w , and PtainBeld Lodge, Ho, U, L O. O. F., DOG RUN OVER. I Valuable Bpanlel sMonglBs; to Harry Brlttaln Was Killed. A Urge black oook-r apanieU >wned by Barry BritUin, of Evona svenoe, was ran over by a careless carriage driver, Tuesday afternoon on West Front street. Tbe aaimal was badly Injured and was put out of its misery by a well directed pistol shot Tbe driver of tbe wagon wbo was speeding at a reckless rate, drove on without stopping to learn the eiten of tbe damage be badcaused. Brit claims tbe canine was a pedi greed one sad captured several Mu ribbons at dogshows. NEEDS 1 1 1 HOME WHAT IS NEEDED AT THE NETHER WOOD CHARITY AT PRESENT, Donations May be Left With Th Dally Press or Heat to th, Treasurer of the Cam*. nee writing one week ago, we have hadmuch reason for thankful because of the liberality of tbe a our appeal for furnishings for tbe Nettierwood Fresh Air Home. There are still more necessities ired before we can throw open the doors of the borne onTuesday ne: 1 we would urge that the responses .liis appeal to made as promptly as possible. In planning to give to this work 'riends should remember tl children arevery young, none brin) older than six yean and some as •oona as six months old, therefore Daby carriages, go carts, baby toy and picture books will to very ac insafcls. We have .reoeived as many beds as e 'have room for, bnt no chairs cheats of drawers; we will * twelve small chairs and three or f< rockers for tbe mothers. If any on« stoop or lawn chain to spare they would to most useful. id » hand! Do not think because yours is small. Or because from its fingers no ric may fall. It ni meant you should render succour at all.— J. Wolcott. We wlsb to call th*attention of public to tbe Fresh Air Fond that bas been started by The Daily Press to be two charities; we gratefully ac i now ledge the receipt of $10 con- tributed through tbis fund. Any one not desiring to use this fund u a lediau for tbeir gifts may send tli recUy to the treasurer. We will aend for donations if uoti- .ed. Any further information regard- ng our work may be obtained bytele- phoning No. 1121. J. Wesley Johnson, Treat. Cbas. J. Fisk. Lucius H. Biglow, Jr. EUCHRE AT HOTEL. (iiintut.TletBirwiiod.nil Plalufleld Society Folk Placed Progresslvi Kuchre Last Tuesday. Progressive euchre was the pastit at the guests at the Hotel Net)* wood last Tuesday #A goodly numi f Plainflelders attended, one of whom among the prize-winners, tables wen neoesssry to accommodate players and W. H. Class, of New York, acted as master of ceremonies Thei prixe-winners were as follow* First, Mis. Paul Sheldon, New fork second, Mrs. Dr. Hickok. Brooklyn, and Mrs. a B. Rogers, tie; Mrs. ok won the play-aiT. Among tbe men our tied for first place, Ei-OoOKress- [rviog Comes, of Brooklyn Mrs. Eelley, of Plainfield, who played Bertram Sear*, of New r ork, and Mr. Thome. Brooklyn. Congressman Comes won the play- off, with Mrs. Kellej, ot Plainfield, aecond. During the intervals tbe Nettie: wood orchestra discoursed music, and M during the evening bulletins wen received from lbs Hew [ersid relative to tbe king'i condition. Completed Swoid Tear. Richard McCulloogh, son of Rich- ard H. MeOnlloagb, of tbe borough, has completed bis second year st An- napolis with booon. He is now off cruise along tbe Potomac He anticipates a visit to his borne next September. P r eac k e r Sec•red. s members cf tbe First Churchof Christ bare secured Bev. J. B. leaver, of Bound Brook, to preach or them every- Sunday evening. Of late there bas been an increased inter- est andattendance. Fourth of July Oration. Ber. Dr. Henry Elliott Mott will delivsr tbe Fourth of July orationon Washington Camp ground at d Brook. Plans an being formu- Geo. P. Meilick Oare Dinner to Announce HI*Katirement From Public LlfeTMa T««r. COULD NOT BE THEBE. llaees Prevented the Host Front Bela* Present, Bsit Mrs. Mslllck Received the O*ests—Forsssr Councilman Harrows Acted aa Master of Ceremonies. A delightful affair of last Tuesday ras the entertainment ol the member* of tbe Common Council and other city official! at tbe summer borne of OoaB- cilman and Mrs. Oeorge P. Melliok Hillside Tennis and Oolf Club. Mr. Melllck hadplanned tbs r, but unfortunately because of i, he conld not be present. Mrs. Mellick very hospitably neeived tbs guests, and made than feel perfectly at home. Tbe event was Intended by lick as a time and plane for tbe announcement that this will to last 'term as a Councilman, It be- ing bia purpose to retire bomthis po- sition at tbe close of bis IIISSIIIII term. It was the sentiment of all present, however, that Mr. Mellick should not retire, that be la acapable and efficient official and tbe city cannot afford to valuable a member of tbe Council. Then wenmany expressions of deep ngret that Mr Melliok oonld not to present last evening and many kind expressions wenmade in his be- half. The bungalow was most attrac- Arranged and decorated for tbe occasion ind toe Ulnsjlnatlon by idle power was very pretty. la tbt absence of the host, Elliott T. Bai 1 - and in a very happy vein be conducted tbe programme. Dinner was served at 7 o'clock and after tbs most excellent menu -was partaken of, :he rest of the evening was devoted to ipeecBmaktng and a good social time. The speeches were ot a high order and were listened to with a great deal of iterest. Among some of thoee present ' Conocilmen B. Frank Ooriell. Leslie M Daniel, E. E. Prsj, Jan. vanHer- werden, R. I. Toll™, J. F. Buukle, William L. Gloak, Frank DeW. Ran- dolph, Robert L. Lee, Clarence (L. Hurphy; City Stenographer George B. Wean; Former Councilman J. ti, Dumont; Former Mayor Charles J. Fisk, Corporation Counsel Craig A. Marsh. Fire Chief T. o. Doane, Chief of Polios F. S. Kiely, City Treasurer F. Arnold, Tax Collector T. 1. Smith, and Former Councilman B. T. Barrows. A feature of the evening wen tbe innygrapba by Mr, Fitch, of New York, who helped to entertain the guests witb comical stories. He was npeatedly recalled and liis supply of mining stories secjnisd exbaustless. was 10o'clock when tbs guests re- irned home andeveryone was loud in tbeir praise of Mr. and Mra Hel- ick for the good time provided. Carried Off Prlxes. e closing exercises last week of the College of St. HUsstoth, Oon- veut Station, NewJersey, one of tbe ildest colleges for girls in tbe east. Miss Vannle Hill man., of Platnfleld, daughter of J. H. Hillman, of West renth ttroet, carried off prises Is losopby, Greek, and for an English ay. Previous to entering tbe in- stitntlon named, Miss Hiilman was graduated from St. Mary', school, his city. Liked the City Impart meat. Captain Burtis, of No. 183 Engine Company. Brooklyn, retnrned home Sunday after spending a fsw days at re headquarters, PiaJnBeld, test of W. F. Townley. Tbe captain off on a twenty-seven days' n sad took in this city oa bis tour. Ha . thinks highly of the FUinfleld depart- ment, as well as of tbs city in general, nod intends to take np bis reside when he retiree from active , Kxpert Saddle Bidsr. [las fcontto Martin, of Newark, m well known and expert saddle rider, s spending tbe mootb visiting bar sister, Mrs. Garrett 3. Powen.of Tine !. Miss Martin may to i daily taking anearly morning outing, acornpanted by Joan p. Powers. WimmX Merser. Friday evsainf, Jmns 87. is tbs date set for the final merger of Miantow

Transcript of Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6....

Page 1: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w \ 26, 1902. NO. a6.

"Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht U m a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots as * Its Authorities "—Madison.

Henry L. Kliner Shot andKilled Himself TuesdayAfternoon mX His Home.

NO REASON FOB ACT

It Is Sapposed That Kecent IllneiCaused Temporary Insanity-Was i

Wife and One Child -Mem ber ofFinn of Wtaaaa * KUner.

iryU K!i • r, of

son of Mrs. and Mrs. Jacob J. Klicommitttd suicide Tuesday afternoonby snooting himself In tbe righttemple. Mr. Kltner was a marriedman. father cf one child, and a nber of tbe nnn of Winans ft Kliner,blacksmiths, doing business on Somer-set street, near tbe end of tbe trolleyline. Be was twenty-ssvso yeaiage and up to .the time of his^deathhad taken an active interest in tbe Re-publican politics of Somerset con

No direct reason can to assigned forMr. Kliner's act Be was anbitious young man, anxious toceed. end his business was in a iflourishing condition gradually grow-ing every year. He was a man withno bad habits of any kind, entirelydevoted to the interests of bis family.

Monday be had attended to his workalong with htn brother in the black'smith shop, aud he was apparently uthe best of humor all day. Tuesdajwhen his mother ami his wife lefthome at a -J» o'clock Mr. Kliner wasto have accompanied them downtown, but he complained of feelingunwell and concluded to stay borne.

When bia wife returned home ato'clock she found her- husband lyingon tbe b»d with a revolver clasped inhis band, and a bullet through hisright temple. She immediately ranscreaming to the shop wherebrother « M working, but-was so ocome with eicitment that sbe couldnot make known her gruesome dis-covery. 'Mr.' Kliner is stilt prostratedwith grief over .the sad event and, liesvery m at ber home.

Since tbe first of April Klinerbeen ill with malaria, which baspreyed severely on his constitutionand caused him much mental worry.He has only worked at intervals dur-

,ni|! the intervening time and onMonday wben-ne came to the shop .hisbrother advised him sot to work thatday. Nevertheless he applied himselfto his labors aa usual, bat Tuesdayhe wits feeling much worse than here-tofore, and it is thought that a fit oftemporary insanity, superinduced byhis Ulnes* and mental anxiety, causedhim to take his own life.

Mr. Kliner was a member of Frank-lin Council. Jr. 0. U. A. M., and hadmade application to Join JerusalemLodge. F. and A. M.

The funeral services will to heldFriday afternoon at his late residenceat 4:30 o'clock and afterwards at Wil-son Memorial chapel U 1:45 o'clock.The services will be in charge ofFranklin Council, Jr. O. U. A. M.

Another J*sUc* at Mew Market.R. P. F. von Minden. who recently

nualifled as a Justice of peace in Pis-cataway township, is located at MewMarket (on the Hallett place. He is agraduate of the law department of-Yale College and practiced as an at-toraev, in Connecticut. He also was aJustice of the peace in tbe latter state.Hf> was recently admitted to tin. SewJersey Bar. Justice von Mindenstudied law with W. R. Codinttoo in

Under the auspices of the ChristianEndeavor Society of tbe M M Baptichurch a patriotic service will be heldin tbe chorch Tuesday evening. JulyTbe address of tbs evening will todelivered by Rev. Mr. Sullivan, pas-tor of the Baptist church at Patenon.

Hew Hews Stand.The work of eroding a news stand

wiU be commenced at the new railroad station by the Union News Com-pany wltbln a snort time. Tbs com-paay bas secured permission to buildtHe stand, which wall to placed undertbe shed*.

' K a g a g e m s a t Is A v dThe engagement i s announced

Miss Elizabeth Reynolds, of Rochester.N. Y. , to Samuel HoWngsworth ,Scotch Plains.

KOBBED LOCKERS.

Caddies at Park Golf Cl«b TriedTheir H*Bds at fteaaSsfcia* Sew.During ' tbe brief absence of tbe

steward. Monday afternoon, some othe caddies at the Park Golf Clnb entend the locker room in the rear olthe dnbbooM. broke open severallockers and helped themselves te tbegolf balla: Tbe theft was soon diacovered and the identity of tbeyouthful offender* found out. Mostof tbe stolen balls have since been n-tnrnetf-but tbe case bas bean reported

the authorities and punishment ifsoon to be meted out to tbe partici

F I H B _ K E MEETTHE INDEPENDENCE DAY PUNS ARE

ABOUT COMPLETED.

Little Track, Hear Westflela, WIUBee Sosae Good Contests

There on July 4.Arrangements for tbe second grand

see meet to to held at tbe prettyhalf-mile track of tbe Fair AcresDriving Club, near WestAeld, on tbeafternoon of July i. a n about comDieted, and the programme for theafternoon promisee to to one of 'great

nusement. National Associationties Will govern tbe raoes.Tbn programme will include tli-ee

puns ,r*c*» for taoQi Horses will gothe a. 2V *•*> and 9.40 class. The3SS will be the tost three in five

beats. Then will be fear divisionsoney—«, 35, 16 and 10 per eeat.

of purse. Tbe sport will begin at 1 :S0clock.

Entries for tbe noes closed on Fri-day. The, list has not yet been pub-lished, but there is no question abouttbem having filled. The chances acethat the fields will to large. The track

pronounced to be in elegant shape.Fifteen new stalls have been added to

le stables, and other improvementsi th* grounds for the comfort of pa-raor.The Aeolian brass band w'U furnish

music for the day, and there will to mrefreshment stand on tbe grounds nn-der the care of Arthur S. Flagg. One.f tbe principal features will to Neil

Afcyxmer, tbe gnldeless wonder,owned by Dick Halsted, of New York,this horse ,has a record for going: a

half mile without harness or driver in.08.Stages will convey tbe people to the

rounds and track. Then wiU be nobaseball game at Westfleld on theafternoon of July 4; the raoes will tohe principal featun of attraction inhat section.

THE NINE MET.tun Ion of Those Who Formerly

Gave Active Assistance totbe Y. M. .C. A.

Tuesday evening, in tbe T. M. O.A. .hall there was n very pleasant re-

;i of the original Ladies' Nine, anorganization that formerly extendedactive assistance and took a prominent

iterest in T. M. C. A. work in thisitj.Tbe members of that coterief^have

een separated for tbe past six years,but with the, arrival ben on a visit ofbe Mlaaiis Demarest, of Free port,II., tbe nine were once more all in

Plainfield and the opportunity wasImmediately seised for a social re-

Tbe names «f those wbo were pre-sent at the affair who formerly com-posed tbe first Ladies' Nine an : Mrs.Stephen R. Strutbers, Mrs. tt W.Raskin, Mrs. Towosend Kdshmon,Mrs. Roger F. Murrey, Mrs. J. W.Gavett, tbe Misses Jennie L. andEleanor Demarest, Freeport, 111., Mra.Harry Manning and Miss CarrieJewey.

Room for AU.Many people in passing the, City

National Bank admin tbs fine vaultwhich may to seen, through tbe win-dow. Then are ret twe other vaults

these a n tbeir storage vaults.t walls are very thick and u s

lined with heavy steel pits*. Tbedimensions of tbs largest vault are

• than two thousand cubic feet.It can thus to seen that while safetyand absolute protection wen first con-sidered, ample accommodation is also

Given a Plane.Mr. and Mrs. J. A Baboock. of

Clinton avenue, Lwill calebrate tbefourth anniversary of tbeir weddingSaturday A substantial git* hasbeen received by Mrs. Babock from ahusband U tbe shape of a piano. ,

Fall Fros« Cherry Tras.A few days ago Albert Utsinger, of

L. W. Randolph', i>barmaoy, lejlfrom a bifcb ladder in a cberry tree.That to did not break bis limbs is amiracle. He U very iauM and sore as-i result of tbe tBssbl*.

Iffl HI I

The Dealers Say That Boatn«M Promise* to b« Paxticu-larly Heavy This Season.

THE REASONS FOB IT

A NUMBER OF NOVELTIES ARE TO BE

INTRODUCED THIS YEAR.

After Flrer n r k f n . Wh Utl I ng PiecesProve the Most Popular—SeuU-meat Is Kow Against the Use

or tbe High Kxploslves.This promises to be a banker year

for tbe dealers in fireworks *rharffe ot tbe fireworks depart-t of a firm that handles a large

amount of goods In that line, bothwholesale and retail, dealing largelywith Plainfield, said last week thatthe sales this year would probably tolarger than any in the past. The onlyibanoe, of bis prediction not being

fulfilled, he said, was wet weather.manufacturers aod wholesale

dealers are delivering tbs goods, andthe retail men an taking themtbe expectation of disposing of tbemwithout trouble. Other dealers spek*in tbe same way. Rone of tbem conld

i any particular reason exceptthat the use of fireworks for tbe cele-bration of Independence Day bas beenincreased largely, year by year, fortbe past decade or more." Tbe greatest

:rease was during the trouble with3 pain, when the war fever ran high.Tbe high water mark in the trade

abed in 1800. The business felloff last Tear, but no mere than thedealers expected, as a reaction of the

ir before.

I think tust the Fourth is toilobserved n a n fully every year." said

dealer, "and as long as It is tbesmall boy. and for that matter grown>eople, too, must nave a vent forheir feelings. Then fireworks an>oth interesting and, la most cases,

beautiful to behold. As they a n re-served by tbe public for Just one dayn the year, it Is only natural thatheir use on that occasion shonld be-»me greater as time goes bv.

"Another thing that helps bnsineaas that manufacturers are getting out

something new every year. There areseveral novelties on tbe market this

besides a number of tbingshat were tried a* experiments last

ad having proved successful,are on the market now in large quan-tities. One thing that was made tbisyear for the first time is the whistling

a cracker. This Is about tbeas tbe ordinary Chinese cracker

of large proportions except that itmakes a whistling sound from tbe

ime tbe fuse is lighted until it ex-plode*. Whistling tilings proved verypopular last season sad tbe mann-

tcturen have taken tbe bint. Alltanner of fireworks that emit a shrill•histliag sound have been prepared

n larger numbers than ever. Be-iies tbe whistling cannon cracker,tie new ones include whistling bombs,

Which explode with a particularlyoud report; whistling rockets and

cloudbursts and whistling chasers,has run on the sidewalk or any other

smooth surface. The latter came outlast season and were very popular.Most of these goods are made to retailat one and Bve cents each, according

si *e. Other articles that a n strictlyw this year an dragon flies, eagle

screamers, skyscrapers and reportinggold fountains, all of which are inIve Cent pieces.•Then is Issa demand tbis fear for

ligb explosive crackers. The trade Isgoing back to the Chinese goods, asthe latter do not contain high explo-sives and a n much safer. These areabout tbe only kind ot fireworks made

China aod they are far superior toanything in that line made In the

nited States. Sotae States ban legis-at e d against tbe manufacture or sale

firework* containing; dynamite,which at use time was commonly

in the cannon crackers. Tbe oldstyle small cracker Is going out offavor. The maadarina a n tbe popularcracker now. They a n pat np inaney packages, a n well made and

give load reports. They sell at fivei n package. They also come in

nils of one. two and three thousand.Tbe way to use these is to tie one end

rrinn to a pole or to atrstohtbe n i l between two posts or trassand then light tbe rose. The effect isvery toe, particularly at night Tberolls sail from sixty cents up.••Another •orslly that found favorMt year aasd which are,

expected to sell well this

holds n oap, which explodes 1struck against anything hard. Thesecanes wen not expensive last yearbut although there i» the cheap kindto to had now, some of them a n moreelaborate, with animals' heads on thetop and other . attractive featuresAnother experiment last year that hasbeen improved upon was the marblethat had a thin coating of some barmless explosive. Few of these will toseen now. as tbeir pine* bas beentaken by what a n called kango clubs.Tbe latter, when struck together, giveoat a load report, Tbey are pat uptwo !• a box and sell for ten cpair.

"There ii not much change in eitbeprice or quality of the larger pieces—those need for night displays. Onenovelty in this Hue, however, is tlRattling batterr, which i« merely a I

toman candlt-s bunched togetherIt is made with eitbrr forty or ninetyshots. Its popularity la already as-sured. The Chinese or Japanese Ianterns, which are nully made in thorncountries, an to to had in newer tut:

e attractive designs."

HEJH I E GRIDAT

Summer Visitors Are Flock-Ing to Aabury Park Detvpfte Lack of Attractions.

FEW AMUSEMENTS OPEN

BISHOP FITZGEHALD IS TRYING TO

INDUCE THE PRESIDENT TO SPEAK.

r Recursions Ii Re-•aarkablr La*** This Ye

of the Principal Event* A Big

Sign an ike Auditorium.Asbury Park, Jose 25— The Jon.

crowd now In the twin cities is thilargest ever known. The boardwalk

been kept busy for a week in spiteof a day or two of bad weather, de-

ite tbe absence of lights and tbefact that only- a. lew of the amuse-

> are open. - Even music is lackTbe contract with Dr. Conterno.

of New York, is oft, and no band basyet been secured to take his place.Bandmaster Voss, of Newark, whose

rejected when Dr. Conteniiwas accepted, returned a decided

when the music committeeottered him the contract. The onlyband which bas offered Its servithe Young American, a representativeof which is in Asbory Park.

Mayor Bradley Is endeavoringive Wesley lake, which divides

limsn Grove from Asbury Park, en-inly under tbe management of tbe

Tbe Mayor owns the AsburyPark side and desires to lease it to tbecity. He bas also written to Rev. A.

Ballard, vioe president of thean Grove Association, asking hi.

oo-operatiou in having the lake placedunder the city's jurisdiction.

Postmaster John Hubbard basleted arrangements for tbe receipt

and despatch of a Sunday mail duringthe summer. The service was in-augurated last Sunday. Tbe mail wiUarrive at tbe Interlaken station about

a, m. Tbe outgoing mail'will closeat a :30 p. m. One collection, about 1

m., will be made. The postofficewill to open only between tbe boon

13 and 1. There will to a. privatedelivery to a number of the larger ho-tela

Bishop ritxgerald, of Ocean Grove,• endeavoring to induce President

Booaevell to apeak at the auditoriumsummer. Three years ago, when

Governor of New York, Mr. Roose-velt spoke to an audience of twelvehousand in tbe auditorium. At that

bftold tbe bishop that be wouldmake a return trip to tbs Grove.

Tbe list of summer excursions thisaar Is unusually long. Tbe principalins wiU come latex in tbe summer.

Thursday, August 21. will to Ameri-Day, when at least ton thousand

Of the Junior Order of American Me-hanic» in New Jersey will be in theity. On Saturday, August I, tbe em-

ployes of tbs Clark thread works stvearny will have, their outing ben.

and on Labor Day tbe New Jersey An-cient Order of United Workmen willarrive. There will be daily eicnr-

from Newark, New York. Tren-Philadelphia and other cities, as

well as tbs usual complement Of Sun-day-school trips.

X huge electric sign is to to placedi the roof of tbe Ooeaa Grove Audi-

torium, bearing the words "OceanGrove" in twelve-foot letters, visible

miles out to so.." win

GliSIGIIElIt! HIJSBII

Delightful Affair at MllwionChurch of the Heavenly

• Rest Last Tuesday.

BY THE LADIES' GUILD

DETAILED PROGRAMME AND THOSf

WHO TOOK PART.

In Addition to Musical NumbersMlsa Mary Adelaide Lackey GaveSeveral Excellent Recitation*—Refreshment. Were Served.

Under tbe auspices of tbe LadiesGuild, a delightful and well attended

icale was given at the MissionChurch of the Heavenly Rest, lastTuesday. All tbe artists with one toeption were from this city. In *d<tiou to the musical nnmton MMary Adelaide Luckey coutribut

iversl excellent recitations.The programme as rendered was as

follows:"Selection From the Opera,'Gounod, Professor Pierre; soprano

lo, "Angel Land," Pinsutu. Missizabeth Forster; tenor solo, "(

Restless Sea." Wbite, Fred Tallamyquartette. "Come Where My Lov<Lies Dreaming," Poster, Juan Baboeok, Miss Grace Phillips, Mrs. K. E.

Irown and Fred Tallamy : recitationTbe Musicals," Miss Mary A.

Luckey; contralto solo, "The Clangof tbe Wooden Shoon," MaUoy, MrsLewis H. Morgan ; quartette, "ComeWhere the Lilies Bloom," Thompson,Mr. and Mrs. L. H Morgan, Mrs. E.K. Brown and Fred Tallamy; Tarau-

j in E minor. Smith, PrafessorPierre; contralto solo, "A WinterLullaby, • • De Keren, Miss GracePbillips: recitation, "Tabitba Tubbaat the Sewing Circle," Miss Mary ALuckey; baritone »olo. "Good Night,Little Girl, Good Night," Macey

i Baboock ; adprtno solo, "PerhapsSometime in the Gloaming," Eve:sole, Mrs. E. E. Brown, final ohorus,

Kentucky Babe," quartette.Daring an intermission refresh meat*

wen served and an enjoyable half' was spent. The proceeds from

tbe affair will amount to a neatand will be devoted to church iiests. The committee in cbaige,listed of Mrs. William VsnNorden,

Mrs. E. E. Brown aod William Burke.

DOCTORS AT SHORE.Annual Meeting of MedleaJ Society

of New Jersey is In Session atAtlantic City This Week.

The one bnndred and thirty-sixthannual meeting of tbe Medical So-ciety of New Jersey is being held tbia

week M Atlantic City, when a larginumber of physiciana from all partsof the State are in attendance. Theirogramme comprises a variety

subjects presented for treatment anddiscussion, including one by Dr. F.C. Ard, of this city, on "RadicalOperation for the Relief of ChronicPurulent Disease of the Middle Bar.Ka interesting subject for discos ii onomorrow morning will to "What arehe Best Methods to Prevent tbe

Spread of Tuberculosis?"Among the present officers of tbe

society Is Dr. E. W. Hedges, of thlcity, who is the corresponding secre-tary.

Going • Fishing.Homer J. Wightman, principal at

he North Plainfleld High School, willeave [or Thursday for Itaaca, 1

York. Mr. ' Wightman Is a devotee oftbe quaint and gentfe Ixaak and tbegreater part of bia vacation will bepent angling for speckled beauties

northern New York.Te Act •

There will to an important meetingof the First Baptist church thisvening when action concerning tbe

resignation of Kev. Dr. D. J. Terkeswill to taken and other bustacted relative to tbe pastorata of tbeburch. A fall attendance of mem-

bers it desired.Private 'Phswe Una.

Tbe Elisabeth, Plalnfleld and Central Jersey Street Railway Companynow bas a telephone w i n for private

from the company's office onWatchuna avenue to tbe headquartersat Westfleld. The line will shortly toextended to the Fourth stnattarna.

In Kallrewd Sit.p..Cyras Kinsmsa, of this city, who is

a student at Cornell College. U nowat Akron, O.. devoting his time to tbestudy of engineering in the works oftbe & s O , R- B.

Odd reilows to Kleet.Queen City Lodge, No. w , and

PtainBeld Lodge, Ho, U, L O. O. F.,

DOG RUN OVER.

I Valuable Bpanlel sMonglBs; toHarry Brlttaln Was Killed.

A Urge black oook-r apanieU>wned by Barry BritUin, of Evona

svenoe, was ran over by a carelesscarriage driver, Tuesday afternoonon West Front street. Tbe aaimal wasbadly Injured and was put out of itsmisery by a well directed pistol shotTbe driver of tbe wagon wbo wasspeeding at a reckless rate, drove onwithout stopping to learn the eitenof tbe damage be bad caused. Brit

claims tbe canine was a pedigreed one sad captured several Muribbons at dog shows.

NEEDS 1 1 1 HOMEWHAT IS NEEDED AT THE NETHER

WOOD CHARITY AT PRESENT,

Donations May be Left With ThDally Press or Heat to th,

Treasurer of the Cam*.nee writing one week ago, we

have had much reason for thankfulbecause of the liberality of tbe

a our appeal for furnishingsfor tbe Nettierwood Fresh Air Home.There are still more necessities

ired before we can throw open thedoors of the borne on Tuesday ne:

1 we would urge that the responses.liis appeal to made as promptly as

possible.In planning to give to this work

'riends should remember tlchildren are very young, none brin)older than six yean and some as•oona as six months old, thereforeDaby carriages, go carts, baby toyand picture books will to very ac

insafcls.We have .reoeived as many beds ase 'have room for, bnt no chairs

cheats of drawers; we will *twelve small chairs and three or f<rockers for tbe mothers. If any on«

stoop or lawn chain to spare theywould to most useful.

id » hand! Do not think becauseyours is small.

Or because from its fingers no ricmay fall.

It n i meant you should rendersuccour at all.— J. Wolcott.

We wlsb to call th* attention ofpublic to tbe Fresh Air Fond that basbeen started by The Daily Press tobe two charities; we gratefully aci now ledge the receipt of $10 con-

tributed through tbis fund. Any onenot desiring to use this fund u a

lediau for tbeir gifts may send tlirecUy to the treasurer.

We will aend for donations if uoti-.ed. Any further information regard-ng our work may be obtained by tele-

phoning No. 1121.J. Wesley Johnson, Treat.Cbas. J. Fisk.Lucius H. Biglow, Jr.

EUCHRE AT HOTEL.(iiintut.TletBirwiiod.nil Plalufleld

Society Folk Placed Progresslvi• Kuchre Last Tuesday.Progressive euchre was the pastit

at the guests at the Hotel Net)*wood last Tuesday #A goodly numif Plainflelders attended, one of whom

among the prize-winners,tables wen neoesssry to accommodate

players and W. H. Class, of NewYork, acted as master of ceremonies

Thei prixe-winners were as follow*First, Mis. Paul Sheldon, New forksecond, Mrs. Dr. Hickok. Brooklyn,and Mrs. a B. Rogers, tie; Mrs.

ok won the play-aiT. Among tbe menour tied for first place, Ei-OoOKress-

[rviog Comes, of BrooklynMrs. Eelley, of Plainfield, who played

Bertram Sear*, of Newrork, and Mr. Thome. Brooklyn.

Congressman Comes won the play-off, with Mrs. Kellej, ot Plainfield,aecond.

During the intervals tbe Nettie:wood orchestra discoursed music, and

M during the eveningbulletins wen received from lbs Hew

[ersid relative to tbe king'icondition.

Completed Swoid Tear.Richard McCulloogh, son of Rich-

ard H. MeOnlloagb, of tbe borough,has completed bis second year st An-napolis with booon. He is now off

cruise along tbe Potomac Heanticipates a visit to his borne nextSeptember.

P r eac k e r Sec•red.s members cf tbe First Church of

Christ bare secured Bev. J. B.leaver, of Bound Brook, to preach

or them every- Sunday evening. Oflate there bas been an increased inter-est and attendance.

Fourth of July Oration.Ber. Dr. Henry Elliott Mott will

delivsr tbe Fourth of July oration onWashington Camp ground atd Brook. Plans a n being formu-

Geo. P. Meilick Oare Dinnerto Announce HI*KatirementFrom Public LlfeTMa T««r.

COULD NOT BE THEBE.

llaees Prevented the Host FrontBela* Present, Bsit Mrs. MslllckReceived the O*ests—ForsssrCouncilman Harrows Acted

aa Master of Ceremonies.A delightful affair of last Tuesday

ras the entertainment ol the member*of tbe Common Council and other cityofficial! at tbe summer borne of OoaB-cilman and Mrs. Oeorge P. Melliok

Hillside Tennis and OolfClub. Mr. Melllck had planned tbs

r, but unfortunately because ofi, he conld not be present. Mrs.

Mellick very hospitably neeived tbsguests, and made than feel perfectlyat home. Tbe event was Intended by

lick as a time and plane fortbe announcement that this will to

last 'term as a Councilman, It be-ing bia purpose to retire bom this po-sition at tbe close of bis IIISSIIIII term.It was the sentiment of all present,however, that Mr. Mellick should notretire, that be la a capable and efficientofficial and tbe city cannot afford to

valuable a member of tbeCouncil. Then wen many expressionsof deep ngret that Mr Melliok oonldnot to present last evening and manykind expressions wen made in his be-half. The bungalow was most attrac-

Arranged and decorated for tbeoccasion ind toe Ulnsjlnatlon by

idle power was very pretty. la tbtabsence of the host, Elliott T. Bai1-

and in a very happy veinbe conducted tbe programme. Dinnerwas served at 7 o'clock and after tbsmost excellent menu -was partaken of,:he rest of the evening was devoted toipeecBmaktng and a good social time.The speeches were ot a high order andwere listened to with a great deal of

iterest.Among some of thoee present '

Conocilmen B. Frank Ooriell. LeslieM Daniel, E. E. Prsj, Jan. vanHer-werden, R. I. Toll™, J. F. Buukle,William L. Gloak, Frank DeW. Ran-dolph, Robert L. Lee, Clarence (L.Hurphy; City Stenographer George B.Wean; Former Councilman J. ti,Dumont; Former Mayor Charles J.Fisk, Corporation Counsel Craig A.Marsh. Fire Chief T. o. Doane, Chiefof Polios F. S. Kiely, City Treasurer

F. Arnold, Tax Collector T.1. Smith, and Former Councilman B.

T. Barrows.A feature of the evening wen tbeinnygrapba by Mr, Fitch, of New

York, who helped to entertain theguests witb comical stories. He wasnpeatedly recalled and liis supply of

mining stories secjnisd exbaustless.was 10 o'clock when tbs guests re-

irned home and everyone was loudin tbeir praise of Mr. and Mra Hel-ick for the good time provided.

Carried Off Prlxes.e closing exercises last week

of the College of St. HUsstoth, Oon-veut Station, New Jersey, one of tbeildest colleges for girls in tbe east.

Miss Vannle Hill man., of Platnfleld,daughter of J. H. Hillman, of West

renth ttroet, carried off prises Islosopby, Greek, and for an Englishay. Previous to entering tbe in-

stitntlon named, Miss Hiilman wasgraduated from St. Mary', school,his city.

Liked the City Impart meat.Captain Burtis, of No. 183 Engine

Company. Brooklyn, retnrned homeSunday after spending a fsw days at

re headquarters, PiaJnBeld,test of W. F. Townley. Tbe captainoff on a twenty-seven days' n

sad took in this city oa bis tour. Ha .thinks highly of the FUinfleld depart-ment, as well as of tbs city in general,nod intends to take np bis reside

when he retiree from active ,

Kxpert Saddle Bidsr.[las fcontto Martin, of Newark, m

well known and expert saddle rider,s spending tbe mootb visiting bar

sister, Mrs. Garrett 3. Powen.of Tine!. Miss Martin may to i

daily taking an early morning outing,acorn panted by Joan p. Powers.

WimmX Merser.Friday evsainf, Jmns 87. is tbs date

set for the final merger of Miantow

Page 2: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

OSMnlcal WIH «j*llw brrnelf to Mackaad vblt* tai* M M I . M>* will alfcr so ildtni I* in ibr helirbt of style.

Black and white foulards a n mad*•nlrt wslat style and are oeat and perttr for street w w , Uw of the smarts**.ways in which such a foolard can b*•»d> up la la Uy tb*> " • « >n Uny hqiylalta stitched Hat and.

i liw i [ Mi-

to flare (ratOf coarse ilir«- fatOard attlft waiatfount* are marie unllned.J There aeetns w b « i rasa lor unllaed

a tbla araaon, nod tb*y • « >

•0 even In expensive materials. Gownsan1 in'I fti much honed a t f.inm-rlj.and, t'li'i-w ID tbe cnse of stout" WIIHIPH,tbe «bwii'-<' of tiones Improves the liturr.

A ii,ivy blur etnmlne snlt In li>re.abuwn. Tbe j :nku ia made bl<Hta«>fashion. With O|»-II fronts, lined wltbI a n . Tin- PI.III bun two graduated raf-fles, whlcb are the [nil. Tbe trimmingOf tli.' wiiil consists In tundH of -Ut- lndaatin. JUDIC i •: [i M . I . K T .

DRESS FAD5 AND FANCIES.

A crr-.-i< veil dra|m] o u t a i-iiif onel i a mlllluerr faU Just now. The vi-ilsa n t not worn over tbc fa<w. but drapedarraiml Ibe lirim of the h IT wltb long>fallluK rnda behind. Both tin- preen• ml ltn- 14,,.. n n > of tbe moat virld

In i'urlu Hif race for greens and,blne* h*s l«Tii SIIIKTWIIIHI liy one Torl t d , pan I'-n i.i ri j fur that at a geranium•bade. Itn) ||ni>u de urn' la vi-ry smart.

MpecLally wben trimmed with coarse|BC« and touch.-* of orient*I embroid-ery.

Some of the smartest coats *een re-oantlj at tbe races wire of white eui-jbraUered In black or of a biscuit abidetreated tbe same way.

Many costs tor evrninj: wrsr iimvrlarge white anri gold embroidered col

- hum,A handsome evening wrap of black

bengalln* silk Is here shown. Tbe ltn-tac I* white satin, and tb* trlmmiconsists wf accordion plaited rafflesblack rhltfon. Tbe huge sleeve* art-M i l l entirely of this accordion plaited•blffon. A facing of wblte lace app«sradown th* front and at tbe bottom of

JTJD1C CHOLLET.

than shirt waiata.Gowns made of eera Ilaen w»

rat bkmse fsihlon and warn with Iand stocks of different pale coGowns at glara linen will b«

OB*SII LIM1S ODWX.

Indpally in pint and blae. They willbe trimmed with bands of Russian em-broidery and are rathrr tsflor made Ineffect, being trimmed with many rows•t stitching ns well a« strappings.Blouse anil skirt continues of pongee

are very useful and becoming. Theybe wanned like cotton,

ilk gingham is another materialwhich lends Itself to tbe morning cos-unie. Made up with n tucked blooseval«. three-quarter length sleeves andi belt of bendiua with a ribbon runhrongh. thin mnk<f a dainty dress."nlln.il iln'i.™-. tit dolled mnslln made

with elbow sleeve* are VIT> cool look-ng for hot days.

shown. Tbe waist Is laid In tucks,fhere Is a bolero effect beaded and

edged by wide i-rn applique. Tbc topsof the sleeves are m- >;,.,). and they ter-

te at tbe ellKms wltb wide cuffs.Tbe akirt has u tu.-k.it front panel anda tucked rinuliir rrtti*. Tbe entiredress 1s trimmed with narrow Mack

elvet ribbon.Tbe bat which goes with this ia ofcm straw trinmtiil wfili black andrhlte tulle»nd an • •-•ni -strlch feather.

jrwq CHOLLET.

6ILKS AND CHIFFONS.IK hi ( • l > r w | T > I M » Mawh t »rrt

r<' r l> •• • - • W f i r .Light i •.!••:. •' taffeta* are being mncb

used for evening wear, i A recent ex-itnitlc w a s n pink taffeta softened by;pt> Heat Ions of bcavi- ,^-ru lace. Tbcraint ]H.,\>, I...I u.Tti back aod front.

r aavsbore wear a CMpto of ngfatfrocks made in comfortable

i fashion, wltb tooae abort easts, I• found very naefuL

: straw toqoes and hats are i

Coronation ofAlexandra,Queen Consort

•a inv.rlaWy wear tntprhats forward to sbade tbe eyea. Thttsla -lofinltelT more becotnlng, as Itthrows a soft shadow arid protecta tkeface from the glare of the *un. If a

wishes to wear her hat off h «

MVsnnfflQface, she can have It tilted np with aband, but It should still be allowed toxtend forward.lillibon work la a greai deal used,

and. In spite of tbe coming warm days.Ilk chenille embroidery hat byleans gone out of fashion, but Is •i very sheer and delicate gowna.A smart neslljiw of pale blue anil'seiling is here Kbai-n. It has a wldo

collar and also ruffle* of yellow tecTbe back and front bunt: In full gatl

tnd tbe side* :m' fitted.

Jl'MC CHOLLET.

EARLYSUMMER DRESS HINTS

Bed ant Same color are a great deal•ed In millinery. Whole bats covered

wltb poppies are >.ry charming. TbeII black picture hats are for the most

part made ot tbe new ribbon or baas•trawj end sometime* of leghorn.

Veils do not lary nm.-ti. Pine, dearneshes are tbe favorites, while a whit*1

tulle v,.jj dotted wltb large and small•!'vi dot* Is very becoming to a

smooth akin.The craze for wblte seems to be In-

creasing. In linen, cambrics, muslinsnd cloth It relcnH supreme. Nothing•n be prettier or more dressy than anII white cow turn.- wben ahoea, hat,loves and jura an I ma ten.There Is n nt-n* nliade of green calledatrick green which Is roniildered very

T ~B pageant of tbe crowning ofkings and queens la one thamay not henceforth often berepeated- It Is worth while

therefore, to note what the'coronatlonof Edward and Alexandra hi like. Forforty yean tbc role of Alexandra ha

' been to walk, a graceful poppet, throngceremonial British shows and win beto the end- Whatever tbe part, sbplnys It to perfection.

This ia ber part In tbe coronation:Picture to yourself Westminster ab-

bey, (ray wltb coal smoke and weatherstain on tbe outside, dingy 'with diand cobwebs on the Inside; bnt thivery smoBchlneaa itself la regardedwltb holy awe by the British nation.Up tbe central aisle ia a platform walk,ellghtly raised lest the feet of royaltytread where those of common folk stepTbe walk Is covered first witb mats,tben with crimson cloth. Immediatelyunderneath the central tower of theabbey Is an often square, called forthis occasion only- the "theater.

' platform five steps high has been raisedupon this square. All about here 'gorgeous red or purple_ cloth border

| witb gold, except tbe top of the plat' form and the top step leading to Itand these are covered with the richestand costliest cloth of gold thatcan devise. If there could be devisedanything more expensive thiot gold—say cloth of diamond*—tbeplatform would be covered with that.

At 10 o'clock In the morning of thirest day Queen consort Alexandrantera tbe state coach at Bucklngba:

palace and sits beside King Krfn-oisod la driven through the streets a,London to Westminster abbey- _Sbcdoe* not wear her coronation mantli

tbe coach, bat just ordinary robes o

it*, in which site stands beside theking on such occasions as the openiniof parliament. After she enters Westminster abbey the mantle of *tate iiremoved by her indies, and the gorgeous coronation robe of purpleturned Up witb ermine and having acourt tralm four yards long is put uponher. The court train falls from theahoulders. We may be very BIthia ceremony of undressing and dress-Ing before all tbe folk in Westminsteribbey will be undergone with courn mate grace, like every oilier rolerblch the beautiful Dane appeara.

A !*•:..i TH Ira. automatic accompaniesof Edward, walks np the crimson cov-ered aisle wltb him. Edward, not Alex-andra. IK "It" on this occasion. Twochairs apiece are necessary :

nine of the king ami queen. TbeSrst two are Upon tne ek>tli of goldcovered platform, sad in tbeai the royalconple sit wblle the archbishop of Can-terbury tolls tbe people that thia mansitting in that chair upon the cloth of(old platform is tbeir fclog and aakilieiii ir they sre willing (o serve him;•hereupon they all do as they haecu told to beforehand and about

aloud. • i;.-! save King EdwardTIt is now II o'dock. Tbe queen baa

nothing to do but sit still and lookpretty during tbe next two or three

M-So Ethel delivered her essay at tbe

graduation exercises for over half antear. Jack, who waa In the antnence.Mast bar* felt proud of her.'"

-Not at all. Ha ab»dd«r*d at tbepossibility of being married to such aMirer and Immediately broke off the•Bfamnenf-Baltlmor* Her*It

The sleeves, and yoke were entirely oflace Insertion, whlcb also went downtbe skirt sod spread at tbe bottom InUtrtcate vet nines.

Foulard Is not so popular as in for-mer seasons, ruin materials are morefashionable Wben fofllard la used. ItIs usually of the satin finished variety" i pate, almost indistinct, coloring*.

Pongee ta being man* Into dressygowns, contrary to th* custom of for-mer Beaton-. Ti !* trin)3»ed with paleblue or deep rvd or else (ace and chiffonin the same ecru shade. Worn withan ecru lace hat and a lace umbrellathia makes a charming^costume.

The hat in tbe Illustration 1* of tock-ed chiffon with a straw crown. Tbeneck ruffle Is of dotted »et. with a car*effect formed of three ruffles and twoenda shirred In three! places. It 1*trimmed with barrow; velvet ribbons,rnn tbrongb ueadinc.

JlDfxHOI.IJtT. i

•m^n lu millinery just now. It is soT'i:J that It ruins tbe complexion ofnearly every woman who wears It.

A pretty evening gown for a j"on|j£rmatron is the .me shown in tbe llluftntvtion. It is made if lustrous black crept'de chine. The skirt Is accordion plait-ed and trimmed wltb two perpendicu-tar Insntiuns down the front. There•a a girdi,. of lace, and tbe waist IsBade up of alternate •trip* of toser-tftin and tucked bands of crepe dechlue. with a transparent .vote of netnavinra Wnti:! .rtbejatv. Ttortf t . ' ,taretra-s: rent ui>;»w ksirv* uud fell»»T««r tin- ;:i. ..

-a DIC CHOI.L3T.

hours while the ancient pageant ofmaking'a dead sure king of ber augusthusband proceeds, it Is a moat ex-hausting cen-miin}'. After it Is overAlexandra goes througb her part, whichla not much and does not take her long.No oath is required of ber, since thehas no part In tke government of Englaud. She has, however, a crown andthrone chair of ner own. Their mnjes-tles do not take their places In thethrone chairs tin the crooning. Tbethrone chair la which Queen Alexandrawill alt after leaving tbe one upon theplatform waa made for tbe coronationof William and Mnry in 1689. Marywas crowned sovereign Jointly withWilliam, ayl thia chair waa for ber. Itwas not used again tin 1831, wbenQueen Adelaide, wife of William IV.,«at, in it when she waa crowned.

Tb* qucea'a crown is historic, too,thouefc aitantiOM have been made ID

tain tbe great KoUnoor di

coronation. Until tbe qnsen la anointedsne will wear only ber diadem, a sim-ple decorated told band or fillet, andshe will be crowned not by tbe arcb-Irishop of Canterbury, like her huband, but by tbe archbishop of Tor

ler special crown was made originalfor Mary of Modena, wife of the halesa King James II. It waa noun*however, tbe crown of St. Editha, for

en Edith, wife of Edward the Con

MMThe ceremony in the abbey las

ibont six boors- After It la over ttking and queen, wearing their brat

ma and state robes, must ride istate through London streets agalisnowing themselves to their people.And when all is done and the royaoatr are back borne at Buckinghampalace and have a chance to matchcold bite we can well Imagine tbe beantlfnl queen throwing off tbeweight of cloth and metal and stonestretching up ber lovely arm* and evenyawning In tbe king's face and exclaiming:

"Thank goodness, it's over!*1

ALEXANDRA COSMO.

CHINA DECORATIONS..rails An K. . i Will PUln, i

Cklss Plrtnrf• Are • Kml.China plates are being much need for

decorative pnrposes. Not only is thiof antique ware, but of tbe ordi

nary modern specimens. For this th•olorinc munt be strong and the paiera effective. For this reason binml white is a particular favorite, and

laares of blue snd white thina ireb framed In black onk and usedIctnres. A new variety or Wedgwood

ware Is no*' being sold very cheap tosatisfy this demand. Tbe platen eachrepresent a pcene from one of Scott'i

r Dickens' novels, and there is tnalnt title IA old English lettering.Tbe iunstration snows a ball witf'hlte paneling n-hieb is entirely dec-rated with- china, the ceiling Is tlnt-1 a delicate white a'nd gold; tbe rriese

Is blue and white. At tlie base of thisplaced a plale rack, on which standeclmentt of old blue china. At intertls along the walls similar bits ollna are placed. [The furniture It

olonial. including a tall prandfatber'iclock, :i fiddle backed elinir and iround mahogany table. Tbere Is alst

II antique chest beating a few choiceteces of blue china;. The arches of.hlte woodwork are particularly grace-

ful and go well with this style of dec-n. A few wa[er color pictures

nng bore ami tlierp add touches of'lor. .Any woumu fur a sojfill umi!

could furnish her ball after this fashion.

L summer dress for walking and vis-ug la of delicate pale blue in a aortcrash made of coalrse linen and cot-

a. It looks more like momle clothilly than what we have always call-crash, but it makes up Into really

handsome gowns. This particular onelade In regular tailor style, withrsnjjement of urn Id around thea la a darker shade of blue with

hlte satin dots over1 the surface. Thealst was in the form of a postilion atle back, while in front It v u a kind! pointed Jacket trimmed with theme braid and having notched edgesr

cacti held by rounded mother of pearluttons. Straps are pot around theeevea, carrying the same generalyle of trimming..and lace finishes thebole. The sleeves «re like nearly all

sleeves now—wide and gathered atwrist and close at the top.

Crepe de chine Is amoDg tbe lilkstbe season, and It Is offered In ev-

lor and tint. Xlbertj silka arein an o vt-r whel in ins Variety, but

g tbe designs the dark blue andMte scroll patterns seem to be rather

the beat iikcJ. T'J.T.' is no end to theumber of daalgns, all different, ande who has any didtculry In choosingmethlugio h r tatte will find It ine immense number, eacb patten bo-g prettier than the last seen. Theilka dot still retains Its favor wltb^mankind. :

LrfHtk « tHr Brisk! IMt.Wben anything goes wrong, don't

roth over like a fin drink, then sinkown flat and deaQ. also like a lisarink. Train yourself to good tempernd patience. Any woman can do fttso train yoorsetf te- look on the bright' - of ttrtaca. Ton can do that, too,

when you do It tbere will neverb* «nr aMe bat tbe bright MM con*

way.

SEPARATE WASH WAISTS.

EfHt mm* Wmttmm Arflflrlnl r t a m n

Tbe majority of tbe Moortc waistsbutton down toe back. Like tbeill i—i a. tbe- watata are aoft and boastof DO rtlff or starched effect.

Waists of graa* linen all lalB In finperpendicular taeka and trimmed witwide applique of Mien colored lace ar*considered smart White china si1

sromu) use jjro u<blouses are trimmed with ValenciennesIn a plalded pattern. White organdiesand mnlbj are trimmed with r,Irish lace.

The gingham shirt waist seemsthing of the past, even for athletics.

Tbe all white shirt waist prevailsThis In probably because It launders

inch more satisfactorily.White pique suits are giving way

White cotton etamioe and the glace llnn ones. - .Long dust coats of pongee are serv

eeable to cover muslin gowns whenon the street or in a public convey:They are usnsllf made with strappet

earns and wide lace collars.Tbe cool, attractive waist in the II

nstratlon shown one of tbe latent doalgna. The yoke Is transparent and baano collar. Across the Imet and the up>er parts of tbe sleeves there ts a dee]>and composed of three shirrlngs an<

cordlngB. Below this the waist lamade very fall. Tbe sleeves have fultransparent puffs gathered Into a deepfitted undersleeve of lace.

JUDIC CHOLLET.

SEMIDRESSY GOWNS.Very Itrtml Urr.tf. Wklrk ( • • B*

A naeful gown is one which la halfewnlng and half afternoon style. Thiahigh necked gown has elbow sleevi

nd dainty little touches of chiffon orabroldery. Such a gown can be wornrestaurants or the theater. Crepe de

nine and wool veiling make especiallygood gowns of this sort

Just now there Is a perfect erase1 the linen and pongee shades. Thiato the almost complete exclusion of

•ray. The woman who thinks she can-wear the trying ecru shade* shouldcombining them with Jnst tbe right

mde of cherry red. Touches of thisn the shape of embrpldery or a band

td the top of the collar even willtbe trying shade of ecru becom-

Colorcd shirt waists are almost en-tirely out of style. White, black and

ire the only colors now worn Ini blouses by women wbo under-

stand, toe art of dressing well.Thia pretty gown is made of white

relling and in trimmed with yellowce. Tbe waist Is blooaed and laid

-lusters of three tucka, betweenUch the applications of lace areiced. Tbe sleeves ha«» big puffs set

to a CtnT Of lace. Tbe skirt la tuckedclusters of three and finished wltb

pee folds around tbe bottom.The. bat which goes with this la ofhlte straw trimmed witb cherries and

their leave*. JUDIC CHOLLBT.

Flowers are uaed on evening 0In Biany ways, such aa tbe powderingof single blossoms over the tunic andbertha or In a ruche placed at rwularIntervals. Ulbbou ta lesa used aa agarniture, bnt cboax of velvet or looseknots of velvet holding sprays of arti-ficial flower* are very effective on palegowns.

The applique craw! baa reached sucha height that even artlflcUl flaweraand foliage are arranged in this war:but, excepting to surround a decoltetaftp

o head a flounce, tbe effect ts tooetiff to be very auccessfui. GarnrUire*Of pearia. groups of tinsel butterflies or

dragon flies and *choux of vetv it <satin edged with turquoise or coral>gads are favorite ornaments, forng gowns.

Exquisite robes of lace are shownwitb a heavy foot ruche of crefe tie

Ine or cbiffon, and ""lu're the patternsufficiently open horicontal stripes

of velvet are run In and out, and tinselbbon Is employed In tlie same fashion.Tbe subject of the sketch. Is a pretty

pale blae mull gown. The waist 1>made with a tucked yoke and a bjolero ,of lace, of which also tbe sleeve* aremade. The skirt has a yoke ••( the

and la accordion plaited. Tb* lacemlero and yoke are further o

TDRESS H|NTS.

I la ..f the 1BM* M.SIIU.

With pUUted or tiaby bodices thd belt• Invariably wide at tbe back andlnar->w la front. Uold and psilver tinsel lainch worn on black and wblte gonvnl.be colored velvet belt is also popular,

especially when clioux of the s-iinn* \ 11et are used elsewhere on the gown.Chlffon,cre.pe de chine and evcA the

old fashioned areophlne are used forthe now popular picture gown. Fichus

soft mull are a feature of these

The nirnmor muslins are marvels otdaintiness. Tbey are almost nil Madewltb elbow sli'i-i i-s, and quite a lev nn*

>ilar)ess. Perpendlcnlar trimntinKs

•wart* tptare marked ^eatnres, together [withmanr little ruffles. Tbe skirts measuremore around toe bottom and arelflany1-tbing more carefully fitted artiunil tbehips.

Tbe majority at the ruffles a n puton roll, but occasionally one aek agroup of gored ruffles overlapping •< v )iother r?sul;irlj- and edgei] with n IUT-row fluffy rochlng.

A waist of wliita flunuel useCul forthe beach and mountains Is shown Intbe cut. It la mudf with ft aoval ar-rangement of sUtcUpe which gi«es alow bust effect. Tb? stock Is of whitetaffeta trimmed wlUi Irioh lace. -

JUDIC CHQLLIT.

A Mr- J>kkStubb—I heard that man say for mile -

after mile nothing but great quantitiesof Ice stared htm in tbe face. Ia he anarctic explorer?

Penn-No: he works on the ba«k olan Ice wagon.^Cblcago News.

CHINA DECORATIONS.

principally In pink nnd bloc. Tbey will be trimmed with bands of Kouian em- broidery and are rather ta4or made In effect, brtn* trimmed with many rows of sCltrhinc aa wHI aa atrapptnea.

JUDIC CUOLUCT. e of lace. JUDIC CHOU.KT. DRESS FADS AND FANCIE8. 8EMIDRESSY GOWN8. EARLYSUMMER DRESS HINTS

JUtMO CllOM.IT. DRE8S H|NTS

SILKS AND CHIFFONS.

Page 3: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

CURB OH fflQOTSITIVE PEOPLE.

"Some people have • great deal ofe*rio*lly," J.»id • Chicago IraTeligB i n , • • be « t swapping experience*with a group ft bii fellow, at Ibe club.•ay- lae "Ch;e»g» Inter Ocean. "OB» J li>i trip Mfiutk 1 took ID a townthat I bad •«*** *i»iied before. Th*town wan jrrowing. Mid. among- otherimpro**niriit», m i the c»iabii»broentof ., pib:k »(rV. ,rr S. r >» the officeOf ihe prirei;-: fe • - The stenog-rapher, s pVrllf jr*C £ l«*J| seeme*qutie an ai.raetio*-r.. the v.,un|rm«Bof ibe town, and there wan jrrnerallya i!i.»n or mt.re of Ihrm hanging•roiiad b*r.

'"I bad quite a lot of writing to dowhen I arrived, and 1 engaged h«r forthe - eventns;, and after sapper I aatdoon (/> dictate. The Bsoal crowd ofyouth, and men were around, andwhin I began thay at first moved bachto a, respectful distance. After a fewminutes. hfUfirr, they began to edgecloser, an finally formed a ringarmmrf the Monographer and myself—m. clone thai ft.') could bear CTMTw.,rdflf*,j >ral i (H. Thla « • • W J• nnnyini'. an:! t determined to pot anMI'! to •!••:• .:(i]iinirtirr. .So 1 begandictating a letter to my wife, in whichI upolte of n,v arrival In the town, of•which I jriive a brief description, andthen,continued:

" *The penple here arc the most IO-rjaliir I hate met. An-1 sit here flirtat-injr a dozen of them are 'crowded•round liatening to M a n -word I lay.This [a no doubt a line trait, but it i*aomrwha-t annoying to the pretty girl*1... ii ,:..in« my work.'

"In a minute the listeners began tomore away, and after that I * u notbothered with their mri..,it \ . "

FOXES TO PROTECT SHEEP.

ATnrri.T.B to the statement of themajority of ihe game warden* undeithe supervision of the American Orni-thologists' union tb* m m w r boardet"who Is out for apart and Will ibootanything in light" ft the greatest men-Mi to the \ si-ion, form- of bird life.

AP «inn»hic exception. howeTer. tothe genrr.1 cheerful Indorsement tafthe native* of the protective policy ofIhe socirty is hpniirht to lifchT by thereport of iliarl-k Holt, keeper of theNanh Inland Jujhihi.rme. u,ni the New

. York Vail aDd Kjoprea*.Op Cone iftland, |a> breeding place for

DTrjnff pir!-. within bin "ffl.-li! terri-torlr, ihrre have been numbered thiaVrtr only mo pull*, aa against S00 l i l tyear. The unnatarally small in-nrir* be attribute! not to tbe of**'•fon.) rj.itor, but to anr entirely differ-

The resident proprietor* of tbe la-Inml are .four, wpmen-L* mother andthree daughter*—who 'own a larff*flock of sheep. ClaimW thai thebtrdn fl—liiji i lari'. f .rf. i:- of thevr*** they lioncht. B few month* agft.fnar f"xe>. which they allowed to roamat will through Ihe fields. Tbe fnxesfca*« earr:e<t ont the desires of thefrmi i lrumi by Crest in* widespread def'antnlion among the eggs and the votingof tlie • TiTMimtr cul'v

Tli. (r-n.,!. nl the birds are. howev-er, patiently hiding their tint'-. Theythink :,h i without tfoubt Uic foxes willdi-MrqJ?the yanng Iarob« fiMJi* "Pringam! tpw defeat tbe purpoxe file which

th.-.v tifre imported. . t

LAMB' DINED ON SHIP'S LOG.

M M »*»f* I.sjaty tan tbe Milr'i Beat

^ Wltl&er main and fore topsail gone,f>frnl tn;t:i* splinter.'it. h-'r steering«enr Am*s*«, and her- logbook d«-'ktr.jeVl. ihr moot »iiiojr abip Lo«hJ-it f JM10 t d itpot

h

ped in

lirhl lately and forked atth. Krir haMn. Xew York. Had It notb.(n fur the abnormal appetite of Ras-fai a pet 1'hHlan lamb. who. fin«n»pili- •htp*i> log on a chair in the rabint « " «"lt« •(["• "••urnl Jin leareiandpa:t of It* w.T'er. Cap!. Dean* naii] that1

he>«Hld give a more clm-umnUntla-!

"Ti-li:,. lamb

»»-TI Wt lefi TlHIMfflO Cliili•" ar . ' aUa CBpt. Dean.. ~ba( o n O U I

'i- I Ti[> lanililf ban ?rown to a re-nur^alile extent. For nearly a m.mihthr anlm.] ha* eaten n«ibm|r bot pap*r». <n<-ludlnR tbe .hip", log; clothes,irr/ludina- ihr first,mate's bent jacketb-jttcrtim and all; for from tbe back ofo-ir pet rat, upon which be graiea ievery I.|I|»T: nhiLy. and featbera be hi_.afj-ly alipped from my big white par-

The U M * Flnla. •truck terrific nwraters aoon after tearing Bermi«'n! Capt Deans removed M» clothingfoe the I n t lime In 19 Jay*. 4arfiWblck period he mm not able to •nstmorr than an hoar's sleep at any onetime and sometime* got none at • ! 'f< r days at a time, lie laynthr nortiiior the Uat month were the mcvrreit laM* 40 years* esperirnre.

** "•".- VnUr Halra.A French explorer has d i«orend on

tne « n t coast of Africa, what he re-p.inl» • • the vminr*t people on earth.'T lit > are tbe Pabonina, a warliketribe, whose main employment is theadornment of their persona. ehie«y bymeana of tattooing. Oreat ingenuityUalao exhibited in dreaaing their hair.which in many cues ia arranged in »*'

• - * - elaborate V.ahton.

In'Turkey red hnj r ;.great beauty and tbfc woikair that tint.

SHALL IOWA HEROrHE.

• » - • H - F 1 Illle H-* Jarli-t m*lanai •• i t M * * B • Trala ait •

A Chlcagf II m i h— crrttpoodrnt,•nitIng from (irrcai-iile. l a , saysthai a litt 14 Une-ejed h*fo:oe of eightsummem lit the person of IHtie Oars6ehl-.«cr i» rereirlng bona^e from

irei of tkanMul travelers and tn«•Biber* i,1 !be Chicago, Milwaukee

ft Bt. Paul •ire* of nstuennr train So.4. &y her fen-aeon of aiffdand br*T-•rj she a*efiei) a wreck, the retails ofrbicb are nut plf-aaant toeoptemplate.The track leading through this city

nukes a »harp lorn near Thc"8ebJo«aerkomr and the little- gir: k i o c i i i welJ

ISEH JACKET AS SIUNAI..

U the tratnmrn «hen the train is due.irge df-ayborae, in cruasing the

track, berime fastened in the culvert,and the mile girl keen ahe could notsummon help before the train arrived,going at full apeed. Hardly had'tfa*thongbt cfOMtd her mind before the.whiatle ojr the locomotive foretoldhat sbe aunt act quickly.

It l#atjacket wt

1 Man.ing In of thi:be awful

which *be was subject, began totrength her little

body con rt command. Within a fewrards of *er Engineer Meyer* broughtbin loCombtire to a dead slop and tha

np.r» and tmirmiD - began tofrom tbe train only to find their

little guardian angel pane. Deter-! to floestr the wvlor of bis paa-ra Engineer Meyers informedollc, of the Incident and they

•earched »H day before she was lo-tted. I-I was afraid Mr. Conductor would

MOM me* she said, when questioned a*why *h> ran away.

"Why did you wave the red jacket?"the waalsked.:"T h»Mvpn the man a( the crossing

wave the red flag and stop the trainand I wak afraid the poor horse would

"Didn'tj you think the train mightbe nr.Tln! and the people killed?"

"So. I fiiiin't think of tbe people ua-tll it waif»H over." abe s-id. timidly.

"Were Imi not frightenedr"No. I faa th Inking of the poor home

n»tl did net thin* of betnc afraid."The lit Ce heroine Is the daughter of

Fred Scb(oiser. a saloonkeeper.Wher rhc trains pass her home now

the trafnWn watch fnr her and tiptheir capk

DOf AT THE 'PHONE

«TT WAI OVEBJOf t D

she. 'ph. 4 0 ;o her molbrr to reHertthe lai.tfm snxieiy. The other nightafter .. I. - with her orarher o»erthe wire khe ailed «boa; Trt:sty.

Tif dog. u< a the Xew York Sty., wasby tbe siiir of the toother. Tbe mother•paoned tin: fact to her daughter wbo'phoned back to ba*c tbr receiverpUoedatlTrusty'sear.

Thii » i . door and the Bgislreaa oftbe dog :ii kr.i to him. Tkai he recog-Bixed bet > » „ was cvl(j,.n:. lor bebarked •»>! appeared overjoyed.

After the receirer if.* bung upTrusty jumped toward it and acted a»if he wanted it taken down. Daringthe nigbt be lay t , , r the telephoneand frequrni.t looked up at the re-

in the fnorninz be sat before it andb.owIfdnfli;*;«n-i-;r,..wmcalled»FVSbecomniai:(!td t!m IO k r e p ^ e t . a B *Bui HUHsfcrs: ulil be k i « » - ) -

VARRISBED CAKE OF THE WXT

«»T VsWe. Minw Telia

THE OLYMPIAN CAKES. STORIES Or COCKRAIf.

. my earned by naring mayfaring- with It a two pennyworth ofsuffering. The New York Mail andExprcM tell* of such a caae:

Peter H. Georg*. of the upperWest side, has been troubled withrheumatimn. and on damp days *of-

his chest, back and anna. Ilia wiferuba him Tigoronalj- with tni-pcntine.•Bd h* usually gets relief. Ooe ofthe mugiry days recently brooffbt onan sit ark. and Mr*. George wma dia-

* "My gra»ol*iier to.d we abovttt."•aid Lncle fairan.. •eoonllcj to theVew York Sou. "i-ut now my grano-nepbew *tk* sc« w t j ur *Unc a « t iMBBbrelU to trip mu* ttft .:u, ha«o!«downward.

"I told my graaenrphew iha: thereason fW•!*»&•• a «e: ;.u.\... . anits handle raiber . t in on iti up lathat if it were i t « . j „* its ll? mureor SCM of Ihe nateron i; r u t n i ^ duwntbe aMn « « « : t i i . . * - - . : r..^. ingon*, settle In :h* 1»:U. . ; .be .•..,. haround where the bows arc joined lothe click ana «aler-tcak •£*< par! ofIbe ciotb which w i i u remaiidamp longer tban the rtat, and io htvea tendency lo rut s;i.! urea.lt. r

~I have sern uiai-j. an umbrella wiiha ragged rfi* little bole aroonc tbe•tick at tfcr ;op thai had bten-cautcdby tbe clith d.cayinj there from this

lbese'no«ai.%.^a.yono»ed lo for the• imp> reason that people are more in-te^lgect nowadays about thr csre ofDDbrrtlx. a; thry are about all thing.«Ue. -

-SHU. thfre'^ mv gran«iOephew. abriBh: fovapter. certainly, and fcedin't know, and there mud be others;ana for their b«nfit Cncle Hiram MJ«,ntoho?f tn^ani. a wet umbrella when

"StiDd it OD the handle."

BLOODY FIGHT OF EAGLES.

A •)>)•! fair la Ike Slew Vnrlc loo

, Pr.-=.:.kr.: UotweTelt * • honoraryprekident of the international Olym-piao gatnea to be held ia Chicago In

1 19W: Baron Coabertin. of Paris, thegreat and miring spirit in the in*tematioSul Olympian committee, aawell a«!fta executive, box written aletter m ITenitieat Boowvelt askinghim to accept the honorary position.Ambassador Porter b u been (riventhe let.fr. and in doe time it will "fl«cr.i iefore the president.

, ' That I'.aron Coubertin on mit than one occaaion baa shown his ieeedingly pronounced friendship for

i

ELU OP ALL TH1KO8!"

appointed to find the turpentine bot-tle empty.

The servant » aa sent oat to hoy •quart, which she did at a> neighbor^ing- paint shop. It coat ten centa leuthan at the drug-gist's. Mr. Georgewas rubbed well, dosed with colchi-cum, mad pat to bed. Early nextmorning be called loudly for bis wife.

"Mr dear." he said, "will you oblig*me hy getting the hammer out of thetool cheat?"

"The hammer?" echoed Mrs.George. "Well, what in the world—"

"The hammer, I said," repeated Mr.George, "and tbe cold chisel."

"Tbe hammer and tbe cold chisel?"Mrs. George echoed again. "Are yonout of your head?" .

"So," replied Peter, "I am not outof my head, bat I want to get oat ofmy sbelL I want to be broken open.I am the great human, upper Westside . ' • * • • ! . Look here," and Mr.'•••orsjv sat up in bed and exposed hisarms from shoulder to wrist. Thrywere both as higbly glazed as a well-polisbed piano, and hi* back andchest were in the same condition.

"Well, of all things!" exclaimedMrs. Qeorge. "I do declare, thepainter has given as turpentine mixedwith shellac, and I have been var-nishing you juat as if yon were asideboard."

Investigation proved the truth ofMrs. (;eorffe*B statement, and it tookan hour to gel th* veneer off Mr.George'* skin, during which process

made many emphatic remarks*

Cvafllet.

At the inn iu ^.ntral park. NewYork, there was a &trce and bloodyfight tbe other day. The outcome, itia feared, nisi prove fatal to the maleeagle, who provoked the battle. No

may have been a scurrilous remarkabout the personal appearance o'f hismighty mate that drew down herwrath upon the luckless male—any-way, they fought.

Loud screams and angry thr*Rhiag«In the cage first drew the 1ceeper*s at-tention when he discovered a fright-ful mix-up. The great curved beakstore, the fearful talons struck and cat,the powerful wings beatamd pommeledas the pair roiled in conflict on thefloor. There was a brown nimbus ofdown and feathers in the air aboutthem.

The female is much the larger andmore powerful bird, says the New YorkTimes, and at last succeeded in van-quishing !:.-r partner. Be, poor, bat-tered, featherlesa wretch, presented apitiable sight when rescued by biskeeper, though bin eyes still Dasheddefiantly snd hia weak voice shriekedundying hatred at his conqueror. Itwaa feared he would jieveir recover.

FASHIOHS IN WORDS.

JILTED SUITOR'S R1VEHGE.

„ , < krrx t . ••( Girl W l . Had

A word t hat is gradually comingits own again after a perirai of neU -lady." After having betuworked until it lost ttsiigrincanciword was sudden!j subdued matpelled from a'.l polite, it not. ,:.

itHJl

! ia tendem

A goo.1 Blory on a young Udy whobad charge uf the general deliverywindow at the Toledo post office, andwho may still have charge, of it, wastold by an Ohiuan in the post office de-partment to a Cincinnati Enquirercorrespondent. He Mya this younglady was - W J I I ' I ! to a young Toledoman, hnt for some reason broke offtbe natch. Some daya later a small

"lady" back iilary. The word is occasional!}- heardin the talk of persons who flatter them-selves that they speak the latest NrnYorkes,-. But it must be otfereH witha slighi emphasis in order to show tba ttbe word has ju t been taken up, nays

the New York Sun."Party" has after a tersn of banish-

ment been restored to hist) furor indrawing rorna conversation Only-sfew yean ago tbe word v n ] s much•Cornell gi "lady" In circles that were•opposed to be rrftlnl in AtaCs of

' But cow "party" is among the over-works! words of the fashionable vo-cabulary und la.addrd ;o evt-ry term

Thtis one hears of "r.m?!ealparties,*""daneibg partiesAanJ so on through-out tae whole category.

ESTIMATING COAL SDPPLT.

THE OWJR ELOQUENT.

packagr arrived at ihe general d«li»-ry window, addresaed to an unosuai

name. Shortly after Its arrival a dis-tinct and unpleasant odor waa noticedabout the window. The next day an-

tber package addressed to an equallyicommon name, eare general deliv-er, arrivrd. It waa noticed that the•pleasant odor iner eased a! moat

simuluneotuly with the arrival of thesecond package. Tbe third day camemother package, and so on natil •IOXCB lav in tb*. pigeon bole* of the

general delivery department. By thisime tne odor, became unbearable, andhe young, woman's position at therindow untenable, so an investigationK3s ordered, and it was discovered tbeaddreaws were fictitious, and the pack-age* contained so thin; but Limbargwr

cheese. A him wts dropped to th*yoing BIBB who had formerly bamengaged to the post office clerk, and

uore package* were received.

, A banking house in New York has. anade an estimate of tbe coal which re-• mains In tbe anthracite beda of Penn• sjlr»ni», and finds that there ira still; f,OT3.775,000 tons unniDed. These bed*

are, with insignificant exceptions, theproperty of eight railroad corpora-

| tions, which expect to mine, W.OOO.OOCton* thU season. At this rate tbecoal would last about 100 years; butthe consumption of coal is constantlyincreasing, and if th* estimate of tb<banking h a u l 1* correct, the anthra-eite field of Pennsylvania will be ex-hausted long befor* Iha end of thecentury, says the Baltimore American.

While this coal ia at present the moilaccessible and of excellent quality.there are other anthracite deposit!which may be brought into generalisewithin • few yean that will removeal!

concerning the sapply. Tbe

the United State*, and especiallyChicago. i» known to those who wimost prominent in getting IOlympian .ames for that city. Eu-rope did net desire the jranien to goto tii.- • •.» world. Eastern citiea,Sew V rk' and Philadelphia, -bad ouitbelr lobl-yiats for the games. Buithe baron had carefully «tudied theaituatidn and bad afoten ao highlyof th:- . i I'TV and i.-.- world's failcity that • ', '.I-.. , ,i..,iy won tb.fight. In Europe President Roose-velt ia E-.--.ir.lcii an the wholeaometype of athletic enthusiast. With theinternational LJ.IIU.-- directly undeithe supervision of the nation's chief,the foreigners will have great faithin tbe iMTi-ifs at the stadium.

"Rooter in Washington for Har-vard when the crimson met tbe blue;rooter on the aUhl line* for the anniream at Philadelphia when the WestPointers met tbe middle* of Annap-olis, and champion of all goodhealthy, manly sports, was and I.Theodore Roosevelt," aaid a Chicagoworked for the succesa of the Olymplan aimM. "Why should not MiRoosevelt accept the position? Wethink <ie will."

RinrD DISCIPLINARIAN.BUknn Cfaarln C. 1H »ii. Hall. tne veii i- it i i imrr G i v r m

Bishop Char!.'* C. McCnbc, whbeing iarshlv criticised by *e*metnber> of the Enmmurl Methoilistr:pi*co|pa1 (-h ireh in Rennctntt, ni.y*rau*e of hi* allr~ri autocratic

opir.or trd for the gen-

( O n

CHARLES 1TCA-Ei Most Forc-fui Bllhops o

mi-bitniainons eoaldeposit* are practically ineKhaostlbte.'and they extend from the Atlantic tcthe Pacific. .Wfflt of the aonthwestemstate* and territorirs being to a largeextent beds of eoa:.

A physician has cieclared tbat If only90 minutes a day were spent in physicalexercise a* an adjunct to mental edu-

. cation moat people might live to TC1 without a day's illnesa. and perhap*

their livuiolOOjeara.

balleU, and after serving hi* term inLlbbr pri*oo he left tbe army beeanseif th* failure of his health. Hia first

pastorate was a little enures atrtaaonth. O. Bl*bop McCabe'ainciput dlalincUon has been hia re-

markable success aa a collector offunds for mUitionary purposes, and ID

bat capacity be atands unrivaled inle rank, of American chvnh work-ra. He la 64 rears old.

Tbe paternal sorer»:»-tit of Nor-way has a fund of money amountingto about 9M0.00O. which is loaned tofarmers throujrb the municipal ftfti-rers to assist then in buylr, - land, iSuch • projif.iiithiB was aarnnt-eiJ by |tbe populists of Ka.isa* some years 'mga and did not meet ulth i n - fa-vor, hot generally with ridicule. InNorway, however. It Is actually iapractice, and small n m i are loanedto Industrious pevple at three percrat. interest for a term of "2% j e a nto enable them to acquire farm* andImprove not only I h i m r ! ™ , batthe s ta t*.

•saployed as a boy in the great dryroods atore of the late Alexander T.

" rart. The strict ideas of thrift andLoniy that were insisted upon by

the famoDs merchaai were wellknown to yonng Cockran, a« the/were *•• every other employe IneatabtlAment. But. tike moat boys,he become careless at times. One dayMr. Stewart caught him wastingitring ta tying no a package and dls-harjred him.Your.: Cockran never forgot

eason and never forgave Mr. Stewart,

•r.) -

Year* afterward, when he became nprominent lawyer be joined tbe Man-

•luh. then the leading- demo-cratic social organisation in N'ew

•k city. One night, after tbeclub bad bought and moved into theStewart marble mansion at Thirty-Fourth street and Fifth avenue.Bourkc Cockran joined a few friend*

:afe and ordered a drink and acigar. Of late years he baa been aitrict tetotaler, but In those day*, he:uok a drink with "the nova." Alterigbticg the cigar, Cockran put MaFeet on the table and upset his drinkin the carpet in a manner that- . I.I.TI too deliberate to be accident-it. Hi* companions looked at him ii h to n ish (tie n t. COCK ran gazed inttbe glowing grate fire and rubbed hi

da with satisfaction. Then fatajd about Stewart's treatment c

in a* ii boy.

-After all these yearn," he concluced. "you don't know what a satUfac.

come in here and dijust M I blank pleaae in the olcodger's dining-room."

No one ever talked five minutewith Bonrke Cockran, says tbe Phil-adelphia Prea>. without falling ua<jer the spell of hia wonderful penonll charm, for be is us compelling- liliis conversation us in hia oratory.

And no one ha» ever spoken morfippreciatii-ely of him than Mrs. Wlliaiii Aht.tr. wbo, after he had won n-

lations with tbe metropolitan foulhundred. Invited him to dine ut tht

stor board. Meeting a friend a dayr two subsequent to the dinner, a'lid:"I have dined with a very large piartion of the men BOW bt public and•n-ial life on both sides of the,nic; Mr. Cockran ia decidedlyiost interesting character 1 1

DUKE OF HAMILTON.

1 DCKE Of HAMILTON.rt Peer of Scotland an4 Patron of

Arti ltd Crafts.)

place at noon. Only half a doaenrelatives were present. Tw. littlegirl* acted aa bridesmaid*. So re-ception followed the wedding and

there was an entire, thwnw of th*elaborate ceremonies usually atteud-ng dura! wedding*.

Alfred Dou*la» Hamilton, duke ofHamiluin. roarqaia of Douglae andaydesdale. earl of An?tia. LanarkUtd Selkirk, lord of ten manor* In

and duke of Brandon ofEngland, ia 30 years old and the thir-teenth In line of the ducby. Thi*noble ia one of the few wbo retain

medieval ducal privilejres of aprivate army and a private chaplain.Be own* 117,000 acre* and lives inone of tbe. finest palaces In Europe.Ovstde of bi. lofty plave In tbe peer-age the present duke ha* done noth-ing to gain fame, Mia* "toorc hiabride, is • relative of M.ij. Poora,wbo masrtad Lady Flont Hamilton it)

THEODORE C. SEARCH.

.rx-t-re*

Theodore C. Search, the _ -of the reciprocity convention whichrecently met at Washington, fa an O*vUmlat of the flrat water. Heaayath*

.rention n-rks -a; great «krid- to-ward recipeooity." Nearly everybodyelse bade the delegaws gr>od-by Withthe feeling that, like the king orrrauce. they had menery "marched npthe hill and down »(r»ln." fofihe re*o-lutions adopted favored otil.v thatbrand of reciprocity >vhl«h iotcrfera*with no American industry, rite aver-age man i» of the (ij>ijUon *'-»t thatUnd of reciprocity is noreeltiTOcHja*

THKODORE C.BSARCf.(pBlladrlpnla Manufacturer Wbo Wants

S « i in rs£um> , ]

all. for. a> President UcKlnLy said,this country must c*nfer favors if Itia to receive favors, and Hiinie line* of

le are pretty aur^ lo ba interferedwith when we begin to extend conCM-

ion* in exchange for foreign eon-erce.Mr. Search is said Jo be a candidate

for tbe new cabinet position wfcich willreated by the enlabliahtn^it of tha

proposed department of commerceand induitriea. He |s a PhiMelphia

LiLfu.-t.irvr. and h|* friend* aay haidmlrably fitted! for the place.

Thoae who are pushing Gis claims hinthot it ia hia due for being identified

with the original movement demand-ing the new department. The ChicagoPost points out thai Chicago businessnen were the pioneers In this aglta*lou, having brought the subject be-

tore the administrUion four yearaago. Chicago, continues tbak paper,should not let the Quaker City stealita thunder, and whan the fitar comesmight ask with good!grace fot the ap-pointment of one of ita own IciUsena.Illinois has one cabinet memtter now;but so has Pennsylvania, for tbat mat-.

THOMAS B. FERGUS0H.

w Giniau • ' Oklak.x o a* Waa

appointed goveri:i d i

»rg-uaon. the] newly

•nun of Mmore, but

appo

ryland.e mode

many

l*!M. Be Iscredited to Itahis home in \

States flsh commixsj<with great ability, using lii- i

high social poaition to niiikt- themission a popular' serrlle at a• when the work van Id ita In-

fancy and needed friends. .- •-. tbe capital, wher. he U widely

»n and h<

THOMAS B. r«RO(T«>*.

(Appointed Oovirnor it OkUiossa by

Proldtnt BoMrvclt.)ijor." and he ami Wr». Pfrgnsoa,

who waa a daughter of Oar. fwm, ofMaryland, were prominent figure* inWaahingion society- Their njouae onHigh Und terrace. ManacbusetM

ue, waa the center of tihe verybeat life in the city.! Mr*. rWffuso*met a cruet death a few mojitha bV-fore her ti.i-i.ainl W|FI

Naj. FcrgtMon ha* never keen a«-tivr In polilic*. lull hi- ia "

ng .lemm-rat. lie !nature, of t».-l anti nliility.accredited with high imerit • • • dtp.

' " — • I-Ihe «-r IMsU*.no other infry in the world

la the cigar ao pop*Iar aa In Oer-r, ao much no that It Is Impoa-to rainr eTimiirh tobawri in tb*

empire to supply tb c domestic de-mand. Laat j-eor Gcrmanv importednearly ti2.O0-t.mii worth of tobaeso.a little more than a third of it cons-ns from the Vnited B!.!«.. tTae uas>

he cigarette' is rapidly aprearfingla (iermsny. Last 7<ar SM jtotu 01Hgarettes. were conaumed, at leastflve time* *> many, aa were needrften yeara ac°-

■m

off. settle In :1Ur to. S .he c.u:h around Where the bow» joined to ike slick ana »INHMk ifcm par: of the cioth which wowld rcaaia wet or damp longvr than the real, and •okaea- a lea dent j to rot aad break. e “I have smb utaa> aa umbrella with a ragged edge little holo around the • tick at Ike lop tkai had Won caused bj ike el nb d.cayisg there from this eaueej bat j*»u don't are so ir.scy of iheae nowaday * as yon used lo for ike simple reason that people are more in- telligent nowadays about the care of umbrella4, as th.y are about ail things •Ue- “8*111. there** my grandnephew. a bright youngster. certainly, and he din't know, and there noil be ethers; and for ihelr benflt I'ncle Hiram .ajs. • a to how Rostand a wet umbrella when yon brine it ia from ortdoors: “Stand It on the hantOe.”

quite an a t.r art Urn To the wumjr men of the town, and there was ireaerally a doaea or more of them hanging around Wr. ‘“I had quite a lot of writing to do when I arrived, and I enraged her for the evening, and after tapper I sat dow n tp dictate. The usual crowd of youths and men were around, and When I began thug at Brat moved bach to a( respectful distance. After a few minim*, hoarser, they began to edge rloser, ant Anally formed a ring around the stenographer and myself —no close that rtey could bear retry word ofmn illation. This waa very annoying, and f determined to put aa end to their Impudence. Bo 1 began dictating a letter to my srlfe. In which I spoke of my arrival in the town, of which I gave a brief description, and then continued: " The people her* are the moat to- rUblr I h». met. A. I .ltb.rrditt.t- Ing a doren of them are 'crowded around listening to every word I any This ia no doubt a fine trait, hut It la aomewbat annoying lo the pretty girl who is doing my work.' "In a minute tW listeners began tn mo.e away, and after that I -as not bothered with their eurloalty."

BLOODY FIGHT OP EA3LES. THKODORE C. SKARi'« (Philadelphia Manufacturer Who Want* ■eat In I'iWmi > I all. foe. aa President McKinley said, thia country roust confer favors If il ia to receive favors, and aom* Ilnea of trade are pretty sore to Ip interfere* with wkea we begin to eaten* conces- sion* iu eachaugr for fyTelgn eom-

Mr. Search ia said lo be a candidate for the naw cabinet poeitloa which will be created by the establishment of the proposed department*' of commerce and industries. He la a I’hihufelphia manufacturer, and Ida frrml. nay ha ia admirably fitted for the place. Those who are pushing E7a claims hint that It la his due for being NleatlM Oith the original mow meat demand- ing the new department. The ChieOgo Post points out that Chicago business men were the pioneers In th|a agita* tion. haring brought the subject be- fore the administration four years ago. Chicago, contlbuea that paper, should not let the Quaker (ity steal lU thunder, and when the time come* might ask with good grace toy the ap- pointment of one of IU own eiticena. Illinois has one cabinet member now; but ao has Pennsylvania, for that mat-

!• JACKET AS SIGNAL amen when the train ia due. a> burse, Iu crossing the me fastened ia the culvert, lie girl knew she could not rip before the train arrived, full speed. Hardly had the roeaed her mind before the r the locomotive foretold iust act quickly, stoat she had the little, red ,leh she wore In her binds ling In the center of the irack. ob|ls!oua of the awful danger o wbicbj.hr was subject, began to wave with all the strength her littlo aody could command. Within a few arda pf fier Engineer Meyers brought kta .'ocomotive to a dead atop and tha passengers and trainmen began to *ome frogi the train only to find their little gudrdlan angel gone. Deter- mined to floeate the savior of bis pas- •eager* Engineer Meyers Informed the pollef of the Incident and they •earehed all day before she was lo-

ne bot* At the aoo in centra. park. New York, there was a Oerce and bloody , buy a fight the other day. The outcome, it Ighbor* la feared, may prove fatal to the auk ita lens eagle, who provoked the battle. No George one knows Just how It started, but It colehl- ■>*> bare been a scurrilous remark f next about the personal appearance of his

the Lulled Mateo, ami especially for Chicago, ia known to thoae who were ■mat prominent In getting the Olympian yamea for that city. Eu- rope did rrot desire the games to go to the new world. Eastern cities. New York and Philadelphia, had out their lobbyists for the games. But the baron had carefully studied the situation and had af 'hen so highly of this e.iuntry and the world’s fair city that Chicago easily won the fight. In Europe President Roose- velt la regarded a* the wholesome type of athletic enthusiast. With thu international games directly under the supervision of the nation’s chief, the foreigners will have great faith in the exercises at the stadium. "Rooter In Washington for Har- vard when the crimson met the bine; rooter on the aide line for tha army • cam at Philadelphia when the West Pointers met the middies of Annap- olis. and champion of all good healthy, manly sports, was and la Theodore Roosevelt." said a Chicago worker for the snerraa of the Olym- pian guinea. "Why should not Mr. Roosevelt accept the position? We think h- will "

York city. One night, after the club had bought and motrd into the Fourth street and Fifth arenue, Bourke Cochran Joined a few friends in the cafe and ordered a drink and a cigar. Of late year* he has been a strict telotaler, but In those daya hr took a drink with “the bora." After lighting the cigar. Corkran put hla fret on the table and opart his drink on the cwrpet in a manner that srrroed too deliberate to be accident- al Hla companions looked at him in astonishment. Cochran guard into the glowing grate lire and rubbed his hands with satisfaction. Then hr told about Stewart’s treatment of him aa a boy. "After all three years." he conclud- ed. "you don’t know what a satisfac- tion it is Tb me to come in here and do just aa 1 blank please in the old eodger’s dialog-room." No one ever talked five minutes with Bourke Coekran, says the Phil- adelphia Preae. without falling un- der the spell of his wonderful person- al charm, for he la aa compelling In hka conversation aa in hla oratory. And no one haa erer spoken more appreciatively of him than Mrs. Wil- liam Astor. who. after he had won re lationa with the metropolitan four hundred, invited him to dine at the Aarnr board. Meeting a friend a day or two subsequent to the dinner, she said: “I have dined with a very large pro- portion of the men now in public and social life on both aldea of the At- Innic; Mr. Coekran is decidedly the most Interesting character I have

whistle o that the a In an II laeket wfi -Hi i™,.- b. M.w. -will 700 -blla, “P“- lb- laakl... ... by (aulaf Ik. h.mro.r on! .1 th. »■/' ,0“'k' tool cheat?" Loud screams and angry thrashings •The hammer?" aehofd Mr*- *■ Ike cage first drew the keeper's nt- dorr -W.U. what la th. wmM-- *»■»<■» «*»• k* dl.co»»wA • lrt»hl- —nw hammer. I Mid." rapart-d Mr. -U-P- Tha C*a»t car-ad back. Crorir. "end Ih. cold chisel.- '«*•■■ l-crlnl teloe, .truck a.llcul. -The hannrr cod the cold chhwlT- tk' po-.rlci .Icj. btat and pommeled Mr.. Cmp echoed a*.io. -Are JO. lk' P*<' '«••*« '«»“'< »» >k' out of your head"" fioor. There Was a brown nimbus of -So." replied Fatal, -I .m Oot out ■<»— <**'k"k *• ">* ••»>«■ of my head, but I want to get out of ’“f"1

mj ebrlL I we.t to be broke ope. Tkr fam.Ia .i meek >he ..r,er .ed I .m thr Treat hemee. upper Wert Powrrfe. bird,the hew k ork .Id. oyster. Look here." .ed Mr. "“"• ■~~'‘-d .. — ctaorpa ... up In bed .ml rsptmed hi. ?*“<*« krr P-rtoar. Hr. poor. twt- .... from Koehler I. -ri.1. They W~d Irt.h.rlrrt wreteh. prr.r.ted . wrre both »■ hirhlr rlued ee • w.11- P‘tl«W« .l»ht whru rrmtued by hi. ehc, «*.ie I. ike -me eoodi.loo. «« -«k -oke .hrlek.d -Wel|. of .11 tht«.!- eacluimed Mrm Oeortre. 1 do deeUru. the WWJlHrrtmr. peluter ha. pi ecu u. turpentine mlird putmn !■ mtllK with .heline, mnd I knee keen rer- FASHIOHS IH WORDS.

• --u.,- ... -r.e.,-.„,.wr._,„ l.re.tIjpntlon pro.rd the troth of **'“ J"”*"" **** Mrs. (leorgv’a statement, and it took

A word that Is gradually coming into Its own again after a period of neglect la "lady." After having brru over- worked until It lost Itssignificance, tb« word was suddenly subdued sad ex- pelled from all pollta. it not educated conversation. Now there is a tendency to receive “lady" hack Into the mooiah vocabu- ...r, o. . you., tody -ho }•*»■ -' h. word I. oec.lue.il, herd . .f th. jrcnrr.l drli.rrj Hike MS of preon.-ho «.tttr thrm- the Toledo pet Offlee. ud 'k,F V"k the lete.t .New Util hn*e eherpe of It, ... It ...Ih .tiered with Ohio.. 1. the post office d^ • •“dkt empheel. In order tn .ho. that to. fWlne.ll Enqolrr, "^yVrk i“u '‘k'° UP' **'"

Toledo “Pen,- has after e term of ba.Uh nkr oS keen retlored to hl>h Wot ia ■ null denies room conreruitian Onlywe few years ago the word wav as much • scorned a* “lady" In circle, that wrr< •nppo.ed to br critical |0 dr.-cK. ol If A tneh Imporreece. It we. acr.r heard* HI B“< «•* "pertj" U amoef the orer- Uj woeked word, of the fa.klonahle .. ■f eebulary aed le.addtd to errry term imfk* «* d».erlptloa. opgll The. oee hear, of -mii.ieal pertle..- ~ T— “deDeietr part le..\.nd ,o oethroDgh- oil the whale entejory.

Aeeordiet to the etatemeet of the majority of the game wardens under the supervision of the Amertenn Orni- thologists' union Ih* summer boardet "who ia out for spurt and will about anything In sight", I* thr greatest men ace to the various form* of bird llfu. An amusing exception, however, to the geaeral cheerful Sndurarmrnt hg the satires of the protective policy of the society I* bronrht to light by the report of Charlea Holt, keeper of the Nash Island lighthouse, say* (he New York Mail and Kxpreaw. On Cone Island. » breeding place for hetrjag gulls, within his official terri- tory. there have been numbered thia year only «• gulls, aa againm too last year. The unnaturally small In- e'eSse he attributes not to the oeeu- •fonai visitor, hut to an entirely differ- The reaMeat proprietors of the In- land are .four, women a mother and three daughters—who/own a large flock of Sheep. Claiming that the birds destroy a large £><>*«ion of the gram they bought a frw months ago. four fox**, which they allowed to roam at Will through the fields. The foxes have carried out the desires of thefr mist resign by creating widespread dev aviation among the rggaand the young of the unfortunate gulls. Thr fdmdrnf the birds nr*, houev- er. patently hiding their tfm* Thev think fjiat without doubt the foxes -HI dc-trojr,!young lambs Inah* "pring and tht>A defeat the purpose for which t*1**? Imported. I

Cleveland'* HIsMee to •**. aaO fioewur. Thomas IL Ferguson, the appointed governor of OKI was appointed minister to 1

RIGID DIcCIPLIIfARIAN.

"Didn't you think the train might he — reeked and the people killed?" “Xn. I didn’t think of the people un- til It -sd all over “she said, timidly. "Were jtnu not frightened?" "No. I a as thinking of the poor h<>rue avd did not iklqk of being afraid." The lltlle heroine la the daughter of Fred Sehloaser. a aaloonkeeper. When the trains pass her home now the trainfcnen wntch for her and tip

In im. He la ■ native of . credited So llaltimofe. but hla home m Washibgton ! years previous tv app He wai a nwmler jof tlx State* fish < ommiaa|OB ~ an with great ability, using h and high social |K,.ition to commission a |M>|«ular »rr time when the work —ns fancy and needed D.eoda. At the capital, wbera he known and honored, he

Bishop Charles C. McCabe, who is being harshly criticised by several member* of the Emmanuel Methodist Kp^copal cbnrek In Erirstaa, HI. (liftjuif of h.» allr“-i! autocratic metho<|s of *"ur.'b K e.rnment). ia noted lor lii. r-’ oui'P»ken dl- rectnra-of op rlcr nnd for the gen- er«l stprtliprsa * mlsd. 11c haa been a niinl»:-r cf *•- us pel for up- went. llMj or .er.I.-Vn- -riirin.llj from nf- o. frrrn tvj leh »:at# he went tu th- y-ikil war in th- uniform of. a rrhlis* i-r. Thr future bishop fca. - « - po Itlral principles with

-JILTED SUITOR’S R* VERGE. served wealth ike the

LAMB DIKED OH SHIP'S LOG.

I.Bl-e.l piothrr. Whrn * Witcher main and fore topsail gone, several masts splintered. h**r steering gear dif»a«ed and her logbook de atr *>evl. thr stout Bailing skip I<ogh Fir las, of S.SOO tons, was Vowed into pmt one night lately and docked at th. Erie basin. New Ydrk. Had it not beta for the abnormal appetite of Ras- tu. a pet Chilian lamb. who. finding tb. ship's log on a chair in the cabin t* -uwks aro. devoured It. leaves and pa l of Its cover, rapt Deans said that he ruuld give B m..re circumstantial ns rattfe ab advrnturous and <•** rwF *“?■»». states the New Yorlf

tffttfihj

the animal hat eStea nothing but pa- pves. lacluifing the ship's log; eluthes. IrHudiag the first.mate's best Jacket, buttons and all; fur from thr bark of •*ir pet eat. upon which be graces at every opportunity, and feathers he has •*»'£ from *J Mr while per- CM.” The Lorh Fin las at ruck terrific nof- •esters soon after Waving Bermuda •nd rapt Dears removed Mu clothing for the first time Iu IS days, during Which period he was sot able to snatch more than aa hour’s sleep nt any one time and sometimes got none nt all f«*r days at a time. He saya the storms of the last month m+er the severest la

CHARLES MT.t"E

adorn me nt of their persona, chiefly by means of tattooing Orent Ingenuity la also exhibited in drenalng their hair, which im many cases U arranged la aa tonishlngly elaborate Ynahioo.

Page 4: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

The Constitutionalist4 DEMOCRATIC WXEKLT.

ft-AINFIELD. rV. J.

COMMENCEMENT DAY.Tor twenty.

last Thursdayepoch. On thatfen wf 11-to school Ufalato tlie world, some to coatiaoe tlteedacation at higher taeti tattooIsamlDg and otbers to begin a 1•ass earasr or to fill a place inhome life. It meant tbat lour yearsbeen spent profitably and tbat tbescribed ooarse In tbe highest departaatnt of tbe city schools bad beenpleted witb credit For some, thinatural ability or -pedalJ applicationtbere were more honprs thaaotber* but for all it meant a tankformed and tbe entrance intogreater responsibilities withebance of greater rewards.

It is at a time like this thatpeople of Plainfleld are brought tokeener realisation of tbe *the city public schools. The brighenergetio young folk, wbo raeei'their diploma* last°evenltig, evidennin every word aad action tbatnave been well trained along thelaid down They are today weequipped to do better and greatework than ever before,not bare been possible but for oarefupainstaking work In the past,present high standard of the CiHigh Sohool was demonstrated bthese eager young people.

There have been wbrus of criticismin that past by some few wbo do nbelieve in the higher educationpublic expense. They argne that itOnly the wealthy or well-to-do, ware able' to take advantage of it »itbat they are perfectly able to methe expense themselves.- It is a nirow view. The graduate* of -HPlainfleld High' School have nevbeen confined to the wealthy class.There have been many whobat little of tbe world's goods win?

' they completed their course atCity High School With, the edtiou they there received, they bavsince prospered and become promaent members of the communitieswhich they1 live! The Imt of graduate* in past years shows manyand women who have succeeded 1lite throagh their own efforts.

It may be argued that nuocess woo!have come to them, even had they areceived tbeir education in the pnblschools. Undoubtedly the edncatictbere obtained i* not the cause •their snoceaa bat a "good educatiotveil founded, is the mean* of bringlag greater opportunities and a createcapacity for taking advantage of theseopportnnitlt

Th* world is now before thesetwenty-seven young people. Tbehave received a good High Hchooeducation. They cannotwin for them an important place ithe work. All the schoolicannot do that The tramit-g tbehave received will, rthem in good stead and will aid themIn more ways than one in advanoinstep by Step ap the pathwayoess. They have the foundation. Threst remains with themselves.

WELL GOVERN ED ~CITV.Those who are acquainted with

municipal governments of New Jersey and the adjacent 8tat«s catteatimoay that Plainfleld is one

' best governed cities to be fonnd inthe east. For the amount paid iIhe taxpayer.. Plalnfleld get*actual beneflt than do the vastJorily of cities. This can be account*for in two ways.

Ptalnaeld dot* notcomplicated sjataw ot municipalgovernment. There is very little redtaps aeoompared with M M olsiesthat mean* a considerable reductionla the coat of running tbe oily'

I aflairs. Where some cities are bur. naoed with a host of ottos holders,• who a n ail dtawing fat aalar.es,

Plainfleld has comparatively few, on!enough to actually transact tbe city'

- basin*** and none of these are psi<I more than justice demands, many o

them serving with no financial rewanI at all.

A second reason is tbat tbe man, c ipa) QMchiaery U singularly free ficorruption. Tbe men. who are inCharge of tbe city affairs, may makeMistakes occasionally but their inMgrily la above question. In tbe Com

I »JOB Council,' a plat* where oorruplion lads its way in many cities, tbi

•attr's interests are particularly w«iguarded. While all may not agree asto the Judgment of tbe Conor ii mmcertain acts, there ia no one wbo canpoint cat a single case of dishonestyfjr anything tbat savor* in tbe slight-est of it.

This U tbe city to which it U pro-posed to add tbe borough of NorthPlainfleld. While North Plainfield U

I equally free from such uaptoasaat fea-tarM today, tbe people of NorthPlainfleld seed have no fear for th*future wbea they shall be joined with

PlaiafteU. Th* C«T la otaaaly aadwell govaraed'ead tbe interests of theborough will be Just as wall cared fora* ar* asm tbe iatatest* of tbe city.

FEW NEW LAWYERS.Bmallee^ Clae* for Several Y m

Passed R>uBl«itI«as l.»»t Week.Tbe result of tfce recent attorney*

rid tiounaelar*' ^xaminatlooa, Iunder "the new rules promulgatedbe Supreme t.'onrt, waa aonounoe<

**ek by thei examiner*, CharlesH. Hartsborne, Pi^nk H Sommer anHoward M. Cooper.

Ofaclaajof twieaiy-nine Utorn«ywho took the counselor*' examluion*, nine faiW, while fifteen oflast of forty-eigty candidate* for adliation to the l.»r as attorneys 4ikewibe. This r«4aced the number n

new lawyers toi thirty-three,eat class admitted for several

While Chief Kmi> waa in Belviderettnrday in comjiaiij with tbe d«le

ate* to the Republican Cangnmiotuon vention, be rail?d at tbe Jail where

had the jiriv,i.w- of seelne; Uharleether, the oonvtcted murderer who

recently escaped f torn the Stroudsbarftjail, and wax captured Friday

' r. at »-lvidere.

Don't Ltk* the Holse.Complaint is njade by resident*rove street, in the vicinity of Pros

sect place, againsi boys_ wbo (ire oOre^orackers to the annoyanceervouB aad *ick people. Tbere i* aaw against thi* 'practice, except onnly •%. and tbe bof a are known amarned to d- -i.i. or they may bened. j •

An improvement [which would grew.y benefit tbe condition of West Front

«et near Washington avenue' wouldtrimming of tl<« large trees at thaiInt. In the •uininrr these tree*ve so much shade that the sunlightmot reach the Street and dry 11

roperly. The Mrr.-t la invaribly athi* aeasoo very wft and unhealthy.

There was a special programe of inrest at ihe Mt. Olive Baptist ct.nrclonday-stjhool Sunday afternoon,ben recitation* and. special musitUtlve to temperance was presented

y the pupils and members of the W.T. U. Daring!the afternoon an

bit address was delivered by WUllam

is rross BosaervlUe to Wed.WilliamlTbonuts Heaih. of Somer-Ue, wa* married 'Saturday eveningtbe residence of fcev.J.W. Richard-

n. this city, to Mm Bertha LentPffar. aUo of SomsrrtUr

x Bought «he Arlington.Charles Jensen, at the borough, has

recently purchased1 from Joseph A.Blat tbe Hotel Arlington at the

of Greeabrobk road and gam-

a Bavre tHaaer.Harry Venter, of Vest Front street,

a party jot friend* to Milord, Ooan., Sanaa*, where ail ss>oyed a shore dinner at the River

ew HoteL jUs«* T i t . All.

One Minute Ooagb Cur* beauber medicines 1 ever triad

colds, croup and throat aadug trouble.." ssjjj D. Scott Oarria,

THEATRICAL."Ail the beat, always" may sound

bit raiaglorioua. to TOO.not if you are a natron of Krith

Start tag with this as' h,motto a r. Keith, the originator

aaderlUe,keeping the lead over al! bia

titor*. Firstof tin

the cpatron* by the exercise of th.

re in evury partioula

present a programme which itonly^nperior to tbat offered at iother vaudeville theatre, bat a pro-

e in which every act is clean>m the disiogae of which

•oopicion of vulgarity has been removed. A wide variety of tastesfind satisfaction in the bill offfor tbe fcomlng week, on which tbebeadliners art Clayton White-MariStuart and Co., wbo will presenbeir sketch "Dickey," perhapslest known and most popular of t

many successes. Tbe Three Marv«lles,he celebrated gftoteeqae acrobats antlancer*: and James Richmond Glen

roy, far-famed a* "The Man Wihe Green Gloves,'1 are worthy

than paaalng noticill l H

apoohis bill. Alex. Heindl, 'cello soloist

and the Empire City Four, will delight those wbo are fond of reallgood music. Hayes and Wynne, ,heir artistic dancing special tieditcbell and Usin, eooentric come

rtiam, with fourteen otber great acts.Deluding many European noveltithelp Mr. Keith to make good rboast of "All tbe beat, always."

"A Cbinere Honeymoon" ii plani into i u third big week at tbe

York, Ilk.iserprising managemen

which keeps tbe pretty theatreigbtfnlly cool, neat and clean i

which ia constantly re-decorating th>bby, approaches, foyer aad andt

orients haa a great deal to do witaside from these pleasal

eatnres the play is to merry amlease*. Bhubert, Nixon A•ve such an exception

lly clever cast that there is DO re*wby it aboold not keep the standroom only sign huay for a lonj

summer vaud«TiU>prices in Newark lias in

uoed General Manager J. AustinVIII* to keep Proctor's open tfaioagb-it tbe year. It is possible tbatithin a few weeks an opera <

pany may be introduced to diversifystyle of entertainment, and ithenuore, possible that the Proctor

tork Company .may present a few olly comedies which bare fonndManager Proctor's New Y.

But tbe determination toeep tbe theatre open all summer ii•flats*.be Fifth Avenne and tbe One Hanred and Twenty-firth Street Thea

res, New Tork, will likewise remainnn interruptedly. Here the Proc-

r Stock Company, embracing an as-mblage of local favorites, will pres-

Dt light comedy bills, with a weeklyhange. Stage Director Frederic Bondill often be seen active stage har-

and among the otber favoritesU' be found Adelaide Keim. Edna•cher Crawford, Beatrice Morgan,n. Ada Levick, Florence Leslie,

" Lea Lirtinm, Helen SalUager.deliaa Raffette, E. M. Bell. Sol

William Gerald. FredericI. James Castle. Charles M. I

ear, Duncan Harris, Julian Reed,

•Ule i* a factor In tbe entertainments;be bast aots of foreign and Ameri-

: fane are weakly presented, theeaty-tbird Street Theatre being

ely given over to vaudeville bill*,

LITERARY.Tbr July CentarySummer Fiotioa Number" of tbat

magasia*, and the chief point of in-terest Is likely to be a postbistory bv Paul Leicester Ford. IU

part of Mary Adams' "Confes

lanband and wif

men w at.mmm m

Action Taken at Special Meet.ot the Common Council

HaldXaM Tueiday.

SOME OTHEE BUSINKSS'

Tk. SUiiarl E>ilru4 .f kmtta.

i

Reading SysterHew Jersey Central.

».•«. I.V»fps^^ipiiiSi!

•ntT third Street was, by the __.ew York's first home of tbe continu-

COLLECTOft SUITH AUTHORIZED TO

ACT UNDER MARTIN ACT.

The ipecial meeting of tbe CanunooCouncil h«14 last Tuesday was sot of

title ia "Waated: A Chaperon," aad

woman from tbe country, visiting in bers except Mr. Mellick w e n present.Of Clerk MacMurray,

plaoed was Oiled by Qeorge WThe principal business tbat called

at tbe doorstep of tbe wrong boaseon a stormy winter night. Tb% story

tbe members together was tbe reportlightest touch, sad the

Other ooatribatiou nf fictionnumber will be "Ting-a-Ung. thestory of a car-horse by David Gray ;•Tbe Passing of Oock-Bye

lock," a story of tbe frontier weat by misaionen of adjustment which met

s. Weir Mitchell, one of bi*Stories" with a problem i

authorised by tbe Council in the reao-confirming the report to adver-

ollicklng homor by Harry «*e and Mil this real estate at pnblloaction to the highest bidd

Little Unpleasantness at Nand other stories, besides the fourth TIB* T»bl. ID ; .

LIATI BOr/TH FLAIRF1KLD.-.N. J.Those who bawe failed to pay thetaxes and interest will hare an oppor-tnnity to redeem tbeir property, butthey will have to pay the cost-of ad-vertising in addition to the taxes, andinterest on the

Councilman William L. Oloak re-ported back the license application ofF. W. Cnleman to serve liquor* atmeals at the Hotel Xtetberwood, andmoved that it be granted This U aspecial license and provides that li-quor can be served during the follow-ing meal boors: • Breakfast, 6 to 10

. dinner, 13 noon to 4 o'clock :tapper, « to 10 o'clock in tbe evening.The license was granted, all TotingTor it. This concluded the businessand the Council adjourned.

Interineillsts »t« tlon*.Lou re PlUoOeld I* 10 p. m.L M T I South PlsIoflelS If IS p, m.

KS

The (Use •!•] also aest kaitaeund trmlnNeeded Two Cars.

The travel on tbe Arlington avenue

ted tbe operation, of two cars

pie travelling oreobliged in someh o u to get back and forth

irirsl and Dtpartire of II

PropertyTbe property on Elmwood place oo-

chased last week by W. A Woodruff,Randolph

in tbe house. SLIZAHKTH-Dirw—140 D. -m.PRMNBTLVANIA-W»,t oIWp-B.

k t u t msU tot Mmt,

ATQHUHQ, WARHINTILLS *

». n . Clcse-*0* a. m,8DHDAT HAILB.Most intensely interesting book ever

b

A. WOLFF.Manufacturer of

Tbe July "Success" opens with anarticle of considerable importancetimeliness, in »iew of tbe factthe American shipping combine la oneof the great questions agitating both•ides of tbe Atlantic This article isentitled "The American MerchantHarine as a Career," and its authora Clement A. Griaoom, Jr., manager

ihe American Line. William Ord-way Partridge, in "What AmericaOffer* Her Artists," makes a strongplea for art students to And their in-piration, at home instead of abroad.Ei-President Grorer Clerelaad eonrilmte» a valuable paper on "Tbe

Evolution of Self-Made Men," whftbcontain* some worthy philosophy re-

di b tfarticle

gardih!ion witb a government,bat will farther endear "Success'

to the bone is- the second of theseries, "Coltore in tbe Home," on

heertnlnesa, by Margaret E. Sangater.riot W. Hall, a new western

metees, contributes a fine poem forndependenoe Day, entitled,

QreatFlag." Otber notable features"Tbe Trace of the Flood," an

animal atory by Martha McCullocli-Williams; "A Miner and^His Mascot,"

tree rtory of Colorado, by Oy War-an; "What a Yonng Man Should

Read, Today," by Secretary of theWilliam H Moody, and "The

Rnral Free Dy

y and tbe Farmer, •y A. W. Machen. The second instal-

Mra Rebecca Harding•Tin's atirring serial, " A Boy'i

Figbt," also appears. In all, this Iione of the most interesting numbers

["Success. _

Chief Officer Scott, of the Boraima,ie of tbe few *orvivors of tbe ernp-nn of Mt. Pelee, gives in the Jnlj-amber ot Leslie'* Monthly Ms

isely intenstinp; peraansl eocobis thrilling experienoas in what

a tbe greatest nataral disasterhas befallen the world In the

living man. Prof, a E. Borchnvink, tbe well-known scientific t

sr, con tribute* a careful summingP of tbe condition* of tbe eruption,

1 these two aoooooU make a record•his gT«M tragedy well worth pro-ving.

Tbe greatest sbow that has enlivenedtbe Anglo-Saxon world for a long time,the Coronation of King Edward andQneen Alexandra, it described witbnnmber of elaborate illustrations. Thearticle on tbe ooroaatioi) is written bytbe pake Of Argyll, brother-in-law oftbe King, and tbere are more than

tbe Klag andoriginal draw-

P r e p a r a yPreparatory services will be held at

be Creecent Avenne church Fridayevening and the Sacrament of theLord'* Supper will be observed Sun-day.

The Volcano1* Deadly Work Frontthe Fall of Pompefl to the

utructlon ©r St. Pierre,by prof. Charles Morris, LL.M i l i t i b k

'.hirty picture* ofQueea, Besides ran,ings by Qneea Victoria.

Tbe last poem Brat Harte ever

that ever befell the h.greater even than Pompeii. Tell:Martinique, on« of the most beautiful

.he world, was suddenly1 in to ' a veritible bell

About 500 paxes, profosely illustrated' taken before aadwith

, tar ihaving Proter. Beet aathor.

W.naVd. •Saara.oi.Tproflt. _who act quickly. Most,liberal terms.Outfit 10 cents. Don't lose a minute.Send for outfit 13£M EDI AT ELY and*- at work. The chance of a life-time

• makin. money.

Woolston & BucklePAINTERS.

•11 Papers. Painters' Supplie141-145 Sorth»Tenn«.

for making money.Clark * Co., 3ZZ 8. A

delphla.Pa.St Pn.Ua- AD<1 de&l«f In all kinds of Smoln z-2. I as

u Oania,caaton, H» One Mln.te Ooaghis tbe ontr absolutely safe coach- which act •'hich act.

•verywbere t«It has done tbeir li'tUe ones.

3roap is so sadden in its attacks tM*doctor attest arrlvea too late. ItIs at oace so One Min.te Congb

ra. Pleasant to take. ~e is. S a n care for grip,

•. aaa has for several years maia- \ wrote, a ballad called "Tbe Sword ofe»ed aa.enviable reputation for the! D M Jose," leads a parbaalar intereW

refined and direning bills which have' «<» *•» poetry of thi. number, and anarticle on tbe draining of tbe Zuyder2«a, la Holland,

Dr. His%...H*l««eareb^-«etiI1g djrecUj uponthe iimss. without exciting disorder inany otber part ot foe system.

supplwafor * n d *° l n M > ** t o « *adyof tbe bus- JJ^J

tbe fact that tbe Fourth T sided number• <« Friday, tbe regular, DUSM- . t Hi]

Owingof Jolt falls— t i n g of tbe Young PeopV,Jf^i Ed of the F

rcb,wiU not bt bald n

-JSSM Cl»b.H. T. HeeiT, a member of the Hill-

Bide Tennis and Golf d a b , gave a "n

Covers t m laid for twerv*.

and Chewing Tobacco, and smokeraarticlee, haa removed from 261 WestFront street, to South side of Somer-set r r w t first door from Front street,and solicit* the p a a o n u e of bis'MendBandtliepablk^—

AGENTS WANTED.

AULT CAUSED WRECK.

Too Heavy for Flat Car "WalclFarted la tne Middle-Vault Wa*

Hot Berl«n . iy OamageU.Word baa been reoeiyed by the Hib

bard-Bodman-Eiy Safe Works official!of this city, notifying them •

reck on the Pennsylvania Railroadnear Altoooa, Fa., Saturday, otby one of their immense vaults.

The massive piece of steel weighlnnearly twenty ton* was loaded on

»,! °"* c»* but it w u unable to'atand thestrain. When ronndlng a curve ttib

Q EOBOEW.DAI,

-Ponrth 'escaping going down a steep enibank-xi mant. A number of can following

were piled up in a mass of wreckage.Workmen were sent from Plainfl'-lti

General Auctioneer *° «umia« the vanlt and foand it tq-Balea of Pewonal Property solicited *f*i A D o m b B r °* t h* e aa* doors inP.O. BoxlW, Ihmellen, s j j or ad * interio* were cracked otherwisedrees in c a n of ConBtltuticinaUot there was DO damage. The vanlt wa*Terms reasonabl*. intended for a bank at Cniontown, P*.

•nr B.ooontoi<oj».* . ^ Mia» Ethel Bogera, ot tbe Mt Oli*»

C**»ns5«llor at-L«w, Baptist church Ban day-school, ra-Oommiarfoner of Deeds, Maater-In- °* i T e d * b*n d*> m* "** *»*«". •*»chancery, Notary Pabfic. Office* l ib»Ped- Sunday, as a reward for n tCorner ct F«rk avenue and Beoood being absant from Sunday-school once

!t- ia flvs years.

H Smlmmd* n 1A Ca(^'ng System "ew J«™«» Central.

The Constitutionalist We wantYou to know Us

pi«x! with credit. For •Moral eMilly or -i-ole

Lehigh Valley Railroad.

B«w Iswyen to tblrtylhrM. the «■•»»*•* clan Emitted for a»vwr»l | Saw Mor.l.rrr (Irolher. WWW Chief Kml* «M in Bel.ldere Katordor la coni|a»T with I ho 4*1 a (Moo 10 lb Hopot.li.a> Coegreeslonal coarentloo. ho roll.a e* the jell where ho hod I ho pruil'iro nl seeing Cherlee timber. I ho oonrlnrd murderer a bo ~~Mlr on-pod from (bo Stroedoberg. Pa., Jafl. and woe eaptated Friday

which keeps lb* prattr IhaMra do- llgbtfall y oool. neat and clean and which la coaotanlly re-decomlag the lobby, eppcaachoe. foyer and acdl

Afrital aid DeearUM af Hina. vr^rwnwr.n HnwibeincH

To* Maar* Nkade. An improvement which won 17 beaefil the coodltton of W»

For Over 50 Years ••Tha Volraoa'o Deadly Warn Front (he Fall of Poeapoll lo Ike l>e- atraolloa e> SI. Pierre,” he Prof. Obarite Homo. LI* D. Noel loltneelr inloreetlag book erer Uabtlahod. Complete, thrilling and aoenrete acooaM of irealeet d loonier that eeer befell tha haman race— ireater eran than Potnpali Telle how Martlaiqea. ooe of the meet heaatlfnl 1*1 on do in ■ be world, wee eaddenle Iranaformed Into • a reritible belL Abeet IWpewee. penfasely illnotraled

Woolston & Buckle, PAINTERS. Wall Papers, Painters' Supplies 141*146 North monk

bss befallen the world la the Dene, of llrias man Prcg. Q R Bor arerUia. the wall-known adeem do

Dr. Huaiapjircys AGENTS WANTED. otsel weighing

Wise Ethel Kogan. ot the JU. Olln

Page 5: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

Class of Sixteen Graduated From NorthPlainfield High School at Fridayv- ' Evening's Exercises. •

COMMENCEMENT ATY.M.C.A. HALLTHE ADDRESS TO THE MEMBERS OK

THE GRADUATING CL-ASS WAS MADEBV REV. I3R. WM. R. RICHARDS.

Trie Valedictory Was Delivered by Miws NellieMonte and the Salutatory t>y Charles Krt-i.1-erlck WInrtham-One Graduate Wa» Unableto be Present—The Winner* of the ValiantPHase**—The Hall Wat* Frettily Decorated

A Brilliant Function Was Held.;be history of the world. It pro-

That , * H * bril l iant function w h i c hmarked thp commencement e ser i sesof North PlalnOeld High School inthe Y. M. 0 . A. haU last Friday.Ttie nailery and anditorinm was com-pletely Oiled by a large and gai lydressed aadienoe, many of whomwere alumni and alumnae of the in-ititntion and appreciating to tbe ut-most the significance of tbe event.They had'the privi lege of l i s ten ing toan i'ntelltwtual programme w h i c h formerit, has been seldom surpassed atPlatnneld. commencements. The can..l i . lmi- f«r diplomas numbered six-teen. One was absent, bot the otbeififteen occupied seats on the stage,and as their names were cal led wa lkedup to the* front to receive from thehands of Chairman James R. Joy thecoveted parchments, and make theirlast salutation as High School pupils .

Seated on the stage, besides *""graduate* were Rev. X>r. W. it. Kirti-artls, Re*. E. L. Earp, J a m e s B . Joy ,presiilnnt of the North PlainfleldBoard cf Education, a a d PrincipalHomer J. Wiphtraan.

The alage ilt'i-oratinn* were ofJninrimnt order. H i g h in the rear, inbri^tic rrd letters, hung the classmotto, ••L.SIUIT Orama V i a e i t . "motto wbicb—said Chairman Joy inpresenting the rtilpomaa-must look totbe future »- wel l as to the past,the crjiiMiit.-' would conquer aSmi laz . in leafage and blossoibaukcil t h e footligbW, anil w i th waving palms set in tbe centre, formeagainst 'the wall in the backgroundhorizontal l ine r ichly flowered amfoliaged, tho whole making a scene torival a flgment of the poet'a brain.

The valedictory, carrying wi th flthe first scholarship honor of tin- classwas delivered by Miss N e l l i e Manfcwhile Charles Frederick Windhaiium.lr- the salutatory address, witsecond scbolarsliip honor. The JohnValiant prizes for proOoiency in math-<-m«ics! first. 115 in gold, second, * ! 'in ;•••:•• were won by Elizabeth Ha;Davenport and Robert F. Hand reipectively. 8 0 close was the competit iontiiat the judges recommendedother* for honorable ment ion, EdwardWhite Overtoil and Charles F. \bam.

Tbe evening's programme in detaiwas as fol lows 1

. . . Kr>. Kdwin L. tmtp

eh..™*.

;be history o poed such men a> Godfrey of Booil

the Black Prinoe, Bayard andRaleigh and Collngwood, and inamntrv George Washington was

repeseotative of the type.Drue, that type of man may haveen aristocratic in his bearing, ber have folded bib robe* about himen speaking to the common people,only because he thooajht the peo-oontrolled by a different standard

lire caring lew fof honor than heid. The world owed moch to these

o another sort you are also naderii obligation*. Things wooid notgreat well if there were bat one. of human being clothedrers and responsibility. *ramaa or bnrgber one owe*soon became strong enough to fighthimself u d i t was the borgbei

ho saved all from the gentleman, li- M difficulty to say what would have

1 of the world bat for the

Having won tbe'vietory he hadjomncli bis own way. Ever slacebe French Bevolntioo the men of

n, tbe boorgeoUie, h a w b 'itproportionate effect oponoral* of the world. The old knight

The world needs more than oatifored clam. It has only one left.tving destroyed the other. It is not

rurprisiog if they hare had a too greatet on human life. As a result ofr influences; commercialism is thelUarit; of the | age. Meroeriary

conditions hav

IP Summer IMy*—AMThe event of the evening

address by Eev. Dr. W. R. Richards,a compreheniHve view and a logiiunfolding of the development of miera civilisation, gradually leadingto his theme, the plaoe of the scbolin modem li*-. No mcould do jnsttoe to thi1 T! . >n After referring to the plaoethe scholar in life he* pointed tofact that in different periods ofworld'* history different aorta of pe»pie have become specially importanlat fir-t m fre««inp need theyreloped into a favored claw. Oing^baek to the beginning! of moderhistorr it is customary to look opotin- f«mdal tvst«m as the emboiof all ihM U bad. l i en had Itthe end '•* the srstem, wben it » »r.-allt bad bat at the beginning it waa bMvsDW blessing. The knightold held a magiaceot Idea of h«ncharaoter. AlthooRh the actual fland Mood man might be a disagree'ahM i»rsoa to x w t his ideal wa.lofty. He baa been described Mman, pore, gentle, ooorteons

m-n. fornetfni of H I I , filled widt-if religion, bowing before Godwomankind, haajrhir to all others.That WM a contribution

The valedictory, by Hiss NellieHants, waa a clevercouched la pan and elegantaad deli vereu clearly and distinctly.Her topic wai "'Literature," embracing a broad view of Eagllsb andAmerican letters, sod the effects 0/good literature upon national and in-dividual life. Taming to tbe claarshe made the farewell in these words

" Classmates, tonight we are SMMDbled for the last time as a unitedolass; tomorrow we eater upon a newand broader field. How large thesefour yean seem as we Look back—wdid not realise bow large until webad reached the end. Mnch we have

and let us remember the extentof oar opportunity is theoar responsibility. From thin timeforth we are responsible for what wehave learned and our query should k*not what is in the world for me. butwhat i. in me for the world ! Truly,be that would save his life most loseit and he that loses bis life saves itfor the sake of the community, Stateor nation and finds it returning to self__ie-hondred fold. 80 let us go forthwith n singleness of purpose in seeking the truth and tbe good; with aself-dedication fo» tbe service of SO-•iety tbat ws all may become in ourevenl flelds of labor, national beneactors."

The salnlatory address by CharlesFrederick Windham was a well pipared and tbougbtfnl essay on Amei

influence,especially in the nation's! possessions. In bis introduction

be spoke of tbe pleasure of tbe class,that could not be otberise than tinged

ith sadness, that the year's workbad come 10 a close. No oneglad to leave the school, but all glad

mi i n IBCourt Tuesday

Morning Why HI* H o wWandered at Large.

TOO MUCH FOB MAYOR

MAYOR JENKINS ADJOURNED THE CASE

UNTtt CITY JUDGE RETURNS.

and Christopher

Were Botk I p

on tae Same Charge—What

They Had to Bar About It.

in all Mayor Jenkins' briefhbat eventfal c

NEW BRUNSWICK'S LIBRARY TRUSTEES

CANNOT SETTLE ON HEW SITE.

dispenser of justice in tbe city courthas he listened to a more eloquent ap-|peat for clemency than that pouredinto his ears Tnesday by Deacon

icer Conway. The natural andflow of oratory, tinged with a

slight southern accent, with whiphthe Deacon is wont to stir gospel cafn-

that they enjoyed the privilege to beIn attendance there. After dealingwith tbe effect that woold be pro-duced by American predominance inOnbaand the Philippine* be closedwith tbe prediction that "in coiningyears when standing on the heights of

r on the bench as a

paign its to a religions frenzy,

betteipeople wouldAmerica for her

r civilisationte to do honoi

work."

Mias Elizabeth

Cupid dealsnuts aod balance*, artIgarized, life*

invaded every walk of

in - tbe cry of pro-Uism lit athletics and todayr.le nation in hanging its headi at the Senate's outrageous-lit of poba. Old honor

one and gold holds the ft. in Tbeiroper heraldic devioe Tor the ageMild be a shopkeeper rampant in aId Of gold. ;It is here that there is need of another

class to step into tbe breach to sa<I tbe bourgeoisie who saved

feodalisnt Now what U, of the American scholartbe question already |aoswered ?

be scholar is tbe new favored class,aristocrat of tbe modem

not aristocratic in tbe sense of arepudiation of democratic principles,not a* one who seeks tbe privilege toiold aloof from- his neighbor. • Letnoblesse oblige" be for him a signi-

ficant phrase. Tbe castle walla haveen battered, down, bat in its steade college walls have risen. Andiwhere in * • world a n tbe advan-

tages for education so great as here inTalk of the bourgeois!'

the a-pper bmaA »*"*•*

The olass who were graduated lastvening and who occupied positions 0be stage with Robert Hand, the

president, seated in tbe centre,Miss Nettie Louise Banersachs, Hiss

Adelaide Carney, Miss Winifred Char-lotte Carroll, Miss Elizabeth CameronDavenport, Miss Jennie May Bveritt,Bobert F. Hand, Miss Nellie Mant»,Miss Alice Emily Martin, Miss Har-

t Bainbridge Messexamith, Edward,ft» (iT«tnn. Miss Ella Pearson.

M. Ryan, KayniondBperry Stevens, Miss Kliaabesh Ver-

., Charles Frederick Windham.Miss Annal Mabel Stevens, anothergraduate, was'.uuavoidably absent fromtbe exerises last evening.

The names of those who sang in tberations choruses are : Miases WinifredCarroll. Agnes LaBoyteanx, NoraSohenck, Sadie Fountain, NettitBauersacns, Florence Conroy, Drucillin Smith, Florence Lawson. BaselMartin and Clyde Slater, with MilClara TanFleet presiding at the

iano.

In a short addrewt previous to tbepresentation of the diplomas, JameiR." Joy. chairman of the Board oEducation, regretted tbe absence of AV. D. Honerman and paid an eloquenttribute to S. St. John MoCutchen and

i merest in tbe cause of education.MoCutcben, up to a few months

__ , was president of the board andbad served on that body for ten ye<

rose and fell in an effort to seeuisuspension on a charge of allowinghis blooded equities to run at large.Backed up by the less flowery butmore artful excuses of ChristopherColumbus Maden, who shared tbecharge, the effect was more than theMayor could withstand and he ad-journed the matter until Saturdaywhen City Judge Runyon will dis-pense justice.

The Deacon is the possessor of threeKentucky horses which during tbeweek assist him in gaining his liveli-hood by hauling ashes, a C. Madenlays claim to two pedigreed animals.On Sunday the Deacon turns his out

1 bis front lawn for a well deservedwnbol while be attends church and

Maden escorts his to a field in theWest End, not being the possessor of a

Sunday all flve horsesrom the usual grazing

places and unrestrained by bridle, bitor clattering ash-laden vehicles,cavorted about the Boulevard, kick-ing up heels and seeming to enjoy theconsternation of the Hebrew store-

wpera who made baste to get theirarea off tbe sidewalk. Patrolman

biggins hove in sight and after cor-ralling the bronchos, drove ther

s were served with sun»ar in court and explain—

Mayer Will Watt Until Tana of One

Empires aad Appoint a Maa I

Of Other Views.

New Brunswick, June 25—The boardof trustees ol the New Brunswickrublic Library is deadlocked over thequestion of a site'for tbe librarybuilding to be erected with tbe 160,000

hich Andrew Carnegie has promisedtbe city. A second attempt, made atthe meeting last week, to secure tbeadoption of a resolution providing fortbe purchase or the Livingston ave-

ite. was a failure, three trusteesvoting for tbe resolution and threeagainst it. The Livingston avenuesite has been chosen t>y a jointmittee of the trustees and of the Com-

a Council, but the opponents oftbat site in the board of trustees re-fuse to abide by the decision ofjoint committee.

I the meeting last week a petitionpresented, signed by TOO citizens,

representing the mc*t prominent busi-and professions! men of the city.

In addition, there were present a num-ber of advocates of tbe Livingston

site. A resolution provlf'ing

FOUND KMJiSUPPOSED THIET WAVED BUILETS,

AND HADE HIS ESCAPE. ;

that the boatd certify to council thatdit is xpedient to purchase a site, and

n issue of bond to tbe suthat an112,000 is necessary, waa adopted nauimously.

A second resolution was presentedmaking tbe site tbe Livingston »>noe lots. This provoked a general

siioD. which terminated, on "call for the question, in tbe defeattbe resolution by a tie vote.

Mayor Viehman has announced bisintention of simply biding bitjntil tbe term of a trustee expires, oruntil one of them resigns, when hewill* appoint a trustee who will break

BRINGS SUMMER BOARDERS.

A U r g e Metropolitan Newspaper

but list whil;be fulness 0

•Mar H

tractable, hot day

Ye Honah. deaen orduwrilgr

[ jumpifled.1 all jnmpitiea, dat is

0 000 about, dev all brekloose and jumps around lak as if deywere oircnmlocoted. I always hastaken special care ob my horses and ifdey have disturbed the morals of thecity, day did so while I we* ~*

ow under dese circas I know wery well dese

Jew storekeepers have animals on dcstreet unloosened all day. I reckon.we'se entitled %o a len'ency of sen-

nee. Ef yo" Honah will considerid as Ah solm'ly promises mabMses will rammiRcate on Sunday'sI mob me and Mr Maden had onght

Which 1B Helping the Sum:Resorts.

The Brooklyn Eagleago established atlon in Brooklyn,

>ral :Inreaa of Informa-wbere the public

mble for a 11 ment. bat tbe

_____,d thought of the colleges andeducational institajlons dispelled tbefear.

Of old, after religions ocr«nonies,;he prayer, tbe fost, .the vi |tncharist, with the placing.word on his! back, the candidate wasdobbed a knight. 80. josj graduate*tonight, aftejr registering a solemnvow, like thi*tii, to trmlntn'" the law*

^iralry and honor, woulddabbed knights cf learning.

The inter.-* displayed by tbe ' ]'res-see of so many people was a hopeful

token. If the voting people on_ • merely accumulated fl.OOOth*

interest shown weald not be half sois. It seemed as if they bad come

together to niake a mutual pledge. Inconclusion the speaker advised tbegraduates always to retain a high

« of hoofer together with a fear ofGod and to be able to say with Kiagt ry : "I ata 00* ooveoms sf | "each outward things are not is

Kzerclses Held by Sunday-Schoolof Park Avenwe Baptist church

Sunday Morslsg.In charge of Miss Florence Hawkins,

tbe pupils of tbe Park Avenue BaptistSunday-school held theirDay exercises, SundayThe church was very prettily deco-rated for the occasion and in addition

tbe music from an augmented

sir, there was melody from cauarybirds in oagea suspended from the

At every opportunity thelittle songsters swelled their throattnod warbled. The T. M. C. A.

rchestra was also In attendance.Tbe programme consisted of respou-

ive Tsartings. address of welcome byMiss Maude Harris, and exercises bj

" * " "Cnrist'iprimary pupil* entitled.Gardeners:" and exercises, "Tbe Sab-bath-school," by Miss MargoeriteOstram as "Herald." Hias ArleneBrown as "Angel" and tbe Misses

KM Weeks, Mary Levertdge,:nmn DeLany, Anna Clarke and

as) •Trophies," andnumbers fey the Misses Ova BiEthel Stryker and Elsie Giles.

by Bev.City. aiKby Dr. J- W.

& R. Doberty, of Jerssy

horses hadn't been on tbe street beante he had permission to put 'em infield and he knew right well be bad

arrii-d em 'ere and bad carriedback home. The Mayor suggestedthat Bpeaoer and Christopher get thestorekeepers mentioned and rehearse

Mr all over before tbe CityJudge Saturday morning.

,ow Pares to Colorado and tbePacific Coast.

>n account of various convention!to be held during tbe somuuer In Colorado and on tbe Pacific coast, thi

Valley Railroad announces 1number of dates on which round triptickets will be sold at one-way fare.These tickets will bear especially lib-eral limits, and will afford attereeting aad delightful tours. Infor-mation as to dates, e tc , may betained of any agent of tbe LebighValley Raii^-*1. or by addressingCharles S. Lee, general passenger

(tent.W Oortlandt street.New York, eFire Cracker Started Horse.

A bone driven by Fred Connolly.an away on Watcbang aven«e Satur-day afternoon. Connolly got thebone under control before anythingserious happened. The animal wasfrightened by the explosion of a firecracker, set off by a young lad who

jretting into practice for *""

could, free of charge, secure detailsof hotels and boarding bouses for thf

The idea at once becanupopular, and branch bureaus wereopened in Manhattan and other cities.Country ;hotels and boarding bousesby sending to this Bureau can securea listing blank, fill it out and returnit and then be represented free.ofcost, and send their circulars 1 *cards for free dtsri button.

The Brooklyn Eagle has also beenconsidered for years tbe best mediumfor summer boarder* in New York

1 the Adi

rondacks, -aid: "We are giving th<a larger share of advertlainimost other papers, as experiei

has demonstrated its value to uspast seasons."

Chaunoey B. Newkirk, of Wurta-boro, Sullivan, county, said: ,""

one small ad bronght^me Bveguests."

La Roe Bros., proprietors of tininerican Hotel of Sharon Sprini

N. T., wrote: "Our house is full amostly by Brooklyn people. Daily

eve applications for rooms, son account of our standing ad.

the Eagle."For Listing Blanks, Aov. Ri

Cards and other information, addressEagle Information Bureau,

SO oaw S m c Brooklyn, N. Y.

syod on CoDouglas* K. Brown, who has j>

been gradaated from Cornell Unirity, is now the guest of his brother,Wallace M. Brown, at the Hotel Neth-er wood. Mr. Brown figured promiitently in sports at college, b icrack second baseman of the

WANTS AND OFFERREWARD—Lost, while

r afternoon, on _ _„ _ . and Menlo Park,LlinntkBff-oase watofa and seal,

jk fob; seal marked with monogi0. F. L. Ten dollars reward if retainedto 10M Park av<

CASTOR IAFor laJuu uid CiiltoM.

TM KM Yw HIM AHIJJ Isjflt

Miss "Teddy" Scrymsvr, of St*Uland. is visiting Mr. and Mrs.J. B. Thlacs, of this city.

Ho g«l«iil"l« Wuted.Ho! I did not ark for a bottle •

cheaper, or twice as large, or onemade by Touselv**. I did ask for

will not have any — b»tit«te fa*7 Davis' Painkiller; 1 have uMd

Iso too; there is no •equal it. That I am .

'•ohaaha.

<, Plainfield. fl 31

MARRIED.

AND EQUAL ANY TWENTY.\ CENT POLL** WADS]

'Id by tlv*. up-to-daU rn*r-

m"pl» coV|"«r«" alflV by*" tnttif.blot* paid, lor 25 winti,

Van Zandt Jacobs & Co.Troy. H. V.

TWO 'NEW ST

Double Triangle Brand Colars and Cuffs are sold by O.[. Dunham, E. M. Laing,utnam & DeGraw and M.Veinberger, of Plainfield.

Whrrl Waa Feapd to « • tfcOjOne

Stolea From Dr»a:ST»«« " l l t -

ler Taesday BreMlng-{Qulok work on the part ol the local

police recovered for Druggist DudleyKiller, Taesday night, his D«W WOIB-

nioan wheel- Tbe mount; wasm from in front of his Park a wpharmacy shortly after 9 o'Wook

at l a . m. TtiesdayJ it! wasintercepted at Cranford on its way to

•w York.

As soon as a description of; the.heel was furnished Sergeant Fred-eriokson. he telephoned to all thenearby places, asking tbe t>oli« to ben the lookout A return messagetame from Cranford Tuesday morn-inK saying a wheel answering tbedescription had been taton from afreight oar on a;train which stoppedat the water tanis. A oWored manwearing a light suit sprang from thetrain and ran away at the .approach oftbe officer. A shot waa fired after htmbut he refused to stop and disappearedIn the woods.

Chief Klely visited Crsnfordand found the wheel to be Mr. Mil-ler V •

To Practice Law.U- W. T. Moy, who recently 1

out his drag business M> Dudley 8.Miller, wilt now devote) bis (ntiretime to tbe practice of law. | .

DEAF? ^ ^ ^ NOISE 5?DEAFNESS ORCHARD HEARING

ARE NOW,. <f^ l*£PV- I ••HEAD NOISES CEASE T M M E D ( M L Y .

F. A. WERMAN, OF SA(-TIMOtt£, . '. - ;« full hi-.'- • -r r,f ::iy c.i f ! • l.i "iivl at yjur c'.isctxlinn,

^uoiit live T"r» '"° ."!• ***** e * r t*B=n W "E. P^<1 lliis kept en ; • • • ' ' '• i l t-i.itnt lor caturrh. for threemor.'.hs.'wiih-.i!- ..::v*l; .•

J>erof phjutcf TU. *mong others, the mo>t cmiarnt -.^ *\-* • - . • * 1 tut^tm\y ID operation couldnelp me. »nd even th»i only trninurarily, that the W M vumA » «WU a c « « . but th= hnriait [Q Ihe mH«trd s»t would be loM forever

tbeo u w yoor »ditrti»ement accideuully in a New York JBIJXT, mil u-.'.U red yab <ITB»-y.sfter five weeks, BjUeuiiiR in the diaeaMde*rhs*tH •'- • ~ i j • • ~-:il7 u d beg to rcm*Ln Very trail

-Our treatment docs not interfere with your usual orati

•TStt;..- YOU CAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME fINTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 5 9 6 LA ULLE AVL, CHICMD, 1U.

CARNEY BROS.,MADISON AVENUE.

Between Front and Seoond rtreet*

TinnerisPlumbersGas Fitters,

Oratea and bricka for all klnaa oistoves can be found here at Jobbersprices. Bring jour tinware mendingto u». The beat tlnnere, the bejflplumbers, and tbe best frae-flttero Inthis sect!' We ivery best of materials, a

ie but theour work

always givea saUafaction. Keys o!all kinds are made here. Tinwaremade to order. Bangee, brick andportable rumaces. Sanitary plumbing.

I am prepared to do any of the abortbranches ID strictly tlret-elues Banttaryand wormamhlp manner.

Having associated myself with theMaster Members Association Of New

D. W. LITTELL,..113 North Ave.. Plalnfleldl H. J.

NEW IN EVERY DETAIL!Mrattwbarbsrsbopst

143 NORTH AVE.

EDWIN B. H1INABD.

DIME

Savings Institution,Of Plainfield, 1 . J.,

now receiving deposits withset allowed oa all sums frominterest, allowed

J FRA^S HDBBABU, President,OKJ. W. EOOXTILLOW. Vk»-Prw.J. C. Von. Treasurer.

Monty deposited oa or before Janu-ary tenth will draw interest from tbe

Kb

re ol Augustus Etzlnser,a«e<i I

ALBERT HEC

Livery & Boarding StablesFOURTH ST..

,ng and Park a'

Iby week

' " SO. 1M.

week or month.' Telephone call.

Sanitary PlumbipgBrick and Portable FurnaceOas Fitting, Tin Roofing,

Etc., Etc., Etc

Wm. A. Wood, tiff,FinudUIe

INSURANCE AGENT,.OTTiC*,

toner Frost St. aad Park ham,tflainflsld. Bf. J. \

Real Estate foi bale, or Ei<Jhs.uo«.Money to loan oo Appfr*<^ rt curtly

GuaranteedSalary $900

-----TOMMY 11 KiH » ™to*v*arj- **,u' ■■■unn linuf IT Win srw rbuhswicr’S library TRUSTEES

mii mw n m

Class of Sixteen Graduated From North Plainfield High School at Friday v ' Evening’s Exercises.

COMMENCEMENT ATY.M.C.A. HALL.

Mart Tueaday nomine Why HU Homan

Wandered at Iarga. TOO MUCH FOB MAYOR

NEW BWMWICKT LIBRARY TRUSTEES CARROT SETTLE OR HEW SITE.

hkm mi OK M SUPPOSED TRICE BRAVED BULLETS

ARD HADE HIS CSCAPE.

MAYOR 1ERHRS AOJOURRED THE CASE URTIl CITY JUDGE RETURRS.

THE AIIDHEHH TO THE MEMBEKH OF THE (IHADUAT1.NO CLAH8 WAS MADE

|1Y REV. IJR- WM. W. RICHAROS.

art whil le Is the world for ee bo* whet fate M foe the world! Truly, he that weaU an hit Ufe inert lore

Tl.e Vf.le.llctory Woe. delivered by Mlaa Nellie Mantle unci tlte Salutatory by Charlea Fred crick Wlndliom—One Graduate Wuo Unable

be Present—The Winner, of the Valiant Hrlr.ctt—The Hull Wow Prettily Decorated A Itrllllont Function Wae Held.

haadred fold. Be let ar go forth with a lincltoert of parpam In ank- les the troth end the food, with e eelf-dedication foe the eerrtee of so- ciety that we nU nar beooue le one eererml Heidi of labor, national bene-

inr of North PlrtnBrtd Hl«h School le Ml. Y. M. O. A hall Uet Friday The gallery end auditorium WM com- pletely oiled by e large end gaily dreeled eodienoe. mnny of whom were elemni end nlemnaa of I he ln- stit.lioa end appreciating to the «- n,.t the .Ifnilicence of .he even. They bed the pnrilefe of lirtenlng to so Intel!eetael programme which for merit, hat hem nldom mrpu-^et didele. to?diplomee numbered ale »> Ogr wee ebomt, hot the other Of I mii acre pied erete oo the -If. end e. their Damn -ere died walked op to the froet to recetre from the hendr of Chelrmeo Jemn R. Joy the coreted perchmenu. end make their leal •alakatirt m Itlfb School popile *--**- the

the Black Prince. Bayard end later Raleigh “d Oollngwood, end In thl. coontry Oeoege Wnehl e repeeentatlre of the type. Tree, that type of man may hare been ertetooratlc In hie bearing, he may hare folded bn rebel

grille net were Her. Dr W. H. Rich- ards. Kee S L Karp. Jamee R. Joy. pr.el.lmt e< the North Plainlrld Board of Edwatioa. and Principal Homer l nightman The Mage lecorallont were of a loinnant enter. High >» the rear. In bruin red letters, haeg the elm- mot to, .Labor Omnia Viaeit." a motto which said Ohalrmaa Joy In pnerntlag tin dl'

The ealatatery eddr Frederick Wladham a pared and tboaghtfal l

aad fell In an effort to melon cm e charge of allowing blooded equlnrotorua el Urge Backed ep by the lem Bowery hat artfml Ooloml

that coaid not be otberlm then tinged with eednem. that the year-t wort to a cieee No eoe wee

hot only heoanee he thoaght the peo- ple controlled by a different standard of life caring lees for honor than he did. The world owed moch to tbeee To another tort yoo ere also ender great obligation*. Things woe Id aot program well If there -ere hot cere at horn being clothed with ere end rmpoa-lblllty. To the reman or bargher one o loan became strong enough to Rght

for himself end it

glad to Imre the echooL bat ail glad that they enjoyed the prlallege to be in attendance there. After dealing with the effort I hat would ha pro- daced by American predominance In Cmbaand the PhlUpptaea ha oioaed with tire pradretioa that "to ootalag yearn when .landing oa the height! of n better nod nobler clrlUeagloo them people woald enlte eo do honor to America for her noble wort. “ The clam who .

difffaalt "to my what woold hare become of the world bat for the townsman or bergber. Prom the bargher to the bourgeois ■top. Haring woo the rl too meet, bis own way- Brer tinge the French Kerolotloo the the

the Hnulag. la leafage end _J banked tire footlights. aad with log palmt art U the oeotre. fi agalort 'the wall le lire hackgroand a Iren gonial line rlohly ffowered aad falleged, the whole making a area, rtral a Bgmeal of the poet's brain The valedictory, carrying with It the Oral tcholarehlp Ireoor of the class ... ile 11 re red by Mlm Nellie Heart, while Charles Frederick Windham made the relutetory eddrrm. with second ecbolarehlp honor The John Vellanl prims for proBcleocy In math .malice, Orel. BIO le geld, second, *10 In gold, were won by RUmBeth Hey Uereojiort eed Robert F.'Hand reaper lively. So clone we> the oompetltloi that the Judges recommended two ether, for Irenorsble menltao. Edward White Orerton en.l Charles F. Wind

etage with Robert Hand, the preetdeot.mated In lire centre, ware: Him Nettle Lon Ire Baaeraacbs. Him Adelaide Carney, Him Winifred Char- lotte Carroll. Him EUmbrth Cameron Daren port. Him Jennie Hay Mrarltt. Robert F. Band. Him Nellie Hants. Him Alina Emily HanU. Hue Har- riet Bain bridge Me—eramlth, Edward Whit. Orertoo. Him EUa Pm Him Kllsabatb RL Ryan. Ray ,— Sperry Breveas, Him Elleabeeh Ter- w — ... lmk of the world. The old knight

',«r m !SrrXTt“l^. u deed for honor i ihl. nr— k.igh, Urm — -“,d rrrr “L tZTZ.* i*. . faro red dreg It hm only one left, having destroyed the other. It It not surprising If they hare had a too great effect oa human Ufa Aa a reeolt of their Icflneacee, commercialism la the peonllarity of the age. Hereertary condition, hern inraded every weU cff Ufa: even Cnpld deal, in booh re- con nu aad balanoe*. art Itmlf in volganxed, literatcre le infected, from college, acme, the cry of pro- fessionalism In athletic, red today the whole nation U hanging * *

Hire Anaal Hnbel Stereos, another graduate, —'unavoidably a beret from the egenres Uet evening The names of those who aang In the various chororm ere : Hteem Winifred Carroll. Ague. LaBoyteaas. Nora Bcheuck Sadie Poontaia. Nettle Reuermcha. Florence Conroy. Dractl 1U Smith. Florence Lawson. Hare. Martin and Clyde Slater, with Hire Clara Vac Fieri presiding at the

The evening’s |irogmmme in detail waa m follow.

of do be Old heoor gone red gold holds the Meld. The proper heraldic devlm for the age woold he a shopkeeper rampant in a ■eld of gold. It Is here llmt there le need of another clam to atop into the breach to mve

. are. r.l—g 1- what is the plane of the American scholar? le art the quertlon already kntwervd ? The scholar to the new favored clem, the aristocrat of the modern world-

The event of the evening Mldrvm by Bev. Dr. W. R. Rickards, view and

of n

. for the library ballding to ha erected with the feO.OGn which Andrew Oaraegle has promised the oily. A recced attempt, made at the meeting lam wart, to moots the adoption of a reaolalloa provldlag for the pare base of the Livingston are- nee eUe, wm a fallmre, three trertere voting foe the maol.tlua red three The Living m chorea “by mitten of the trustees and of theOoue-

petition .re . signed by TOO cltlrens, representing the meet prominent bosl nem and prof east anal men of the city fa addition, there were present e nem bar of advocates of the Livingston .venae site. A resolution psovlfing that the board oertify to council that It le expedient to purchase e site, sad that an imoo of hood to the worn of adopted an Bit.no fa

H.yor oonld withstand red he ad loomed the matter until Saturday when Oily Judge Kenyon will die- The Deacon fa the possessor of three Kentucky horam which during the week assist him In gaining hie Ueull- hood by MbM. Q. C. Uadeo lay. claim to two pedigreed animals

on bis front fawn for a wall deserved gambol while be attewda chnrch and Haden escorts hie to a Bald U the Wart End. not brtng the poaeeaeor of e gram plot. Boa day all Avu horem .redered from the amal graving

A Mooed resolution wm pres. making the site the Livlngrton lota Thl. provoked e general region, which terminated, no caU for the question, in tbo defeat the reeoleliou by e tie vote. Mayor Viehman has renonneed his Inteatlcn of simply hiding hie limn entU the term of n trustee expiree, or entU one of them reelgnr, when he will appoint e trnxtm who wlU break tbs deadlock.

Double Triangle Brand Col- lars and Cuffs are sold by O. M. Dunham. E. M. Laing, Putnam A DeGraw and M. Weinberger, of Plainfield.

oavortad about the Bonlerard, kick lag np bests red xeemlag to eajey Hm of Ufa Hebrew rtore-

with ,, fa court red explain— bat Ifal while the Deacon xpeaki from the fulness of hlx heart -■Hay It please.

la n short nddre— previous to the prnmntatlon of the diplomas. Junes R' Joy. chairman of the Board of Education, regretted the ahaence of A. V. D. Hon.yman red paid re eloquent tribute to 8. St John HoOntchen and bis interest fa the on— of education McCutehen. ep to a few months ago. wm president of the board and had served ea that body for tea year.

Iran table, ha. -W *» all JomplBed. Yaaelr. day am all lumpiBed. dal to when dab'l no one about, dey all brak loam aad Jumps around fak ns If dey were circaeilocated 1 always has taken special care ob my horem red If dey hare distorted the moral, of the city, dey did so white I wai church. Now nador dam cirt stance, red m I know wmy wall dene Jaw storekeeper, bare animals oo dr aad all day. I reckon, to a len'ency of een- Hoaah will consider -Olm'ly promire, mah boeem wtU rammldcate oo Sunday’s no mob me aad Hr. Haden had ought to go fm." Colombo. Haden ioaisUd that hit

CHILDREN'S DAY. Kxerrl.ec Held by ».ad.y-Sckoel

of Park Aveawn Uaptlnt caareh

.ore he I tod penBlreio« to pat ’em la . field aad ha knew right weU be had carried em ’ era and had carried ’em The Hnyor saggeeted red Ohrfatopher get the

enfolding of the development of mod- els civilisation, gradually leading up

repudiation of democratic prtnclplm. not a. one whd seeks the privilege to hold aloof tram hie neighbor. Let . oobimee oblige" be fee him n etgoi- Ocant phrase. Tbs mssfa walla have been bartered dowa. hot fa Ha seaad the college white have rises. Aad there la t|m world are Ufa udvaa-

fa charge Of Hiss Florence H.wkic, the pupils of the Part Arena. Bnptt, Bandar -school bold their Children Day esarafaae. Sunday moralnL The c hatch wea eery preetily deco- rated for the ooreelrt red to addition

s theme, the place of the scholar In modem li> No mere eyaopnia could do Joel ice to this maaserty effort. After referring to the place of the scholar In Ufe n.1 poiatrd to the fact that la dlffereut period, of the world’s history dlffereut torts of peo- ple hare hen

America Talk of the boarguofaie gettlag the upper band might owe to tremble foe a moment- ka recend thought of the culfagm and

« — - — - — - - - they — reloped into a favored clues Olanc- ing’bark to the beginning, of modus hlstorr It Is customary to fart nf all tbrt la bad Hea had the an rvaUy bleasteg The knight of magiAceot Idea of human Altboagh the artaal flmh awe |a.rana to mam Me Ideal lofty. He hm base dmertbed m mre. pare, gentle, courteous to •_ —i. forgetful nf eeU. filled with p religion, bowing before Ood and ■d. haughty to all others l a ooatrlbetlrt of feudalfa

IW. Of old. after rotleloa. ceremonies. the prayer, dm tort, the vigil, u- eacharlei, with the pfaolag of a sword ea hi. bank, the candidate wm dabbed a knight So. yrt gradnatea tonight, efiw registering n solemn tow. like Rlipjn to m^Btein tbe liw of chivalry red howos. vro-U be •lobbed knisbu nf learning. The inured displayed by the psee- cf m many people - ‘ “

great It seemed m if they had together to make a mutant pledge la —— t|u weaker advtoed the a*way> to •• ■■■■ — areas of hoatn t-wrtber with n fear rt Oad aad eo be able to my with Kfaff Harry: "1 am am rov.lon. of gold; each outward things are aot ia my

CASTOR IA Fer Ufagfa aad Ckildrm Tk KM YN UK«Hllra>

BRINGS SUMMEB BOARDERS. A Large Metropolitan Nowepapor Which le Helping tbs Sum-

The Brortlyn Eagle several yearn ago retahlidled a Bureau of Iafonna- tloo In Brooklyn, whore the public ooald, free of charge, secure details of betels red hoarding boasm for the ■■miner The Idea at cnee became popular, red branch bureaus ware opened fa Manhattan red other cities Country ^ hotels red boarding bouses by sending to this Bureau ere a liming blank, fill It out aad it red than be represented free.of coat, aad rend tbetr circular* red cards for fees disrlbutloo. The Brooklyn Eagle hm also haea considered for year, the beet medium summer boarders in New York City. The Rocky Point Inn. in the Adi rendacka. said: "We are (iring the Eagle a larger share of advertising than more other paper., m experience hm demonstrated its value to a. fa

n't bare oa

Fa— to Colorado aad Urn Facile Coast. On account of various convention

Ghanocey B. Newkirk, of Wurfa- boro. Sullivan, county, suid: "Lust oa one until broo|(ht'fne Bre La Run Brea, proprietor, of the American Howl of Sharon Spring., N. Y.. wrote: "Oar boom to fall red mostly by Brooklyn people. Dally we reofave application, for room., and all on recount of our Mending ad. fa tbo Eagle." For Luting Blanks, Aov. Cards red other Information, address Eagle Information Bnreao. « BO oaw » m 0 Brooklyn, ». Y

Flayed aa Cornell’. Hit Doaglam K- Brown, who haa Jart been graduated from Cornell Univers- ity. fa now the guest of hie brother, Wallace M. Brown, at the Howl Netb- erwood. Hr. Brown figured premia- eotly in sport, at eolfage. brtng the of the base bull Lehigh Vtkll«7 Railroad anononn* .her of dales oa which round trip tickets wUl he sold at ooe-wsy fare. Them tickets will hem especially Uh-

WANTS AND OFFERS , red will wresting red delightful Ware, lafar- m 10 dates, eto.. may be ob- tained af say agent of the Lehigh Valley Ballroed. or by —

inir Fnils' eft’ Hamfield red gold bunfalg-oare wetoh m Si mesh fob; Mai marked with mooograai O. F. L- T« doDaro row*H if rojuroad to 10M Park aroeaa, Platofleld. d »1 lj

UiMd, U visiting Mr. and Mr*. J. R Thiar*. <* *kU city. Mo! I did not *»* «or > oocue w/

CO -Ilf art have rev rebrttiate <— sr&maafo^aKsj equal IL Thee 1 am mre of—fa. atom

COLLARS Than StytaH.

GUARANTCCQ LINEN. TWO POR A OUARTIR mre. .QUAL ANY >iv PINT POLLAN »old by llva. uo-U-daU mar-

Vmi ZAndl. Jacobi & Co. Troy. N. V. TWO HOW STYLES

lev Tarnday Kvnalag. yulek work on the part of the local polio, recovered for Dragffat Ifad^ey Hlil.r, Tuesday nighL his new Wolff-

rtrtre faom"a from of Ufa Park ave- nue pharmacy ebortly after » a'elonk bat rt I a m. Ta-*Wl»!w« lets rue peed at Cranford oe Its wqy to New York. Ae won aa a description »• ,b* farnUhed SergeaBt Fred erlekeou, he telephoned lo all the nearby pfaom. mUng 'he polle. to ha on the lookout. A return r- came from Cranford Tuesday fag saying

wearing a light mil L. —, train red ran away at tbs approach of the officer. A shot wm fired after him but hu refuted to Mop red dUeppeurad In the woods Chief Klely visited Cranford red found tbo wheel to bo Mr. Mi| To Practice Law. O. W. V. Hoy, who recently mid out bit drug business tu Dudley 8. Miller, will now dorow hu entire time to tho practice of law.

ARE YOU DEAF? ALL CASES OF

DEAFNESS OR HARD HEARII ARE NOW CURAO'-r: 'ey OUT l:wInventior. On y I'wee borj del' ore he nbj’. _

HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIA s ELY. F. A. WIRHAM, OF BALTIMOtt:

Iy ..

"if. 5rwggttA!t.7>.a krt-I. htUinrev. -Onr t root meat doe* nof faferfere reKA gone ttetref •attK- YOU CAB CURE Y0UR8ELI- AT HOME V-S* ■ITtR«ATimUL AURAL CLIRIC, 596 LA BALLE *YE^ CNICMO, ILc

CARNEY BROS. MADISON AVENUE.

Tinners, Plumbers Gas Fitters,

A BUI L IVIHUPU IV uum; WK mw*w branches in strictly Qrrt-class Ninltary aod worman*hip manner X DIE LIIJ, A CUIJJIVJ l»-’M ofam mechanics and nan- I be Here In

Oretea red brlcke for all kinoa .. stoves can bo found hare at Jobber* St arts plum here, and the beet gm-fittera In this section. We use none but the verybestof materials, and our work always gives satisfaction. Keys of fill kinds are made here. Tinware uiado to order. Ranges, brick and portable fumuoes. Sanitary plumbing.

NEW IN EVERY DETAILI Mr new ksrhsr shop at

143 NORTH AVE. ARwaUs sMSiSWr:

crunk b kit*ABC.

DIME

Savings Institution, Of PlaiifiaM. I. Jo

now receiving deposits with intstmt,'” aUowed to *3.000. J. Fuavk HcagAKP, Prertdent Oei. W. Bocgrgt.Uiw.Yloa. Pres. 1. a Pope.

Money deposited on or before Jana iry tenth wtU druw lotereet from th*

Sanitary Plumbing Brick and PortabfaFarna Gas Fitting. Tin I Etc., Etc., Etc.

I am prepared to doeeyof the abort ronohaa in BfHfffl* ftflLrlui HUlltan _iember* J York City, I employ union men.

r^nfnb“ business, at aU times D. W. LITTELL,

laid. N. J, ■o. Ill North Ave..

urT^ragawaMH

Wm. A. Woodiuff, Fire end life

INSURANCE AGENT,

cor»tr Frott St ad Fark burn, FfalnOeld. M. I.

Beal Eatato for Bala or Eidbaaaa. Honey to loan oo Appr. v— - corfty

winkle, m aer esta year. ALBERT FfEDOEN Livery & Boarding Stables

Goarwtfed Salary $900

YFAFI.Y.

Page 6: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

Mim Elizabeth T. Oinna B«-c*m« the Wife Of Erickson

of

A BlAUTirUL WEDDUfOWaa Wltaasaed b j a l

—Aa Klaborate Keeeatloa *-»!•I*ws4 at Hos>. of the Bride'sPare*** oMW.trt.-ak H a a a S

The marriage of Mia* EUaabethTorapkin* Uiana, only daughter ofMr. u d Xn. Staphen A. (iinna, ofWatchung avenue, to Eriefcaoo. Perk'In*, of Rochester. N. T., took placeJune .IK at the home or the bride'parents, with all the brilliancy and•pletidor that one could . wish for.Surrounded by a wealth of floral dec-orations and an assemblage of promt

distant points,the- happy event was oneot the social events or tbeThe palatial home of the bride's par-ents never looked more attractive.From the extensive conservatory weretaken stately palm* and beautifulfern* and 'flowers and these were usedto make one of the prettiest ditieau ever seen In this city.

Throughout tbe vafloua rooms andoo tbe large plaxia there ware placeda number of these large Ipalmn andfern*. Perhaps the moat unique ar-rangement waa in the drawing room,whan the oeremony took place. Herela a large bow window, and threemagnificent palm*, twenty feet liheight, were used, together with aprofusion or mountain laurel andaoathern amilai In tbia bower therewere countless little incandescem•leotric lights. Th* pains, laureland imilax completely filled tbedow, leaving juat spaoe enough forthe bridal party.

The wedding, which took place at7 o'clock, was attended by a United•amber of relative* and friends, therenot being over one honored In all pre-sent But at the reception which fol-

- lowed at 8 o'clock tbe home wasthrown open to receive hundreds ofguest* from PUinfleld and otherpotato.

The fcnde waa gowned In whit*ohiffoo, the waist being trimmed withreal lace She also wore a , veil oftulle and carried bride roam A oortlynecklace of pearl* and turquoise, tbegift of the groom, completed tbebridal attire.

Attending the bride were two bride-maids, Mia* Meta VaaNest Button,of Baltimore, and Hiss Bernioe Per-kins, of Rochester, the latter a sisterof tbe •room, and.a flower girl. HissCatherine Wliitiug'/.iaua, a nieoe ottbe bride. The bridemaida worewhite tace town* over white, trimmedWith a combination of white lace,organdie and chiffon, with sashes ofWhite silk They carried pink sweetpeas and nfoss-rose buds. The flowergirl was gowned in white organdie,trimmed with lace and white silkribbon*, and she carried' a gilt basketOiled with WNt peaa and moss rosebud*. The bride'* gifts to her bride-maid* were torquoiae and gold 'chainsand to the Bower girl a pearl « n

Promptly on the boor set forwedding, KM bridal party proceededfrom the second Boor down the mainstairoast no tbe drawing room, whilean oirheaira. hidden from view, ren-dered the Loltengrln wedding march.Tin? flower girl led the way, fol-Wweo by the brldesuld* and thebride, accompanied by her father.who gave her away in marriage.tbe room- where the ceremonyperformed, the patty met the groomand hi* hf-i man. John Porter Bow-man, of Rochester. Two bioad band*Of whit* Kit in ribbon were placed

j aeros* the entrance to the bow win-dow and as tb* party mad* its appear

i aao* they were removed by Daniel F.- Qtawa. brother of tbe bride, and John

Craig Powers, of Rochester.The marriage oeremony, which

according to tbe Kpiaoopal chiform! waa performed by Rev _William R. Richard*, pastor of "theOreeotnt Areaa* church, while tbeorchestra rendered beautifulvary softly. Tba marriage wiformed with a ring.

Immediately 'following tbe cere-mony the bride and groom ware the

_ Nelpieat* i «f a shower of ooograrola-ttona, andjthe beat wUbas wen nlanded to the happy couple that tbelmarried life may be a happy and* suc-uaaaful one Aa hoar later otbeiguests begun to arrive and there wana continuation of congratulations un-til a late hour, daring which a de-lightful wedding supper waft served.

Taa guest* aougbt tbe piaaxa andthe charming lawn, where provision*had been mad* for the reception.Here and t here about the lawn, tb*bsaatifal shade trees were brilliantly

mingled show! - tbe bouse and lawatbe entrancing ajaaic by the or.-Matr.gave additional; pleasure.

While tbe guests were enjoying tbeassay p l w n c Qntarea, tliey wenanlndfal of th«- twantiioi arraywedding gifu .received by the bride.They consisted «i hundred* of articlesOf great raise ana uw. includingmuch solid *il*«r and gotdware,glass and other things. Tb* popularityOf UM bride and ber haabandfully aWnattiil ttaoeigh these magni

Mr. aid'-™ perkin. left Plainnelddaring UM erasing for Haw forkfrom which point they will take asextended wedding Journey. Tbey expact to be away nearly all HDIMIand is tbe fall they will take up tbeii

to* a* Rochester, where thaia engaged in tbe banking boatMrs Perkins has always been

itnber of PUinfield'ibest society aad ; ber departure fromthe oity will U felt in a large circleof friend* and aoanaintancea.

TWO Wf DDINGS flT ST. MflRYSSAME GATHERING OF FfllENDS AT

TENDED THEM BOTH.

Miss ' O'Brien • Wrdded PatrickO'Brien Mil* O'DoneU l i "

» » f Mrf. X- J. Burke.St. Mary1* church was the scene •ro weddings, Wednesday, June H

which wen held within an hour ofeach other and were witnessed by tbe

large gathering of relatives andfrienda

The a rat took place at t o'clock andas that of Hiss Margaret O'Brien, a

former well known resident fof ;tbiasiiy. but more recently of Newark, toPatrick O'Brien; also of J"Bar. Father Egaa performed tbe cere-mony.

Mlaa O'Brien waa attiredharming gown of white organdie andras attended by ber sister. Hiss Kate

O'Brien, of this, city. The latter'*gown WM alao of white materialPatrick Oorrlgaa, of this city, actedas best "ran

Immediately after tbe ceremony Mr.aad Mrs. O'Brien left on a weddisgtrip of a week'* duration after whichthey will return to tfata city andtheir home oo Richmond street. Tba[room ia employed by a large *te*l

In Newark.precisely 5 o'clock Him Madeline

Julia O'Donnell, daughter of Hra.Uargaret O'Donnell, of this city, andMichael J. Burke, of Avon Park, en-erwd the edifice and took their place*

the altar before Father Egan andOn tbe word* were pronounced

which made a young couple man andwife.

Mlaa Catherine Qlennon. of Cran-ord. waslsiasO'DonnelTa attendant

and William <>Donneli,> brother ofbe bride, acted ; as best man. Miss

O'DonnelT* (town was of whiteI'esprit aad she carried a large shower

bouquet of bridp roam Hia* Qlen-gown wai of white organdie

and in her band nposed pink roses.Him Smith presided at tbe organ and

ihe marches daring tbe e»-trance and retirement of tbe bridalparty. |.

Followiu(tjtb«' ceremony tbe gawtarepaired to I he home of the gloom's

•s. j«hn Brown, of Avon[•ark, where a: reception waa helduntil hue last evening. Mr. and Mr*.

irke will Uare today for am ex-tended wedding trip and afterward

their borne on East Si:street. Tbe groopi is a valued employe

f the Aluminum Plate and Prom"ork-Many beautiful and useful present*Tee extended the young couple aadast man and ushers were presented

with stick pins by the groom.

NARCONNKirS FESTIVAL.

Held Laat Thnvaday on U w i Oppo-CampbeU'a Clajbhoue.

X am a f^fnl strawberry andin festii *1 was held laat Thnn-

d*y on the Uwn on Park avenue op-poiite Oampbell's clnbbonse, in aid ofMarconnier pbapeL The Uwn wasvery prettily decorated with bunting,flags, and Chinese lanterns, and largebunches of flower, set off tbe tables.On account of school fuoctiona at Me-tachen and Piainfield many peoptowere prevented from attending, nerer-tbelees a neat sam was realised in aidof the ohapel, tbe proceeds

ore tha* Hf.charge of tbe affair wi

VaaCoart, general ebalrmiby a decorating committee composedor Mr. Wd Mrs. W. H. Randolph,Engene VanOobrt, and Mias Jnli»

cake table was ia c barn'of E. VasOonrt,- Mr*. John FreemanMrs. Wm. Randolph; at tbe oandytable waa Miss Fanny SlOTer; at tbe

table; Orrllliaver. Tbe waitresses were• Mettle Stover. May Mom-

sot), Jennie Robinson. Lottie C»mp-brU, Lillie Statka, Besaie Reigbton,Jennie Kyle and Loey Scbeock. WillVsoOonrt

• Mrs. Leo

T

I iff Hidfrt+m s adie Holmca* W a* Mar-ried to Clare nee X*. Th orn—Ceremony at Bride* Home.

FLOEAL DECORATIONS.

ROSES WIRE USED IN PKOfUSlOK TO

DECORATE THE HOUSE.

[, Pft. D...1 « • • Q M k - T k t N I- Bridal

H-rty -Will Reside Here.Standing in a pretty green bower of

"tike aa a father plrletbe Lord pitletb them that

Many youns rx""*1* "•*• dnrln*' tn«ast season been utDdrinc more closelyban -rtr before flowers and birds. Teg

etable and animal life. A newrant world of wondrooa fascinationbas been opened to tl

to explore. Few facts are nwtlng in this world of creatur:boae connected with their tobouses and clothing. Tbe merethe habits of tbe little creatuilowly forma of life tystndled tbe wonderful becomes

daughter of Mr. aad Mrs. Lewis D,Holme.. Of Orandview avenue, andCUreoc* L. Thorn., son of GuiUerooThorn. or East Second street, took tbe

OWB, Wednesday. June i\ whichimted them for life. One hundred

gueat* witnessed tbe ceremony whichperformed by Ber Cornelins

Sabenek. pastor of Trinity Beformadhnrch.The borne of the bride's parents was

be scene of the wedding and in ac-cordance with tbe custom was lavishlydecorated with nature1* moat beauti-ful flowers. Rope* of pretty rose*

r freedom from worrlment and carefor tbe future and their asfetj 1B aworld swarming with enemies amdangrrs. Their food Is round and eaten by them aa needed, bat tbey neilook oat for the future. It 1* one mlat a time. Tbe more we think of'tbe more singular it seeaw thatthings whould work together so inHow dearly It all shows a vast pland«-p wijtdora and j->« There hi also

At tbe boar of 4, the bride andgroom entered the parlor preceded bybe ushers, Elwood Sebring and Henry

r, both near friends of tbeThe remainder of tbo partyI of tbe maid of: honor, Miss

\chsar4Holmes, the bride's sister, andhe beat man, William Thorn, broth.

of the groom. Tbe bride waa charm -ngly gowned in mode crepe de chine

with pearl trimmings and carriedhire sweet peas. Her maid of honoras attired in bine iiiim—iliini de sole

rimmed with silk applique.A luncheon waa served Immediately

after tbe young people plighted tbeiitroth and late in the evening tbey do-parted for a week'* trip, tbe destinat-ion of which they refused to reveal.>n ita completion tbey will return

and reside in a prettily furnishedWhite wood avenue. I

bride and groom a n popular amongtbe local younger aet aad am oog the

asineaa men, tbe Utter holds Irominent place.Beautiful designs in aUnr, fund

tan, bric-a-brac and cot glass formedarray of present* extended tba

roung people, while their rift* to thebridal party were neat designs iner and gold. Among tbe witnesses otM pretty oeromony -were man y from~ rwark. New York. North Branch.

Aabuiy Park, Elisabeth u d ttomer-rille. •

ALUMNI RECEPTION.lvea to Gradauta* |af City HighSchool at tha Casta* by Cli

of 1SOO aad 1SO1.At tbe dose of the Oity High Schoolusmencement exercise*, Thursday,•e members of the gradnatinR classid their friends to tbe number of 330•enabled at the Oaaino when a re-•ption was tendered tbesa by theember, of the - ' inn of 1B00 andN>L 11 wa* one of tbenl alumni raoeptlaaK evDancing began at 10 do o'clock and

continued until I o'clock with alarval for refreshment*. Excellent.»ic was famished by Frank'* N. T.beam. The floor waa not uncomtably crowded and a delightful ere-

TbaH. Pres-

oott. Miss Gumming, Mias Grace E.Borrouaba and Hiss Katberyn Ball.

Light blue and white, tba color* ofhe clam ot 1903 predominated in tbaecorationi which consisted largely of

bunting. Tbe work of arranging andbj

tbe claasea of 1900 and 1901. HiasMarion D. Woodcock is president ofbe class of 1M0 and W. Hollo way

Titus of 1901.

Freddie TTniwin tbe young eon of« and Mrs. Jacob Bansen, of Web-«r place, was taken to Mnhlenberg

Hospital, Friday noon, to hare anperation for appendicitis performed.t proved successful and the rouau;

patient is doittg nloely.

l*ria* far Mlaa Moody.UM amateur photo departments

conducted by the varioua magaxutea,PlaUnelder* are frequently beard

n. In tbe bant inane of St. Nichoias,a Helen C. Moody, aged fifteen, of

his citv, ia among tbe prise winners.

The Mw Coaches.paas**meT train* on tat New

Central are now fully equippediew coacbe. of tbe latest pat-Toe change ia one that ia ap-

preciated very much by patmrns of the

died the way plan!protect tbe life of seeds and bird* feedand rare for their roang fur nwhiletil rficy can care for themselves.

But all of tbls la far below tbe careiin.i l«ve. tbe mnvv and compouionatenTTi'rtlon. Of a htlnuit) par*work and will flgbt bard to defend theirlittle ones. This abow* seme sense oregard. But bow far shortof tbe great, whole snuled love of a faIIHT! HOW a man will work and denyhimself to feed and clothe, to give *good borne and education to hia chil-dren. Who can ever describe tbe heartfeelings, of a great atrong, rough manas he take* in his nrtns tbe little helpIts* bundle of humanity, bis first childHe la shy and awkward with It becausebe never, perhaps, held a baby beTore—never hia own baby. He becomestie, the rough voice is aubdnetl,heavy atep grows lighter, and a newnature opens up In him such aa benever knew before. Ho baa new viewsof life, new Jo.rs and new hopes. H<will work now for that little fellow aibe never worked for himself or anjone else. How be hurries borne fruitwork to see bis baby! How be watcheievery neir development day after day,snd how glad he is to see the littlething grow: What little angers grip-ping bis great big floger*! What alelplesa little mite! The very llttliDd helplessness make him love thenore. How tenderly be will carry th|i>aby on hia arm hour after hourthrough the nlgfata of sick new and al-

« pot hli own life Into the little sickne!nt such lore 1* only Juat a Cam!

shadow of God's great affection.God ibowa hia cafe for ua aa creaires by the way be has made theorld so we can get Food, shelter andothlna* as aafety and surely as do birds,nata and plants. But thia la not father-vo. Ills real affection for us is seen

only In Jesus Christ *nd It »ho'•enn'l ilcatb for OS. It Is realized•I feelings, of trust, nope and love

and Dot in meat and drink and money.Tbe soul that haa come to reverence

God by full surrender of allloving obedience to and glad

appropriation of the divine Impulsesthronicb the Holy Spirit haa begun tounderstand God as Father and notmerely as Creator.

wearisome satiety, to do Justice X» our•nse lore, reverence and admiration

f.ir (be character and teaching of Jesus.'e regard Him nut as tbe perfection' tbe intellectual or philosophical

mind, bat as tbe perfection of tbe splr-il character—a* surpassing all menill times in the closeness nod depth

of tits communion with tbe Father.In reading* His sayings we feel that weire holding converse with the wisest.purest. Dobteet Being that ever clothed:hought in tbe poor l«Qgn»«re of hu-nanlty. In stodrlns His life we reelthat we are following the footsteps of;be highest Ideal yet presented* to OSupon earth- Blessed be God that so

Kb manliness baa been lived out anduitis then? yet a lasting monnment to

mark how bigR tbe tides of divine lifei risen in;tbe world of man:—Wil-

Is DO legend, but daily fact thatsouls in sorrow and pain are lifted up

the faith there la a God of love,hough their lot la hard. A great Joy

fill* tbe heart out of whose depths mayrise tbe cry, "Thank God, there IsGod, from whom nothing can separateHia children—not persecution nor dis-— 1 nor peril nor tbe sword, thlnga

•nt nor thing* to comer' Tbeywho cherish thia assurance do make

heaven they hope Indeed theirie. In aueh a faith does life find anine, a meaning which Join* the'

ends of experience In endleas tbanka-glvtog and transports us aa If tbrooffhtbe air into the midst ofllfbt super-nal-Christian Register.

What la tbe missionary spirit? It Ib i it f l f lt f

Scientific study of the storm alost that swept over south.

irope from March B toMarch 12. 1501. shows that It -waa

if the ntnat remarkable phenomif the kind a*«r observed; "i In northern Africa, on

•order,Hediteichain of the Alps and extended aa

as Denmark, tbu* traverstaa; XftTees of latitude. The dust waad from the desert, and tbe parti• that fell became finer and fin

> advance was at the rate of 'mon 43 milea an boar, a high atmoa

pberbc current carrying the duaalong the course of a barometric de-pression morlna; toward tbe Baltic

" Austria-Hungary and farthenorth the dust-falleverywhere by

Y t h ' C

mpanieiy y

—Youth's Companion.

genera 11} accepted belief thae ot taste lies in the tonguealate. People speak of a fined

<•• -f TMt«.. iccepird belief tha

W * K ot taste li.and th<

many persons expresicnuhment that they can enjoy

delicacy as (veil after having had apiste fitted Vf, their mouths bj

Ihey conld before they paid avisit to that cle

not confined'to the tong-mpalate, bat extend* down the th:____You taste also with tbe epiglottisthat little valve at the base of thi.ongue, and the larynx, to which theepiglottis acts ai an •••istant, al*takes part in the process. Concerninf:he palate, it Is noteworthy that w<ta*te with the tot I part, whicb Is at thaback of the mouth, but not with thebard (or front) palate that explainsthe-mystery of the dental plate.—Chicago American.

Aa HIS ChlM Saw IIA prominent real estate man laDS Angeles had an experience a few

evenings ago that kept him gtiesfqr a little hit as to whetherihoald feel complimented or other•rise. He waa at home with one littie daughter wnile bis wife and asother of the children were down

n. Darkness wan coming on andlittle girl was anxiously watch-

iifr for ber mother's return. Hernervousness grew apace, in spite othe father's attempt* at reassurs.netAt length the little one burst int.:ear«. aaying-q

"I just can't helpm, and I mutt hare her!"

"Do yoo d4> this way wh ymamma is here and I'm away?" askedthe father. •

Ho, of coarse not," replied thlittle one. " 'Canse tben there's son*,grown-up person about the house."—~ Angeles Aerald.

I need

Tbe American entering the studioswill he well received U he co

bmit in a jovial maitle Beaux Arts joking. If be. canince a jig be will be Mire to be wel-.mrd with open arms as a demf-god,be put op rui tbe model throne • "

worshiped between Ihe rests. X.of'the harmlfKs imitations involving-icrional humilitation will be triedipon him. Th F h hnbitantial reasons for not doing so,eeiot: that hardly s month pai*es labe atodios in Paris without someLmericsn or dns;iislin>an standing up

ble with decency in France, and theseuent. andj a* the French sar, ab-tely aaralped for outbursts of iht

nrage" (savafre) in our tempera.h de the French

itioa in attemptingi E l i

ch fu

who had been brought in for a pre-Unary hearing after si* weeka In

the county jail, "I want a change ofMB.-Yon mean." said tne judge, kind-'. "that you want a change of venue.ow, tbe proper course of—*-No. I don't mean that. I want a

hanffe of menu. That sheriff seemshave tried! to ramtr the cornedi supply (if the world."—Baltl-

"Yaa," explained the lawyer, -youa through bankrupt^-, and it Will

reUeve you of all financial burdens.""Sor said the man who waa in-ouble. "What becomes or her?" •"Her! What do yoo moan?""Uf wife, of course."—Cfalcaar]

tFoot.

has Tommy

•nt off a piece of thecat's tall, broke three windows, black*

ed the cook's ere, and built a bon-re in the cellarI s that allT Tommy must be lm-

worrng."—Stray Stories.

Greene—Some folks fancy that golfI » d«H(jeruii» game. Do you thinkhere is any danger in it?Gage—I h»d two frienc. who got en-'

d n tb lf l i k lapirlt of love, of generosity, ot an- S*»*ed on tbe golf link last season.—"" It M tbe spirit Of him Who. , Boston Transcript.e spirit of

when be finds something precious, de-sires to share it--Ber. J«be» T. Bu

—Was the church garden-party

I^oreled -*ad ooreled -*ad or hart of pain.S^ I W r SZKt!?"1* "**"***I " " to a rlsnt*ous Jada-c ta* rsst;

yyTry »f— " ^fcstf ID Wit *a i s mssarm!

JoU«—Well I worked bard enough;I ate jee-eream with every jounr maaen tbe ground*.—Detroit Free Press.

Vaster—What are you crying for*(MBee Boy—3fy grand moth ef» dead,

and «hei ar*.insr to be buried o . a

n. hVtt.Never in tbe history of our country

waa our national prosperity greatertnan It la today. Our political domaila more extensive than ever beforeand our prestige among the nations othe world has> reached Ita highest polnup to the present time. We are in themidst of an Industrial prosperity tha

it like a dream. Egypt*•even years of plenty were not to b

iparcd to the unbounded extent andtbe unrivaled character of our

condition. Religion,and tbe so i en res are alao prosperous 1our bud, and we can say with geoulienthusiasm. God "hath not dealtwith any other nation." Tbe presenttherefore a most opportune moment twhich to make a thoughtful andprayerful study of tb* subject of rturns i prosperity.

The topical references atiRge.it I'important facts upon this subject.

1. national prosperity Is a blesalifrom God. God is tbe God of natlona

I well as tbe Ood of individual*. IIilsctb up one and brlngeth down an

other. That the prosperity of a natiogift from God U ihe direct teach

Ing of tne Scripture*. It waa God wlila Canaan was to gire the Jewish natioi"goodly cities, which thou buildedst noinml houses full of good things^ wbic'thoa fllhxteftt not, and weila diggedwhich tbou (lijtsiHist not. vineyardsolive trees, which tbon plafltedat iNor la prosperity lea* from God be-

lly Indirectlythrough His blessing upon nature amthe works or oar own hands. Pre-

iptlon and pride should not possessn our hours of national prosperity

but rather bumbleoeas and trustSod, the Giver of all good gifts,[srael in the day or Ita prosperity iwarned to beware lest It should forgetthat It waa the Lord wbo brought 1oat of Egypt and made or the people agreat nation, so we should beguard "lest we forget."

2. National prosperity can only becontinued by fidelity to God and to (:beright eons Dess that is pleasing 'sight of God. "Biffbteousneu ta nation, but sin la a reproachpeople." -The nation that forgeta Godsnail perish." If becoming proud

imptnous In their prosperity tbeAmerican people become unjust. Im-moral, godless, extravagant and reck-

leaving tbe paths of rlgbteous-of Judgment and of equity, what

a crash there will be!' Prosperity pro-duced by divine favor will give way uadversity, the result of divine coodctunation. We may well wonder what lao be tbe outcome of tbe presentilleled conditions Ia our country, aadu our speculation* we may rest assur-ed that Just a* certainly aa night fol-ows day if a* a nation we forgetrod, dlaregard bl» lawa, trample underoot Hia day and neglect Hia bouseIsaster will come. Our prosperity will

swept awiiy in a night, and dark-ness, disaster and despair will coverhe land. The supreme national dutyf tbe hour Is to keep close to God. It

to be guided by His wisdom, to prac-tice His laws and to depend upon Him

lone a* our national guide and pre-erver-

SlBLE BZAD17IOS.Ex. vi, 8-10; Neb. U, 1-5; Pa. xxxil l ,

O-3B; II. 18; Jer. xxlx, 7; M a t t xrti, 24-27; Luke xili. 34; Bom. ix . :r . ; x, 1 ; 1

" 1-3; He!.. XL 8-I&

There Is a story Of a king who gave arest quantity of thread to some worklen to weave, telling them to be aurei come to him when they bad any•oublo with it. The day came when11 were to bring their work to the

king. All %? work showed that tinlreads bad been tangled except thait one little girl. Ben waa smooth, and

well finished. She waa asked the rea-son, and her answer was: "I did as tbeking told me. Whenever I got into the

bit of a tangle, I went to the klngr.nd be helped me." Things about us.nd we ourselves sometimes, seem toft Into tanffles. Like tbe little girl,•i ua learn to take all these little Utn-les to the great King, and He will un-

ravel them for us. He will heal oursorrows, soothe tbe troubled heart and

Ive ua help and comfort. Go and tel1

.-Brethren Evangelist

Prejudice never reasons, but movesand awaya the mind and notion from

instinctive or sudden or biasedimpulse. It baa ita scat in Ignorance,

mkness or idleness. It Is a blindnessperception and relation which leadspersonal and public injury. It acts

as a hindrance to troth, knowledge androsreaa. It is a neutralizing forceresists and modifies the moat co-argaments, tbe most powerful dis-KS, the most moving appeals aadmost stirring eoneideratlons.-Pres-

_ itronc hand to th* fallen or defewlTh* debt Mrainit a. ilncl* envious atn

Mr life, tnoucb bare.

» « • « «"»>. win not fcav. »»»„ tovain.

The purest joy. .

K naar to Heaven, tar from earths al-

, nan** c k » d . a i r . war ta sun and

And -rwrnbe wtn

That Followed MatrrlagJ ofKiM Marguerite Schuckand Charles 8. Maltby.

WEDDED OH THURSDAY.

PRETTY CEREHONY PERFORMED AT

THE HONE OF THE BRIDE!

Both Are KnthnslMtlr rotlo4«raoflaaak Walton, and They \rr

Soondtnc Tbe Honeya»on Aftf rFinny Tribe The liMalls.

The marriage of Htas IfargnlrlteM. Sohnck, daughter of Mr and Mrs.Frank Sobnok, ot 19 Virn- strict.

Plainfleld, to Gnariea SohojrlnrMaltby. of PUinfleld. was a Terypretty- but quiet affair! Tburaksy.Owing to the recent death of [the

"l mother tbe inriUtloi» werelimited to the relative* and very nearfriends, there being thirty gnjesta

. Tbe wedding was celebratedat the hone of th* brldeta paren<;B at

•'clock, Ber. George W. Oardkier,formerly pastor of Qraoe M. „ Kiburob, but now of, Jersey pity,

officiating.The home was lavishly deeor4t«d

wtth*flowers and in the how windowtbe dining room, where the dere-my was performed, there was a

profusion of bridal daiaiaa. ramblerand pinks. Thore were fei

ooned overhead and about tbe w'n-dow, while throogh the entlrs househere were oonntleaa pinks. -j

>ride and groom ware attenfled-by the former's nieoe, Klas MargaretLoni»e Darby, aa flower girl, wd joitas tbe party entered the reoepijion

the bridal march from Lolwo-grln waa SOOK by Mrs. G. W. Oardder.Miaa Grace Oarroll and Hfiss A|ieeOarrolL Tbe offlclatiog clergyiaan•tood beneath tbe bower of floWerswaiting to receive the bride ami

Tbe bride wore a travellinggown of a French bine cloth akfrt,

rhitt) silk walat trimmed -withhlffon. .She also wore an imported

white mallne hat and carried whiteweet peaa. Ttae flower1 girl #aaowned in Persian Uwn withimmingfj. and she carried aF flowera and the ring with wll•e couple were wedded.Following Che cersinony cntiRratala-om were ahowered upon tbe brtde

and groom for a auoeessfnl and happyourney through life. A wedding nap-

was then served and at 8 o'clockand Mr*. Maltby left PlalnSeld

to enjoy a fishing trip in Jer eywater*. Upon their return they

ilde at the groom's home on Pla fi-eld avenue. When they departed

ilr honeymoon they were* delnfwith rice and flowers, making 1event a joyomoue for all. There wpre

iany bandaome and useful presentsjoelred by the bride, including tbteehecks for substantial amounts. She

alao received considerable out gli ta-

rHEATRICAL.Tbe summer season of vandcriil.' iroctor's, Newark, continues with I

attendance and interest at the* I >;>otch. Tbe claaa of atttaetiona fu ly

equal the mid-season standard of exe l-which brought this prettr plav-

louae into immediate favor from }tang date.. Bo successful baa j be in

•e plan of preaenting summer ram ••Tllle. that itlhaa been determined tostend the season Indefinitely. I'r. c-r's Twenty-third Street Theat «,ew York, will continue i « ezceUentills of ideaa summer vandevil e. •here fs always direreity and exo 1-

in the numbers presented a idie performances are oontiauons frt moon till nearly mldnigbk At t ieifth Aveune Theatre tfee Procl irtook Company will present "Cajit,win," with E. H. Bell appearinB |nie role created by Haurlce Ban r-ore. Up In Harlem the One HD I-red andfTwenty-flftb Street'* off r-ng will be "The New Boy." w hrederie (Bond, general stage direct rf tbe Proctor Stook [Oompany, pla f-ng • the laading role. Manager Prop-er haa in press a pretiy folder, illo*-rated with pictures of the leadUft

•era of the Proctor Stock Co -pany which will aoon be leaned to•Urooa of hia Tariona theatre*. T •ork promises to be a rawalaffon n

be printing art and is likely to 1«eagerly sought after by patrons of tl «

Toctor theatres and admirer* of t emotor Stock Company.

Honor, for Blwoou l>a*U.Among tbia year's graduates at Bu -

en College ia Elwood Davii, fd Brook, who waa awarded•d scientific honors. Bfr. Da» •graduated front tbe Plain fleW

High Sohool in the class of IHW.

Two Maw Orldsrex.lTrmholder Wm. Westphal is bop*-

al that within a abort time tha work•noting two new bridges on Jack-

1

th. ora of to-

Parkin*, of Bocliaataa A lUUTiniL WEDDIHQ.

Th* Dumw of TaaRktn. (llano. oalr dwhttr of Mr ud I* Supbni *•. to lira of Rochrawr. » T.. look ploco Joor M. ot th. poroou. with all Iho bnllloocr ood ■plondnf thol ooo ooold wuh for. Sorrooodod by a wraith of floral doc- oroilon. ood an orartlklag. of proral- awl tocloj folk from thU oilj ood dtat.nl potato, tho happy e.aalaaaooo of Iho metal oTiota of tha aaaaoo. Tho palatial bora, of tbo brlda'a pat

I tho dravla* ■7 took Plano. Haro la a largo lav window, and thrao palma. Iwaaty faat la logoi bar with a «<o laarol aod aoalh.ro aallai lo Ihla ho.tr lhara alooino 1 labia. Th. palma. laaral aod amllaa oomplauly Iliad the win- dow, laana* ]ora apaoo aaoagh for lha bridal pony. Tho wadding, which book place nl 1 a'oloofc. waa alaoodod by a llmtaod aubar of ralallraa aod friaada. lhara BM baia* orar oaa haadrod la all pra- aona. Bat al lha raoaptloa which fal- lowed at « o'clock lha hoaao waa

Tha bride waa (award la wblta obiffoa, lha walal bale* Irlaaad with real lam 8b. alao wore a .roll of M1U and oarrlad brldo rooea. A ooMly back law of paarla and tarqaolaa, iho (If! of lha groom. aamplMod tha

farmer wall kaoara rooldbol (of ;tola ally, bol marc ropawlly of kawark. to Patrick O’Briao. alao of Bowark. Bar. Father Egan parformad tha oaf*- oooy Him O Brlno waa aUlrad la a harming gown a* whit# orgaodl. and raa attradod by bar rimer. Him Kate O'Brian, of thla ally Tha lataar'i i waa alao of white material. Patrick Corrigan, of thU oily, aowd

trip of a wiak'a daralloa aflat which they will retain lo thla otty aod mat. •hair home ea Richmond aUeat. Tha U employ «d by a largo ataal i la btwul At praclmly 0 O'clock Him MadcUoa Jolla O'fVmoall. daagha.r of Mra Manama O'Dmumll. of thtg dty. aod Hiehod J. Berk* of Araa Part, aa- lorad lha adl*oa and took thoir ploom

cf tha aroma, and > Hewer girl. Him Oalk.no. Whlltag'.UtoM. a alaoo of tha bnda Th. br1d.malda worn white lerr^RowB. orar while. Irimmtd with a camblaatloo of while lace, argaodi. aod ahlSaa. with aaahm of white rtlk. They carried pink aweef paaa aad byra-rara bade The Sowar girl waa gowort la white organdie, trimmed with lam aod whim ailk nbbooa- aod ta. ranted a gill bold ■lied with eweet pma and mom

aad to tha Sower girl a peart wreath Promptly oa lha bear eel tor th. weddlac. to. bridal party pmoaeded from lha aaaaad Soar down the man —Irma, aa the drawla* room, whip aa etebaoera. hidden from new. mo. dared the Lohracna weddln* march Thr ftowyr girl lad the way. fal Mwdd by thr brtdrmalda aad lb. hrtda. accompanied by her father, who mra her away io marriage. In

aorom the ..trance to thr how win- dow aod aa thr party mod. It. .ppm,, > they ware mmored by Dm Ml V.

Tha aroma*, cremoor which war aooerdla* to the BpUeopal cbaral form, waa parforamd by Rot. Dr WUMam R. Richard., pmtor of th. Omao.nl Arena, ckarah. while tha aaohaalm nadend braotltal mult rary aoftly Tha amtrla*. waa pm foraifd wuh a rim*. I-m4U.f1 T "Wlowtnf »ba .

beautiful shads truss *•« brilliantly

•ff Um W4i and tor husband fM felly allomed 0>roa*h them m Mr llm'wn'pWklm Mft Plan Carla* tb. ora*la( for Ira Tart from which pclat ihay will Ink. aa weddla* Joe racy They ti

(ARE GATHERING Of FRIEND* AT- TENDED THEM BOTH.

Hlee 1 O’Brian • Waddad Patrick O’ Hr 1.a gut O'Daaaall Hr-

cam. In. ■- J. Bark.- Hr Mary’a oh arch waa tha aeaaa two weddings, *ed.mday Jaaa 18. which ware bald within an ho h other and ware wltaaaoad by tha aa large gathering of ralatirao aad friaada Tha am look plow at 4 o'clock aad

ford, waa Him o'DaaaaU add WUllam u DoaaaU.ta brother of o'Donnell , gown waa of while g'mprll aad ah. mmal a lar*. ahowar boaqael of brldr mean Him 01.0- i gown wag of whim Orgaadl. and la bar band rrpoard ptak Kara

mam aad nuiranl of lha bridal party Pollowln*;tbe ernaaory lha gaeem rapauad lo lha baoM of tha groom'a mother. Mra. John Brown, of Area Part, where a reception waa held I lata tool ranging Mr aad Mra Bart* trill bar. today for aw ra-

il ARCONNXR'S FESTIVAL. Held Url Tharaday an Lawn Oppo-

•llr Campgall’B Clabkanaa. rary moemafal .Irawbarry aad cream famirel waa held tool Tbora an fh* tom aa Part arenaa op- partto UdmpMl'a olabboaaa. la aid at aaulor r ha pel Tha town waa rary prettily droaratod with booling. Saga, aad Chlama toalaraa, and large baachm of Sawara ml off thr tablra cooaal of sthoal faaatlaaa al Me-

at Mr. aod Mra W. H Randolph. Eagao* TaoCcart. aad Mlm Jalla Bara.; the cake labia waa to ah *f x VuGocn. Mia Job. Pram Mra la Randolph. at lha aaady table waa Mlm Faaay Baorar; at tha tahto, Orrllto Praamaw aad

LOCAL you FUJI

li HI III ■Um Badla Bolznoa Wao Mm* Had to Olarwoow la Tborn— Cormnony at Bride . Home.

FLOBAL DBOOAATIOMB. ■OSES WERE USED I* PROFUSION TO

DECORATE THE HOUSE.

hear af Mr aad Mra Lewia IX Holme*, off Otandview •««•*. and Clareoo# L Thorn, son off Gniltorao Thorn, off East Second WTvet. look th. united them for life. On hundred

for ibe rotor* aod ibeir mfriy lo

Kurds li tool. .him. 1 of tho Onat remarks of the kind ■n fcn northern Africa. on th* harder* of the Subaru, crouuud th* Iterrunean sea. swept nt*r th* chain of th* Alps and extruded aa far aa Denmark, thus trartrain* ti d«T»M ot latitude. Th* duat waa 1 from the d*scrt. and th* parti- that frll bi aa the alnrai fH—ol northward Th* advance waa at th* rat* of * than 43 mile* an boor, a high a phertr current carrytaf the duat ak>n« th* course of a barometric de- pre*ai»u moving toward th* Baltic ae*. In Audrla-Hanfi'J farther north the dustfsll everywhere by rain. —Youth's Companion.

thing* ahonld work together ac well. Unw clearly It at! show* •a and power! There la alao and studied the way plants nmr.rtkoa* whtrh **» Uf,‘ #* wed« ■ **! btnls feed

by Rwr o— Sohaock. paraor of Trinity Reformed b„, «n of thi. i. charch. and lore, 111. mercy and Tha home of tho brlda’a pareatewa* nfforaloa. of a human parrwl. wart aad will fight bard to defend tbrtr oordaam with the owrt rated with hotara'i lowera Rope* af pralty

waa toriahly mu. i

Newark. New Tort. Sarah Aabary Part. Eire hath aad villa.

earn. Mlm Owaamlag. Mlm Oram *

booting. Th* wort of arranging aad Ulna waa dram by from th* olaa Marina D. W,

fram. to the tarn laraaof St. Mtobatoa. *>“ "-Ira a Moody, aged Iftraa. af thla oilv. to amawg th. prim wUaara

aeo now (ally aqalppad wiu aaw aoaabm af th. tom pm- ton. Thaahaaga to aw* that la ap-

ThU .bow. regard. But how far abort It all r of the creat. whole aoaled lor* of ther! How a man will work and hi mar If t* feud and r lot be. to flrr a good home and education to his chil- dren. Who can erer describe th* heart feetlnn of' h treat strwf, rough as h* tak*a In bta arms the lltti* help leas handle of bnmanlty. his IIrut child! H* is ahf and awkward with It bevanae be Uerer, perhaps, held a baby n*r*r his own baby He b**o« tie. th* roogh rote* Is sabdaed. th* heavy step grows lighter, and a i nature opens op la him aoch aa never knew before He has D*w rfc of Uf*. new Joys and new hopes, will work now for that little fellow aa be nerrr worked for himaelf or any o*e rise. How be barrieu home from work to aee hla baby! How be watrbe* every new development day after day.

little mite! The very and helpleaanea* make him lore the How tenderly he will carry that baby on hla arm hoar sft« boar through the nights of sickness and al life Into th* HttJ# ate* frame! lore la only Jnat a faint shadow of God's great affection. God shows hla care for ua aa crea- tarua by the way be has mad* world so w* ran get food, abeltet clothing aa safely and surely as do I plaatai But this la not f real affection far aa ia Christ and la show hla life aad death for as. It to realised

CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR. *-< — mtlx hr aM.T'V.'olri*. Toyto^-Kattooal pmaperlty.-lteT alt M; Daat el. W-IA Never In the history of

mmri

i than It la today. Our poilUcal domain

It to a generally accepted belief that the M«n*e of taste lies In tha tongue and the palate. People speak of a f ne palate, and tonUhment delfears aa well aftef having plate fitted to their mouths by a den' tiat aa they eoald before they paid u visit to that clever grntlemaa ppesrs from ohservatktna made by ■a Italian doctor That the taste to not confined to the tongue and palate, but extend* down thr throat You taste alao with the epiglottis, that llttla «alve at th* base of the tongue, aad th* larynx, to which the epiglottis acts aa aa assistant, also takes p*rt ia the process. Concerning the palate. It Is noteworthy that we taste with th* soft part, which to at the back of the month, hot not with th* hard (or fro«t) palate thst explain, the mystery nf the deatal plate.—Chi- America:

. nto real - In Jrma « and not to a The soul that has and love Cod by fall surrender of all Hs Uf* to loving otwrfienre to and gtad appropriation of the

pareat. noblest Doing that thought la tbo poor language of hu- la studying Hla Uf* w* feel that we are following the footsteps of the highest Meal yet presented to us be God that a» haabs stands th«w yet bow hlgff the tides of divine life have risen In th* world of snaa!-Wil- ma nathhnn* Greg. It to no legend, but dally fart, that souls In sorrow and pain are lifted up la the faith there la a God of love, though their tot to hard. A great Joy fills the heart out of whose depth* may rtoo tha cry. -Thank God. ther* la

troaa nor peril nor th* award, things T They do make veo they hope Indeed their homo la such

As HIS Chita SOW HI: A prominent real estate Lou Angeleu kud un experience u few evenings ago that kept him gaeaulng fqr a little bit as to whether should feel complimented or other- le waa at home with one tlo daughter while hla wife aad other of the children were down- town. Darkness was coming on and tho little girl was anxiously watch- ing for her mother'i nervoasnesa grew apace. In spite of the father's attempts at reassurance At length the IKUc one Want into teare. saying i -1 Jaat can't help It! 1 ms. and I mast have her! -Do you do this way when your mama to bar* and I'm away?- asked the father. j- -So. of coarse not,- replied the little one. - ‘Cause t Loo Angeles Herald.

The American entering the stodloe will be well received 1/ he cornea pre- pared to submit ia a jovial manner Utle Beaux Art* Joking. If he dunce a jig he wUI be sar* to be wel- comed with open arms as a demi-god. to be put up on the model throne and worshiped between the rests. Nona of the banplfss imitations involving personal hamilltatlon will be tried apoa him. The Frenchman has very aabftanttai reasons for not doing so, seeing that hardly a month passes ia the studios in l*arts without mome American or tngllshmaa standing up for bis right* la a manner not compat- ible with decency in France, and these frequent, andj as th* French say. ab- solutely uncalled for outbursts of the “ssuvagr" (savage) ia our tempera- ments has made the Frenchmsn rather cantinas in attempting much fan at the American or Englishman's ex- pense.—Ladles* Popular Monthly. -Your honor,- said thr prisoner, who hod been brought ia for o pre- liminary hearing after six weoka In fha county jail. want a change of -You mean.- said the judge, kind- ly. “that yoa want a change of veaua. How. the proper, coarse of-“ -Xo. 1 don't mean that. I want a change of menu. That sheriff seems to have tried to corner the corned beef supply of the world."—Buitl-

—Yea," explained t go through bankruptcy, and It will relieve you of all financial burdens.1 “So 7- said the man who was L “What becomes of her?" What do yoa mean?" ,-Mj wife, of course."—Chleug

up to the present time. Wa are la the midst of an industrial ~ “ room almost Ilk* a •even yean of plenty compared to the unboa the unrivaled character of oar national Industrial condition. Religion, the aria and the ariet our laud, sad we caa say with guanine Ood *

The topical references suggest two important farts upon this subject. 1. National prosperity to a blessing from God. God is the Ood of nation* aa well as the Ood of individuals. lie ralsetb up ooo sod brlngeth down an- other. Thst the prosperity of a nation to a gift from God la the direct teach- ing of the Scripture*. It waa God who in Canaan was to give the Jewish nation “goodly cities, which tboa balldedat not. and hoauc*. fall of good things, which thou filled**! not. and wells digged, which tboa dlggedst not. vineyard* and olive tree*, which thou plahtedst not." Nor la prosperity leas from God be- cans* it comes usual ly Indirectly through Ills blessing upon nature sad the works of oar own band*. Pre- ptlon sad pride'ahooid not n our boors of national rather bombtooeae and trust In God. the Giver of all good gifts Aa Israel In the day of Its prosperity was warned to beware tost It should forget that It was the Lord who brought It out of Egypt and made of the people a mat nation, so we should be on our nurd “leal we forget." 2. National prosperity can only be continued by fidelity to God and to tha righteousness that to pleasing In the sight of God “Righteousness exstteth nation, bnt ala is a reproach to any opto." “The nation that forgets God If I presumptuous In their prosperity tha American people become unjust. Im- moral. godless, extravagant and reck- less. leaving the paths of rlghteoua- me, of Judgment and of equity, what crash there wUI be! • Prosperity pro- duced by divine favor will give way to •drrrattj. Iho rraull of dlrlM codrto

Thmt. Followed Marriage of KIm Marguerite gchuck end Charlee 8. Kaltbj.

WEDDED OK THURSDAY. r«ETTY CEREMONY PCRfOSNCD AT

THE HOME Of THE BRIDE. Both Art MathMUotlo Folio..,.

ofUook Hollos, ood Thoj Ar, Sprodlog Tho Hooogmooo An.r

vioor Trio. Th. nraoii. Tbo mornogo of Rio Mor«o,„i. : Sohock, dooghur of Mr. ood Mra Frank Debook, of I» Vino Mrrol. North Plolodold, lo Ohoitro Scliari.r Moltbf. of PlolnOold. ora . rmrj prattj hot qolot offolt Thorajloj Owing to tho norm dooth of tb. mochor tho Inrilollaoi «.r. limited to Iho Mourn ood rrrj frtoodo, Iboro bring Ihlnf gn..t. Tho woddlog ... rolohraud ho homo of tbo brido'r por.nl. u t o’clock, Rot. (Saorgo W. Omdow. tormorlp poraor of Oraoo M , K. oh, hat now of. J.rmj (Illy, oBlolono.. o homo woo lorithly drtorMrO wilhfflow.r. and lo tho bow wlodow lo Iho dining roam, wh.ro Iho mra

' woo porfarmod, Ikon wot o ptofoMoo of hrtdol doltUL rambler ood ptoko Than won fra dow. while through Iho ..Ur. hdam

fd thol jool oo certainly u night fol- low. day If u . nation wo forget Ood. dlrargard hu law. trampl. under root III. <My aod n.glrat III. boom dlmrara will como Oar pnwpwlty will bo owept .orgy In . night, and dark dlaaatrr and drapalr will corn tha land. Tbo aopramo national daty of Iho horn la lo kaep ckaa to Ood. it lo to bo guided by Hla wtadom, to prac- tice Ilia lawa and to depend upon Him alooe aa oor national golda and pro- rt 8-10: Nch. II. 1-11: Pa. mill IO*: IE 18; Jor xrlx. 7; Matt xrll, *4 X7: Lnka nil. 84: Rom. It. Id; t. 1; I Tim. IE id: If.b. IE Aid

Tha brida aad groom warn all.ndv) by tha fonoar'a nine. Mlm Marram Ionian Darby, aa flower girl, aad Jott aa tho pony ramrod tbo morpMon . tho bridal maroh from U-lwn grlo woo ooog by Mra O. W. (lordo.r Mlm Oraoo Carroll aod Mlm Alton OottoIL Tha oOolallog clcra'iaan •Mod baoaath lb. bowar of dotarn waiting M racal re tha brida aod groom. Tha hrtda won * uaMItnt gown of a Fraoeh blaa ololh nhlrt aod a Whit, allk wolat tnmaaed with chlffoo. .RhaoUo worn ao Imports! white moll oa hot ood ouriad while •weal paao Tha town girl Waa gowned In Peril an lawn with lour trimming., aad aha carried a baakat of Bowora aod tho ring with which

There to o atory of a king who gare gnat qnantltr of thnod to aomo worl to wcarp, trlHng them to be am me to him whro they had any Doable with It Tho day como when m to bring Ibolr work to tbr All an work ehowrd that th. tftmodo had bnoo taaglrd racopt that ot ooc little girl. Tim

Phot *•« BvmUm HU ■•cars. Fathar—VVcil. whai has Tommy Pen doing to-day? Mother Ur cat off a piece of th* cat's tall, broke three windows, black- ened the cook's eye. and built a boa firs to tb* cellar "Is that nil? Tommy mast be Im- proving "-Stray Stories.

folks fancy thst golf to B dangerous gum*. Do you think ther* to say danger la It? -V - • Gage—11 had two frU^s wbogotem- th* spirit of love, of reoerosity. of an »°*f ««»* *■»« •“•on- II M the nplrit of him who. ■«*»» Tra.rtript. Jack—Was th* church garden-party Julia—Wall j worked hard enough; I at* loe-eream with vwry young man •Detroit Free Press.

you crying for?

and her answer was: “I did as the king told me. Whenever I got Into th# Ml of a tangle. I went to the king. «nd be helped me." Things about os. and we ourselves sometimes, seem to get Into tangles. Like the little glrU let us learn to take all these little tan- gles to the great King, sad IIo will un- ravel them for us. He will beat Borrows, sooth* tbe troubled heart and give ua help and comfort Go and tell Jesus.—Brethren Evangelist. Prejudice never reasons, but moves and sways the mind and action from some Instinctive or sudden or biased Impulse. It has Ha seat In Ignorance, weakness or idleness. It Is a blindness of perception and relation which leads to personal and public Injury. It acta as a hindrance to truth, knowledge and to progress. It to a neutralising fores

Following Ih# ceremony eongratnia- oos were shows red apoa tbe bride id groom for a sunoemfal and happy Journey through lif#. ▲ wedding top- per was then served and at 8 o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Maltby left Plainfield to snjoy a fishing trip in Jersey water*. Upon their retara they will reside at the groom's borne oo Plain- field avenue. When they departed oo their honeymoon they were deluged ~ with rloe sad flowers, making tbe event a Joyous one for all. There were many handsome and osefal jm>**nt* received by the bride, Including three checks for substantial amounts She also received considerable cut glnm- fHEATEICAL

Tbe summer a*Vna of vaudeville at Proctor's, Newark, continues with the attendance aad internet at the top notch. The clans of attraction, fully equal the mid-season standard of excel- which brought this pr#ttvpl*v- housa into immediate favor from its Bo successful has bwn th* plan ot presenting summer van**- ville, that itlhas been determined to the season indefinitely. Pro tor's Twenty-third Street Tbsatf*. New York, will oootlnae in rxcellimt ttflto off ideek summer vaodcnM. There is always diversity and excel in the numbers preeented sod the performances are oontiaaoua from ° rill nearly midnight. At ihc Fifth Avenue Theatre the Proctor 8took Company will preemit ' Cajjt Swift,” with E. M. Bell appearing in the role created by Mao rloe Burr? Up In Harlem tha One Him drod aadVTwsoty fifth Street's offer lag will be "Tbe New Boy,” with Frederio |Bood, general stag* director of the Proctor Stock 'Company, pis? lag the leading role. Manager Proc

iu4* tinted with plotaroe of the leading iben of tbe Proctor Stock Com puny which will toon be tossed to patrons of hie vnrloos theatres. The k sri and to likely to to **F 1 of the

Page 7: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

in111

Commencement Exercises Were Held inFirst Baptist Church Last Thursday

.Before a Large Cnjwd.

• D I S T J H B U T I O N ~ O F . THE| AWARDS.ADDHEBH OF1 THE EVENING WAS MADEBY KICV. OR. JE88E L- H U H L B U T , F"OIl-

J A RESIDENT OK TiHIS CITY.

AddrcHBOf Welcome Was Made by Xfise Mor-ion i-i jB. Abr>ot.t—Oration on "The ProbationOrflcfi- im New Jersey" by Harold A. Nomer—Erwin J8. Leland Gave the Valedictory—Thepri*ce Wlnnera-Dr. Hurlbut [Talked on

-Tl it- Importance of Kdijicatlon."

With bright faces and sparklingeyeh, animated by the expectancythat accdnipaniex the beginning of anew epochj tbe membnrs of the classof \:*r> bade farewell to their yean of•tody on the occasion of tbe thirty-xecond annual commencement of thePlainfleld High School, held in tbeKir-t Baptist church, ThursdayTwenty-seven young men and women,had completed the course* adopted bythem foor years ago and stood fortheqaippod sod ready to begin tbe strag-gle which 'lead* to u'ltimate

gAt " :15 O'clock, the honr designed

for commencement, every seat in thelarge ediflifce « M occupied by parent*and friend! of the young jrraduaWs.*Preceded by Principal Travell andSuperintendent of Schools Maxsoo, th«members <•( the olMi appeared npooHi. ipaclou* platform and took their•eatK arranged in a Urge semi-circle,limvitiK as » background, tanks ofpatted iilwA- the broad green leave*

- of which i Mood out in linking itrait to 11*'white gowns of the youngwomen and; more somber rai mentlit Tiiuuf men. With the course*coaiplei'-il the graduate* were as fol

Classical course» AfuDyer, Lulu Harriet KnMoore, Kenneth Bulklt-y, HoUUBrown Oujbbeiley. Clarence Blxby La-Hue ; Lit la-scientific course, Margaretiteekman Abbott. Alice Mary Brick.Mabel Jenkins, Evelyn Grace Lock,Bertha 'Mitchell, Elizabeth Kirkpat-nck Vanderveer, Kaa«el Bailey, Linden We^tzel Bridgeman; Latin-modern language, Grace JetTenBarke, Elizabeth Ooddard, MildredAnna Vlriflh, Marguerite Ewing Van-rlt'v.-ur'-f, fSrwin Hriant Lelaod, Har-olil Adiii : Nomer; general conrae.Daily May Bronara. G. LeRoy Hal-lock ; commercial course, Cora AbbieHarrlK, Charlotte Agues Johnson,Emtnpline ' Ksmeralda Larew. LoaiseMitrirnr.-i Pctfr-on and Arthur LewisDentoa. ;

r'oiiifwinig au overture by Frank'sNew \ urfc orchestra stationed In tbenailery, as invocation by Rev. Dr.William K. Rfchards opened the exer-cises. Another orchestral selectionfollowed and Dr. J. B. Probawo, who*»- muter of ceremonies, announced•he opening address, delivered by)!»>. Margaret Beekman Abbott in aclear, firm voice. "The ProbationOfficer in Kew Jersey" wan tbe ora-tion subject selected by Harold AdinNIIIIHT and be presented his views ontlii* abtK>ijbinf[ topic with a sinceritythat greatly imprea*ed his hearer*.Possessed of a naturally well modn-lated voice erery word was forcefullyspoken in p tone free from all re-straint. The oration wan as follows ]

Vncur has existed lir all ages andwill continue to t .?ist u f i l the end oftime. In order to protect societyha* i»otuulgateil' sftreral differentmethods df punishing' the offender.Tbe traditional CBStoidfu* to define bylaw the several acM constituting crimeand to attach to each a penalty withsome rrf.'Ff nee to tbe supposed guiltwinch it reveals. The erode andterrible p*nal code or our ancestorsprescribed death for every feloniousact; but uf minor offenders some for-feited their lands or roods, otherswere baniahed.or snffered some bodilynitmlatfo.tr; being sent to the pilloryor tbe whipping post. Prisons were atlint regarded almost exclusively asplaces fur securely detaining; tbe ac-cused until trial, and the convictuntil ponUbmenL Hot" as mea grewmore humane the infliction of death»••>! of all forms of torture becamedistasteful and rare: and Imprison-ment for specified terms was irradnallysubstituted. This change, tb* remitat • -nimcnt and convenience, andMM at all of any rational convictionIbai confin—eni attains better results

DW almost complete and universal.Our penal. c«das assign imprisonmentas a penalty almost for every act theyforbid.

This system ha* often beenas absurd In principle and as grossly

'rang and injurious- in practice,rounded on the false notion tinState ought *o apportion a

itribution fir each offense. Nordoes it effectively promote the soleend of criminal law ; tbe protection of

ety. There are but itways of protecting the community

against its enjemy. the criminal: toriu him IT to reconcile him. ButrihODment j does neifchd

strains him until bis term ends, as ifone should cagb a man-eating tiger fora month or a yrar, and then turn himloose. Tbere .is nothing in sooh amethod wbichltenda to reconcile bintto Mi fellows, and in most cases he iadischarged more the enemy ofkind than before. Therefore prisonsare worse tbanf aselesa used as aof punish menti

Tbe whole criminal class mar bedivided into two divisions, habitualcriminals and' criminals of occasion.We believe that for the former, tbeonly remedy ia tbe indeterminate sen-tence which makes the length of aman's confinement depend upon hisattitude and department during hisJimprisonment thus patting into b:own hand, as it were, the key to hiprison. Bnt this ia an entirely differ-ent question from the one before us.It is with the second class that wehave to deal, criminals of occasion,those wbo commit crime only once tna while and graduate into the etherand worse c!as* only by long con-inned training in tbe former. The>rison is tbe m-hool which graduates,hem. No better way was

ceived by which to save these uafor-tunates than the probation systemstarted in HassWchosetts, a few. yearsago. According to tbis method thejudge holds oat to tbe culprit await-

bis Brat sentence, this hope Imug man you will not be im-

prisoned ; yon will not be sent to thepenitentiary: the court place* youunder the chajrge of the probationofficer. He will be to yon a friend andcounsellor. Kaep away from youievil aasootatioeu and attend to youiduties and you can be a man. So longas you support roar family and be-have yourself you will not be regardedas a criminal asd the court will pro-tect you. If you do not follow outthese instructions a cell in | the jailiwaiu yon."' 'The work of the pro--ation omear i* to investigatethese oases and1 keep in touch witbthose committed to bis care,required by the court to keep a

record of each probationer. Butthis is all on the surface. Let u*sider ia detail bow a probation officerundertlk.es a caSe. In the first place,he attend* every session of the courtWhen the judge! turns over to him a

inject tor probation, be investigatesthe previous life of the offender verythoroughly. He studies his characterand the character of his parents: helook* through bis borne. After thatbe lias aa interview with tbe proba-tioner. In this Interview be appealsto tbe good in his man. Tbis is wherebet counts. JKext our officer gets

k for him if he ha* none at tbee and tells him to report at stated

intervals. If the conditions at bornee it hi

get* an entirely new environment forthe probationer, i Surroundings mould

man. Take tiro young full-bloodedcolts and give one to a kind sympa-thetic lover of boras* and tbe other toa harsb rough fellow to be brought

Two years, later tbe one will bethe gentlest and best of horses, tbeother will shy aft every thing and runaway with you at tbe very first oppor-tunity, Just so with hcinan beings,Tbe bey who baa associated all hit life

wtth«s»"

Uf III*—youth brought up |

people. At Irst they ito him. The* he tto tbis kind of Ufa aad doesn't mind

Soon he bsoomas a little carelessself aad anally be is truly as*

them. This, we are told, is theout of ten. Tbe quest! cw

Is bow to make self respecting tittiout of these degraded wretches. Prison

i&nement does not do It.they need ia aa entire change in en-vironment and to cause this U tbe

probation officer.short, parole with tbe possibility ofpardon ia tbe probation system ia si

but tbe probation officer haseel to do in order to help his

charges live the honest lives requiredOf them.

The beaeflts of this method of treat-ing offender* against the law are iand varied. Strictly speakinglaw was meant only for first offendersand it naturally follows that much ofthis kind of work is done among tbechildren. Tbe form of crime they

is generally trivial, and even, ithen they are lad on by older boyswbo really ought to receive tbe pun-ishment To reform them is veryeasy. We have an instance ofkind right here in Plaiufleld. Tberewas a little Italian boy whose family

poor. In order to help buybis daily bread he sold paper* onNorth avenue. One day in search of acustomer he entered tbe bar of tbeHotel Kensington. The bartende:

irted vlchl water in his face. Thiamade his eyes smart andangry passion for revenge. He there-fore went out into the road and col-lected a supply of stones which be

good advantage inside. • Sa-t u rail y be was arrested betti through

mistake be was imprisoned inthe county jail at Elisabeth. Imaginetbe night-mam a little fellow ofeleven most have suffered, shut

liny cell, three feet by ten with athick iron door! And who was trulyat fault, be or tbe unfeeling wretchwbo excited hi* Just anger? By allequity, tbe half intoxicated bar tenderought to have been in tbe county Jail

night! Fortunately, bow-ever, tbe posr little Italian was dis-covered in hit cell by Mrs. Williamson, probation officer of Union county.She found him a good home in tl«

try away front tbe evil associationof whisky venders and tbe report

that his temper is Just a*equable a* any other child'*. Thisillustrates tbe kind of probation workamong tbe children and yon cireadily see that this little boy is &donbtedly saved to a good and nseflife whereas be might otherwise habeen led on into deeper sin.

it is'si harder task to reformfull grown men. To these also thedoctor of morals, as tbe probationofficer actually is, stands in tbe placeof a friend in need. Any man convicted and sentenced to a penal insti-tution for a felony loses the right ofcitizenship. To get back thU priaedright after bU term expire* is no easymatter. It involves great publicity,

trouble and considerable e:Then, too, each day in jail

adds to the degradation of the youngsentenced for tbe first time.

Every man leaving a prison carrieswith him tbe stigma of a convict.

•possible to escape it. • But at to tbe probation officer does

necessarily burden the man with anyThe helping band is eagerly

offered to those under bis parole.;ben a valuable friend to tbe proba-

tioner who can save him from all thedegradation, and stigma of

prison confinement. Tbis quiet work-ing witb individuals according t<their separate needs is the most im-portant benefit of tbe probation sys-

For it is only by dealing witheach separate man and raisingmoral standards that all society can beuplifted. ...

It is seen then that this law propeily carried out is a great source of goodnot only to tbe individual bnt alsotbe community at large By helpingtbe individual • We believe thatfew years there will not be so :

of assault and battery, and .thatpeople's homes and property will besafer on account of this new system.Bnt the probation law also possessesgreat advantages from a f

of view. Every year tbe Statepay* enormous sum* of money on ac-count of crime. It mast feed andclothe the Inmates of its prisons andit must also rapport'Ebeir poor faaa-lies. K on the other band, tbe judgesplace the accused under tbe charge oftbe probation ofloer, they not only

themselves and their familiesby honest labor but also pay tbe finesand costs of the court which would

be collected otherwise. For in-i let us look at Union county'*

records for tbe year en d i n* in Hay,Tbere were some 000 person*

oar county jail duringthe year. Of these (WO. over 400 wan

Ia addition war*eleven children. Including all there

12 i persona who because of theiryouth and inexperience in crime, werepresumably suitable probationers. As-turning that we had bad a probationoDcer and that be bad met with tbe

aboat «70ef theweald bare retimed to their o o o pa-

ths* the county could havesaved in food alone over 33,000or aboat $4,000, and the countyhave oolieoted aboat 97 per proba-tioner or in the neighborhood of B3,QOD. There is a total of ti.ooo a

Union county. This oughloach tbe hearts of tbe taxpayers.

In spite of its benefits, in this as i severy other new plan, tbere at* thoe

finger amraise objection*. Tbe principal objec-tion raised is tbe difficulty to get theright k i • d of officer*, men conin all respects for tbe work. The:

: taen who have brains enougfa for this work willsneh petty positions. We grant thatwitb this as with everything elms tbe

behind tbe scheme makes it thethat it is.

position does require not merelynigh intelligence and great Strengthof character, bnt also a profoundknowledge Of human nature andspecial training in tbe method*dealing with its degenerate and pt

forms. Bnt it i* entirely possible to get tbe right men. Mr. Bamo.J. Barrows, of Massachusetts, says: "believe that when a trained and eiperienced corps of probation office;U developed as a part of tbe Judicialpolice of thia country, no functionthe police court will be regardedmore important.' I Tbus if we are notable to get men of training intopositions, we can train men especiallyfor this kind of duty. Another way tosecure highly educated men is to offeia large salary. But. onr friends ofopposition now say: Yes, but if yoooffer a large salary the corrupt poUtiolan will fix bis eye on your positionand secure It for one of the ring. Tbiiresult is not inevitable ft

The corrupt politicians a n get-ting fewer and fewer. Politics arebecoming dean. As proof of this weneed only mention tbevelt. And even if one of the dirtypoliticians should use his influence to

end he would be stopped in an-other way. The great majority of o

ges are now honorable Christ isi and they will not allow politicsinfluence their appointments

probation officers. In spite of all tbewarnings of these old obstinate op-posers of new plans, in Union Inot one of these objections hasup during tbe two months tbe planhas been working. Our probationofficer, Mn. Emily E. Williamson, of•Elisabeth, is a woman of noble cbaaeter and long experience. For seera! years she had acted as a self onstituted offioer and when the probation

passed largely through hi•nee, and she was offered tbe

position, she gladly accepted,refusing the salary offered because be?

truly in the work. Thecorrupt politician tried here to get hisman in but tbe judges said no. Whata victory this was. Tbe lawyer, andpoliticians of tbe rising general

half so correct aa mason thinkthey are. Mrs. Williamson i* doingfine work with aeventy-fl'tloners under her care.

If all tbe counties of Nebad their probation officer* we sbould

be living in a veritable Utopia.The number of prisoners would be re-duced, tbe old criminals would dieoff; and a* tbe young would allcorrected tbere would be none bo t;he places of the old rascals; the taxrate would be greatly reduced; tbepoor would become rich; tbe> rich,richer: people in general would txufer; all society would be uplifted,n short we should have a perfectiommoDwealth. This will be tbe ageof tbe millenium. But we cannot expeet to realise this bappy dream untilevery man is awakened to tbe good oftbe probation system. We cannot seelow tbere can be more than oniipinioo regarding tbe benefits of tbiilaw. Whether you look at tbe gooddone to tbe person under probation,

he great financial saving to theState, or at tbe wonderful uplifting

woe upon all society tbe com-wisdom of the Probation Law is

proven and must be universally acrnowledged.

As tbe young graduate withdrewamid generous applause. Rev. Dr.

Lyman Hnrlburt, formerly iresident of thia city but now of Mor-ristown, aroee to make tbe openingaddress. In hi* preliminary remarki

•poke encouragingly to the classseated behind him, stating tbe talkthat was to follow was more for theirbenefit than that of tbe audience be-

him. Hi* subject was "The Im-portance of Education" and be re-

iwn belief* a* to why it isessential to success.

He contrasted civilised nations andwhat makes them so with barbarouscoontries and tbe canse of their re-maining in darkness. It is education,

said, that requires tbe line to bedrawn between tbe two as no race

of letters can lav claim•Mliasd. Tbe aristocracy

of today in thia country ia composed' ' said Dr. Hnrlburt,

and every boy'or girl has tbe privilegeMorning one of them by graspingopportunity offered Din by tbe

public schools. That is one advantage~ ~ ~ M its asais-

» » sttateiog worldly i1 .«f use)Aans

reaching of high positions asstatistic* gleaned from govern!

Fifty per oanL of tbnation's vice president* have been i

wbils stzty-oae per centtbe speakers of the bouse bar* passedthrough high educational institutions.

Again education is the oaase of cer-tain mystic and nighty illuminations

the great human brain.wbo baa bean educated sees things

coosidered com-monplace by other eyes, not trained

perceiv* all that Is good and beantiI in natur*. There is nothing par-

ticularly edifying tcthe sight Of a country churchyard,yet the moss grown stones imbued tbepoet Grey witb an inspiration whiclresolved itself in one of tbe grandest

i ever wiitteu. Tbe toweringto the untrained mind

nothing but arduous climbs antfatiguing tramps, yet to Byrooltbeyopened np a Hood of new thoughtswhich has enriched tbe language andliterature of reoent years.

In dosing. Dr. Hnrlburt addressed;he class in congratulatory terms aniizpressedtha wish that "this be icommenoenMnt day and that they goon, and oc aad on." ~supplemented his remarks by relatingcertain fact* which convinced himthat tbe fame of the Plainfleld schoolswas known all over the Union aa iihis travels across the continent, eai

j and west, north and south he beard othem everywhere. ,

presentation of rewards b;Leanoer N. LoveU followed and tbefortunate pupils and the studietwhich they excelled are as folio wi

Engliit composition—Tbe Geo.Baboock prise, given by Mrs. Geo.

first prize, Hudson'Shakespeare, twelve volumes, Edith

Jarvis; second prize, Tennyson':works, six volumes, Elizabeth T. Van-derveer; honorable mention, Mercy A.Hillman, Rachel Aughiltree,Wyck Broaks.

Mathematics— The Dr. 0. H. Still-an prize, given by Mrs. C. H. Still-lan; first prize. 915 in gold, Cyri!

Brown; secood prise, f 10 in gold.Gbariea Elliott; hoHarriett O. Randall.

Translation prises—For the besttranslation of assigned passages a first

id a second prise of $3expended in books chosen by tbe re-ceiver of the prise.

Modern languages— Given by ErnestR. Aokerman.

French-First prize, Eli:beth K. VanderVeer, Lowell's Poems,second pri*. Daisy M. pronard,Longfellow's Poems; honorable mei

a. Alice M. Brick,nnior French—First prize, NoratiHill, Fiske's American Revoli

tion ; second priae, Louise M. Taylor,Shelley's Poems; honorable mention,Alice A. Pugh, Cyril Brown.

German—First prize, Erwin Brianieland, Hudson's Shakespeare; seoon'rize, Russell Bailey, Bloiam

Chemistry; honorable mention, Mabe'Jenkins.

Latin prises—Given by AleiandeGilbert

Senior Lsfin—First prize, ErwinBriant Leland, combined witb Ger-

prize, In Hudson's Shakespearesecond prise, BnsseU Bailey,bined witb prise in German,copy of Bloxam's Chemistry ^honor-able mention, Margaret B. Abbott.

Junior Latin—First prize, LouiseL Taylor, ' Keats' Poems; second

prize, Norman C. Hill, combinedwith French prize, in Flake's Am*

Revolution; honorable mentiDorothy Waldo,

Second-year Latin — First priAnna F. Brodnaz, Vanity Fair aHenry Esmond: second prize,

ingen. Wbittier's Poemshonorable mention, Mary Dunham.

Greek prize—Given by Miss E. K.Humming, Loin H. Fuller, Bryant'iIliad and Odyssey.

irctal prizes—A first prize of•3 and a second prize of «2, expended

i books. Given by E. R. Aokerman.Stenography—First prize, Anni

Rimflit'1, Tennyson's Poems; sooondprise, Louis Bock. Qregg's Manual ofShorthand; Gregg's Phrase ;Bookhonorable mention, Ralph S. Lane.

Typewriting—First prize, Vincen. Miner, Fnasenius' Qualitative An-

alysis ; second prise, Ralph S.English Classics; Emma Line, Howto Know tbe Wild Flowers.

Bookkeeping—First prise, Ralph R.Baker* English Classics i second

.Harry G. Thompson, Des-banel's Physics ; honorable mention,unes McCarthy, Mary H. Randolph.Excellence in Manual of Arms and

Military Tactic*—Gold medal prise.Lard Tweedy; honorable men-

tion, Cyril Brown, Frederick Taboran Anken.Spelling — Given by

_oveIL Priae, Longfellow'Elizabeth Crane Winter; honorablemention, Gertrude Laura Hunter.

United State* History — Given by*v. Dr. William R. Richard*. Prise.ireen's History of the English people.vols., Elizabeth Crane Winter; hon-

orable ment|on. Abraham Hugotubenstein, Benjamin Edward Her-

Tbe oration and valedictory;was de-

Uvend by Erwin Bryant Lelaud, tbesubject of the?ormer being "Miapic Friends and Enemies. '* It relatedto harmf <rl bacilli which lark in wiand spread malignant iHnssns. germs

'bicb infest the air and produce trooble for tbe humans wbo breatheand tbe process of decompositionwhich assists nature in enriching theearth and making vegetation possible." -a* couched in familiar terms and

evidently well thought oatclosingpte saluted hi« das* and formal-

ide the farewell which brought theibers more than ever to the real!M that their paths separate after

a companionship of yean.President of the Board of Edncati

J. B. Probsaco presented tb* graduate*with their diplomas Mid as tbe young

and women stepped forwardire the parchment which rep

seated to tliem many days of self d»iial ana study, each was greeted

prolonged applause. With tbe award-Ing of tbe but one tbe exeriose* were

As may be seen from tbetbere . was no salutatory and orati<a* is customary. This honor was dvolTed upon Clarence Blxby LaBibut owing to a recent illness he wasunable to take part and tbe nnmbei

omitted.

WILL NOT RESIGN.No Truth In Story Th«t IT. 8- Hc-nnto

Drrdeu's Health Is Bo Poor as toCause' Illi Resignation.

It has been rumored tn certain partsof the State that tbe health of SenatorJohn F. Dryden is so poor that ithink be will consider bis retiremec

t tbe United States Senate.is almost needless to say that this

statement is witbont the slightestfoundation. Notwithstandingstress of the campaign, Mr. Dry-

was . in better health after Inelection to the SenaCe than ever infore. After his election be immediately went Into tbe Senate and hasworked ansidaonilr on the Tariooi

vbich he was ap-committee* topointed.

Owing to a slight touch of malariaand tbe se-

tters of bis family. Senator Dry-den considered it advisable to go

home at Bernanbville fora short rest, and after reAperafingfor a few day*, be went to Hewarl

i gives e attention to his personalaffairs and to vii-.t the office of thePrudential Insurance. Company,which he is the president.

Senator Dryden is in splendid health.le has not tbe slightest Intention

retiring, and will noon return to hiiduties in Washington toMay until theclose of the session.

WON A BRIDE.Oscar Moore, of Tbl* City, Weddi

to Miss Florence Banna, orBlakeslle, Fa.

Miss Florence Hanna, of Blaketlie,Pa., and. Oscar Moore, of tlwere married Thursday at the homeof tbe bride in the presence of a large

mber of relatives and friends. Tbe•emany was performed by lit"

Mr. Williams, of Scranton, Pa. MiasCarrie Hanna, sinter of the bride,

the bridemaid, andMoore, of New York, a brother of th.groom, was the best man.

Tbe bride, who' is the daughter <Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hanna, was foimerly employed at Hill & Shnpp'dry goods store. The groom waa a

i*r resident at WarrenriUe, but1* engaged a* a mason in Plaii

field. He is an excellent basso andember of the cboir of tbe First

Baptist church. After a wedding triptbe oonple will take up their restdenoe In tbe borough.

MRS. VAN WINKLE PASSED AWAY.Widow of Jeremfmh VanWInklp

Succumbed After Brief IlioesiFollowing a brief Illness from

application of troubles, Mrs. Violet"anWinkle passed away tat her home

on Central avenue, Saturday. Ita general breaking down Of hei

health.Mrs. Van Winkle was sixty-four•ars old and was the widow or tbe

late Jeremiah Tan Winkle, at one timecity treasurer and chief of the

Sim leaves eight children,Charles, Jeremiah, Daniel, Kelson andFrank and tbe Misses IsabeUe, Violetand Elizabeth, all of whom reside inthis city.

The funeral w-rvi<-. -, willMonday and will be private.

Half Holiday for IiawiThere U a movement on foot among

the local lawyers to close up the!offices Saturday afternoons during the

imer months. The baseball feverthoroughly taken possession of the

legal lights, and if all of the disciplesof Blackstone will agree to close theiroffices, there will be plenty of talent

long tbe base lines to settle any nlti-iate diapute that may arise.

Second Dinner Dance.The second of tbe series of dinnerlaces will be given at the Hillsideennis and Golf Clubhouse on thevening of July 4. Tbe bouse com-

ittee, of which Councilman GeorgeMellick ia tbe chain

overy preparation for an enjoyable

Iddlng tookresident of

P K T T V JURE WEDDING AT BfHDCS

HOME ON RICHMOND STREET.

Iroos* Was Waller B, Belahkrt,«r Craaferd-Tkey Will • • )

side at Craafotd,A vsry prettyiwmn w

place last TnursdV at tbeMr. and Mrs. John S. WikofT, of BUeb-_jod street, when tbeitr daughter,Miss' Olive Irene Wikorl. became; tbe

• of Walter K. Reinhart, of Oran-ford. The cereinon v was performedby Bev. Dr. Cornelius Schenck, ofTrinity Reformed chnrcl), the bride'spastor. «Mist*.l by Rev. Elmer Pnl-per. pastor of a Lutheran church inJersey City and an intimat* rrisart ofthe groom.

In honor of tbe event the parlor Iwasbeautifnlly deoorated, pink and greenbeing the prevailing colors. The bride

gowned In silk and carric|d »booduet of bridal rases. She was at-tended by her sister, Miss Laura, A.WikoftT, wbo was olad in pink |*Ukand, bore a buncb of pink rases.

[enry W. Crane, of Cranfcrd, waiteda tbe groom.Two nieow of the bride, Haael Mae

;onyon and Clara Mae Smock, acteda* ribbon girls, forming an aisle firom

entrance of tbe parlor to I tb*arches where tbe ceremony was per-formed. Acting a* page was littleRalph Bunyon, a nephew of the Wide,carrying the ring on a Silver tray.Miss Emma Green rendered tbe wed-ding march.

Just after tbe ©eremody and tore-,iou* to their departure on a weddingtour the newly married couple hold areception. They were theof many useful and costty ]

listing of out gl**i, iilv<litnre, pictures and oliher

The bride Is a member of Trinity! Re-formed cboroh where *BW hasrery active in Sunday -school «

and will be greatly missed bybus of boys.Tbe guesto nnmbered j about

from Cranford, Newark, jersey 0 _Inaction, High Bridge, Lpng Branch,New York and Plainfleld.

Mr. and Mrs. Roinhait left by.0:90 train for a short honeymoon. I rip,and on their return will take up their

lence at Cranford, where | thegroom has bought and furnihome.

ON LAKE GEORGE

>re | tnetisbdd a

t the Slivtfr.M.C. A. Will ConductBay Hotel oa Its shore. .

During the month of June and fromJuly 15 to October 1 tbe IT. M. d A.of tbe east and Canada will conductthe Silver Bay Hotel, on Lake Gebrgeas a resort for association men'andtheir families. Tbe hotel accommo-dates six hundred, has every conven-ience, and a special rate toC. A. members, including-acation tickets.

For the guestn there will bedant opportunity for Ashing. , _ „boating, ideal bathing and athletic

vises, snob a* mountain climhing,tenni*. basket-ball, baseball and othersports. The Adirondack; wildernessivith it* numerous oharms i* within•asy reach, and Lake George, upon

which the Hotel is situated, baa! thereputation of being tbe n«st beautifulbody of inland water in America.From August fi to 15 a conference Ofassociation workers will be held. :

>tng, : fine

More BaggageAlready the baggagemaster at| the

North Avenne station, J. P G» ust-i,' and his assistant, Jacob Wa| ner,^beginning to feel the fciressun . of

[so increasing business. PlainflelUer*lave commenced leaving tbe citj for,he shore and mountain* and tbis

makes much extra work at the sta-tion. |

Ready to Yleht.1 used DeWltt's Witch Hazel Salvepiles and found it a certain cure, "i a B. Meredith, Willjow Grbvs,

DsL Operations unnecessary to curepiles. They always yield to DeWittsWitch Hazel Salve. Cures skin •"-

i, all kind* of wounds.counterfeits. L. W.

Mew Ticket Ofllee.It should be remembered by patrons

of the New Jersey Central that Onlytickets for eastbound trains are soldluring tbe day at the neiw statPersons going west can secure t

tickets at the North Avenue statli the evening tickets for trainsLther direction are sold at the sUw .

—Won. [Spring Fever.

Spring fever Is another name forfatuousness. It Is more serious than.

people think. A torpid ltverand inactive bowel* mean a poisoned

If neglected, serious lllsessfollow saoh symptoms. DeWlfct's

Little Early Risers remove all danger' BtimulatiDR the liver, opening tbeiwels and cleansing tbe system of

impurities. Safe pills. Never gripe,I have taken EM-Witt's Little KarlyIser* for torpid liver every spilingr years," writes R, M. Everly,

MoundsvUIe, W. Va. "They do atee good than anything 1L" L W. Randolph. T

Commencement Exercises Were Held in

First Baptist Church Last Thursday .Before a Large Crowd.

DISTRIBUTION OF- THE AWARDS. aiipkebh of the evening was made

BY HEW DR. JESSE L. Hl'HLBUT, FOR- MERLY A RESIDENT OK THIS CITY.

Aildr«H« of Welcome Wa« Mode Dy Mins Mar it ret B. Ablkott—Oration on "Tile Probation Officer In New Jersey" by Harold A. Nomer- Krwlii B. Leland Clave the Valedictory—The I’rl.r Winners—Or. Hurlbiat Talked on

••The Importance of Education.” with bright fades el .perkHog U nee alatcht Complete and onlversnl. •yes. Mlsated bp the expectancy Oar penal. nods aslga imprisonment that BCriJmpMlee the beginning of a aa a penalty alSoS for everJ act thay or* .pooh, the member, of the dam forbid. of 1U0S bado farewell to their pear, of Thl. . , gedy on the occasion of the Ihinj- ae abaard la principle and aa woood aoaoal roramrueemeul of the wrong and In]Orion, la poetic I-lainO.II High School, hold la Iba Firet Bapti.t ohoreh. Thoreday Twenty .eren pooog men and wol bed completed the coo me. adopted bp them foor year, ago ud rtood forth rqolpped and ready to begin the etrag pie which lead, to animate .Occam or Ignominy. *1 7 IS o'clock, the hoar designed for roinnjencement, eeerp soot to the lose edifice wu oceopied by parses Md frleade of the pooog graduates Preceded by Principal TraraU Md Superintendent of Schools Msxaon, the member. S the clam appeared opoo the ipacloo. platform and look tbalr M, arranged in a large —ml circle, baric, *- a background, banka of potted piatft. the broad green leans of wbirb mood oat la atriklag oon- traat to Ihe'whlte gowne of the poang woolen Md more —her raiment of

* aa fob

Ups. Uli Harriet Poller, Kdoa Moore, Kenneth Balhlep. Hollle Brown I lubber ley. Clarence Blibp Is- Hoe: Latin eolentlfic COO me, Margaret Beekaua gfbbott. Alls Mary Brick, Mabel Jenkln. Evelyn liras I llertha Mac hell, Elluhsh Kirkpat- rick YMderveer, Hoaeel Bailey, Liu den Weasel Bridgeman; Latin modern language. liras JffTere Bnrte, Klirabeth Goddard. Mildred Anna I'lrleh. Marguerite Kwiag Vm dereuler. Krwin BriMl LaUnd. liar ot<! Adui Nomrr; generml cooroe. Dmkmy Mmy Uroomra. G. L-Roy 11*1- Uttk: c‘nmmpm«l roar*#. Cor* Ahblo lUrn*. Cliarlotlo Ardm JoIiomo. Emmfliof' Kama ratal* L*rcw, Limine y*rK»rr« P«t#r*OB mod Arthor L«trl* Dratoa. KoUaTwlug mo orartar* by Frank’ K*w York orchralra stationed In the gallrry, an invocation by Rot. Dr. William R_ Richard. opened the enr et»ec Another orchestral Belaotioa followed mod Dr. J B Probaeeo, who am maeler of reremoolc, mdooi the opealag addrem. Slleered Him Margaret BeekmM Abbott U a clear, firm rots. "The Prohatioo UUlcer in Kew Jerney" waa the ora non .object stooted by Harold Adla

thl. atuortnng topic with a atasrity that greatly lapsed hi. boMern Pomemed of a naturally weU mods latcd rols orery word wan forrefnlly ■!«*«* In a Moo free from all re- Tho oralis waa s follow. Vrtme .ruled Hr oil ags Md •111 coot la ae to eimulll the ead of time In ardor to [waned eoriety man

Md to attach to each 'a penalty with reme reference to the sppoeed galU which II rereala The credo Md terrible penal ends of sr adorn preoenbed death fs erery fels loo. act: hat id minor dander, com. felted limit land, or rood., other, were haolehed or .offered boom bodily mmilaflow, being mot to the pillory or tho whipping poor PrUooe were at firil regarded a]moat eldonleely at placre for eecarely detalnlan rbe m>- "“4 •»'H trial. Md the cowrie, anlil panl.hmeci B.f m ss grew more hasaae the inflict Is of death aid of an form, of tortore bee

oily os el all of sy rational csrlctis

It la that t*Cate ought to apportion a find retribution far each off* doom It cffaoClrely promote the role end of nrlwiial law; the protection of •ociety. Thera are bat

•trains him onlil hie term end., a. if one *boaid c**B m wood cattog tiger for a month or a foot. and then torn loose. Then ft* nothing in mm method Which tend, to reconcile to hi. fellows and In wmomt am I discharged mom the enemy of I kind than before Therefore pel

We believe that for the former, the ooly remedy la the laas which maks the leogth of ms', confinement depood ops I attitude Md deportment daring hie imprtasmeot Uu petting Into hi. own hud, m H were, the key to big pries. Bat thin is an entirely differ, cot q oration from the se before aa II la with the aeosd clam I bar we See to deal, criminal, of oeeaalow, there who commit crime sly o while Md graduate Into the other Md wore# claee sly by Isg os tlooed lraining la Ule former The pries le the a-hool which grad nets them No better way sired by which to eara there turfs- Innate. Him the probation syktem few year* ago. According to I hi. method tho lodge hold, st to tho calpric await- log hie Ural eeateas. thl. hope: "Yoon* man yon will Dot be tm- priesed; ys frill ns lie een| to the peolMatiary! the coart placre ys under the charge of the probation officer. He will be lo ys a Wind Md eooorellor. Keep awoy from ysi nil Maori alls, and atlsd to ysi i man Bo lsg family Md bo- bare yoo reelf ys will as ha regarded m a criminal aad the coart wlU pro- tect yba. If ys do as follow st three lnetrnorios a cell la| Ihe jail ewalM . all oh with l He le required by the eoert to keep a fal record of each probationer. Bat this u all s the .nrface Let as os- elder In derail how a peohatls officer undertaken o esc. In Ibo first place, he attend, ever. sere Is of the Mart. Whs the jodgo tors orer to him a sbject fs probat Is, ha laeastlgatra the pee.loea life of the offender rery thoroeghly. He stodlea bU character Md the character of his loeka thraogb his hocse. ^ftar that has m lolernew with tbs proba- Itcoer. la thu inteeriew ha appeals so tho good la hU man This Is where Nert sr officer gets work for him If he hoe none ml the

■ mM Take two yaaa u sod glee owe to a

Wt hare M Instance «f this kind right bore la Plainfield. There a little ItallM hoy whore family Tory poor. la order to help hay hia dally bread be sold papers <m north arenas. One day la search of

it oat Into the read aad col- lected a supply of smote which ho need to good edrentage inside. Stu- rerally ha war arretted US', thri Ihe suaty laU at Ellsahsklt Imagine the night maran a little elerea mast hare safferad shat ap la a tiny call, three feat by ten with a I Its door I And wb> wre truly at fault, be s lb. unfeeling wretch who excited hU lost Mger’ By oil equity, the half intoxicated bar sgbl to here bos lo the county jail : weary Bight ’ Korina tho poor little ItallM was dla- corerad la hU oall by Mrs. WiUiam- ss. pro balls officer of Os

rfres tho aril of whisky renders aad his temper la last M sqaahls M say other child's Thu tllMtratee the kind of prober Is work children aad ys readily tee that this little boy le as dly sared to a Ilfs whores ha might Bat It Ilk harder task to reform fell grown ms. Ta there also doctor of morels, m the prohatls officer actually Is, Meads to tho ptas of o friend lo need. Any nan rioted aad rent seed to a peaal il tails for a felony lore, the right of cttiaenehlp. To get hack this prised right after his term .ipfrre la no esy tor. It lamina great pabUclIy. h trouble aad considerable ex m. Tbs, too. each day la jail • to the degradation of the yoaag i sen termed fs the first time Erery mM leering n pries carries with him tho MIgmn of o oarid II la Impossible to tospo Ik - But o as-

necessarily bards the ms with odium. The helping hood Is eagerly offered to tbore coder hi. parole. II. Is tbs o ml cable friend to tho proba-

prias confinement. ThU qalet w lag with lndtvtdaals according to

uplifted. Is ass than that this law proper- ly sarriad oat U a great aoama of good net only to tho iadlridaal hat aim to

the iadlridaal. - Wo belters that la a ware there will as ha M auay of assault sd battery, aad that

poriscsd corps of prohatls U developed M o port of Urn judicial tho polls sort will ha regarded m ■1 Thu If ws are not of training Into snoh ally far this kind of daty. Another waj re highly adeemed ms la to offer a largo salary. Bat, oar friends of the opposllls now my: Tea, hot If ys a large salary the corrupt poll ticlan will fix ala eye s your pcoltion sad ssoora IS fs one of the ring. TbU it It act Inevitable tor two . The corrupt politicians art ting fawn ud fewer. Politic.

Talk And area If s# of tho dirty poUHetaos should as hU mfln.no, this sd he would be stopped In u- otber way. The great majority of ou honorable Christian aad they will M allow poll Us

op daring tho two month, the pis -king Oar prefas officer, Mrs Emily E. WUliamas, of b o wonts of aobb char eral ysara aha had sMd m a self os- ar Md whs the pr I largely through bar position, she gladly aooofMd, utterly i tier truly la the week. The corrupt politician tried here to got la hot the jodges said no. What The lawyers sd politician, of Ibo rising gserutis think they are. Mm. WUliamas fins work with rerenly fi

If all the ooeatlre of Mew Jorasy od their prohatls officer, wt cbsld n be IIring la a veritable Utopia, 'to number of prbsara would ha re- dacad. the old criminals would die off; Md M tho young Would all be corrected there would bo aoae to Ink# plasm of the old rascals; Ihe lax would be grstly reduced; the would become rich; thu rich, richer: .people la general would he ; all moiety would ha uplifted, la short wo should hare a perfect os wealth. This will be the age of the mlllealom. Bol wa cannot ex- pect to reullm thl. happy dream aaSU erery ms b awaksed to the good of tbore cm be more than ss opinion regarding the benefit. of tkb law. Whether you look at the good

srpr.mil the with that saaoaasont day and that they go s. aad s and on." Ha afterward MppbaMoted hie remark, by relating certain fact, which osrlaocd him that tho foam of tho Plainfield seboob tswn all orer the Union aa In irareb across the oosllaecl, east want, north sd sooth ho heard of Tho psamnlslls of reward, saner N Lorell followed sd tbs fortunate pupils aad tho stadias la Which they excelled are ee follows; iposlsioa—Tho Oca. H. e, glare by Mrs Gs H. Babcock; first prise, Hudson's sire relumes, Kdlth I. J orris; eoosd prise, Train yes', works, elk volumes. Elisabeth V. Vm (terrier; honorable mentis, Mercy A.

Hillman. Bachel Aoghlltree, Van Wyok Breaks dbemattm—The Dr. C. H Bull- prise, gins by Mra a H. 8U11- ; first prise, file la gold, Cyril Brown; eecood prise. $10 In gold, Charier Elliott: hooorable mentis, Harriett O. Randall. translation of oadgaod pomagen, a firet prim of 33 sd a eecood prise of B evpsdod la books ohoos by tho ro- of Urn prim tgm Olrea by Ereem K Ack.nnM ns Preoob—Klrat prim. Elisa- K. YaakrYrtr. Lowell's Poems;

•d Pri*. Daby Longfellow's Poems; bouorebls tls. Alls K. Brick. Joolor French—Klrat prise, Norm so a mil. Ktme's la«W> Heroin prim. loUm M. Taylor, Shelley's Poems; honorable mentis, Alls A Pagh. Cyril Brown. First prist, Erwin Briaot prise. Keamll Ballsy. Blhxam'

Latin prime—Olrea by Alexander Oil bark Ssiar Login—First prim, Erwin Brian! LeUad. combined with Oar- tana prise, la Hades's Shakespeare; id prim, Burnell Briley, com-

et the great fiaapoiri saving to the

plate wisdom of tho Probation law b w sad mass be srUvarmUy an-

spy of Bloxua'a Chemistry ;;honor- his mentis. Margaret B Abbott. Junior Iutic—Klrat prim, Louies L Taylor, 'Keats' Poems; ssooad prise. Norms a Hill, oombleed with Kreach prise, la Flake's Ameri- can Bcrelatfs: honorable menus, Dorothy Waldo. Booood-yoor Latin — Klrat prise. Anas K. Brodnax, Vanity flair sd Augusts Bags, Whittier' honors hi# m soils. Maty Dunham. Orest prise—Given by trim K. K. ummlag. Lulu H. Fuller, Bryant': Iliad sod Qd^ssey. Commercial prism-A first prim of IS sod s seeded prim of *1, expended In books. Otero by E. H. Aokermna. Stenography—First prim. Anas a

reived sps Clarence Blxby LsRue hat owing lo a recent Illness be wa Unable to take pari Md the nimbi m omitted. WILL WOT BJC8IQN

KoTratk la Story That U. 8. Baaato DrrdM'ff Htallh la So Poor mm to Ca*»V Hu RMllMtkB.

It horn boon ramoNd la rortml a port* of Ibo State that tho health of Sonator John F. Dryde* ia »o poor that mmmj think b* will ooMidrr hi* retirement from tb* United State* Senate. It aim oat nwdlwi to mmj thot tbia Hatement la witbont the altjrhuoc foundation. Notwithstanding I hr urn* of tbo campaign, Mr. Dry- botMT broil h after him •faction to the ftonmCm thmn mr br- toro Aftor hi* •lootioa ho *Ulj want into thm Senmtm mod hmm worked SMidaomlj on tho ▼srioot which ho w*a *p Owing to * alight mod tho moron Uluraa of om of tho member* of hia family. Senator Dry- den considered it adviaabto to go to hia aammer homo ai Beroa^rllle for a abort not, and after reAperaflng for a few day*, he went to Newark to glre aome atlentioo to hia poreooai affairs and to rl»\t the offioe of tho Pradeatial Inaaraoco. Company, of which ho le tbo president. motor Dry dan la in splendid health, hae aot tho aUghtoM loUntloo of retiring, and will aooo jwtarn to hU doties in Washington towny on1 oIom of the naloo. <

WOW A B^XDK. Oacor Moor*, of This City. Wedded to MU* Ploreoco Hoooo, of BlakrelU. Pa.

Mia* Florence Hanna, of Blakeelie. Pa., and Oaoar Moore, of Uiia city, were married Thursday at the borne of the bride in tho preaone* of a large wr of relatlTM and frteoda The nony waa performed by Rev Mr. Will lama, of Scranton. Pa. Mia. Carrie Hanna, aimer of the bride, the bride maid, and Howard Moore, of New York, a brother of the groom, waa the beet man. The bride, who' U the daughter of Mr. and Mr* Alfred Hanna, waa for- merly employed at Hill & Bbapp dry goods atore. The groom waa former resident at Warrenvllie, bet Is engaged an a mason in Plain field. He i> an excellent basso and la imberof the choir or the Firet Baptist charch. After a wedding trip too pie will take op their real

by Rev. Dr. Cornelias Setieock. Trinity Reformed church, the brtdaU pastor, assisted by Rev. Rimer Fai- psr. pastor of a Lntheran charch is Jersey City aad as inti table friend of

benotifally * being tb* prevailing cola**. Tbs l»ide «m gowned in silk sad carrtMl u boaqaet of bridal rossu Bhu was ns- *d by her sister, Mlm loom A. Wtkoff, who wu clad is ptok . bora a bonob of pink rUnoa H.nrv W. Oran., of Oran lord, waited I the groom Two utsom of tho bride. Hnml Mas Rsuyoa and Clam Mas Smock, anted M ribbon girls, forming M alals from

formed. Acting as pug* was Ralph Ran yon, a nephew of tho hxide, carrying thu ring ou u silver troy Mice Emma Or Just after the ceremony Md PIU- Tlnoa to lheir departure cm u weddlag tour the newly married oauplc hold u recaption. They were tho reciptMW any ascfol Md costly presents, consisting of col giant, sllvcrwuru, furniture, picture, and other srtiSlss. The bride ic s member of Trinity Bo- formed church where sfie bee been very active in Soudsy-mhool work, Md will be greatly missed by her clsssof boys The guests numbered .bool fitly from Cranford. Newark. Jersey Oily, Joeotton, High Bridge. Ismg Branch. New York Md Plainfield Mr. and Mrs Hutu hail left by lbs 0:30 train for u short hooeymooa.lrtp, sod aa their relent will take sp their residence at Cranford, where the

prise, Louis Book, Gregg's Manual of Short hand; Gragg's Phrase IBook j hooorable mention. Ralph a Lane. Typsxrritlag—First pries, Vincent R Minor, Fiaounioa' Qnalitatira An- olysls: stomal prise, Ralph a Lass. English Classics; Emma Lina, Bow to Know tbo frild Flo were Bookkeeping—First pna, Ralph R Eckert, Kngllth Claaatos; second prise, Harry G.

James McCarthy. Mary IL Randolph ExaeUonoo ta MmssI of Arms Md Military Txsffra -Gold medal pries. Jess Lard Tweedy , Cyril Brown, Van Antes Spelling - Given by LeroU. Prise. Lengful llauhuch China Wink sent ion, Gertrude Inara H enter. United Bentes History — Olvsn by Rev Dr. Wlllieso R. BlehnMn Prise, Green'. History og

mention, Abrohnm Hugo sin. Hi^smlu Edward Her.

MRS. VANWINKLE PASSED AWAY. Widow of Jeremiah V.aWlakl.

Soscumbod After Brief Illasoa. Following u brief iUnset from com plication of troubles, Mrs. Violet VMWlakle passed away at bar home on Oonttsl avenue, Saturday was a general breaking down of her health Mra Vsn Winkle wm sixty-four yean old and wm thu widow of the » Jeremiah VmWiuHc. st ooe Urns treasurer end chief of the fire de- partment. She leaves sight oh il dree. Charles, Jeremiah. Danish Nelson Md Frank Md tho Mimes Isabelle, Violas id Oisabsth. all of whom reside in lie city. Thu funeral terrier, will he held Monday Md wlU he private Half Holiday for Lawyers Thors is a movement aa loot on tho local lawyers to close up their Mas Saturday afternoons daring tbs nmar months. The baseball fever ■ thoroughly taken poaaaaskm of legal Uahta. Md If aU of tho disciples of Blackwoue will agree to close their office., thorn will he plenty of talent I ibo base linen Is settle nay altt-

ON LAKE 6E0RGE. S V. M. C. A. WlU Congnet Me Oliver Boy Hotel on It. tkor«.

Daring lbs month of Jane Md from July li to October i the Y. M d A. of tbo root Md Canada will contact the Silver Bay Hotel, on Lose Goorgn m o resort for .woolalien men Md their families Tbo hotel accommo- dates six handled, has every ooovm- tenor, Md a specie! rate so ell T M. V. A. members, Including boldera of vacation ticket. For the god. there will be shoo- (laqt opportunity for fishing, fine hooting. Ideal hashing and athletic exercises snoh ss mountain climbing. is basket-hall, haselmll Md other sports The Adirondack wildafnem with Its nomeroui charms It wHhla easy reach, sad Lake George, epos which the Hotel le sitoalad. hee tho reputation of being tbs moat htnalifal body of lalMd water From August 5 to 111 a association workers will he held. More Baggage Handle/ Already the t-aggegemaeter at | tho North Avenue station, J. F Garret- eon, Md his assistant, Jacob Waffner, •sm beginning to feel the preaMr* of M increasing business. Pl.inOeldere s commenced leaving the city for shore Md moootalos Md this iso moch extra work at the eta-

Tbe eecood of Urn series of dll dances will be given st the Hillside Tennis end OoU OUhhoom an lb. evening of July A The hero, oom- aalttsa, of which Oonnollman George P. Mclliak Is Us chairmen, Is making foe an enjoyable

Ready Is Ylsid, "I need DaWItt's WItcl, Haael Halve for pi lee Md found II n certain Bare,” say. 8. K. Meredith, Willow Orirec, DeL Operations onntosaaary to son piles They always yield to DeWills Witch Hanoi Halve. Os res skin die h ell kinds of wounds Accept no counterfeits la W, Randolph. New Ticket Olllre. ■herald be remembered by patrons of tho New Jersey Central that only tickets for eaetbonnd trains during the day ut the new Perorate going west cun secure ticket. Ut tb# North Avenue station. ' In tho evening tickets fan Irnino ta either direction era sold st the new

vu.y

HZ

Spring Favor. Spring fever is Mother It U n people think. A Rapid

may follow eoch symptoms DeWUt'a a Early Kiser, remove all . g by ■Simulating tbo llrar. opealag tho ImpnriUeu Safe pills Never grips De Wits'. Little Early Risers for torpid Hero every spring

• M ■sear. "They do ms 1. W. ■ nays;

Page 8: Iffl HI I GliSIGIIEl It! HIJSBII · VOL. XXXV. PLAINFIELD, N. J., ' HURSDAY J w\ 26, 1902. NO. a6. "Support tht Cmstitvtxm. Which is th* Cement of tht Um a*- Wei, m Its Lmmtatiots

But Hllls-id* Day. With It*Bpecial Event* at Park Club,W M Postponed a Week.

HILLSIDES TEAM WON.

Harbor Mill's Crack O o l h n War*Dift itM la Traa Match oa HIII-,.I<1. U a t l - B*«aJ*r C « a | « I U l HTook Plar • a* L'eaal—O. "••>«• tadaad L.W. Hallock » O * Honor..Mipor incident*. *ncf. M thunder

Mich M tbonder ttormi, failvd to h many effect on the local golfiaoo, Satur-day aUrrtKH.D, and they turned oat ingood number- playing rinht throughid.- nln. The ihowen had theiraffect on th* aooinl function, plannedby the Park tJolf ("lob, and HillsideDay with it* varied attractions wan]postponed a week Some of the Hill- jaide players natlierrd on that coonrbow«v*r, and •pent a pleasant afternoon la informal matches wi«h tbel• o f . . '

The strong Harbor Hill aggregationfell . Tiolim to the Hillside** crackMam daring the afternoon. At Hillaide, Olaf Sangitad oarrien off flratboDom In ,the regular event whiteLeslie W Hallock waa winner ID theweekly campetltion at the. Park Golf(Hah. :

GASTORIAFor InfcuU mi Children.

The Kind You HaveAlways Bought

Bears theSignature

of

PARK GOLF CLUB.Hiltaid* Day will be held at

Park Golf Club, next Saturday,wa* scheduled for last Saturday, buttbe brfak little shower* which wan-dered that way no frequently decidedtbe golf committee in favor of a post-ponement All tbe special event*were' thenfore called off for the dayand such of the Bilbride members aabraved 4he rain were entertained in-formally.

there waa quite a little gatheringat th* clubhouse late in the afternoonwhere Mrs. Samuel Townaand, Mrs.B. BL John McOutchen and Mr.Q*orge D. Ballock received the gueata.

The proposed team match nad at-tracted nun* of tbe Park golfer* *uthat tb*re waa a good field whichtamed out in tbe weekly competitionfor tbe -President1- onp. Some ofthem, failed to finish on account of tbed^man it ration* of nature while thoaewho* did make the eighteen hole*fonnd the course very slow and wet.The honors for the day went to thosewho have heretofore taken no Im-portant position in the race. Theleader* for the cup all tailed to score.Lean* w. Hallook was low man, put-ting up hi* best game of the season.

Th* score*, below 100 net, were aafollow*:

O H NLeslie W. Ballock. 103 31 blW. de la R Atihf r*oo. 1'S 8 90H. Ii. Hibbard. 100 14 91Charles B. Mora* 110 17 MDr. A. W. Anderson l « 90 MCharles U Nichols. ISO 25 W>Ralph sHallock IS5 90 SBB. St. JL MeCutchen 115 IT 99

The Btabding for th* Preaid«Dt'scup is:

Pointa8. St. J. MeCntchen . . . . 8CharleaB. Mane t%Charles 1. Nichols . 6',ObariesiW. MoOutclien. 5Oharleii A. Reed 4W. d* IU R- Anderson HLMlieT. Hallock * 3Dr. A W. Anderson 3Henry C. Well* 2<^Arthur H S.TC-11 2 LAllan B- Laing •:•William K Richard*. aFrank [Roirera.Samnel Towuseud.J. C. BtntlovrH D. HibbardJoseph L MyenCbarlet K Murray

Aa ajrewult of hut week'* play forthe Hr».:- v cop, Mia* May 8. Sfar«va

j Is well; iu the lead for that trophy.Tbe More* made for that enp lastw**k were a* follow*: Mia* May S.Shr*v.e, 74, 33—SI; Mrs. C. L. Good-fa, 40-rAS; Miss Laura Long, 78, «—M; Mi«* Mabel VanDev«at*r, 88. *0—.4K; Mia* Harriet'Shreve. us. a*—saMia* LVdie K. Loiaeans, so, 11—aMUs Blimabeth Curtis. 110, >ft—74MiM Edna L. French. 138. 40-48.

The standing fpr A* Hooley onp i.aa follow* :

Mia* May & Shreve. .Mia* Harriet ShreveMia* Laura LongMia* KiUabetb .CurtUMia* Lydie E LoiaeaaxVia. a L.,GoodrichMi-Edna I- Fmtcb

Boy*' cup on tbe HlUaid* Tennis andOolf Club course had to be called off.Tbe rain arrived j u t at a time whenIt would be impossible for the. <testant* Co start and. finish within tb$n-e*oribed limit. Tbe heavy thunder

•hower nearly postponed, tbe scheduled•vents f r the afternoon, but the rain

•topped early enough to allow thembe played Tb* team from Harbor

Hill arrived and tbU match waailayed over a wet and rather slow

• the team m«t;h Hillside won byItoodnargiivnf 11 to 4. Howard

Wright scored 9 Lf th* 11 pointa andIped tb* team <-ut materially. N.

Pendletoo Roger*. Jr., waa tbe only:her m«mber of tbe team to score.

He made 2 pointa. Tb* visiting teamfailed to •how up as? strong and tbeHillside team bad little trouble incarrying off t lie honor*. Tbe score*

;he match ara as follows:

1

HILLSIDE CLUB.Owing to the baary shower Satur-

ate mornittc the weekly nlay tor th .

InUse

For OverThirty Years

CASTORIA

VOUBK Couple Caaae Froa Ntwirk-Trip Waa Too Lrf>ng, So They

Stopped Her*.Satardar aft«mooo'a heaTy down

pour of rain presented an opportunityJanice Hand to perform hi* Brat

marriage ceremony ainoe assuming the'office and securing the privilege

The Justice waa aeaMd in bu officeengaged in legal matters with La wye r*William (;. DeMMa and Walter L.Hetfield. Jr., whan a baahfnl yoonc

Hillside.'J. W. Baker.Boward WrightW. L. (VI. fiuv.N. P. Rotten. JRobert Abbott.Horn* Damont.

. . 0»

.. 0r. 1

0. 0

Harbor HilLFiake....McKnigbt-HoUia . .ScottTobin.Oonrow.

The other trend of the aflwere tb« weekfy play for the OolfCommittee enp! aad the regular nrstllay for the Beinhart enp, men's

r for [active tnpmber> only.The same acoref counted in each event.Olaf SaaffiUd Von first honor* In the

petition and •cored thefirst win for t lie Reinhart cop wit

score of 80. •• There were threetettanti tie for second honor* for theOolf Committed onp. V. L Olenn*7,Robert Abbott and Howard d*P.Wright. Kachlone nude an S3 net.This doe* not change the standing for

Oolf Cumin tee cup. H. F. Baker•till faolda the lead with 8 1-3 point*,while Olcaneyi sod Abbott improvetheir position with an additional onepoint and Wright receives hi* Qnt

for the cop* are Mfnl lo

BOlaf SanavtadHoward WrightKob.n Abbot

L. Olenne;Evarta TracyK F. MurrayH. F. BakerF. A. ClarkTaller Peterson

The »tandink for tbe Golf Commit-toe cup is a* follow* :

Points.H. F. Baker fEvart* Tracy •w L. OUmaefRobert AbbottD. H. BamwjiCtlarlc* Sto»<-j-Frank U. KeiBhart

O. IR. F. Manayj.Dr. W. R_ B|chardsC. 8. Hal.t. a<iHoward C. TracyF. A. Clark ! . ..H. D. Hlbbarjl& A. Cmi.itjaniHoward deP .Wright.a w. i—B THttD. H*««ee. .

JUSTICE HMD J E D KNOTPERFORMED FIRST MARRIAGE CERE

MOKY SATURDAY AFTERNOON.

timidly entered aad advanced to hi*deak- Oa receiving an assuring; amilethey announced tbemaelve* a* Cliffords. Bradford, aged twenty-seven, andMis* Margaret Donlap. aged twenty-

both of South River. Theyw*re on their way to Newark bytrolley, they said, to be married buttbe rain induced them to drop off atPlainfleld. Their query aa to whetherthe-court cocld act as a anbatitute fortbe Newark minister met withready "y**.11

They took their place* before tb*deak u d while tb* lawyer* acted aswitness** the knot waa tied hard andfast. The groom'* proffered, feeignored bnt exercising hi* judicialprerogative, the lustic* exacted doablepayment from the bride'* lip*. \hearty congratulations and nothingbat best wishe* for the future accom-panying their departure. Mr. and Mr*.Bradford left to commence their Jour-ney home. They will reside at SoothRiver where tbe groom ha* a lucrative

lition.

HEARD ABOUT CAMP.

Special Servlc* of Eadeovorera of.•.eventh-Day B.pt l . t Ch.rch

Tbe Chriatian Endeavor Society oftbe Seventh-Day Baptist church baldam intonating meeting Saturday aftei

wban a special programme, pre-pared by tb* manager* of tbe WeetfieldFreah Air damp, m pnaented. Orra

i preaidad at the meetingan address telling of the worki camp. Tb* rest of tbe pro-

mated of recitation*special moiia At tbe close of th*mooting a collection was lakeo for: !»• work.

I Wittered from dy*pep«U and indigettion for fifteen yean," lay* W. T.Btnrdavaat of Marry Oak**, H. C.* "After I had tried many doctor* andmedicine* to no avail on*friend, pemaded tn« to try KodoL It

immediate relief. I can eat al-anything I want now and my di-

gestion la good. lohaafmUj recom-i . " Don't try to canible by dieting. That only

further weaken* tb* lyatam. Tooboleaome, strengthening food.

Kodol enable* you to a—Initiate what7«> eat by digasting it without tb*

4. L. W. "

J-alor Day. jg 14 will fa* Joaior Day at

Aibu ry Park, at w h ic h tiat* the 'ioaa It. a p . A. M. OcmaciU ofKew J e rsey will uwijUMll aOBi

Kttthleas bactflriologiits dealroy,by one. oar fondest Ulmfontw Nowfaith in th* purity of glaciers most gotbe way or other popular fallacies.Hitherto the ru»a In th* street hadimagined that . _.every city and plain polluted be wouldstOl find Isn macula'"' Rprmg* in theAlp*. But M. Binse. who presides ovetfa chemical laboratory at the Pasteurinstitute, having no •och faltb, ob-tained some See from the glaciers ofMont Blanc Itself and placed it antlerht* pitiless mJrrr.M-.ipe. Ills verdict

a* III inIt appear* that even the summit, which

lone remained untroddea by hum•t. ha» lost it* purity, if it ever hr. The ice in question, and wat>Ited therefrom. Were found, oa bac-

teri.-lr.pirn I analyst*, to he "peopledwith colonies of microbes.™ The •Late-men I which follow* is parttralarljrter-rifrin*>. It appear* that "the germin question were found to belong to thmost varied families of bacteria-" JJBinst aocotinta for tbe pollntion of theMont Blanc glacier* by surmising thaithe microbe, have been conveyed to thimountain peaks by the wind* *werpin|tbe cities in the valley*.—London Tele-graph.

I s * r i n r mt Purf.

the Boer lender*, whnse cutnfort inthe matter of Imlginfr ba* becilooked after." 'Thu* the report frontPretoria, and in the Interest* of peaceIt U to be hoped thai the comfort* in-clude *ome rens. nahly choice cigar*,the reduction of wbii-h to ashes form*the be*t b**t* for an agreement be-tween men who differ and smoke. Bymuch tobacco RiMnarck red need Thiento acceptance of Iand the Spanish-Am erica n peace com-mission after the w*r of 1S9S proceed-ed bat lamely until the delegate*kindled the" pipe of peace. At thefifth meeting, little progress havingbeen made. Senor Ri"». on behalf of hiscolleague^*, proposed an encape fithe formal atroo*phere. "I have•erved," be said, "that

med toimoking. May 1 Mie-tre-t that we joinopether in our one bond of sympathyibd light our r i p r . and cfgarettesr~rhis being done, tbe negotiation!

speeded happily, thereby proving thaia smoke in time saves much firing.—London Chronicle.

Tfc* Bareet* *t Avtmerr-It has long been a commonplace-

tbat the effects of artiHerysre mainly"moral.'1 bnt for alj that the intro-duction of the new explotive—lyddlt*.

ipecially—and of qniok-firing gnashad iaaensiblyrevived t hi. belter in thegreat material value of artillery, ttwould be gratuitous to say that ir-.illery has had a great downfall in

j«neral estimation—among thoaewho have alway* taken a sane view

" "ts nses we d- not think it has—we nay fairly say that relative.

ly to artillery the rifle baa gainedutation. We know now that

Ijddite. althoaga tt may make shortwork of the tnahdl's tomb, i* of little

against earthworks, especiallywhen it falts on very soft ground.andthat the stories of aten whose i r m oleft them and whose teeth shook intbrir beads becam« they hitt. be within a quarter of mile(plosion of lyddite were

moonshine.—London Spectator.

"What seenu to be the matter, 4ot-tor?" asked the alck man's wife n*.be waylaid him In the hnll.

"Stomach trouble." replied tat pilldispenser. "What he needs is achange. I <lf)n't believe the- waterfieri* agree* with him."

"Vattr n<ithln|r!kt exclainted thewife, in a tone that was calculated tochoke off any further argument. *•!

t belteve he has taated a drop ofr in ten years."—Chicago Daily

lose who have complained thata* ia uninleresting have usually

been branded aa cynics, or. worse,people trying to be clever. To all:h this true story of. a little gtrliv come a* cnusolatioa, for "nut of• mouth*,- etcLhtl* Alice had been pot to bad,d told to say her prayers. -o

Qod." she prayed, "make all the badpeople good, and make all the goodpeople, all the good people—all th*

mi people—nice!"—X. Y. Tribune.

A Sara MOM.loulman—Why didn't you demand? Thej didn't have any bag-gage.i.rk-Ohl he's got barrel* of

>ney.11..iv do TOD know?"Uecatue he's old and ugly and bis

wif* 1« young and pretty."—Philadel-phia Press.

Porto Rico, tecfntly. for one tmost strocloua i-rinaes ever eon»la Porto Rico, the murder of AiDelfado de Pino, at Guayo. ne»Junta*, and tfce robbery and ill

!t «f /his family and terraaher 30,1898.

Becently a Chinese b*v wa* broughtInto the Peking hospital terribly in-jured by a heavy tog falling- nponhim. The doctors, to save his life, de-cided to cot oft hi* ]e(r. The mother

lad. Tbe patient, howei

, aad tfce robof *is fnmilihV of Septem

upposed, wam tbe dkgraceorld in a. mai

.i-nii-. Her reason.

mdition.

night In the court j ,inl of the priaoB. > Chinese, who always- pickle an nmpu-few fret frbm the cells in which the \ tated member to bave it i,uri,-.l with-nr men- ll.-rrrnlte. Acevedo. Jo*« j them when they eventually die. Inorre*. Ramon Troche Cadeno and J this, imtaDce , the family being1 poor

Juan TorreB^nere confined. j and a whole leg belnff difficult toPriest* werr with each of the con- I pickle, tbe simpler Course «-*• take*

aenncd men until tbe end, leading: j of poisoning the boy, so that be andi bis l*g might jro togvtbvr.—Ciarin-

aati Enquirer.

I e n e o Tea a«« Black Tr-.t The difference in color" batwi

I grrvn and black tea ha* been aacvl!to various causes. Recently Mr. &

. of the agricultural college at Tokyo,ha. in<«*ti|catetl the anhjecV and hoffers, in tubxtancr, the fallow!pianation: In malting trrern tleaves are steamed an soon a*ered; in the case of black tea t

1111 IUSpeaker*. Addr-MMd L^alOongre«»tionB on Workj'of

League in New Jersey.

WHAT IT HAS

L*TH BT GABOTTE.rib Are Executed In tb,

or Porto Rico)tern to the. scaffold. When trument ti:it! been adjuEted to their•el;*, all of{ the prifoners, wbo hac

previously denied (heir crimes, mad.' »k>n*.

t Torrrn. who hart heeome. a fanatlcal Epirilualist. vioientjy resisted

TtemptB to adjut.t tbe frarTqte. and in-ttetl (hat b* ,-h.Mil.l die with his fiicovered. tt waa IS minute* befi

They a * n M put to death within SOminute*, an.l the average time taken

B), it is thou|rbt. suffered pain,

ign violent twitching* of the limbscn&tixrued fotr" a minute or two after-ward.

Evidence it lh< trial of the menhowed that • band of about !5 wento the ],• r3 ,- of Delgado and calledip*a hint to open the door in the namef the American police and municipal

in! jT*. Whr* J Ica.i,, ripened the d<i*bed h the hoi B*i

seized Deljrado and aboot >is otber*.• men were lied to the stain lead-•i the tonf. The women were locked> a roi..m. white two of the bandit*

took Delgad* into a «he<! atijoining theonse. aad, »fter tying Mm band andlot, hung nfm up In the feet.They then: beat him and cut off hi*i n , afterward putting • rope aroundisnieck n.m! hanging liira to one of the(ants. Kei!<-1 in thrmorningnf Oc->ber 1. of *lranRnIatkrn.In the mlantiine the othri bandit*'ere rnmaafcfng the honse. After•veral attarkK npiin the wonien. thel td departed withtheirstAlengood*.

DR. W0ODROW WILSOH.

IhT. Woodfow UiUon. who has juaten ebosell president of Princetoniversit.v, ip the place of Dr. Francis

U. P«tton. i i a well-known jurist, his-a and i«m » nf It-tters. and at pres-

„_. profesabr of jurixjirritenee andloUttcs in ifrincetoD. l ie won tn.ru atitaantos.. Vs.. Deceinher L-. 1 v.r,. His.

r general of Caid by an evil infl

his yamen »i , rh ; in Onecaused the death of his «daughter

It w . . i r » iti_.Mr. Williams (Fanny1* a.lmirer)—Is

lour siatah going to the seaaid* thistummab. Tommy?

tommy—That all depends an you.I heard ma aay if yon and Fannywere engaged before the season•peaed there wouldn't b* any senseIn her going.—Stray Stories.

OUW •( K » n Wrltlaa*.The oldest piece of writing- In the

world U n i t fragment of a vase foundIt Nippur. It i. an inscription in pic-ture writing and date* 4,SOD year* bc-Fore Chriit. Tb* fnirer.itj of Peu-tylvaula has securtd ft

VVben folk* KBy they cannot be flat-tre.l It te the ant sign that it I*eginning tu take effect.—Wasbltig-c-n (la.) Democrat.

ome men would be all right if theynot talk,—Washington (la.) Dem-

0BH

father, JoMph K. \\ ilson, »a« & prom-inent divine of the Southern Preaby-terian church, and wa* himself a nativeof Ohio. W.n-irmi Wilsoa studied inthe primary schools of Atlanta, Ga..and wa* later & student In Princeton,from whictt he wa* frraduated in 1H79.HeTtaext entered the law departmentof thm Cnivbr*ity of Virginia, andf sub-sequently began practice, but aban-doned it to take up general study inJohns Hopkinn. There he began hi*work In history and politic*, and in i<j*itook a portion as instroctor ia thesebranches in Bryn M;,n-r. Johns Bop-klna gave Urn Ph. D. in i—.0. in 1«SBhe became* member of th* familyorWealeyaa university, of Middletown,Conn., and ;19 year* afr» was called toth* chair at jurisjn-inlrnre at Prince-ton. Dr. Wilw.n has pabliahed "TheState Klemrnt* * "tical Politics.'Other Politic*atnrc." and '"historical aad 1the first American preside!besd of Princetn

p e d T h eof Historical and Prac-"An Old Master and

ferment befoi;*that

goriginal tea-leaf pos*edizing- enaymoe which is destroyed' inthe green tea by steaming. In black

i, durinjr fermenfoiiii;if» the tannfi

Yofcth'* Catnpar

is the fir>: lime 1 ever sablack chip* b> * mme of poker."

-W.-il." said Broncho hoi., "thewas two of th* best fellers you «*

g-ot the drop on each other sort.jltaneons the other day. They

botb arrivei) over a year a^o an* ihe\got into a divpnte about which wi

• i.l.-i inhabitant of CrlmatGulch, an' th* r».i thins us innoce;bystandem knew, we had to send eaifur bullet proof shirts. Itut finallyibey met. rice to face."

"Itut the Mste-fc poker chips?"The blnck pohft chips! Oh. yes.

They both Mtvnd miRbty hlRh in thi:nity. an* n« fellers thought iIy pi

t b ep

mip* line." —

The oabout to| boy ra

"Sir. 1thi* traigot any

Then.

T i n Be Raa.her day. jusi a* •go out «I Broadn up to a ticket

tterVa two meL. and? *eitber o

feeing >1* Info

Mrt-iinapt

•raioeof

* H

rain wtsUtio

ellnythem hi

• tandin

•n^tne!" shouted the boy.—

declared the temperance question »be of equal import an tm to the ejmrobas h*tme miisiOD*. He deploredl th*lack of temperance sertaon* in tb*cbnrches and stated that they slumldb* give* at frequent interval*, j

In the United Utataa, he said, tbere*2UKtM»licens«d drlnkiag plao4»and

the only way to root out th* evil i*-"I the church and Jean* OhrlM.

The ohareh i* a saloon'* recoghizedand naMt fornildabl« enemy anU'theformer, ho aaid, could not afTord torelax an* moment in tbei *tmgg|e for•upremacy.

" iv. J. B. Brittain, superintendentthe New' Jersey Anti-3 iloon

League,*«OBpt*d th» pnlpit at Ti mityReformed church yesterday mo ulnfc

'• a *tr»Bg talk ou th* wt rk oftbeleagM.

Brlttaia rcUt«d lotereitli g in-cident* of tbe work in -Mew J*r**j.eapeoially ia New Braatwict and

~ r where an aggteafive • cam-paign agahMt tbe saloon* ts now WineproMouted. He told of tbe laagtfe and

its orKaaiBation in every Slate inh« Onion, the irtea being to combine

a strong fore* of temperance wdrkert-or the purpose of securing looak op-Ion In w r y place.

Th* speaker stated that it wa* in- 'tended to pteaeiit a local option l>i 11before the last Legislature, Imt this

Ttntcd for good roaaons. i It ia-jroposed to- work earneatl^ dnriUg tbe

ulng yaar and wben th* Legiajator*iv«ne» best winter have everythingreadin*** to preaent tho Mil Ac

h* Old** Of the service Mr. Brittain

•al.of.a foi

ity.

A fun? shui profeisolly caHed in. He looked ore

intj deefded the evil influ-he roof of the library o

The roof, which wa» I'. was at once removed ar.iX replaced by n flat op*.-[ Press.

tfiade a- pl»a for snbscripttoi

A scheme U on foot to create anland in tbe center of the Xafce ofeuchatel, in Switzerland- La theLiddle of the lake there Is • sub-lerged wouniain six or senen feet

lountain that the island will be con-tracted. A larpe hotel will be erect.1 on the island. The capital, which. already subscribed, irffl eooie from

Enjflainl and America.—X. T. SUD.

X»< Afraid mt Antoi«altlle<"It be afraid of auiiimohilrtV

Iderly lady iinly hoi

Id be foi

**Sot a bit!" respondc* the livery-m o . reas*uriD?:y. :'Th* only th in Sfcat might make him Bay a little would»aLto come suddenly upon some vehicleteing drawn by a bone , but that im't

at all likeIy-"-Chic*p» Trlbuor.

The c00 of tmountnd impuri

B»7. If Iera t ion*

—WashiGf

Da-ties aa Tea*.as dutirs on the *ll,noo,-iportei] into thfs country

£9,000.000. All adulteratedteas are exploded fromtbi* country by thKt*a

i»w. which w*» passed iaa is adulterated the adul-re added ia this country,^n Sttr.

Th* OM ain*.Mr. Kooceet—I expect to be famous

atae day becauae I ana Indujtriona.Mr. Tweedles—So do I, but I don't

iaie my claim on being Industrious.**On what, then, pray?"-I was bortt in a log home."—Obio

itate Journal.

Wicks—Oh. be heard that * womansaid about him yesterday: "What a

ty man he Is!"—SognerviiU Jour-

LriiiBs HI*. D M . ttmrnr.*—Sow. dear, break the new* of

ur eKfafesMBi gently to papa.He—How ahall laUrt in?"Ob! Ton m-^ht beffin bv *.yia>

aaMIh*veJ««tdJ*dI-—Pack.

PLANS TO INTRODUCE BILL IN LEGIS-

LATURE THIS COMIKG 'WMTEJl.

Addresse* Were Mad* at al*rar*e* ' • • « » • K., Trinity BefvraUd,» U i t Baptist and Grace- M. •

Churrhri Whil Wu>'M.ii|.

A* a result of th* crnaade inaikgar-Mfd by the New Jem-y Anti-8MoonLeague, many of the local cbureh>a *tBanday '• service* devoted {the k**alMBW to temperance addnaw* leajl by

" era of that organi*ation. | Allwall attended and from tkU u .

tem*t taken like MTTJ.-C. will be heldtb* near future.

3B* of tb* strongest adUr«i*> by Bev. C. K Berger, of jl

ton, ai th* Uonrod Avetaut 'oliurvh, in the morning. AftereraMag liquor traffic flguna Ithe: hold It has npon the c n try, be

tb thework. Oa*da were diatribnted th|roughhe oongNgation and ttos* plreaent«re asked to give aomeihing tuwsr.iipporU*g the l*agne.Similar sermon*, varying bnt| littlet their general import^- were Ibeard; thfi First Baptist church, Lhereev. Dr. Clark *poke. and Unkee M.

K rliareli where Rev. U.| L. Bobthbv.York, made the 4ddrea*i

NOAH DOVE'S OfFICEHS.

Wev* Elected at Meeting of «*>is £ • - .

Aa th* | meeting'of Noah Dole ED-taspment. No. 2H, I. 0. tu Fi, but

wa*k tb« following ofncern weretooted for tbe ftnaningi y*ar:| Ci.nt

Patriarch. Edward Bowman; higharieat, Joasph Perry; *ea*ar ifmrden,Kdward ScbrinK: writ*. Jolm WU-

i; nnanoUl scribe. Will tarnWyokoff: junior warde*. Albert Paag-

Tb* installation will takb alacehe a n t meeting in JaiyJ

TM new paraphernalia wa* rvwivedid accepted. It la considered] to be

1M finest of any In Ibe State. -It will>e uaed at the neit mMting Ibr the

No Iioager Thai Vrinr wind_ the spot in yonr bach diretftly af-eoted by lumbago. Bui it |ii bit

gh to proMrate row until • kindd rnb* Perry Davte' Pai&killrr

nto your aching Oeah.. Then thehrobbins: pain, which baa bpen a*ad aa toothache, dies .away. . Pain-Uler is equally good iu relievingdatica and the variatu fotms ofjeumatlam. SB and SO ct. bottles.

Sine Iilv** IiMt. |Nine live* were ground ont of « -

itence by a troU*y oar on Watelinnjranna*, Friday *nnln«. Th^y be-longed to a large Malta** cat ownedby Mrs. Lewi* Leonard,[Df North ave-on«, wbo valued th* feline higlly.

LotikiDK at Material, iMayor Smailey. of tb* brohitoct C. H..Smitk *

bridge Friday aftemonai. Inspect innualltie* of briak to be used In tbe

casement construction of th* aeyr tinengine honse. j |

Small-Pox at Mvtacbrn.Tliere I* a alight epidemic off *mall-Nt at Metucben, when one 6>ats ii•ported. T i m are atiU two case* of

be diaeu* In th* same family.

la Porto Rico. the murder of Antoafto Delgado de r.no. at Guayo. near Ad Jualaa. aod the robbery sod III treal- BV**m Addr^Md Local Concretion, on Work **

L~«u« In Mow Jtrur WHAT IT HA8 DONE PLANS TO INTRODUCE BIU IN LtGIS

LATUK THIS CONING WIN TCP

had given him arsenic. Her reason, II la supposed. lo prewot hex . mu from the disgrace of reaching «he | I next world in a maimed roaditioa 1 This la a very itronr point with lb/ . Chiaeae, who always pirhle an amps- ! tated member to hare it buried with I them when they eventually die. la | ‘ thin instance* the familj being poor J and a whole leg bring difficult to 1 pickle, the simpler course was taken | of poisoning the boy. so that he aod . , h*. leg might go together.—Oaaa* Mil Esquirer.

the night o/ September 30. JAM The sc* gold was erected during the night In the *«'urt yard of the prison, n few feet from the eel Is in which the four men—Bernabe. Ace redo. Joae

Signature

the green tea by * It* min*. I tea. daring fermentation, the oxidises the tannin and* git to a browwlNh-colored pn Youth's Companion. them to the scaffold. When strament had been adjusted necks, all o4 the prUoners, i preciously denied their crime confeusions ed but Ismely until the delegates hind led the pipe of peace. At the fifth meeting, little progress haring been made. Seaor Rios, on behalf of his colleagues, proposed an escape from the formal atmosphere -1 hare ob- serred." he said, "that the American

“This la the first time I erer saw black chips la a game of poker." “Well." said Broncho Rob. “there was two of the best fellers you erer saw got the drop on each other sorter simultaneous the other day. They both arrtred orer a year ago an* they got Into s dispute about which was the oldest inhabitant of Crimson Gulch, an' the fust thing us luuocenl bystanders know, we had to send east fur bullet proof shirts. Ihit Anally they met. fare to face." “But the lilac* poker chips?" “The black poker chip*! Oh. yes. They both »t#*>d mighty high In this community, an* m fellers thought it

lb the United States, he said, them *ro2iflvOCOlicensed drinking plar^aui the only way to root out ths a til t» through the church and Jesus Christ The church la a saloon's recognized and moat formidable enemy anil the foitner, ha said, could not affofd to reins an# moment la the struggle fhr

natiral spiritualist, riolchtly resisted attempts to gdjust the garrore. and in- sisted that h|e should die with his face aneorered It was 15 minutes before They we re la U put to death within SO rinutes. and the average lime taken

Xoae. R It thought, suffered pula, as death was practically instantaneous, though violent twitchings of the limbs continued for a minute nr two after- B*v. J. R. Brittain, supertntetdent of the Ifew Jersey Anti Saloon League. accepted the pulpit at Trinity Keformed church yesterday morning aod gave a stroog talk ob *he work of

frequenlly decided Rririrnrc it the trial of the mea showed that a band of about *5 went to the hnmtr of Delgado and called upon him to open the door la the name of the American police sad municipal Judge When Delgado opened the door the outlaws rushed into the house and seined Delgado and about alx others. The men were t led to the stalra lead- ing to the fsaf. The women were locked up in a ropns. while two of the bandits took Delgado Into a rhed adjoining the house, a ad. after tying him hand and foot, hung Wib up by the feet. They then beet him and cut off hi* ears, afterward pottieg a rope around hla neck aotfhanglag him to one of the beam*. He died In the morning of Oc- tober I. of strangulation. la the BifsBlime the othei bandits were ransacking the bouse. After several attack* upon the women, the babd deported with their stolen goods.

The other day. Just as a train was about to go out of Broad street statloa, - boy ran up to a ticket Inspector, and whispered: "Sir. there's two men traveling In this train, ainf neither oar of them has got any tickets!" Then, seeing hla Informer standing near the entrance to the station, he ahooted: “Where are the two men without tickets?" “On the engine!" shouted the boy.— N. E. Herald.

The speaker staled that it waa in- tended to present a local option bill before the last Legislator*, but this waa prevkamd foe good reasons. It- la proposed to work earnestly during the oarping year aod when the Legislature oourenea next winter hare everything In read loses to present the bill A* the close of lbe service Mr. Brittain made a plea foe subscriptions tb the work. Coeds were distributed through

While those Hillside. J. W. Baker. Howard Wright i W. L. Giaour. If. P. Buffers. *. Robert Abbott Morris Dumont.

of lyddite wei —London Special -What seem, to be the matter, do- tor?" asked the slrk man', wife as she waylaid him la the hall. “Stomach trouble." replied tbe pill dispenser. “What he needs la a change. 1 don't believe the water here agree* with him." “Water authlag!" exclaimed the wife, ia a tone that waa calculated to choke off any further argument. “I don't believe he has tasted a drop of

was finally the city, bi Dn Woodrow Wilson, who has Just been rhoaea president of Princeton university, in the place of Dr. Francis L. Patton, i* a well-known Jurist, his- torian and man of letter*, and at pres- ent prufe.Mir of Jurisprudence and politics la Princeton, lie was horn at btauatou. \>- December T% 1AM IIR

laagraaffr*- The roof, w peaked one. was at once i is now being replaced by lloug-Koug Press. As ArtMelat talas*. A scheme u on foot to create an Island in the center of the J.ake of Xeuchatel. la SwIUerlaud. la the middle of the lake thdre la a sub- merged anountaln alx or semi feet below the water, and it la aa thla mountain that the Island wilt be coa* at meted. A large hotel will he erect- ed oa the island. The capital, which is already subscribed. will come from England and America.— N. Y. 8un.

M Afraid af Autsssoblles. "It he afraid of automobiler; the elderly lady ashed the !nermau who had the onlj horse that could be found in lows, for it was the yea# 1®I6. **Xot a bit!" responded the livery^ mao. reassuringly. rThe only thing that might make him shy a little would ba| to come suddenly upon some vehicle being drawn by a horse, but that Isn't •1 all likely."~Chlcngo Tribune. The customs duties on the II 1,000,- OOO of tea imported into this country amount to S9.ttri.000. All adulterate and impure teas arc rxcladcd from coming into this country by thfvte* inspection law. which »»» passed la 1MT. If tea la adulterated the adul- terations are added In this conn try -Washicgton scar.