ACCIDENT OBLMTIONS ORCHARD IS AGAIN PUT OF POLICE ...

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Weather to-m orrow ; Probably fair.

LAST EDITION.

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N U M B E R 7.341

E R P L O ^ A C C ID E N T OBLMTIONS

Roosevelt, a t Jamestown, Also Talks on Income and In<

heritance Taxes.

N E W A R K . N. J ., M O N D A Y , J U N E 10, 1907.— E IG H T E E N P A G E S . TW O C E N T S

SN A PSH O TS O F F L A G RAISING PROG RA M IN C O N N E C T IO N W IT H O R A N G E C EN TEN N IA L I ~ l : - t

GEORGIA DAY, FDEET REVIEW

1. )

P r e « i l d « n t A g n i n V l » l t a V l r g l u l K F « t r A p k n o w l « < l g i n r n « n fO e o r g l B * * T r l b a t P l u I I U A o p e a * t o r * U a l l l u g f r u i u t b n t M h i t e —A r - f l T 9» o n t h e M a y f l o ^ F T P r « n d I n . ■ p e c U S « « o n d G r e a t G a t b e r t n g o f t h « W n r i h l p i o f f l e v e i i T V a t l o u i ,

EXPOSITION anoU N D S. Norfolk. Va*, June 10.—Bpou«ht back to the Jamee- town ExpoalUon i*y the fortnul opening of Bulloch Uall. the aiicestrnl of hin mother, a t Rnawell, Oa., hiiiI reproilured here as the Georgia s ta te building, Preel. dent Roosevelt to-day Ja, for the second time, the central figure of an attractive Gxpoaltlnn program. Outside of the fea­tures arranged tn connection with Uio celebration of Georgia Day. tho military and naval spectacle waa not greatly die- almllar to th a t which marked the visit of the President when the exposition Wh« thrown open, on April as. He will be the gueal 01 the exposition for nlHiut nluo hours, arriving with a special parts’. In- oliidlng Mrs. Runsevplt, un the May­flower, a t 8:20 A. M. After receiving the Georgia oniclala on, board nnd wHh iheni us his gueata, reviewed llu* flrels a^sem- hled In Hampton Rondn. he wuh ImihIcU ut the expoaltliin grxmnda at about 11 o'clock. lie niude a speech ns n. part of the Georgia Day cxercisea In the forenoon and will make another nt the couvenllon of the National Editorial Aaaoclatlon in the Auditorium In the afternown. He re­viewed the parade of the m ilitary and naval ‘foreea, vlelted the negro exhibit, participated In the preeentatkm of :i hIU ver service by the State of Georgia to tho battleship named for her, attomled a reception given at the Georgia building by Georgians nlone In honor of himself nnd Mrs. Roosevelt, and visited Informal­ly tho New York State building. He will depart for W^ashlnglon a t about 5 o’clock.

The weather provided another Roose­velt day. There were ju st enough clouds to break tho heat of the sun and yet leave the day bright and clear. From early morning ovary street car and boat arriv­ing a t the exposition groimda deposited hundreds of passengare a t the gates.

F k lr 'a G rc a le e t A ttendance* Every part of the exposition grounds

except the "W ar P a th ," the sideshow* place, was covered by the President In his BtronuouB day. The New York build­ing and the Georgia building and negro exhibit are situated a t extreme opposite ends of the grounds, and the reviewing stand and the auditorium, where the speeches wero made, are In about the cen­tre of the grounds. The reaer^’aflon was throngtid with the greatest attenflanco since the opening of the exposition, and the president was given a reception fully as enthusiastic as th a t accorded him on the occasion of his first visit.

I t was a distinguished party th a t re­viewed the assembled w ar vessels from the Mayflower. Immediately upon the arrival of that vessel the party of Secre­tary of the Navy Metcalf was transferred from the Dolphin* The others to loin the President were Governor J. M. Ter- rett, of Georgia, and W . N. Mitchell, of the;"4«orgta S tate Conrmlsslon.

Passing over the same course as when I he visited the exposition on the opening day, the President reviewed the fleets

jo f seven nations, six in addition to the I United States. The sea fighters were in gala attire, the flags of the different

< countries represented m aking a striking I picture. As the Mayflower steamed down ; the long column of vessels, each In turn i greeted the President, who occupied the bridge of his trim yacht, with a salute of twenty-one guns.

The foreign vessels had the positions ot . honor In a lino nearest and parallel to

the exposition grounds and were reached first by the Mayflower, eo th a t their guns were the first to be heard in eound-

I Ing their salutation. E ither black or dark drab, tho vessels Of Austria-Hungary, Brasil, France, Italy, the Netherlands and Portugal appeared In sharp contrast to

! tbe Atlantic fleet of ijilrty-three fivessels under the command of Rear Admiral Evans, these ships being dressed In the usual peace paint o f white for the hulls and buff for the superstructure.

Each foreign and American ship manned the rails as the President posued In re­view. Completing the circuit the May-

I flower came to her anchorage within the . group of flagships and Immediately the , President received on board the flag offl-

tContlnued on fith page, 3d column.)

SEA DISASTER IN WEST INDIES

I Twenty-eight Passengers, In­cluding Twelve Women and

Children, l^ s t on Ship.

,THE CREW SAVE THERSELVES

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ORCHARD IS AGAIN PUT

Subjected to Gruelling Interro­gations Concerning P lots;

Offers Explanations.

CONSULTS WITH DETECTIVE

f l a y s H e H a s T a l k e d w i t h M o P a r t - l a n d a n d f l t a t e l / a v r y e r S t f i c e H e B e g a n t o T e l l I l l s f l t o r y ^ H e f l a y s H e N o w H a t G o t R e l i g i o n a n d I t G i v e s H i m S t r e n s f h t o T e l l A H H e K n o w s - H e A g a i n T e l i a o f t h e M i n e B l o w i n g P l o t s .

B O I 8 E , J u n e ID .—T h e d e f e n d e r s o f W i l l ­i a m D. H a y w o o d , r o n t l n n l n c j h e i r c r t)a a - c x a m i n a t l o n o f H r i r r y O r e h t i T d , a r e m a k ­in g a s t r o n g a t t e m p t t o s h o w t h a t t h e In d e p e n d e n c e S t a t i o n o u t r a g e I n s t e a d o f b e i n g p r o c u r e d b y t h e W e s t e n i F e d e r a t i o n o f M i n o r s , w a s a " p l a n t ' ' o f th e e n e m le a o f t h e f e d c r a t l g n , I n t e n d e d t o b e c o m ­p a r a t i v e l y l i a n n l e s s , a n d c o n v e r t e d . b y m is c h a n c e i n t o a g r e a t t r a g e d y .

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H l a E x p l M i m t i o B .O r c h a r d , t n e x p l a n a t i o n o f h i s a c t ! t i

s e t t i n g o f f t h e m i n e b e f o r e t h e t r a i n a r ­r i v e d . s w o r e t h a t S h e r m a n P a r k e r , o f t h e W e s t e r n F e d e r a t i o n o f M i n e r s , h a d a f r i e n d o n t h e t r a i n —o n e B u s h —w h o h a d p r e v i o u s l y b e e n a f r i e n d l y w i t n e s s I n t h e t r a i n w r e c k i n g c a s e , a n d a s k e d t h a t c a r e b e t a k e n n e t I n j u r e h i m . O r c h a r d a l s o d e n ie d t h a t t h e m i n e o w n e r s o r t h e r a i l ­r o a d d e t e c t i v e m a n a g e r a h a d p l a n n e d t h e e x p l o s i o n .

T h e d e fe n s e h a d p r e v i o u s l y s h o w n t h a t , a s f a r a s t h e w i t n e s s k n e w , M o y e r , H a y ­w o o d a n d P e t U b o n e h a d n o t h i n g t o d o w i t h t h e V i n d i c a t o r p l o t , a n d t h a t M o y e r a n d H a y w o o d h a d n o t h i n g t o d o w l l U p l a n n i n g t h e m u r d e r o f L y t e G r e g o r y .

O r c h a r d s a id h e b e l ie v e d t h a t t l i e y w e r e p a r t i e s t o b o t h p l a n s , b u t h e c o u l d n o t , o f h i s o w n k n o w l e d g e , s a y t h a t t h e y w e r e ,

T h e d e fe n s e m a d e a t t e m p t s t o s h o w t h a t O r c h a r d Is t e s t i f y i n g u n d e r t h e c o a c h i n g a n d c o n t r o l o f D e t e c t i v e M c P a r l a n d , b u t t h i s t h e w i t n e s s d e n ie d w i t h s p i r i t , s a y i n g M c F a r l a n d a n d A t t o r n e y H a w l e y h a d c a u t i o n e d h i m t o t e ll n o t h i n g b u t t h e t r u t h .

I n t h e c o u r s e o f t h e c r o s s - e x a m i n a t i o n O r c h a r d a d m i t t e d h e h a d b u r n e d h i s c h e e s e f a c t o r y , n e a r B r i g h t o n , I n C t a n a d a , a n d c o lle c te d lio o I n s u r a n c e .

S t e v e A d a m s , t h e a l le g e d a s s o c i -

OF POLICE

Supreme Court Refuses to Quash Bills Against Castle,

Kroeger and Gardner.- - - - - - - j

TRIALS NOW LIKELY TO 0 ON

CENTENNIAL OF ORANGE UNDER WAY

E ag Raising, Patriotic Exer­cises in Theatre and Special Church Services Yesterday.

OLD GLORYFOR COLUMBUS H AU

Em hlem , the Gift <if .Ml, Pntrtek'B .illlu n cr . In Aerepted by Rev, HttglS P. F irm ing, W hn H e r m t« 1li« King BN t'on iirctln g M ilk BrttveeB Cliarc'b mid flrhunl'-PnNlurs UmiB T hrir flerninui i>n ih r One Hun* dredtii Blrthduy of flobnrbnii City*

CORSET STEEL CONVERTED INTO RAZOR AND 50 PRISONERS GET SECRET SHAVE

BURGLAR DUEL AMID DARKNESS

H an Fires Four Shots a t In­truder, Who Replies with

One and Esapes.

L E H HIS BOOTY BEHIND

C o m m l k N l o i i e r N , H a y i t h e C A n r l | M n y B # J o i n t l y I n d i c t e d t o r T t i e i r P u b l i c D u t y b n f l n e h —D m l n L t b « t N i r g l e c t o f R a e l i I « N r r c H N a r l l r f l e p a r B l e O f f e n s e —D l N p o r n l o f T r c l i - n i c n l L e g a l O u c N t l o n s H n l s e i l b y C o n n H c l I n M a d e I n t h e S y l l n l M i s * |

N O R R I S T O W N , P a . , J u n e 10- W h e n W a r d e n G o t w a l s , o f t h e c o u n t y J M l . re *

'le a s e d a n u m b e r o f r r l a o n e r s f r o m th e s h o r t - t e r m d e p a r t m e n t y e a t e r d a y . he f o u m l t h a t t h e y a l l p o s s o s s e d a S u n d a y « h a v e . w h e r e a t h e w a s g r e a t l y pii a x le d . W h e n c o m m l t e d e a c h o f t h e p rle o n e rs w o r e a w c e k 'a g r o w t h o f b o a r d n n d t h e w a r d e n e x p e c t e d t o se e t h e m m lo r n u d w i t h g o o d l y w h l B k e r s a f i r r a. o o n lln e in e n t o f t h i r t y d a y s . A l l h u d h e e n r e lie v e d

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l i k e a r a x i i r a n d it w h s n o t lc»hg b e fo r e h o h a d r e m o v e d t h e b e a r d s f r o m a l l th e

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B A R B A D C E S , J u n e l O . - T w e n t y - e l g h t p a s s e n g e r s . I n c l u d i n g t w b l v e w o m e n a n d c h i l d r e n , w e r e d r o w n e d b y t h e s i n k i n g o f t h e F r e n c h s c h o o n e r L a J a l o u a e , f r o m C a y e n n e f o r S t . L u c i a ,

T t ] e s c h o o n e r s a n k o f f B a r b o d o e a l a s t F r i d a y n l g i i t ,

T h e c a p t a i n a n d t w e n t y - o n e m e n re a c h e d B a r b a d o e s y e s t e r d a y .

COUNT BONI WINS HIS DIVORCE SUIT APPEAL

H udaiun U on ld Alaat A v n ln F lK h t C u e In P reneb C o sr t,—W ill

T a k e L o u k T l u e .Bptcial Cahle |)i«potcA to tAo

P A R I S , J u n e 30, —T h e C o u r t 6f A p p e u l e t o - d a y ( r a n t t 'd t h e a p p e a l o f C o u n t B o n i

. P e C a e to ll a n e a n d h te o r e d l f o r a o g a i n a t t h e v e r d i c t o f d i v o r c e g r a n t e d M a d a m e G o u l d , B o n I'fl f o n n e r w i f e . A n e w h e a r - l i i A h e f o r e H i t h e r j u d t e i h a a h e e h o r ­d e r e d .

B y t h e a c t i o n o f t h e C o u r t o f A p p e a l s t o - d a y M a d a m e G o u l d w i l l l u i v e t o m a k e b e r f i g h t f o r s e p a r a t i o n f r o m B o n f a l l o v e r , T h e c a s e w i l l n o w t o b e f o r e h i g h e r J u d g e s , w h o w i l l e i t h e r e H l n u o r o v e r r u l e t h e f o r m e r d c e le lo n .

T h o p e w l i e a r J n g w i l l p r o b a b l y n o t c o m e u p f o r a t l e a s t a y e a r , a n d I n t h a t t i m e M a d a m e G o u l d m u g t l i v e i n t h e u n e e r - t s J n t y o f n o t I c n o i ^ n g w h e t h e r s h e la d i v o r c e d . A n a p p e a l h a e n l a o bei^n a l ­lo w e d In t h e c a s e s o f c r e d i t o r s o f B o o l , w h o s e c l a im s w e r e s b t f W - - e j g , ,t i m e t h e d e c re e o f d i V o r c w a s g n , » , . . . a m s 'G o u l d .

( C o n t i n u e d o n 2d p a g e , U K e o i u i p b A

DIDN'T SURVIVE HUSBAND LONG

Widow of Supreme Court Jus­tice Abram Q. Garretson

Also Dies of Pnetmumia.

HAD BEEN ILL BUT A FEW DAYS

■eaatee PreUwtrbureen H ecav«rla« .C t U C A O t t J u n e 10. —S t a t e S e n a t o r

J o s e p h a . F r e l l d g h u y s e n , o f N e w J e r s e y , S u b j e c t o f o n o i K r a t U m f o r a p p e n d l c l f t t ' i n a h o te l h e r e l o j V w e e b . Is r e ^ r t e d b y b i s p h y s i c i a n s t o - d a y t o b e I n e x c e l l i n t c o n d i t i o n a n d r a b i d l y r e c o v e r i n g .

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- ■ ---- > fruit Msrtet St. SU f. n s Bread sU Newark.;

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S p e c fe l B U p a f i 'h fo the B V E S im XEWB. ■ M O R R I S T O W N , J u n e 10— M r s . A b r a m

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t t Is b e l ie v e d t h a t h e r e lc k n e s e w a e s u ­p e r in d u c e d b y t h e s h o c k o f t h e a u d d e n d e a t h o f h e r h u s b a n d o n J u n e ! , w t i l c l j w e e f o l l o w e d b y a s l i g h t c o l d , p n e u m o n i a d e v e l o p i n g l e s t F r i d a y .

M r s . Q a r r e t s o n w a s a n a t i v e o f P h l l a d - d . p h i a , t h e d a u g h t e r o t J o s e p h a n d M a r y B o k e r , o f t h a t c i t y . j

M r s . 'G a r r e t e o n w a s p r o m i n e n t In s o ^ d o t y h e r e a n d f f tr o o u s f o r h e r f r e q u e n t e n t e r t a i n m e n t s , f a i r h o m e , “ B u n n y m e d e ," b e i n g m a d e b r i g h t a n d b o s p l t e b l e t o a n u r u u s ii n l d e g r e e b y m a n y I n f o n n a l t u n e t l o n s : S h e w a s a m e m b e r - o f t b e N e w J e r s e y S o ­c i e t y o f C o l o n i a l G a m e s a u d a c t i v e ' I n m a n y c h a r i t a b l e w o rlc s .

B h e le a v e s t h r e e c h i l d r e n , J o s e p h B . , J o s e p b l n e B . a n d H e l e n , t h e l a s t n a m e d a t m a t t e n d i n g s o b o o L .

T h e h o m e o f t h e G g r r e t s o n f a m i l y w a s b u i l t b y J u s t i c e a n d M r s . Q a r r e t i o i l a b o u t t w e t v s y e a r s a g o . I f Is c o m l i i u d l u n s , la I n t h e o o l o n la l s t y l e o f a r c h i t e c t u r e a n d s e t a I n s p a d o n s g r o u n d s .

T h e f u n e r a l s e r v i c e s w i l l b e h e l d W e d r n e s d a y m o r n i n g , a t 0 o 'c l o c k ; I n S t . P e t e r ’ s C h u r c h . .

WOUNDED BY BULLET FROM OWN REVOLVER

IToiuig H a a W as O le a a la g W s a g o a I t ' W a s '.A e o ld e a ta l lr

■ 4 l ^ > » h o l u u q r « i l .J o M p b S w e l g « n , iW e n t y ^ ^ K v e n y e a r f l

olds O f 62 B r i l t f t r e e t , w h l l « c l e a i U n g «r e v o l v e r a t h te h o m « t h i s • a f t e r n o o n , : i c - c l d e n t o U y h l m a e i r . T h je b u l l e t to d jg ^ d i n b i s A b d o m e n .

Tlie Third Prccindt |»]icA took him i6 6 t r Jam ea 't Hospital, where tt woo de< elded to operato oti hltn' a t dnee. Th« znaii's a)ndltlon to ' . * /4 '

T»*c Goai4«r Poata*W rsw i, Bot4 Carts. Asb * r iiiin n iiu^

5pertal Didpflich in the EVF^'fSO SfiWB, T R E N T O N , J u n e W . - T h e S u p r e m o

C o u r t t o - d a y . In a n o p in io n b y J u s t i c e f l w a y z e , r e fu s e d t o q u a s h t h e I n d i c t m e n t s f o r n o n f e a s a n c e In o ffle o f o u n d b y t h e E w e x C o u n t y G r a n d J u r y a g a i n s t P o l ic e C o m m i s s i o n e r F r e d e r i c k C a B l l e , o f N e w ­a r k , a n d h lS f o r m e r s s a o d r ite a o n th e b o a r d , H e n r y K , G a r d n e r a n d F r e d v r l c U W . K r o e g e r .

T h e v a l i d i t y o f t h e b ill s w a s q u e s t io n e d b e c a u s e t h e g r a n d J u r y h a d b e e n I m p a n ­e le d u n d e r a l a w p r o v i d i n g f o r s i x w e e k s ' s e r v i c e a n d h a d c o n t i n u e d t h e i r l a b o r s b e y o n d t h a t p e r i o d .

J u s t i c e 8 w n y s c 's o p i n i o n d is p o s e s o t t h o t e c h n i c a l l e g a l q u e s t i o n s b y c o u n .s e l f o r t h e in d i c t e d m e n in t h e s y l l a b u s , w h i c h s a y s :

" U n d e r t h e a c t o f 1903 tn c o u n tlc a w h e r e a n e w g r a n d j u r y Is a u t h o r i s e d , g r a n d J u r o r g B u m m o n e d i t o a t t e n d a t t h e o p e n in g o f t h e c o u r t a r e t o s e r v e u n t i l t h e n e w g r a n d J u r y a p p e a r s .. " T h e o r d e r o f t h e c ^ u r t d i r e c t i n g t h e

s h e r i f f t o a u i m n o n a n e w g r a n d J u r y p u r ­s u a n t t o t h e a c t n e e d n o t be file d w i t h t h e c l e r k .

" A n I n d i c t m e n t w h i c h d e s ig n a te s a h o u s e b y i t s s t r e e t n u m b e r n e e d n o t s e t f o r t h t h a t n u m b e r In w o r d s a t l e n g t h ; I t Is a n a r b i t r a r y s y m b o l a n d s h o u ld b e a r t f o r t h In a c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h e f a c t .

" A n I n d i c t m e n t w h i c h c h a r g e s p o lic e c o m m i s s i o n e r s h o l d i n g o ffic e u n d e r th e a c t o f BiSG. w i t h f a i l u r e t o I n q u i r e in to th e n e g l e c t a n d o m is s io n o f p o lic e o flic e r s u n ­d e r t h e i r c o n t r o l t o s u p p r e s s h o u s e s o f i l l - f a m e a n d g a m b l i n g lio u s e s , a n d t o d is c i­p l i n e a n d p u n i s h s u c h o f th e o ffic e r s a s w e r e g u i l t y o f n e g le c t o f d u t y . Is v a l i d .

'P o l i c e c o m m is s io n e r s m a y b e J o i n t l y I n d i c t e d f o r n e g le c t o f t h e i r p u b l i c d u t y a s s u c h .

' A n i n d i c t m e n t o f p o lic e c o m m ls F lo n e r v h o id lT ig o lllc e u n d e r t h e a c t o f 1S85 f o r f a i l u r e tp I n q u i r e I n t o t h e n e g le c t a n d o m i s s i o n o f p o li c e o ffic e rs u n d e r t h e i r c o n ­t r o l t o s u p p r e s s h o u s e s o f 111- f a m e a n d g a m b l i n g h o u s e s a n d t o d is c i p lin e a n d p u n i s h s u c h o f t h e o ffic e rs a s w e r e g u i l t y o f n e g l e c t o f d u t y , is n o t m u l l l f a r l o u a b e ­c a u s e i t B p e c ifle s m a n ,y s u c h h o u s e H ."

I n ' t h e b o d y o f h is o p in io n J u s t i c e f i w a y s e f i r s t d is p o s e s o f t b e t e c h n ic a l o b j e c t i o n s u r g e d a g a i n s t t h e In d ic t m e n ta ; a n d t h e n d is c u s s e s t h e I n d i c t m e n t s o n t h e i r m e r i t s . H e a a y s :

' T h e o t h e r o b j e c t i o n s g o t o t h e s u b ­s t a n c e o f t h e I n d l c l m e n t f l . T h e f i r s t la t h a t t h e B o a r d o f P o l ic e C o n n iT ls s lo n e rs w a s ft m e r e a d m i n i s t r a t i v e b n d y . n o t v e s t ­e d w i t h c r i m i n a l j u r i s d i c t i o n , n o t a u t h o r ­is e d t o Is s u e c r i m i n a l p ro c e s s e s o r t o a a n o t l o n o r a u t h o r i s e t h e r a i d i n g o f h o u s e s o f i l l f a m e o r g a m b l i n g h o u s e s .

T h i s o b j e c t i o n o v e r l o o k s t h e g r a v a ­m e n o f t h e c h a r g e . T h e g is t o f t h e f ir s t c o u n t is t h e w i l f u l l y Buffering a n d p e r ­m i t t i n g t h e s p e c ifie d h o u a e s t o b e k e p t m d m a i n t a i n e d w i t h o u t In t e r fe r e n c e o n

t h e d e f e n d a n t s ' p a r t , o r w i t h o u t p r o p e r , r ^ B o n a b l e - o r e f f e c t i v e o n d e a v o r , j n d w i t h o u t u s i n g a l l m e a n s In t h e i r p o w e r f o r t h e s u p p r e s s io n a n d p r e v e n t i o n t h e r e o f . T h e g i s t o f t h e s e c o n d c o u n t Is ,t h o f a i l u r e t o I n q u i r e I n t o t h e n e g le c t a n d q m t t s f o n o h t h e p a r t o f t h e p o lic e o ffic e rs t o s u p p r e s s t h e p u b l i c n u is a n c e s s e t f o r t h I n t h e i n d i c t m e n t a n d t o d is c i p lin e a n d p u n i s h s u o h o f t h e o ffic e rs as w e re g u i l t y o f it s g l e d t o r . d u t y . I f e i t h e r c o u n t Is T o o d , t h e m o t i o n t o q u a s h m u s t f u l l .

W i t h o u t d e c i d i n g w h e t h e r I t is t h e d u t y o f t h e ' p o l i c e ■ c o m m is s io n e r s t o u s e a n d e x e r c i s e d l l p o w e r , r e a s o n a b le a n d e ffe c ­t i v e m e a n s « n d a l l m e a n s w i t h i n t h e i r p o w e r f o r s u p p r e s s i n g h o u s e s o f T l l - f a m e a n d e n f o r c i n g t h e l a w s o f t h e S t a t e r e ­l a t i n g t h e r e t o a s s e t f o r t h in t h e f i r s t c o u n t , b u t w i t h o u t i n t i m a t i n g a n y d o u b t o s t o t h e v a l i d i t y o f t h a t c o u n t . I t is s u f f i c i e n t f o r t h e d e c is io n o f t h i s m o t io n t o e x a i f t l n e t h e s e c o n d c o u n t .

^’T b e s t a t u t e c r e a t i n g t h e B o a r d o f P o ­lic e C o m m i s s l o n e r a e n t r u s t s t h e m w i t h t h e ^ v e r n m e n k v c o n t r o l a n d m a n a g e m e n t o f I k e p o l i c e . d e p a r t m e n t a n d t b e d i r e c ­t i o n a n d c o n t r o l o f p o lic e m a t t e r s . T h e y a r e t l v e n f k l l p o w e r a n d r i g h t to s u s p e n d f t p d t o e x p e l o r 'd i s o h a n e e a n y p e r s o n e m ­p l o y e d o r a p p o i n t e d I n o r u n d e r t h e d c - p a r t m e h t , p r o v i d e d flfood c a u s e Is s h o w n s i f t e r a n I n v e s t i g a t i o n b y t h e b o a r d .

" W h a t e v e r m a y b e t h e p o w e r s o f t h e -p o lic e M ^ Bt4> p r e s ilo n o f h o u s e s o f I ll- f a m e , w e t h i n k t h a t I f t h e p o lic e fo rc e o f a c i t y w i l f u l l y .p e r m i t s s u c h h o y s p s to b e k e p t w i t h o u t li r t e r f e r e n c e . a s t h i s in ­d i c t m e n t e h a rg ^ ^ s . i t is .a t l e a s t t h e d u l y o f t h e p o l i c e c o m m i s s i o n e r s , c h a r g e d b y s t a t n t e i a s t h e y a r e w i t h t h e .d is c ip lin e o f t b e f o r c e , t o I h v e ^ i g a t e th e c o n d u c t o f t h e p o H e e u n d e r t h e i r c o n t r o l , a n d t h a t i f t h e p o l i c e c o m i r t l s t l o n e r s w i t h t h e k n o w l ­e d g e , w h i c h t h e i n d i c t m e n t c h a r f e s . t h e y h a v e w i l f u l l y n e g le c te d t o i n q u i r e I n t o th e c o n d u c t o f th q . p o l i c e -f o r c e I n p e r m i t t i n g iracS r 'p u h lle - n u i s a n c e , t h e y a r e t h e m ­s e l v e s g u i l t y o f . n e g l e c t o f a d u t y I m * p ogied u p o n t n e n i b y l a w . a n d a r e I n d i c t ­a b l e t h e r e f o r .

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PAYMENTS HAD BEEN HELD UP

T o d e t e r m i n e w h e t h e r c o n d ll lo u fl w a r - r u n t e d t h e w i t h h o l d i n g o f p a y m e n t s flu e t h e c o n t r a c t o r f o r w o r k d o n e , th e T u b - 11c B u i l d i n g C o m r a l t l e b o f t h e B o a r d o f F r o e h o l d e r s Is t o - d a y m a k i n g a n Insp e c - t l o n o f t h e n e w b u i l d i n g s f o r t h e O v e r ­b r o o k B r a n c h H o a p i t a l in V e r o i i u , I t w a s a t t h e s u g g e s t i o n o f C o u n t y E n g i n e e r G e o r g e F . D r u m t h a t t h e t r i p w s e a r ­r a n g e d , M r . D r u m h a d p r o m is e d t o a h o w t h e f r e e h o l d e r s " s o m e I n t e r e s t i n g d a t a ," b i t t o n j y t h r o e o f t h e m , M e s s r s , ( 'u a a c k , M c B r i d e a n d G a l l a g h e r , p u t i n a n a p p e a r ­a n c e .

B e s id e s t h e c o m m i t t e e m e n , C o u n t y t i u p e r v i s o r O t t e r b e l n , C o u n t y C o u n s e l C r a n e a n d F r e e h o l d e r W a t s o n w e n t a l o n g , a s d id M r . D r u m , H u r d & S u t t o n , th e a r c h i t e c t s f o r t h e b u i l d i n g s ; R i c h a r d E . H e n l n g h a m , t h e c o n t r a c t o r ; W i l l l a r n F . K l m b e r , M r . H ^ n l n g b a m 's c o u n s e l; A l d e r ­m a n W i l l i a n i P . M a r t i n , w h o ia s a id t o bo c o u n s e l f o r t h e a r c h i t e c t s ; W l l i U m U . S h a r w e l l . R a l p h B . S c h m i d t , J . C r o w e d M u n d y a n d a n e n g i n e e r n a m e d U l t c h c o o k , w h o Is e m p l o y e d b y t h e c o n t r a c t o r .

M r . D r u m p i l o t e d t h e p a r t y t o b u ild in g s N o . 3 e n d N o . 6 a n d d t n in g '- r o o m N o , 2. H e p o i n t e d o u t w h a t b e d e c la r e d w e r e d e ­f e c t s in c o n s t r u c t i o n , w h i c h . In h la o p i n ­i o n . J u s t i f i e d t h e c o m m i t t e e In w i t h h o l d ­i n g p a y m e n t s f r o m t h e c o n t r a c t o r ,

T h e c o u n t y e n g i n e e r s h o w e d w h e r e s to n e s h a d b e e n t a k e n f r o m t h e w a lls a n d r e p la c e d w i t h ‘ t i t h e r s . H e r e m o v e d s e v e r a l t o s h o w t h a t a p rtj|» e r b in d in g w a s l a c k i n g , a n d a s s e r t e d t h a t t h e w a l l w a s n o t I m p r o v e d b y t h e c h a n g e s . H e a ls o d e c la r e d t h a t t h e r e w a s n o t a s to n e v i s i ­b le t h a t c a m e u p t o I h o r o q u ir e m e n t s o f t h e s p e c i fi c a t i o n s , m m jt o f t h e m b e in g n e a r e r o n e f o o t t h a n t w o f e e t in l e n g t h . I t w a s p o i n t e d o u t b y M r D r u m t h a t t h e J o i n t s w e r e n e a r e r o n e a n d o n e - h a l f in c h e s w i d e t h a n t h e t h r e e - s i x t e e n t h s o f a n In c h c a lle d f o r i n t h e s p e c ifi c a t io n s , a n d he s a i d t h e b r i c k w o r k r a n n in e c o u ra e a to t w e n t y - f i v e o r t w e n t y - s i x In c h e s In s te a d o f t w e n t y - t h r e e I n c h e s , a s c a lle d f o r .

M r . D r u m p o i n t e d t o a l le g e d d e fe c ts In t h e w a t e r t a b l e a m i w i n d o w s JH h , a n d u n c o v e r e d i r o n s o il p ip e , ih o p o in t s O f w h i c h ' w e r e c a l k e d w i t h c e m e n t , w h e r e l e a d s h o u l d h a v e b e e n u s e d . I n s o m e c a s e s w U a r e l e a d w a s u s e d t h e r e w n s a p r e p o n d e r a n c e o f o a k u m a n d l i t t l e le a d m s t e a d o f v i c e v e r a a ,

M r . ' K e n i n g h a m t o o k e x c e p tio n s to s o m e o f t h e e n g i n e e r 's s ti'lc tu r e s i, u n d M r . O t t e r b d n s a i d s o m e o f t i c t i lin g s c o m ­p la i n e d o f l i a d a l r e a d y b e e n m a r k e d to be i ^ v e n a t t e n t i o n , T h e c o n t r a c t o r e x p lu tn e d t h a t s o m e o f t h a d e f e c t s w e r e d u e to t h e d i f f i c u l t y o f g e t t i n g g o o d m e c h a n ic s n t th e o u t s e t o f t h e w o r k . T h e s ite is so o u t o f t l i e w a y i t w a e n e c e s s a r y t o t a k e w h a t mc-n c o u l d b e h a d , a n d t o w e e d o u t t h e p o o r G U M a s f a s t a s b e t t e r o n e s c o u ld be s e c u r e d .

^ u c h . a n e x p l a n a t i o n , M r . D n J m s a id , w o u l d ' n o t^ o f I t s e l f , m a k e g o o d t o th e ^ u n t y f o r p o o r w o r k , a n d h e in s is te d t h e c o u n ^ s h o u l d g e t w h a t f t w a s p a y i n g f o r . M r , O t t e r b e i n w o n t e d t o k n o w w h a t r e m e ­d y c o u l d b o a p p l i e d , b u t th e e n g in e e r r e ­m a r k e d t h a t i t w a s n e i t h e r t h e t i m e n o r t h e p l a o a t o s u g g e s t a r e m e d y . T h e ' i n ­s p e c tio n w i l l c o n s u m e t h e g r e a t e r p a r t o f t h o d a y .

Complete Victory in Ex­pected Court Decisions.

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tn im dtur (nnn Mnlttt SUit«n). CH, tick.t TW .Btwl^n .. m nbrk.—Ajv.

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C o l n o i t l e n t w i t b B n r i a g c » t A r t e a t a n W r I I i . . .

A d d l t l e t i f t l t e s U m o n y f o r t b e d t f e n d a n t w a s ta fa e n b e f o r e J u d i t e A J u n e fn C l r O u l t C o u r t A t o - a a y t o t h e e o H I n e U t i i t e d b y p r a n k W ; M e e k e r , a d a i r M n a n . o f U v t n g . ■ t o n T o w n e b i p i ' t o r e c o v e r t lO .o o o d a m a g e , f r o l n C u t O r a n g e f o r t h e loan o f i r a t c r f r o m a p r l D g e o n h i , f i t n n . M e e k e r a l l e g e ,

. t h a t t h e , ^ n g » p r a e U c a l t y d r ie d u p w h e n E a « t O r a n g e b e g a n t h e o p e r a U o n o f a r t e - a l a n are ila .

S a m u e l B . P a n u t p , J a c o b C h e r a e a n d A n d r e w w . B a t g r t o , a l3 o f w h o m r e s id e t o t h e v i c i n i t y o f t h e M e e k e r f a r m , w g r e c a lle d t o t e * t i f y r e g g 'f d l n g th e v o l u m e o f w a ( e r i n t h e M e e k e r s p r i n g b e f o t e a q d a f t e r F a s t O r a n * , Ja e g a ft .u s in g t h e w e l l s .

C h i e f E o g l n a e r M o r r i s R . B to S t r e r d -d e ­c l a r e d t h a t i n ' C l i n t o n a n y Io m . f w a f e r f r o m M o M i e r 'a . p r o p e r t y w o , .c a u e e rl b y . l o c a l e o n d l t t o m i a n d w n e n o t t h e n m i t o t t h e o p e r a t i o n o f t h e a r t e a U i n w e l l , .

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e U n e * V u N h s B a m M y C o ., 163 B i w d K . — A d r .

Kliwfal IHsjmtck fo ffte KVEMSO XKWE.TKENTON, June 10.—Since (he an­

nouncement last F riday that the Court of E rrors and Appeals was prepared to ren­der decleione In ail pending lltlgatlonH ut the next opinion day there has beeti much speculutlon here as to the dlepositton which will be mude of Ilie Ijnpurtunt tax queatlnna to be decided by timt trllninul. The very essence of the principles affecl- tng the taxation of rollruada, tbe inuln source of revenue of the State, la at stake In the caKcs peadlag before the Bupreine Court and the Court bf Errara.

In handing down opinions tu-day the Supreme Court dld-^not page upon the oonstltutionahty uf ti.e Pt-rklaa inula Hteni act which h a , been atlacked by the railroads, and the Inference was drawn by some of the lawyere present llml the Supreme Court dectaion m ight be withheld until after the Court ot E rrors decision next week upon tbe Duftleld act for the taxation of aecond-cluua property. The prtnelpies lovulved la tbe two caaes ere In eome reepectg nnalogoux mid it would not be anrprlBlng If the Bnpreme Court aw aits the dictum of the higher irlbunnl whlob will hnully estubliah these prlnnb plea, and bases It.s own decialon accord- Ingly.

The belief Is prevalent mnong most of tho lawyers that the combined decisions of the two courts will have tlie effect of eatabllshlng without fu rther question the legality of the system of taxation which has been adopted by the State in dealing with the railroads and th a t the la tte r will have but scant grounds left for future a ttack s upon the method of their assesK- m ent nnd ia.xatlon. The Dultlold act nf 1005 provided for the ta in tlnn of sectmd- clnss railroad property at local rales In­stead of a t a uniform rate of one and one- half per cent., os theretofore. Under a auppletnenlary net Introduced by Senator Allnturn the raJltDads were enabled to pay on the basis of the old rate the taxes for th a t year pending a declelon by the courts us to the constitutionality of the provi­sions for local rates.

If the opinion follows the lines that are airtlclpated. It will, praetteally estnhll.h tho right to fix the rate to r this class of property..and It will then retogln to be de­cided whether the subsequent law, known as tho Perkins act. and providing that seeund-clnas property should be assessed by local nssee.sors. Instead of by the Stale board, Is conslltullonnl In th a t reapect. It Is believed tbal. w llh the establishment of the right to fix the ra te of taxation, the right to empower tbe local asnasu rs to place the valuations on th e properly will follow.

Such a decision. It Is anticipated, would alm ost certainly be followed by an affirm­ance of th e right of tho S tale to make a classification of first-olass property, nnd to tax It as provided by the Perkins lu t ralatlng to th a t class of property. This would eHiaiiHsh the right of the Legis­la tu re to define w hat shall oonstitiiio main stem property for purposes of taxa­tion, and to fix an average ta x ra te there­for.

I t Is accepted thg t the courts will ad­here to the old doclskin t h , l the chartern of the ra liroad , not constitute an Irre- penlahle contract, under which they mlglit a t will revert to th e old system of tnxallou applied when they were first organltced. Unless prevalent opinion here It unfound­ed. the S tate wllL a t an early date, have won a complete victory In establishing its ; ig h t to levy tax es upon the rsllibads under tho acts psM ed during the past, th ree years.. The eustalning of the main stem act would In Itself enable the col­lection of about t3,60l).OOO for the present year.

T h e r e a r e v a r i o u s c o l l a t e r a l Is s u e g p e n d ­i n g b e f o r e t h e c o u r t s , a m o n g i h e m th e a p p l i c a t i o n o f t h e r a i l r o a d s f o r a r e n s -

• M W s m e n t b t p r o p e r t y , w h e r e I t Is c l a im e d t h a t s u r r o u n d i n g p r o p e r t y to a n m n l e t p a l - i t y w a s a s s e s e e d S t a s m a l l e r p e r c e n ta g e o f v a l u e t h a a t h a t o f t h e r a i l r o a d s . I n t h e s e l i t i g a t i o n s t h e l e g a l q u e s t h m s r a l i c d w e r e r e g a r d e d a s v e r y c l o s e , a n d t h e d e - 'o ls lo n o f t h e c o u r t I s , t h e r e f t . f r o m a c v r t a l p t y . T h e n , t h e r e I , a l s o t o b o c o n s id e r e d t h e c l a i m m a d e o n b e h a l f of t h » P e n n s y l v a n i a a y a t e m s t h a t t h e y h a v e b e e n p a y i n g t a X f w a y e a r I n a d v j i n c , a ln c u 1885 a n d o r e c o n s e q u e n U y n o t e o a n ^ l l e u t o pay u n d e r t h e a c t t h e n e w t g x e s a i -,eaaed for thlgyeoir.^

Do glaw B e’e IM>e. n o o n tW Dgheea hnsBO wlual. Tha t t dinner, with oharmlDt muslu earn eranlnf. aqusls tha b « t In N. T. Pine t& suet ball for ‘Wedding* *nd fetvet* attatr*. xSmtit rsaiaiuwl. Ceauel a n ., Mer Breed.

Cfloper W as Awakrti^d bx Nielse in ilnoiu nnd D ln lr Mau U lffln sHnrena -Blnsed A w nf, bnt MIsA^d. flhot from Burdlnr'S W eapon Sfint- tered Mlrene N«as Caop»r'« H ead. T hief G«t Thraniirli a W tndair

■Five ;jhola w ere flrod flt 2‘30 o’clock thL"! mornliuf Jit n duel tn a 'b e d ro o m n t 4i C linton Htruet between a bu rg lar and W lll- Inm C. rooper. a boarder In a boardlnir- boufte III th a t address. Cewper, who w as In bed In the fron t room' on the second floor, wae; awnkenod by the noise m sde by tiu ’ In tn id er In riflln j th e b tiren j. There wan no light In the room, find an C’ooper was not thoroughly aw ake ho ctuiM not K€0 plainly, but seising u ro- vo lv ir th a t was near UiR bed, he fired four Hbot^ln tbe dJreellon from where the

C JJine ,The volley wan retnrnotl by the burg lar,

wim, crouching near the bureau, aenl ona fihoi from b is revolver, nreaklng a m irro r d o se - to Cuoper'w head. So near wua th a burg lar to Cooper when the In tru d e r fired th a t the blase from his w eapon blinded Cooper fo r the m pm ent and ho could no t fire ngalu. The th ief then m ade hla ewenpe by climbing out the fro n t w in­dow to a root below and dropping to th a ground, a d is tance of sboul tw elve fee t, (kK)per dressed hurriedly and ran to th e Btrt'cb b u t the thief hnd gone by th e tim e Policemen Hennessey and Cleveland arrived .

The only th ing token was a slgfiet r in g belonging to Cooper, us the th ie f did not have tim e to pick up the goods th a t he hud ]>ri'pared to take. Among these whs a valuable cornet, a diamond ring, B gold w atch nnd chain am] a. stickpin, all of w hich he took from a trunk he forced open.

This Is the second nocturnal v is it paid by bu rg lars to (he Clinton s tre e t house w lihtn Q fo rtn igh t, ITf) being tak en from the room of Jolm H. Glest M ay 29. Tills last In truder pried open the (shutter cm the window through which he escaped and th u s gulncd an entrance. On th e previous occasion the entrance w as mndo in the som e way, tlm»ugb a second-slo ry window.

BIG 'FRISCO FIRE.BAN FRANC'Isro, Juno 10,—A Are is

rag in g on th e com er nf T enth and M arket streclH, The wagon, carriage nnd au to - muliile s to re of Sludolmkcr B ro th e rs h a s liJready been dcHtroyed, utid tho pa in t, oil nnd paper s io re of John (juud t ft Co, Is In fliimcs.

O r n n g o 's c e n t e n n ia l b e g u n y e s t e r d a y a f t e r n o o n w i t h ilc n i o n a l n i t l o n H w h ic h w e r u u m u n g t h e m u s t n o ta b le g u tlie r in g tf e v e r h e ld In th e c u r n m u n l t y . T h e s t r e e t i a r e g a y w i t h llagM a n d b u n t i n g , th e I 'u t l o n s u m i n g t ’ d b y t h e C e n t e n n i a l A a s u « c i u l i u h b e iiiK o u p p l v i y e n i e d b y u te d e c o r a ­t i o n s o n t h e b u il d i n g s .

T h e p r l n c lp iil H t i r a c t l u n y e H te n tu y w a g t h e m o n s t e r p iir a d e o f t h e C n t h u h o s o o lo * ( lo s . F o t i n l i i g At t h e M l l l t ( i r > ' F u r k t l m p u r a d o r s w e n t u p M a i n s l r v e t tu R i d g e , a n d t h e n c e ( u 8 t . J o h n 's C h u r c h . T h e i e w o n i A t I v A s i 2, 50(1 m e n 'i n lin e . A t th e 01(1 B u r y i n g G r o u n d a n d s i m i l a r p o i n t ! o f v a n t n g e la r g e c r o w d s g a t h e r e d , w h i l e t h o H t r e e l s s u r r o u n d i n g t i t . J o h n 's C h u r c h , w e r e llfu id w i t h p e o p le , o v e r f l o w i n g o n I h e g r o u n d s o f t h e c h u r c h n n d C o i u m b u i l i a i l o p p o s i t e . I n t h e c r o w d w e r e m a n / n o n - C a t i i o l U ‘s . s o m e o f t h e o ld e r re e ld e u td o f t h e O r a n g e s b e i n g in te r e s te d s p e c tu - t o r s . O n t h e c h u r c h l a w n w e r e t h s a c h tm J ( 'h l)d t*e n a n d s e v e r a l C a t h o l i c c l e r g y , w l l h D a v i d L P i e r s o n , F r a n k E d w i n E l w e j b J o h n D . E v e r l i t , C h a r l e s B * Y a r d l e y J r . , T h o m a s W , W i l l i a m s , J o h n l i s n o r d M e r ­r i l l . A l d e n F r e e m a n a n d o t h e r s w h o b s rv s b e e n n c l l v o In t h e c e n t e n n i a l p la n s .

T I u t u w a s a c r o w d o f a t l e a s t AOOO pscM p ie cnaHsed a b o u t t h e s t r e e t s a n d n e a r l y e v u r y o u e c u r r i e d a n A m e r i c a n f lo g . T h e p M tru d rrs h u d a l l c a r r i e d flo g s I n t h e m a r c h , a n d t h e s c h o o l c h i l d r e n w e r e p r o ­v id e d w i t n e in b lc n is w h ic h t h e y w a v e d \n u n is o n n s t h e y s u n g p a t r i o t i c s o n g s . I t w riA A n o ta b l e d e m o n s tr a t io n ^ a n d I t p a r - U n > k o f t h e i i a t u r u u f a n o v a t i o n t o R s v . H u g h i*. F l e m i n g , r e u t o r u f f l t . J o h n ^ s C h u r c h , w h n w a s g i v e n a r e c e p t i o n ’ a s s n - t h u s i u s t l c as It W AS s p o n ta n e o u s .

E xercises In T heatre. F o l l o w i n g t h e e x e r c is e s h e r e t h e s t r e e t s

w e n * th r n n g e O w i t h t h e c r o w d s r e t u r n i n g t o t h e i r h o m e s . A t 4:80 o ’ c l o c k t h o p a t r i ­o t i c s e r v ic e a r r a n g e d b y t h e C e n t e n n i a l A s s o c i a t i o n w a s h e ld I n t h e O r a n g e T h e a ­t r e , O n t h e s t a g e w o r e c l e r g y m e n a n d t h e c e n l c n n l A l c o m m i t t e e , t o g e t h e r w i t h m e m b e r s o f O r a n g e C h a p t e r , ^ o n 8 o f t b e A m o r l c o n R e v o l u t i o n . F l a g s a n d fie ld f l o w e r s d e c o r a te d Che h a l l , th e s e h a v i n g b e e n a r r a n g e d b y a n u m b e r o f y o u n g p e o ­p le u n d e r t h e d i r e c t i o n o f M i s s F r a n c e s A d e l a i d e J a c k s t p i .

I l l p r a c t i c a l l y e v e r y c h u r c h In t h e O r - , a iig c fl y e s t e r d a y t h e r a w a s s o m e r e fe r e n e s t o t l i « c e n t e n n ia l c e le b r a ti o n - M a n y p a s - t o r a u s e d t h e o r d e r o f e x e r c is e s n r r a n g e f t b y R e v . D r . C h a r l e s T o w n s e n d a n d T^OV. O iM > rg e P . E a s l i n a n ,

T h e r e w e r e fla g s o n C o l u m b u s H a l l m w e l l a a I n S t . J o h n ’ s C h u r c h b e l f r y a n d t h e s te p s le a d i n g u p f r o m W h i t e s t r e e t w e r e d e c o r a te d w l l h fia g s a n d t h e o r a n g e a n d w h i t e , t h e o ffic i a l c o lo r s o f t b e c e n ­t e n n i a l . H e r e w e r e g a t h e r e d R e v . H u g h P , F l e m i n g , r e c t o r o f t h e c h u r c h , w l l h t h e o t h e r p r i e s t s o t t h e p a r i s h , t o g e t h e r w i t h s e v e r a l p r i e s ts f r o m o t h e r p a r i s h e s a n d t h e o ffic e r s o f t h e C e n t e n n i a l A s s u - e l a t i o n .

A p a r a d e o f 2,500 m e m b e r s o f t h e C a t h ­o l i c B o c lo lle s w a s h e l d , w i t h J o h n P .* I -e o a s g r a n d m a r s h a l . T h e s t a r t w a s m a f ia a t M i l i t a r y P a r k a n d t h e r o u t e w a s u p M a m s tr e e t to R i d g e , th e n c e to W h j t q s t r e e t , t o H i g h , to P a r k a v e n u e a t if i t h r o u g h C h a p e l s t r e e t . A s t h e p a r e d e r s r e a c h e d t h e c h u r c h F . C . L . B c h r e i n e P p l a y e d “ F l i n g O u t th e S t a r r y F l a g " o n t h e c h im e s a r id t h e n t h e c h o r u s o f s c h o o l c h i l d r e n s a n g “ A m e r i c a . " T h e o p e n i n g o d d r e s a w a s b y J j a u r o n c o T . F e l l , w h o s a id In p a r t ;

“ H o w m a n y o f y o u c a n lo o k b a c k to t h e J t t t i A re d s c h n o llin iu s p t h a t s to o d o n t h s s i t e o f C o l u m b u s H a l l ? W e c a n lo o k ; b a c k w l l h l o v e a n d g r a t i t u d e to t h e e a r l y t e a c h i n g s ! H u w r e l i g i o n a n d p a t r l o t l s u l w e r e t a u g h t s id e b y s id e ; l io w t h e s e t e a c h i n g s l i .u l s u c h H U e f f e c t u p o n u s t h a t U ii'*ed cid o n l y t h e w o r d to fire t h e s o u l o f t v e i y r a i h n i l c i n t h e c i t y . L o o k a t t h e r e s n U —t h u u s u n d s h e r e to h o n o r t h S f la g .

“ T h i s l i i i l l d l n g , k n o w n f r o m M a i n e t o C a l l f o n i l f i iiH t h e m o s t c o m p le lo o f it s k i n d , w i t h tta r u r e w o r k s o f a r t , H a a n - l l q u l i l r f t jxn d c u r i o s , h o w d i f f e r e n t f r o m I b e cildl T i u w t h e c h ild r e n o f t h e p r e s e n t g e n e r a t i o n s h o u l d a p p r e c ia t e I t ; a n d w e a l l a g r e e 11 w i l l b e a l u s t i n g m o n u m e n t

ORANGE LIGHT PLANT ILLEGAL

Supreme Court Sets Aside Resoltitions Aw^ding Con­

tracts for $70,000.

OPINION HAS NOT BEEN FILED

(Continued on Wth page, 1st column.)

fip c-d o l D iJip o h 'A <0 tAu KVEyiMO NEW6 .T R E N T O N . J i u i p 10. —I n t h e p r o c e o d ln g a

I n s t i t u t e d b y l l r t b o r t L J g h t h l p e a g n ln i^ t t h e c i t y o f O r a n g e , J u s t i c e P i t n e y tu -c ln y a n n o u n c e d t h a t t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t s e i a s i d e , t h e r e s o l u t i o n s o f O r a n g e a w a r d i n g c e r t a i n c o n t r a c t s t o t h o C r o c k e r - l V h e d e r C o m p a n y a n d t h e W u s t e r n F]Ji? c trlc C o m ^ p o n y f o r t h e c o n s tr u c ti o n o f a m u n i c i p a l l i g h t i n g p l a n t . T h e s e a g g r e g a t e a b o u t fiO.OOO.

T h e p r o c e e d in g s w e r e a t t a c k e d o n v a r i o u s g r o u n d s , a m o n g t h e m t h a t t h e c i t y h a d n o a u t h o r i t y to m a i n t a i n a l i g h t i n g p l a n t . . T h e o p in io n o f J u s t i c e P i t n e y h a s n o t b e e n file d .

MAY QUESTION KIERSTED AND M’DERMIT TO-NIGHT

o t h e r F i r e m e n A U o t i i B e C a l l e i l n t f f c c o n f i I t i t t i n f f o f

H o a r d .[ t I s llk i^ ly t h a t C h i e f K l e r s t c d , o f t h a

fir e d e p a r t m e n t , w i l l be e x a m i n e d t o - n i g h t w h e n t h e F i r e B o a r d ra n u m e a lie I n q u i r y I n t o t h e m a n a g e m e n t o f th e T u r n H a l l f i r e . In w h i c h H e n r y K e i i n e k e a n d h Is w i f e a n d c h i l d lo s t t h e i r l i v e r . C i t y A t - t o r t i e y C h i l d , w h o la c o n d u c t i n g t h e p r o b e f o r t h e b o a r d , u la o p la n a to p u t B a t t a l i o n C h i e f M c l l e r m l t , In w h n a e t e r r i t o r y t h o f i r e o c c u r r e d , o n t h e a ta n d .

M r . C h i l d h a a a e c u re d t h o H a t o f w i t - n e a n a w h i c h t b e I n v e a t l g a t l n g c o m m i t t e e o f t h e v e r e i n g a t h e r e d la a t w e e k . I f t h e p e r a o n a w h o m t h e c o m m it te e h a a I n t o r r o - g a le 'd p r e a a n t th e m a e lv e a t o - n i g h t . M r . C h i l d a a y a h o w l H h a v e t h e m t o l l t h e i r a t o r y u n d e r o a t h . B e a ld e e K i e r e t e d a n d M c D e r n i i t . a e v g r a l o t h e r m e m h e r a o f t h e d e p a r t m e n t w i l l , b e e u b m i t i e o t o a q u l a - x l n g . M r . C h i l d w i l l I n t e r v i e w w itn e a a e a I n h ie o f f ic e th la a f t e r n o o n .

W e d d t i M f C w a e b e a O a r h p e e l a l t r . lSa,tlaiactian xuarante^d or moniy refunded.

M. A Mumn'a ■tablea 3ot Waaidnatan at., sub ClinUn ava. and 9D Summit ct_ tei. S ll.--^ v ,■ ■ . — -----------a ---------- -----------

f.'WnaM’a. F a n lta re . B«Mla«> RawaaISO f a r U d o w n . I t a n t a k . M M a r k e t a t ,—

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Mixed Kerosene with W ater and Fluid Boiled Over

on Stove.

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M r e . K l h i .V in ith , f o r t y y e a r s o l d , w i f e nf Andrew H m l l h , a h a t t e r , w a s e e r to u a l y b u r n e d nt h e r h o m e o n t h e s e c o n d f l o o r o f s:, w i l l l n m 's t r e e t t h i s m o r n i n g - A t B t , I t i ir n ii tia a 's H o a p U a l , w h e r e s h o w a i (liken. It W HS .s o l d h e r r e c o v e r y w a a d o u b t f i l l . S h e w a s b o i l i n g s o m e t o w e l s n n d o ld c lo th e a In a w a s h p a n o n t h e a t o v * e m l m i x e d k e r o s e n e o i l w i t h t h e w a t e r . S o m e o f t h e f l u i d b u b b l e d o v e r a n d f la m e d u p , s e t t i n g th e w o m a n 's c l o th e s a b l a x e . .

A l l a f l i e . M r s , B m l t h , w h o w a s a l o n o .l n h e r k i t c h e n a t t h e t i m e , r a n I n W t h e a d ­j o i n i n g a p a r t m e n t s o f M r s . F l o r e n c e C a r - r o n . w h o l a y 111 In b e d . I t u s h l n g t o a n u p a 'n w i n d o w f a c i n g o n W i l l i a m a t r a e t M r s S m i t h s h o u t e d f o r n s s ls t a n c s . B e v - e r a l ' [w d e s t r l a n s h u r r i e d In to t h e h o u a a e n d s o m e o n e o e n t In a A r e a l a n n . W t U - I n m M i l l e r , a f i r e m a n c o n n e c te d w i t h C h e m i c a l N o . 1, w h o U v e a u t !1 W i l l i a m s t r e e t , w a s a t h o m e a n d w a s o n e o f t h e f l r w to r e s p o n d . T r u a n t O f f i c e r V a p H o u t e n . J u s t i c e o t th e P e a c e S i m o n a n ^ t P a t r o l m a n T h e l a n , w h o w e r e a t t h o F i r s t P r e c i n c t S t a t i o n , n o t t a r a w a y , a l s o c a m * o n a r u n , b u t b y t h e t i m e t h e y g o t u p - s l a l r a M r s . S m i t h h a d f a lle n u n c o n s c lo u a .

T h e b i a s i n g g a r m e n t s w e re t o r n f r o i n t h e w o m a n 's b o d y a n d s h e w a s h u r r i e d I n t h e p o li c e a m b u l a n c e to t h e h o s p i t a l . T h e r e t h e d o c t o r s f o u n d s h e w a a b u r n e d f r o m h e a d to f o o t a n d i t Is fe a r e d s h o I n ­h a l e d s o m e o f t h o fla m e s .

S o o n a f t o r h is m o t h e r h a d b e e n r e m o v e d t o t h e h o s p i t a l n t w e l v e - y e a r - o l i l s o n o f M r s . B m l t h . w h o h a d b e e n o u t s e l l i n g p a ­p e r s o n t h e s t r e e t , g o t w o r d o f th e a c c i­d e n t . a n d r a n t o a n e a r b y t e le p h o n e a n d h a d h is f a t h e r , w h o is e m p lo y e d I n a , h a t s h o p t o B e l l e v i l l e , n o tif ie d n t t h e m i s h a p .

M a k e H e p l y t u M o r r i s ,T h e E s s e x F l n h a n d G a m e A s s o c l a U t l f t

■Will h o l d a m e e t i n g a t M O B r o a d s tr e e t t o ­n i g h t . w h e n I t Is e x p e c te d t l i a t a r t a l w - m e n t w i l l b e Is s u e d to r e p l y t o a l l q » - t l o n s m a d e b e f o r e t h ^ e g i s l a U v e I n v w l l ; g a t i n g c o i o i n i t t e e b y F r e s i ^ i r t M o r r i s , t h e S t a t e F t a h a n d G a m e C o m m l i s l o d . ■ w i t h r e fe r e n c e t o t h e B s a e g - o r g a p n a t l o t i .

S e w C U r T le k« t OSI«e, lAklgb Valley RsJIread, TSS Breed Kswaik,—A d v . ______ ,

gpeelal Bale a f Tnuifea.Qulgloy, B C entral eve.—4 4 t,

, - t ■■

NEWARK EVENING NEWS. MONDAY, JUNE 10. 1907.

^CABRERA STORY NOT CONFIRMED

Revolotion in GuitemaU Ex- pected if Rtport of Killing

of P read at Proves True.

PREDECESSOR WAS SHOT DOWN

MEXICO CITT. JilneW ,-Thc AmocWtoa P n n o«lc» hsr* rectlvfd » m n»agf from tli« HermM *arly lo-duy. »»ylnjtth a t a prlvat* mesaaio had W n In 0»**fa layln* that praalrtrnt Cabrera, of Oualemala, had been aaaaaatnatad. F urthar daUll* could not b« obtained.

Mlnlater Manuel Qlron, the Qualemalan npreien lativa to Mexico, wna aeen a t hie home, hut knew nothing of the alleged laaaeslnatlon, Ih*. Pritncleco Reyee. for* mer Mlnleler of Foreign Relatione In Sal­vador. who now la In tbie city, deelarsd th a t If tba report waa trua It meant a lavolutlon In Ouatemala.

WABHINOTON, Juno 10.—Manuel Kc- troda Cabrera, Freeldent of the Repubilo of Chutemala, reported aa aaeaanlnated ht Guatemala City yeelorday, wae forty- ae.ren yeara old. He came to (he front In Ouatemnla during the hattlee which fol­lowed the death of P re ildert Barrloa, who waa aUo aaanaelnated. Cabrera kept hlm- ■alf eonatanlly earrounded by a atrong

.guard of lOldlera, and It le eald that all hla ineala were cooked by hla own mother bMBUBO of. Cabrera'I fear of aeaaealna- lloa by polaoning.

NEW YORK. June lo.~No conflrmatlon ' haa been received here of the report tha t

^ a i d a n t Cabrera, of Ouatemala, had . been aaMaalnated. Dr. Ramon Brn- gtMOhea. Quatemalan Conaul-Oeneral a t Now York, cablad the Minlaler of State a t ttuatem ala City to-day fof Information.

O RCH ARD^ AGAIN PUT

UNDER FIRE(Continued from FIrat Paga.)

a to of H arry Orchard In aoma of hla orimaa, reached Bolae thta morning in charge of a daputy.. Adama w ai aceompanled by hlf attornay, John Wonne, of Wallace, Bhoahone County. I t la tMRav^ Adame h i i made up hla mind to refuat to teatify when he la plucad on tlM Bttnd. Adama was placed In a cell in the oounty Jail adjoining that occnpltd by Hgywaod. Moyer and Pettlbone.

Immadlately after going on th e gtand . • ( t:K thia morning Orchard aakad per-

mlaaion to correct two atateraenta made by him on Saturday; one (o the cEect th a t "BUI" E iatarly and himaelf made bombg with "Rattlbone dope" a t Cripple

.: Creek, and the other th a t he and S uva 'A dam a had carried their ahotgnna In ' holatan when they were atalking Oov- ariWr Peabody. Ha tald: "Billy" A cker man, and not ''BUI" Eaeterly. made the aaperimenta with him and th a t he and A tem a did not carry their guna In bobtera. He Idetitined Baaterly lent week na the man who mada th e M parim ants tritb Mm.

Attoriiay nichardBOB brought out tha fnot th a t O nbard wag In oonfrrance with Dnttbllve Hepariand and Attornay Kaw-

' ley yaoterday, and that each morning b ^ r e appearing on the aland ha vlaiia R aw ley 'i oSlce, but tha wllneaa denlad

* tb a t ha oorreoted hie tedtlmony on any aufirM loa from either Hawley or Mc- Parland. He lald he told Hawley he had m ade A mlatahe In hla taatlmony and aakad If he ahoutd correct, and Hawley told him to do H.

“ Didn't McFarland apeak to you about ; th e mathod by which you coutd withaland eroap-epamlnattont" demanded Attorney Rlehardaon, who haa handled tha croaa- akatolnation throughout.

"NO, ehr." replied Orchard, "but he ppakb of xrhat gave me airength to go through the examination."

Onshtrd baa profeaaed religion."Now, thflii," roared Hfcliardaon, "didn't

' you make thia correction hecauac you dla- eoverad th a t Baateriy i i here and Acker­man la. notT"

"No,, air; I knew Baateriy waa here a ll (be lima."

Orchard laid he had heard th a t TAdkarman i t In Ooldlleld, Nev.

Attorney Rlehardaon next demanded to know of Orchard what he had talked to Nelnon PranhUn and A. B. Carlton, of

'th e IHne Ownera' Aaaoclatlon about. Me ■aid ho bad a certlllcate of depoait in a b an k which had cloaed and he heard . jjMae men were buying aucb certifleatea.

Orchard waa going into detafli of the itenvartaU nn, when he waa ktopped by nSldhardaon, who declared the m atter tm- rm atarial. Thia brought a p ro te it from

Senator Borah, who aald;"You aakad for thia, now take It aa it

sSmaa."" I didn 't aak for a lec tu re" retorted the

attornay for tha defente.' Judge Wood aald tha proaecutlon counl

j So-in to tha m atter on redirect examina- I tion If It dealred. and Orchard waa not altoxred to proceed.

" Oreliard denied that he had ever iflla- jpuaned mining troubtea with Franklin and

Ogriton. He entered the game denial aa .to "KW" W ateri, Frank N. Reardon, A.T. Holman and Major Tom McClellan,

f CwBld Not R entenibec.. Riehardaon next took Orchard over the Lkround preceding the blowliia up of the .Independence D epot The wIineaB anld he Jngd dra t dlaotneto the m atter with Park- - p and Davlf, the etrike managere In the 'Cripple Creek dlatrlct, but he could not .Ibecail the egabf date or place.

Haywood whlapered conatantly In hin ‘Attorney’s ear aa thia part of the i-rnen '^examination proceedod. prompting qnea 'Ilona from time to. time. Orchard auid be later diacuaaed the Independence mat te r with Parker and Davta a t the Belmont Hotel In Denver and In the lobby of ibe

* mlnera'-convention, which wae In aeaaloii a t the time. The wltneaa declared that It was because Haywood's control of the

. Jedefdtlun waa In Jeopardy In the coiiven tlon th a t the leaders wanted something fu lled off,"

Rlehardaon next Jumped back to the ‘l ^ y te Gregory murder In Denver, wanting

It) know If Orchard hud nut gone to the Jt.dania Hotel that evening.

: "No, air," replied the witness. 'T Ural I w ent to Petllbone'a back yard and buried ';.tha aawt'd-off sholgun and then went i.ltpme."

- Orchard denied he had ever jumped I from a window Of the Adams Hotel while l.^hlef Ixtottils, of the Denver detective : lOrce. waa looking for him.; After a long line of questioning, which I developed IllUa that waa mnlerlal, Attov J'.aiey Rlehardaon itidden'.y turned on Or- j imard and shouted:’ -.V'ljook here, have you been cautioned

give definitely any time or place th is croae-cxam lnatlonr’

-vhave been cautioned as to nothing," f/gatortad the witness with feeling, "but to t tell tha tru th .":l; 'Who cautioned you?" demanded Rich'{Ardaon,

"Mr. McPartland and Mr. Hawley."D id n 't C saeh Him .

. "Mr. McPartland Is your mentor In this I tnatterv"

"I don 't know what you mean by men-

'T mean he haa coached you,""No, sirf no more than to tell mo to tell

l^ e tru th .""You have also racelved a letter from

M r. Bangs, of New York, the luperlm sn db n t of a dataetive agency, encouraging gon, haven't youT'

.OtThard said ha had never aaen any jN cb letter. Iba alto denlad that he had 'jkver received a le tter from WlUlam A. ’Pinkerton...'The wftnesa was next required to relate 'the details surrounding each oceaalon on Igllloh he received money from Haywood, Moyer and Pettibane. Ha said he thought

", «ha dm t money he received from Pettibone j ^ g s handed over In t h e .la tte r’s store.' "A bd that waa a publio place, woon’'I I t t " oiohnd Rlehardaon. i.j wwit to the rea r of th e store.

onbard b»M PbttlbotM had aeveral era I Moyaa Im the etore and rented desk room " to two or more pnrnone. H e n id that

usnaUy no one present a t the g regarding money except him

Steve Adams nnd Haywood, Moyer -or Pettlbona Bpesklng ta r himself and Adgmk, Orchard aald;.. "During the time we w art working on .'Mr, Peabody we got ISd or nOD whenever wn asked tor IL"

JSo said b t wna gambling and leading gMntthJng of a dlaoolute life.

"HeWt from gU you bar* M id and th a t

you know, theaa defendanla hod nothing, to do with planning the Vindicator mine exploslenT" suggested Rlohardson,

Nnlhlng ollior than to pay for It, re­plied OrchnrU.

I limited my question as to plotting and planning," aald Rlehardaon.

"This had nothing to do with planning ihv ViiullcsioF osplosloti or the hilling "f byte Gregory,"

Not so ta r as 1 know," replied the wlt- nciB,

Then they hsd nothing to do with any of your outrages until the Independence depot affair?"

I believe they had aomsthlng to do with It, yea, air."

I mean as to planning."No, they didn't plan It.”

MINERS' UNION SENDS A GREETING TO PRISONERS

W eatern F e d e ra tio n In C onven tion n l D en v er W free M easnge to

Bolae to L nhor OMeere.DENVER, Col.. June 10.-TWO hundred

delegates to tits fifteenth annual oonven- tlon of the Weatern Federation of Miners Were present hare to-day when Acting president C. B. Mahoney called the aa- aembly to order. Ontario, British (Jolum- biB. Alaska and Mexico, os well na all tha Weatern Stales, a r t represented. No op­position to continuing In oIBce President Charles H. Moyer and Bscrelary-TraBa- urer William D. Haywood haa been ex- pressfd by any of the dalagatea, and tha convention la expected to go on record with a strong Indorsement of the Impris­oned officials, who are charged with coro- plIcily In the murder of former Governor Steunenberg, of Idaho.

The convention sent the following isle- gram to Moysr. Haywood and Peltibona at Bolae:

Finacnth annual convention aandi greetings. Confluent of your innocence, and we are with 'you until your honor is vindirnled and your friedom aaaured.

(Blgnedi "C. B| MAHONEY."----------------• — _ _ _ _

WEDDED AT PUINFIELD.---------------- •

Miss R d lth C aeinn Rerow ies th eBsM * o f l-a« laa I. W lg h tM U

in H am a C erem ony, ffperisl DiapaM to Me BPF.Vf .VG FEWff.

PLA IN FIB tiD , June 10,-A wedding took pliUM a t tha home of Mra. Hannah Caclns, of a « Weal Fifth airoat, 'Batiir- day oftam oon, her daughter. Miss Edith Caclnw becoming the bride of Lucius I. W ightman, of this city. The ceremony waa parformod by Rev. G. 'W. Nicholson, pastor of the F irs t Baptist Church of Bridgeport, Conn. The service of the Episcopal Church waa used. Irving Coclna, of Montclair, uncle of tha bride, gave her away. Mlsa Josephine Hollo­way, of Montclair, wae maid of honor. The beet man woe George S. Olldersleeve, q t Detroit, Mloh, a classmate of the bridegroom. Two ribbon hearers, Esther Merrlok and RIohard Howard, preceded the bridal parly os It entered the parlor, while Mias C. Tracy, of New York, Sang the bridal chorua from Lohengrin, ac­companied by Mrs. jAwrenoe R. Howard,

A t the reception Immediately following the ceremony the guesu were received bp Mra, CoclDS. mother of the bride; Judge and Mra. R. H. Gilmore,* of Den­ver, Col., the latter a slater of the bride­groom, and Judge Gilmore's half-brother, General O. O. Howard, of Burllngtqia Vl,

Among the relatives from out of town were Mr, and Mrs, Irving Caclns, Clif­ford Coclna, Edward Caoina and Irving Caclns Jr., of Montclair; Mr. and Mra. W alter Caclns and Charles Caclns, of Hackensack; Mrs, Jasper Caclns, Mr. ond JJrs. Bheperd Rowlsnd, Mr, and Mra. Alfred Rowland and Mlaa Carrie Cooper, of Montclair; Mr. end Mrs. Jam es W, Howard, of Newark; Mr. and Mrs, Fred Brown, of Montclair; Miss Martha Mur­ray Poeter, of Ml. Vernon, N. T, Mr. W lghtmsn Is a graduate of the Cnlver- ■lly of Colorado and a t prosant le ora- ployed se the superintendent of the In- gersolI-Rand Drill Company's publication departm ent. W, L. Baundera, president of the company, w as among the wedding guests.

MRS. EDDY TO UNDERGO TEST

Court Appoints a M aster to Decide Competency of Chris-

tian Science Leader.

HISTORICAL SOCIETY WILL PLAN TO BUILD

RIGHTS OF ^'N£XT FRIENDS'

CONGOnn. N. H.. junfl 10.—Mftry Bailor 0. Kddy'B comjxM^m’y to m anag* h tr «f* f tirs inUBt t>e determined by ft maater, aecordlnf to the declaion of Judve Bobert ChftTTiberlln In th e M errtm ac Superior Court tO'day.

Thii decialon w as announced a t the clOM of ft hearJns a t which O tnerat F rin k 3. fltrreter, Ln th« dual capacity of counool for M ra Eddy in d fo r Mm. Eddy'i three irusteee. a r fu e d on a mo­tion aiklnff lo have the ault brought by the reletlvea of M ri. Eddy aa "nezl frletidN*' dijmUied on the ground th a t tha procecdlngi ware not b rought In good filth .

The greater part of th e aen ton waa oo> oupied by General S tre e te r 'i argument, at the cloae of which counael for the "next frienda" rtipUed brleflyr s ta tin g th a t the suit, ^hlch naroei Calvin A. Fryo. Mrs. Eddy'a aecretary, and nine o ther Chrlitlan Sdintlate, m defendante, waa InatUuted in good faith end th a t It would be ao proven whan the coae cam e before the court for a dedalon.

.Yudge Chamberlain, having listened to oouneel. announced thad he would appoint a rnaeter tr> in<uilr« inin the competency of Mra. Eddy. This m a a te r ll la expected,

111 be named before ' th e end of thia weeks

LITTIjB OWES" HAPPY DAY.

Pear niivrebes la Som erville ObiePt*# ip c e la l BaeriUiieB fe e C lilldvcn.

BOJdEaVIIxLK. June l».—ChiMren'i Day woe ob»er\Pd In the two Reformed, the Methodist and BapUat churchea yea- trrday. There wae ihe u tuat elaborate floral dlapley and epeclal muBic for the orcftBlon. In the Firei Heformid Church Rev. Dr. W. 1. rham berlaln preached In the morning In thf* Abnence of the paetor.

At the Methodlai church Rftv. A, J. PIIhh gave e eermnn foneletlng of object lesaons in th^ morning, artcJ there wa* a ■pecSftl aorvlre In the evening, In which membcrB of the Bimday^achool took part. The Baptist church also held Sunday* school eervlce in the evening, w ith an addreee by the pnaior. Rev. K. A. Wools.

waa

- MiL f

RXrigK ARREaTH A1VD RAlDSa

J«reey Cltr I'oHce P a t In a Bney Sfnnday.

JERSEY CITY. June 10.—-The.police yes­terday made these excise a rre sts : MICh »i»l PerelBkl. 182 E leventh atreet; Edward Tripp, 447 JackBon avenue, and Jam es Sul­livan, 20S Second atreet. The police ol.'o arresud William Volun and hla wife, Netlle« colored, on a charge of running a crap gamp at 4T2 G rand etreot. William Taylor and wife, Alice, and Aaron Bkea- roter.

A second crap game, suld to have be<pni run by James and C hristopher RobertS'tn, also colored, whs raided la te r a t liR York streat.' William Jones, of 472 Seventh nve- nus, New York, said he had lost $46 ami a gold WBttfh. The proprietors were held on a charge of keeping disorderly houa s and the players were lield aa wltnessvs.

P isto l iHiot StlrN Pftl^rson P«iltoe.PATEH80X, June 10.—A drug clerk

dlsrharged a revolver In the rear of Bmlth's drug store last night, claiming he new a burglar in the ac t of breaking In a window on the second floor of the build­ing. The man. he declares, dropped to the ground and fled. The store is near police headquarterp nnd Sergeant Perry and his renerves surrounded the building in a few momenta, but a thorough sPHreh failed to reveal traces of nny burglar. They flnaliy decided the clerk had oi mistaken.

gnM «s f'o a a ty O rgaatsatiw a to io*UeH lab scr lp tlo ftft fur E rrotlon

o f I ts O w a H ouie.Hpfflat DltpQtvh to tAe JBVKM.sa VAH'B.

NEWTON, June Thp oflleers elected for ihs ensuing year a t the fourth an- mml meelliig of the Butpex County Hie* torlctil Society. Saturday, are: FrrpUlent, WlDlsm W'. Woodward: flrst vke-presi- daut. N athan A. Stackhouse. Andover; second vlce-pr^^sldent; Jacob L, Bunnell. Newton: secretary, Charles J. Uiilorv, Newton; treasurer, Andrew J. Van Hl«r* com Newton; trustees, Dr. Joseph H. Hunt, Huntsville; Rev. T, Orevllle, Blimd, Psaftton, Pa.; Dr. J, C. ClurKi ATwh>ver; Bninufi Warbasse, laftfayetUr. anfl Luther ilHL Andover. President Woodward ad- vouaLod the shirting o f a cetni«lgn far the Kccurlng of suhedtiptlona to go Into a building fund. H« was willing to contri­bute I he first $100, F o ld e r Judge Wllb mm 11. Morrow, of Belvldere, also agreed to five another $100. A oammlttes to solicit subscriptions w ai appointed as the socity needs Home perruanent place In which to store Its relics, which are rapidly accutnulutlng.

Anuiher contribution to the society, which provoked a smile when Its nnture was leAmed, but which w as neverlhelctia accepted, waa a sum left over from the Sussex County seeQUl-centennlal fund, which the treasurer of th a t fund, the lata John C. Howell, had been unable to re­turn to the perfKuns entitled to It aa a dividend. Dr. Joseph H. H unt, who is n director In the M erchants’ Bank of New­ton. where the money w as deposited, pre­sented the money In a sealed envelope to the society. He said th a t It was "betwren twenty-flve cents and %2b." On opening the parkage, which was aomewhat bulky, peniolea lo the amount of sixty-eight cents were counted, the c e n u being con’ tained In umall numbers In separate en- velopen.

The treasurer reported th a t the society now had th lny 'flve life members and forty-six stibscrlblng memhuri. Dr. J. B. Johnaon, of Blalrstown, and Edwin A. Ely, of New York, were elected honorary members. The last session of the soriety was devoted to the reading uf papers and addresses. I. HalJock, In his capiiclty as necrologist of the society, reported his ezaminAtlons In the old Newton Ceme­tery and presented a Hat of S28 names of persons burled therein, beginning wiih 1770. N athan A. fltackhouse. of Andover, read a paper on tha early railroad history of the county.

Luther Hill, of Andover, was to have prepared a sketch of the early educntloiml Institutions of the county, hut on hla undertaking the work had found the sub­ject too lengthy for preparation. He asked 10 be allowed to reserve his puper until the next meeting, more time being needed for Its complellcm. John A. Stra- ley, of New York, dell^’ered an address on "The Debt Which the Country Owes to tha Cltyi"

DEaA R ES HE FIRED STORE

First W itness in Postm aster's Trial a t Flcmington Turns

S tate's Evidence.

SOAKED THE H O U R W H H OH.

Spfrlal Disjiarrlt ffl Vit EVKNIHO NEWS.FLKMINOTON. June lO.-Tlie tria l of

former Poatm aster Charles T. Vall. of W rit Portal, charged with complicliv In the burning of the old Cornish store a t WSit P orta l on February U last, was begun here this afternoon. Vail haa re­sided at W eat Portal about eight years and was the village postm aster for about six yeara. His successor. tVexley Va- natla, waa appointed two weeks figo.

Vail was Indicted a t the recent sitting of the grand Jury with Joseph B. Hnm- irtell, hla assistan t and m all-carrier, and Mlsa Kllan Gillen, of PInInfleld, The court placed V atl’i and H um m dl'a ball at RDOd, and Miss Gillen was released under B.OOO ball. At th e time of the fire A'nll was not a t home and Hummell claimed that when hs raked the stove a clinker caught In the grate, which npaet tho ■love, and set tha building on Are.

In his opening this afternoon Prosecutor George Knowles Large claimed th a t the bolts holding (he centre sections of the stove had been removed, and. while rak­ing It, It fell apart. The store and con­tents ware totally destroyed. There was an Insurance of M.TOI) on the store building and pontents.

A few days previous to the burning of the building Vail sold the property to Miss Gillen. The cases against Vall, Hummell and Miss Gillen will be tried separately, so th a t nearly the entire week will be consumed by the trials.

Huniinell, the first witness on the stand to-day, turned S tate 's evidence uort salt! he upset the stove a t Vail's direction Kerosene oil was poured on tha floor and on the counters, hs said. Huminell said Vail removed the nuts frum (he bolts be­fore going away an<t gave him dlrectloiii how to burn the store building. Hiim-nell said hs upset the stove with a heavy stick, and not while snaking 11.

to an open letter published b]s the H lnli- ttriaKAaaoolatlon. Blder Roberts frank­ly declared' th a t tha church bed eurren- dered hot one lota p t fts Itellef In the prin­ciple of polygamy, but countenances no pelygomoue m arrlagea while they were forbidden by law. Of himself he eald;

" t stand exactly where I did ten years ago, namely, th a t .though the church pro­claimed against the continuation of this relationship, (hough (he S tate proclaimed against It. neither (be church nor the Stale may absolve the moral obitgatlona I am under or release me from th a t moral duly."

hwet MSSg

been

D reg K ls t B axned 1st Odd Way*gperiol Dispotah fo t»s BFFVI.VO J'Bfff.

HAMPTON JUNCTION, June lO.-Mor- ris R, Albright, the druggist a t this place, met with a p e c u lla ^ '^ d d e n t Saturday. He eras engaged In d ^ l n g gasoline from

barrel for a customer when the flew stopped. Thinking the faucet was clogged up, he gave the h a rn l a rap, when In­stantly a streak of flame burst (rom tho faucet,' In order to prevent an explosion and poBSlby a conflagratlen, Mr. Albright reached Into the burning fluid and turned off the flow, buvntng^hls hand and arm.

C w eght S te a lin g Lnnsber.FoUceman Degnsn, of West Orange,

saw two men making off with lumber from some housea that aru going up a t Valley road and Meeker atrest, that town, about 3:}9 o'clock yesterday morning Ke caught one of the men. Edward Staley, and took him and the lumber to the police ■tatlon. This morning Robert E. Nelbeo, the owner of the buUdluga, made a com-

talnt against both men. S la l^ paid a ne and costs, amounting to 17, and a

w arrant w«a Issued for the arrest of Frank Odandahl, of Orange, who. It Is said, was the man niio got away,

Rnlibeit W h ile F e n l ly W ae Atvay.'While members of the family of Thomas

F. Cogan.i of 170 Thomas street. Bloom­field, were away for a few hours last rdght. snei.k thieves broke Into the house and rantocked the hedrooma. Before they had completed their wofk a neighbor rang liie doorbell, and this, It Is bellevedl I Tightened the Intniders away. The thieves atole a gold watch belonging to Mrs. Cogan and several articles of jew­elry. Entrance waa gained by prying open a dining-room window. This Is the third visit of thieves to the Cogan home In the past five years.

Gets Xli C e n ts In M h e l Suit.gprWol Uiaaakit to tha fiVB.VI.VG VI-.'IVB

MORRISTOWN, June 10.—In the suit uf Orion N. Hnghson, an undertHker, of this city, .who accused Mra. M argaret L. Bur­nett of libel, the Jury to-day rendered a verdict "of six cents fo r the complalnanl. Tills verdict waa handed In afte r the couple had agreed on it, settling m atters amicably. Mr. Hngliaon cltiltned ih.U while at work one day he heard 'the wom­an make a disparaging rem ark about him.

' ,------------- • ---------------Vonnw Cntiuelal Druvroed.

TRENTON, June 10.—Wlllnm H. Doran aev.enteeu yeara old, son of .Mrs. Margaret Doran, IM Perry street, was drowned In the river yesterday aflernoon na a result of being imahle to control his canoe In front of the flood gates of the water pow­er a t Brookvllle. Hla family offered a re­ward of RW for tho recovery of hla body.

ESCAPING FROM BLAZING VIRGINIA BEACH HOTEL

A ll b tti T w o Oftt O nt S afe ly from Ih e P rincess^ A n n e—H ero ism

of M llllInm A n.NORFOLK, Vn.. June lO.-The famous

Princetx Anne Hotel a t Virginia Benoki Vtt., built tw4nty-flve years sgn, and t>no of the handnomeet aiiinmei* resort hotels elOflg the Middle A tlin tio seaooard, vas destroyed by Are which had Its origin early to-day In the kitchen, nupposedly from ft defective flue. In two hours the entire hotel building, together with the Norfolk ftnd Southern Depot, the howling Hlley, hotel laundry, engine-house, the office of tho Virginia Beach Development Company and rII the board walk In from of the hotel were wiped away. There were IlD persona, gueats and emplayes, in the hotel.

All are thought to hftvo escaped with the exception of Emma Glaik, ti T**g■ chambepmald, and John Eaton, the white steward. There were no fire eecapes.

JAP FOUnCAL LEADER SEEKS WAR WITH U. S.

gpenker for M lnorM r In th e ^'nllotial L egU lftture O penly A dvon itea

Appeftl tik Ariun.TOKIO, June 10.—Viscount Tanl. leader

of the oppoBlttpn In the House of Peers, and head of the Defense of Kumamoto in the Sjitsurnft rebellion, is reported to have said anent the American question:

“The persecution of the Japanese in San Francisco lx a most wicked act. Should diplomacy fall to bring about a satisfac­tory solution the only way open to ua Is .'in jippeul 10 arm s. Our mind \a firmly made up. It is certain that America will yield, for Its people nre radically commer­cial In their sentim ent,’'• How much VosCount TnnI ropreeenls public sentiment it la difficult to estimate at the present time.

THE C.S H. AND D. AGAIN.ttiCHft e f L ife In m DffftI to H cv lv lty

Che firhem e W hichCollftpeedr

Npecfof Dispafrh lo fA# SVUSISG SBW8.NEW YORK, June W.-WaJI street |s

gradually awakening to the faot tha : something Is doing In Cincinnati, Hamil­ton and Dayton, the railroad which M \ Morgan tunied over to the Erls, to ihu latter's disadvantage, and. when he found U out, took it back again, with Us Pere Marquette attacbm ent.

The la tter has now been disposed uf and. from the fac t th a t Cincinnati, Ham- tltmi and Dayton oiotes, which have be *n kicking about the i t r t e t with Interest long overdue, a t from 70 to 7S, have advanced sharply wUhIn a few days, it Is regard>)d as evident th a t there Is a hen on.

Mr. Perkins, of Morgan A Col, recent'y remarked tha t as soon as Pere Marquette was out of the way they would take caro of Cincinnati, Ham ilton and Dayton.

Evidently Morgan & Co. have nearly o* about made good In the m atter of re ­habilitating th is most Important Ohio railroad, end the question now Is. Who will get the road?

While Mr. Morgan got out of Erie, prob­ably, when the la tte r 's stock was about 40, It Is likely be may continue to think the Ohio croea-llne should go to th<T sy s­tem which owned It for a few months an 1 then tumbled It ov tthoard for the fln.Mi- cial relmblUtation which It seems to luive received.

HilEAWAY THROt'OH THIlOYU.Owner H olds on to H eins and Is

Thrown Under B ngay W lievls.flprcMlI nUtpatrh to the A!IA’.V7.\tr SKW8,

WHITEHOUSE, Juno 10.-Whlle the congregation of the Methodist church waa dlRperslng after Children's Dny excrclees yesterday morning, a. horse belonging lo Frederick Conover became unnjumige- nble aa M r Conover was about to aeslBt his mother, Mrs. Jam es Conover, iuto the bugg^'. Mrs. Conover muni;)ged lo alight lu safety, but her Hon held on to the reins and wan badly cut utaiut the head by being thrown under the wheels.

The horse broke away and darted In and out among over a score of vehicles with occupantfl, barely missing cnlllsinn with a number of them. The buggy Mmil- ly struck a cherry tree bpHide tlie ruud and was tom from the homo, which gal­loped home with dragging harness. Mr. Conover, with his mother, wus later con­veyed to Ills home by friends. He was not dangerously Injured.

CHANCELLOR IS PESSIMISTIC.

Bsby*e €rl^ s Attract Help.Cries of a baby attraoted the neighbors

of Mr#. Julia O’Connor to her home. HO ML Pleasant avenue, West Orange, about 10 o'clock last righ t. They found Mrs. O’Connor, mother of the baby, lying upon the floor, uncon setous, having fRllen down a flight of stalre. Dr. flamuel A. Muta watt Bunimoned and a t first thought the wonmn had n fractured skull, but later found she was suffering from concussion of the brain. She wga then removed to tin- t)rHhge Memorial Hospital, How long she liiy lit the foot of tha eialre before dla- cttvered bv the hPiRhborB IS ttol knowh.

H u rt by F a ll from T ro lley r n r ,John Cogan, iwenly-threa years old, of

Vuutlh ftud William streetB_ Harrlfton, I while retuniing from Newark on a K ear­ny trolley car on Saturday night, fell from the rear platform and cut his head and face. He waa carried to Aller'e drug store where hie injuries were temporarily dreesed and he waa later removed to Sc Mtchael'A Hospital

Dog*e B N e M ay K il l Htm.gpsctol DitpAtch to fc'VA’Yf-Vf#

HAMPTON JUNCTION. June 10.—Bor­ough Clerk Edgar E. Riddle, of this pla«e- 1i tn a dangerous condUluii from ulond poisoning ana not expected to live. Me was bitten by a dog, near Ludlnw, a week ago. while collecting for an Ineur- ance company, tn epite of the efforts of a spec1,BU8t. he is In a ptecarloue condition.

N ew ark Btad^ut W in s Prise.aperfal Dieputvh to the KVEMKO NEWS.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va,. June 10.- The Edgar Allan Poe pH ie for the best short alory haa been awarded by the TTntveralty of V irginia here to Albert Frederick Wilson, of N ew ark, N. J., for "The Tea Machine."

\evrjirk W om an D reaks a Leg.Special Diepotch to the EVEyiSG \EWit.

GLKN GARDNER, June lO.-Mre. Lizzie Kinsey and daughter, of Newark, hflva hern spending a few days with Oacar Bnydsm and family At th is plcire, siul >es- terdfty the Suydem family, with the guests, took a walk to the o ta le Tuber- ctiloftls Sanitarium op Mt. lOpp.' Mrs. Kinsey made a misstep, and In falling doubled her leg underneath her, break­ing it n t the ankle. A carriage was se­cured and she was taken to the residence of Mr. Suydam, where medical aid was procured. Tliero are a t present In this little village four persons suffering from broken bonf^s. Two broken legs were re­ceived on Mt, k lpp and two persons in the t(fwn received broken arm s by falling on wet bon rdwalks.

H alf Jury P a a e l W an ted t<» ^utt.fJjb't'iul IH'fpoIcA to the AIFi5.Vf.VG VA'H-’fl.

ELIZABETH, Juno 10.—Application for excuse from duly mode to-day by twenty- four out of the forty-eight petit jurors serving the May term now engaged in tr>'litg criminal cases caused Judge Ed- wsrcl S. Atwater to deliver a mUd rebuke toward laxity In jurym en's ardor to serve Htid ft stern definition of the duties of an Amf-rkan citlsen In ootmecUon with such work. In a few cases Judge Atwater granted the privilege for stated times, white others were refused permission to lea\‘G the courtrooom.

fetyracase Un^lvershy licnd EllainesR oosevelt fo r Inipenillnig D lsns-

fers th a t T h reaten A atlon,HYRACTT8E. N. T.. June Hl.-CommoncO’

ment exercises at S^yracuse rn lvorslty wehe held yej^terday, the baccalaureate ser­mon being delivered to the 362 graduates by Chancellor Jam es R. Day. Chancellor Day's rem arks have been construed as re- fleeting on Prepidrrji Raosovelfs public policies. He said, among other things:

“The distinction between tho executive, judUdal and logislative order is disappear­ing in a forin of oligarchy named commis­sions. with an aiitocrncy at Its head as tyrannical as the world has ever known.“

“The democracy of this great republic Ifl rapidly becoming a farce.

“The Infatuation of the people Is n burning fever for which the only an ti­febrile is an appalling disaster, financial and polillcal, from which there Is little hope of eBcnne.

“The sowing of ansrehy and socialism has brought the reaping of the whirlwind of hatred of government ann Ood;,p social order, while tho ran ting cant of tainted money Is reviving an old form of phalr- Isalsm.

“Six blillons of shrinkage in the prop­erties of the people, the Immense losses that have come to sn^sll holders nnd un­certainty and d istrust in all business are a costly Warning of the danger of riotous impulses and demagogic policies In cqm- inerce and trade."

W ill Ratid SchoolhoD se nf Vnicin,Sprdnl Viepatch to th t E V K yiSd A'iiR’N.

ROCKAWAY, June 10.—At the special school election of Rockaway Township, St Union, fiaiurdiiy, only thirty-four vot­ers were prcRent, Among them were ten women and five members of the Board of FJducallon, The vote authorized the Hoard of Education lo purchaan u;e Calvin Liw rence lot of one aero at Union, situated on the nvftd from Rockaway in Shonsum, for $100: lo erect on that lot and fully equip a new schoolhouft.* at a cost not exceeding 13,900: to issue bonds of the.d istrict for $4,(W>. One bond shall be Issued for three years, ono for four, one for five and one fur six years.

Red Croift L eg lo ii's KIgliLto the KVRMSO SEW8.

ATLANTIC C rrY , June 10.—A pnijecte-] raise of Insurance rates that win bring premiums to the full rate of the fratern;'.! fnsuninco rabies will cause the chb-f Ktruggle during the meerlng of tho Nn- tlomn Legion of the Red Cross, wim-h opened Its sessions here to-duv, 'Ti'. grcHlcsi flgm will tomo from tHe older members of the organization, w'ho arc t:i“ mnei affected by the raise, and the battle will resemble tliat rHiaed In the R o\a l Arcamim over the same cimnges.

SiwgMiUMawill prevent indigestion:

Take good care of your stomach. You have only one in a lifetime and on its condition depends your health and happiness. Ninety per cent, of all dis­eases begin in stomach and bowels.

Castor oil, taken in time, will remove the cause of diseasehy healing and strengthening the di­gestive organs.

Sweet Mint Ola is cas­tor oil made pleasant to take. All unpleasant odor and taste removed and a flavoring of pure pepper­mint added. The mint expels gas and sweetens the stomach.

Physicians pronounce Sweet Mint Ola the best laxative known to medical science. If you value the health of yourself and family, you cannot afford to be without a bottle in your home. Costs 15 cents at druggists. If your dealer doe.sn’t have it,, send us his name.

Every mother should have a copy of our book­let.

THR MINT OLA COMPANY.IxaboratoritPi, K^yport, N. .1.

Tliotairhl .s tr ik e r* .w tarfed F ire ,ELIZABETH. June 10.—Mystery sur-'

rounds tho origin of the blaze which de- ptroywd I50.C00 worth of property at the blacKsmIth shop of the New Jersey Dry Dock Company on South From street to-day and which is thought by manv to have been the work of striking dock hands. General M anager Drum said to­day to a N®WB reporter that an Investi­gation wft* being made but that nothing definite could be eald a t preeenL

ROBERTS UPHOLDS POLYGAMYM orm on E lder* W h o W aa B a rre d

fro m C o n g reee Mix Y eara Ago» C la ljua M oral O h lig a tio u ,

SALT LAKE. June 10.—A feature of the controversy which has been waged be­tween the mlniatera of the evangelical churches and the Mormon priesthood was tho address delivered In the tabernacle yemerday by Elder Brigham K, Roberta excluded from Congr«« becauee of hla polygamous practises. H e epoke In reply

Merekaafii* to LtqalitatesThe stockholders of the old Merchants'

F ire Insurance Company met this morn­ing In the office of Joseph M. Byrne, ROO Broad str«eL and passed a resolution Htftttng tha t they deemed it advisable to dJftftolve the company and liquidate Its assets, which amount to somet(;i!ng more than IKW.OO). About four-flfths of the stock waa represented a t the meeting.

Ixercise Your JudgmentIn ciioosing painting ntatertal.s, basing tt upon w'sar for cost, and you’ll turn to Devoe’s Products as naturally as a ftower turns toward the sun.

J. J. Hockenjos & Co.,829 Broad Street,

Newark, N. J .

H ^ b o r ii C u r r f c l F y e g la s s c sr \A \(I.N ,\llti,\q

Bifocal Eyeglasses(For Far and Near Combined)

A great help and convenience! Whether you wish the old-style bifocal or tlie new improved Hilborn Invisible Bifocal —my prices are the very lowest such glasses can be made for.

New Invisible Old Style(Vou cannot see the line) (You can see the line)

This style, as low as This style, as low as$ ^ 7 5 ...................S teel C « p .„ ................ $ 2 . 0 0$ 4 . 2 5 .....Gold Filled Clip..... ..... $ 2 . 5 0$ 5 . 0 0 ............ . lOK. Gold C lip ............., $ 3 , 5 0

Would cost elsewhere from $4 to (10—my price from (2 to-js.

19 W e s t P a r k S t r e e t .rolM;

. ^me jubilee Sensation ^S$22 Taffeta Silk «CI.75(C Shirtwaist Suits, P

CITY NEWS HOTES.The annual dance nf the Angiui Club

will be held tn Oratuii Hall Wednesday nlffht.

A postponed monthly meeting of the Oliver Street School Atumnt Association will be held a t the ichoolhooee to-night.

About SOO pleasure seekers participated In the cxcurelon of the VVtne. Fruit and Garden Culture Association to Bellewood Park yesterday,

Memberi of the Planter Lledertafel and a boat of frleade epent (he 4ay yesterday on Prankton 'a farm In Maplewood, the occailon being the liedertafel'e annual outing.

A report on the garbage question will be submitted a t a regular meeting or the Clinton HUl Improvement Aesoclatlan In St. Andrew's parish hall. Seventeenth' street and Clinton avenue, to-morrow night.

Bev. John HcDowell, pastor of the Park Presbyterian Church, has been In- vtted for the third, time to lecture at the Northfleld Btble School a t East North- field, Maas. Hie telka will be given next winter.

A t the meeting of the United Blngere Saturday night the board of directors w ai authorised to arrange for a benefit enter­tainm ent in eld of the Newark Turn- vereln'a building fund. Julius Lorens was re-elected 'conductor for the ensuing year.

Jennie Lewis, sixteen y^ars 'old. of IM Belmont avenue, was knocked down by an antomobfle operated by Charles Krebs, of Mi Springfield avenue, a t Belmont ave­nue and Spruce street yesterday and slightly bviFt. Sbe was able to go to her

To-day the Piano playable enly by hand;is rapidly and unmistakably being'superseded'by

The PIANOLA PIANOThe Plano ANYONE can play ARTISTICALLY

(Playable t ilk tr by h u d or by P iin o lt Music Roll.)

EFO R E long it will be as diflicult to dispose of a piano p/ayaile by hand only as it is now to dispose of z .square piano.

At the present time, a larger allowance can be made on haod-played pianos, in exchange for Pianola Pianos, than at any fu­ture time..

'This condition, in addition to the unlimited wealth of music that the Pianola Piano brings into the life of every m«ittb6r- w should command the immediate consideration of every piano owner.

Prices $500 to $1060.AH makto of piittos taken tn ejtchange. Balance payable in tnoderate monthly amounts

T h e A E O U A N CO., A e o l ia n H a l l .x S .T

7 uesday's BargainSmartest Summer Suits on I

the very crest of fashion's! wave— suits sparkling witht authentic style points splen-4 didly tailored by Bedell artists. |

Shirtwaist Suits. \ Jumper Suits. J Lace Trimmed

French Knots and TucksExcellent Taffeta Silk ini

golden brown, Yale blue, myr­tle, green, garnet, iridescent reds and blues, champagne, I cafeau lait, green with white! pin stripes, brown with' white! thread stripes, blue with daintyl stripes of white. 1

(G raceful flaring skirts— stunning kilts—newest sleeves and yokes—TuAday’s bargain ( price, $9.75. ^

No Alterations. ,SALB A 7 A U *1HREE STORES

I

NEWARK EVENING NEWS. MONDAT, JUNE 10, 1907. a

a A S S DAY ON AT PRINCETON

'CommencemeDt Exercises Con­tinued by Students of

Old Nassau.

DR. WILSON'S BACCAUUREATE

OFFICIALS ARE FOUND GUILTY

Judge Declares that Constables Showed Contempt by Talking

to Somerset Jurors.

BOTH ARE FIRED BY COURT

fipeW4l DUpntvK to thtt f;FA\Y/Y(jF StJWS.PRINCETON, Jrmi* 10.—This wuii clans

day a t tho unlVtTsily hero nnO I ho slu- d«nts who yoBterday gravoly heard Preji- Ident Woodrow WUHuh'H hacoaUiuronto aermon, which mnrk«*d the oponlng of tho 3#Oth annual coniniBnceineru exerclBen, celebrat^'d to-dny's event with ihe usual orations and Jukes.

President Wllaon conducted the open­ing of llii'sc exorrlscB, introducing (hu m aster of ceremonlua, IJoiiuld UruiiL Hc*r- rf]ig.

The salutatory address wur delivered by K arry McClure Johnson, and the clasn orallnn by John Nevin Bayre. Thoimis Clinton Pears Jr., read the cIu. b poem.

^tie Ivy oration In conneciiun wJlh the planting of the Haas Ivy at Nassau Hull was delivered from the st*’pa h>* Henry akllhnan Brei-kljirlUke.

The annual ednnon okercdHcs began.this Aftenioun. The cIhsh history wus r^atl by Thomas Jackson Huroll, and Oharlvs Ar- buthnot McClInioc-k made the presenta­tion oration, after which the cl:i»s pro­phecy was delivered by Fredetjck Morgan H arris.

Jam es Lawrence Oooney, llio cUhs presi­dent, delivered the preshh iu's addresH, and Henry Sklllmnn Breckinridge, cla»s Bpcretary, called the class roll.

The class odo, written by Thoinaa rtlii- ton Peurs Jr., with nmslo by Thaddeus Ooreckl, was sung In closing.

At the meeting of the Iwntrd of Im s- tres this morning a committee was ap- potnt^fd to canvass the vote for the elec­tion of an ntumhi trustee to succeed N athaniel F2wlng, whose term expires, and who hns declined to be a candidate for re-election. There Is a spirited con­tes t on among the ahminl present and all the returning graduates who have not already enrolled and voted are being Urged to do so by friends of the varloue candidates for the coveted poalllon on the board.

Among the lending candidates In the field are Andrew C. Imbrlc, ’9o, of New York; Wilson Farrand. '8S. principal of tho Newark Academy; !^r. Samuel B. S tryker, *63, of Philadelphia: Rev. Ed­ward Hutting Rudd, *IS3. of Dedham. Mass., and Andrew II. McClIntuck. '72.

.of Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The consensus of opinion on the campus seeina to be that

'M r. ^ b i i e leads the Held, with Mr, Fur- r a n d ^ probable second. Mr. Imbrie w'lis BUggeat^ for the poBltlon early In the contest and hhi friends lust no time cor­ralling all the votes obttiinable.

I t would not purprise many If Dr. Stryker should prove a factor lu tim con­te s t

The result of Iho election will probably not bo announced for several days.

This evening the class of 1!W9 will give the sophomorcB a reception and the mem- bere of the Glee Club will give their can- cert. Activities will continue to-morrow. I t will be aiumni day with the annual m eeting of the Rhl Beta Kappa. Society, the annual meetings of Whig and Clio balls, election of ulumni trusif^e. uTumTii luncheon, gymnastic exhibition, reception by President and Mtb. Wilson, Lynda prize delmU and the promenade concert on the front campus.

On Wednesday, commencement day, the members of the class of lliUT, will bn grad­uated a l 10:15 A. M. uiid in the afternoon the Pennsylvanla-Princoton basebalJ gJime will he played.

The subject of Dr. Wilson's hacciiluu- reute address yesterday was "And lie ye not confornted to this world: but, be yo tranafom ied by the renewing o f, your mind, tliat ye muy prove wliat Is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of God.”

He Impressed upon the class members th a t, w'hlle they are now at the lurnliig jjotnt In their Uvea, tho change from pa­rental care to dependence upon their owtj effort In the world of w'ork would not he abrupt, but oa gradual us that experienced In their transltloD from childhood to young manhood. His text, taken from. Romaiia.li., U sold, flitted-lbis u ra in ^ imJnt In their lives. He said. In part:

" I t may seem strange and futile counkcl to give to a company of young men who' ere about to go out Into the world to u±<h a living of it, to tell them th a t they musst no t conform to w hat th<?y find, must not accept the rules of the life they enter .ts novices, by permission and not by riglu,

I as those who would learn and not as tho&e who would teach.

Kpwltil fn'spofrk to tihp fcl'KYI.Vf/ .YRU*S.HOMEHVILLR, June ID. Deputy Blierlff

John L. Anderson und Constabiee f>enals Wyckoff and Ambrose Muntx apiKiaied before Judge Theodore liouraetii In the Burnorset court to-day to answer queh- tlons submitted to them on the contempt proceedings In.stUulcd by Prosecuor John L. Reger, as the outcome of the trial of Wllllum H. BKlllman, who was charged with forgery. It was alleged that the foiistublcB perm ltt'll Audi'iwu^ to lalK with the Jurors In that cose during the night they wore out. imd that Anderson Uimpored with two of the Junirs. with the purpose of Influencing tho virdicl during the priigrc.'^s of the trial.

Motions were mudo on bciuilf of nil the dcfonduiits this morning for their dia- cimrgo on various grounds of lack of Jurisdiction and proper evidence. These wero nil denied and the court culled UfK>n (he dofondunta to prcscni their answers to the interrognlorlea served uptm tltom by tiio pmsecutlon,

This lo i'ing been done in the ease of CohKiablea W3'ckotT and Muntz. Frose- culor Reger risked p^rml^slon to offer evi­dence to show that the reply In the nogii- tlve to the qiieellon wiiether they had permitted the Jui*ora to speak to any one was untrue.

He called Jurors Stanley Brampton and CharlfcM F, Horner to the stand, and lh«*y reiterated Ihelr prevlouB testimony to ih t effect th a t (hey talked tn John L. Andcr- Non and heard other jurors talk to him In (he presence of the constables during the, night.

I'pon the conclusion of tho testimony Judge rkvir.'iem said limt ihe evidence in­dicated that (ho con.siubles had failed to fuini the duly Imposed on thoin by the court. Constable Montz hiul i‘ulh*d out a juror ut (he request of an oiUsUiiT, the Judge eaid, and both consiable.s h.id allow- od jurors to como Inio llio lower room and coiH'crse.

Hrt adjudged ihctn gulMy nf (vmienu-L w’hflihcr or not any evil purpose was In­tended by thOBO who approadiod the jui >.

He thought, however, that Home amisld- eriitlon sitcviild be token by 'the court of the fiicL that tlie consUible? permUlt-d this, for a superior offlver—the deputy sheriff—from whom they were probably accuetomed to receive their orders, hI- lowed It.

He thought Manix was the more guilty because he had taken a more active part. He thfii aentenced Wyckoff to pay a. fl.ie of S2C» and Muniz IIOO.

The cnae of D**puly Sheriff Anderson was then taken up. und after various ob ­jections to the interrogaiorifB and mo­tions to strike them nut, in which all the motlnns but one were denied by th t court, a recess was taken to give couns'l an opportunity to prepare other answers.

LAWSON PRIZE TO HARRIMAN

Trophy Captured Without Any Opposition a t Plainfield

Horse Show.

SAUVAGE GETS FOUR RIBBONS

S a le sDrug and Toilet

Sundries and Nickel4

Bathroom Needs Ends Wed., 6 P.M.

OPBIf AT A. H „ O bO ia « T •)««. lA M M IlA T a U C K IT B If.

" B E E H I V E / J a n v l T t N C W A I U r -

S a le sSwiss Sonoier Cirtaifs,

AHover Efflbrolderies,Hack Hohair anA Siciliaa,

Wonea's Sanaer Uederwear.

P L A IN F I^ I ) , June 10.—Rucceoaful to A degree fur beyonal Ibi! cxpectutlona of the Riding and Driving Club, Plalnfleld'H lourth anniint horse show vlOBod Siilur- day afternoon w ith J. W. HnrriniHn, of New York, leading In the number of awards for the throe days the exhlbUlon wuA conducted. W ith eighteen horses en­tered In tlje various cluasca ho secujed a Inliil of elghtef'n rlbliions, nine blufB, kIx reds, two ycHowa und U white. In addi­tion he won the Thomas W. Lawson rlml- knge cup for pairs of horse* in harnesa. Reginald Vanderbilt was aecond with fotirteen ribbons, only four of which were blue, W’hUe Miss Emily Bedford wins third wUh six blues, three reds, a yellow snd a white.

The attendance Saturday was nearly twice a* large a s has been noted a t any ttme Blnce the shown have been given, and attention was about evenly divided between the liandsomely gowned women In thf! grandstand and boxes and ih^ Ihoroughbreds who swung around the ring. The H arrlm an horses were the fav- crlles during the day, and there wns keen disappointm ent when one of ihc team s took the Lawson Cup with prac­tically no opposition,

Mr. H arrlm an had two pairs entered, Reginald Vanderbilt had two. and Mlsa Emily Bedford had one. Early in iho forenoon It was noted th a t both the Vun- dorblll and Bedford horses were In no condition to compete, having caught colds St Philadelphia last week th a t enured them to wheeze. They were accordingly withdrawn, and when the class was call­ed only H arrlm nn’fl I,rfird Burleigh and Lord Brook and Laughing W ater and Chieftain appeared. The Judges awarded the blue to The former pair amid en- thuBlasllc handcl.'ipplng from the spvc- Utors.

Another feature 4.’la«s of tho day was for champion saddle horses. The held was bO Inrge that It w'as placed In two divisions, atid for tho flrsr the blue was taken by Rufus L. Patterson'S bay mare Jaamliiu, which has been taking flrat place all sea­son. The red went to H, G. McElwalne's clieatnut mure Flirtation. P ar the sscond division, Otto H. Kv'ihn'a brown gelding Supreme won the blue and Mr. Pallerson'a Corotoma tJie red.

There were only two Newarkcra who had horses a t the show, and one of them did fairly well. Tonzo fiauvage look a total of four ribbons, two blues, a red and while, P ete r llauck Jr,'a jumper, H arry G.. was aw arded two whiles against a large field.

PICCATINNY EMPLOYE DIES OF HIS INJURIES

Norinnn l)HT<M^pnrt, of Splcertowiif Hurl In Fraean In Dovers

FnllM tu Iteeover.Spffinl io the EVt'M.Ktr .VfJffS.

W*ll.\RTON, June 10.—Norninn Daven­port died a t his liume at Spicertown, near lici'e, last night, frum InJiirlpa received In a fight In Dover last Momlay night. He WMifT suffering from Jideniul homorrhages resulting from ci blow oi* blows In the back and groin.

Davenport a t first said that ho was struck hy tho handle of a truck whlla working at the I’nlicd Slates powder depot a t Plociitlnny, but later lie told hlb fa ther about the figljt In Utjver. He says th a t he and WlllUim .Berryman went to tin* lunch cor on Flusiejc street, known us the "D«w Drop Inn," conducteil by Harry IT. Bickart, and in a soufile following a dispute over making change, whs struck by some one whom he does not know,

Blcknrt. the owner uf the lunch car, says that tho two men were Intoxicated and were ejected from the car after they had started n rumpus and began to break crockery. Outside the llgiiling continued and Diivld Helmun, who essayed the role of paaceraaker and attempted to get Berryman away, was struck and received

, . .. %i black eyp. Ijiitcr Berryman and Dnven-Laam lng is knowledge purged of all w hartun und the following

th a t la untsalcd and epliemcml. I t Is , uavennort went t<i work as usual,neither the rumor of the streets nor the ta lk of the shop, nor the conjecture of

: the flaloon. I t has been purified and sifted I ill quiet roomB to which passing fashions ' of thought do not penetrate.

"By ft we are renewed In Uio aamo way th a t our mind* are, as It were, brought

- back to the originals and first basis of thought th a t Is, simplified, when soi-lai

. convention and all mere fashion falls ' aw ay In the presence of danger, of sin- ■cere, unselfish love,"

President Wilaon concluded his address w ith word* of encuuragement for the graduates in their new life and plcdg^nl them th a t Princeton's good wishc,* would follow them.

On Saturdaj’ night the fltuients gave n performance of "The Mummy Monarch" In the College Casino.

The patronesses of the Princeton’s per­form ers were Mrs. Grover Cleveland, Mrs* Woodrow Wilson, Mrs, Georg© A. Armpur, Mrs. Henry R. Fine, Mrs. Harry A. G ar­field, Mr*. John Hlbben, Mrs. Helen Mnr- quand. Mrs. Gustave Schlrmcr and Mrs. H enry Van Dyke.

P t a g r y 9cliool Com m encem ^nf^. ELIZABETH. Juno !0.—With an address by Bev. Dr. T. B. Thames, class oruiloit* and class cheers, commencement exercises ■wer* Ptngry Sdioul to-day. Rev.Brockholst Morgan opened the commence­m ent program by on . Invocation, Dr. Thames' address had fo r It* keynote the word*, "Nql Little, but Much." 'i'be grad- na tes In the dess of 1907 are the foilow-

ling; Charles W'aokermHn, Charles J. .Bennett, George E. DImock Jr., Wilfred H. Jayne Jr., Clayton B. Jones, Harry

: 8. Kent, Vivian P. IjOlcher. Howard B. Mulfordi Jam es F»aWrftod* Myprsi Roy K- Patterson, Sidney J. Rockwell, Donald M. SlmonSr Wllltam M. Sperry, Leslie Alan Taylor, George Coyn Thomaa Jr., Asher U. Vreeland and John L. Thame*.

H igh School ClAO to Gowns.OCBAN GROVI-3, Juno 10.-In 3t. P sur*

H. E. Church Saturday night the bacca- Utureate sarmon to the Neptune Township High School, which claims to be the first High School class In the Statb to wear caps and gowns at graduation, was preached by Rev. Percy Ferlnchlef. The oommencement exercises are In he held next Friday, and Thomas J. Iltllery^ Slate Senator from Morris County, will deliver the oration. *■

but a t 10 o'clock In the morning he had to quit and go home, where he had since been very ilU

Blckart has sworn oiil a warrant for the arrest of Berryman, Davenporfs com­panion.

HORSE'S KICK CRUSHES SKULLF I ' H P - o l d PH trri.on B07 S lra c l,

A n im a l A c ro u LfKn w ith a d u l l .

PATERSON, June 10.—As the result ot striking h horse upon the hind legs with a stick while the animal was In pasture near Beckwith avenue, j-rHlcrdny afte r­noon, John Murray, the live-year-old son of Mr, and Mrs. John Murrify, ot Raritan nvenue. Lnkevlow, received a kick th a t fractured his skull. The hoy is In a pre- carloua condition In St. Joseph's Hospital.

The little victim, with a number of other children, were playing In the pasture, and M ttrray 'picked uti a stick and advanced to the horse, wlilch was ijuletly grating. M um ij' h it the animal u hlow across the hind legs, and the hor- picked out, one of Its hoofs striking th . .ihis

iioy's head. When m other saw her son's unconscious

form, s'-" • 'i j te d . Phyal<'!ans nt the hoa- pttal penotihed on operation on tho child's skull soon after his admittance to the tnstituUon, but tho chHi>ces for his recovery arc slight,

H o rse D ro g s G irl Two B locks,HOBOKEN, Juno 10.—Her feet caught In

tho reins o t a runaway horse, Mies Elof- ence Kiagea was Sraggoil two bloefcs and painfully Inlured after she had started to alight from a carriage in front ot her home, 227 Shippen street, .West Hnboken yesterday afternoon. Finally the horee rnn Into a atone wall and was caught. No bonea ™ re broken, hut Mias Klagaa's clothing w i^ tom to shreds. Shu was out and bruised and Buffering much from the ahock,

H lis t H av e M ale E sc o r ts to Cafea.,ATLANTIC CITY. June I0.-Pol1cemen

atatloned In the doorways of many edfea Saturday night rofused to allow wumen to enter unless accompanied by male com­panions. The order WSK pkiended to back room s of saloons on lha bualneaa avenues. Heretofore, all bu t the most fnahlonable of the cafes have admitted women who were In tho habit of taking Innph after the theatre. The change la due to the

. activ ity o t reform era who claim wmnen and glrta were served with drinks..

3

A rsA a g lu g fo r k ra s ld e C o u ra a tlo n s .ABfyRY. I'ARK, June 10.-Artangc-

m ents th a t look to several years ahead are being made to secure the meetings of various bodies for this place when they hold their annual conventions. This city wIU be Selected for the Baptist May an ­niversary In HU), and tha Baptist Young Peoples’ Union of New Jersey will con­vene Jiare for three days in June ot next year. A score of invitations have been issued to other associations and ordera

.............. Sr --------O lass B ottn iu B o a t L aa n c h e d .

_ A N 0L E8E A June ID.—Ths h rst glase- bottom boat to be used In Jersey watoi's wtm launched Saturday a t the boat-bulM-' lag eetabllehmcnt of Captain Prauer, (wd ns It slid Into the waters was christeiwA Catalina, In honor of the islunda of thni nam e In Southern Colifornta, where bo-its o f th is description are used extenslvolj'. The boat Is th irty feet In length by eight f*et in width A t 't in centre and will tw propelled by a slx-ftorsepowert engine,

> e a B Cvts OK H is P ln g er . .A TtA N TIC CITY, June lO.-flamnel

B lcreni, a local earpenter. Is connlderlng himself the luckiest man In the State, al­though be Is ihlnua 'A Anger. Btevena wag working tipon the new Baardwalk Bank Saturday afternoon, when ft thrtie- ton titm beam fen, crushing him to tlie grtnind. Fouow-workroen expected to find him mashed to death and were a c ^

■ to sea him erawl from one end o t which Iddi

,. t of dehrlA One of his 1 oil and u * bru

r.-.fcJ.U,liUitfa

g iiin in it gehoo l C om m encem ent.gpccinl BIspafrfr (o'He KYMSIHO A’t ’ffB.

SUMMIT, June 10,—The commencement exercise of the class ot 1907. ot the Kent Place School, will terminate this evening with the address to the graduates by Hamilton W right Mable. At tho Calvary Episcopal Church the graduation sermon was preached last night by Rev. William M. (»OBvcnor. of the Church of Incam a- tlon. New York City.

ffAD DREAMSC anaed hy Cotfea.

'1 have been a coffee drinker, more or less, ever slrice t can remember, .until a few montlie ago I became more and more nervoup and Irritable, and finally I could not sleep a t night for I was horribly dletiirhed by dreams of all sorts and a species of distressing nightmare.

"Finally, after hearing the experience ot numbers of friends who had quit coffee and guile to drinking Pottum Food Oaf- fee, and learning of the great benefits they had derived, I concluded coffee must be the cause of my trouble, so I got ao'ine Postum and had it made itiiotly acooraing to dlrecUoits.

”1 w;M aatontahed s t the ftavor. I t entirely took the place of coffee, and to m y very great satlefactlon. I began to sleep peacefully and sweetly, My nerves Improved, and I wish I could warn every man. Wtnrian and cblida from the unwheleoome drug (caffeine) In ordinary coffee.

"P eople really do not appredate or. reatUe w hat a powerful drug It Is and w hat terrible effect it has on the human system, 1 would never thing of going back to coffee again, 1 would almost o« soon th ink of putting my hand In g. fire after I had once been burned.

"A young lady friend of ourg bad -etsnmeh trouble (or a.^ong time, and ceuld no t get wall A f wng as she uaed coffee. She finally quit It and began the use of Postum and Is now perfectly well.'’

. “There'a a Heagon." ' Ssad-HW .little :^ e a 1 th CtanwhEvv <.xi„ Bead .WTell- =yUl«,'' in pkgo. ' •

Tm/

Shoe Proof.There is more than solid

comfort in our Oxfords. They have mote style and more wear in them than any other Oxfords can deliver t hat cost t he same as ours, and wearingonc pair will prove it.

Our Tremont Oxfords are the best $3.50 can buy, and J. & M. Oxfords, $5 to $6, are the best at any price.

T an and black, on extreme and modified faets*

Stoutenhiayks7 P 7 -8 0 5 B road S tre e t.

NONK 13 PURER THANH A Y N E K W H I S K E Y

UCtTTL.ED IN BOND.It l8 made ot the best of grain, dLiJlIlaU nn-

drr tbr moat rigid annllary ciindlllrnB, ajta, ll.ll alrength aml -abaolule parlly guaranlceit by mb U. 8. ijovernmeni offlclals, as ahuan by the btamp over the cork.

Four Full Quarte, ‘A ftFxpreps i3P«*pal»l....... *jf**»**f rHsyner Distilling Co., Division O. 2S2. _

Dayton:, 0.< 3t. Lcufji. Mo,: Atlanta, Ga.;St, Paula Minn,

Mlmyon's Rhernnatlsm CureI t curES sharp, Hhootlng palps In the

arm*, legs, Blileys, back or oreaBt. or sorB- ne*» in any part of tho body In from one to three hours. Cores fitllT i'n<»flwollen JoInlSj stiff back and nil palna In the hips and Joints, sciatic iumliuijo. It does not put the cHscasc to skep. but drives from the system.

LEGAL SOTHJB5.SPECIAL MASTER'S SALK Ob' LANI>--In

Chancery of New Jersey— Catherine KlUiiaU'IvKe compialnanc ane Mary VS'clden (Whelden). George ^^>lrten tWhelilen). tS’llllain Fhapatrlck. Annie Flupairlf'k. Tlioman F1t»- patnCk and Raymond Fluiiatrlck. oefendanta— 0« bill of partition—Dwree for sale,

Notice U hereby given that In ['UrKuance of n dec«!« for aale made by the chancellor of the Stite of Kew Jersey. In the above jiiated cause, bearing date the founeeiith day of May, A. D. 19^, to me dlrecieU, 1. Walter J. Rhlghl. one of fhe ipeeiai muHiffB In Chamiery of New Jersey, shall expaso fur at publlo vendue> to the highest bidder, on Friday, June 31. JgO?, at the hour of 3 o'clock In the aflffr- noon of that day. in ihe lower main hall or corridor of the Easox C!ounty Courthouf^ (n the'olty of .Newark,'county of JSflWX und Stat* of 'New Jersey, at) and slnguler :he said premlwa mentioned In the bill of complaint in the above cause, and therein descrltwil as fol­lows .to wll: Beginning on the westerly lineof Cojden eUeet. at the distance of one oyn- drtd and’fifty feet southerly, twenty-eight de­gree* sfeaterly along the same from its Inter- aeotlon irlih the aoutherly Ihie of a street called Bleecker atreet: thence U) along t'olden street south tweoty-elght degree* west twenty- Ave feet nine iDches, more or less, to the line of Jand belonging to WtUiam Wallace; thence (9) along said Tine north sixty-four degrees Torty-flve minutes west one hundred and five feet; thence (8) north (weniy-ttighl degree* i»ast twenty-eight ' feet, more or less to the ncHtheasi comer of lot No. 50; thence (4) south parallel with Blescker street alxty-two de n'e * torty-Av« minutes east one hundred and five feet to tb t place of beginning, including the eaiate and Intartat in dower of the defendant, Annie Pltipatrlck, .widow of Thomas Pltspat- rtek. dsosassdg in the said premlaea together with all and slogular the hereditament* and appurtcDanceSs to the said premlBes belonging or In .any wise appertaining, be suld at public vendua to the highest bidder. In the presence and under the direction of Walter J. Anlgbt» esuulre, one of the special master* of this court 4

Gtv«n under my hand this neveqteenth day of Uara A. Da ‘

. WALTER J. KNJOHT,Bpcclal Uaster In Chancery of New Jervey, 1^-1016 Prudential building, Newark, N. J.

Thomas L-Butler. Baq.. fiidldt«r,(I1O.0U) 76S Hroad street, Newark, N. J.

IN CHANCBRT o f NBW jBR8ET-ToO «fi«J, Stapbens.By virtue of an order of the Court of Chan­

cery of K«w Jsrsayp made on the Afleenth day of Hay, Dloelsop nimdrad and seven. In a raes wherem Bmiaa J. Stephena i* petuioner. and you, Ihs aaid George L Stephens is deftndant, you. are requlnd to appear and answer the petltioaers petition on or before the sixteenth

of July next, or in default thereof such dsorea will be made against you aa the chan~ eellor will thlhk MUltable and Just.

Bald petition Is filed a^fnst >'ou for dlvoroe from the bonds ot matrimony on tUs ground of desertion.

Datsd May>ilBDBRIC SI. PAYNB,

Bollottqr of Petltlooer. lOT Market etreet.

Ntwartt, N. J.(tfi.oo> ________________IN acMrdimee'^ifih Scctloii 1 of an act of

the Legislature tbs Btate sf New Jert«y, entitled "Aa act to am hortn pareona to change their name*." apprevsd Febriiary 3te. ISTA, no* tihe Is hersby given that Louis Ooldstetn, of the city of Neyrarhc. New Jsrssya t^ll apply to the j u ^ of the Oonrt of Common Plsaa of the

Great June Sale Reliable S is .S a V in g s R u n , t o H a lf .

B e re a d y f o r b arj^a in s that will re tu rn more money to your purse than you ever dreamed of saving on staple and timely silks—be alert to opportunities of such ma^jnitude and variety. We are do- iner this just to create a furor—to (drive our high-water business mark of this year above that of last. Read—do not skip a line—and you will marvel that we have so exactly gaged your present and future silk wants. Come to the sale early, choose from the vast array before it is broken by quick selling sure to come as a response to these magnificent offerings.

For New 45c and 50c Corded Wash Silks.

19 and 22 inch, excellent grade all silk, superb luster, strong, firm, possessing lasting wearing ciualities, splendid assortment pat­terns and colors, very newest, pleasing styles; stripes and checks, in white with blue, blue with white, pink ^ith white, wliite with rose, gray with wiiite, white with green, lavender with white, and more; also solid white and solid black; decidedly stylish, particularly desirable for waists; come early ifor good choice; positively 45c. and 50c. wash silks, at the almost unheard-of little price of 2Sc.

Sale Wanted Black, White, Natural tlabntai Silk.

iFavorite Summer Silks—None better or

more desirable for all around wear; every piece carefully selected from the best j;ip- auese Habntai silks possible to secure in the respective grades; it will be wise for any woman to buy for present or future use; for waists, dre.sses and underwear.WhiteHabutaiSilks27 In, reg .tS c , spe.36c 27 In. reg. 65c, spo. 48c 27 in, reg. 75c, spe.59c 27 In, reg. $1, spe. 79c

Black tiabutdi Silks23 In, reg.50c, spe.39c 2 7 tn, reg.69c, spe.48c 2 7 in, reg .75c ,spe ,59c 27tn , reg. $1, spe. 79c

'FiguredJap.WashSilk$Figures, dots and spots, 26 inch, beautiful

new silks, all silk; women who miss this will surely regret it; extraordinary bargain in most stylish summer silks; 2,5D0 yards printed Habutai; good weight, woven from the finest Canton silks; famous for wearing qualities, with beautiful brilliant luster, white grounds, slightly imperfect edge, and U inch dots in black, brown and navy blue; also 26 in. dark gray, navy, black, reseda, old rose and royal grounds with neat,dainty rings,dots and small designs; actual val. 75c.yd; great spec'I 39c>

C fl« For 75c Black v/y Taffeta SilkFull 21 inch, splendid

luster, excellent .black ; strong, firm, perfect weave, one of the most desirable black silks, for entire suits, skirts, linings, gr.ide not often sold under regular 75c. price, special in this sale at only 59c.

For I5c. Fancy Plaids and Checks

N ew styles, all silktaffeta, beautiful broken plaids, grounds of navy blue, Alice blue, reseda, garnet, brown and Jasper; also small block checks in black- and-white, violet-ami-white, navy- and-white, green-and-whitc. royal blue-and-white, taffeta and loiiis- ine silks; particularly for jumper and shirtwaist dresses; regular 75c., at 50c,

For Extra Grade 60c. Liberty Satin49c

iO ^ For 69c Black 401^ Taffeta SilkFull 19 inch, good, firm

body, excellent quality, made from fine selected silk yarns, for waists, suits, skirts and linings, will give splendid wear, staple black silk of wide use, value 69c.—heavy thread here and there—nothing to hurt—make price 48c.

171 ft For 50c. New All ^ ■ 2 ^ Silk Pongee

22 inch; for street and even­ing; may be depended upon for hard wear: strong, firm, rich luster; white, cream, light blue, pink, Lavender, reseda, inaiie, dark green, red, garnet, gray, navy blue, black and natural col­or; one of the best items in the sale; would be regular 50c. at to- dav's cost; good bargain feature at 371' c.

For 69c. Good Black China Silk48c

19 Inch; heavy satin face, all aiik cloth or real style, soft finish, rich ap­pearance, inetliuoi weight, aplemlid for wear, white, ivory, cream and new­est shades light blue, pink, nile green, lavender, gray, jnaire, cardinal

A Q For 7Sc.Good CottonBack5atin^ O L —24-lnch, extra good for linings, fancy wo>|k

and pillow tops; heavy, strong, rich satin face, white, cream, light blue, nile green and roid; one of the bargains you should not allow to pass; 'worth 75c.; a leading sale, s p e c i a l . ............. .............. 48c

Full 26 inch, one of the greatest values ever offereil, strong, heavy,firm, rich jet black, evenly woven, will give suljstaiitial wear, popular for present and laier wear, save a th ird on this widely used silk, good regular 69c., al 48c.

For 1.00 Black AINSilk Taffeta

Full 26 inch, heavy, rae- diiiiii finish, splendid deep black, width that cuts to good advantage for waists, dresses and skirts, special sale attractiveness, strong weave, of perfect construction, value at least $1.00, extra fine special at 69c.

For 7?c. Grade Rough Pongee Silk

strong fashion feature—handsome Shantung silks, look like rough pongee at more than double the price; 27 inch, slight imperfections that will not affect the' wearing; navy blue, royal blue, Alice blue, light blue and leather shade, light brown, for entire suits, regular 79c.; do not hesitate to buy at this special price, 48c.

For 65c. Reliable Black Peau de Sole

19 Inch, strong, all silk, one of the most favored black silks, perfect black, good weight,beanti fill finish, for dresses, waists and separate dress skirls, one of the fast selling items, be sure to buy of this regular 65e., special 48c.

48c

0 0 ^ For Fine L25 0 0 1 BIk. Taffeta SilkFull 2 7 inch* voatkrful

bargain, made by one of the beat manufactureri, splendid quality all silk, jet black, medium finish,., high luster, may be depended upon for hard wear, for waists, gowns and skirts, cannot be tmde to-day to sell under $1.50, at 88c. '

CQ. For 84c. i l l Silk Nalnral Poagee

Full 31 Inch; p e r f e c tweave, made from finest silk yarns, beautiful luster, heavy weight,finest quality , firni,atroog, splendid for suits and coats; save a third on bne of the most popular . materials of the season; one of the bargains sure to attract, a. great magnet in itself, regular 89c., special at 59c.

I 1ft For 1.75 All Silk I.OV Voile Ninon—44ln.

Refined, high grade, for evening gowtis and waista, finest all silk yarns, sheer appearance,but strong.wlll find t favor with stylish women—white,ivory, light blue, pink, nile, lavender, light gray and black, reg. fl.7S, spec. t<39.

All-Silk Black Grenadine—Full 44-in-; dainty weave, beautiful luster, silk of beauty and fashion; rich black, for waists ami dresses; cannot be duplicated at prices— $1.50 grenadine, spec. 1.15

J1 .25 grenadine, spec. 89c

Cftrt For $1 Satin Stripe Marquisette—ftj 23-Inch, all silk, one-inch and heavy satin

stripe on the sheer marquisette ground; pink and coral shades, very handsome—decidedly high-grade sheer fabric of beauty and fashion, suitable forjevening wear and w aists-regular |1 , special i t ...................... B9c

l.BGAL NOTICES.plaint Ih thl« aclhin nn-l ti> perve a copy ul yoUT xnswer ofi the iilaliillff's aMomi‘y within twenty 4,10) tlaya Hfler the ocn'lee of thla autn- monft, exclusive nt Iho iluy of service, ami In i&ae 0( your failure l<» ujipeAi* or answer, tudgmeni will be luken agaltiHi >-oa by default for the relief domandeil in tlie complwlnt.

Dated April 1 . 1U07. PAVl. BONTNGE. iPiHlntlfffi Alforney.

Offlcp and poatnfUce address. 40 Wall straet. ■ New York. N. Y.To tho defem'.anl, Krtward Ktlefel; 1

Thf loregiilnx »uinmonB ih Nprven u;>nn you 1 hy publication, pursuant to an urder of the 1 Hnnorahie WlUlum J. Kelly, une of the Jii«- 1 tlcM of *hp SuprfTOft Court of the Slate nf i New York, dated the tenth day of May, 1W>J. and mod with the ox>mplaint m the office of thf clerk of the county qI Klnke, at the hall of records, in the la>rough of Brooklyn, Jn the i cuimly of KlngM and Suite of N»*w York, 1

Dated N%w York City. May II, 1I*h7. |PATIa ItONYNGB,

I’lnlntlff'e Altornt-y, ! Office and poetolflce nddrewi, 41i ^Vall street, \

New York, N. Y. j

ROSSNAGEL&dePLANQlE9 . 8 5$15 Brass Rail

Bed Out f i t . . . .Dodhtuad Stamls, GG Inches high; has ex<

tension foot, heutvy brtiAS m ils nnd brass moutits on head and foot; combination cotton ojid excelsior mattrosF; double mesh Tvoven wlm. all steel springs; wedge Rliape bolster; two t>eBt A. C. A. tick feather pillows (all slaes).

BIATTIlESffHENOVATlNG—Mattressescmcl feathers renovated right here In our . own bulldlnf; full else hair mattrosFt thoroughly renovated and new m a a best A. C. A. tick furnished; guar- S 1111 ameed workmanship, com plete— '- ' • v v

FBOrOSALS*

coni^ of Essex In tlie State sforesak). for the right and suttiont? tO mswds the asuke of LnuU Botten.

Dated June 8, MKff,RAUJ_______

FetltUsisr, :twark, N. L

COPHT OP t h e ' 8TATB OF NSW VOaS—AUnd KuIIk , olaIntIB. vi. edward

BtMCOI, Mfondoot—PlolBUS (Mirei «tltl in tb . oounty of Kings, gtrmnaons.To the 1IA0SS itsdHa difas’l^stt'

xou d u n i i iu r iwmcimwI » *i

SAUL COHNa *T « F«tltU>n«f L8t M ^ « t wtreeL.

newfi

PllOV>OjiAL9.OFFICE OF THE BOARD OF ftTREKT ANL

WATER COMM1SS10NRR9 OF THECITY OF NEWARK.

City Hflll.Newark. N. J., June 8, ltM)T.

Sealed proposals will bu r^ci lved at (hie .omee from -to fl:B0 o'clock P. M.. ot ’niufedAy, th«* thirteenth day of June, 1IH17. and opened at the Uat named hr*ur, at a. )>ubl(a Tneetlnx of the buard (o he held st Bald time and place, for the paving uad repaving of thn followitif streeTs:

BEACON STREET,from South Orange avenue to Springfield ave­nue;

BERGEN BTRV:ET,from north side ef Hawthorne avenue lo Ren­ner svemie;

FILLMORE STREET, from Market olreet to Ferr>' Ptreet:

HOrSTON UTREatrr. from Hasiburg pl«o« to Elm .road:

LKflUE STREET.fromCltnlcin avenue to Hawthorne avenue,

NJNTII AVENUE.from South Fourteenth street Ick the city line;

OLIVER HTREKT. froht JenrefSon street to Kim rhad:

POINIBR ST’REET.from Ell»al>eih avenue to Frcllnghuysen avo* nu»:

SOUTH f if t e e n t h STREET, from Clinton avenue to p:ighteenth avenue;

SOUTH TENTH STREET. ■ from Springfield avenue to (Tllnxon avenue;

UNION,«Ttt.KKT,from Uatitet strert to Elm street, on both elde.4 ■pf the railway Araohs. with the exception ii -one toot on eaob aide of anld tracks;

WOODBfDE AVENUE, from Montclair Avenue to Grafton avenue.

th e fOHoWlnf -Is about the amount of the work to dope, and the materials to be fur­nished In the eonslruotion and conipleilon of said work, and upon which bids will be coon- uared•For Beacon Street Repavlnx—Two ihouaami aloe hundred and twamy-alx 4!i!,ivjrj> w]uare yards «f oblong granite block pavemeot on a six (S> Isoh concrete foundation. One thou­sand eight hundred ajid twenty (1.K20) Mneal feet of new RJ by d Inch eight cut or fine axed curb, set Ip <«nerete. Two hundred and forty square feet of new BelglAn bridging, laid on ooncreta. One fl) set of new 16 by 6 Inch eight cut or ffpe sxed e<Fn«;ra/ aei In concrete.' JBIx (fl) ‘ngv Sotaslelfi manhole cidv* era to rew ce nUt ooverir Gne (Li new bachi, compisie. One nsw 1»sln. ualn^ old h^d And ain. ’

For Bergen Street Paving—Seven thousand aevftft hundred <T,700> square yards of oldong ifroaUe block pavement on a alx (6> WE concrete foundfillcm. One thousand three hun* drad <1«SQ0) square feet of new Belgian bHdg- Ing.^^lstd on egnente. Nine hundred (wCs)) squar«r feet ot old bridging, reUld on cirincrete. Two hundred (2001 lineal feet of new 20 by 4 Inch curb, set In wancrete. Three Ihouaand one liundred (6,160> llMsl feet of old tO'lnch isurb, redressed and set In coperete. Two (2) sets of new SO far 4 inefa eomera, set In concrete. One ti) new bsstn, egmplete. using oM head smf silt.

For FRImors .Btwet Paving-Two thousand one hundred ana s!xty*sevpn squareyards ot brick Mvement on a six (0) . inch roncret* fbUndstlon., One thousand three hun­dred U JW lineal feet of new 16 fay ft inch eight cut or floe axed curb, set It) oOrtcreta. V... . . aqUBiw feet of

concrete. Une

GL'r OI'B rR IC K S -Y oii don't know how cheap you can l>uy furniture, beds and bedding until you have shopped with ua Low rents uml small expensoa enable us to work under a sm aller proflt than stores inoro prominently situated. Shop with ua,

T H U E E -P IE rK O IT F IT -A ll *!*w. B?d eimSJol' to piciure, clean o x - p i o cclslor m aurc’si . woven w lroA 4 A pprh?g................................

PURNITUItE rU H O l.A TEniN O —War­ranted workmanship, lutesi style ooverun. 'Phone ISfiTW, or send us poslal and we wtli be pleased to esU with s/iinr'l> s iind estimate.

f% i \ P l T D D V O T D P P * T OSK b l o c k f r o m u a b k m t sTma U r b n l T T V I n C s K I P e n n s y l v a n ia k a il u o a d .

K lone/streets Banth Ormngm and Sprtnsfield Avanao Cars Pass t>or Uocca#

One <1) new basin,

^ s hundr^ twelve (tli) squaiw fact »f new Bslgion brlgfiag, UW on conersts. One hundred sod twelve 013) square feet of oldbridging. reMld on concrete. Four (4> new noiseless manhole oovere to replace old covets. Two <S> w ii of nfaw 10 by ft Inch eight cur IV floe axed eorosra *ot Ir concrete. One (D new hsoin. coiarti|e. One (1) new faaeio, usiag^V or Kowdii Street Paving—Five rhouHhnd four tnmdrsd fft.40m Moare yards of briek pavement on a sfat (6) Incfa concrete fouFndatld)*. Three thouasBd one h*i idred and sevesty^vo (9,170) lirM^ feetyof new 16 by D' infih eight ctiC or fine a>ed uirtk, set tn conersfe. one huOdred and twelve (113) square feel of hew Bclglgh biidflhf. laid lit concrete. One hem tiM end etA t'G o^I Uaeal feet of hew 16'by ft

I tni**r (ft« ooiB-

rnefa h«wdi«f *cui^"^sat tn cooo^e. Four .<4) seta of new 1| fay | toch eight onl dr fihe aSud oorofTf, DM Is eooeretSL One tl) new basin, ccrssplete. Om (1) new basin, oaing cM head and MB. Six t6l otw nolMless msohols e»v-o«. to repUtW eld ^ . ifb r LeslM itra tf> g 8 ig Pour IdsBSisatid tire i bUBAKUd sod tfa(rty*U^ (4,291). oquore ytrils

PROPOSALS.nf ten (10) IwOi IRirnnl ps'einenl- Eight hun- iiroil »n«l fnny-J4i‘VPn rtquure yards ofhrlck pavcaienl tm a six Inch ccmrrele fotindrtdon, ' Fifty iftu) pnuajr** yards ut oJjlotig grsnlic bioi k [isvr>n iMU <m a ssnU fnundHtlgn. Light JiuiMlmi and eighty equare fi-et ufijew HriKlan brldgltof. laid nn cunt-reH*. Twu ilioiirend flvi' hundred Unval feet of newl(j liy 5 Inch eight cut or fliJ" axed curb, si»t In roncreie. Four (4) sets of new Id by ft Im h f-lght cut or tine axed corners, get In concrete Eight f8) new nnlsnlews manhole covers tu n*- lilair olfl wvere. F^ur (4) sqnare pards of bitulllhic tiav' ^menf. i itu* (1) new basin, com- I'lctf!. Gnc tl) new huAln. unlng old head and*^Fnr Ninth Avenue Paving—One thousand tlx hundred and fifty (l,»)W») square yards of shprt asphalt psvrinmi on a six (6) loch eoncrui’ foundRtlcm. hundred and fifty (050) lineal feet of new 2<) hy 4 Inrfa eight out or fins axnd curb, act In rnnrrpte, One <1) Alt of usw 20 o> 4 Inch elihi cut or fine axoti rarnttfL set in conen^te. one hundred and fifty (IfiO) lineal i)( now 10 bv fi Inch hesder.curb. sat In cnn> rrele. One «1) new basin, complete,' One (1) new Imiln, using ulil head and silt. Three (6) new nu*8elcsB manhole covers to replace cld i-ot era.

F“or Oliver Street Paving—Seven ihouasnd alx hundred (T.fltSi) square yards of oblong granite block pavement on a nix (ffi Inch noncreie f<.undail»n. Four hundred (4w) square feet of new Belgian bridging, laid on concrete. Two hurwlrcd tine! twenty-four (224) square feel of old bridging, relald on concrete. Four thou- Hand (our hundred (4,400) lineal feet of brw Id hy 5 Inch eight cut or fine axed curb, set Iti concrete. Two (2) nets of new 16 fay 6 In^h eight cut or tine axed corners, set Id concrete. One (1) new bssln, complelt-. One (l> new basin, using old head and sill.

For poinJer Street Paving—Three Ihoiwand nine hundred and seventy (3,970) square >-prds of oblong granite block pavsmenl on a six (6) Inch concrete foundation. Chie thousand nine ItUiidreil and twenty^Ave (L63Q) lineal feet of naw W hy 4 Inch eight cut or fine axed curb, set In concrete. Three (3) sets of hew 2U by 4 Inch eight cut or flue axed corners, set In ccin- prete. Six hundred (and eighty<four (064) square feet of new Belgian brldglnc, laid on corcrele. Ou* (t) new basin, cARimete. One 111 new basin using old head and sill-

For South Fifteenth Street Paving—Eleven thousand seven hundrra' (11.700) sfauare ysrds of ten (10) Inch telford pavement. Two thoU’ ssiid four hundred (2.400) square yards oC brick pavement, on a six (6) Inch ooncrete foundation. | lxty~fly« (lift) squall, yards of nUong graalts hlnck pAVpmnnt on a sand foundation. One thossttid two hundred (1,200) square feet of new Bslglan bridging, tud on concrete. Blx (hbussnd eight hundred 46,MO) lineal feet of new 16 by fi inch eight out or fine amed curb, set In ooncrete. . Four (4) sets of new 16 fay ft inch **«h* 9^* ^ c«-

Sra. set In concrete. BIghteen lilt} new aolse- m msnhole coveni to replace old covers. On# (t) a#w basin, complete. One 41) new basin, wring cld head and sill. I'our (4) sqnare yards ef bliuKthic pavement. ^ _For tkiuth Tenth Street Paving—T«n tbotiaand

stX bUbdred (10,600) sfaUftre yards of fen (td) Inch telford psveinent. Two ihousand one faun, dred (2,100) square yards of fartek jHtvcmem, oa S' six (9> liieh ooocrite foundation. <Jna fajn* dred <100) square yards of oblong graalte block navrmeiK, on a sand fouTMlalkm. One tfaou«'iti4 eSahl hundred 41,600) square fret of new IUl< glan bridging, taM oa cuneradT* Sts tboosant on4 hundred (6,10C lineal feet of new 16, by 9 Inch eight cut or fine axed curb, sat in con- oret*. EUtht O) sets oC new ]Q by ft inch s jr tt cat or fine axed comers, set hh ooncrete. Barenteem (17) new noiseless msnM e covers to replace old covers. One (1> new basin oom-

' " One (1) new basin, using old head and (4? sfauare yards of u n f

j* n a ro sA L A ,of s#fi m concrete. One ll)'ne« lifiKin oojTit' 'itv. i'me (1) new basin, Ud'i.g oM h4'8il and 8lll. Tt-ti (lo) new nolMlesa man- holt- I't'vvrs t'l n-plu'-i old covers. Three ol)

nijtilmkH. cumpiHe.. with noiseless cove 8, (tn# himdrvJ Mn<! forty-four (144) aquare feef of new Beiglnti bridging, laid on concrete.

For Woi^Jelde Avenoe Pnvihg—Three thuu- Rand six hundred and seventy-five (n,h7D) sQiiaio yardi of brick pavement on h tlx (fl) Inch erne foundallun. One thousand four hunJi<‘ ) tihil F-lghly (1.4M) 1tn#a1 feet of new HI b C liKdi eight t'ui-or fliiR axw! curb, set in rnn- ciete. Four (4) rets of new 10 by ft Inch rut or flno axed oomsrs, set In concrete. Ni.n • ty lUO) lineal of.nsw 10 by A Inch bra br curb, set in concrete. Four (4) new manhole covers to replace old covers. Orn- ili new basin complete, One (1) now basin, uHin.; old head end sill.

The coivtract £of this work. If awsr-irri. rthsll be awarded provistonalty by (be Unnul. rtiu. shall Impose no liability upon ihr i-liy iinh‘-i such award shall subsequently be tl;inll> ina-fri by the board; prellnilnwry aaweffiJit-ru uf |.r |.-- Mty Bpedftlly benelllcd by (be prr>|iom-il in.- provsment Is to be made anil benrlng >(he samo is W bo held, after which ih'- !>-■«- I nisy or may not nnally awaril ibe cf'mrn- i, ni at'cordsoce with chapler 2l7 nf the Starr laws Of ISdft.

Bidders nre not to slat# an) jirlco r- r lerlalR rind work for which (here Is n tixoi amount provided for in the Hpei’lfli-ndnrkH

B^ch propcaal muai Im> ‘inHopifid in a w’liU-d envelope, protierly ImlorHrtd with the nuntc '>f the bidder end of the lnijir‘)vcment. and di­rected lo the Board Of Sired not] Waier i’om- nilsslonertF of (he cUy uf Newark.

Bidden* will slate th*'lr prlrcH In writing us wo*l a« In figures.Bidders muai specify tn (heir prvitHjaals that, should (be alxrve work bo awarded to (bem, they will bind thetneelvt'S to finish and cnni- plete the sami‘ within the following number of conae* uilve wnrklng daye-

Bearon street repaving, ihlrly-flve 13.1) days. Bergen s(ree( paving, sixty fWJ} days. FtUmurs street paving, twenty-four <24) days. Koasion Biroei paving, forty (46) days, l.,ealle atreet paving, forty (40) days,Nlndi avenue paving, twenty (20) days.OUvar street paving, sixty (60) Jays Pnlnler street paving, forty 440) days.Houth Fifteenth street paving, seventy-fiv«

tTftl days. ^

fuith Tenth street paving, seventy (70) days, nlon avenue repaving, forty-fl\> (4ft.l days. Woodsldo avenue paving. ihJrty-ftve (3S) days. Thr plans aful snecificatlons of the work can be axsmlns4 at (ho office of Ihe vhlsf viigJ*

near of the Ekmrd of Street and Water Com- mlreiopers st the city hull. Raid pro|>osalB to be accompanied by the consent, In writing, of two sureties, or a surety company qualified (o

i>iamlne the proposed bondsmen under oariii. fif hi' shsU AO desire, or shall be ao instniotsd fay the board, but the board will not be bound fay any sialement that may be made by sucb pro- poesd hiKidsmen, but sball have full power and elisoluie direreiton In the whole maJttr, and thi.i provlilDii Alia) I be referred to Iq ofay ad­vertisement Inviting bids for any such pubtlo work.by direction of the Board of Street and Water thjminlMbjnera uf the city of Newark.*

MORRIS R. SHICRRERD, Chief Ektginrer.

do buiiinew In New J^rrey, ^ho shall, at the time of putting In such prop(j«a]a. qualify ~ ~to

Plate.MR four merrt.

sfauare yattto ( dlitbla pave*Fof Union fltrtgt Repsvlng—Four ibounuJ

hlna Iretidred inaATiy-flva «4fakre yardsof Iritutmnoua corieret* paving on a six (6) Inoh condw foundation. Three tbM and seven hundred and eigtitreti 48,719) llaail «f new '16 ellHCt cut-or fine axed cUrb, set tneoMireie. Six td) sett ot W by ft tacb eiglu cut

their reaponalblUty In the amuunt of eueh prq- I>osa1. ami bind theniMlyes that. If the oontra<!C bs awHrd«d io tb* person or peraoos making the proitoasl they will, upon Its being so award­ed become bis or their auretlea for the faithful iwrformanre of said wqfk; and (hat If the ^ r - son or persobs otnlt of refuse to execute such contract, they will pay to the city of Newark any difference, between the sums to wtaleb he or they wou^d have b a r tion of the cdntract. mth tdoc'i; .of Newark mmy be obliged to pay the peraon op persrms by 'Whom such contract shall be axe* cute*l.

The Board.df Street and Water Commiselon- era trf tha oUy of Newark reserve tb thetu- ■eh-es the right lo iireept or rejeet any or alt prnporels for the abo>\'e work, as they tnay deem fog the tatereat of the dty.

Bidden and suretlea are hereby ooltlled that under the proTlalopa of tbs sevetith aaettoo 'of the law ereailoa (he Board of Street and Water .Commlsaioiiera. approved Uiireh 'A . IM)1. that (he bond or bonds to be given for the. faithful execution and pertormance of gold pufaiio .wcn^ Miaii iWxt be aMfored M to fufflctonry by th e l^ rd . and as to forta, hy 4 couxtoM of the board, and no contract Shall fae blndinif Oq Che city- op become effeeUve or nperarive until each bond is eo approvsd^ and tbs preiddont lot the bnoid aboil have sawoff to

UaARD OF BDUOATION,Office of Secretary,

Newark, N. J.. June 6, 1B0T.Sealed propceols for fumisning the material

and performing the work required In the erec­tion uf the proposed

COMMIClirlAL AND MANUAL TRAININO HIGH flCHDOU

to be located at High. New and Summit atr^lf. In the c'Uy r f Newark, N, J-, will bn recelrail by the (‘ummlttee on Bchoolhousea of (he B<reT'1 of Education of the city of Newark, at a ni'‘ct- ing to be held at the c;hy hull In the rooms of the said board, on Tuesday. July 16, JOOT.

The curuinlltee will be in seiwioii to reca ll bids from 6:40 o'clock (o 0 u’nlork In the aven<« lug. Bids will be opern-'d promptly at D o*cto ~ Proposals properly Indorited nnist be l plther iJersonally V thn Urnt- nnd place . sluled or by regleteroiJ m.HI mldreesed 1 Argue, secretary, Itourd >.f Edunatlon, Newarik V. J. If presumed personally, they will be TO* celved only at the dme niiil piai'e above statodi If by regletereil mall ihry ivill be received on Munday, July 1, , from k .H> .'■-•loik A. M. (0''4 o'clock P. kl.. anii on Tu>-.sday Jifly 10, from A:SO o'clock A. .M ti/ 1» n'rtlock P. M. sbMf and no laier.

6«psra.lti pr'i| ‘>8'ils may be made on each Ol thn followlii iii'iiix

l. Kxcavuthii work.V. MltMIII I 1, e 'H. Hltjpl Mill! Ii- 11 WHfk.4. f'urpt'iilrr Milk. :

Phiml lntf V MkH. PnniUiltr ss'ih7 KlertTfliji! .".ijikfl Il'ui lui.' flti'l .*-111 Hating system.Cniiirnt ims u.hv alnn makf u total estlmatfL

coniljliiJiiV an.I im haling any two or more or all nf rhn Si VITJI j . nie nbcMa merjllnned. covering (he (•r«i-t].'ii aiiil ciiniplfdun of the said build* log I'xrriit ftir ihn heating and ventllatlog sysKm KAMmares an made must give the nnm«8 ami HiMt'i'Mffl at lh( different lub-eon- 'riLr tills 01 pnrsuiiH making such estimates, I'ropiisjils (')! (hfl hvuUng and ventilating sys- I cm must III' i-nilri-ly aetuirate and distinct from pr'ip'isnifl for any other claua of work.

Planh Hml Mprelflcailons for the above work, exi'pjil hnitilng ami ventilating, may be ea> amlned i«l lli*- offim of the architect, Nathan Myers. Meirjpulitun building. Newark. N. J. risnn iind 8]>r-rlfiratlons for the heating anl rentilailng S5'ntem may be examined at the nffice of the eiiglneere, Ruiiyon A Carey, 1J& Market sircet. Newark, Nr J. The right to use sMm Ilf plnns and speulflcattons for estL muilnK purjioseii muy be obtained by c(nj' irm-ior* ujHm application at the office of the* arrhltect or engineers abo 'e mentioned, upon 1 the condltluns us stlpuluted in the ipeclAca- (lons. Al) plmnu and speclflcations thus pro­cured hy coniractoru are (he property of tha arohitfct and engineers, reepeotlvely, and mute be returned to (hem us required hr tbs specific's lions, Plans will be ready for da- tlvery on Thur*dey. June Ifl, 164)7.

Bald pcnposals must be accompanied by the couaent In writing of two surfiles. who shaH, at the time of putting In such proposal!, | each qualify as to their reaponsiblllty lx to* amount of such proposal, unu bind themeelvw I that, If the contract be awarded to the per­son or persons making (he proposal, they will, upon It tielng so awarded, become hla or tfaelr sureties fnr the faithful performance of Mid work; ami that If the person or persona omit or refuse to execute such contract, they will pay (0 the Huld Hoard of Education of tbo city of Newark any difference betwesa Iba sums tb which be or they would have baen . entitled upon conipletlou of tfae contract and that which the said Board of EdueattOB of! the city of Newark may be obliged to pay th a '

Tson or persons by whom such contract Bball ; executed. 7'he contmlttre Will also rectlva -

as surety s reliable company duly autbortastt by the laws of this State to exeouta auQg bold M auiili rarely.

Bidders must specify Jn thslr projtoulf thaL should the above work or worksto them, they will bind thehiselve __and complete the same within ala hundr^ (600) consecutive working dmya^from the 4atoi of (heir contract. ;

The person or peraons to whom the eontrogi | may be awarded will be required to attend a t . ' u e office of the city counoet with tha stirsUto'

K'

'OJPOUl* tiui, » iw&rdM

VM (o Ibuill

ttlltirrd lir him or th«m. and UMnta tha ccii- traci ulIhlD tan (10) d a n fnnn tha data i t ft aotlca to that iflaot; aad In caaa ot (ailura ornarlart to do ao, ha or thay will ba cohitdar^ u havinft ahandonad It. and aa In dalault to tha Clt>'. and Ih0r«ii|wn lha work aha)) ha

'.-a f te o ftn o tu tha eon- . traot hn- ''ttia work tot.cotnmaace la woi. -a ox.a'.d.dCqaot or ooatraota^ -‘ muat ba mada out on blanka tnr-nlahad '(or tha purpoaa, whldh can ba had npon appttnUon at tha oKleaa tha arfhUtot aad • andnaara ahora mantloBrd. B iM tn inftat atatft I tha amount of tiitir jmpoaala |ft arr(tlii« aa wait aa In tUnrta. _ ^ .

Tha aald Canunttioa on SchoMbnuaa ot tha aald BoanI of tCdsdaiton raaom Mr thain- •alvaa tha riaht to ^ rw )aM afti. orall rrapoaalt for tka abow worn or afali a ca r dafaclr ttwrahi, aa thw mar damn baa^rtr tntaraat ot tha a»U B o ^ '’*„?***

By dIraotlOB of ttta CowufttltM tnuaaa of tba Board ad Bducatton i of Kawark. _

■ ___ B.

that

' . hi i

ij djgTT:; '■

NEWARK EVENING NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1907.

CHILDREN ARE ftTtntnrt Iwnw 8o(urrt«)r fww B«t-! lain, wbem ihf <I«clart4 h« )Md xwe on I butincw. went out «f town on bu«i- j'ni'H aguin to-day. Mr*. Cook* awwrled,

DAY’S LEADERS rI buf where Iw went and the nature of h1«■ huelnw* *h« tefu»«d to lay , Mr, Cooke

I'xpi'elfd to return hum* thi* atlerhuois, I,* r ih i LHckeriain Uoiiib 11 wa» laid th a t !

MALONEY SURE IS ON THE JOB

Sunday - schools of Many Churches Present Programs

with Floral Features.

l itt l e ONES ARE CHRISTENED

Jt)**plte the l i te r f*a of the aeaaon and the learcity of wild tinwera, a number of churche* held Chlldren'a Day cxer- elH> yeBterdoy. Moat of ttiem wore docked more In Bccordanee with Enatur or Palm Sunday, plants hanking the pint- forma- OtherB were trlmnifd with aitl- llolal flower*, and atlll other* wllh niche*, *UlrWay» and ladrtera of erepn paper, th e re were a number of bnbles chrle- Un*d.

At the Roaeville Preibyterlan Church the Sunday-achool marched In to "On­ward, Chrlatlan Soldier*," and the re- iponatve reading wa* led by Frank Hen- Jamln. a u ls ta n t euperlntendent. IVllllam I . Ionian wae the leader In singing "Ke- Joloe, Te pu re In H eart." and Mre. Wlll- lu n M. Bailey conducted the eiorclses of the primary dopnrtment. Miss Mary C. Vedder conducted tho Inlermedlnle de­partment eierclioa, and the senior* also contributed to the prognun. Rev. Ih-, William Y, Chapman, the pastor, made k abort addreas. L. R. Anderson played "The Palma" on the cornet. The singing of “America" concluded the program, W. ^ a c h Plume was the leader In this and each child waved a im atl American flag.

At the Chhrch of the Kedeemer the day Wki eejebraled In the morning. The pu- plli' proceiilonal w ai "Once Again with Joy We O alher." Carols were sung by the eehool and recltalloni given by mem­ber* of the kindergarten class and the other departments, leveral children were baptised and Rev. Henry R. Rose made an address.

On the roll of honor were the name* of William H arris Hewitt, who had nine­teen year* of unbroken altendance; Mt'S. William H, Brown. Willis F, Pos and Mr, Hewitt, teichci* who have not mlssoil a Bunday In the past year, and six pn- plli.

The Central M. B. Church platform was adorned with throe arches for the chil­dren to march through, and a railing and Bate enclosing the space. These were of . While crepe paper, as was a stairway a t the buck, ten steps hclng decked with words, in gli*. a* ‘‘Faith," "Hope," "Love,” the children reciting appropriate veraea to these. The pupils sat In the front pews, and fema and palms hanked the platform.

Hlas Augusta 'Pan Atta, contralto, sang a solo, and a (jiutrtet gave selections. Rev, Dr, William H- Morgan, paator, made an addreas. Henry L. C. Klrcfiner •ang "Oh, Como Unto Me."

At th* Emmanuel Reformed Episcopal Church last night Children'* Day axer- ctae* ware alao held, Alfred Walker. »u- pertntendent of the Sunday-school, an­nounced the pro iram and spoke a fevr word*, as did Rev. Robert W. Peach, the hew rector. The la tter announced th a t the collection would be turned Over to the liunday-achool, which probably would add It to a fund for a memorial to Rev. P r. Howard Bmlth, the first rector of the church. The children marched Into the church from the.Bunday-schooI and carols and recitations were ^ven, several boys M otrlbuting anchors, crossee, lamps and crowns to the decoration*.

At the F irs t Reformed Church ’Rev. Henry J. Voskull spoke and exorcise* and wmgs were ftven by young and old, one feature being a ladder with steps of '"Hope," "Love," etc., leading up to a crosm. Pansies, roses, tlltee and palm* d ^ e d the platform and George W inter n n g . Four babies were baptised.

Other churchee which held exercise* yentorday were the First and Belleville Avenue Congrdgaltonal churches, the Clinton Avenue and North Reformed, North. Clinton Avenue and Roseville Blip- tlit. Trinity H. E., Fewamlth Memorial, Third, BIxth, Park, Calvary and Soutb Park Presbyterian churches. N ext Sun­day le re ra l more will hold theirs.

neither Mr nor Mrs, Dickerson was there, Mr*. Dlckersdb, It was declared, had re­lum ed to the home of her .nolher. Mr*. J. E. Ketcham, In flernardivllh'. after spending Friday In Newark, where she t-anic to do some shopping.

Mr*. Dkkeraon. It was explained, has been visiting her mother for over two weeke, and during the first week of her visit Mr. Dickerson wu* with her. going to hiB office every day. HI* health, however, was not eufficleiitly good. It was said, to wllbsland the fatigue of commuting to Bernardsvllle. and consequently he re- luined to his Newark home. He had not been eeeti there. H was declared, elhce Thursday last.

JEWISH BAKERS CALL ARMISTICE IN STRIKE

Hetnrn to Work Pending Derlelon o f A r li ltra l lo n B nnrd-B us*

Arenece Journeymen,The striking Jewish Journeymen baker*

on the "Hill.'* who went out several weeks ago, returned to work Saturdey evening pending the dcelslon of a board of nrhltrullon. The opposing cdmmltloas w^ere headed by Isaac Blinder, redreseiit- log tho boss bakers, and Bernard Wevk- steln, business agent of the workmen, at d visited nil of the bosses snd principal workmen In le ro tcd In the strike. Tho arbitration committee will mael during the week afte r a conference has been held and will iimiounee Its declalon. 81xty-Mv# workmen were affected by the ntrlke.

Louis Kestcffi r, twenty-seven years old, of 87 Prince street, and Max Ijindsman, twenty-three years old, of 69 Barcley street, were heht In $2,400 ball each for the action of the grand Jury by Judge Horr, in the Fourth Precinct Court this morn­ing. on a charge of aseaultlng Herman Schechtel, a boss baker, of 87 Broome atreet. Both prisoners are Journeymen.

New Smoke Inspector Takes Hold and Means Business^

So He Declares.

TIME FOR JOKING IS tAST

Sm a ll a d v e r t is e m e n t o

"WANTS" “ REAL ESTATE."

ETC. fur the

'Kfiwoi (fo m in s Ntw®Will 0* fUcewed el the

/,Lo c a l / B r a n c h O f f ic e s7

B«li«vni« AVonM. ICPinicp ttr*«U Clinton ivenuo*. J43. Qtrdtn itrMt.

Hamhurf plac«, 14. Roievfll* Avemit, 80. South Sixth ■imii, S36. Wxllaca pU.c«, W.

Until

THINKS HEAL ESTATE MEN ASE SWINDLERS

A rn o d a le to A p p e a r A g a in s t P a ir W h o A d v e r tis e d F re e Lota

o n L on g ta ln n d .Inform ally charged with being iwln-

dlera. In th a t they have been engaged In a peculiar real estate advertising bualness, two young men—Bevnin Stillman, twenty- three years old, who a u e r ts ho Is a graduate of ' Annapolis, and Joseph B. Leonard, twenty-seven years old. both of whom have bee.u boarding at 180 W ash­ington street for ten days past, are look­ed up ut police headquartera, They were arrested by Detoctlve-SergCBnt Tulte and Patrolm en Troy nhd King.

M. E: Arundale, of 813 Mt. P Ic au n t ave­nue, says he will complain against them. He charge* th a t they got |I0 of hi# money through mlareprcaentatlohs.

INTENDING BRIDE READY, BUT GROOM IS MISSING

U Y DEAD IN KITCHEN WITH GAS TURNED ON

Ben n n d * W t l l ia iu F e ld m e ye r’s JleBy on F le e r —J o h n P re n d e rga st

D r ie k e U a rh o lle Ae ld anti D ies.William Feldmeyer, forty-live years old,

,ef K8 Hawthorne avenue, was found dead .la the kitchen of his home early yester­day morning, and a gas-jet in the roui-t Wa* partly turned on. County Physician KUIott announced It was a’ ase ut sul- i^ e, but misnbors of Mr. Feldmeye.-'a family sold they thought he was rol*- takea. They declared Mr. Feldmeyer had ■uSered from Indigestion, and In accouui- Ing for bit pretence in the kitchen, neeert- •d that he kept bis medicine theve.

Ilr. FehSmerer left his home Sdlurduy nlfht* ostensibly for a stroll, und rptutti* #d home about Ui80 o'clock. An hour later his eldest imn John went Into the kitchen and found his parent dead on ttio floor, tube was attached to the partly op«n Jttf and one end was wUhln about

feet of the body. The dead man Is turvlved by a widow and three sons anJ three dauvbters. He wua n momber of the firm of Fedderson & Feldmeyer, but­ton makers. The funeral will be held

' Wednesday, and Interment will be iu Woodland Cemetery.

John Prendergast, lhlrfy-fl\p years old, of Cf Wallace street, Hwellow*'d carbolic aeld In the inrlor'Of hl» homr laic Siti* vrday nJght, and died two iimirN Uiier in the City Hospital. He ha$l bc< ti gloomy ever since he burled hie oldeRi bfjy, five years old. two years agD* ami jiIiku needay last, the stioond anniversary of hlr doath, waa particularly desprmdom.

prendergast leaves a widow and three Children, the youngest a boy of srvkn months and the, oldest li g>r‘ jf four years. The fdnertfl will be held to-morrow and Interment will be In tlje Cemetery of the Holy Bepulchre.

Mtfts C a ro lin e Mfromesky# o f H arri* son* W a tte d In V ain to r

W n e r tc h a to A ppear.Miss Cnrolinc Btromesky, nineteen years

old. of 206 Second street, llarriaon, is broken-hearted tu-day over the disappear# nnee of her intended husband, Joseph W uerlchg. The wedding was to have been celebrated a t 7 o'clock this morning In th is city. This Is not the only isd part of the yomig womon's story. She Is bemoaning th^ loss of 136 which, she says, Bh« gave W uertebg flaturday night to purebaae a miit of clothes,

Arangem ents had been going on for spme weeks for the wedding. A number of the bride's friends useembled at her home early to-day Inteml-ing to accompany the couple to church. Coaches were In waiting bIso. W hen the groom did not appear at the appointed hour It was. thought a t Hrsi tlm t he had been de­tained by some Bccioeni, but as hour after hour passed amt no trace of the Intended bridegroom could be got, friends of the bride went In search of him. He could not be found, however.

Daniel Mnloney, tho new smoke tnspF>c# tor apiHiimod by the Common Council Friday night, was at the city htUI bright and ciirly this rnornlug, nnd wns swnrn i In by Acting Mayor John F. ainnott, r Aside from being confront'd w ith another } evidence of the apparent lack of Interest f by the city ofTIclftls with regard to the > emoke department, Mr. Maloney found i plenty to occupy his a ttention fo r his first day.

As was the case when the first Inspector was apiKilnteti, tjirongb‘snmebody's over­sight, the new Inspector was without an offlci*. owing lo the fact th a t a room on the fourth flf>or w'hlch had been lUted up for the department hiis since the retire# ment of the first Inspnctor been turned over to the use of th$> building depart­ment. An arrangement w«k made, how­ever, so that Mr, Maloney will he lem- pomrlly located in the office of the cus­todian on the same floor, adjoining the office originally used for the smoke de­partment.

Mr. Mnlonry mot Thomas J . Mead, the clerk for hie deparimorii, and the pair spent a part of the morning in a discus­sion as to method., which will be ndopted in the new oflirc. They icHik their oaths of office together iind hiid a long chat with the acting Mayor, dealing with the smoke problem. AfUTward the new In­spector made a Htatr-mcnt Ha to the new duties and the Inauguration of whatr he declared will be a thorough campaign against the soft coal Biuoko nuisances

"This m atter has been the object of considerable lirnnor." the new Inspector asserted, "and It has al><n bi-en given a deal (if serious cooHldcrntlon, It cannot be looked upon In l)Olh tlghtu, but In my opinion will prove an Inti-restlng nut to crack. The subject hy this tlm« surely has been given plontj’ of consideration. It should have hern, at any rate. The ellmlnallon of the smoko mil«ance In­volves a great many rompllcallons which 1 hope in tJm« to nvercorno. The aubject U practically new In thl« city, and I propose to combine iny cffortH to check the Binnkft miltiances with a cam paign of education. U Is not In my opinion a case of disregard for law hy offonders of the amoke ordinance so inuch a s It is a lack of cducnilon with roft^rcncc to th a t de­partment of pliiim. involving the boiler- rooms and furnnee.**,

H ard P rob lem A bend,"It Is clearly up to us to gel results

In this mutter, and 1 feel confident there will be some as quickly as pn^slhls. I propose to g('t after all violators of the ordinance and to those W'ho mny consider the m atter a Joke wo may be able to make It appear more serious. Every complaint

fywUl be invcrilgatt'd personally by myself, and from whal 1 have heard of the sit­uation I nm Inclined to the belief that the manufucturera who use soft coal In a manner by which a nuisance Is created are willing tn co-operate iti thla work. W here we find them othcrwlso. however, the law will be enforced w ith the game strictness.”

One of Mr. Maloney's first visitors was B promoter of a smoke-cnnsumlrtg device who spent sevcnil minutes expounding the merits of the apparatus. A fter assuring the visitor that he was tn no poalthm to consider any particular device, the In­spector took a HsU of places In which the devices are Installed and initends to visit them to ascertain w hether the emoke law and the low governing the oom(truc- tton of the varlons bollera are be in f lived up to. A number of cnmplaintp. which have piled up during the lull since the retirement of the first inspector, have been turned over to Mr. Maloney ftqd they will be the first upon which he will act.

11:30 O’CLOCK A.Foe IiuefliaD the Seme Dey.

M.

FIFTEEN OFFER PLEAS OF GUILT

Offenders Qiarged with Arson, Burglary and Minor Crimes

Admit Wrong-Doing.

WILL BE SENTENCED JUNE 21

Picas of gulUy were entered by fifteen offenders h«?forc Judge T en'K yrk in the tJuui'Cer flcNHlona Court to-iuy to Indlct- nujuU nlh'h'ing offtinses ranging from arson and burglnry down to R.ewiult and battery. All of the offenders will be sen lanced June 21.

Frederick Meyers, who June 4 entered the home of Horace \V, Cort, of 379 Bouth Slxlh street, and wa.i captured by Mrs. Dorothy F. Cort. was one. Meyers had gathered up jeWelry and silverware valued at $55. Mrs. (’ort discovered him a t work mul the burglar Jumped through a window. Mrs. Cort pursued Meyers and captured him.

The charge of arson wna against John Harvey, of this city. Harvey admitted that on May 31 he set fire to a dwelling at 607 North Third street, owned by John Zlpp. The hloxe w'as extltigulahed when damage to the extent of about $50 had been caused, It is alleijed that Harvey- started tho fire a t 2 o’cHfck in the morn­ing and stood neafby watching Its progreis.

Joseph Adams, of this city, entered * similar plea to a charge of malicious mis chief. H was allogpd that ba smashed two buggies belonging to Jacob Moyer, of 14 W alnut street. RuhboU llolburn, ae\'cnieen years old, udmluod obtaining 15 under lulsc pretansoa oti May 31. John ilolbum , of 10 Olenrldgp avenue, Mont- ejar, the defendant's father, was the cornplalnanl.

Isaac Fine ploadod guilty to a charge of rnuUclous mischief, preferred by H arry W. l^awrence, who assorted that Fine, on June 4, broke a plate glass win' dow In a restauran t a t ■KS nroud street,

The other pleas of guilty entered hy the following: Ernest Fraser, colored, larceny; Tlnney TaOWIs, colored, mlsde n^ranor; Marla Ollvero and Jamefl Chi Bcco, misdemeanor; Thomas Doty, breaking and entering: Joseph Kennedy, assault and battery; Edward rrlqul, sell­ing cocaine Illegally; Mary Scofield, lar- cruy; William Sautter, iarceny; Amanda Webb, asnauli and btiltcry.

-------------- • -------------TO K R V U r# CUMll IT m iii*.

O’ROURKE IS A LIFE APPOINTEE

retx ry , wlwt tb* Lena e t oflloe ws% u B refervuim lo ibe unJHuJuw sbAwred Uw tenure to be ImtelernitRate.

SImu'.taneouEljr, Mr. O’Rourke stid Mr. Vsnec, who is s i n a Mpanish w sr veter­an, recalled the action qf the Leffle- lature. Mr. O'Rourke served h v u imonths with the New Jersey Naval Reserve* on the auitllnry cruiser B adter,

Develops New Building Super-' ‘1 a lieutenant, and was mustered out with

i n t m d a r l : f a n R e R f i tn o v ™ i congress.UU C llU M il U d i l I K IVCIIIUVCU I superintendent ha* arraneed

IndividualTreatment

for Cause Only. wilit Ills predecessor, John Austin, w here­by the la tte r wlU assist him In becoming

1 fam iliar with the current work of the de- I partm ent. Mr. Austin has. a hum ber of

IS VETERAN OF SPANISH

Coincident with hi(< formal assumption Of ottice. .this morning, the fact was mode known that Superintendent Wlliimn P, O’Rourke, of thu building dcpurimcnt, wua a life apiiolnlec and cun be removed for cause only. When Mr. O'Hourks wad appointed by the Couuuon Council, F ri­day night, comparatively few recalled the f a d th a t he wan a veteran of the Spanish war, and fonscquenlly whu protected by the veterans tenure of office act.

The veterans i^ct up to loi*t winter ap­plied to survivors of tbs Civil War only, but through the elTorts of Frederick Keubler, of Camp Mitchell, Hpanlnh W ar Veterans, and AnBrniblynian Uuy Fr*ke.

n amundmeui was put through bringing the boys who wciYt out in '96 within the survey of the statute. The amendment was approved by Oovernor Stokes March 27 last, und one of the first to benefit was Cnplath C. Albert Gasser, Inspector of combustibles and firs risks.

I t did not dawn on Mr, O'Rnurke. hlm- eelf. that hlH appulutmcnt was for life until after he had been sworn In by Acting Mayor SInnotl. The new sup^Tlntendent asked Wilson J, Var>cc, the Mayor's eec-

One qf the now superintendent's Brst j official acts will be to assist the Commit­

tee on Construction and Alteration of Buildings of the Common Coitndl In re- I fnrining the building code. Mr. O 'Rourks favors a ir entirely neW code. The aider- men will get to work on the ordinance Thursday night.

NE^wark B. and L. Report.The twenty-fourth annual report of the

Newark Building and I.K>an Association has been issued and shows the receipts fur the year. Including 142161.' on hand May 3t, 1906, to be tl24.632.». Of this iirnount $34,341 represents Instalments paid* $12,049.13 Interest and $1,947.40 premiums. Oh mortgages $67,260 has been loaned, on shares $ 090, while $8,814.61 has been paid on shares surrendered. The SMoclatlon has assets amounting to $lS$,G(i,E6,

Stabbed Dnrlag F lgb t.During a fight between Alfonsio Ballato,

thirty-ofic years old, of 126 E ighth avenue, and Nicola Cupola, of 86 Cutler street, on Cutler street, near Sixth avenue, last night, Ballato was stabbed In the left fide. Tho {Second Precinct police removed him to the City Hospital. Cfopola escaped. Hallato'a wound Is slight.

Wstaon clothes are not made in the ordinary way—that's why they are not ordinary clothes. Unnsual hand work gives to them th it finished and refined air of elegance such as high priced made-to- measure suits possess*.

In truth, Watson clothes are made with more care and ex­actness than suits coming from the smalt custom shop, where the work is done by one man. Watson suits pass through the hands of cutters, coat makers, vest makers and trouser mak­ers—four divisions of expert tailors.

Watson made suits at $18 show this tailoring executed in rare and rich' fabric patterns.

Other values at $10, $12, $1S, $20, $22 and $25.

6E0. WATSON & 00.Braid lid Miriut Sts.

SejIVARK. N. d-

H0WWUCH W WATCH WORTHf J a d g e H o w ell a n d Afra, MetCnroe

H llfer b y Sam e gaO.Charles Hood applied to Judge Howell,

Ift the F irs t P re d n c i Court this morning, for an examination In ibe case of Mrs. Mary Zoll and Mra. Gertrude Lavallon, now In JbII In default of ball on a charge of stealing and receiving a watch said to have been taken from Mrs. John Mc­Enroe, who lived In the same house with them, a t 252 Central avenue.

The nrnglsirale said he would grant the reQUfHt because he whs perRonally inter­ested. In her complaint, he declared, Mrs. McEnroe said th# watch wan worth $25, but yesterday, he added, Jean Tack, a Broad Htreet Jeweler-, bad sent him a let­ter Bfiying Tack had had the timepiece tn repair nnd th a t ft was not worth $5.

■Judge Howell dedlared 'he would apih! for Mrs. McEnroe and qbeailon her about this dlMcrcpsncy,

ALCOHOL SELLING CASE IS STH-L IN ABEYANCE

FIHR IN RXCBLSIOR.

PRISONER ACCUSED OF ■ SHOOTING AT OFnCER

Btuse Damages Pool Maunfartorvand j^torelinaso—Horses ReHraefl*Fire from Home unknown cause broke

out In a two-story frame building, used for storing cucetalur, In the stable yards of Koe A Conover, a t Plane and Acad- f-niy Hm-cta. this af$emoon. The building Is in iltc rear of the store of Joseph De Cfkhtro, u pool and bllUgrd table manu­facturer. of 2Go Plane street, and the blw e apread Into IiIh pikee, entalfihg a Inns. Tbr ^dainuge Is estimated a t about

Tin* II n- wofl discovered about o'l'lf.n i'. hy a pHSHorby, Who SUnt In an uUirni from box 14 at Plane and Hackett strciUs. p, n . Van IHbp and Frank Adanih, a d rh i i. hick two horses from a stable iiicmiccd 1>' it)>- hlaKC.

Aeeletant City Aitorney Reniir tii Proier.Hc Dj-n««l*t Inr Sn..dBy

Sele, but l*Diree Halt.Assistant City Attorney MV'Ta toM

Judge Howell tn thn F irs t Precinct Court this morning that he was prepared lo prosecute a complaint against Em,anuel Bellman, the druggist, of 233 Market street, wlmse clerk waa arrested Sunday. June 3. for selling alcohol that day w ith­out first requiring a prescription. No action was taken, howtver.

Mr. Myers said he had given close a t­tention to city ordinance 142, undi^r which the arrest was made, and exprcaaed Idm- selt as believing an iilfense had lieen com- m lttsd under tho literal im crprelatlon of "Intoxicating liquors," as rarnilnned In It.

Mr, Myers declared th a t u coiivlcllon would result In all drug stores being obliged to 'rcruse atcolin! lo patrons Sundays. It wouhl be impossible to make any discrimination as to the claag of buyers, he said, hut If one w.as refused all would have to be. The Judge replied he thought that If all druggists were careful there would Im no occasion to consider the question further. Ho thought It might be e good Idea, though, he said, for a complaint to be made ngnlnat Bell man and a test made.

Captain Ryan, however, conferred with the maglatrate, and the outcome was that no complaint waa made nor will any be made lor the presrm.

•ntnlon .irrretrd Italian, 1%'Iiq Drew HevoJver. F iring Fonr

llliolB, II la Held.Nicola Fresen. of 244 Adame street, was

held In t&M bail by Judge Howell In the Third Precinct Police Court this m orn­ing on A charge of fi»8uult. with Intant to klU, made aguinnt him by Patrolm an

. Bcanlon. Early yMterd.-iy tnornlng Scan- t#n, while patrolling Affitms ifirt'et. haard ##v#ral ahtil# and utartud to invcMlgale. Od D#lancy a trre t ho saw Frv^ro and ask- ad If he knew who fired the Hhcuta, rpoolv- liif a negative reply. The uffleer told

• ]fV#BCO he had better gu home, but the Itoilan became abnalve, and when arr^'at- «d put u p -a fight, throwing Scanlon to the ground, the offlocr aaya.

Scanlon tried to reach ofor his revolver when Fresco was punching him, and when the Italian saw th is he pulled a weapon. Scanlon tried to wrest it from FrpBco, and

. during the struggle four of the buiteta In It were discharged. The shota oitraoi- #d the attention of John Smith, of 123Jobnaon s t i ^ t , and he went to the offi- Hlgble, Miss Matilda Dodd, Misscei^a aid. The two managed t« Huhduc N. Hulllfiold, Lockwood Perry and^ ^ ® * pcvenil young men from New York. In

the afternoon, MLsa Lathrop gave an In-

RfHl.Wlinil CASE rOSTPONIED.

CuiniiilHSloiier Lambert IVniits Sen- r»7 MubMtitate PaNneib

On the Initiative of CoirnnlsBlonpr Lam ­bert, ihf* Board of le tseriOIng let-tefi? to m^^mbers of the Assembly urging that the committee substim te for 9en«to bill 7)7. which authorixe# i-ltles of the first class lo aerjuire and cotiPtrucl under- grnund condulta, be enacted into law at the adjourned session opening June 13,

The orifflTiLil bill wua introduced by Sen­ator Mlnturn. The substitute passed the upper house, but has been held In com­mittee by the Aspombly. Tho board has unanimously Indorsed rtie measure.

CE^TUAIi AVeXlE BBIDGR SIGNS*Pnhile Informed Ancl<n< Straoture

U Wuhhly, «(• Staled.The Central avenue bridge over the

Morris canal, which trembles and shakes with thu cfOBahig vehicles, now hear# three aigufl, placed there Saturday, on© at the UiidHon street entrance, and one a t either end of iho brldgo on Central ave­nue. Tlie signs read: .

' “Take notice—danger! Heavily loaded vehicles muBt keep on the tracks when croBsJng this bridge. By order of the chairman of the Urkige Comralltec.’'

“TRrSTY?' NiBT CAl’CHT VET,James 0*Coiinor Toltea French

Leave from Cald^vell P en lientlarr.The pollco have not yet caught James

O'Connor, an inmat’& of tho county peni­tentiary who eflcaped from the prison Saturday afternoon. O 'Cannor waa &en- tenced last October by Judge Ten Eyck to elghtpcti montlw for assault and bat­tery whh Intent to rob. Ho was a " tru ily " and had charge of the cows,

Man Aceuserl of Brihlng gerlba Will He Tried In Aepiemlner.

The tria l of Samuel Neuwlnh. under lii- dlcttnent for bribery, which was sched­uled to lake place to-day before Judge Ten Eyck in the Quarter SesMona Court, was postponed unlll the September term. I t Is alleged th a t Neuwlrth paid former Police Captain Jacuh Snlba Jr. 13 for protactlon for a disorderly house at Camfield street*

ABslatanl Prosecutor Mnii explained to the court th a t the State was not remiy lOtfproceed and formally moved that ihe tria l of the caw be postponed until the next term. F rank E. Bradner, eounBcl for Neuwirth, waa on hand and mad# no ob­jection.

Oft fo r A W eatee n T r ip .Former Mayor Henry M. DoremtiSf Po­

lice Cuinmlsstoner Frederick Oaatle nnd *Tam n P. !/>gan left for a WcBlern trip Baiiirduy fttiernoon. They will gu to the Paelllc coHst, and Mr. Logan will lanv© hl8 <'OTnpaY\loiiS at Beattie and com# home, while they wifi go on to A laska for per­haps a Jtionlh’s stay.

Thf Hi^hes,t Type o f Ready-io-Wear,

Here ate the tiles— in yout roof.

Fancy Straws. Fancy Shapes. Fancy Bands.But no fancy prices. $2 to $5.

b r in g

Marshall k Ball,807-813 Broad Street.

32

Miss I .a th ro p « a r e tl ln n e r .Miss Kiiima G- L athror rove a fllmier

party a! her hnine, B92 Broad street, Sal- urday night. Covers were laid for eight, and the decorations were pink and white sweet peas. Among the guests were Mtss

li EXPRESS CO. OFFICIALS SHROUDH) IN SILENCE

formal tea, tv —

af |SIII

Reltlivr Cvolce nor Dlckersou, Km- X lnyes of Laeal o n c e Under Dos-

pension, in Town To-dny.I t the exam ination now being made of,

th e bm ks of Joslah B Cooke, of SCO Clif­ton aventte, and Charles L. Dlckeraon. of m Oaraide street, fom eriy the local rep- reem tatlvsa o( site United States Express | Compajiy. haa revealed any irregularltlea, o| the autbDrlllea refuse to make them pub- ;

■\Ue. The tnvretigailon Into the aftalrs-of ] th e local office is being made under tho - iaupervlsion Of H. O- McLean, who le a t ) Jpreaent In charge of the office, und I speputy United States Marshal Joseph B.' atayhew, a private'detective in the employ of the oompany. j . ^ ^

Jakod if any discrepancies had been fM ld , Mr, McLean refused to saj!_hny- | S H i th is n o m in e , merely r e p l y l i ^ ^ a t

be slnffular If a fter four days 'Mr, rjsM verles Had not been made. - He w* aaSx he could not tell how much

Me sSkwDuld take to finish the Inveatl- 'aomethlti ' ' \

-Mow.'jg to Mrs. CoooSe,_ der hueband'ir - i -

ynr (.'nnnty Bertlllon Gallery.lihirlher steps lo have a Bert Ilian gallery

Installed In the county Jail were taken a t a meeting of the police chiefs of this county, held In the prosecutor's office ^ tu rd n y ntiem ooh. It wan decided to make formal application to the Board of Freeholders for a enmeient appropriation —about M.OOO will be requlted~to conautn- mnte the plen-_______

Closest Profit—a Better Shoe

Can You Afford To Pay More When

HEYMAN SHOESAre So Very Good

and

Cost So Very Little?The extra QUALITY and extra Wear

prove conclusively that what we say is true —a BETTER shoe sold on a CLOSER profit. We promise you that once you try Heyman Shoes, you will keep on wearing them.

For such. GOOD shoes cannot be bought anywhere else for so little.

Ladies* Oirfords and Pumpt

SALLOW SKIN83 different styles to sMect from—a great choice of tans—

all other popular teathers—Oote lining that prevents slipping gt heel—solid oaft soles—turned or Goodyear welts. Good $.1.50 or $4.00 values......... ...................... ................................ * 3

W an. Pallid. Dingy Skin le Just aa unpleasant to fta ovfner and bis friends ax Is the wearing of soiled linen.

'.SO SEE.-OUfL.$Z AND $4 LINE?.

£ h n . Store Closes at 5:30 P. M.

The Great In Women's

Event of the Year SHIRT-WAISTS

Will Be Ready Tomorrow MorningWe've Been Planning for This Annual June Occasion,

which has always been enthusiastically welcomed by Newark women. But re­cent trade conditions have produced better opportunities than ever, .so that we will have ready, when the store opens

to-morrow, some of th^ most stirring offerings in Summer Shirtwaists that have been present­ed in many a day.

Thirty-two hundred spick-span-new Shirt-Waists, just brought in from the manufacturers, and arranged in six groups as follows:

$W to $12 Waists at $5 EachA collection of about three hundred beautiful model Waists, in the prettiest effect* of the Summer. Of sheer

batiste, trimmed with fine embroideries and lace, forming yoke, both front and back; short sleeves, with beading at arm holes. $10 to $12 values, now at $5 each.

$5 to $6,50 Waists at $3,5001 white or ecru net, trimmed with Clony lace insertions; short sleeves, liined with silk.

$4. 0 to $s' Waists at $2,75-Of white dotted China silk, tailor-made in Marie Antoinette styles; also of white lawn, elaborately trimmed

with lace insertion or tine embroidery; trimmed backs. Short sleeves.

$3 to 3.7s Waists at $1.7^Of white lawn, trimmed with insertion and panels of embroidery; some with fronts of allow embroid-

*ry. Short sleeves.

$2.so to $2.7S Waists at $i,soOf white lawn, trimmed with embroidery and Valenciennes lace insertion, forming yoke, or with medallions

and embroidery. Short sleeves. Tourth floor, Old Bnllfltng.And the following group in the Economy Basement:

■ $2 and $2.2S Waists at $1 EachOf white lawn, trimmed with panels or stripes of embroidery or lace insertion. Short sleeves.

Some of the lots are quite large, others are limited. This means that those who come EARLY will get a little better selection than those who come later; but the last waist in the entire collection will be a splendid bargain, at that. Not on sale to-day.

There .is more than mere beauty in a clear, fresh, transparent complexion.

By Woodbury methods the dead, inac- Uve skin is qulekenea Into life, activity and fresbneae. Call or ivrUe Dept. S for Information free.

Don't ^ i i t till Satur­day. Come early tn the nveei., IVe can give you better service —the s e r v i c e that SATISFIES,

IF m V M A N

A Certain Linen Buyer Asked d Big Linen Importer:*'lVhere is the best place hi New York to

buy Towels?”This importer is famous for table linens by

the yard and pattern table cloths and napkins; but has a rather limited showing of towels. That is why the buyer for a large store asked where he thought he could do best in buying towels for his store.

The answer was,"At WANAMAKER’S"The buyer took it as a joke to be referred to

a retail store. But the importer was in earnest. He voiced the general opinion of the trade.

“The Wanaraalter people are crazy. They are selling Linens at retail for less than you cau buy them anywhere today at wholesale."

That is the fact, jffiut why should we stop doing it, when we own the linens at ffld low rates f It is a principle of thjs Wanamaker busi­ness to always give the public the full advantage of Wanamaker merchandising. We bought these Linens a year or more ago; though many of them

-are only recently from the looms. But prices were made when the orders were placed.

And so to-day WANAMAKER’S stands al­most alone in selling

/, Nothing but PURE LINENS;2, At the LOiVBST PRICES, either retail

or wholesale.

“ I Never Saw the Muslin Under­wear So Fine and Beautiful”

But we esn only continue these lOw priee* while the Ijliien* we own on the old basis are still here, and we’re doing the biggest Linen busine** in our history. Thethne to Bhate tlja splendid economies pn superb Linens is NOW.

As to TQIYELS—thinif of these; -sjAbout a t h o u sa n d do zen hemmod and hsrtstltehed

MljOTAwCltilOWELfi, oye^ thread .pure flax. In qualityshown elsewhere a t 35c. and 40c.: here a t SSc. each.

V As to TABLE LINENS—these:7t-lnch Half-bleached all-tlnen Table Damask, such a*

would refulariy sell for "60.; here a t M e -a yard.Then our wonderful Crown Dnmaak a t M a yard would

be counted splendid vnlue elsewherw a t U.25. 71 Inches.' wide; In beautiful double border eltecte—five dUIercnt pat-^ terns,And hundsome 7I-lneh Double DamaSk Teble Linen, ta six artisflo patlema. J Regular fl.£6 value, a t |1 ,» ayaip^

24-lnoh -NAPKINS, -tn ten dlffe«mt.P!lttemB, a t SLW Jt,do*®. to t8 h d of -------^iS J* a'dosen, ■. " “ w____ _ h — 1.- . .

Double D am a® ^^^ah^e Cloths. SxZW yards;, I1.S0 and 84.®; 3x3 yards, a t S4.2S and $S. Woula oraiQartly '* be about a third more.

Thus spoke a woman last -week after looking over the counters laden with the White Sale garments.

And it’s true. Every new season MUST bring im­provement. More artistic patterui. Prettier trimmings. Better shapes. Better finish. And netrer was the low price feature more decisively emphasized than now, when the prices o f cottons, laces, embroideries—even of the spool of thr®d—have gone up to radically. And yet &eae present offerings are of equal value to the garments you thought, and we KNEW, were so low in price a year ago, before the recent advaoc® in market pricea s-

The WISE w o m a n will BUY NOW. For not in years are these low prices likely to be matched. And no finer, daintier, better-fitting, better made garment* will be found anywhere, at any tiiao.

Seeghe Nightgowns at a Dollar.See the White PettioMta at $1.50.See the Matching Sets of Underwear at $3.25 a set—

or those at $7 a set.Or select yonr own price ® d garment, and see what

nnmatchable values are presented. But buy BEPORB THESE LOT8 ARE GONE—for the manufacturers have notified us that no mm'e can come from their factor!® for such little prices. The Une to higher prices MUST be crowed. You may avoid crossing it for another year, at Irast, by sharing these ^lendid offering*. Bnt DON'T PROCRASTINATE.Fourth Floor, Old Building. '

Printed Irish Dimities At 15c. a Yard

And there are scores of othfer oSeritig!^Second floo^ Old Building.

This is an offering of more than seventy-five of this season’s choice pattern* of 22c. and 25c. Irish Dimiti® Tbs pattern* include the mmdt-favbrcd iqngrM, saoUi, oblongs, stripes, polka and ring-dot* and- amall rosebud* in many attractive wloringa on white grouads. Also cluster floral printings, polka-dots and ring-dots on tinted grounds.

With the price of cotton good* goi«g sky high, and the almost etnolnte certainty that all rtapte cottons will be much higher next season, thrifty women will select

beantifni Iridh Dimities gnd Uy them s'way for dresses, u 'well u seenre them for gowns toe

tH eyete ttt Summer wear. Bnt remamber that the quan­tity offered i* not large, and when gennine Irish Dimi- tiw are priced at l ie . a yard the selling will he lively.

iecona floor. Old Ballding.

VI

j!

-b;

'It

V m X S K EVENING NEWa MONDAY, JUNE 10. 1007.

DIFFER ABOUT RAISING RENTS

Committee Members a t Variance n Over How to Meet Centre

Market Deficit.

MULLER FAVORS AN INCREASE

MftrobeTB of thft CiunmltlPe on Marketw of the Common Council at odila on the adviBaOllliy of nilHinff renia to utaml owners In order to bring up the net In- oom® of that tnetliuilon to a point thni will provide the sinking fund far the re dempllon of the 1330,000 market bonds Uflued In liffll. with sntflplent money to re­tire the bonds when they becoinp due In l&lls Alderman Michael J. Mullen,‘chair­man of the oommlUric, Is advocating the adoption of the plan he Inaugurated s<imc* tim® ago, of making a genera! IncrcHMtr in the rentals of about twenty-flve per rent. Bonne of the moinberi of-lhe majority side of the committee are oppuslng this plan on the ground, It is understorid, tbol ii ik not a wlae muva from a poUtlra) stand-

.polnt.The sub-coimnlltee appointed lest week

to confer with the stand owners arul Ket their views on the subject have not re­ceived encouragement from those who would be nffectod by .the proposed In­crease. but Mr. Mullen announced to-dayShut (f he can bring It about the rents

rill be tncreajdd. He added, his opinion hat there will not" be a single stand [Older who will refuse to pay on an ad- ’anced schedule and that If any should

Ibappen to prefer to go elsewhere than to pay the city more rent, the stands would fiot be vacant dve minutes. i The situation In relation to the market R anees Is that in the yeartr prior to 19(C ih s receipts from renlals of Btands and from the country market privileges an­nually felt behind the amount neceswary to pay the Interest of four )>er cent, on the bonds and Jeavo enough to put into the sinking fund ns one year's quota of the amount required to complete the fund a t the maturity of the bonds.

The m arket ac t of 1386, under which the Institution in Its present form was built, required th a t when the receipts fell be­hind the needed amount in any one year th a t the deficit should be made up In the tax levy. The law wus not obeyed In that regard, and the sinking fund fell behind year after year until a large net dfllcit was threatened. Two years ago City Au­d itor Forman called the attention of the aldermen to the condition of ufTairs, and the Market Committee of that time, of which Fredorick W. Krueger was chair­man. met the situation parllatiy by nutk- Ing Increases of about ton per cent, in the rents of stands and raising the fees for the country m arket. This action bnd the effect of bringing the receipts of each year up to the amount required for Interest and tdtiklng fund, but did not ibake up the deficit. Last year the stim of about fU.OOO was carried In the tax levy as an Instalm ent in the deficit. Bom® of the present committee are in favor of having the same process prevail (his year, but Mr. Mullen and some of the Committee on Finance have declared themselves In opposition to th is plan.

We have been informed that the Com­m ittee on Finance will not consent to placing any more money In the tax levy for the m arket deficit," said Mr. Mullen to-day. "F o r myself I do not believe that the people a t large should be called upon to pay any of th e deficit. The proper source to augm ent the funds is the rentalb of the stands. The people who hold the stands have been fayored. They have 4cen rents all around them go up. yet they ave been perm itted to occupy their tands a t the same old low prices. We

charging from $17:60 to $^ a stand, ,nd most of th e holders have one and a uarter stands each. Some are In pos- lesalon of two and three and as many us our. T hat condition prevailed when I was

ade chairm an of the committee. It is surd to claim th a t a reasonable In^ ea*o, which wilt be sufficient to make e m arket self-supporting for the enilre riod of the life of the bonds, would be hardship. I t la equally unreasonable to

all upon the taxpayers a t largo to make ;o«d the deficiency.i ’As to the hardship upon the stand-

hOlders, I am willing to say now that I tiind two others whom I could name '^ouU

wllUag now to relieve the city from a|ll responsibility of maintaining the mar-

at 11 the institution is turned over to us, 1th the privilege of renting the stands ad the outside market and collecting Hie mt for our own pockets. For this prU- .ege wo would be willing to pay llie cUy he sum of $&,000 a year and make tJie aimaents In advance. If a proposlticn of ;hat kind were to be put Into efCect I ■oulfl not hesitate to say that the three

|bt us would make a profit of $10,000 each **

RBENTTUL PRISONER A S S A U L T M ^ WARDEN

R lla a b e tb K eepvir K niH pkrJ Down by H ru o m ailo k W le l4 « d Mna

H e M ad H ep ro v ed .Spcrffil Dbipu/i A to the E VgSiyO NEWHA

ELIZABETH, June 10.-A refractory prisoner named Charles Sherman, twenty- two years old, a ttacked Warden Charles W, Dodd «t ‘he county Jtill whlh* *he prin- onern Were returning from breakfast this morning, und struck him a blow with a broom-handle upon the head, knocking him down, and infiteting a gash that required seven stitches from a physician to aew up.

F urther Injuries were prevunicd by the Other [irl^oiH'^rs seising Sherman and throwing him in his ce ll W ank'n DoOd, with hlM head bandaged, resumed hln du­ties.

When the warden went on hla rcgii- Jar round of Inspeeilon of the cells yes­terday, he noticed that Of Shenfian, who was commuted May lu to awult the action of the grand Jury on a charge of larceny, WBH untidy, nnd called the prisoner's a t­tention to the fact. Sherman was laclbied to be Impudent, which provoked iho war­den Into wurrtlnK him that if the cell was not made more presentable punishment would likely follow. The Incident was closed at that time and the wurdi;n thought no more of it, since Sherman olipyed hln order.

CORONER SEEKS AUTO OWNERSJ u r y BuDiiiioued to In q u ire In to

c ld e n t t h a t Cnilmed Child*® D entti N e a r B n rn e g a t.

UAKN'EOAT* June 10,—Ab a result of the death of ten-year-old luaum Brown, by the collision of two automobiles near here Saturday, th e authorities have de­termined to make a thorough Investiga­tion, nnd Coroner Parker, of Ocean County, has begun proceedings to have the offenders punished, by Impaneling aJury.

The child died In St. James’s Hospital, where her father. Benjamin. II. Brown, her mother and a smalt brother are also contlged with acrious injuries. In order t h a l \ i l available evidence should be laid hefor<\ the Jury, the coroner telephoned MAglsflrate Stroms to hold a Central of New Jersey car. In which the wrecked automobile of the unknown parties had haetily been loaded for shlptnent to one "Joe LnnUer, Pier 51, New York."

BREAKS PRISONThirty-year Convict, Sentenced

for Murder, Makes E sape by S aling Fence.

REWARD FOR H B CAPTURE

TRENTON. June 10.—Reuben Strick­land, a thirty-year®' prisoner at the State prison, a .tru s ty or runner In the wings and front offices of the Institution, whilu luklng ice to the prison manM yesterday scaled the fence In the rear of the house and escaped. Strickland, owing to the liberties shown him. had a chance to plan his escape, and U is the opinion of the officials in the prloon th a t he had a.'tslsl- aiice from the outside.

When he left the prison he was In charge* of Deputy Keeper E. C. Hurd. The deputy keeper had confidence In ihe prisoner and allowed Strickland to pre­cede him. The deputy stopped to bay a paper from a boy.

When he reached the rear of the manse nnd did not sec the prisoner, he naked Mrs. Osborne, the wife of Principal Keeper Osborne, if the prisoner was In the cellar. Mrs. Osborne said that she thought ha was not, and upon Investiga­tion by the deputy her belief wus Cuimd to l>e true.

Mr. Burd dame out of the cellar and saw the man fleeing along the fence toward Cass street. He was too far away to shoot. Burd gave the alarm , nnd sev­eral deputies and Mr. Osborne gave chose, but the prisoner eluded his pursuers,

Htrlcklund Is flve feet nix inches tall, Ihirty-flve years old, blue eyes, dork brown hair, complexion medium, but he is tanned from oiaalde work, weight about IBO pounds, scar on the chin and a soar on the left forefinger. On the left arm there was tattooed the "Rock Of A ges,’

Suprem e Cowrt D ecid es IVtatuber ofCases la v o lv ln ic D ouble T axation

o f R a ilroad Pr«pert>%Speriot IHtfmtrk U> (Ac ,YNB'g.

TRENTON, June 10.—The Supreme Court to-day handed down u imniLtcr uf ducistoiis In cnees Involving the dniiblu tuxuHon of rullruud prbperiy by tho State and local authorities. Most uf these nre <mh«s In Hudson County, and from the veri>nl nn- nouiioements it apt^cart'd tha t the Btale and local assossaore shared honors about even.

For example. In the ease of the Now York Hay RollnuKl, involving the taxa­tion of the tcrmliuil a t Grecnvltlo, the

vwurt held th a t from to IflOO Improvc- nieiitH were properly tuxublo by the city* and that for 1901 and 1902 ihc tax Hhould have been by the S tate board. Tho Issue WAS when the improvement became suffi­ciently advanced to regard Ihe pn)t>erty as sCH-rond-olass railruud preporty.

Other dcclsionA Involving various other tracts, iu which subslnnilally the HUine (luestlons were raised, were dlsth'aed of by reference to the plot nuinla-rH on the official maps. In these, us sla ted bolii aides shored about equally In securing the verdJclB.

TURNVEREIN’SANNIVERSARY

Members of Bergen County &ciety Observe Golden Jubilee

in Fitting Manner.

REWARKER MAKES AN ADDRESS

TRAIN VICTIM’S FUNERAL,Serw lres fo r E lm er B, Apivar, Who

Met D ea th on Track Year B ern ariln v llle .

Sa^efol tfi ihe EVElCfSQ ,YPWR.BEHNARDSVILLE. June lO.-Tho

funeral services of Elm er E. Ap^nr. who was killed yesterday by a train while on Ills way to B lasure’s Cornep, near liere, took place to-day from the home of hla parents. Rev. J . T. Reeve, pastor of the Basking Ridge Presbyterian Churoh, of­ficiated, The accident occurred a short dlBiunco from the Bernarclsvllle Station, ncor file yards of the ConlIng Lumber Company. I t la believed that Apgar was lying across tb® track asleep a t the time, as hIs head, both legs and one arm were severed from th e body.

TO PROBE MAN'S DEATH.

■ it

HARRISON HAN STABBED.P oll€« L oo k in g Giordano Spaden,

W ho, It la AUeiccd, A tlueked A(OttttO Cltalgo.

AffoUno Cihlgo, sixty years old, of 201 Becotld street, Rarrlsoii, Is a t hts home under the care of a physician with a bad ly disfigured face, the result of being slashed w ith a hhife Saturday night In Third street, near Cross street, Harrison. Qiordano Spades, who it is alleged, did the etahblng, escaped. The police say he is In Allentown.

The police did not hear of the assault until yesterday, and then PoUpetnen Will­iams and Clark arrested Oiuseppl Spa­des, thirty-one years old, of l i t Cross street; Ottavio SestIM, eighteen years old, and Nicholas Bpadea, (wenty-oae years old, both of 23 South Fourth strest, Harrison. The men admitted being pres­ent when the stabbing took place, but said they were not Implicated in it. Jus­tice Branegan paroled them.

Clhlgo told the police that a year ago to-day ha had his alleged asaailant a r ­rested for assaulting him, and he served two months In jatl. The men mot Satur­day night for the first time since Bpadea's release from Jail.

HEN FALL WITH SaFFO LD .In a tall from a seaftoldlng at the Edi­

son works, W est Orange, shortly before noon to-day, Nelson QulOane, of 186 ’Val­ley road, th a t town, and Samuel Erick­son, of 101 Lake Side avenue. Orange, re­ceived several bruises and contusions about the body, The scaffolding collap- *ed, when the men. It Is said, removed some supporting beams. They were taken to the Orange Memorial Hospital In an automobile. The two carpenters tell the distance of a story and a halt, and part of the scaffolding tell upon them. ---------------• ---------------

VAILSBURGH AFFAIRS.^ |i The Carlyle Club haq elected these of-

jilcers: President, C birles Smith, and treasurer, H erbert Manser. The club will CO OD an outing to Rockaway June, £s.

A large delegation of men from the Baered H eart Church went to Orange yesterday to • m arch In the centennial ipj^rade previous to the preaentatlon of an J ^ e r ic a ti flag to Columbus Hall,'(M ias Stephanie Beers, of fill South Sanford avenue, and^ Miss Mary Oalla- kher left Ratilrday for Atlantic City to apend two weeks.

A utopsy W ill B e P erform ed o f Body o f B r o o k ly n R es id e n t Supposed

to H ave D row ned.gpfriol Diapaioh to the ETENiyo- KEWB.

LONG b r a n c h , June 10.-^An autopsy will be performed on the body of George Johansen. Uiirty-five years old, of 25 Ham ilton avenue, Brooklyn, here late this afternoon, to determ ine the cause of his sudden death. Johansen was a passenger on the F atten Line steam boat yesterday to the Highlands, where he joined a party of fishermen.

The sto ry told Is th a t he started to Jump into a pow er boat and fell Into the river, but was resctied a t once and taken ashore and placed in an empty house. Later, when he w as visited, the man was dead.

FOR INLAND WATERWAY.(«ov«raor filgns B ill for Surrey De->

tw e e n Bay H eed and Cnpe Mny, T w o O ther Laws.

Special Dispatch to rfto ATfJA'JYfJ Y/7TFS.TRENTON, June 10.—Governor Stokes

signed th® following bills to-iiay:Senate 171, Mr. Lee, provides for the

rem uneration of superintendents appoint­ed to m ark and designate channels In Ocean, A tlantic and Cape May Counties.

Senate 235. Mr. Hand, provides for a survey between Bay Head and Cape May to show the dredging needed to deepen the chonnels.

House 259, Mr. Taylor, provides for the erection of a Je tty a t Manasquan Inlet.

$Qys C om in lsslon W as W rongsThe M artin ac t commissioners of Kear­

ny, a t th e ir m eeting Saturday afternoon, received from th e Finance Committee of the town Common Council a oommunfea tlnn to the effect th a t the report of the commission In regard to the unpaid taxes on lot 450, In block 1445, wa.4 wrong, as the estate had shown a receipt signed by Edward Kenny, former treasurer and coUector of the township, th a t the taxes which the town sought to collect had been paid to him In full. The taxes in­cluded the assessm ents against the prop­erty from 1532 to 1388, inclusive. Tpii p^roperty was recently purchatad by Jacolj ^M ste ib i and John MuUlgan, both of K earny, and when title was to be passed It was Jearned th a t do record of the pay­ing of the am ount to the town had ever, been made. The commissioners will make a final report of its findings to the coun­cil a t the RteeUng of th a t body June 26.

A sked to D ism iss Steojgel Com plaint.AppUcation was made to Judge Howell

In the F irs t F reclnct Police Court this morning by F rank M. McDermlt. to have the com plaint made against Mrs, Louise Melln and Mr. arid Mrs. Cliaries Beynon, in connection w ith the larceny of an $1,8U0 broach from C. E. H. StengeFa house, dismissed. U e told the m agistrate of the a rre s t of a girl and two boys In the F ourth Precinct and tho girl’s ad- TUlBBlon th a t she bad taken the ornament. There w a s jio evidence to hold hla clients on, Mr. MoBermJt said, and the m a^s- ira te agreed to a fu rth e r examination for the mau und two w<mien.

To S p eak on G nebage D isposal,Dr. Charles M.'^^Seltxor of Philadelphia,

will speak a t the monthly meeting of the Board of Trade W ednesday night, on 'Garbage Disposal and Collection." Rev,

John McDowell, who represented the hoard a t the recent InternatJonai a rb itra ­tion conference, a t Lake Mohonk, will report and the comnActee on municipal aniairs will present a statement of faou regarding the collection and disposal of garbage.

H ald M ade «n Crap F ln re n .Roundsman Lueddeke and Patrolmen

O’Gara, F arre ll and Flood surpi-ls(!d a party o f crap players a t 10 ArllnKion street yesterday afternoon. The ofneers arrested F rank Reynolds, colored, as the a l l e ^ backer o f the sport, and seven other colored men. Reynolds paid a tine ^ ISO and costs In the F irs t Freolnct Court th is tnortilng. Three others paid |U fines and the rest were acquitted.

GIRL'S ESCORT IS ASSAULTEDB loonifleld Man H t Upon and

B eatan In A rlin g to n E arly Y esterday IHornlng.

Ragnar Dalquist. tw enty-three years old, of 3 WllJuw street, Bloorafleld, walk­ed Into the Kearny Police Station ahorlly after midnight yesterday and Informed Desk Brrgeant Zltxow that he had been beaten by some men in iiOciiBt avenuf. Arlington. His !;lotheB were torn and he was cut and bruised about the body.

Dalquist said that lie had accompanied young woman, Hillda Peteraen, to Lo­

cust avenue, and after he had left her two young men set upon him. His as­sailants he declared wore Victor rlckson and Yena Carlson. OalqulHt w«is told to appear before Recorder Koch to­night and make a complaint agalnat the pair.

VETERAN LIFE-SAVER DEAD,C sptiiln C. IL Vnl^iMlne lle r e iv e d

F irst G overnm ent Meilnl for Hes- c o ln g a ■■'rrsun from D rorrnlng,

I.ONG BRANCH. June - ID.-CnptsIn Charles He Valentine, the pioneer pound flslierman and Ufe-snver along the N orth Jersey coast, died yesterday afternoon nt Monmouth Beach, In his eighty-fourth year. F or tw enty years he was captain of Life-saving Station N')- ^ nt Monmouth Beach^ and while in tho aors'lce distin­guished himself for his bmvery, and celved the first government medal.

re-

FOUND ASPHYXUTED IN BED

ACCUSED OF CHOKING CHILD,B everly M other’s §1rengfh P revents

Croird In te r fe r in g L h lll M arshal Comes.

BEVERLY, June 10.—Because her elght- ycar-old daughter Amy crlGclaed her, Mrs Amy Johnson, a widow, while. It is al­leged. under the influence of Uquor, as­saulted the child, and Is now in Jnll, charged with atrocious assault and bat­tery, Mrs. Johnson ta of great strength, and, angered at her child, started to strangle her. it Is charged. Alfred, a younger child, ran Into the street and hla screams brought a crowd to the house.

The onlookers were afraid to Interfere until Marsha! Austin arrived, and then several men aided in taking the woman to Jail. The ^hlld is In a critical condi­tion.

HUCKSTER'S WIFE IS HEIRESSMrs. Pet^r Ebbe* o f E iisabeth* W ill

R eoeive 992,000 ns ghare o f A onl's EstntP'.

ELIZABETH, June lO.-^Mrs, Peter Ebbe, wife of a huckster, will Inherit $32,000 through the death of her aunt, who Ls SHld to be Lady Mary Halslop, of New- raslte-on-Tyne, England. Mrs. Ebbe rc- t:elvpd word Boturday th a t her aunt had died leaving an estate worth $96,000. Mrs. Ebbe. as one of three heirs, will receive one-third of the estate.

The Ebbes live at 220 South Fifth Blrcet, and will continue to conduct their truck garden until September, when they will leave for England.

MISSING MAH DROWNED.Dead Bady of a D over Realdeitt

F oaad Hear M ine In R ock­aw ay T ow n sh ip .

ROCKAWAY. June lO.—The dead body of Jacob Rush, of Berry street, Dover, w'as found In some w ater in the entrance to the abandoned Swede’s mine In Rock- away Township, Saturday, Rush had been missing about three weeks.

I t Is thought he fell In the water and was drowned. His face was bruised and lacerated. Coroner George Hitchens, of W harton, viewed the body.

Joseph B e ll, o f H a sk e ll, D ies W h ile A s le e p t a a H o te l In

P aterson .PATERSON, June 10.—flupposed tn have

been accidentally asphyxiated by gas while ftPlevp, Joseph Bell, of lluski-ll, wus found dead In a room in Dwyer’s hutfl yeHlerdny afternoon. He was In ch«‘»Tful spirits when he arrived with a friend SiU- urday evening, und after the Inlter’s di*- parlure, was escorted to a room on the. third floor of the hotel. That was the last seen of him alive.

LANG MUST HANG.H upretii^ C o a r t fittsCalns i h r V e rd lr t

o f l^ow pr J u d l r ln r y tn Mid­d le se x Cnse.

gperiffl rUnpateh to fhe ET‘f/’V/.V(? .YETVfl.TRENTON, June lO.-The Supreme

Court to-day sufiUlned the ronvlellon «if Frederick 1-ang, of Mlddl+*spx Countyf who Is under sentence of death for killing his nicer, K ate Gtordon. According to (he testimony, the crime, was yirompted be- enuRG of the young woman's refusal |o m arry Lang.

Hets A side Tax A ssessm ent.gpeotol Dispuich to the EVEytSiJ Xh’WS.

TRENTON, June lO.-Tlie Snpri-mc- Court to-day set aside an unsessnuMJl fur toxea levied by the borough of Atlamic HIghlandR against the Ceniral Railroad Company for the pier and land of llu! Nuvesink Railroad. The opinion by Jua- tlce Fort hralda that the properly Is out­side the corporate lEmlta of the borough and the right of a municipality to tnx Is limited to property within Us territory.

F a vor M onum ent to W. W , P lie lps.KNGT.E'WOOD, June 10.-Sentiment In

favor of erecting a monument to former CongresMmaa William Waller Phftlps Is Increasing and a movement 1. nnfler wny to have substantial recngnttloii paid to the memory of the statesman. The site of such a mnnurnenl. It l« urged, should he In Mackny Park. wJiloh Is at the en- truncp to the Phclpa drives. Mr. Phelpa was thiB nation's representative to Aus­tria nnd Germany. Ills death occurnid several years ago.

Slate for M ererr A ssem blym en,TRENTON, June 10.—Mercer County Re­

publicans aro booming Hervey C. Scud- drr, a Trenton lawyer, for Assembly aa a successor to Profesanr Honry H. Thomj^- aon. of Prihcelon, wlio Una Jmd two terms. It ifl said that either I>r. Edward H. Glii- uflly or Henry U. Coleman, of this city, wilt succeed AKaemhlyman Alfred N. I3»»r- bfr, who 1b slated to J)fl made secretary to the new State Railroad ComrnlHfilon. P. M. Wurren, a Trenton grocer, is miked of Rp Huccesaor to Aftaemblyman \Vllliam F. Burk.

Ifetvark P riest P reaches,SpeHal Diepatch to the f;,'VA’.V/.\i7 SEW8.

ELIZABETH, June 10.—Five hundred girls of the Children of Mary and Angela Boeiety of Holy Rosary Church, thiN city, held their annual celebration and recep­tion yesterday afternoon. A fter the pro­cession through the main aisle of the church an elaborate muslcHl program was rendered. The sermon was preached by Rev. Dr. M, A. McMunus, of Newark, He ipoke of "The Love of the Good Shephard/’

FIRST WEDDING IN CHURCH.

CTAPTER OF A C qpENTS.Mr*. Brldfirt Farley, fitty-flve year* old,

o t & Auerueta street, fell a t Mulberry and L afayette ttre e ts Saturday night and bus- talned a frac tu re of the left arre. SUe was taken to th e City Hospital by the F irs t Proclnot polloe.

W hile engaged In painting a house a t S( South T enth street, this morning. Frank W hitaker w as throw n to the ground, a distance of about six feet, by one end of the scaRold becoming detached from the rope. H e was hu rt very little and rt> fused to go to the hospital.

FOLKS YOU KNOW.

w i l l P ostpon e O eclslon.Tlce^Choncellor Emefy decided to^iaT

that before going into the Issues raised ■by the petltloD filed by Edward B. Colby for leave to sue to recover the amounts paid by the late ^ w n rd B. Cpnipbell, as receiver for I..',Sternberg A Co„ tn satis­faction of two mortgages, on the ground ithat the mortgages were invalid, he wotSd first try the question as to tsb e t)^ the issues have not already been B dlhd^led in the enurse of the Blern- iDsry Insolvency proceedings. The vice- chancelloy set down June a lor a hearing on this preliminary phase of the case,

morlgagea Involved arc one for tOOO, nmUch wna paid do the P u r i tyjVtoWi Mnlt, and a n o tto for (U.W, op —Dr. and Mrs. Sidney A, Twlneh and

**“**'’“*• Minton Twlneh, of Summer avenue, have Ifawprk Banking Company. relum efl from Atlantic City, whori ttaiy

spent last weqk.—Mr. and Idta. Max Seellnger celahrated

their fiftieth birthday a t their home, Komom street. yest«r(lar afternoon by entertaining fifty guesA

—WHlii <3. and Mnrol'd V, D. Dowden sailed for Enrope Saturday 'to spend the aummer. They will be Jn Pari* the great-

■’er part a t fhe time, -.and will visit the British Isles and Holland.

.. —Invltatlona hove been laeued for the Wedding of W as May Headtraon, d h n ^ ter of Joadph Hendeyami, to James F.

i woman of wealth, took a liking to~tha ^ r ^ n . The ta -p e rfo m ^lor boaM wtaeiLliwy passed It In ^alW odnsaday, Jobe K-ai.#:1> a clock, ItxSL ' a t Baater.Mm, ■ g6fM get's Oatholle' OburctL '

•<K1«» t t e c o y B uys H o n e .Norman Selby, known as "Kid MeOoy,'

mgtilst, has purchased the; home IkWQiit’ Fenum Taylor, Gll Centre street, loutb Oronga, and Mrs. Selby hai sold to g r. Taylor a resldeiiee In New York.Selby paid t&MO for the South Orange

muse and grounds, but says be will n it fide there ' because bis wife prefers to ne iu Ihe city, Mr. Taylor also deciareai

Sen>v does not intend to occupy ttm. h Orange house. The-foVnier pug ll'it Mrs. ilelby. who was formerly uie ot Edward C. Ellis, and la reputed to

gprriol fMapeteh to tiro EYE yiSG A'h'H'y, SUMMIT, June 10.—Miss Emma rnlller

Grant, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gcorgo M, Grant, and H arry Dwight Nima, of New York City, were married a t the new Central Presbyterian Churoh Saturday afternoon. The ceremony waa performed

,bY Rev. H arry P. Dewey, ot the Church of the Pllgrlma, Brooklyn, asaisted by Rev. Minot C. Morgan, of this city. The Preabyterian church has not yet been completely finished, and tho wedding was the first ceremony of any kind ihut has taken place in th e new slruciura.

F h llllpa -F eliliuR U .MISS B. Rose Feldman, daughter of Mrs.

Lena Feldman, w as m arried to Ilrtrry B. Phillips, of K Howard street, a t the home of the brlde'a mother, 73A Thirteenth avenue, yesterday afternoon. The cere­mony was performed by Rev. Julius Sll- berfeld, rabbi of Ibe Temple B'nal Ahra* ham. There were no attendants, and the bride w as given away by her uncle, “>avld ’Welsbarger, of New York. She rore a robe o t Imported batiste smbrold- ry over white taffeta and carried white

roses and lilies of the valley, The couple left tor a trip W est On their return they will live In Orange.

RweenBww m . K o pol d .Hiss Pauline'K opold, daugliter of Mr.

and Mrs. David Kopold, of 69 Lillie street, was married tu Isadore Roscnbaiiin, of the same address. In Progress Hall. Sat­urday night. Rabbi David Halperin of­ficiated. H e bride w as attended by Miss Sadie Konold and Hlsa Anna Elsland. N athan Kopold acted a s best man and Louis Kopold and M ax Rosenfeld were ushers. The bride wore a gown of white measaline and carried a shower bouquet o t white mses. T hs couple will reside at HD H crria avenue,

S e k e se r-W d sa e rm a ii.The m arriage of Mies A nna Wasesrman,

daughter o tM r, and Mrs.. Charles Wasser- man. of 2tl Court strefit, to Louts Scherer, o t 23S Court street, toolc place last night, in New Columbia H a lt Ml Court street. Rabbi Cohen .ofilclated. The bride was attended by Mrs. P lncu t Lehrhoff and Mrs. Abraham Gordon, and with the groom was H r. Giordan and Hr. Lehr- Related. Tae bride wae attended by Hiss face robe, wore a bridal veil trimmed with llllee of the v a t l ^ and canicu! a bouquet of white roses. The couple wiu make their boms a t 2H Court s t r e e t

SehiM B-Rawe.Mlse Beesle Rane, daughter of Hr. and

Hre. Joeeph Ranm pf 2u Brooma street, was married to Eterry Schroff, o t ITI Spruce street, In Progress Hall. 21 Bar­clay Btreet, lo ft night. The eemmony waa performed by Rabbi A aron Cohn. Tho couple were -attended by Mr. and Mrs. Edw ard T ra ttnun . o f Brooklyn, and Mr. and Mre.gowned : . _______and carried an arm bouquet of rnSes'snhj carnations. The coiqde will live Barclay s tre e t

W e d d e d a t B b e r t , N atlee.Jbhtl

Ct.unt;

Actora O bserve W edding A nniversary.ASBI'RY PARK, June 10.-M:ihcl h’cii-

ton and Charles J, Ross, nclurs, cele­brated the tw entieth anniversary of iheir m arriage yesterday a t their bungalow, In the W anam aasa Woods, on tb r north bank of Deal Lake. Over 600 '‘commands'' to participate in the festivities were Issued, and a large num ber of relniivcs and friends obeyed. Music waa furnished by a New York orchestra, and tbei'c waa a dainty luncheon.---------------• ---------------

A uto C rushes In to finloon.HOBOKEN, June 10.—An automobile be­

longing to Louis etitz, of Hudson boule­vard, and loaded with five persons yester­day afternoon, swerved suddenly from its course a t Plum place and Bergcnlinfi avenue,' Union HIU, and smashed Into a saloon. I t broke seveml boards In the front of the place, but did not smash t'm plate glaes windows. The front of the machine was smashed.

Snpreme Conrt ThlnksVerdletExpreslveSpedol DIspoh* to Me EVEXJXG NEWS.

TBENTON i June 10,—The Suprcine Court to-day ordered th a t unless Mr. und Mrs. J, K. I. Cody, of th is city, will conseur to the reduction from |I0,«J0 to tT.OOO, of a verdict for d a m ^ e s recovered against 'be Trenton S tree t Railway Company, ,i new trial will bo granted. Mrs. Cody va s quite badly Injured In an accident. ,

g n p r e n e Cowrt g ets A side L icense.ENTON, June 10.-Justlce Garrleon,

In tlie Supreme Court, to-day filed nn

In p nTHE

. a Supi . .opinion se tting aside a licenee graiiled by the E lliabpth Excise Board, for a saloon a t 201 Spring street.' The license wus con­tested by George W. W right and others, on the ground th a t It was within 200 feet of a church edifice. The question hinged upon w hether a new rllcenae waa granted.

I

SpeHdi A to the fJF&Y/.Vcj SEWB.CARLS^rADT. June 10.—A itd-lct^wr

event In tlu* lUHioiy uf lUe Carlstudt Turn- vervln wan Uje 4>ccasloii uf itie celebrn- (Jon of thv orifiinlzatlon's llfUelh iinnL vemiiry, holrt in Turn Hull, yvsterdiiy. Tlia celebration j^unctlvully bvjfun Suturrtuy nitfht. Tlu‘ borouKk wu. decorated *n honor of lUe vvenl. The cnk-bnillon wa« un»plcU»u,«ly opened .^alurduy nlglU by a Hurles of iryimiiiMic exhibitions, under the dircGtion of Rrofeflsop W. li. Rlenu'r. Pro- vlouB to ilji* addrcHs of Noah Outer, of Newark, the Turners gave an exhlbUlon oil Ihe rings and parallel bare.

Mr. Gutor referred lo tlie aim* of the NoMli American Gymnnatic Ifnlon . nd dwelt at lenglti upon the m-oesalty i»f tru iniroduclloti of phyalral iralnlnsr In the public schools. Hi conlcjidcd iluit the nthb'les uf tn-day *;fn<'riilly di> not de­velop wlutle body, simply porllonsof U.

A feature nf the evening was the prertejilalUiii uf a uold watch utal fob m Riufesflor Rejiiier by*-Theodore Uloecher, on behalf yf the wcnneii’a nnd children b otoMftB, Former Rorough Clerk CharU-B Alborilne, of Kaju UutlUTfopd, waa toual- ntiiHiur lit the bunuuet last night, being asHliUud by President Walter F- Schwabe an<J Au- iiBi xMoeiK'h, Word® of weloomo w«*ri‘ Kivtni bj’ TonetmaBter Albertln-’, after which Ihe orator of the occaHioii. fornuir tViriiiiiT Dr. August Scholer, uf New Yorli. wuft in.troduv«d.

A featiirf of iho spuech-makiirg w-aR the talk uf Mrn. Otcllle Ulrih. of Fort who Is one nf the oldest wnitien fnlereetO'd in till’ Work of the tunivereln. Congraiii- inhiiiiw were offered by PrealdenL Schwaoo and Mr Moench. They were supple­ment ml Ijv the prraldent prciwnllng fleere- lary Kmil Steiger with a gold-headtd um­brella III ie(‘ognUlon of hlB serviceB aw :ui officer and member of the organisation. Fre.skhni Sidiwabe also proBRiited niem- bci'R who luid been on tho member^Np roll tweTiiy-iive years exch with 4i dl-

A b;m?ier made by Mr®. Otto lAnndWehr wns |iInvented by tho women's wellou lo tlie nrti\f lurnorR by Mlsfi Lottie KosBler.

The geneiul commJUee of arrangemenlR of the affair wns 'eompoied of August Moench, eliulrman: Walter P. Sehwabe, vk e-chalrmHii: Emil Slelgvr nnd Moritx Trubeok, .'ietrotarles. and Theodore bloechor, treaHurer.

FAGAN VETO SUSTAINED.U esolD llon (ii Keiffird to Hfin*

ningr of T annel T rains Tbrvo- ti|H»n Is Adoptoil.

Rfwpfftoft to the E i'E M ytl XEW8^ JERSEY CITY. June lO.-^After Mayor

Fngan'p veto of th<* reRoliitlon granting tunnel privileges to the Hudson and Man' hftUan Rullrond C.unpany Jn this city had been austahufl by (he Street and Water niiiii'd lliln ariernoon by the votew of CornmiHrionci's Heorgi* W. Berry and Andrew Knox against ilio.sc of Comtnlp- Bloncrw John J. Ib’uvey. LouIr F. Fluke and ProKklont Tlumuia R. Rooney, a new resolution w.is Intriiduced by Conimls- sloner HcjTy, Bepubllriin. The difference betwefii the rejected repoluMon and the Berry resolution was the question of com- penfiatlon lo the city, fare lo be charged and Irtln ftervjce. Mayor Fagan vetoed the resolution adopted by the \ ntep of the ihreft DemoemtH In the b<mrd because the compenHatlon whb one per cent of the gross r“f:«Jpia. ibe fure lo he ton cents between Jersey City and New York nnd the miln service for Jer»ey City thirty per cent, nf express trains wlUi no hours for that service spedrieil,

CoimnlBsloner Ilerry, In bis resolution, ejnbodlea ihe suggestlonp rif Mayor Fagan for three per cenl. compcnsulton for tlie hrst ten .vrars ami five per eettt. for llie next flflecTi. with compcnHatlon adjusted even' twenly-flve yours thereafter by a court. He ralle for ibe fiioppage of all trains nt one Jersey t’Uy stailon and for u flve-cent fare from JorRcy City to the neurcRl stjUlon In New Y'ork and vb.-e versa To avoid any I.Yemocfatlu criii- clsm Ihut the new resolution waa sprung on the board for a vote without cnnsidi'ra- tlon of ll, Commlseluner Merry moved that It be referred to the comniJUee of the w-’hole.

This also dlpposed nf any charge that In sualulnlng Mayor Fngan'R veto the two RepubUean commlHRiomTa were acting ns (ihsmicilonlstfl. The Hemormtic cominln- eloners were taken by surprlBC by the !n- Iroduellon of a new resoluHon. Th6y will hiive until next Monday to think It over, and then 11 can be LllscusRod in committee.

D ecries CTinrrh (jJimhllna.Spccirri to fftn KVh'.VJ.VW

JERSEY CITY. June 10-^Rev. George D. Hadley, of 3t. John's EpliV'opal ChurclJ, has started a crus:ido against "chiircli gumbliiig.'’ In wrUhig in the inembera of the church in the church puhllcutlon about u fair that Is to be held by tbc im-mberB of 81. Stephen’s Chapel In Ibo fall, he says: “Let ua not plan to ‘holdup' any merchanu or 'bbtekmaU' any dealer®, and If It should be puslllvely iu.l- ess^iry to have any gumbllng. lei us luive Bomo atmlghtforward, 'honeat' gambling, and aetl policy or slitiko dice, so Unit our boy« mid drls will knt»w whether liiey are really 'taking il chttuco’ or giv­ing charity ” ^

R etired Mcreh nut's Ftinrral.Spfdtli to Ike E V E \l\'ij yjCWB.

DEAL, June JO.—The funeral services of Hlmon Bminer, of New Y’OTk. a retired merchniit, who died Saturdny nl his eum- mer homd herr, took place lo-diiy. Inter­ment waa In Salem Fields Cemetery. Ha wiiH sevomy yearn old. Mr- Ilanner niiun to America from (Jennany more than fifty years ago and establlsbed the lirrji of ll.inner Hrotliers, who wera pbineers in the wholesaJe clothing business In Cal­ifornia and New York.

V erdict AsmIiirI City nf Ornn^c.Spfvlof iH>tp<tirk to Ihc UVEMSG SBWB.

TRENTON, June 10.- In the Supfeniu Court, to-dtiy, W A, Manda, Imrorporhlei, Becured a verdict agalnat the city of Or*' ange, In the certhunrl proceeding® to «et aside the condemnation of land® for a w ater plp< The court ordered tooprocecdlngB set afllde. Including the ftp* pointment of cnmmiBsioner® to condemn. Cowles and Carey appeared 'for the cojp- philiianlJi and wUllam A. Lord for tha city of Orange.

"DONT TELL MOTHER," PLEADS WOUNDED BOV

K f tu w lu t t H e t' I lltte ssa I^smI W muIs [ K.nuvvlediie of I lls lujurleii'

K e |i| troni Her,JERSEY CITY, June HX—Bocaubc his

mother Is scrlouBly 111 and n shock might prove fatal, lUram Inslry, seventeen

old, eon of Edward Insley, city aur- v%or, probably murtuiiy wounded Sat­urday night, that the news be keptfrom his iTnretitJ sx long bb possible.

“Take me to n ho»tmul luid any nothing, please," he nsked or the nurguons Attend­ing him. “If you irli fuihor, ho might lot mother know nnd the shock would kdi j h e r!" WlifMi hla fa th e r arrived , the boy. w'ho w«« growing weaker, repeuted hla request.

In^ey. who lived at 357 New York ave­nue. Jersey City HnlghtB, played h game of ball in Palisade nynnue Saturdny af­ternoon und after the gum® whs over they wen resting under siime treee. One of hf» cnmpanlona, Harold MuHaffney, produced a small revciiver and, flourishing It, boatied of his marksmanship ll was all fun. but suddenly the pistol wns dln- charged. The bullet entercct Insley's left side and took an upward course, lodging near the heart. The bi y fell and his com- puiiUms, much frlghtoneil, called for ua- slstance.

T H E T R U T HAMUT

G fattta • Hew T ria l,TRENTON, JURP 10.—A uew trial waa

granted to the Supreme Court td-day, in the damaffe euit brought by James A. DacRhain affainat the N orth Jersey Street Railway Company. The court .holdn that, the applicAHon of the defendant, fur a new tria l should have beeo granted.

. Max W ldeteln. The lirtde was anIn a white o« m . « reety .led an arm boufiuet of foSes sBaj

.'onnerly ot this city, to meet Lorenso Dcdd, of fJ Hudson-street, an old friend. During the day Mr. Kittcber sunfested to MIm Queman that they se t married, and the lady being wllUng, Rev. K. & Waten. pastor of Grace English Luthsran Chqroh. Was.ssnt for and tied (he Knot Miss Clara M. Sutter acted as bridMinaid end

‘tTrafik J. Kutcber attended nis father as best man. Following, the ceremony the bride gsd groom left to r MjrerevlUa.

D a n ta g e s f o r t n j a r l e s finefa ln ed .TRENTON, June 10.—Tae Supreme Court

to-day sustained Judinnent for damages recovered by Harry, Tlttlebaum. against the Progreasive P aper Box Company ,of Newark. The plaintiff Was In defendant's employ, -and w as drawn Into the shafting and Injured.---------------

g a y o a n e H a n Plgsia L ong R id e ,BAYONNE!. June 1)0,—H arry Early, of

Bayonne, and Frederick 1. Perrauft, of Boston, will s ta r t from the oity hall In Boston on June 16 to attem pt to ride tbelr bicycles to th e city hall in New York In twenty hours. The distance Is 264' miles. , _____ ■

A u to fp n e d o s I s n > e i l .MAGNOLIA, )iunat 10.—j', Scanlan, of

IfiH W est lAnIgb a n n u e , Phlladelphlo, dashed through th is place yesterdsy a t

■ ' o f speed. H e was ar-M/i. gud-

“ e --------------------------- 1 -F ll lp in n e to OnA w nte n t T re n tm .TRENTON, Ju n e 16.—Among the State

Normal fchool graduates th is ykar will be five FlUpInoe, 'Who wiH a t once return to the PhiHppinea to. bocome te a s e r s among th e ir fellpW ^countrymen,

W oM an fiw allw w ed C asboH e A rid .BAYONNEL June 14.-^In a despondent

mood, M ri. Della Gorey, ,t|ilrty-sui y e a n of age, a t E Cottage sireet. attem pted to end her JIte yeatirday by swaJhiwlng curbolle gold. She waa takan to the City Hospital and will i ja a r st.

P o lice G et R u n a w a y Boys.Bprrid! UlHfuHrh lo th« KVUXIXQ XKWS. '

RAHWAY, June lO.-Rey Woodward and- George Brown, ten years old, both of Bayonne, were fouiDl wandering about^tlie streets last night hungry and wearj-. T lity were taken to the police sta tion tor lodg­ing and supper, where It was learned th a t they had run away from home, alleging th a t they were going to visit an aunWat Milltown, near New Brunswick, They had no money and were sent home to-day.

H orse K illed go ffer lo g from R abies.BAYONNE, Juno 10.—A horae belonglns

to John Tinkle, a coal dealer, of Ifi East Nineteenth street, wos pul to death yes­terday by Dr. R. J. Halllday, ,a veterinary Burgeon, who found the animal suffering from rabies. Tho horse waa bitten by h road dog a week ago,

.W orkman KBpa an d Is D row ned,BAYONNE, June to.—'While a t work

yesterday on Pier 1 ot the Standard.O il Company, In Constable Hook, William Claseon. forty-five, of 6tS Humboldt street, Greenpolnt. slipped, felt overboard and was drowned.

PURCHASE OF U N D SET ASIDE BY COURT

Hfiprem e f o u r t Jusiloik N nrs P e r th Anibox WflN^r Ccinim issloiiers

P«IU Kxrrnslvr Sum.JfjMTdal />fii;w(f/i (0 KYEMSO

TRKNTON, June 10. —In an opinion I'V Justice (tiirrlion the Supreme Gourt to- diry ®el aside a purchusc nf land, mad« bv the wat'*r commlBSlouera of Perth Ambov. for $15,000.

The court Bay® that n fair market value for the properly would nm exceed SJ.ixn and if the properly could nut be had f-ir less than nurli iin exceR!«lvp Moni as $15.<hX) the comnilflPlonerfl ahould have reaortej lo candctnmilion.

P K E U IE URGES FEDERATION.

fiRADIATION GIFTSThe best ll noa« too good "-for on

this oersMiob the recipient hiMKedueted on m erits-end merit

uuld nlweys be rerofoUsds Kvery watch or piece of Jewelry

eversotdat the Holtslore aa* and Is a piece of ((oods of tnerlt^vyet not hiRh p r lr* d -fo r 'til the policy ot Ihe Holt store (o b«U low. C'oQld you tfu to a better place T

Frank Holt & Co.,T ru g fw o rth y J a w t l t r s ,

t Acafem; Stmt, Oop. P. 0.

TAKE NOTICE.B ofird o f Asse.asiTient a n d R ev is io n

of T axes.

IHshfop McFnoil Anraln T ells t'nthii- ]|<*s to Affiliate fo r Re(»rvenlcH-

tio u of M ercer llra n e h ,TRKNTON, Juno ID.—Members nf Rn-

nion Cnthollf BurlidlrB from o-ll over Mor- cor C’nuiity aiii ucimi >i massnieolInK In Si. M ary's CuthnliMl School Halt last flight

ito hear nh aildross by Rl. Rev. Bishop Jam es A. McFuiH fui "Federation." The meeting ufih a pjirt of the plan for the rfui'sunlxiitlr?ii uf the Mi-rner County Fed- crnrlon nf rn!linllc K>dvtlPB und for Uh afflllrtlhvn wKli ilw Ainorlnin ftKierallon.

At the omsel ItJrthop MrFaul referred lo the fact lh.it jn’xt Sunday fiftemoon dclo- gatPH fnitfi twehly-oTH' BOcletlns in the ronrity wonlil, ('undnct u nu-^eilng at whlcli an orgimiziulnn would be »'ffecU:d and del- egatfs chnsm in represent Mercer County nt the imtlonnl convention of the Ameri­can fi'ctoi'iitkin, to be conducted In Imllati- upniit^, July H, Ifi, 15 nnd 17.

Thu bishop then spoke of the great good th a t co\iU1 ht accomplished'by the county organlxutluu Lhruugh Us nffUlatlun with the national body. Contlmifng, the bishop said that The lime wan when the entire burden und lesiMnisIhlllly of the promo­tion of Catholic InlerestH fell almost en­tirely upon the clergy, but through fed- erntlan It (e hoped tlmt the burden wJli i>6 lightened, und n portion a t least will bo carried hy the different soclotie®, >!e then ouUiH('d ihe purpOHOS of the sYraerl- ean frdef'Hti''ri Urt lielng to pr<»rnole and defend Catholic Inlereat® and Catholic cHlxenshlp.

Vott ®re hereby required to leturn the total value of your personal property as held on the 20th day of M ay, to the Board of Aaaessmetit and Revision of Taxes at their office in the City Hall^ on or before the 30Ui day of June next, and in no case will any abatement be made for mdebtednesa or for property which may be claimed to be exempt from taxation unless the law is ■trictfy complied with.

J f return ts not made under oaf A a d d according to taw the taringoffletnuHU a u c u your pergonat properly accord^ ing to their judgm ent, from Whloh no appeal can be tn/cena

JOHN H OW R, Prefc

t k t Most EtfrtshUg Urlak la the World

IK BOTTLEaAt flood Ban, Cafn aad BMtaaniaia

liMOK TOW .VtHlP PROPOiALPlsTmVNilHlP OF UNION-

NOTlCrc TO CONTRACTORS.Sfttlfil pruiJOBttU, nintiiBd ’’Proposslji for con-

Gtrucilnir sidewalk* aru) L'TOStwalkB.'’ wlU ho Tfioflvf-rt by tho Ti>wnoh1i) CnmmiUoo of tho iBwmhlp of l^aion untii H r. M., Uofiday, Juno IT. iiaff, St (Vid Feltowo' Roll. Lyndhunt, K. J , tor tb«* crMtNtruoilcKi qr oamont sfdowalks urn] nn nidge rnfid. Vsllsy Bn>okH venuD. Nfow .If'rai'y av nue. gccond avontio ohd

Thfl eiurineer's approxiniote estlmoio lo aa folh'ws:

5b«l ruble ynnU of Hiirtb e-xeavatlon.Gtx) ruble ysr'ilB of eurtli to bo sup-

pllwl If mri'eBfiHry.tll.rilHj Hqusrf feel 'if cement Hlden-alKs snd

lut'Idi'iUHl iTi ftoot of property.wiUBrH feH of cement elnev.-Rlks at *Wos

of Btrecte. . ^ftOO miunre feel of four (4) Inch bluoolono

rrirfWH’u.lkn 20 Inches wide.Rsrth bid or iirfJinwHl tnuGl bs sccompsnlefl

with H OLTlItleil t’hnck or csith for flvo Oh'ptr ii'Hi, of' the loiRl iiiwoum of Ilia. A surety bond In the Gvm thousand dollora willbe required iho succeMful bidder.

The coiUractnr will be required to furnish a flui'ety b»>n<l xuarnnieemir the cemeat sidewalkfor a perl'Hl of five iBi years.

The Township <.fonimlitee rosorvef tha riantund Bli bids.iiiecldcaiUmB may be examlnodIII reject uny und all bids.

I’lsfts sTul ■iM.*t.'ldctiU»ni and bidden' blnnks sooured at ths offloe of the townshlii onKlnoer or township clerk.

Dated Jun<* H. iW)?WILLIAM a. LOO.VN. Township Enslnssr, |tld®F rond. Ktrurslund. N, J. John K. Wwdi, Township Clerk. Bldgs rood.

Kmgalsnd. N. J.

TO GUARD’V O U K H B A t v X H

, Vm ai^bt to take an occasional dose oT the B itten . It will prevent the Stomach from becoming weal; and the liver in­active; Blit II yoiir health is poor, we nrg^eyoatotake itregnlarlv liefore meals.NosTEntrs

STOMACH UTTEIGdaring the past V y e a n baa proven Its ahilBytAicuM Headacl»,BloinnK,Voat* — Poor A ppetln , Dyspepsia. Imll-

or i^ la r la . Fever and Ague. ' ev a iy bottle pure.

Two Wznh Goods Specials.Applique Swiss— In a full assortment of colors

in dot effects on white and colored grounds; this season’s most popular fabric, very dressy and durable. .* n Sold everywhere at 25c: very special, yard . . A v C

Imported Voiles—Of very fine quality and tex­ture: in light, medium and dark effects, in this lot will be found large, medium and small plaids and small checks, and the colors are light blue, pink, black and white, lavender, gray and other good fancy styles. Regular price 35c., 40c. and 4Sc; special, yard, O - l at on ly ................................................. ^ I C

R e d f e m S t y l e “ S S . ”An undergeam model, fitted to a tall form,

creates exceedingly smart lines.The model is so patterned that it nips

the waist, giving it a very round and small appearance, and is cut straight at the top, firmly holding the bust.

An extremely light weight garment, in wear so smooth that the model is hardly fell. Beautifully trimmed with hand­some laces and ribbon in lingerie effect.

A full set of silk elastic “Security" Rubber Button Hose Supporters, placed on the 5kirt by the designer, the person

best qualified to properly attach the hose supporters for obtaining the best figure result. In fine quality Batiste, style " S S , ” or Coutillc, “S.” Price

'.S S '

3.00Miss Pendleton, of New York, an e x p e r t Corsetlere, Is here

to demonstrate the numerous aJvontages of the Redfern Corsets. Fitting free. All women welcome.

mm- W. V. SNYDER & CO.

® . A ltm an Gin.WOMEN’S WAISTS.

TO-MORROW, TUESDAY, JUNE llTH, AN EXCEPTIONAL SALEOF

. WOMEN'S WHITE WASHABLE WAISTS,

AT J1.50, 2.00, 2.85, 3.2S, 4.00, 5.00 & 6.50

WOMEN'S SHOES. ............... ...

TO-MORROW, TUESDAY, TuNE Iltb ,

• WOMEN'S TIE POMPS OF VTAN RUSSIA CALFSKIN, ‘

REGULAR PRICE 15.00, ’ . ■ • • AT f3.S0■ gc., ' ^ ■

A »m ». 34ti| anG 3 ^ dtm U . Knii loriu

^ m o x k <£))fcnin5 3fet05.Pubilftied dilf. «nc*i}f iuiidA7. bir tht

EVDflNfi NEWS PIJBUSHINQ COMPANY,21S-2I7 MARKET, STREET,

NEWABK. If. J .b u n d •« th« N*»*rk, »• J'.

MCflnd*€lBMi matur>

Ttlephont IBM—Private Braneli E*chani« connecting all depanmciUB.

Delivered by newedealere anil rarrleri In any part of Newark and Elase* County, In all towna In Northern New Jersey and all along the Jersey Coast at ten cents a

BAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS”The Newark Evening News, one month,

an y centa; six months, two dollars and (Ifty cents; one year, live dellare.

New York Office. Il> Brunswick Build­ing. a s f i f th avenue. Tel. ESB Madison.

Chicago Onioe, Hoorn E2B, Tribune Build­ing.

Washington Bureau. Room 318. Colorado Building.

Orange Branch Offire. r irs t National Bank Building. Tel. 4T8 Orange.

heard In Joyoue praises, and they .held the places. In a childish way. which they must. In a few years, occupy serloualy and with the weight of rciponslhllliy upon them. It la encouraging, from every point of view, to see children given a place o( their own, a day to themselvea and Ihc prominence th a t belong* to them. Chil­dren's Day ts a giorloue Institution, nod the older one* enjoy It and Its lessoiis quite a t well aa the children.

LOCAL bra n c h o m c E s .BelltvtUe ivsnus, lot. i Hemtiurs fiscs, lABruce etreet. MO. CUatsn eveaue. MB. Oerden street, MH.

Rctcvllls avcnUB, W. South Bltlh slrtet, JBA Wellses pise*. 38.

MONDAY, JUNE W. 1»7,

YTHBRE JER gE Y MIBBED IT.The violent con trast between the New

Jersey railroad oommlsslon bill and the New York public utllltlee law, the latter hATlng been signed by Governor Hughes on Thargday, will hardly strike the stu. dent of railway regulation and reform as Indicating an exalted conception by the New Jersey Legislature of what should have been produced In a Btale In which the nUlroade occupy so large a portion of the public stage. In saying this It la with due recognlilon of the debt duo Senator Colby for rising when It looked as If New Jersey was to have no railroad regulation bill a t all, and furnish­ing a meaaure which, by being neither In­nocuous nor se effective as It ought to be, was, nevertheless, something which the retorm erl and the railway reactlonlsla decided to allow to pass. As might be supposed, the outcome was a compromise with very little In It which suggeate what the general public would have turned out, had they been allowed tree swing.

As already pointed out, this New Jersey substitute fo r w hat we should have had In the way of a railroad commleilon law. oraatet a commission with some adminis­trative, but largely with advisory pow. trs. When deemed requlslle In the public Interest, it is empowered to order rsll- roada to Increase the efficiency of their service, and to render eafw, tracks,

: bridges and rolling stock. When needed,: t in orders m ay be enforced by the cqurls, land U, a tta r Inquiry, It la found that rail­ways ought to inatlto ta othar reforms, "a recommendation" to th a t elleot may be

I made to the Leglslatarei from which It '.w ill be observed the New Jersey Legisla­

ture wse evidently In a very grscloui mood when th a t sop was thrown to the

. people. This will be all tbe more appar- ' ent a fter the dovem or names the three commissioners to carry out the provisions

■ of the bill, which he will do when the |InSlgIatnr« convenes within a fortnight. jThe particular men selected will naturally ‘ have much to do w ith the aplrlt In which the law Is sdnclnlitered.

. When ona tu m a from this enactment to ' the bill which bacame a law tit New York, on Thuraday, It is alm ost' to smila so plain Is tb s svldenca that In the great S tate of New York the people have been

t! able to drive railw ay Influences out of the oapitol a t Albany, while, eo tar as Tren­ton la coBcerned, a little child could draw

I tbe Inference. By the public uUltlles bill I a ll public service enterprises, (except tele- ' phones and telegrapba) common carriers Of every dassrlptlon, gaa and eleotrlo

‘ 1 1lluminating oorapanlos, a r t all brought I Under the confriil of two boards of five

m tm ben each, one tor Greater New York : and one fo r the remainder ot the State. ', These a re aubstltuted to r tbe present

New York S ta te railway and lighting I boarda, the S ta te meter inspector and tiie I New York C ity Rapid Transit Commls- I lion. They will hava power on aod after I July first, to prevent rebates and rate

TH E ORANUK fESTKkIVM I,.The people of Grunge are rtevollng the

present week to th e celebration of the centennial annlveraary of the foumliiig of their rity, They a re to be heartily con­gratulated becaueo of the patriotic spirit Which Insplrea them ; because of their Jue- tllled local pride; bccauae ot the spUnidld growth and prosperity of their beauUtul city, and because Ita hlatory alfords them abundant opportunity to hold a eelebra- tlnn In which all can eeaiously partlcl- pats.

Orange Is aeparate from Newark, and yet It le. In one aenoe, n part of the greolest and moat prq^perous city In this State. It le more, for It la one of the many munlclpalUlee which make 'this seo- llon ot New Jersey and thlo part of the great metropolitan dlatrlct the most a t­tractive, the moat populous, the most wealthy and the moat enterprising and progressive In the United States. And In this galaxy ot cltlea It elanda second to none as a place in which to make u home and live a life of uietulness, com­fort and delight.

Orange haa been largely a realdentlaJ city from tha time of Its birth, a century ago. I l l open flelda and Ita roads and lanes have been turned Into city lots, streets and avenues, and tha greater por­tion of its ru ra l fea tu re s have become the Bites of storca, acboole, churches and resl- dancea; yet ag fa r aa It can It retains all these characteristics which make It a t­tractive to those seeking homee of cointorl or luxury In a locality nt once healthful, beautiful and easy of accesA

Orange haa pride In her eltlsenshlp as well as In her situation and her pros­perity. In Orange and the Oranges re­formers, sta tesm en and men of broad minds and public sp irit bave made their homes, and there are dlaousaed with grent earnestnesi and ability questions of pub­lic policy and Issues ot Btate and na­tional importance. T he debates on such topics aa a re given eonalderatlon In Or­ange a ttra c t studloua attention tar be­yond local lim its.

The whole of th is week la to be given up to the centennial celebration, which was begun yesterday, with sermons In the pu lp lt| and parades In the streets. It Is to be an "Old H om s 'Week,'' In which all the former cltlxens of Orange are ex­pected to re tu rn and participate In the reunion and festivities, end probably to wish th a t they had never left a city ro beautiful, so patrio tic and ao enterpris­ing. Before the exercises close "The Dispatch Rider" will be unveiled end duly dedicated, and Orange will have a new attraction.

Thete celebrations a re really great events. G reat not only In the numbers partlch atlng In them, but great In flrlng the r.ilzena with local patriotism and awal enlng In them a new appreciation ot the historical events which might otherwise be overlooked or forgotten, Orange Is to be .congratulated upon her centennial anniversary, upon her marvel­ous progress and upon the prominence' which she m aintains among the other cltlea of th is metropolitan dIstrIcL

books that precious few of us read, but the tram p Is sill] an enigma.

Dr. Beltman, being preaumably not only wealthy, but willing to "give up" In the Interests ot science, pursued an riilircly original line ot research. He got the tram ps under the glare of electric llghte around a sumptuous table iind loaded them with good liquor, "In vino Veritas" Is as old as the hills, and no soonar wna the banquet fairly under way than the doctor surreptitiously pulled out hiB notebook and began waiting for re- suits. 1'liey came, of course, for lliere wire songs and speeches and much eon- lidenllal conversation th a t could have tiien heard In the next blook, but In It all there w asn 't enough sociological tru th to Justify a single entry In the notr- hook. The tram ps. Indeed, talked and acted very much like other gentlemen un­der similar circumstances, disdaining u t­terly to retard the flow of good feeling or cloud the merriment of the featnl oc­casion by talking shop. They may have made occasional references to the dlfll- cully of finding employment or the hard­hearted ness of the capllallstio clasa, but only In a general and quite amiable sort of a way and without so much as hinting th a t these things had any relation to their choice of on avocation. There ware several form al addresses, too. pulled oft Buccessfully, In spite of the condition of the speakers, but they didn't furnish any more m aterial fur the notebook than the uaual after-dinner speech does. The plain fact Is that Dr. Beltman'a guests did ample Justice to the refreshments, solid and liquid, enjoyed themselves to the u t­most under the novel oondltlona and finally departed, leaving the tram p prob­lem even a profounder m ystery to him than It had been before. For this reason, aa well as ona or two othera th a t Will readily suggest themselves to the thought­ful reader, the tramp banquet ts not likely to become Immensely popular, even In ad­vanced sociological circles.

STATE HEALTH BOARD’S POWER

Seaetary Mitchell’s Reasons Why Slaughtering of Diseased

Cattle Cant't Be Stopped.

IS MORE LEGISLATION NEEDED?

inor« legliilatton and mnnay la neededfrtim M tm r fllwaaeit maat.

them lii no rMaonabte doubt Ibdt the 1 ^ ' tftUiuru will furnlah both a t the vedalon on June is, If It Is called to their a tten ­tion. If they don't do Ji then, and lh« m atter 1m ub BeiiouB sb Mr. MfcOulro Jtaye It 1b, It U e^rlouB onou^h to juRtlfy the Ftato bourd In uBkIng tha Governor to call un ex tra neaaton to provid*^ the neccBoary rrmedlea.

Although, a t the rate m eat pHcee are going up Juat fit present. It la doubtful If

ur« K(itng (II be able to se t enough meal to cHt. whnU'HOTnci or unwholcsomo, to Injure na vory much. H. B. W-

WORK OF THE LIBRARIES.

f dlsarimlnatlon, to compel the furnishingof adequate railw ay facilities and equlp-

maul and to enforce the liability of com- 1 mon carriers for damage caused by delay: or negligence.

The bill also provides that no franchise 1 shall be capluillsed in excuse of the

am ount actually paid to the State as con­sideration for the grant of the franchise;

\ th a t the capital stock of a corporation I forced by the merger o r consolidation ot I two or more corporations shall not ex- ' oeed the sum o t the capital etock of the

corporations so consolidated a t their pur value or such eums and any adillUonsl sums actually paid In cash; "nor shall any con tract for consolidation or lease be

I capUaUted In the stuck ot any corporationw naf------ ------ ..............................A lever; nor ahull any corporation here

'1 after issue oiiy bonds ag-alnst or aa a lien , upon any con tract tor consolidation or

.1 m erger." I t 1* provided nlso that no cor- ; p o r t io n ahnll purchase or hold stuck in

another auch corponulon or commun carl “5f ud1«M authorized hy llm. penalty of $5,000 for e:irh offeiiH ' l» I Impoewd upon common cairiera vlohuins I the laWs Bnd Ytolwtion by any oin.-i r or ' agent IB ttuule a mlarletneanor. Any cor­

poration o th er th an a cummun rarrl4-r or railroad or e tree t railroad Is subjecud toa ptnaity o t $1,000 for eacli oFCenti< ,

Tlie prov'Fbe provlslone relating to gas and elm

RBCKLfBftg O F HUNAN L IFE .The accident a t Dudley, In Camden

County, laet week, shows more clearly than usual the low appreciation In which human life 1b hold. An exprcaa train was approaching a grade croeslng e t a high ta t* of epeed. An automobile, in which were two men, two women and a little flhlldi wBB approaohtng the aanie eross- ing. Also a t a high ra te of apeed. The only protection ngnlnst accident at this crosBlng waa a flagman. There were no safety gatefl.

The approach to the crossing wna curved, with an embankment and build­ings to shut off the view. The man driv­ing the autom obile should have been prudently cautiouB, bu t he wn^ not. He drove so fast th a t he could not stop his machine before reaching the track, and he therefore threw on full speed, hoping to Jump across the rails before the train was upon him. H is Judgment was faulty. The locomotive struck the auto squarely, car­ried It n distance, overturned and amash- ed It. One of the woman was killed, the other received in ternal Injuries that may prove faibl, th e men were both badly broken and bruised. Only the child es­caped unhurt.

Every facto r In this accident In con­demnatory. The c rosa lng .has been the scene of m any accidents and hairbreadth escapes. Jt is known as one of the most dangerous Oil the line, yet the railroad company has never guarded it, except with a 'f la g m a n . I t should have been ab<v|i!ihed long Ago. In the next place no aiJtomohillst traveling over such a road should have appronclied such a crossing without haWng hla machine completely

I trlcal corporaGonB are generally eirnllnr omior control. Yet this one was going a t ! to those affecting railroads.

These are th e m ost awecplng powers of this character which have probnhiy ever iMBD granted In any State, anywhere. As will be recalled, the New York Lcglsia-

lure gave promise of being an IrresEstlbie ¥ody. in Us oppodtloh to the Governor. %hose pet m easure thl^ was. But time, Which ovei'cometh, much, soon brought a great light to the senators nnd represen­tatives a t Albnny, and they speedily fell over one aiiothcr In ePforti to get Into line w ith w hat they ultimately saw was public BetitlmfiU. Borne men can see further than others. And it is well that It is Si), for some day the short-sighted legislator hi this respect, even In New Jersey, may find lilmgctf gathered up as Ih a whirlwind and der'calted In the utter- most parte of the purlieus of polltica) oblivion. Belah.

1C-

C H IL D llES 'n DAY,The churches arc to be ihRukod, sin­

cerely thanked, for providing at least one day in the year in which the children are given the consideration that is due them. I t Is ,o ften said that ciiles pro- Yld© no place for tUo children, but this iB not quite no true now as It used to be Heretofore there was no place for tlieiu but tbe itre e ts ; now they are gradually' being provided with playgrounds.

On the o ther hand, there appears to be no place fo r children in flats and apart­ment houiee. Landlords and hcmec agents will not ren t to families with children, and a ^ e i t of the aUirk to a family that wae childiew when the lease wn^ made is beld to ,be sufflclent .reasOn for icfuBlng to renew th e agreement a t the expiration Of the terniv

But the ehurchCB are willing to receive th e pbildrcn, to prepare a place for them, and to give th em a day .all tn themselves. Tbe chiirchos, If wo except the educationat aothorltieB. a re about the only ones that team to rea llio how necesBsry children are, and how eesential they wlU.bacome, to the m ahitenance of morality and H-

' ttglan In th e years th a t are to come.Cltfldveh*t t>ay wee iu beautiful yeater-

day ad Ju n e—of 1997—could fumlBh, and' tlw r enjored It without alloy. The sacred

ware etvwded with them, their young voioeB were everywhere

HU« h ppp*‘d that he could not obey the ilapM in 'f signal.

Hrrp iTr.‘ presented Ihq. iwo sides of the grade crosalng question. The rail­

road companies are reckless of human Ufr* In ullciwlng such crossinga to exist. Bo aro the Btate and municipal authorl- tli's. re rhaps the Railroad Commission will, when fully organized, turn their a t­tention to this phase of the matter, On the other hand, those most interested In the preserviiilan of life—tholr own llvcs”- are the very ones who are reckteaa In running Into peril and bringing about such terrible fatalltlps as that nl Pudley.

There Is only one w af to guard against these accidents, and th a t la to abolish grade cronalngs. This must he done by law. Even intelligent men and women, on foot, in carriages or Ih-HutomobUeB, will dash in front of moving (mins and W’lll bo killed or nialmcd. There Is no provcnllng them, except by abolishing crossings- It would pny tho rRilroads to adopt this policy, and some are trying Jo do so. but their attention Is diverted by freight business, iind the m atter of human life Is not given much consideration. The complete abolition of grade crossings aw aits the action of the State Rnitroad Commission.

m e n o f t h e COLBY S T R IF E . Senator Colby has made It clear tha!t

he will not accept the nomination for Ooverncr, but thin does not appear to have discouraged the very largo number of people who favor him for Chief E x­ecutive. He has pleaded h li duty to hts constituents In Essex County and his.desire to finish out his tefn i as Sen­ator. but there are many who think th a t tho State haa claims upon him bu- porlor to those of hlB own county. Ho haa urged the need of continuing the work of reform and of spreading the new Idea, but they a a / ho can do this as well In IhS Governor's chair as In the Senate chamber. He has even urged the Hlncsa of his wife ns an excuse for not undertaking the exhaustive work of a Gubernatorial campaign; but they eay he will work In Essex Coumy and else where and U wdll proportionately improve a fond wife's health it her husband ii elected Governor instead of Senator.

There is marked similarity between the case of Roosevelt tiatlonolly and Colby in this Stale. Millions want Roosevelt for a second elective term, notw ithstand­ing tho fact th a t he had nearly a whole term through the tragic death of Mc­Kinley. They want him though he has positively declined to accept a nomina­tion. They want him because he. Is iho ally of tru th , the advocate of a square deal, the friend of the people. They want him because they love him, tru s t him, 'find In him an honest offlolal.. see in him an ideal President.

Thouannda of people In New Jersey want E verett Colby. They want him not­w ithstanding the fact th a t ho hue de­clined to bo considered a candidate. 'W''ant him because he Is, In tho language of the Sussex Register, "sfumre and honest and tho Slate needs hls services,” W ant him because they see in him a good Kc- publlcan. an honest olTlcial, a friend of the people, a man to be res^pcctcd and trusted. Hls enemies have said, for sev­eral years pait, th a t ull ho wnnled was office. He has proved to the satisfaction of the people that he never wanted office merely for the sake of office; and now the people arc anxious to see him in the highest office ifl the State,

I t does not follow that Pre.sident Roose­velt will next year be the Republican candidate fo r President or th a t Senator Colby will this year be the Republican nominee for Governor; but there is reason to believe th a t each one. In hls sphere, will exert no small influence In securing '

L lh© nomination of a man who will repre­sent honesty In public office and devotion to the Interests of the people.

W hat the people want a re men of the Roosevelt stripe In national politics and men of the Colby stripe in New Jersey politics. Men who, when they pledge re­form, will do all in their power to ob­tain reform. Men who arc not led by bosses or who eubservicntly follow'' m a­chines. Men who are not seeking office for w hat can b« made out of It, but who accept office for w hat good con be done In it. Men who are neither the slaves of corporations on the one hand, nor their unreasonable enemies on the o th er; but who will protect corporate rights an.d prevent corpofatton wrongs, ^

Senator Colby's refusal to be consid­ered a candidate haa Increased hla popu­larity many times over. Ip all pa rts of the State. He is sincere in hlfi declina­tion, for the reasons he has stated, but had he skilfully forecaated Us effect ho could not have selected a surer method of Increasing hla political strength. The people may demand Robsevelt tn spite of all he has Bald. The people o f New Jersey may demand Colby because of what ho haa said. W hat arc rto s t wanted, to-chiy in public office are men of the Colby Biripe, of the Colby character, of the Colby honesty. Such men gye becom­ing more popular after each and every official in\-efitlgatk>n, because they are uuirf? nveded.

,A week or two ago Chief Inspccior Ooorgu W. MoGuIre, of the 0lato Hoard nr Health, annoimced In an Interview’ his four that slur** the federal Inspection of almighter-houBoa which kill and prepare meat for Inleratalo eommfree had been InatUutert, many of the cAtllo rejected hy ihr:! frderHl inspertorB aa diseased or o th ­erwise unfU For fond were Doing shipped to (hla S tale nml elnughtered ami sold for consumption here. The NKW8 silggeoled thnt ir this sort of thing was going un it w/i» essenihilly tho l>ualne«s of the S tate boarj and of Mr. McGuire to put a stop Co It Insteiu] of talking about It; tlm t It Was for very much this sort of thing the hoard tn existence and Mr. McGuire w ts paid his salary, and that If the board didn't have enough money to do this work, It should ask the Ixeglalature for more money In order that it might do it.

To this charge Mr. McOulrc and the officers of the S tate Board of Health take exception, M r McGuire. In reply, wrote

long find very Interesting hut entirely Irrelevant statem ent aa to the meaning and operation of the federal inspection law. I have another letter, w ritten by Henry Mitchell, the secretary of the board, which bears eomewhat more diroct- ly on the qucBtlon, Mr. Mllcheira letter Is OR follows:

Mr, MttPhelRH E xp lim iitlnn .The f^cts relating to the subject dls-

cuasod In tho NEWS Item are as follows: The State Board of Health has caused Inspections of slaughter-houses, located In various parts of the Slate, lo he made during the past winter, and the reports of these inapectlons show that a consld- ernble ImTCftSfl was found in ihc number of animals Bhinghlorr'd Tiif food In some of the slaughlcr-houses in rural districts, and that this IncresHc crcuired soo« after the iisaignmcnt of I'nlivd States Inspec­tors to the larger esuildishnients. The law In New Jersey {nee paragraplf 4 of Bectlon 12 of chapter SR of tho laws of 1S87) authorizoB local Boards of Health lo make nrdlnAnoe» to regulale and con­trol tho slaughtering of nil kIndB of nni- mats, hut no authority is given to the S tate Board of Healih to take action In cases where the local Uourd falls lo en ­force the necessary requirements to p re­vent the slaughter Jnr fiiud of diseased and immature anlmnlH. and a leglaliiilve hill was prepared (t^pnato 301} and in­troduced March 2S. 11107. hy Hetmtor Fre- llnghuysen. The hill was dnsigned to pines sib lighter-house? hi the same rela­tion to aanlLary reqiJlrements th a t has been found satlsfueinry In the case of creameries, and to gh'i* lo the S tate Board grf Health authority to mvoko the license of every catabllahmont where (he buslncsg Is not conducted willi due regard to the Welfare of the public health. The bill did not become a law.

"At present the inspccUon of slaughter* houses Is being canllnucd hy the S tats Board of Health for tho, purpoae of call­ing the attention of local boards to estab- iishments where the building Is so lo­cated, constructed and purrounded thnt a nuisance la created; whf're the method employed for tho disposal of offnl la un ­sanitary: whore there Is disregard ot cleanliness In conducting the buslnCHs; where dlaeosed animals are slaughtered, and also for the purpnse of eoHecting In­formation which wIM lend to the passage of H suitable leglslailve act to cffectunl- ly prevent the sliuigljicr for food of sIcK, pm uature nncl ernnclatod animals, and which will require that the slaughter of animals for food shall be conducted with due regard to cleanliness. It Is liUended to continue these Inspections during the coming summer until all parts of the Sliiiti? have been reached.

"Thr law's give to tbe State Board of Health, and also to local hoards, ample iiu4horl1y lo proeccute peranns who sell iho meat of dlflenacd animals, hut the regulation of slaughter-houaea imder the pennit system will check the vicious praetlRp of buying up and slaughtering dlfteased cattle and secretly disposing of tho cnrensscB of such animals as a rogiw lar buplncsH in localltlca where the local thsppcilon of meat Is carelessly performed or ttUogether neglcnted. Doubtless one consequence of the enactment of Senate 301, or some similar measure, would he to permanently close numerous small eatahlishments where the business of Hlnughtcring la a t presem conducted with entire disregard of hyglonlo require* ments.”

DottriBH W id e P ow ers.There nrc Just a few weak points In

Mr. MitchcU’a defense of the inactivity of hiB depnrtmcnt In the inspection of slaughter-houses. For Instance, In the act of 1887, creating the board, to which he refers, the powers of the board aro generally described ns fol!nws:

"The 6uld B ute board shall take cog­nizance of all mattere affccllng the health and life among the chlzcna of the S ta le . '

While the commonly nccepicd definition of "cognizance” is merely jndlclitl notice or recognition, Blackstone alno used the word to signify Jurisdiction. I don't know whether the meaning of the word In (hls connection has ever been decided by (he courts of this State, but If the la t­ter definition phould be accepted, the State Board of Health needed no other authority thau that contained in this one paragraph to Inspccl slaughter-houses or do anything else It found necessary to protect the heaKh and life of tho people Of New Jersey,

But there is other and more deflntte au­thority conferred upon this board bv the BtatuteH. Mr. Mltcholl o n ip la ln s ' that nothing can he done by tho State be-”'" toward establlslilng In.spection bccaiMfO there la no specific authority In the law for such work. Ho clalniB that while authority is glvfn tn locui boards to in­spect and regulftte slnughler-lioiisea. tho State board has nn authority if the local boord In any rnunlclp.-imy falls to pa«s ordinances for such regulntinn.

It might be reclliirjil to as k where. If Sue!) Is the case, the xState Ivuird secures authority to make the Inspr-crkma Mr. Mitchell eays are now being made ofBlaughter-housea. A more complete refu­tation of this argument, hnwever, la found in another paragraph of that same law of 1887. AS follows:

^ ^ " T h e Stale board, Ils agents and ap- potntqps ahftll h^ve ihc same right ofinspection in re»farrt to all m atters a f­fecting the public health as hna been orwtiixp ha anneATipa.4 ><*srvn i v t aV a

T he NoteiTorthy D e'veloiinient of th e Library M ovement In th e

llonth.The register of attendance at the con­

ference of tho American Library Aiwo- dallon , held nt Asheville, shows 120 li­brary people from Btntca south of Penn* aylvnnit. One of the main -topics dis­cussed a t the conference was (he growth of libraries In the Smuh, Norih Caro­lina, the State tn which tho mooting was hold, had only forty-live libraries ton years ngtj. It now haa more than twice (hat number. It Is to be remarked th a t tho library movement In the South Bcemfl to keep pace with the public school and high­er education movementB. Another S tate In the South In which the library movement hns developed to a noteworthy extent la Texas. Tito Texas Library AHsooldtlon haei Just held its fifth annual mooting. It has Issued a handbook of Texas li­braries. It has conducted one library In stltu te, There are Carnegie libraries In nineteen Texas cities, four of the largeet libraries coating $50,fl00 each. Galveston and two other towna have libraries erect­ed by funds left by Texas citlzcne. There are fourteen counties with free libraries, ten with subscription librarlos and sixty- six without llbrarlcB. twenty-nine countlee not reporting. *iPhe women’s clubs circu- l«te iniveling libraries In twenty-four. coutitJfR. Berea College circulatca about sixty traveling llbrnrlcB among the moun­taineers.

The American Library AsBoclation haa elected the following officers Ear the com­ing year: President, A. E. Boatwlck, New York: first vlce-prealdent, C. H. Gould, Montreal; second vice-president, Helen E. Haines, New York: Hccrelary, J. Wyor, Albany, N. Y.; treasurer A, H. Ilopklns, n u sb u rg . pa., aiiti recorder, 1,little E. Stearns, Mndlson, Wls.

The conference next year will be held at St. Paul and Minneapolis.

In tho E ast Orange Library Is displayed a map of the Oranges as they were In l i^ . This has attracted much attention. All books and pamphlets rflailng to The history of the Oranges have also been prominently placed, and the Interest op' parent in tho centennial eelebratton of tlie founding of tho Oi*angu» Is attested by Ihelr use, Tho library will bo open on Friday next till noon.

piled for hls pasBport hb gave Jwfl- Itffii. as the date of hls birth, end

November Hi, U96, as tbe date o t hls &r- I'ival. The discrepancy between these friRtementt and the stAjeroent in hls nwL- uralixatlon certifliratc did not 'escape the Btate Deparijnenl'a iioUoc. and as a re­sult Hnited States Dialrlct Attorney John' R- Vreebtnd, under orders from the United Btates Attorney-General, haa filed a petition for the annulm ent of Hersch- kow its's naturallzntlon in the United Blatea D istrict Court a t Trenton.

Herschknwits, It Ib said, has gone back to Hungary without a paBsporl.

ANTI-SALOON KAN'S RAT AT LEGISUTORS

COLLEGE GDtLS RENDER THEIR SECOND REOTAII

Em «*U ra1 PvaKiwat cMtcb k r At* ««■<■ o f f t . BlUoboih** a t

O ooToot •to tlam ,Speriol CJtpateA to tito arBmSB BSWB.

MADISON. Jqne lO.-JThe BMon:)•erle* o t raoltaUi ot tba Col1«ae £ llu .b e th a t Convent Station p repara to ttf

«K* ^^..^-1__ aa-l_____ J

Joaeph H. C ollier, E d itor o f "Tke Iaaoe,»^.Hol[es Addreaa In

Cranford Chorek.BpecUll Dfrpairk to lAe E Y E H im XEWS.

CHANFORD, June 10.—Joseph H. Collier, eflitor of The Itaue, the official o rran of the Antl-Baloon League, apoke here last night, In the Flrat Methodlat Church. He ■old, in pdrt:

"New Jeraey haa the pooreat liquor law* of any )8tate east of the MlaalealppI Rlvor, and It la one of only five Statea In the enHre Union without aome form of effect­ive local option or local vote on the aalooii queatlon. We aubmltted thta fair majority ru le measure to the Inet Legislature, and the Aesemblymen were actually ^ ra id of It.

"A targe majority of them simply lined up on the side of the moneyed liquor In­terests, and said by their actions and votea on thla bill; 'We don’t w ant anu American m ajority rule, local selt-govein- ment, home rule on the tfquor question; our sister States have found itr Is decided, ly antagonistic to the trade.'

“Your Assemblymen from Union County must have taken one of these two posi­tions when they voted agaJnst giving you a right to vote on the saloon question— either th a t you, In their opinions, are not able—haven't sufficient intelligence—to de­cide whether there shall or shall not be saloons In your community, or they, for aome reBaon, political or othsrwiae, took a stand boldly in favor of the saloon, sn1 were ao Intansely Interested therein that they lost all the Instincta o t Amerlcanlam and representative government.

"PrlendB, this probably Isn’t the gospel as you have been hearing It from this pulpit from Sunday to Sunday, but I'll tell you this saloon problem Is pretty closely connected with thnt gospel which our brother here preaches to you. Stalls- tics show th a t a church Is worth twice 08 much for good in a town where there are no saloons as It Is where there are anloons. Who will deny th a t there Is a grea ter obstacle than the open bar, which stands In the way of the church In her, work of obtaining and retaining men’s souls? The saloon dellea the church and would shape the very field In which we shall work If we are not up and doing."

to the commencement exercises Thursi day, was given to-day by the membera o the college clasaes. and an Interostlnj prograin was rendered. Papers were ri by the seniors, and tha undergrudunt' recited and gave piano aelectlons, Thi order of eierelses tor the day followa:

Chorus, College Glee Song, s. E. C. the Collegians, song composed by th ' class ot '07; paper, "Women in Homer. M argaret. Russell. A. B.. '07; piano solo Fruehlingerauchen, Op. 33, No. 2. Bindin, Adels M arla Daly, '08; recitation, "Hon; V .'s Wooing," Bhakeapeare, Winlfn Weiss, '10; paper. "Woman In Politics, Desiinges G enereui, A, B.. '07; piano soli Butterfly, Op. 43, No. 1, Grieg, Mary . Leyden, 'M.

Recitation, "Jean Valjean," Hugo. Mai J. Conroy, '08: paper, "Woman In Si clety." Marie Felslnger, A. B., '07; plan aolo, Caprlccioso, Op. 12, Von Weber, t.«o cadle Farrell, '10; recitation, "The Goln of the White Swan," Gilbert, Maude San Brndy, '03; paper, "Goethe, the Poet o the Eighteenth Century." Sara Hernon A. B., '07.

Q uartet, A Cappella, M otart, Marin Simon, '09; Helen McCrystal, '09; M ar­garet Flynn, A. B., '07: Hester Sullivan A. B., '07: oration, "The V aliant Wom­an ," Mira J. Mlsner, A. B., '07.

The vocal recital will be given to-mor row, and on Wednesday the academic an^ gram m ar classes will render a prograin At the close of Wednesday's exerclaet the prises in the undergraduate deparb m ents will be awarded by Rev. Dr. P he­lan, the chaplain of the convent.

NEWARK PEDDLER PUNISHED.

The Newnrk Library endeavors to help l(a patrons decide where and how to spend the summer by making a display of vacation literature In the reading- room. Ift addition to the circulars from summer hotels, deserlptlvc booklets Is­sued by ra llroa is and alenmahlp compa­nies may be found.

Tho Interest In the music collection which was placed In tho rfladlng-ronm April 16 is steadily IncreoBing. During May 319 volumes circulated. Tho collec­tion covera 350 titles, and contaihs the piano and vocal scores of fifty operns. With the exception of the opera acorea, which are limited to seven daya, the music may be kept for o re month. In connection with the music department the library has bogun a collection of musical literature clipped from musical m aga­zines. No musical magazines are In­cluded in the Indexes to periodicals, nnd It Is difficult to And satisfactory refer­ences about living muBlcIsns. It Is hoped tha t the material thus collected will in time h e . of value and aiipplemeiit the small amount found In musical diction­aries.

V «ter«ne to W elcom e LeaderaELIZABETH, June 10.—Preparations

are being made by the United Spanish W ar Veterans, whoso headquartera are in thta city, for an official vlalt next Mon­day of Commander-in-chief Hamilton W ard. There will be refreBhmonts and un entcrlalnm ont. The meeting will be held at the arm ory a t 8 P. M.

Dobbii W as Arrested, E seiiped , R a rrested , and, w ltk a Com-

panloit, F ined flO*gpfctrti to l/ie tSV^VIIfO yEtP8.

RUTHERFORD June W.—An arrest an eecaiw and a rearrest, within a pefjo< of one-half hour, was an experience of John Dobbs, a peddler of Newark, Satur day afternoon because of hla failure If meet the rcqulromentB of tho borough’ ordinance in regard to Ucenaea. Borougli Clerk F rank A. Stedroan, who has re cently been appolnlRd marghal, arreetc (he man in Sylvan street for aetUn straw berries. He was brought to poUc- headquarters, and hls companion wax lef in charge of the wagon. While Chh Holland was telephoning for Recorder M. Milahan. the peddler walked out of t Btation, reached hie wagon and started i a. lively gait for Orient way. with Marshi Btcdman and Chief Holland in pursuit Reaching Ridgewood and Highland Cross the chief found Health luBpeotor George Thomas’s horse and wagon and 'waa en ­abled to overtake the men near th e Ridge road bridge, in Klngaland. Both were arrested this time and Recorder Mllehan fined them RO each.

L A U D E R

The. Brooklyn Public T/1hrnry is per­haps the only one tn the country whose affairs are ndirilniatered fr^ra a building which contains no books for clrcvilntlnn. The library 18 really a system of llbrarleB, mostly Kmail, and the librarian .and cer­tain of hla ri.9Blstants pnrfnrm their duties In a building entirely separate from any of those where books are issued. The library la ten years old, has twenty-alx branches, loaned for home use last year nearly 3,OOiLOiX> books, and Is now about to erect un elaborate central huSlding, F rank P. Hill, the librarian, formerly 11- bm rlan of the Newark Library, statea th a t he “ feels strongly the disadvantage of being obliged to have hls offifo sep­arated from the circulating and reference departm ents of tho library, and looks fo r­ward to the time when the librnryRiroper and the administrative offices will bo un­der the same roof."

Out of a population of about l.^.OOO, about twenty per cent, are registered bor­rowers in the Brooklyn Library. This percentage compares favorably with th a t of other large librarles, but methods are being employed to increase it. One method, the reBulls of which are sa tis­factory, Is the placing In stores, factories, etc-r of placards giving the location of the nearest branchca and Information con­cerning tho piivllogoB of the library.

AGAINST WATER COMMISSION

A IIHKUE BGCIOLOGICAL EYPERI- MEYT. -

Dr. B. Beltman, of Clilcage, recently gave a s -e ll dinner

Chicago hotel to a "r^pro-

Ifwhoinsentotive gathering" of hoboes, ac- eompllshefl anything beyond filling hls guests, he has not imparled the achieve­ment to the public, The banquat was conceived In the interests of sociology, eo we are Informed, the Idea being that tvlggi. asaembled a t the festal board and generously Inoculated with beverages, the Irauips would bare their souls to each other and. Incidentally, to their host, who was burning to get a t the real secrete of their Uvea, "W hy le thd trattip?" Is Indeed a problem th a t has hilberto haffied the, high brows among eur Ameriean probtom solvera. They have iW le pon- ddrous dednctlonv, theorixed to the limit, and, of c o u m , draw n liberally upon their ItnagJiMAIaii, and we hava it alt in tbe

If, ao the learned Dr. Drake observed to the American Medical Aeaocleifton the nihor day, "educated fair once In tlit women's colleges ot America arc kissing Ihclr lives away,” ynu can see for your- solt ihat modern cultutc, has already dona a heap to rob death of Its terrors.

Now thnt tho recount bill la sure to bo- come a law. Mayor McClellan 1* more. Im­pressed than ever with the desirability of peace with Tammany.

In this Peklng-Parls auto race, a Rus­sian nmehtne really ought to distance the whole bunch, cepeoiaUy It It ia navigated by Russian army men.

Mr. Shaw may have a flghtlng chance for the Presidency, even aa he thinks, but It'll have to do some of the tallest fighting In history If it pans ouC.

Furtherm ore, It was entirely unreason­able to suppose th a t Chancellor Buy could hold himself in throughout an entire cbm- mencement season.

may be conferred upon local boards of health." ,

In tbe act of March a), 1892, the powers conferred upon tho local Ivmrrta, In part, arc apeclfled ga follows;

"To aid In the enforcement of the law as to adulteration of all kinds of food and drink, and to prevent the sole or ex­posure for sale of any kind of m eat or vegetable that la unwholesome o r unlit' for food.'

"To regulate, mnirni and prohibit the keeping or sltiughterlng o f 'a II kinds of cattle."

Ko E ic n se l.ir M cGnlre,There would scum to he in this s ta tu te

two flelegnllone of Biilllelent power to the State board tn get after Iho men who are killing dlaeaacfL cattle tor food. Under the section quoted of tho law of Ugt all powers given to the local boards a t any llmo are conferred upon the Stale board. In the low ot 1S92 the local boards a regiven the power to "regulate, control and prohibit tjie keeping ot slaughtering o f as:

I f . the State Which has n favorite son will only make Mr. Taft its second choice, th a t genial gentleman will appreciate It utmost as much.

The automobile led the pleasure boat In the casualty list on Sunday by a hair, b.it It was nip and tuck.

One redeeming feature in the Ayars case ts th a t Secretary Loeb dodsn't geem to b« mixed up In I t

kinds, of animals." This ought to be power enough to Justify the Stale board In making siaughtcr-house Inspection,, if there Isn 't enough power In the provlou* section conferring authority to "prevent the sale of exposure for sale" of unwhole­some meat. There will be no. denial, I think, th a t the flesh of diseased ca ttle U unwholesome meat.

Under Ihp law creating It the S tata hoard Is- given authority to do almost anything. This Idea of public offlclata of Ignoring general laws and Insisting upon specific powers being conferrsd by sta tb to has become a habit in the Stiue. Usually the habit Is used .is an excuse for failuro or neglect of duly.

I t the Stale hoard oRIclaJs o,ro righf-ln their prolesiatinns. and their' hands are really fled for lack of spcolflc legfslaHon. oven that Is no excuse for allowing the slaughter nnd sale for food of dtwaaed cattle to go on In the State ns Hr- Hd- Gulre says It Is'kcing on, if he know It while the Legislature was In session. Mr.

Sam uel rh llU p s Urares tbe R ig h ts o f B lp arlan O w ners A lon g the

P a ssa ic R iver,To the Editor of fke NEWS.’

Sir—Tdio recent discussion of the potable w ater question has created a public im ­pression th a t the State, under "the law of Inheritance," holds In trust, aa trustee for the people, under a legal title of "ownership," tho entire Bow ot the tidal and non-tldal waters ot llio PanHale River, subject to the rights of riparian owners, hut subordinate to the 'absolute control of a S tate water oommlBslnn. Such an ^ tra o rd ln a ry proposition cannot be true. F irs t, there Is no such doctrine in the contemplation of the law as ownership of w ater in tidal or non-tldal etreams— only a UBUfrUclory right to the reasonable use of such waters by riparian owners along the banks of tho stream. The courts of this Btate and nearly every S tate In the Union have declared ngaln and again th a t rlpurkm owners along fresh water stream s have a right to ' fhe natu ra l flow of-the water In such streams, undimmlshed In quantity as well as un­impaired In quality hy any of the riparian owners.

"Conuisnsatlng reservoirs," under a proposHlou to give lower riparian owncra more than the natural flow of a stream during seasons of extreme drought, are not compensallve to lower riparian own­ers In contemplation of the law under re­cent court decisions; nor would they pre­vent tJte lower rlparlfin owner from g e t­ting an Injunction against the Btate or the United States Government for the diversion of a stream from Us natura l ehgnnel unices tho rights o t'su ch ownora were taken under tho power of eminent domala and Just compensation rendered to the riparian owners In money.

Riparian owners along . tho Passaic River should be very c,aatloua about su r­rendering their constitutional rights In the Passaic Bluer to the State W ater Commission under the proposition of a broad principle of public policy! I t would be a very serious mistake, [deed, tor them to either consent or acquiesce In the poli­cy of the Stale W ater Commission in the invasion or control of Jheir riparian rights in the Passaic River without first making Just and lawful compensation In money damages to such owners, who have a God‘glven right as well aa a constitutional and common-law right, param ount to all other rights, to the natural undlmln- ished and undiverted flow of the w aters, of the beautiful Passaic.

SAMUEL P H IL U P a, Passaic Valley Mutual Protective Asso­

ciation.Dundee Lake, June W, 1907.

If you are interested in seeing and hearing pianos of the most exquisitely beautiful character, we invite you to visit our warerooms and see our splendid stock of Lauter Grands, Laiiter Player- pianos and Lauter Uprights. W e confidently as­sert that finer instruments are not manufactured.

W e can take your present piano in part pay­ment. We can arrange to receive settlement in very reasonable sums, month by month,

W e gladly mail beautifully illustrated catalog to any address on request.

L A U T E R . C OWarerooms 5 657 and 659 Broad Street Newark

DROBABLYthehigb ^ est and greatest development of unself­ishness apparent to­day is to be seen in the growth of Life In­surance. Everyman with a family who carries a policy in

BACK WITHOUT PASSPORT.

MeOulra neglected hla duty in not ealllBgth . BUintloh of the Govetmoc and Lagj.-

m w K a r la n . Tripped by F lsrar* . laNaturalUatloB Papers, II la cboiBed.W hen Isidore Herschkowits, for a time

a resident of this city, applied In Ahgust las t tO" the Department of S tate a t W ash­ington for a passport to enable him to revisit -hiq. to m e r homo In’ Hungary, th e information gavCTetattve to the dates o t h,ls birth aiid arrival In thin country did 'not ggree with a sworn sta tem ent he had made wheif applying for tale cifi- nenshtp papers, and hi* cltlxenthlp U now In jeopardy;

Herschkowils obtained hie naturallsa- iio'n oertlfluaui from the United StatRi. D istrict Court for tho western d istrict of

lahire to the fact and asMng for leadsla- PeansTlvnnla on his sworn statementHati .a«fl uMlIkfiti' t/i Anrikta-JaamAA.*n. Ukffiih Kfb OHiA utiflaw AfivhtAAn WABnr n f ao^

1 is not only exhibiting a high degree of thrift and foresight, but is an example of the p r a c t i c a l unselfishf ness that looks to the protection and coi fort of loved ones.

3N 1N 0 '] 1 0 , lO O T .

THE BROKEN NET.

U ain 8i plan

.Qoln ) San Mlernon

M artaMnr-

ttlvaii.Worn

)-mor lie ant « ra ir srclae apart . Phe

m s WITH A rEEUNC ^ OFRELEtF THAT! REVAZ- QuiSN m s PosmoA/,AS THETURMOtLAZ/O STRIFE ASSOCIATED W/TH IT ARE W R E THAN ANY MOfETAL VIOULD CARE WC0N8AT

A f < < C ^ f

Of

PS. arrestpeDof nee Salur- ure ough’a >routjrf as re prefitci sellin poilc

a* W CMi

rdcr ot t l

rted « [arehi ureul CroBB,

Qf'orgt aa ep- iT th e . Both jcort^er

*‘ W 3 I t h e r e b e o t h e r r e a i g n a t l o n t f r o m t h e m e m b e r i o f t h e F i s h a n d G a m e G > m m l s s l o n ? "

“ 1 a m n o p r o p h e t ” — G o v e r n o r S t o k e s .

/ I

k

4- M

FAT IN STATE JOBS IS SHOWN

Plumber Gets Contract, Though His R ival's Bid W as

$12,000 Lower.

NO ENTRANCE SENATE ROOM

spado! from a Btatl Oorrtsiiondeiil,TRENTON, June 10.—Contracts for tho

building o£ the new Senate Chamber, new wings to the S tate house, S tate prison and Rahway reformatory, were gone Into la te Saturday afternoon by the Assembly investigating committee, and much In­form ation of interest to the taxpayers of New Jersey was extracted from the wU- Jicsaes by John H. Backes, the counsel.

I t was shown through Lewis Lawton, head of the firm which has had the con­tra c t for the greater port of this work, th a t the plans for the new Senate Cham­ber. as drawn by Architect Arnold H. Moses, of Philadelphia, did not provide fo r a corridor from the main Slate house building to the new Senate Chamber, and he built such a corridor a t an ex tra ex­pense to the State. There was much other ex tra work about the Senate Chamber fur which the S tate paid over and above tho contract price.

A rem arkable feature of Mr. Lawton's testim ony was his statem ent that he gave th e plumbing for the new S tate house wing to George J. Tobin, of I'lalnlleld, notw ithstanding tho fact that F. 8. Katxenbach & Co„ of Treuton, a reputable

,llrm of plumbers, bad onered to do the ! work to r 112,000 less than Tobin did.

All of Mr. Backes’s adroit quesiionlng could not get him to admit that In tints

I deliberately giving Mr, Tobin 112.W0 out of his own pocket he w ai actuated by any b u t honest, straightforw ard motives. HO had asked Mr. Tobin, he aald, and so one else, to bid on the work, and It would have been dishonest and unfair for him to have given it to any one else, no m atter how low was the other m an's bid. I t also developed th a t Mr. Tobin did the plumb­ing on m ost of the Stnte work Mr. Law- ton got, as well us that on some of the private work.

Mr. Backes endeavored to show that Mr. Lawton received “Inside Information'* which eoablod him to bid so low th a t he w as sure to receive the contracts, but th is the witness denied emphatleally. The counsel went Into the contracts for heat­ing various S tate buildings with t^e Paul system of heating, and showed that Qoorge A. Squire, the president of the Rahway Reform atory Commission, be- oame a stockholder in and president of th e Paul company about a year afte r he became a member of the Reformatory Commission. The system, however, was first Installed In the Institution before Mr. Squire became a holder In the company.' The committee sa t until nearly 6 o'clock

Saturday afternoon and then adjourned to meet to-morrow morning a t 10:30 o'clock,

Mr. Imwton was the h ist witness a t the afternoon session, and sold, In answer lo Mr, Backes's questions, th a t he built "the udmlnlelration building," the addition to

..-the rear of the State house, some years ago. George E. Poole, the present Slate architect, was a member of the firm which drew the plans for the building. As ho recalled, the contract price for the building was tT2,M2, bu t the total cost wus, be thought, tlffl.MT.TB, the extras being In th e main for making the boiler-house larger than called for in the specifications. H e was In arrears hi tho time for com­pleting the work under a penalty of gfjioo, which he forfeited. The allornoy- general decked th a t the State House Commission Would have to exact the pen­a lly ana th a t Mr. Lawton would have to look to the Leglslatuie for relief. He did

.ao, and the t2,ld0 was returned to him ■'by the Legislature.

Coming to the new Senate chamber, Mr. Lawton said th a t the appropriation was |U5,(IOa, and he bid for the work a t $121,480,

The State House Commission asked him to bid on the connecting corridor, and whether there were any other bidders he eonid not say. There were no bids tor this, nor any for all the other extra work on the new chamber, as far as he knew. Mr. Backes asked about the much-dli- eussed kitchen and dining-room in the

\ basem ent of the chamber, and Mr. Law- ‘'ton said he did not know whether they were now used or not. The dome of the nbamber was on extra, a t a cost of $$,128. and he w^s paid ILHB ex tra for chan^ng th e press gallery, bu t bow it was changed

: he could not tell without comparing the y old and new plans. Neither could be tsil \ w hether It was changed because orlg^n- ' gTly It had no entrance nor was wide ‘ enough to accommodate a single choir.

A fter declaring th a t he did not know w hy the press gallery was built, Mfr.

wton added emphatically th a t be made IB money otil of the work he did for

J th e S ta te than from any o ther p art of his business.

Another ex tra of 1^11*, Igr. Lawton •old, wae fo r plastering in thS oelter, 'the oommlsslon having given him a con- in to t to do more than the original con­tra c t called for. The witness said that h a w as building the new wing to the B ttte btlonn, befhg a sub-centractnr tinder the Pauli JalLBulldlhtt Company, which seoured the 'contract,*and the new host wing to the S tate house, which Is about completed. H is bid for the State ^ouse wing was I22JI0D. HThls wae on the wwood lender te r bide- Cm the first Will­iam Johnson was lower than he, but the Wds Were rejected. No ons, to his knowl­edge, brought any Infioenee to bear u ^ n the commission to have the first bids rejected. The diflerence between the MPKlfleatJoas on the two bids w«s that some Items la the first -were left out of the second/

Mr, Lawton adm itted th a t he w as us- Ipg some Ume m ortar around the Indiana a t o a trlmniinga of th e east wing because lUm_ csmMit m ortar stained the atone.. I Mr, Backes then took up tbs sub-eon-

: w ith Tobin to r the plumbing work, Mr. Iwsrton told how he gave the

to Tobin uotwlttaitandhig tb s fact

wny

•is

th a t of KatjBenbach & Co. Hp d-'nled tha t h® told K atienbach th a t th® ''powers tliat be" Would not let him work with hin compuny. For aome time Mr. Backes ex- Firclsed all his a r t aa a akllftil croas-cx* antlner to get Mr. Lawton to aoknowltidge that h® was compelled by aome one to take In, Tobin, but all the witness would say was that having asked Tobin and no on® eUo to bid on the work It would not hav® been square or right for him to give It to any one else, though he might b® lower than Tobin. '

"Now, won't you be frank with this committee," Anally aeked Mr. Backes in a coaxing tone- "and tell us why you gave that $12,000 to Tobin; come, now, wasn't It g raft or a rake off?"

"I don't considi-'r it anything of the kind; it was straigh t business," replied the wlt- nesfl.

Mr- Lawton was excused with the un­derstanding th a t he will produce his books a t to-morrow'9 session and show what moueya he has received from the Stale.

Mr. Squire was the next wllneBs. He has been a member of the Rahway Reforma­tory Commlaalon since 1900. He became the owner of seventy shares of the stock of the Paul H eating Company soon after his appointment to tho board, for which he paid $75 a share. Ho t$ecanio president of tho company about four yciirs ago, but Is not now. The Paul system was In­stalled In the reform atory the first tlma before he became a holder In the com­pany. The engineer had investlgatnd and considered it a good system, and It was placed In the new wdngs to the building which were built while the witness was a member of the cDminisplon.

Albert A. Cryer. vice-president of the Paul company, dejicrit>ed his system an i declared Uml it w'as knowledge and bralia which hi!* compony sold. There were no State ofheiuls or politicians among the stockholders of the*company. 11® men­tioned John B. Gibbon among the stock­holders und Mr. Gibbs, of the commit,tea, asked him If ho did not know that Mr. Gibson was a promincnl officeholder a$vl politician.

"1 think he used to be, but I did i;Ct know that he.w as now," replied the wit­ness.

The Paul syslcm w as first put In the Btflte house in the admlnielrallon butid' Ing. He did not know that any Influoncj jvua brought to bear lo compel tho arclii* teet to put It In the spccincallotis. It w is a great surprise lo him when ho saw it there. Neither he nor any one for the company spoke to Mr. Poole about It. T ht price of the system alfCered because the apparatus used In different places dlfferdd.

The company never had a contract to place the-system In the Trenton armory.

"W batl” exclaimed Mr. Backes, In sur- prlge. "is it not lo'Uae there now?”

"No, sir," replied Mr. Cryer, ,*Tf it tfrerc we would be after the Slate sharply; It has never paid us a cent for Its use in the armory.■"

"Mr. Cutley. lake th e stand." said Mr. Backes, sharply. This wUnesa is Jnsppn H. Cutley, & builder, of Jersey City.

"Is not the Paul system installed in the Trenton arm ory?" he went on.

*’No plr.”"W hat!" explalmed Mr. Backes, In .sur­

prise. "didn’t your contract call for It?"■Tea, sir," continued Cutley, "but wc

made an investigation and found th a t the system was not satisfactory and the com­mission allowed me to leave It out. I paid the State for the change, $132 morethan the Paul bid,"

"Generous m an." exclaimed Mr. Cryer with Irony In hla tone.

"Oh, I don't^ know." retorted the Im­perturbable Cutley. "No more* so than the Paul people."

At another time the witness said ho knew th a t all the sta tem ents Cutley had mad® against tjio Paul system were un­true.

"W hat you say, of course, Is true?" re­marked Mrt Backes.

"I hav4 proo’f o f th a t," replied Mr. Cryer.

Tho witness and the counsel rubbed against dach o ther again when Mr. Buckes referred Ironically to the witness's view of Mr. Cutley’e testimony and Mr. Cryor replied: "Oh, I think you are quit® capable of telling the tru th , Mr. Backes,"

------- --------—----- --------

GET COCAINE IN JERSEY CITYC xiita ln R rd u 'W a n ts to K n o w It

C e rta in D ruK S to re k e e p e r T k e re C a n 't Be P nn iah efi.

Captain Ryan, of the F irs t Precinct, told Jndjte Howell th is morning th a t a doaen or so a rre sts of cocaine users and venders had been made recently., and each person taken Into custody, he de­clared, had Kvld they had bought the drug a t a certain drug store on Montgomefy street, Jersey City. L ast night Minnie Peoples and Bessie Parker, both colored, were arreated aeon a fte r they had a r ­rived here from Jersey City, and they said they had purchased two bottles of cocaine found on them a t this store.

The captain said he had telephoned tn the Jersey City police acquainting them With th is tac t and had also informed the chief there th a t he would go before the Hudson County Grand Ju ry and complain against the storekeeper. W hat he w ant­ed to know of Judge Howell was whether there was not some way to handle the. question In Newark- The m agistrate said he would consider tho m atter and confer with the captain again.

, ---------------—

TWO SALOONS RAIDED^gooOBd e P re e in e t Q e ls B o th A lleged

■■■day V Ie le to re —F a ls e A larm In F o a r t l i .

Two saloonB were raided by the police of tb s Second Precinct- yesterday. The proprietors w e re 'Jo h n Flynn, thirty-five years old, of M Bridge street, and Joiin Slattery, fifty-four years old, of Central avenue and Cotden s tr e e t Flynn fur­nished lion ball for examination to-m i>'- row morning. S la ttery w as placed under $$M ball to aw ait action by the grand Jury.

Flynn was a rre sted about 2 o’clock, after Captain Brown and PeHceitien H an­non and W hitm an Itad len t Morrla Cad^ igan, thiriy-elgjit yeera bid. and Patrick H ellet forty irsafs old, both of the RoiMsue Home, In to purchaae a drink and buy whisky. They succeeded, the police say ,

Fotlcgrmen Tortarlello, B srty and Farrell say they found five man drinking beer In S la tteryg piaoe and arrested them

proprietor-' .F rank Kneeler, of KH Boyd street, 'war

Station last night. He was arrested, and when Captain Vogel learned of the case It caused him to repeat his jrdsra to bis men relative to looking out for Sunday selling by saloons. When Kiieel -r woke tip this morning he said he IriJ filled up on botlled beer a t his hums. He wus discharged.

REV. H. J. VOSKUn. ORDAINEDW ill Go to China am F oreign Pafttor

o f FirNt R eform edC h a rc h ,

Tli® or<lliiatloti by the ciaesla of New­ark of Rev. Henry J, Voskull, who will go lo China as the foreign pastor of Ih® pTrst Reformed Church, took place In that edifice yesterdus’ afternoon. Rev. Henry Merle Meileii cotidiiclliig the Bcrvlces. Res’. WltUam W. Conner, of the Re­formed Church of Belleville, preached the sermon. His text wub "So rnuch na In me is. I nm reiuly," and he Insisted that ChrLstlan service was a m atter of barter und trade.

"There \» no such thing as pomething for nothing in the commercial world or m the world of grace.'* he asserted.

Mr. Conner declared that Btatletk-s showed that while one Protestant de- nomlnsUon gave an average of $1 a year for each member and one gave $1 a year for mifleions, the nverago of all the P ra t' estnnt members won forty cents, He then road n poem published recently. It wiih in effect that in open all the evei; of the hlind. to gHUv*r all the lost woiils to Christ And to rnrry hope atid Joy lo nil majiUlTul. the Christian gives forty ceiu.s a year.

Rr-v. Dr. Daniel M. Martin gave tho charge la the mlfisionriry. H e warned the new’ pa.^tor to bt'ware of formality, ol "dying frequently," and of "yellow puJ- pltlsm."

"The pulpit Ifl the lost place under the sky for dechimalory dlaplny," h« nasorti'd. '•qnd never ptjt striking Signs outside your church to draw crow'ds. "Yellow pulpit- Jsm is as had as yellow Jouriinllpm.'' Ruv, A. peter Tulp, of tho New York Avenue Church, gave the Invocation: R(^v. Churles \y . Condlt. of Trinity, the reading; Hev. Peter Ilngcman. Assistant pastor of the North Reformed Church, a praypr, nnd Kev. Stuart Kye Hutchtson, paetor of ihe F irst Reformc-d Church, the ordination pfayef.

ADVISES THE WEDDED.Rev. Georg;e E, Lomburtr® Pointed

EplfframN lleln ttn ir Co Nlatrlmoliy Fcnture off flermori,

Tlev. George E. Lombard, pastor of tlio Falrmmint Biiptlst Church, preached last night on '‘God Bleaa Our Homo," taking as hl3 text Amos Hi., 3: "Ciin two walk together, except they be agreed?" Mr. Lombard's remarks were In the nature of a series of epigrams giving polnlod Krtvlcc lo those already m arried and others who contempJate entering th a t state. The speaker urged th a t irmirlmony be mud« a partnership in reaJity and told the hus­bands to take their wives Into their confi­dence in ’business m ailers as well as those that relate to the home. Among other things Mr. T^cmbard said:

"If all made prudent mfirriages there would be a great decrease In the populu- lion.

“ Women, recogntxe that you did art marry an angol; there never w'ns but one perfect hruin-

"H ave two ‘bears' fn the house—Bour and Porbojir. Don't keep Iheni chained,

"When you take a woman us u w Ife ynu take A pnrlner. T reat her as such.

“Tell your wife ail your buslnc.is ufTalis, "Cultivate the roUglous welfare of tho

other. In most homes where there Is a Christian it Is the woman. I don’t know why God madw bo many women unless !t is th a t llj® women are so rrmcli bettfr than the men. But even all the women are not saints.*'

RIPARIAN SUIT IS NEARING END

Final AiYoment Heard in Dam­age Action by Owners

Against Paterson.

HR. CORBIN PRESENTS OAIHS

YOUNG WOMAN TRIES SUICIDEo f Q,iiRrr®l v r llh b o v rr At^

tem p ted to D rin k Curbollc on Ufa Stoop.

Becaua® eh® had a quarrel with her sweetheart. Henry Schott, of H Mechanic elreet, Orange, Mlsa Sudlc Furrtll, of 101 Can&l street, this city, went to his home last night and attem pted to commit sui­cide by taking carbolic ad d . Juai as she was about to place a. bottle of the polscm to her lips she fainted. The vial fell from her hondB. spattering the add o n , her IresB and on the stoop of her lover's touse. She waa found by a albter of

Schott and taken to the Orang'"' Memorial Hospital, whore ah® wae revived, later being removed to police headquarters by Delccttva Drabell and Roundsman Brown. Her parents were notified and Inst night Bho waa taken home by her Xaihor.

ThfB, morning the young womoji would not ttiJk about the affair, saying that it waa nobody's buBlnees bu t her own. Her mother -enid the quarrel wad the only reason she could advance for her daugh- ter*B action. Ur®, F arre ll said she pur­chased the carbolto aold for her daugh­ter, believing th a t she w anted it t» clean Borne plumes for her hat. L ast night the young woman a te supper with her par­ents, and they noticed nothing unusual about her. They left the house to go to church and shortly sifter tb s girl depart­ed. The next they heard of her was when they were notified by .the police th a t she attem pted .to kill herself.

gay B oy* T apped T ill.Jam es Casey, fourteen years old. of

Madison place; Joseph Johnson, oi lu Adams street, and PhilUp Smith, lourteen years old, of 17 BtoWory street, were held fn ball eaeh for the Juvenile Court in the Tbtrd^PEeclnct- Court thismorning. *-.r --------------------tonl B oehlefTdt M arket slreeL wiiJi tapping his money draw er last n'edncB- day- and steaUng | l Tliey were arrested yesterday py M a d red Patrolm en McCon­nell and BymeOi

Final argum ent began before Vice- Chancellor Btevens to-day in th e suit brought by Henry W. Doremus and other riparian owners on the Passaic River be­low Paterson to recover dam ages from that city for injuries alleged to have bejsn (^used to the properties of the complain antB by the discharge of Paterson 's sew­age Into the waterway. The agregate asked by twenty-one complainants - Is In round numbers $1,000,000.

Argument was opened by Charles L. Corbin, counsel for the conii)1ainants, In asBOClatlon with Sherrerd Depue. On be­half of Paterson Michael Dunn, as spec­ial counsel, and Edmund G. Sialier, for­mer city attorney of Paterson, appeared.

Mr. Corbin began with th e Btatvineut that for the purposes of the su it the ci.m- plalnantd, who own property on Dundee Lake, are on the same footing with those owning property on the river proper, Dundee Lake being nothing more than tho river maintained a t a higher level by means of a dam. As a second proposition, Mr. Collins contended th a t the alleged pollution on the p a n of the city Is not sanctioned by law, notw ithstanding Pal- eraon's allegation to the contrary. The defenae, Mr, Corbin declared, rolled on the amendments to Paterson 's charter, made In 1806 and 1867, for au thority to con> struct Us sewenige system. The Leglt^la- tur® had given authority to construct SbW- ere according to plans to be filed with the county clerk, bnt no much plans hart ever been filed, while those made did not show m^Lny of the sewora ainc® constructed, among those not on the plana being the Market street sewer, which constituted (he worst offense. ‘The law was clear, Mr. Corbin urged, tha t a city ha® not the right to discharge Us sewage into a fre:ffi water stream , and such disoharga can be enjoined. ”

Mr. Corbin next raised th e contention that Paterson could not reduce the meas­ure of damages by proof of factory pol­lution. For one thing, he Raid, It had been shown th a t the pollution from fac- lories was relatively enmll and the city’s pollution was alone sufficient to destroy the value of complalnant'a properties. Mr. Corbin went into the evidence on this point at g reat length to show th a t the city's pollution was the g rea t source of trouble.

TWENTIETH CENTURY'S CA UH*v. J o h n M cD ow ell B o n I t !■ lo r

M en of A b l l l t r n n d P ie ty .

Rev. John McDowell, paetor of the Park Presbyterian Church, preached In tha t edlflco last night on "The Call of the Twentieth C en tu ry" This, he declared, was for men.

"W e want stronger men In the busl- iiees world," said the minister, "In the professional world, In the political world—men of honesty, men of Iron con­viction, men able to stand the strafn of publlo life.

"There Is a certain type of man that the tw entieth century wants. He must be a man of faith. F allh Is the founda­tion of business life, t^e basis of Inven­tions and discoveries. The world Is on the lookout to r men who know w hat to do, when to do It and how to do It. We want men who believe In God, in hum an­ity and tnaiatlonality; men who place the Interests of the world above their own Interests. The twentieth century Is call­ing for the Chrlstijke man, and without such It will be a great failure."

B ervlee In t lie J a il .Under the auspices of the W. C. T. U.,

with Mre. Sarah D. Pierce in charge, a service was held In the jail yesterday afternoon. The prison was decorated with palms and flowers and eaeh prisoner re­ceived a small bouquet with a card con­taining a verse from the Bible. Colonel Fred Lindsay and his wife sang and spoke.

ClerB ym an’s W h eel Gone,Rev. Paul Thompson, secretary of the

colored Toung Men's Christian Associa­tion, ol >6 Pennington street, had a call to make a t 92 Academy stree t Saturday night and rode there on his bicycle. He loft the wheel outside the place, and wheu he s ta rted 'fo r home It was gone. He told the F irs t Precinct police.

--------- • --------------------BobbeA W h ile fihop p ln g .

Mrs. W illiam Hodges, of 991 Bprlnrteld avenue, Irvington, reported to the First Precinct police Saturday nljght th a t she was robbed of MS while sfiopplng In a o ■—'ig Htreet wtore.______________

____ _______ ___— _ — ___ found Intoxicated on Sprlngflald avenue,‘foU h'g bid WM talttaer t tu u tfn o t fitr from tb s F o u rtb Precinct Polica

Cowld Not F in d R w hbed Msh.Edward Siiilth. fo rty-eight years old,

of New fo rk , w as sent to jail lor sixty days on a charge of dnm kem iesa by Judge H err to the e ^ n d P recinct Court this morning. Smith Was arrested Friday fitglit by Fnlloemm J . J . S a r ly and Tor- IHlfellb. {iLwas alleged he stole 19 from a man he had been drinking with, but the pollcs Wars unabto to locats the

Ideal, taites and opinions differ concetnins alt tukes of Pianos except the Steinway. IPs for second place that the others are cUmoiing.

TheStandard Plano of the World— tile Steinway—Is not beyond your reach.

The beautiful little SWnway Verte- grand Is the greatest piano value In the world for the price—$;cio, and the terms can be arranged to suit you.

STCtNW AY ® SO N S Stetewgy BaU

and HP C. I4A S t, Now YeikSuivMif Etfrm Suoim m th* Dm

683-687 BROAD ST. 21 W. PARK ST.

A Sale of White and Colored Wash Goods.

Would You Have a Dainty White Waist or Dress?You U n Ba; the Material for It Here at a Reduced I^co

There is a niarketl difference in white goods— cheap materials never have tliat grace-

. lul, dainty, clinging appearance found in gar­ments made from better goods. This is a sale of white goods that have all the characteristics appearing only in the better materials. We Im ght them underprice, and so tliey will be sold. In the as.sortinent will be found embroi­dered lawns in figures, dots and floral de­signs, checked, plaid and figured batiste, striped imported lawns, imported madras in stripes and figures, em­broidered Swiss in figures; values up to 39c. per yard, a t..............................

M e r c e r i z e d E o l i e n n eHsndnontPi plain coU»r fabrir, m fri’crlB^-d In

yarn, 2S lurhf'B witle. mako pretty flhlrt walsl eu lta :l T Inn, rfPMjn of while fabrlv, wt>rtb rtuubl® Iho epeclall prlc®, VBhuj 25c. yard, sale at, yard .................................. ^

32-inch M adrasCorded m alm s, neat colored (IgiiroA nnd BtrJppB.

for ladles' or chlldirn'e rtrepses and watstR. men's and boyR' Bhlrtinpi, line qualHy, fast coJors, food value a t l&c. yard, very special while quantity UiBlfl, y a r d , . , , . .

Figured Linen Color BatistePretty wnshubln HatluMf. llnon color Kround, with

self-color tnefi'crlied tlgun'H, i>ui of the ordinary, for wHletfl and drPBesB, Tfic. uiluc, »il® for Tiioaday at, yari ........................................................................................

lOc

I5cHalf Silk NoveltiesAll Ih® newvBl half sUk novsllles,

34-lnch—plain pong®eH,i7-lnoh dotted silk tamlse, checked chlffona, p r in t ' ed liberty' iacguardu, shadow allk and other fln® Wash xuoda: sold refu larly a t

and BSc yard, for this sale, y a rd ...........................

Fancy Black Lawns^Openwork and yam inercerUed

fancy lawns, guaranteed fast black, all Imported goods, U patterns to choos® from, regular price yard, for this Hals, yard ............

39c

15cCorded Dimity

27-Inch Cordod Dimity, white and colored grounds, figures, slrlpos, plaids and dots, fast col­ors, a cheap prjp.e but not a clisfip fabric, value He yard, for this sale, yard .. Sc

Organdie Lawns

3ual to lawns sold a t 1 3 ^ yard, 'all thiA HcaHiin's style®,.28

wlae. for 8'kWhite gt;f>undN with dots, new

checks ntul floral designs, quality . . . . . . . . —sf]to Jjn liirhcy this Bale ni, yard ..............

White Persian Lawn30-Inch pur® bleach Persian Lawn,

sheer even thread weave, for waIhIh or dresBOH, w® bought nil the commission man hart ^ at a price; value 12^ yard, fur this sal®, yard,.

White SuitingsWhite goods for outlrig suite.

aklrU Olid dreseo.<i, 34-Incn, linen flnlHhi 28-liK’h while duck and eta- mine suitings, value 15ft and IHc yard, great bargain for this Bale, sai®. yard..................... .

8 'lc

10c

Dress QinghamsIvArgcst and beat aelectcd asaort-

ineiu m the city; these goods were ordered months ago; new stytes arriving daily, every wanted plain culur, stripes, plaidsund Value,price for this solo, yard ...................................

White Dress LinensYard wide while dress Ilh.®n, light

nr nu'diiim wtiKhi, fur wiilsta or 'hulls, rciiinrt lUreart weove, iniro while, regular prio® ftfft' yard, fur ih)s sale, linen department, yttrd ...........................

Mercerized Shepherd Checksniack and while mercerised shep­

herd check!* and plaids. In all sUes, the best quality lmi'H>rl®d gocHjF. T\ InchuH wkif. sold ri-gutarly ul 2jc yard, sps- cIhI for Dlls Hul® at, yard

lOc

25c

I5c

FOR THE TRAVELER.Suit Cases.

Canvas Suit Cases, good lock ftiKl catches. Inside strapa, stitch ­ed leather handls,, 24-Inch sixe, light weight; value $1.25. '7 0 / 'Special ................................

Karatol Suit Cases.24-lncb good Quality K arato l

Suit Cases, with lock and bolts, sole leather corners, fancy lined. roitnO easy handle, well | ' y c made; value $1.75, Special.

Cloth and Canvas Cases.Dark green and russet color, f l­

inch Suit Case. gtw>d handle, sole leather corners, good lock nnd catches; value $1,^. O A r Special ................................

Japanese and Genuine Karatol Suit Cases.

Well miule, fancy lined, sonic have shin pockets, double Inwld® ' scraps, oLhars with bolts and str.ipB. solo Icftther corners, bound nil around TCiigHah ban- | QQ dies; value $2.79. Hpeclal.. l* V O

Leather Suit Cases.2H ounce cowlfid® Suit Caacs.

fancy lined, atfol frame, wo|I sewed and rheted, 21 Inch sla*\ good straps and h.indh-: \ QQvalue ifi.OO; whllo they Inst

Trunks.A lot of fin® Canvas Trunks,

good lock and boUs. Iron bottom, hardwood alatP. Rises 2R, 3D. 32, 34. they vnlue from A $4,69 10 $7.00; special...........

IN NEWARK’S BEST CLOAK AND SUIT DEPARTMENT.^ A N A R R A Y O i l '

Fashionable Summer Dresses, Jumper, Shirtwaist and Coat Suits

W ith the opening of the Summer Beasoti nml tlic hurried de- i E \ Q mand for wearing apparel (or Sea Shore, M ountains and Vaca* 1 I Xtlon T im e, we offer for Tuesday’s .Special Sale, choice of any style a t............................................................................................................

“ P rin c e C hap” L inen Coat Stiltn,T hree lin t te n C utaw ay Watili Siiltw,

Cool Cliaitihray “ .n tin p e r” Suits,W hite Law n S lilrtw aist Dresse.s,

F iifureil D ain ty I>lmily D resses ,D otted Swiss Ono-pieee D resses ,

Lace Trlnim eil l.iitK eric D resses.This assortment comprises every new and desirable style at a

nominal price—barely the cost of the materials alone, lo say nothing about the findings, trimmings and worries of going to a dressmaker. There is not a suit, dress or coslume in this col­lection that is not worth #7.50 lo J9.98; you can choose women's or misses' siies, all a t ...............................................................................

STR U M ’S I

BIO SALE OFTrimmed Hats

Tuesday’s Big Offerings For a Quick Clearance.

$5to $8 Elegantly Trimmed Models,atThese comprise perfect

copies of Parisian models, ol stylish creations designed by leading experts in our own workrooms.

Materials'* a r e those most in vogue this season.

Tuscans, Chips, Javas, Leghorns and Neapolitans, richly and tastefully trimnied.

Ail the newest shades, including ly t-A the leather color. For Tuesday only, / fill

while they last.......; ...................................................................( S e e O u x * W ' l r s d O ' w O l e p l n ^ . ..

5. S T R U M & C O . ,

639 BROAD STREET,IT H E W H O L E B U I L D l N O M H H H H a H i

S S i n o o l o l M J 7 » * a i l y .

FO R T U E S D A Y :old I'asljioiicd Mola-'safs |

•ally, lb .................................. 1 U GI’cauut Cream K i s s a s . 1 3 c

Uanily MTHcrncherK, 6c. a biincli, aad ITrt'crtickffr (-au<ly ilDivafrum ifvicacbup.

NlAkers of

S I”„-JSs'.”,'.v NeBirli, N. J.83 HroB«l EtTiftbeHi. 3. 157 N ew srk Av®.. Jeraey Cltgi

Wbo1®Bihl® DepHrtmeni lo r®sr • ! 157 M arket St.. Newark.

D»ffy*t P oreMatt Whiskeycmweoacbx, oaldi.

S^& iwid conmmp- tion. It xtimiiUtaa IheUood. T b esm t- Wt known b eu ito td o .

CARIERS G a n b i Must B a rfao-SImile S Ig iu tw t

t f u m r S tI lI T tT Q T it .

JUNE H dO IIO S NOW RIADT.

EDJSONM ^ O RTMMni ■ criilM . .old on tlm . nt c u h

price, from fl.uO down, tl.OW wnohly. BPACIAL SALK OH CABINETS.

BMSONUQ•T HALBEV STREET.

B naak ld W M g t l U C tH T scon, IfB n K v V 0 I .KTHtinm

Oo Y ou Know

UneedaBiscuitA M U S E M E N T S ____

O L Y M P IC P A R KEvery Evening & Wed., Sat. & Sun. Matinee

TELEPHONE GIRLABORN OPERA CO.

K O I 3 I ] V H f O O X >

PROCTOR'S WATS BBWBTBD IN AUTAXCB.

DAILY I All Bt»» V ndevltl* . H A TIN K l^ [ By«iiAaiehaeld,fi«lwnk- ISe-M dadcuiirarFelU Oo., HertwrS / PHONES L|ajd, DonaM A Canon. MMOandSAS Hale.UvTvloandotlt.ra.

NiNbta, 1S«., ns«., SBe» SINa

N E W i ssS ifeI WARSHIPS IN HAMPTON ROADS AT THE JAMESTOWN EXPCSITION AWAITING REVIEW BY PRMiDENT'SOOSEVIL'

NATIONAL TAX REFORM PLANS

Roosevelt Favors Both an In­come and Inheritance Levy,

He Tells Editors.

PRESENT SYSTEM IS UNFAIR

NORFOLK, V*., June 1».-E(lltfr» from ■II Motlotui of the United Btntee iueein> bl*d In the Auditorium bultdinc a t the JAmeetown Bxpoeltlon to-dnr. They are tBHuben of the National Editorial Aeeo- elallDn, which le holdinc It* annual con- n o tio n here. The chief feature wae the •ddrea* of Preaident Rooievelt a t the af- taraoon ■eeolon, followed by a reception.

The Preeldent began hie speech by sry- tng th a t no other body of men In the United Btatee wields such on extensive in­fluence os does the one which writes for th e dally presA He went on to any t'lul ■uoh power Implies grave responsibility and tha t the man exercising It should be held accountable. Ho asked the writers to ho sure of their facts In giving expreraion to nplnlDna and newe.

Then the Preeldent took up the matter o f the utilising and conserving of our imtura] resources, From this subject he passed to th a t of reshaping the national system of taxalion so th a t thoso most capable of supporting the elraln should be oompelled to take the heavier burden.

In speaking of the conservation of the natura l resources the President told of the work In the West of reclaiming great arid lands by Irrigation. He told of the preser­vation of the great stream s of the moun­tain region! end lUld th a t the same class of preservation work should be carried out In the m atter of public lends. Rcfcr- enoe was made to the g rea t land frauds by which the government was defrauded of many mlUlone of dollars' worth at property, and how this has been rooted o u t

He also referrsd to the creation of na tu ra l forests. The creation of the fot^ ost bureau sendee w as described and a t­tention called to lU magnificent worth. N ext he went on the subject of the natu­ra l fuel beds. He mentioned the fact th a t he has drawn from private market ibo public fuel lande rem aining In the West, snd added th a t he hoped for proper regulation of coal, gas, oil and other natural fuel In order th a t these great re- 'ioiifccs may be saved to r future genera­tions. Then bs said:

"Now a e . to the m atte r of taxation. 'M ott great civilised countries have an ■Income tax and an inherltanco tax. In my Judgment both ahould be part of our I system of federal taxation. 1 speak dtf- 'fldently about the income tax beennse '.one lobeme tor an income tax was de- I d a re d unoonstltutlonat by the Supreme j Court by a vote of t to 4i and In addt- Itlon It Is a dtffloult ta x to adm inister in

a tax would he one of the methods by which wc shmild try to preserve a me.ie- Urehle eouellty of opportunity for the people of the genenitliin growing to mati- hooU, As IJncoln pointed out. there sre some respects In which men are obviously not enufll; hut there Is no rea­son why thrre should not bo an eqiislity of self-respeei and of mu­tual respect, nn equality of rights before Ihe law, und c l least an npproxl- mnte eqiiHlIty In the conditions under which -bch msn obtains the chance to show the otuff that la In him when com­pared with his fellows."

CENTENNIAL IS CRITICIZED.Two Colored PiMtova o f th e OrKiiv«i

Sny T heir R ace Waa Ig n o re d .

In (wo oolon^d churohes yesterday the Centennial Asaoclatlon was crUIdied cause It was oUsved the colored societies had not been Invited to take p art In tho parade on Friday.

Rev. George W. K rygnr, pastor of Mt. Olive Raptlst Church. E ast Orange, and Rev. D. Oewltt Turpeau, pastor of Ht- John's Methodist Church, Orange, w^re the pKfltorfi who criticized the arrang*^* mentH for the parade. They alluded to the rapid strides made by the colored ru'^e and declared th a t the race was now tempting to lend a life which would be a worthy one. In view of this they th.mglit It strange th a t the colored people had net been asked to parade ns lodgea.

Some of the rolnred people feel so sirongly th a t (hey have refused even to display a flag from their houses. Others have decorated, When the parade plans were underway, invlmtloiis were sent to organizations generally to participate, and the colored Knights of Pythias will iia- rade. ll Is pzpeetccl. I t w as understood that alt the orgntiltiitlonB should bo head- ed by union burvclN, snd the commlitcc found that the colored band was not a member of Ihe union. While the commlt- taos were discussing the union qucHtloti the boUom apparently dropped out of the negotiations.

BLINDED BY ELECTRIC FLASH.

t I

I ;

I i ts firaotlcal w orkings and great care would have to be exercleed Co xee that

■tt -woe not ovoded by th a very man whom :l t l l moet deilrable to have taxed, for iff to evaded tt would of oourse bo woree I th an no ta x a t all, ae the lenxt deelriible ' of all taxee It the ta x which b e a n heavily

I upon the honeet ae compared with tho dlahoneit men. Nevortheleee, a giadu- ■ted Income tax of the proper typo would I be a dMlrabla perm anent feature of fed- ■ •ro l taxation, and I etlll hope that une m ay be devised which the Supreme Court

■ will declare oonitltutional. f "In my Judgment, however, the Inhorl- Itonce tax la both a fa r be tte r method of [ to u tlo n , and to r more Im portant for the ! purpose I have In view—the purpote of Bavthg the iwolten fortunoe of the coun­t r y bear In proportion to their alie a constantly Increoalng burden of taxation. Tfaexe fortunes exist solely bocauee of the protection given the owners by the public. They are a cOnatnnt source of care and anxiety to the public, and It Is

j sminentty Just th a t they ahould be forced to pay heavily’ for the protection given them. I t l a of couree, elem entary that

itbo nation has the absolute right to de­ckle ae to the term s upon which any man

■Shall receive a bequest or devtso from another. We have repeatedly placed iiucli Jaws on odr own etatuto books, and they have repeatedly been declared constitu­tional by the oourtB. I believe th a t tho ta x should contain the progreialvo prin-

.clple. W hatever any Individual recelvee, j w hether by gift, bequest or devise, In I life or In death, should, a f te r a cerinlii am ount Is reached, be Increasingly bur­dened; and the ra te of taxation shouUl be

■ Increased In proportion to Iho remotcm.-ss ■ of blood of the man receiving from the I man giving or devising, Tho principle of ■ th is progressive taxation of Inheritances I h a s ju i t only been Huthorltntlvely reeog- I nixed by the legislation of (kmgress. hut

i t Is now unequivocally adopted In tho ) leading civilised nations of ihe world—I In, for Instance, G reat Ilrltiiln, France

and Gcrmajciy. a “’' ' - “xland led olt wim ; the tmpnaltlon of m gn r^ogresslve rates.■ Great Britain w as the first of the great ■natloift to follow suit, and within ihn I la s t few yetrg both France and Oer- . m any have adopted the principle. In

Great Britain nit celntes w orth (6,000 nr i less are praottcally exem pt from death *. duties, while the Incrense le such that ' when an estate exceeds (5,000,000 In value

and passes to a d istan t klnsmiitv or stranger In Wood the governm ent receives

. nearly eighteen per cent. In rvnnce, un­der the progressive syetem, so much of

■ an Inheritance ns exceeds (10.000,000 pays over twenty per cent, tn the State if It passes to a diainnt relative, .ond per cent, if it pasHi-s to a direct heir. In Germany very small Inheritances are ex­empt, but the tax is m sharply progres-

■ I sivo that «n inhcrUance not In ngrlciil- turnl or forest lands which exceeds (2.50.-

I OOO, if It goes tn d istant relatives, is ■ taxed Bt Iho rate of ahnitl twenty-five per

cent.• "The German law- Is nf siJeclal Interest,

becauae H makes the Inheritance tax nn Imperial meastire. while nllottlng to the individual States of the empire a portion of the proceeds and perm itting them to Impose taxes In addition to those Im­posed by the Imperial tlnvernment. In the Unlletl States tha Notional Govern­m ent has more than once imposed In-

i herltance taxes In addition (n those im- ; I posed by the States, nnd In the last in- ’ ‘t ■tance about one-half of the States levied

I BUOh taxea eoncurrently with the Nu- '' tional Government, making a eombhii d

. maximum rate. In some eases ns high a.s twenty-five per eent., tinrt, ns a m ailer Of fact. Several Slates adopted Inheritance la x laws for the first lime while tlie mi-

[ llonal law was dtlll in force and unre- ; pealed. The French law liua orte feature i which Is to be heartlty eommeiidpil. The '■ ■progressive principle is so aptdlixl thitt . . each higher ra te is Imposed only on the

excess above the am ount subject to the next lower rnte. This plan Is peculiarly •daptefl to the working out of the theory of using the Inheritance tax for the pur­pose of limiting Ihe aixe of Inheritable

■} ■ fortunes, since thC progressive Increase’ In the rates, according to thia mode, may

, be eorrled to Its logical eunelustor in a ; hmailrnmn rate of nearly one huiidri d per ' cent, to r the amount in excess of a speci­

fied turn, without "being confiscatory im to the real of the Inherltonce; tor each .In­crease In rate would apply only to the 0,iiount above a certain maximum.

•T do not believe th a t any-advantage comes either to the country as a whole or

■ ' (9 the Individuals inheriting the momyby permHlIng the trafiamlsslon In their

F - .e n t i re ty of Bpeh enormous fortunes ns niSJSBave been accum ulated tn America, The

ta x could be made to bear more heavily iipon pRWona realding out of the country than upon those residing within It. Such ■ heavy': ttrogresalve ta x le. of course, in no shape or way a ta x on th rif t or IniiuF- try, for th rift and industry have ceased to poaaeaa any m eastirable importance In ihB BcquialUon of the swollen fortunes of which I apesk long before the tax would

.Ifl «ny way serJouBly affect them, flueb

n ig h t s t a r t e r a t M iller S tre e t C ar Sheila W ill Not Lose S ig h t

P e rm a n e n tly , T h o o g h .John F. Rlordan, of 221 Pateraon atreet,

Harrison, night sta rter nt the Miller street car barna, narrowly escaped blind­ing last night while trying to operate a BWitch In the cut-off box n t the cur (tarns. A trolley pole had grounded in the car shed and Rlordnn climbed up to the switchboard to cut off Ihe current before attempting to adjust the polo. A flaeh of flame flew Into ills face, badly Injuring hla eyes.

Rlordan remained a t work for aovernl hours, when he was suddenly stricken blind. He was taken home about 6 o'clock this morning and afterw ard visited tho office of Dr. 'William F. Seldler, of 21 Ferry.

Dr, Beldler said th a t tho man wag mere­ly suffering from the Hash and th a t his eyesight would not bo permanently Im- piklred.

EMPLOYERS'ACCIDENT

OBLIGATIONS(Continued from F lrz t ruffe.j

RENEW SACRED HEART PLEDGEP u rU h lo n e r i o f 9t< J o b n '» R. C.

G kqrph R ^ v o n z e e rn te tllH to rlc K dl- 4o«H-wReealU M om orlo*.

Imprezaive ceremonies were con^urted In St, John 's Roman ^nthollc Church, In Mulberry fttreet, last nlffhi, when the Society of the Sacred H eart anO Holy Nome renewed the ccmi4C!crt.tlon of the old edlflcR to the Becreil H eart. The-Sej-Ykea wero led by F ather Fldells, and the mem* bera of the ao«lc|/ participated In n body.

The event had h hlelorlc Inlcreai, ue U was (hla church th a t waa the first hi tblH State to be conaccrated to sprcliil drvo* tlon to the Sacred Hoart, In 1873, when tbo late Arohblabop Corrlffftn* (ben bishop of the DIoceae of Newark, waa the cele­brant. The example not by St. John's at that lime was emulatewl by 'nearly all the churches of the diocese, which at that period Included the whole. State of New Jersey,

cere of the Atlantic neet. The forelffn flag and commanding offlcpjpi were then received and In departing they proceeded to the expoaitton grounda, where they went ashore a t Discovery Lnikdinff- A few minutes la ter they were followed by the President In tho barge of Ihe eommander* ln>chlef of (he Atlantic fleet, accompanied by the members of Ills party.

Id Mmeh Ilettcr Shape*President Roosevelt found things In

much hotter coudlllon thuit when he w as here before and did not healtate to com­mend the progrYns that had been mads In improving the uppearance of the frrounda.

At Discovery Ixandlng another salu te to tho ProMdeni wub fired, during which time the Prcflident and members of tils party and tho reception committee stood with bared heads.

Thfl party then marched to carrbiges nnd drove through a guard of honor formed by the Georglii troops, the cadets of the Military and Naval academies nnd the Virginia Military inatltu le draw n up In open ranks. The great th rong within the grounds stretched from the w ater front to the auditorium, and on the other aide a crowd fur grea ter In pro- portloDB bail assembled on tho parade In front of the reviewing stand. Thovieands of voices swelled the cheering, which was begun na i^oon as the PrcshKint stepped on land nnd continued until the program was nponed a t tho stand. The police utrangementa weiv better than on the opening day. nnd the people were kept from surging upon the stand and endangering thu llvaa of womf^n and chil­dren.

CardliiH l OD t l ie .H<uncl.On the reviewing stand wlili tho Pres­

ident aod his party were Curdlnal Gib­bon^. General Stephen D. Lee. cnintnander- in-cblef nf the tTnlted ConfciiiTato Voior- ana; Governor Swanann. <»f Virginia: (bjv- ernor Terrell, of Georgia, unit a number ot other nfllclnls from th a t S tate: tb'- Jnniea- town. Exposition S ta te commissi onera. dls- tlngulsbed Unllod State# arm y unii navul offleerH, with a number of the foreign rcpresentfttlvea nnd prominent members of tbe National Editorial AssncUitlon.

Following a patriotic selet-tinn by tho j exposllinn band, the program IncMent In (he G^'orgia T.>ay eelehrnllon was npeneil hy G<ivernor Terrel!, who intm dured W.N. Mlmhell. president of the Grorpla |

' Gommlsslon, the m aster of oerpmimles. Mr, Mllrliell presented Cardlnnl (ilbhmiK. who olTrred the Invocation. The hand played "S tar Spnnglod Banner." after w’hich Mr. Mitchell In an addreas Intro­duced President Rnosovelt, who delivered Ilia Hrst Hddrefls. He was cheered throughout Ills entire apeerh.

The rrcsldcal began his speech by allud­ing to (he tribute paid him by Gcitrgla In reproducing tho replica of his grand­father's housR a t Roswell, Gu. He spoke of being of half Northern and half South* ern blood, and th a t because of tlds fact he fell more keenly his kinship with every IJiirt of the nation. Americans, he sold, Sire about thP same everywhere In the m atter of tundamenlals, there existing among them the aume good trails and the same shorlcomlngs. H r added:

D is tru s t o n Dotli ^Idea."Not only Is nil of this true a# between j

one community and atiolher, bu t It la just j as true between one d ess of our citizens nnd another. Mow and then we mea^ t well-meaning people who have a genuine | horror and dread of all rich men and think of them as being set apart by peculiar vice and Iniquity. Now and then wo meet equally well-meaning rich men who have an equally Irrational dread of those whom they style iabor leaders.' In each case I (hink the hostility ie In large part ;lue to a want of sympathy caused by com­plete ignorance of the men who arouse such distrust or anger.

"There !fl Inerenfling need th a t the wel­fare of the children should be effectively safeguarded by governmental action; with the proviso, however, th a t this no-

for whose beneflt all induitrles are carried on. Frcim every standpoint the cluuige would be A benefit. The community a t Urge eliould share the burden as well us the beneflts of industry. Employers wuuld thereby gain a d^ lrab le certainty of obligation add got rtd of litigation to determine It. The workman and the work­man's family would be relieved from a crushing loud.

"Tlie National Government should b« a model employer. I t should demand th# highest quality of service from Its em­ployee and should car» for them properly In return. Congress should adopt legis­lation providing limited but deflnltfe com­pensation for accidents to all workmen within the scope of the federal power. Including employee In navy-ysrds and arsenals. Similar legislation should fol­low throughout the States. The old and Inadequate remedy of suit for negligence would then gradually disappear.

Laws Id Other CooutrleSr"flufh a policy would mean (hat with

lncrcawc<l rcsponilhlUty of tho employer would come increased care, nnd accidents would bo reduced In number. The tem- poniry burden Involved will not hamper our IndiiBtrles. Ixtng experience of com- pensnthm laws In other oountrics has demonstrated their benefit. W hat we ad­vocate Is only a simple measure of iustlce, only one atop toward the goal of ftocurlng, ao fur Jis human wisdom can secure, fair and equitable treatm ent for each and every ono of <mr i«jople.

"As n corollary to the nbove let me point out (be oxin'iue unwisdom of the railway companies In fighting the constitutionality of the nailonnl emplnyers' llabllily law. No law is more emphatically needed, and U must be kept on the atatuie books *n dnifltlc and thoroughgulng form.

"There should he the tiluincst and most unequivocabl» udditlonul statem ent, by cmiclmi'nl of Congrvae, to the effect that mllrorul employes arc entitled to receive damages for any accident th a t comes to them H.1 an Incident of the performance of their duties, and the law should be s u ‘h that It will bo Impossible for the railroads suci'OMsfully to light It without thereby fovfettlrig ul) right to the protection of the. Fetlrral (loverrimont under any clrcmn- slances. In the same way there should be ilRld ffdi-tal leglslntloii to minimize all nillwjiy iirddcntB.

lu closing, ibe President said th a t our navy la the surest guarantee of peace for the United Slates. He added that the fact of having an efficient arm y la also an additional safeguard. The lesson of p repared n ess ,h e explained. Is one that should be thoroughly remembered and not alone refers to war, but to civic life ae well.

INDIQMENT OF POLICE

HEADS GOOD(Continued from First Page.)

gltfiia E m ployers* L ia b il i ty B ill,flptfclol DfjipflU’A to the EVE SI\G yEW8.

HAHIilSBURG. Pa.. June 10.—Governor Siunrt lo-day approved of the eniplayers' bnt»lllry bill and the hill giving miiwny mall clerks the same rlghta as paaaengere In suitfi for recovery of daniagcs for In­juries sustained on railway trains.

HmCHLIFFE CRISIS PASSED.

of earh la noceaaarily a eeparate ofTouae. Thle la not the faot. The neglect charged la of the public duty of tho defendants ae police commlealonera; th a t duly la a Joint duty which cairnol be exorcised by any one of them alone, and the neglect Is llke- WIBB Joint. Each defendant tnu»t Indeed concur In the neglect, but tho result la a Joint reault

“In a very recent case In thle State, directors of a atreet railway company were Jointly Indicted to r involuntary man- alnughter; tho duties of tho defendanta 'Bare diverse; some ware concerned only with tho operation of the road, and some -with the scheme or system under which tho operation was to take place. Had tha objection now urged to thhi indictment been sound. It would have dlapo.eed of the Indictment In that case. The point waa not even mined nnd the case came on for trial upon the m erits before three of the justlcta of thle court, who delivered aep- nrnte charges to Ihe Jury. Neither allud­ed to any difficulty In the way of holding the dcrendant.s Jointly liable for negli­gence.

"As to the ohjectlonn th a t the Indict­ment la nnihlguous, Indefinite and vague, and bad for mmUfarlousncBa, li la enough to any th a t there Is a single definite chnrge of ncglpcl of duty in falling tn In­vestigate the conduct of the police force under the control of the defendiints. The rtvermente na to the cxiaicncc of nu­merous houses of Ill-fume ainounla only to speclflcailons of numeroiiH liistnnccB of neglect, but the crime la single. It may well be that there would he no criminal neglect If thcr'* was but one houae of [II- fnma In the city; It may he necessury lo prove the existence of m;iny In order to eelabliah the.neglect. A similar view bus been taken In a recent case In New I'ork. The motion to qua.»h Is dented.”

Assistant Proaecntor Mott paid this, af­ternoon tho declalnn of the Supreme Court did not permit of an appeal. Apked when the trials of the Indicted men winitd be moved he replied tliiit he could imt tell, but It waa quite certain nothing would be done during this term of court.

PliTslelnn A tten d in g I'nsnmontHVIettin Ile llevea Hie P atien t W ill

Mnlte Rapid Ilecnvery.PATERSON, June 10.—Thera has been

n marked Improvement tn the condition of Senator John Ilinchlifre during the past twenty-four hours, which, If con­tinued throughout to-day. will Insure hla complete recovery.

Dr. Edward F, Dcntier nays hla palleiit has puseed the crisis, and ho looks for hla ntpld recovery. Sir. Hlnchlltfe waa able to tnke'aonie substantial nourishment this

1 morning, the first he has taken In several 1 days. I

j I.OTTEBV PIIOI'EHTY DHSTROYED. |(rov^m m snt OHIrlata HniMah P latea

ADfl D am T ick ets a t WIlmlDjrtan*fipecUil i*i*patch to (Afl BVESIhK} SEWR.

WHsMlNGTON, De!., June lO .-tn the yirY-sYnce of UnUnd S tates District A ttor­ney NlcUJp. of this city; Secret Service Op4imtive Donaghy, of Philadelphia, and wiine^iSRs Hworn In (or tlio purpose, a force of men a t noon to-day destroyed tho effeoia of the Honduras National LrOt- tory, which have been accumulating nt the office of the concern a t the John M. Rogers printing plant In this city for years.

MISHAP FOLLOWS MISHAP.Httnavray Horne Throw z Otit Man

uihI raiiMrs A nother tn Jniup n u d B re a k I l ls Lee>

fi/ edrt to (fte EYE'SJXG y/.'U’H.FLEMlNOTON, June 10.—Charles Caul­

field, formerly af Jersey City, was seri­ously Injured In a runaway accident here last night. W ith two others he wns driv­ing in Bn.iad etreet, when his horse be­came frightened ami ran away.

Caulfield w-as thrown vfoli-ntly over the dashboard. His back was seriously In­jured and he wiia otherwise hurt. Tho other occupants escaped Injury by Jump­ing. Caulfield was carried to the homo of Surrogate George F. Hanson nnd later removed to the home of hla fatliRr-ln-law, Tlorace Moore.

The horse wba captured nnd driven

it>m. of th is county. The (ollowlng July he received an apptjlnlment for the regu­lar term , and had held the oflloe coutlnu- ouely since*

M iss BtitgradsTt H«TelJst, Dead*RICHMOND, Va., June 10.-M iss Julia

Blagruder, the. noveUst, died here a t 81. Luke'fl H ospital yesterday. She was fifty- one years old. Miss Magruder's death had been ezpM ted for several days. 8he was born In Charlottesville, Va*. and made her home In W ashington, D. C. mnee Miss M agruder had been In her last lUnsss a }«lgnal honor was bestowed upon her by the French Academy, which conferred on her the Order of Palms. Mias Magruder waa the daughter of the late AJan Bowio M agruder, of Charlottesville, Vo., and niece of John Bankhead Magruder, of th e U nited S tates and Confederate armies. H er fa th e r was a lAan of distinction tn bfdh law nnd Isttera.

SlFs, M ary HAgDlre*Mrs. M ary Maguire, mother of PolSee

M arshal Thomaa F. Maguire and Pollce- m un P a trick Maguire, of South Orange, died a t her home, 2; Undsiey avenue,- South Orange, last night of acute indiges­tion. Mrs. Maguire hud been a resident of tho vUlogo for forty years. She became 111 Saturday night and did not respond to mod leal treatm ent. Mrs. Maguire was fifty-seven years old. The funeral will be held from the home of her son. Marshal Mogutro, 58 Riggs place. South Orange, und the high mass of requiem will do oelebnUed in the Church or Our Lady of Borrows, Wednesday morning.

M iss Acl« Vs llrlttoD.Miss Ada V. Britton died a t the homo

of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Qfibrlel <j. B ritton, of Hrookstde nvenus, Caldwell, yesterday afternoon, of pulmonary con- Humptloii. Britton was In her twen­tieth year. She was a member of the M ethodist church snd r graduate of the Caldwell High School, hnvlng been vale­dictorian of her class. Tho funeral will be held from the house Wodn«’sday after­noon a t 2:3(1 o'clock. Rev. Oacar L. Jo . soph will offidate.

T hom as CsUnhan.Thom as Callahan died yontcnjay ut hl»

rcelrience, 1L*6 Lincoln avenue. Orange. He recently underwent an operation asul la ter u fever developed wlileh caused till

: death. He wiis a omther of Cornelhis ' Callnhan, who died a few menthn agu. Tho funeral services will be hild to-mor­row morning, In St. John's Church, Or- ungo.

Ajiron W. ItofT,A fter a brief Illness, Aurt.fn-tViird Roff

died u t hlH luio hiune. ftW Orange street, yesicrdny morning. M r., Itoff waa born in Danbury, Conn,, Jifty-alx years ugo. and thirty-five years ago c-une U> this ei ty . .M tho time of bis <leath Mr. Ilnff WAS the proprietor of u laundry. He leaves a wlduw and onC son, T>r. Ward Hoff, uf New York. F’lmpral eervienp will ho held In the Church of Si, Rose of L im a a t S;30 o’clock Tuesday murnlng, and Interm ent will be In the CDmetcry of ih»' lio ty ficpulchre.

F a iie r iil o f Charles H. Sandfonl* The funeral of Churles IT. Sundford.

form erly aasletant superlnlemlont of the J Clement French InduKtrlal H"me In Plane street, waa held yesterday afler- noon In the chapel of the Rescue Home, SI (-‘lay street. Rev. William T. Llptun. curnle of Trinity PJpiacopal Church, con­ducted Ihe services, assisted by Rev. Oecirgft H . Rndgera, of New York. The rhnpel was crowded. There wofi special music and a number of friends nnd co- workera spoke briefly of M r Sandford's life find work.______________________

B a ttle for LifeWhen Despair Seemed All Tha^

Was He Strives and Finallj Wins Health,

T h s sxpsri ■*ncd Of R. H. Lewla,81 Second S treet,! Gloverovllle, N. V.«l who was given up] by hia flootorz t o j die of eoMumptloB.r and whose pastor and frleiidz hs<]| lost hope, le giverti for the benefit o t i all who are to n d 'l Ing toward con­sumption.

Mr. lAWls lost S | pounds In thrsi

______monthe, hod hem !orrhages, and

consultation of pliyslctune gave Ihevcrdiei th a t he had ooneumptlon ami one 1un| was nearly gone, and he returned fron visits to the Adirondack and Catskid Mountains so weak that he could hard lj get ab o u t I t was a t Lhls elage that hS began to take Father John’s Medicine^ the guaranteed cure for throat and lungs.! Now be Is able to return lo work after 1 two years' Illness and he gives oil thS i credit to F ather John’s Medicine.

Ab a body builder Father John's Modi- j cine has no equal. No alcohol or Inju- | rious drugs. Guaranteed.

CITY ADVCRTISEHBIfTS.bblZAUETH a v en u e OrENlNO AND

WIDLNIKO AND THE MX'RRAY STREET -^PPiNING.Notice Is herebV given that the commlssiun' ers heretofore npptdnted by the Mayor of »»« eUy of NeWftrR, to make an estldiaie and aanr-ssment upon all the ownerN of all the lamia and real cataie In Ihe dty of Network peculiar­ly damaged or benellted i>y any local Improve- meiU In the said city, irt proportion sa nearly U8 may he lo the advantage each wa» deemed to have acquired, have made an eBtltnatu and uMHessment of ds mages conferred upon all the ownere of all the lanOe and real estate m the city of Nfwark pwollsrly damaged by each

down Branch street by WUlInm J. Case, (of thn following improvementa in aald city, who, In Jumping out of the vehicle, frac- | namely, tvirc'l both bones In blfl right leg. Tho horse began kicking wiillo being driven [ by Case, which prompted him to Jump

I from the vehicle.

PLAINFIELDER DIES SUDDENLY

The material destroyed Included plfLCcSi tlon BhriU be taken with knowlctlge iindhi j first impresfllons of lottery tickets nnd

In H onor o f A p p ro ao lilD g M nrrlitge.Mlaa Anna F ra n k gavo a soduble F ri­

day nighi. In 8(. V euantlus's School hall. Orangfi, in honor of the Young Ijadlejt' Sodality, of which she bus been un active member. On Ju.ne U.M.18S Frank will be msiiTled to Frank Ldng, of East Orange, ami the reception w as In honor of th 's cveni ond also on account of Mias Frank severing her rnsmberahlp wJtli the sodetv. The president, Mias C arrie Mahlke, rend n congrnlulatory address and presented Misa Pm nk with fl gift. A r<H!ltation, "The Cnunterfllgn," was given by Miss Anna lanichs, and mualeul selections w'ere rendered by several ^em b ers .

Serv icea In MHItMry P a rk .Beginning with Sunday, June 30, up to

and Including Sunday, October 27, a flerl'-e of veHjiRr services will be held Sund^’y afternoouH, a t t o'clock. In MDllary Park. Theac nervlces will be coutlucled by R rv Dr. Wlllhun H. Morgan, of the Cetiti-;il M, F.. Chiiroh. PermlsHlnn to Use the pnrli wii.s uninlcd by th e Shade Tree Commu- elon, ThUTBdny. The flnu Sunday,service wlU ho piUrtuilc In character and tin speaker will hv T>r. Morgan, Tho servlco will occupy ail hour, iiml tt la the liiteii* tiim of lhoH« In charge to obtain good spvakors to nddrcMB Uieae guDierlriga, Tlie Y<iuiig Vooplo's Hocloly of the cfiuich will

Mr. Morgan,---------------«---------------1^'lug l* reae iitn tlo u to C harrli*

There will bo a fiog presentation a t S t VeimniluH .M ra tho llc Otuirch, (Srange, late this afternoon. The presentation waa to have taken place yosienluy, but It waa found IrnpoHSlble to complete the airunge- mentfl in time, O tto l-Uigaman, president Of the Holy Name Socloty of the church, will make tho prvflent4itlon. und niemlKTs of the Young Men's Qormnn Cniholle sSo- cietv. Ihe Holy Name aoclely of the church and fit. Vemimius’s K. IT. V. will piirUdpftto In the eT^crclses.

To Act OD IVcw .■liddlflOD to l vhikdl*Special meetings will be held to-mor­

row night by Ih^ Commllleo on Hchool- hoi>8f’}« of the Board of Kducation for the purpose of taking action to ftxpfdHe (he construction of the pruposed clglitp<'n- room addition to (he Runlet Hin-et Schonl. It is proposed to accept the plan.? prepared by Architect Frank F. Wiiirl, If sailsfaclorv, and in authorize adw r- lliJng for bids for the construction work, The Slum of fhWJKW I.k available fur '.bla purpose.

^gplnnrrvi Auk f o r .%loreTlip mule spinnerN'lii the Mlle-Knd Spool

Colton rum pjtny's mIH. Fast Newark, have asked for f\ ten ju^r cent, increase In wages Riid a reply to the demand is ex- peck-d this w*eek. The men allege that (hey have been Imposed upon hy the new regulatlmiB now in force, and It is inli- maled that a "short weight*' system k also being used by the cumpany to de­crease the wages of tho men.-- ----------- ------ -----------

RnDndNniaii lU g ltt on tlie Jo lt,Angelo FInelll and S^ilvodor Russo.' both

of Cone BtrMl, Orange, engaged In u light In South street, Ihui city, early yeaterdny morning. Flnellt drew a knlfo and made a t Russo, but Ruundsman Brown, who vnmc along nt that time, enught hla luutd before he could do any harm. In the Or* angtn Police C^ourt this morning Flticlil waa fined Ho and Russo 13.

Tw o HloDVufi«^id M ru C onv ic ted .Edward MorAn and Albert Post, both of

tloomflcld, wore convicted by n jury In the Quarter Sessions Court to-day on u charge pseferred by the parents of H ar­old Doggett, fivi.r ,*-ftars ol<l, and Hurrv Johnson, four old. The ctmvlctedmen 'Were rclrH . ,u under |25J ball w ch W uppcBV Juno 2i fur sentence*

, e — IF o m e r 9eD «for im ltb RriarDS.

After a three weeks’ hualnerk trip to the West former United Stales Sonaiur Jumes Smub Jr, has retumeU home*

a spirit of robust common senBo; for philanthropy, whether governmental or Individual, 1s a curse nnd not n blcHslng when marked by a spirit of foolish eeiitl- mentHlUy end Ignorance. Such govern­mental action iB merely one Inevitable rv- sult. of the ever-increasing growth of our complex Induatrlallsm. Decade by decade. It becomes tnoro and more neces* snry that, without sacrificing their Imll- vidual independence, the poopJe of ihla country shall rocognlzs In more cffeciiva form (heir m utual Interdependence, and tho duty of safeguarding the Intercju of euah in the uUlmole Interest of ail. We have inherited and developed ii superbly self-reliant Individualism In thle country.I most earnestly hope that It will nui ho lost, tha t It win never b« exchanged for n deadening aodullHtn.

CafiiniKy, ua llartlahtp ."For example, the g reat Increase In

mechanical and m anufacturing operutiouB means a corresponding SnereaBe in the number of acrldenta to tho wage-work- erw employed therein, those including both prevenlablft and inevitable aeddents. To tho ordinary wHg«-Workcr's futnlly such u calamity moans grim hardship. As tho work is done for (he employer, und ihevo- rore ultimately for the public, it le a biller injustice th a t It ahould be ihe wage-worker himself and his wife anil children who boar the whole penally. Legislation Bhould be had. alike from Ihe nation and from the Statea, not only to guard ngiunst the needless multiplication of lliCHc uccldenis, but to relieve the fi- nandul HulTfflng due to them. Last win* ter Coiigrtfus passed a safety-appliann law which marked a long slflrle In iho rigiit iliiiM.tlon. Hut there should he uJ- ilittotujl legislation to secure pecuniary ctmqionsiUlon to workmen -sulTorltig from

lUonts. and when Ihej' a re killed, to ihoir fttiiilllca. At presenC both In tbs aph+rn covtrtd by national legislation, aii«l In the sphere covered by State legla- laiion, the law In too many cases leaves tin- llniinclnl burden of Industrial occl- dvnlH to be borne by the Injured workmun nnd their famlllca; and a workm an who Riifferfl from .in nccldeot either has no

asc at all for redr^as or else m ust under­take a suit for damages against his em­ployer.

The present practise Is baaed on the view announred nearly sevenDf years ago, that principles and justice aira goo<l svnse demand that a workman shall take upun hlmiMolf nil the ordinary rlj»ka of hJft o,e- cupallon. In my view, princlid<^. of jus- tlci* and gckid ecneo demand the very re­verse of tills view, which experience has prciwd to be unsound and productive of widc.ipread sufft^ring. i t is neither just, expedient, nor huniuno; R la revolting to judgment and sccitlment alike, th a t the flnmiclnl hurdsn of accidents -occurring because of tho neci'tsury "exigencies of their dally occupation should be thrust upon those'' sufferers who are least able to bear It, und th a t such remedy a s Is theirs sliouhl only be obtained by lltiga* tion which now burdens our courts.

' As a niatUr of tac t there Is no snuni economic, reason for distinction between Mccldenls caUBcd b n*'jrjUifi*>“- ^

...fx. rticvr shouldh r^u cn tliat the paymeh( of those acci­dents will became autom atic Instcai) of being a m atter for. a itiv'i'-.uU, Workmen t<)iou1d receive a certain definite nnd llm- itHl cohipensatlcn fo r'a ll bccldcnls In in- duf^lry, IrrcRpecUve of negligence* When *he‘employer, the sgMit of the public, on lilfi own x'sponsIbEIIty and for bin own proilt, In the buslnes^fSof scrvtng.the rub ilc, Hlurts In motion agsnclea wbidh orH<* nte rlr.kp for others, he should take all ihc ordinary and oxtraorrlinary risks in­volved: and though the burden will ot the moment'’bs his. It will ultim ately be nasume<l, as It ought to Ih», by the genor-d public. Only ft! this way can the 8ho<)k of the accident be diffused, for it wilt be

I i ru a fe rrsd from employer to .CQuainert

ciher paraphernalia, and Its destruction marks the end of the ono-llme prosper­ous concerr..

Fata) .\tito W reck Id UrooklyD,NEW YORK, June JO.—One death and

Injurlvfl to a half a dozen other por- Bons rcHulted from an automobile accluont on Ocean t>arkwuy. Brooklyn, yesterday. Thonri.s Heffner, a resident of Hheepfl- licad Ii,ay, was killed, and William Lc May. Ohauffeur William Beatty and Will­iam J. Doyle, all occunanlB of the m a­chine, were serlouaiy injured. Tho car belonged to a Brooklyn contractor, wlio nllegea that hb had not given porml.i.'ilon R r taking It out. IjO May. who was at the wheel, ran down n carriage cm the parkway, and both vehiclea were wrecked. Tn the carriage waa a party of four, who wen* all slightly hurt.

----------I 'h l la d e lp li la E lkn C om ing H ere .

PHJLADELPTJIA. June Ifl.-Many mem­bers of PhllndPlphla ' T^dge No. 2, R. l \ O. Elks, will go to Newark, N. J., Juno !10, to assist In tho cc^rcmonics tn- citlenl lo the dedication of the new homo for Newark Lodge No. 23. The thllfidel-

will leave on ft special train from brohil sSiroet a u tlo n ul 1 o'clock, and ac- eempnnied by ihe Elks' Band of th irtv- OT10 imm, will lake part In the paruae whifh will preenfie dedication. Thn rrtiiTii will he by a specUil train leaving Neworic alunit midnight.

Ilpplles to T rn lley Coinpnny.I/PtjifffrA (0 (fte EVESJyCr SEWH,

JERSEY CTTY. June lO.-The Board of Worke to-ibiy replied to the letter sent it by the Mc.'\flr>o Tunnel Company. The board said Uua a t a conference with the clly ntfiflals the traffic arrangem ents had practlenlly been agreed upon. The board said thftl Uie rate of five cents for looDt and ten cents for a trip to New York had been agreed upi.ui becauBe of the belief that tlu' company would have to charge loBB to got business iiway from the trnllny company In tills city.

D nvlil P re sc o tt Hnlls n nV ictim o f H e a r t Dlucase

a t H is Home.flprcfaf DIspofcA to the EYENISO Yb'irK.

PLAINFIELD, June 10.—David Frracott HftIL one of the best known re.sidenia of Plainfield, died suddenly of heart trouble a t his home, on Madison avonua, Satur­day night. Mr. Hall was born In New York November 15, 1S4B, and waa ihe son of David Pritsley and Caroline Mlntuni Hall. Hp siient the ctirly part of Ills life in New York and a t the age of sixteen went Into the law oflico of his father, who was one of the prominent lawyers In Now York, and with hSa asHlstane© wns able to secure admlsBlon to the New York bar a t the age of twenty-three years. Ho was also a. charier member of the New York B ar Association.

H e was married In 1S71 to Miss Marlon Howe, daughter of Mrs. Julia W ard Howe*

R ev . D ai> uy teren V erm llye,RIDGEWOOD, Juno 10.—The fuiiotal of

Rev. Dupuyloren Vermllye, a ratlriVls^lev- gyrnan of the 'D utch RftCnrmcd faith, will be held to-morruw afteriu^n frtjm ijio home of Wa brolher-ln-law. Pcfll Z-ihriskii^, on the Faram ue rood. Rev, Mr. V-a-mbyc w as eeveiity-ftve years old, and was Htricken with heart disease an<l died in half up hour Saturday. He leaves a widow and one daughter.

CotHRty School Head** FancraLWILLIAMBTQWN. June lO.-Tho fu­

neral of William M. Kldrldge. superlniend- pnt of the public schools of Glouresler Cnunlv. Who died at-hU home her^ sa in r- rirtv evening from pneumonia. wUl take pUce Wednesday. Mr. Eldrldge was born nn October 2S, XW, on a farm near Wlll- Lnmsiowm U ^ a portion of which his bile residence stands. He was a, gradtiaic S the S tate Normal School In tlie class of T577 and a t once entered upon hla corepr a s *a teacher. ■ For o l^ tre n Ytinra he biught a t Swedeihoro. Penna^ove, May e Landing Wflllamstown and Manttia. and hTM ar^^ 1S62. received Appohirmcnt as auD^fnU ndent .of public Instruction pro

Farins and Country Places.IX to' J6 sort* historic Sprlngflcld, N, J.i

tro it Btrtsi". »Prtnp>. home »nd outli.rlkllngs- BO 8cr»*. house, Csltlwell, N, J„ very oh-*p; 11 orrss end housSi Jhouse, Nsllei. N. J. . IW sens.J .i lultsbls toe iUMlYlsIon.

EUZAHETII AVENUE, from Peddle etreet to llnwthfimp avenue; also Ihe widening ofELI/ARETH AVENUE, from Ilawftiorne avenue southerly to a. point al(OUt 651 feet from the eoutheriy line of Ilayii-' ihome avenue.

The opening ofMURRAY BTREET,

from Avenue C to alajut IW feet w «t of Goble atreet, and have filed their reports of ealrj aa* eesvmenta for damages In th^ office of the clerk of the Circuit Court of tho cnunly of Bsecs, and that the judge of said court has nxed Friday, the fourteenth flay of June, liW7, nt ten o'clock In the forenoon, In the Circuit Court room at the courthouse in the city of Newark, as the time and place of hearing any objections that may be made to the said assessments.

Dated Juno 8, IDOT,FRANCIS CTTILD JR.,

City - Attorney,NOTICE OF INTENTION-Board of Street and

Water OommlasloDers.I*ursuant to a rcaolutjon adopted by the

Board of Street nrwl Water Commlaaionet^ -jf tho oily of Newark, at a Tneetlng held the twenty-ultUh day of May, IDOT, and approval by the Mayor uf the city of New'arh aix iho sevonib day of June, 1H07, public notice la heit'by gl'^t'n that It I* the Intention of IK'S Ikiard of Str.cet and Water CommlsslonerM of the oily of Newark, under and by virtue uf provlflhma uf the act entitled "An act tn I'evibv and amend the charter of the city of Newark." approved March 11, isn?, and tho auppU- mofiiH thorfdn, and the act creating Ut? nnani of Street and Water Commissioners of the c'^y of Newark, appi^ved March 28. IBOl, snd o’hcr public laws of the Stale of New Jersey, to order and cause the repaving of

SUSSEX AVENUE, from High street In the dty line* with bltu»r,- Inuus cofti*rn«rpavotneat on a telford fminda- tlon, together with all the appurtonancea stiry to xotnplei© the same. The proceedings 111 the ropavSng will he utidirifikcn underthe provlalon« of e.bQpter 210 of tho Slate laws i<r 1S95.

Such p>er>K5ns as may object thereto are re- quf'Bied to preeent their objections In writing to (he fllerk of sold board, at ihe office of tha iJoaitl of 1?treet and Water Commlaaienera. oily hall, Newark, on or before the expiration of six, days from date nf this notice,

By direction nf the Doard of Street and Wats' Commlsilcners of the olts' of Newark,

M. R. SHKRREUD. Chief Ettglneer-

Newark, N. J.. June 7, WOT.

SHterlff lia la^r to lie Am erced.iJpeHdl DIsphlcA lo Ifta EVESISif yE\k'8.

TRENTON. June 10.—Justice Pltnev, in (he Supreme C'ovirt (o-day, announced h rlcclalon In the case of H atry B. Brack* hurst, agiilnst Sheriff John C. Kniser find the Court of Common Pleas of Hudson Cuunjy* under which Sheriff Kaiser will he ftmererd. Judge Blair denied the nppll- eutlon. whlcii was made in proceedings then pending between Harry B. Broclt- huffll, plnlullff. and Loula Hievens apct others, tlpfeftdants. The ontnlon of llie Supreme Court was not filed, the an*' iiountH*inent of the decision being verbaL

ROTES FROM THE , POLICE BLOTTER,

On n ohnrgn of ns.sauU nnd battery nuvdc by; his n-lfc, August Wlblernian, of 2J8 Oliver .Bti'wt, wns arralBiKHi in the Thira I'rflolnet Police Couri this m om ' Ing; !U> furnished JiiOO ball to uwhU cC- tlon by the ernud Jury.

Hnrry Clark, nineteen yeurs old, of 27 Boston street, 'soa sent to Jail for fifteen days by Jud«fe H err In the F ifth PrwfJldt Police Court yesterday afternoon, c t ia r* ^ by Mra.i'jAnnu Berger, of 86 M.orrJ# ave- nne, with taking some money out of the till In her grocery store. The woman also claimed Hmt Clark threw o two-pound weight a t her.

lA>o Baker, twenty-seven years old, of 77 South Thirteenth atr>et, called u t po­lios headquarters IhiB ir.ortiliqjf and gnvs Mmeclf up to BetceUcevg^rgeanta Ryan dud Long, who sought him to aqsw sr a charge of grand larreny preferred by ttllHnin Bennoit. of 81 Vanderpool strsst- BennsCt claims he was robl).^ of (u7 a few weeks Bgu by Baker. The prteonhr guvs IS>d ball to await the uotton of th« grand Jury.

: 10 acres aud Chatham, N,

U a n c e(iDcorpo rated),

l e d s t 'i h'ewneU. !«• J .Tbs'best In Real Eststs.

AUDITOR’S

w..Scl. lim »r pisiniui, vs. Ollnton A. H s S u w aSsitiam- In sUschment. Aotlcm

of so Oril’''' m'"'* J"uuse by ssia court, on the second day K.** llXn, th* subscriber, sudltor, ap-

™ in?.5'by.thc ssbt ' ““•'I "> 'be tala causs. Sail Mil and make sssurancs at puWlo vondu*. ?? .be iswlbouse In the city of Newark, on TbiiWS^ tl>» twemy«yenth day of Juow the hour of 2 o'clock la the afteruw;*

day. of all that cenatn tract of fend S5,a‘"trt'emlses sltuete lo Eaet Oranye. New ? ! ^ v ' dMlgn«*«' " numbers 6S and 8T North vridBul stfest (conshtlnr of a tract op ths Jf..reriy lids of ’Walnut elreet, about thrts S f ’K y twouty-thrse feet north from SutP-

s tm t one hundred feet front hy about bundred and nlnrty-flvo feet deep, with two

themn), eelxe.1 and sttsohed by the of R-e* 'by virtue of an at-

S^hment iBsoed In the above stated cause, or iJ SJieh tM * f as shall eatlefy the flebla of fS.^aM n l^ u n and th* Other crtdliori who hJle aoptW sxreeahly to the directions of the

enflfied. "An set for tho relief of eredllors ^ i S t Sbsent and ahscondln* debtors (r^

DOS thousand nine hiindKd snd one, ’>

•wJly’aUsiea star A, CIUMnKHR.■ ■ ,_________ Auditor.

OFBICB OF a T t CLERK,Newark, N. J.. June 8, IflOT.

Report of Intermenta for the week endJnf June 8, Men, .HG; boys, 27; women, 2tS;^irli, 15; total, 104.

Ageo—One year and under, 28; between 1 and i Va»r«i; if And 6 yoArn, 4t 8 and H> yeara; 1; 10 20 yean. 5; SO and 80 year*. 0; 80 and40 years, T; 40 and 50 yearn, 10; 50 and 00

geftm, 12; ® and 70 yeaw. IB; 70 and 80 years,; and over. 2. ’ 'IDIae«s{o» Ali3Ch llBtn, 1; angina pectorla. 2;

apoplexy or cerebral hemorrhage, 6; hronchlUKi 2; CAlruius ct Madder. 1; cancer, 2: cancer, KVer* 2; cancer. ulpruB, V, casualties, 8;< clrrtiOBla llvei, 3; conxeatlon. Tunffi. 1; con-c vulalcBS. 8; cyatlli*. 1; drowned, 1; edampRla, 3; endocardltla* 3; eryalpslM. Ij fever, ucarlcl, 1- fevor typhoid, 1; heart dlSeate, I: heart, orxanlc* 1; heart, valvular, 4; hemorrhage. 2; ranlformsllon, 1; maraamue or malnutrition, 2; meningitis, acute, 1; manlnf tta* cerebrospinal, 2: mycoearditln, ^r-nephritis, T; phthtslsi pal- tnottaUs 2; Macenta pnevlo, 1: pneumonia, 6; pneumonia, Vweho. Pn*«»nonlft, Plfuro. 1; Doteonlng. aflcldental. l l premature birth, 8; stlU bom 9; suicide, t : ombUlB. l ; tubercu- loals, 0; uloers. 1; uraemia. }.

Plftces of NatlvUy—Lotted States, 72; Ire­land. t ; Buglaud, 8: Swtland, 1; It^ly, 1; Germany. lO; Denmaric, 2; Huisla. 8; Auitrlo.5. Coloradj y, CONNELLY* City aerlt.

CfTY ADVEBTlfiHMBNTSsFTNLiAY PIxACE QHADING. CURBING AND]

FLAOOINa; IIALSTED STREET ORAD-f TNG. CURBING AND FLAGGING; KEN-j WORE AVENUE QBADINQ, CURBING ANDJ FI,.AOaiNG; LANARK AVENUE ORADlN<y CURBING AND FLAGGING; PALM STRKEt’ if-TiKsMERLY BEPFORD STREET) GRAD-! INU. nmBINCJ AND FIw\GCHNO; 8ALEM1 SJTUEET' (FORMERLY LILLIE STREBT) 1 GKAniNG, AND SUNSET AVENUE GRAD- 1 INU AND fl a g g in g . —AiaeMtnpni for beiie-lUfl.

NfitU'o l< hereby glvrn that an aeieBBrnent ■ m>'>n all the owners «f all the land# and r«tl tstflte peculiarly benef. «'<1 l<y each o( the foL lowInjf itnprovements. ruifnely: Tho grading,curhlng nnd flagglri-g ot

FINLAY FLACE.from Hfinford HVfinie l.Hfl fi ei weei. according lu Ihe provlhlnne i>f ah nnllnance of the city Of NcwHrh, entitled "An onllnFiriL’e to provide for Ihe gnifllng, curbing and llagHlng of

FINLAY' PLACE,from Sanford avenue, Lll^i feet we#t;'' the oradln^, curbing and Hanging of

HAL«?TKT.i STREET,from South Ornngf Hvenuc, USO feet north, ae- coT llng 10 the provision# nf tin nrdlnance of the city of Newark, miltled "An ordinance to p* - vide fnr the grading, curbing and flagging of

HALStED STREET.from Ftouth t>range tivenue. 1>S0 feet north;" the gradfUK. eurbliitt Hnd Ragging of

KENMORF. AVENUE.from Sanford avenue, l.oiw feet weM. occord- iiTff to the provlBlnna cf on ordinance of the city of Newark, ciillrled "An ordlnanc-e to pro­vide fnr the grading, curbing and flagging nC

KENMORE av en u e*frf m Biinford avenue, l.tHki feet west;" Ibo irradlnK. curbing and naglgng of

LANARK AVENUE.from Sanford avenue. »5T feet west, according to the prfivUlons of an ordinance of the clly rf ■Newark entitled "An ordinance to provide fur the gradMg. curbing and flagBlng of LANARK-AVENUE.from Sanford avenue. 007 feet west; the grading, curbing and flagging of

' PALM STREET(formerly Dedford atreet), from Sanford ave­nue 1 Hlb feet north, according to the pr::- vlao’ns of an ordinance of the dty of Newark, entitled "An ordinance to provide for the gra-.- liig, curbing and flagging ot

pa l m st r e e t(ronnerly Bedford alroet), .dTrom Sanford ave-

(formerly T flll.- atreet), from South Orange J n\ptiue CIO feet pouth. according to the pro-1 vUiona ••'f an ordinance of the dty of Newark. I Hntttled "An ordinance lo provide for the graa- |

SALEM STREET (formerly Lillie atreet), from South Oramm ave* mie. fllO feet aoulh:" the grading and flagglrg

su n set AVENUE.fiv.m South Orange avenue. 1,7M feet south according to the pfovlelona of an ordinance of Iho cKy of Newark, entllled "Ad ordinance to provide Tor tho grading and flagging of

St^SET a v en u e .from South Orange avenue, 1,7«0 feet sooth;' hHft hern prepared by the umlerelgned oom- mlsBlonere, appointed by the Mayor of the oUy ofAISawurk, and that u report by a cerilfleata j InQp'lting with an acuompanylng map otid I

-H^SBule. showing the several afieaim «tsj against the several owners itecullarlv benefited I aa nforesaid. ha* been deTioslted in iho oflloe nf 1 the city clerk of the clly of Newark, for ex­amination by the parties Interested therein.

fialij aPSPsement comprises all lota tract! and Dttrcels of land and real estate liable to be aaaessed os aforesaid, lying on both sides ol

FINLAY PIJ^CK.from Sanford avenue to a point at»out l.llfl feet west of the westerly lino of Sanford siW*nue: on both sides of ___HAL.STED STREET,from South Orange avenue to a point about hkO fwt north of the northerly Una of South Orange avernie: on (wth sides of

k b n m o r e a v en u e .from Sanford uvev;ue to a point about 1,000 feet wesi of the westerly line of Sanford avo- nucTi on both eldee of „

LANARK AVENUE.from Sanford avenue to a point about M8 foot w*,8t of the Af'Kterly lino of Sanford avenua;on both aides of _ ^PALM STREET,(formerly Rfdi'ord slroet), from Panford ava- emuj lo ft point ahaut l.tiSft north of Son- ford avc-iiyo; en both sides of

SALEM BTREET,(Aormeriy LiUlo street), from Boutn Orange avenue lo a point about flit* feet south of ths Bouiherly line of South Orange avenue* and on both sides of ^ .,r„,,Trn HUNRfSr AVENUE,from South Oranice avenue to a point about j,Tft) fvet south of the southerly fine of South

an entir* plot of land,i« «Md

may be heart before said ooflnmiialojne« oft Friday, tho fourteenth day of June, at 2 p, M., and on Saturday, the fifteenth day of Juno, ItlOT at ID A. M-, at (he commlsatonjB room, No. 4 (Ihlrd floor), clly hall. "

Dste^ Juns IpBRSTlNE.w il l ia m VON KATELEE. JAMESS 0. SMITH.

rinumlftaloasri.

p r n r iC NOTICE 1* hereby glvsh Uvftl Ih* ■ frYiiftwlng proposed ordinances passed a sownd

trarilng and ^ r e ordered to a third reading waning * Board of Btreel and Water

D IB S O ljm O S^vwiCE*OirDIs5^ Is hena” Sven itait (he partherehlp lately Misting 1 i J ’iwB WlllUiin If, HoittrmRh and Freder

hen^y .. .ing br-

i^i^B"Wl11Uiin If, .Hoittrmah and Fredenclt ? ^ o If tn i» f . of (he cfiy of Newark. Btate of r.'JT jamy^ dndar the firm nama of HbUsr- flhln and Woiflttfw, wm dissolved on tho eighth Sbv of ICay. nfni loon hundred and sa 'en* hy mutual eonstnt. All debts owing ta.the aoJd uartasrohlp. are to be recetvrt by ,Aha said vrMlsrtcX r . Wniflnger and all domands oni r> hR dtbts of (he said pannorthip art to bs

'ofM to'him fnr psyment.Sd May a tnot.

'WIU.lAM >1. HQLTERMAN. rRBDERlCJC P. WOLTlKaEIL

hwFlCE OF THE BOARD OF EXCISE COM- MiaSlONERB OF THE CITY

OF NEIWARK,City Han* Juns 6. IIW.

The following tS (he list of names, reeldeocss and places of business ot persons making gp- pficflllQB to lW« hoard for the granting of licetmw to oell aplrliuous* vinous, malt nr brewed IRttiors and not heretofore pubflahed ■iicardlng to law* to wit;

BETATU-'NBW APPLICAttOKR.Name Place of business. Aesidonce.-

John A* Tfl Dth avo..20l Houth litn n.H H Marrtn, Bffl liSth st.>,'*,712 BpriPgfietd kv, Harman Wag«ar. Evartreen av„...,Same plans lutius PUsoher* MO Ml. Prospect av.Same pUoe ' • VHCiLKSAliE-RENEWALa.wm Maper ft Co * Broad st.lOl Summit sL

NEW APmCATIQN-BO'rr},KRB'.&CEN;JK, SaalmuUer ft Yaucib 001 So. 11th at,&stne p.soe

SoWl-KES’ UCKNBl^-HENffWALa. Roth ft smith, «M-444 ISHsabcth av.Sstna p'jtee John Perga, iflS.WIIIIam Springfield iv,*■Fsnlliiknq Flack. i« .^rtienor *t,W Tlchanor st.A sa. A lilnlsri^ tiTusD st Sams ptssab5 w Biro“ i», wmiarn 'Wartilnxion «ChsriFB Klntehl. im Bjvcntb ai^....|anMi plaos M1ch4S! Pottl. i® McrntmoiMY si...,game p ^ n Kart waiwr, Osnual Wlkooa8....Ssme plakt

FraBk Btosckiir, J19 Prtoos rt-.M Baldm-In *v. MSrls.Mlehrta*: !w jtartni^)() a r.fcnu,p]a«

N ieds Pstaroml. (W Anaflsmr st.ara* plaos if f W sfrtt st.San* plaicJ.KcNapu*. 2-4 » . R.' pi..Rams pits*

ft Kojpwr. *ka Park av^.-tamaplic* HcnrY FsH>. a t . , .Ban* p ls«& trtek CarrotL 154 B tkomflold av,..8am apto^

Commlsalonenii held Juiis 6, IDOT; ’^ ttralnancc (p provW* ior tha conttmotkm ; ot a tw»t*a (12S Inch PtP® 5,'™ '»RIDGE STREET. ,from the terminus of the preoenl sewer south- j erly lo Park avenue, |An ordinance to provide for the conitruotwnj at a tan 00, « « « '»between Belmont avenue and Chadwick avenue. \

An ordinance to provide for the construatldtt I of a ten (10) Inch pJtc sewer In ■HENRY 0THBET.between Bank atreet and Mjademy slra^ ,

An ordinaocc to provide for the conotructlOD of a ten (UJ) Inctijilpe aewer tn M a ten STRBSIT,beltvMti Mulperry atreet and New Jersey Sail-™An ordl^anee •<> provide for tha conelriioUoh' of an eight (t inch pipe seWar Is of an eigm ‘ xJr r a y -STREET.between Avenue C and Goble street, • _

An ordinance to provide for the coiurtrtictlog'lof a ten (lb) Inch. p1p« eewer In 'oI a len gTBEE^ .. ,hatween Bo«th Tenth atreet and Bouth Blsventb “'"tn Vdlnence to provide for the wnatmettod 1

'?.aS!irn‘. .TrSrt” K ; ± ; .kaotper ^ S ^ K n *'**°*‘ 'President of th* Board ot Sriwl and W aiarl

hi. GRBATHflAD, Cflerk cf the Bcai^

notice o r INTENTIOK-Boord cl BUstt aad] Water Cotnmlosloners* **. 1^ ran a n t to a reartotton adopt^ by thal

m a rt™ Btreet nltd Water Conuttlaelm^ o ( | tM city of ■!* * ineetJB* brtd Oiajalxtti day of June. 1301, and approval by tM | MKor of the olty Of hfewark o* Ihe aeranAfl aiv of Juno, Shot, paWle notlc* la h*«by |

that It la the tntenttap ot the Board ot fitm t and W at,r OommlealoliOnr^ot the city oB Kewark, uodor aod by virtue of provlaloa* oB fh, iorem itled "An art to reviao and amagi S o obarier cf th* city of Newark." app™*** MevoK ll . 1B8T. dnd th* eupplemanu tbsrstol S d t te j ic t oMatlti* the

U,*&*ln« BTHBET,tm a Bambxnt plaos to Vataxlo* straai. « iK SlO Tbrttberf wtullthic payrtnaot on a i. i n Inoli coBCftte fcunfiatlon, together with j the appurtOfiiLncea no eeaery (o ccmplsit Mme. Tha pnwcrtlngs In the wm b* ta lM .tm ^ r the ^ l i l s w 21ft oC- ths stAU laws nf IdW.

t, B(»ch JM/ eh^***’

and W aw

l ^ A l S N I N O ! J t t N E 1 0 . 1 9 0 7 .

irj#

thofto

1!** >m- i :l»y ftto IUi4 I BWi t?4l|r r 'r]

eti to

I of

oututb

099-ro-

’Mtim;

tho

o u tuth

iBtlOil

U..ino.otr»

U>«ondling»t«rLkm :

lih-1tlon I

IIM. I tlOttl

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laU-tiob*.

mtbtwa

WILD WEST IS A GOOpraEDER

Much Food Required to Supply Buffalo Bill's Performers

and Horses.

u t i iUkol

I 0 t |tholIbBl

ro tb l rebirlli ' f 00M '

AU DINE in OKE BIG TEHI

r

Buffalo BIU'b Wild Weat show, with Ita cortgress of rough rldcre, cowboya, liidliina and foreign ao ld lera^rrlved In town yeaterday morning and encamped a t F irat Bireet and Susaex avenue, where Uia porformanca thia afternoon will be repeated to>nlght Intereat at the grounda yeatarday waa divided between the Indian wlgwama and the mesa tent. At the tepecB, however, curiosity wna gratlAed only by the occaalonal appearance of an Indian.

Probably few of the curious hundreda who thronged about the meas tent aa the cowboya* ludlana, Mexicans, Arablana, coaaacka, artillerymen and cavalrymen filed Into the huge canvaa dining hall fur their evening meal. Bitting at a doien tables a t which over 700 piacea were pro­vided, realUed the actual damanda tha t a re made upon the commlaaary of auch an enterprlae. From April 1, when the company atarta on Ita aummer travela, until October 1, when the organisation goea Into winter quartera, It takea on a daily average about 70u loavea of bread, ilx b arre li of potatoes, the meat of two Btcera and three tube of butter, not to mention th e many crutea of egga, buahela of peaa, beana nnd other vegetables, and grea t quantities of other meats than beef, to provide for the three meala per day. Thia p a rt of the day’s program, no matter w hat the box-office receipts may be, can never be omitted either In sunshine or rain.

Then, '3oo, there are 620 horsea and eleven buffaloes to be provided for. The etock of the ordinary hay and feed m ar­ket would be depleted In one day In the stables of the Wild W^eat, In this re­spect, however, the management shifts all reaponsiblllty. save tn the enforcement of Itip agreementa, by contracting out the work of provisioning the comp. Canned goods and Imperiahablc foodstuffs are kept In largo quantities In storage, but with moat, bread, butter and vegetables it Is a m atter of fresh dully supplies, and for this purpose an advance agent pre- cedes iho show in the various cities tn which performancea are to be given abd bargains with the local shop-keepers for the delivery of the goodu on arrival.

The m eals are pnld for at so much per cap ita and no discrimination la made In the serving of them. Tlio same fare la provided alike for the star performers ami the laborers. The quality of food is said to be of the best, while the character of th e bill of fere is especially designed to appeal to a variety nf tastna. Ilrcakfaat usually consists of cereals, steaks, chops, eggs, potatoes and colToe, while dinner em­braces the usual range of courses from soup to dessert, and supper la characteris­tic of evening meals served a t an old- fashtoncU farmhcniRc.

An Interesting feature of the Interior of the dining tent la the nrraj)Rcmen.t In groups, in deference to rank, of this big family, iiround the boards. The manager, w ith Ids corps of Rsslstanis, and a few of the chief performers, sit at one . table, while o thers are placed at adjoining tables, and ho on down the list. The In­dians occupy two long tables by them- aelvea, and the negro I.T.l>orera another.

The task of preparing the food and of Bcrving tho meals is one of no small Im­portance. Blx huge sheet Iron stoves and ovens on a truck form llie kitchen, and there, out-of-dnors. the meats are roasted or broiled, the potatoes c«.u>kcd and o th tr vegetables prepared. Tea ami coffee aro prepared in largo copper bollcrH and gal­lons of these beverugos nro daily con­sumed. To arrange ull this necessltatea th e employment of a chef and a score of cooks, while the preparing of tlio food for cooking requires the employment of aa m any more hands. From ten to twelve men are kept busy alone a t cutting breo-j during meal hours. Nor is this all. Quick service when there are so many to wait upon la necessary, and a corps of waltera, making In all a kitchen compliment of about fifty men, are.prepsed Into service.

In the Stables care la observed In pro­viding fodder for the horses and tons of bay atid bushels of feed are apportioned to the spirited Arabian atecds, the shaggy Indian ponies, bucklnls^ broncos and ordi­nary work horses alike. This requires a large force of hostlers who are constantly employed In either grooming the horses o r feeding them.

PETIT JURORS DRAWN,P —n d o t 100 W ill n eg lti HerTtee It.

Upper Conrlr next M onday.

TTnd*r-8her1(t Cyrus Benedict to-day drew a panel of ICC petit jurora, who will begin service next Mominy, in tho Court of Common Pleas. The following Is tho list!

Newark—H enry Fisher, W alter Mat­thews, John Ortman, William F. O'Connor, W illiam a Bharwell Jr.. Frederick W. W right. W illiam P. Slnnock, William H. B lu e , John Offer, Charles Irfhman, John R. Reilly, A lbert D. Perflt. Edward W. Woodruff, William Augustine, George V, Mason, Allen R. McCoy, 8. T, MoVey, Frederick J , Nagel, William a W right, John S taa ts Jr., Charles F, Malden, Robert Shaw, Charles Holt, Uriah Seely, H arry McGee, Alfred H. Senior, F rank W. T. Stiles, Jacob McCloskey, Edmund B, Shawger. Georgs Wood, Samuel Simon, Jam es Maher, L. E, Cook, John Shea, WllUatn F, Halsey, J. Herbert Mayfield, F rederick Zweldlinger J r , Charles H. Bloane, Ju lius Koch. Henry Nehr, Andrew Weber. Paul E. Nagel, H arry Smith, Charles A. Selover, John J. Ledwith, H enry Setland, August Miller. W alter E. Shoemaker, Michael J. O'Connor, Wil­lard B. Wood, C. Blanchard Price. F rank E. Muson, John Martonls. Cornelius H. Mabie, AJfred N. Lewis, Francis W. Malrlng, George D, Mitchell, W alter Nutt, 'William Jones.

E ast Orange—William E, Small, William B. Bklllman, O. F, Bailey, Jam es F. Bhepaid, J . D. Potts, George W. Lord, Percy H, Armltage, Isaac J. SIpp,

W est Orange—Edmund Johg, George N autly, BTank Bauer, Frederick J. Wolfe, ■Gottfried Fiedler, William O. Sargeant, 'Je s ie Raya, John Pefiho. Oeilnld Scliroll, Alvin W . Williams, George Mussler.

O range—John L. Yatman, Miles A. H anchett, Owen Casey.

South Orange—Winfield S. Bhann, J. Al­bert Lewis.

Mlllbum—Edward Lackner, Tracy A. Johnson.

V eronei-Jacob Tost, David H. Slayback, E arle E. Whitehomo.

Montclair—Simon V. Carmaoho,Bloomfield—John L. Poes, John T. Mur­

ray , W ard O. Thomas, Franklin A. Stone.Irvington—Charles W. Bhipley, John

Groom, F rank E, Smith, Theodore Smith W illiam Mall.

Nutloy—Edmund Wright, John j. Bres- Un,

Activities i)f , Women's Clubs

The monthly council meeting ot the Wcunan'B Club was held Saturday night. Plans tor the summer were dlsousa^. During the warm weather weekly rneci- tags will be held, probably on Monday ntghfa To-ttigbt Mrs. Henry B. Tiaylor will have tha dlsouselon elsss In charge and to-morrow the regular classes will meet,

s s •Eight members of the Curtomis Club

went to Bergen Point Saturday afternoon to A olainbeJta The affair was very In- formal and was In charge ot Mrs. j. D.

• UjSrinoott and Mra John M, Sehmldl Other outings will be planned tor later In the aummer.

The annua! lawn fete of the l^ r d of K nutnageni ot the Mary Fisber Home will

bk held on the grounds .at Teoafly Bat. nrday afternoon trom tiE to i:tii o'elixdt. There wilt be music and rMreshments. The aged guaslg will aestst In weioomlng the visitor*. Atrangements ate being made by Miss Mary A. Fisher, the ]n ^ - dsnt, mid Mrs Marion H. iSabriiA^.. of TsnUlF, ia e of the board ot msnagem.

Nine members of the He# Jeiaey Woin- ' An's Pres* piub visited the Mary Pfsber Ir ' Mesne Saturday afternoon. Hlse W ay

and Mrs. M. Dorothy Shaw the nt, reoslved them,- Thepwere

': dw home by Mlse SMiier taken on a drive Zabrisfetk one « tha

C\jrtains ClecLned*If you will drop us a card we will call for your

lace curtains, clean them at small cost, store them for you during the Summer, and return them to you in the Fall when you say so.

HVttABK’i STCW E^EAUTinit EiKMP. msw-m HALser j n u rj

We Fix Furfviture«If you have any broken pieces of furniture or

any that need upholstering, let us fix them for you during the Summer months and have them ready when you come home in the Fall, Drop us a card.

A THREE PATS’ SALE SEW AND BEAUTiruL June Sale Home NeedsWASHABLE DRESS FABRICS

Hundreds of Pieces Priced Below

Present Wholesale Cost.jlW O ER E are some of the m ost extraordinary propositions

ever made to the people of Newark in Washable Dress Fabrics. Splendid goods, fresh and fine, the best

products of the foremo.st mills; the very things that are most in dem and; nothing p asse ; no slow-selling stuff, but thou­sands of yards of bright, winsome, washable stuffs, at prices tha t will simply dum found competition because they can not be matched.

There has been no cotton goods sale in many a moon equaling this in importance.

We have planned for a trem endous business, much ad­ditional space and many additional salespeople being brought into requisition.

COLORED FABRICS. WHITE FABRICS.Irish Dim ities.

Genuine Irish Dimities, our own exclusive imported printed de­signs; most desirable for women’s shirtwaists, suits and 'I ( J c dresses; 29 inches wide; never sold for less than 25c. a yd.; one of the great features of this Three Days’ Sale at only..

Voile Suitings.Mercerized Suitings, ranking with this season’s most fashion­

able and much-in-demand fabrics; particularly nice for mountain or seashore w ear; regular value 39c. a yard ; special priced.................................................................................

Chiffon Suitings.Silk and Cotton Suitings, in a very choice line, in the newest

and most wanted shades-^a very pretty and useful fabric ; | |? C 27 inches ij'ide ; regularly 39c. a yard; at the extraordinary price of.............................................................................................

Dress Ginghoems.No less than 120 of this season’s very best styles to choose from;

pretty stripes and checks; all the standard patterns as well I A ^ C as many new ones that you will like; 27 inches wide; regu- f larly 12.^c. to ISc. a yard; in this sate at..............................

Cotton C hnllies.Sixty new and beautiful Persian patterns—stripes, all-over P c

designs; 29 inches wide; exceptional quality; value ISc. a yard, ^ at the wonderful price of............................................................ .

Persian Lawn.One of the prettiest of white fabrics, largely used for shirtwaists

and entire suits, in a large variety of designs; 32 inches wide; regularly priced at 35c. a yard; in this Three Days’ Sale at only............................................................................................ .

Poplinettes.White Imported Figured Poplinettes, exceptionally nice goods,

much liked for Summer shirtwaists; medium weight; 27 inches I A c wide; good value at 29c. a yard; special priced I Wat.................................................................................................

Fine sheer India wide; nothing nicer anywhere under 18c special selling at....

Indin. Linon,Linon; superfine finish;

a yard;40 inches | I < priced for

- S w isses.White Imported Figured Swisses in no less than twenty patterns

—neat figures and allover designs; beautiful goods that should ^ A c sell at 50c. a yard; to go In this wonderful sale at...............................................................................................

Boktistes.Highly Mercerized White Batistes that will retain their

luster permanently after laundering; 46 inches wide; regular value 50c. a yard; priced for this event at................................ 35‘

MILLINERY Undermuslins|E BEGIN to-morrow

morning ariother Millinery Sale of mere than usual

attractiveness, embracing hun­dreds of Trimmed and Un- trimmed Hats, Flowers, Feath­ers, Braids, Ornaments, etc.

A feature in this sale will be the introduction of many new styles for seaside and moun­tain wear In our great collec­tion of Trimnwil Hats at $4.75. These hats are notable for their beauty and elegance and rival many sold in other stores at from $8 to $l(f. You may pick from dozens of new styles at $4,75.

Other Trimmed Hats which are notably cheap are those sold at $7.75, $9.75 and $12.50.

Rough Braid Hata in new, large, Sailor and Umbrella shapes in black and white only; regularly $1.45; special priced 95c.

Roueh Braid Sailor Hata with silk bands, made by men's hatters; black and white only; special at 95c.

New Summer Feather Effects, Wlngfs, Breasts, Pompons, etc., in large variety.

Oreat White Coque Pompons, now so much in demand for trimming sailor hats, are here at $2.45.

Soft Satin Feathef Sweep Effects In white only; very beautiful; priced at $4.95.

Coque Effects in alt desirable colors; a large assortment at $1.49.

, >_

S a le of B o o k s

TWO SPE C IA L LOTS

lAMED for its notably fihe muslin undergarments and for the splendid values presented, our Undergarment Store comes to the fore to-day with two combination propositions that you would go a long way to match, much less surpass.

These lots go on sale to-morrow. They are truly remarkable values.

Group 1 includes Gowns, Chemises, Corset Covers, Drawers, Skirts, S ho rt S k irts, of cambric and nainsook; generously cut; care­fully stitched; elaborately trimmed with pretty laces, insertions, em­broidery edgings, hemstitching and tucks ; a very large as- P Ac sortment of styles to choose from; regular value 75c. the gar- ^ 1 1 ment; priced for this event a t .....................................................

Group 2 includes Gowns, Corset Covers, Skirt Chemises, S hort Skirts, P e ttico a ts and D raw ers, of nainsook and fine cambric; cut very full; accurately stitched; beautifully finished; daintily trimmed with Vatenciennes; Torchon and Point de Paris laces; em- QAc broidery ruffles and insertions,beading, ribbon bows, etc.; gar- ments worth up to $1.50; offered in this sale, to-morrow, at...

ShanghaiSilksTin*' for Co nf Irma, tlon and GreLduaLtlon Dresaea

|HESE are the original China Silks—genuine Shanghai imported from China, that can be washed, and washed, and washed without harm; looking always the same — always handsome. Shanghais are the

strongest and most durable of the Oriental silks. These are sold in the original papers just as we received them from China, and the best news of all is that we are going to sell them Tuesday, in 16 and 17 yard pieces (good dress lengths) at just about one-third less than regular prices:

$11.98 for $18 Pieces. $13.50 for $20 Pieces.

Attractive BooksFor C o m in u iM in m t Qin*.

M y C om m eocem eat—b«tn| * n >ord of tb« CDDimencement $1-A QExerdaes—price...................... l* v O

Alma i iu t e r Days — An efitttQy appropriate gift for tjjj High School, as well as the College graduate, In which to keep a complete record of those happy days never to be forgotten. There la a place for everything dear to $1 OQ neinory—price......................... l« U O

B ooks of Poem sIn Padded Binding.

^Poetry—Richly bound padded leather volumes go in this sale at a mostdfaiina- ttve priof-4die result of a purchase of the publishers’ overstock. Poetry and Notable book*—choice selectfona ot Ameri­can and English poets, beauttfuDy printed end bound In fancy leather covert, of­fered a t the astmilthlng specialprice.......................................... v V

These among others are Inchited: EvwaneUM Bryant

o f th a L ak* Boxiit ra m U ltfO a o tta tto u P U ffrtm 'iP ieg fw

Tor Boys.Hesty Books

Each .... *'ve*OMst SereesaaO ,**e*is

- %

18^Among i Mlaori nod Ssttler.A Fiost Rsolwaing, TboCstorSmbnstes, v Qtonds H u ^ DIvUsd, llw OoUsB Mueyon,TBrngk thoAlgor BooisH- |Q c

Each '•■*•■l•«s«■•«•'eaJ••eAe4e.jn■l*S**d*<Ses4 .■- An0(^ Hb 'IKm are: '

■BdYlMst,

Ettb ra Boy,'eChoaeo,

Jack’s word,StriSB, ■R sM ^am M im oiivr-

For Bovs.Rovof Boys'Sorfoi—10 vols. qQ c

Arthur M. WfnSeM.Putnam Hall Sorles—z vole.

Arthur M. Wkifletd.Flag of Freadom SoriM— ■jAc

a vole,—eecb...........................Captain Ralph Bonehitl.Franklin teriea of Blogra- J Pc

phy—each............ ....................wA (few ef the ttHas;Ufa H Baoadlct AraoM—Oeo. C.

HHl.LMa of JhHm Coaaar—James A,

Fronde.Ufa ot Nathaa Hala-C. M. HoUo-

wwr.CWi of FatrWk Hasiry—WllUea

Wilt.

For, Girls.Mrs, L. T. Meads’s Boots }{fee

ferO lffl-oid)......... .............. . v 7Qffltalolng-^U gbto’ ttoM oraiag.TIaioot Rosso,CUIdfan of W tton Chase,

' * Bindi ot.Chorrfoa,GIriaot Sb WotWo, O iitottlioFishloa.Rvo l i ^ F eppere Swioa AQc

—Mvtl»,-e*cli................ "OMaigant SidBoy—O u u td o Cootfn Sorioo- CAC

aech O vt® Inclodlnt—

Onr LHm Afifeoa COHris—Maty HaidtoD Wade.

Onr UttfeeCoMdtoaCooola—Elbi- IWth R. McDonald, y

Onr UtHo Pramah Cchala Blanclie McMaUttt.

G enuine Rogers

SILVERAf HaJf

Genuine Rogers Extra Plated Silverware; base guaranteed to be 21 per cent, nickel silver plating; fuD standard weight; pure silver, superior to all other goods having a similar plate, and the prices are so low that boarding-house and hotel keepers, as welt as others,' will find it decidedly advantage­ous to stock up on them.

KaH GoodsChoose here from the largest line of

waists, sweaters aiid Jackets to be found anywhere.

Ardsley’s Knit W aists in all thepopular plain shades; most unique; priced fd-50.

Blouse W aists in all ths correct styles and shades st $2.80 to fS.

Double Breaeted Coat S w eatera ;the very newest and nobbiest things for shore or mountains; In light gray and white, at $4,80.

Pony Jackets in popular shades and sveaves; very stylish; $Sto$6.

Derby Jackete, $6.78 and $7.28, Golf Veste $1 to $3.

For Men

Regsn Extra Silvw Mated Taaapooaa, regular $1.19, special 90c per set of six.

Regers Extra silver Plated TabJe- spOMs, Detemt Spooni, Medium Farits, Daaaart Itorka, legutar $Z:9B, special $ t.8 0 per *e.4f efx.

No more than two sets to any one CMtomer ef above. . IIggar To«ga, tag. 98c., special d9c. Barry 8pada», rag. fl.td. special 89c Oravy Ladfaa, rsg. «K., *pe^ 49c.

'Oyster Ladlsa, lag. |1‘9«, spec. 98c. Pla Kalvw, rag. $1.50, 7Sc.Cold MasM Pnha, «g. Ttc.Bac. 39c

Oaty ens each of Oe above to any one costOBier,

Men’s Derby Jackata—Red, grayor white; handtome and comfortable: $7.28.

M en’s Coat Sw eaters — Beuitles and lots of them to choose frim; $5

.and $6,V Neck Sw eaters, $4.Boya’ and (Hrls’ Coet S w eatare ;

far better for the youngsters than coats; $2, $3 and $3.80.

Boya’ V Neck S w eatara — All s b i ^ ; mads of purs wool yani; $1.80 to $3. *

Bey’s Ugbt Weight Jweaysi $1 to $1.71.

Added featUKS every day to W atering Pots—itpinm ed'O emmake thlnga interaating and fesc, ssc. y j tprofitable for all, spedii................i7c. lOc. s ic . 69c.

c u p the price Mats from the Trowala. made el stetl, 7c,and lOc.

papers, check th e articles you Heavy BoHd Tiewato, 29c.w ant and bring tha Hat with Garden Hand Foiln, tOc.you . Saves time— and proves Garden WaedIngiHocdcs, lOc.our ads truthful. *Pring ateel, rsg».

„ krty »9c.. at 23c.l e r i ^ ? Z S l l Lewn M 9 w e r a -T h s cslehrstoC

ragutarly t ^ c Dewey—a make of which w* have sold1 sptaai..................... ............. a s thousands In past seasons and wWch wt

Spice Cablnetsi polished htidwcod; think la the best populsr-pricsd mower nicely finished; ragulariy 11,79 and on the market to-day; here In whatever$Z.7l; ipecUl I I C A $1 Q A *'** T™ 'hoose to have K tor g )a t ..................... I . f ) V •"*' | ,O V ordinary Uwn use; ng. fj.OS 0 » / 0

Salt B o u s i fancy wood salt boxee; Garden Hoee—80 feat ef 3«ply rtgularly joc. and ] w c & JEC Best Quality Rubber Garden Mom ,49c.; i | ^ a l ............... O v Ck 4 0 with Jg-Inch brass couplings snd nossli

PsKolatnH, H.. oompletB on s hardwood, hint, hoi* isri,a. -.r^ coffw poTOlitori, ragulariy 3 C a A

^ 8 « « h $ o .lfe ; tpsdal.pFked... 0 . 4 V

Upped Measureai hssvy pnllshsd _ _ . - -\ i Window fti\d

H n Gravy Strslnerst rsguUily 1* ~ ~ ~.......... -... Door ScreensTill Berry W u h eril raiulirty QC

lOc.; $pecltl..a.................................. 0 -----

regularly st., apodal........................ f ^Roiat Pane; sheet Iron covered: reg- made door sold in Nswsrk; stra* 1.6x6,6|

nlsrly 29c. snd dSc.; 7 C 9 C. ')A o Z.BXA.S; 2.10x6.10; 1.8x7; 1.10x7; Jx7|spsdil.......................... L o Ok L y regulsreS;.: your choice of say Q Ag

Pry Pans, sheet stral; regularly 7 c ** ------lOc.; special...................................... f Screen Doers In nstund fWah; sxtrs

Fry Pan Ceverti just the | Ac 8ne In svsry wsy; itrongly built; lemtthing lo use on an ull or gas stove lU *!*•• • • *bovs; ragulariy f | 7 C

_ $1.49; apectat at.................. . I*fkwSaucepans; heavy, polfshed tin

uucepans; 2-quart; just the thing for IGiock'Dcwn Window Pramaat Dll or gas stove; regularly 25e., 1 7 c complete with brackets tod screen, 7 1 ^special................................ ............. I f without arirs; regularly 25c., a t ,

Maslln Kettles; enameled; reg' I Qc

Pie Ptatec; tin; dean nit, patent; ^ Q t \ d O W ^ _ S c r © j 6 I M |regularly lOc.; special 7c.; perfor- -Jc ------------- ------------------- ------- - ‘ '■tied bottom; regularly Sc.; special O R e a d v M a d o

Retlnned Pudding Pansi J 7 c -------------------------and 4 quart; regularly !0c.; special I steel roller tildes firmly held In pitea

Layer Cake Pans; tin; shallow layer making adjuiiment perfect; comera m«^or jeliy cake pans; 9,10 and 11 Inch; tited and glued; edges of cloth covertdlregularly Sc.; special......................... 0 hardwood, finished In oil.

Turk's Head Cake Molds 1 qc height Closed Open Regular Spedilwith tube; regularly 2Sc,; special ID

Coffee Pots; tin coffee pots slightly 22 J4 31c 28esoiled; J-quart; regularly lSc.| spe- g e

....... ............................................. 24 34 37 35e 29SSash Cord; Giant Sash Cord; 7 AC , , . , ,

100 feet; regularly 89c.; ipectal... / V **«„ 30 24 37 43C 8SC

Galvanized Refrigerator Pans— _ . .Regularly.............. 29c. 3Sc. 53c.Special...... ........... 21c, 29c. 49c. J(> 28 +2 67c B3«

ice Cream Freezere—The Gem—TTie only double action freezer ol repuU- 0 6 43c 3Betlon to-day; H*Mesta S e m n W in a o tli; ix-

2 qt. .1 qt. 4 qf. 6 qt. tra fine mesh; this will keep out the youngRegularly... f t . 8.i $2.25 $2.65 $5.3.5 mosquitoes; regularly 3c. a aq, ft.; rem-Speclal........$1.79 $2.19 $2.39 $2.98 nanU, any length, to-morrow, 2c. sq. ft.

F urniture F eaturesT his w eek will be prolific in exceptional offerines of just such fur­

niture as people are looking for at th is tim e of year. You wiU'find every piece offered of a worthy class and priced so far below the common sorts sold elsewhere that you w ill wonder how it is that anybody will pay the exorbitant prices asked elsew here.

Any of these pieces, whether special priced or regular, can be bought on our popular Club P lan , m aking It easy for anyone to pos­sess all the furniture needed to properly equip their home without financial inconvenience.

R,eed R.ockers>Nice, room y, comfortable rockers, e s­

pecially liked by ladies; strongly built of round and flat reeds of best quality, with continuous roll arm and top, w ith 'r ee d s woven round th e base as indicated in the picture. Seat of closely woven cane; run­ners and woodw ork of maple; all parts shellacked in natural color; selling here at th e m odest price of

PORCH R-OCKER.SThese are so popular that we buy th^m by the

carload, and we sell hundreds every year. The chairs are exactly tike the illustration; have flat slats in back, and .seat is of flat reed; base ' work and jo irti' strongly put together; finished in light natural color; also in a nice shade of green. We offer this exceptional little rocker at the diminutive price of

7 5 cOther rockers in tremendous variety; $1.25 upwards.

Here Is another Porch Rocker with framework of all clear maple stock; back and seat of reed; size of seat 16x21; arms broad and comfortable; joints and base work strongly put together; shellacked in natural color; also painted green; very pretty in either finish ; a roomy and comfort­able, serviceable chair; price only

$ 2 . 2 3 .A rm chairs to match at same price.

NORRIS CHAIRSThess itrongty built, roomy, comfortable Morris

Chairs, just like the tllustratioa, are built of oak In golden finish, also in mahogany finish ; a practically new design, with just a bit of carving on the front and back; adjustable to almost any po tion , giving eaee and comfort; cuahtons made of velour, red and green ribbod, and In figured eftocts in green, red and other color combinations ; felcely tufted and so ft; the regular price' of thesfe chairs complets Is $ i z ; we offer a tlmlt^quantlty thia week at the spedai price of

$ 8 . 3 0 .Pretty Dressersa

Just like the Ittostration; built of ■ oa|«, nicety. finished la golden coior; may be had alsd In natural oak and plain, yet attractive slylfe, ot ikWch we sen many; top 40 Inches long- 22 Inches wide; French plate bevetod srirrw, 22x28; cast brasshandles; very low priced at A.

$ 13 .

ii. -.t A-i'.! f r ’

DR. TOWNSEND ON PATRIOTISM

Orange Pastor Delivers Sermon on the Meaning of the Ccn-'

tennia! Celebration.

SYMBOL OF DISPATCH RIDER

A t an »w>roprl*te begirniji* to iho «elebmflcn ol the cenleniiltil a sermon oil ■•PalHotiem” was delivered by Rev. Ur. Charlea Townaend, pat tor of ihe rira t Frcgbyterlan Church, Orange, yealerday m ornlta. In a few years Ihn 'Old F lra f’ •rill etlebraie Us double centennial. Or. Townsend gave a review of the problf.nn of modern tlmoa. and denounced altenipta to curb the power of Btatehoud, He epohe on the teal, "W liat Meaneth TIili?" aay- tn ( In part:

■’This uueatlon of old may well be re­peated by thoaa who behold the atrecta and avenues of our city adame with tiio arlmaon of our national and beautiful amblein. They aee a ghoitly and lierolc flaure' In bronae mulhed In awaihlug olotbea until next F riday; they hear of .paradea and proceaalone. of banquets and oratlona, and very naturally they aak the queaUon, ‘W hat means this?' And the anawar can he eaally stated. W# mean by this th a t Orange palrlotiain Is breatn- Ipg deeply, aaelna clearly thinking fer­vently, moviDS energellcaliy.

"There ii patriotism In (bis common­w ealth and Ju it now It la taking thia len n . W e believe that there Is ao much of thla exhilarating spirit in the air that not a ilngle little ourly headed Italian boy afaall crowd hla way Into the maae of l i t t l e th a t preaemly will be grouped awar our ancient graveyard and, looking upon th a t bronre figure of a young man, ■hown In tha act of proudly delivering Me dlapiitch to W ashington—not one such little ellen child but should feet In his h ea rt th a t the Dispatch Rider years ago did something for him; that the Revuhi- Hon m eant aomething for those of Italy a t te-day, end of every other nation eeml- dng hither of their strong, virile classes to begin a new life beneath the American tu n and atara.

A fter paying tribute to pnlrlotlem nnu aontrastlng with it anarchy, Ur. Town- aend told of the Inlluonca exerted opon the Bolution of the Immigration problem ^ the American public school system. He portrayed the type of man produced by anarchy as contrasted with the tipc developed by patriotism. Continuing, he said;

“Wa cannot hate a thing well unless we can see some other thing that we enn love better. The beat way to make people hate crime la to Incite them to love order; tho best way to foster a hatred of the icono- eiast, wltb his despoiling hand, in to en­gender a love for the man whose Ideal ot life la conatructive.

"Tou will preoently believe tha t this tyuth waa In the heart and mind of the a r W every minute of thd time when ho was Cashlonlna In d a y the features of the Dispatch Rider, and was the dominating Influence in the persevering heart ot Pavht I/. Pearson during these many months devoted by him to this great com­ing avtmt.

"For there he standa, this rider, on ths eorasr of our cemetery—a cemetery where Ue the bones ot Revolutionary heroes,

‘ a ceinaterr once misused by British occu- pancy, and he stands there In the a tti­tude of the faithful patriot, who a t last .gappotedly delivers Into the hands ot Oeorga Waahington a t Morristown certain dJapatches committed to hie care for 'de­livery. I t la the Idea of the constructive against the Idea of the destructive."

CENTENNIAL OF ORANGE

UNDER WAY

bw n fflfifil with p ro p h ^y I could not have done better thiw to hn\> welted for the opportune moment for the prtMn- tatlon of Ihle beautiful emblem. The flitK l«, ao to apeak, the connecting link be­tween the ehiireh and echool, thoae twin monumenia of the wtinderful. gmeroua cosoperatlon of my beloved people. I t (■ connected with the church beoauae the Catholic motto la 'Ood and wiuntry.' Ii la connected with the echool fo r the rea- ton th a t there the fu tu re clfltsma are educated in all the prliiclpEeA which go to niukp up i^trlotlem ; there our children are tnatnicted with rcKurd to tiv'lr civic dutlea; there they are in itn ic icd with rein^rd to upholding th a t beiintiful em­blem and even dying fur It. No m atter where Its enemiea come from, whether from abroad, on the i*ea o r in our mldat, (hey are enernlfit who, like viperj», grow up and Hiaert themnelvea In opposlilan to the dug.

“ Ill the long ago, nay nfty yearn, there wr-rc thone who called Into question our loyalty. Some there are to-duy who cavil a t onr Joyutty. If there are any of them hire 1 InvKe them to look a t thin crowd, to look at our cemetery, (hal'n acre, where the rrtoundn were decorated only a few dayn ago with the Hag, point­ing onl the renting place of many on Atnrricaii hero.

“ You will notice the Starn and 8ir1i>«n vlnlhlti eveiywhere, and while th e ie dom- hiatc, the centennial coIoch a re yellow and white. The old Firehltecti bqlU la't- te r than they knew, and 1 want in con­gratulate Mr. Plerenn upon aelecUng tho papal ro ion for the centennial.''

An he concluded Father F*lemiitg pointed to the papal tliiKr which was hung from one of the windows of Colombus Hull. He then turn<;d, and. tak ing Mr. Pier­son by the bund, presented him to the audience and led In giving three chcerH for the mnti who had originated the idea of observing the centennial, Mr, Pierson then proposed three cheers for Fatti«^r Fleming.

The oration of the day on 'T !ie Flag «nd Ihe Celebration'* w as deUvered by Alderman Thomue A. Davis. He said in p a r t ;

fle llirlo n a n d th e P U k .“\V« have the honor to-day of Inaugu­

rating the ceremonies which will continue during the week, and w hat more appro­priate event should m ark thiH opening than the prrsentallon of the S tars nnO Stripes on the tgord'i Day to a church and school. It shows th e respect th a t re­ligion has fur our ftng and th a t our fla^ has for religion, One is entwined with the other; each supports the o ther; and BO lung as th is continues, so long will our country and its institu tions thrive, grow, broaden and progrcHs. ITndcr the folds of the flog and within the shadow of our church and school, we iiinugunitL< the celebration of our city 's centennial.

'T h in k of what our flag m oans to relig­ion! The fathers of our country bellnvpd th a t without God they could have no h id ­ing government. They wrote down a t the beginning of their DecliirailoTi of Indepen­dence tbelT belief In (lod and th a t >I« had endowed all men with certa in Inalien­able rights.

*'Our fathers can tell us of the quiet little village to which they cam s half a century »go. But U was 100 years iigu th a t the name of Orange came into ofll- ciai being by the Incorporation of the community Into h m unicipality o f that name. W h who were born here hftv^e seen our own deHtInles and the destinies of our city, shapt'd in the path of rlgliteousness by our belovc-d piiHtor, ^ i h e r Fleming, who is to-day the oldeet resident pastor In the Oranges. On all sides to-day, Irre­spective of creeds, politics, race o r color, he Is acknowledged to be the man who. by his untiring seal for rlghtoouanesp. his luve of tru th and his hatred of evil in till its forms, has euertt'd the g rea test In­fluence for the pest q u arte r of a cen­tury In upbuilding and m aintaining In this community the highest type of cttlienshlp to be found anywhere, having regard to morality, Justice und decen<‘y. He has mnde the Oranges better and sweeter places to live In. To this work he has given hla life. In the presence of this vast muHUude, In the presence of the people of the Oranges and of the Slate of New Jersey, I pay this tribute, a trib ­ute of love and affection, a tribute abounding In sincerity, truthfulneaa and Justice.*'

CALLS UPON cmZENS 10 THROW OFF SnOH A

K*v. Jaltn M. Thom as O w laroa th a t Krw J r r s a x A>vcx H ad

Traltorona HrarS.Npw Jprsvy's palrlutk] ollliena w ria

l•ul1r(l uputi 10 rsmovc the ■tlcma rn tln g nil Hie namviif this S tale In un address rtr- Hvert’d lit ihv pslriolle service held in OrHiiae Tlwntri'. yeslerduy aliernoon, by Ri'v. Jnlin M. Tliomaa. pastor uf (he Ar- ilnaloii Avniiie I’reabylerliin Church. lOi.st Oran*e. Mr. ThomnH declared (hat this i-imiiiioiiwwiltl) was slln*ln* with l lu sliame of the corrupt deeds of the o rlnxin / rt-preseiituUves of the past. He said th a t the m!sdi'«d» of the past ahuuld serve us all Imentlvc fur the people of to-day to remove Iho stigma which hud earned for this commonwealth Ihe title of "T ratlur mate." In defense of tho real patriotic eitUens Mr. Thomas declared that New Jersey was never a traitor a t heart, as live majority of Jerseyites had alw ays labored for the development of the noblest kind nf patriotism.

Mr. ThomoB was the principal speaker at the service, wliti'h marked the opening exerdses of the centennial cctebralion. More than u thousand people were present.

In his opening rem arks Mr. Thomns paid a tribute to David L. Pierson, pres­ident of the Centennial Assoclntlon, tor hlH energy In b r i - fn g nbout the celehra- llnn. The speaker then explained th a t there were two kinds of Interest In the piist-oiie that ot the aiiHuuurian, who had limply fallen In love with the Hines long dead; the other, the InleroBt of men who consulted the records and deeds of the past with a view to Bdvaiielng prog-

. — . . . — Continuing,

(Continued from H rat Page.)'

PROGRESS IN D iaTED BY BROADENING SYMPATHY

n cv . W. R. liliNti P rearh iitg Abowt O ii t ra ii l j i l , CnntrBBtP M a le rla l

anU gplrllmnl A4rnni*r.8p^‘<khig on the lubject, "A Ciilxt'n jf

No l!Uy," yeai«r<Jay, Hev. W aller it. Hum. uf iluf First Unliarltii) Church of Urangf^. "old, In part:

"It iH not the y^nri, but whnt 1b drmB in Iham that really cauiitu. And In the Tlilitgij done ihB luBt century easily sur-

ill] thnt. went before. Oii^ hundred ypsirB iigu no nqin could iravcl fneicr than Abrulian]. Hpvoch wan limited to the cBJiymK power ct the hum an voice, Thi, buitli' of New Orleans w&a fuught and woi) h'Hrly a week afte r peace had been arroriKcU between tho belligerent naUone.

"And yet. In Npite of the rapidity of our ae(*mluK progrene, our real advance ta nnl nor 'BBurlly BO great. The Rpeed a t which fmu tmvejfl, a f te r all, Is relatively

impiirtunt thun the motive which tn- I ho travel, TJie telephone eervee

equally wr-ll (lip sinner nnd tho saint. It Is tlii» broudening sym pathies, the grasp tt! fiimlamental prlnclploH, in the higher eiimdiinlB *>t wurlh, th a t we are to look for real prutfrees and elablJIty,

"In Orunifp, the cenlermlal of whose hirrti we telebralo tbl* week, religious synipalliy is nirong between the denoni- InHllons. Tlis Mlnlfttorial AKSUClnllun, Which Is hardly two yeiin* old, huii brought the iiilnlsteifl clOBcr together, and a bcttei undrstiindlng prevails to-day than ever bcifore of the common work In which all are engaged. In the things really worth while, a larger sym pathy and a larger helpftilneMB, our oily Is fIJling a large place.''

ORANGE'S PART IN THE POLITICAL AWAKENING

r.i

Ip Iha untlrlnc aBergy, isa l and patrio t­ic davotion of a, man whoae aim haa been

vto do things for the uplifting o( th is com­munity—Bov. H. P. Plsmlng."

DwBlel A. D a g a n ’a A ddress,—Dt yroaoBting tha flag, Dtuilrl a . Dugan ■aidt

, "W ith their trlenda uf the allied Cath- oUo ooclotlea, the members of Brunch Nu. li tU ttric t A, St. P atrick 's Alliance, con- rilUr th a t they are alnguluriy honore.1 A th is opening day of the centennial to have the privilege o t presenting to Co­lumbus Hall the moat beautiful emblem on Qod's footatool. It la right nnd upprii- jprtate th a t thla emblem should e.un>e from

; 'a soolcty made up of men who are Irlali- men or descended from Irishmen. St. John 's Church la the pioneer of uU the Catholic churchea of Essex County out­side of Newark. I ts congregation line al­ways been m ade up mainly of Irish and (tsscendante o t Irish. The aohooL which ta conducted a s p art of the great work done within th e walla ot Columbua Hall, la the m other o f all the parochial aohoola of T sw x County outside of Newark. It gtanda to-day pre-eminent nmong the Sehoola of Its grade. Columbua Hull la .u monument to the tireleaa. energy, genius and culture of F ather Fleming."

After referring to some nf Ihe deeds uf Rflshmen to tho Revolution, Mr. Dugnn eoniinued:

"Wo make no apology for presenting a flag to Columbus Hall. We rest ae- eure and confident on the truths of Iila- tdry. W e know th a t In Cniumbus Hall and In 8t. John 's Church the hlgheat patriotism Is laugh'll ''- - y lh a t the iing comes next to Q ofl.' 'i rteTefure, on he- half of orir branch of the St. P iurlek 's Alliance of America, I present to I'olum- bus Hall ^hls s ta rry banner and with It goes the pledge of every CalhuHe nnd Iriah heart, that In the providence of Hod t t i radiant stripes and brilliant atars shall be reserved while life shall last."

The flag, which was slretclied aerosB W hite street from the ehureh to the hall, w as unfurled u# Air. Dugan concluded and the children sang "The S tar Spuugled •an n e r." At etlluti side o t the large hnn-

' ttir are slreamer».fa th e r Flftiiliig, tn oceeptlng the gift,

w as given an enlhu,slttsitc ovation. 81neo hia return from Eurette a year ago the. Clergyman has rellhquisltrtl much of the trork which lie formerly did. and II Is aaly on rare occasions ilitii Ills patlsh- Ittners are addressed tiy him. When (inlet U d been restored bn aalil:

" I accept with great pteaaure this beau- , tiful emblem of our cnuiitn" rnuii the Bt.

f tltr lek Alliance, and I warn to tel! a of hiBlory. Twf'lvf ytfirH ngn, after

i "Wb hqd cnterisi upon th«? of rolumbiiBV B a ll 8- committee from the 8i. Prt(rltkV AIIkin<^ cam# to me iimJ Bald that they

•food ready to preHem un American flagi ia fly *ver th« Bchool. T was taken ooine- [• .W a t by surprise. We had an Amcrlt’an

l|g4|. ^be Bilk flag which belnngeu lo the If. M. C. la. XT,, ami one thut belongf>d 10 the old lemperane# society already in-

the building. I was nut quits pre- » fared to display the Itiig outside the

1, TlUltdlng, and I told fhe committee to watt for a more opportune moment, if I had

Ilrv. Adalph R oeder P r ra e l.e s 'What It Means to He C llisrn

of tHr City,Rev. Adolph Reeder spoke a t Iho Now

Church, Orange, yeaterday

■ r

morning, nri 'W hat Doe« I t Mean to B# a CItixen of

Orange Tb-dayT" He based his remuika upon a gradual change In theology, wliere' by the thought th a t Christ died for niun had b««u plH«ed In raUicr fHlrer JuxeuuuHi- tlon with the thought th a t Christ lived for man.

" I t may Heem R fa r cry ," said Ihe speaker, "from the vital change of a theologle concept to tha Interpretation of local symptoms of an aw akening of the civic ccmBclouBncss. F or ihe present awakening of the civic conaclousnesH and of the civic conBClence which New Jersey IB experiencing In company with eveiy other Btnte, Is nctuully In Its eurhe^ci origins traceable back lo (he fundumenral change of thought from the form ilmt 4 patriotic cltlsen dies for his ermniry to Ihe form that he lives for his country.

"We In Onmge have a large and vital Interest In what Is going on In New Jer­sey In the way of aw akening, since many of the things recriitly accomplished In tho Slate may be said to have had their In- MlumeutB in Essex County and In the Ur- angea.

‘'F o r Instance, if any one will take the trouble to trace the origins of the limited franchise movement and live regetiernlod m ental attitude toward aggregate powder which that measure Involves, he will rind himself, If he he a cltlsen of the Orangus, (luite »eor homo, for the nam es of the New England Society, the CK’lca (Tub. tho State Federatlnii, w'Jrlcb has Us hpudqunr- tprs In Orange, are prom inently usHnclatert with this result. And If he will da the Huiiic with the Railroad Commls.^^on tund vvllh the Potable W ater Coninilflsltm. he will tlrul the same to be true. If he wnll losik Into legislation referring to the tvcI- furc **r wiiinen und 'Children he will llnd. In the forefront of Hhe work, fhe legis’n- tlvc iMunmlltcs' of (he W oitiun’s d u b . If he UNka whU'li 1» the ac tual civic honie conin' of tilt' OrHiiges he may find him- Molf coimhig for nnswer the sam e title If he asks lor the fiiHter of the word 'clvk's' lirt now iifit'il. Ii# vi'lll llnd Dr. Henry Ran- diill WtiHe living in tinst Orange. If he w ants the names of men ccmnecled jwKh the niovcnienl for refium ot lnrge In the S tstr. he W'lU not have very fur to go to find Iho residetice of Ki-nutor Everett Colby."

onu atul avoiding mlslakoa. ho Raid:

Sow Jrraoy No* k« K orinoato ."Both for Ihe achlevemenU of which

We have a right to bojuit, and for tha d is­honor* which It U our duly to obliterate, wi' men of New Jersey would do well to recull the day* of old. llunlel W ebster declared that he would pronounce no en­comium upon MasHachuBctta, slnee she needed none. New Jersey ciinnol claim to he that fortunate. To be eure iher* la Trenton, and Prhicelon, ami Muninoulh, imU poeelhly they may ho thought to epeah for Ihemaelvea, with eloquence nearly equal to that nf Concord nnd L ex­ington anti Runker Hill. 1‘erhaiis, If we had had a WoliatiT to erato upon the Hell (if Moumoulli. where, despite treach ­erous leadership and terrifln heat. Ameri­can I mops were not wllhoul honor: per- hnps. If Iherc had been some Emerson to eehn round the world ihe shot of the em- hnllled farmers of ITliieiton. our caeo would nut be ns had as II Is iialnled,

"But we did not have a W ebster; we have not produced on Emerson. We did. however, crtuite the t'a in jen nnd Amboy Ksllwrjy,' which owned this State for a gencrntlnni Wn have had cities which have suffered eruelly from the exemption of eorporaic properly from taxation. We have had Legislatures which have cringed BUb.servlenllv 1” comnum gamblers. Wo have earned the aligmn of the 'T raitor Blste' for ematlng orgaiiliathins to do within sister commonweiilthe what they eniild not sceure [..TmlHslon from those communwesMhs hi do.

' liul the Htiiic nf the Canuien and Ariihoy.' us we have been called, Is not the true New Jersey. This cnmmnii- wealth WHS never, at heart, a Irnltof. Never did we hitend to do that which etilltled us in that name, Ever the heart* (if our people have beaten true for all th a t Is best and noblest In American life. We celebrate the founding ol n Puritan eom- muiilty which sllll, nt the ai'Uing apart of ths Oranges 10* years ngo, was Fiirltsn in blood and spirit. Whatever honor at- laches to the Puritans of New England Is'longs not less to their brother* of ths town on ‘the great Pa.ssnlc River.'

Xtnte to Be I 'ro iid Of."Let u» testify to the world that we

have also a coiiimonweuUh to be proud of, tluu we boast the honor of living in a town named after some of ihc nobleat patriots the world has ever seen, which In the past 100 year* has come to be no mean rity, and which, please Ood, shall remain through all the coming years a city of pure homes nnd of brave nnd honest men nnd women, w'ho purpose to do their full quota to help wipe nut all the slain tram the record of the common­wealth, and to allow the eelehranta of tho second centennial yet worthier mem­ories than those which we are privileged to call to mind to-day."

Tho opening of the meeting was a n ­nounced by a bugle call, given by Fred W. Fort Jr., bugler of Battery A. Field Artillery, of East Orange. The opening PTayer wan offered by Rev. George L. Moody, of the South Orange MethdaiSl Church, and tht' acrlptur:il selection was given by Rev. George P, Eastman, pastor of the Orange Valley Congregational t'luirch, who read from an old Bible, which had been used for swearing In elec­tion oflleers In Orange for several years.

Mr. Pierson delivered a short address of welcome, In which he expressed Ihe hope that the day would not he far dist tout when all nnlninslMcs and discontent would he cllinlnateil between man nnd man. and that the day wonltl soon come when the brotherhood of man W'as

fuel and not a fancy. He nrged hi* audience nut to forgel (he stirring deeds of the past, when (lien and women look their lives tn their hands for the ennae nt ilbeyty. Mr. F'lerson suggested ihot Ihe people of the Oraiiges should now Mini to the future nud work shoulder to shoulder for the development of evco

more glorious commonwealth. Follow­ing a review ot many nf the historic scenes now passed away Mr. Pierson losed his address by expressing the hope

that all the realdents and visitor.* would assist In making the cclehrayon a suc­cess.

Patriotic song* were sung by the mem­bers of Orange Maennerchor, under <he ditecilon of Frederick G, Handel. The service closed with prayer and the hen- edl(!tlon by Rev, Henry C. Stone, curate of Grace tthurch, Ontnge. Taps was tlier. Bounded by Bngter Fort,

MONTCLAIR C U S S REUNION.Alniunl of 1M07 H old D liiii#r in

York, ttl Wh1«b F on rfeeu Ar# Prraeiit*

A raimlnn of (ho boys In tho claua of ■W. Montclair High HchooL, whs h«ld at the Yale New York, Friday nlgiiti t wan (lie Ilrat clxua reunion since gruO' UAtlon ten yimre ugo, and twelve of the twenty-four boys who received their dlpJomtiH th#n and two who wpre mem here of Ihc cUiiia for p art of (he course sa t down to the dinner.

Robert B. Woodward, of New York, who wiw prcaldfnt of the claas during Its senior yvar, was toastm ustor. A slivnt toast wns drunk to the three mrrnbarH of the class who have died. I*Kters wore rend from members who are living at too greul :i dlmance to attend, uinl a report was made of every naecnber. *\lfrvd Fop- pea, the honor man of the class, is In Qerinauy, fruncejttiful In conimen-ial pur- suits: Charles K. FhilllpB. who wua the best all-armind athlete of the school.wrote from Sealtlo, Wflsh , where "limber Uindfl and timber cruising," according to h!s letterhead, occupy hla attention. George A. DroRtc is also a t Seattle. William H. Baiting, a lawyer, wrote from W al­lace, Idaho, expressing regret :it being unable tu uttend. H enry \V. Singer, now profe'^sior of mathemutlca a t tlu- Fnlver- Bity of the Pacific, Bun Jose, Cal., went an account of the earthquake uf last yoar.

Tliuse present were HaatlTiBs Swenar- lon. Walter Howell. Oliver K. Fhulgeley, MiTWln ( \ Berrien and Stanley Huveral, of Montclair; W alter Ijathmp, Wtlllam F. Oakley, Feglntild TraiitBCholJ, Rich­ard II. S. Francis, Robert B. W'oodwrtrd. Dr. Tasker Howard, of New York; Oua* tav Hornfeck, of Verona; L esHe Ludlam, of Fast Orange, and F. W. E. Mlnder- niann, of Dover.

BETTER GOVERNHENT IS URGED IN THE ORANGES

B r « to r H ateh lem i Mnya <*W« H ale ateatiK g «ud We DUHke tu

0 c Hubbed."Rev. Charles E. Hutchison, ^rector of

C htlat Church, East Orurige, preached a reform aorroon to lUa congregation yeater- day morning, taking aa his text "And when he came near he beheld the city, and wept over I t/ '

"Blnca the Oranges constitute a com­munity so large." sriJd Mr. hutchl^on "we w ant to see them better governed and fo r many reuaona. We hate stealing, and we dlalJke to be robbed. We should like to atop the waste of public money and dlahoneaty and cctyruptlon which goes one. B ut I prefer to remind you of an­other se t of oonilderatlons. A cUy ia Jti* habited by men and women. All of them irti affected aomewhat, and some of them a g rea t deal, as to th d r happlnesa and character, by the conduct of the city gov. ernment. It directly helps or hlndera the m orality of the people.

'"There are lawti to safeguard righteous- ncaa and datiency which may or may not be enforced. The saloona may or mn> not bo allowed to sell to minors and b' persona already drunk, and to keep open a t all hours, Gambling hells and dens of vice may be allowed to flourish openly and do their beat to a ttrac t custom or a vigorous war may he waged against them. Of course prohibitive measures do not mnke people righteous, but where lempla- ilon la reduced, dsuger la reduced also, nnd the harder It ia for vice to thrive."

CHURCH CORNER-^TONE U IDM on teU lr and Newark Clergym en

OAlelate at Rxerclaea of NewProabyterlsti Edtflre.

The corner-stone of the proposed Pres­byterian church a t Norwood and Inwood avenuefl. Upper Montclair, was lold Sat­urday afternoon, with appropriate cere- monies. The coat of the building nod the land on which the edifice will be located la the gift of Timothy Q. Scllew. The building will be constructed of im p rock a t an estimated cost of 110,000.

Rev. Thomas Morgan, pastor of Cedar Avenuo Preabyterlan Church, Montclair, had charge of the affair. Rev. Edwurd Payaon, pastor of Qraco Presbyterian Church, that town, made the opening prayer. Rev. I>r. Llewellyn S. Fiilm»*r. of the F irst Presbyterian Church. Monl- clalr, r#nd the aerlpturea, after which Rev. Dr. Orville Reed, pastor of Trinity Presbyterian Church^ of Belleville, and Rev. Robert S. Inglla. of the Third Prep- bytertim Church. Newark, made inb flrrsans. The corner-stone was Uild by iMr. Morgan, assisted by Mr. Sellew. It con­tains a copper-lined box. In which w-rre placed a Bible, copies of several rollgloue papera, an American flag and Newm-k and New York newspapers.

The prayer of dedication was offered by Mr. Reed. About 300 people wltiiesed ihe ceremony. It ia expected that thi? tu-w edlilce will bo ready for occupancy nhout October 1, and will seat about 2S0 pi^oplo.

Juatico Coaiieii and hold without bail for tb f cratMl Jury. Hla brother went betor* Juatlco Horliert Smith aihrti secured a war­rant for the arrest of constable. This was given to Chief o r Police Flynn to serve. Oilman henrd of the warrant, how­ever, and to avoid tb# humllistlon of the arrest, went to the utfle# Of Justice Smith luid surrendered hlmiwlf.

The JURllce paroled him on his own recognlBuiice.

JV» ‘•Cfiifli" A»rr—M «xtr« p«rMal- s ta tM e d w tua wacbmrga »& »uaut

FAITHFUL AT SUNDAY-SCHOOLTw o D loom fleld H caidents P reseu t mi

E v e ry S ession In the Past Seven Years*

The fifty-fifth Mimlversary of the F irst B upllit Bunday-school of Bloomfield was celebrated in the church last night. The pusior, Rev. H enry 8, Potter, made un address, a f te r which an anniversary hyhin, written for th e occasion by Isaac Pardee Williams, th e oldest member of the church, who Is in his ninety-seventh year, was sung. H arry L. Osborne, the secre­tary, read the annual report, which showed the enrolment to be 5G0; largest attendance, 121; smallest, 177, and Mie average, 308.

Miss Marlon E. Pierson and Charles F. H erring were reported to have been present every Sunday for seven years, Lind Mrs. M artha Spear has not mlssad li session lik two years. Mr. Herring has missed seven Sundays In fourteen yearn; Howard Ferguson, ten Sundays in nine years; Milton 8. Cadmus, eleven In nine years; F ra n k C. Foster, sixteen In seven years; V irginia M. Brooks, ten In six years, and Mrs. Willis Hubbard, six in four years.

Tho am ount contributed during the year for missionary purposes was There were recitations by the puplla. sing, ing by the school and selections by a male quartet.

After the exercises Frank B, Stone, superintendent o f the school fop twenty- rive years, presented a bouquet to Mra. Potter, wife of the pastor.

LICENSE HGHT PROGRESSES.(IIJbpiim* [.eoanc o f yinntrlmlr

t'lren in ie P e tit io n froni House to H oase .

Tlif* Cllispiifl' League of Montclair, r - cejitly organised to oppose the granting uf addliionui llcenHOd phices In that town, met yesterday afternoon a t A»sT>clat‘on parlors. The executive board, cunslstln; of I'lefildent D ecatur M. Sawyer, Vlce- PresIdeniB T. Q. Sellers, H. H. Dodd, C. I. Reeves. Shephard Rowland, Philip Dore- muH, Fred E. Kip, W. L L. Aduins, Ar­thur C. Harris and H erbert H. Bldiitp i* Treasurer George S. Jellernon and Seer tary Louis llunaon, preHcnied copies of petition which will he circulated from house to house agHlnst the granting i?f any Itcehaes this >'ear. In addition to the petition, ihe commiut'e furnished cards to be presenled^to the councllmen and to Mayor Metiry V. Crawford.

Another Bt«-p taken was to secure the town's polling list. All residents of Mont claIr wilt bo asked to sign the petition und ibeir signatures wlU bt* comparM with the vethif Hat* 41 is the intention .to presi'ut the petitions to council with the alalemont that of the total a certnlo miin* ber are legal voter's. Kev, Orville Reed stated (hat he believed more Diiin tvo- third.'? of !h# voters would record ihem- selvcM Kfl being opposed to the extens'on- of the liquor irafflc In Montclair.

Til# Montclair Mlnlateriul AasocloMon Is also actively engaged In n campjr-rn agahiHt the granting of licenses. This body is working along the same line the Citizens' Iscague and h*is issued Jn- dlvldual carda, which the members of the nssocltiUon are having distributed, re­questing coundlmen to vote against any licenses.

FATHER HALL GIVES THANKS

Am os H. Van Horn ltd

Not* tha "No. 7 3 ” boforo •n to rlng atoro.

Pay imw or on account—order delivery now or later—“anyiblnf' goes, so tong as you BUY now!

Backward Spring has a lot to answer for; it’s left us with

Heavy Stocks cf

M ATTIN G

HARRISON RESIDENT SAVES LIFEt'llft^ ii Hiiwerif JttukpN Into Waiter

find HeacneN Man W ho Had F allen Overboard,

Cllflon S. Bowers, of 36 Reynolds ave­nue, Ilurrlson, son of former Fire Olilrr William Bowers, of that (own. dlslln- guished hiJiiself yesterday afternoon hy saving the life of John Kelley, of Hast Newark, who fell overbfjard from tlie yacht Helene, owned by George Stumpf. of Harrison, a menihar of tho Passaic River Yacht Club, xis the boat wns pahy- Ing under tho Lehigh Valley bridge, IS’eW- ark Bowers, who la a good swim­mer, was on the oulJng of the John Brown Association of East Newark, and was re­turning fr>sni Staten Island on Ix^ard of tJie sdilhoat Ethel, As the la tter and the Helene were passing each other under the railroad bridge Kelley was standing on ih© stem of Ills boat, waving a flag. ILi hocama overbalanced and fell In the water.

The mishap was not noticed by any one on either boat except Bowers, who dived Into the river and sw^am to where Kidley wqa battling for his life. He was soon alongside the struggling man. and, grab­bing him by (he hair, kept him afloat un^ (ll the Ethel, which had turned around, got close tb thetn.i' Both were pulled aboard, nearly exhausted. Kelley was In p re tty bad shape, but after u vigorous nibbing became all right,

Swatli O range P r iest ExpresNeit HlaG ratltad e a t R ece iv in g 9l,t£00

P a rse o n Occaalnn of Job llce ,At all the rnaRses In the Church of Our

Lady of Sorrowsi South Orange, yesitr- day morning, the poito r. Rev. Jam es J. Hall, gave thanks for the purs© of |T,;X0 recently presented to him by hla psrlab- lonei'iL The priest said he presumed It was In order for him to extend his heart­felt thanks for the very generous purs© given him by the members of the purlah cm the occasion of tho twcnly*flfih anni­versary of, his ordination to the priest­hood.

"F irst of a ll," continued Father Hall. I should thfink Almighty Qod for sparing me to celebrate such an ©vent. The aver­age Ilf© o t u priest la about thirteen years, so you see I, indeed, have much to be UiRukfiil for."

The clergym an also averred th a t he was given to understand by the commlttco hiivhig in charge ih© recent canvass of Ihc parish th a t the movement met wUli 4i sincere and hearty response In ilio flir- fvrent homes, nnrl that fact added grcaily to the presentation. In concluding, Futlu-r H.'ill called attentioii to the faci that he was nulhorllatlvely Informed th a t «mc kT ilif* leaders In the plan to raise money fur lilt* purse lie received was llic Ul© Chari*..s J. Barrett, nnd lie desired to say he was grateful to him.

- b u t at the p rice cu te Just put on 'em they’ll soon be thinned o u t -end And other o w ners I

Evsry w ssve th e worthy, relia­ble, dependpbl# so rt — fresh Im­ports from forem ost m akers—clev­er designs and colorings—many new effects never before present­ed I

AT SUCH figures you’d do well to buy NOW and have us RESERVE ssise tions ff you d id n 't w ant ths goods at th a m om ent I

KNOCKED DOWN BY a C I,IS T .Adam W a lla h Wax p arry in g Bahy

D ow ii M onntafn Arena© W liea ColllN loa Occurred.

Arlam Wallah, of 13 Merchant street, who was carrying hla ten-weeks-old (laughter, and who with his Wife and a friend, was walking down Eagle Ruck avenue. W est Orange, yeaterday after­noon, wa.R run down by a bicycle ridden hy John

The 25c. grades The 30c. grades The 35c. grades The 40c. grades The 45c. grades TheSOc. grades

CHIRESE AND JAPANESE WEAVES:“ Nowl4c Yt

Now 19c Y( Now 23c Yd Now 28c Yd Now 35c Yd Now 40c Y( Now 45c Yd

Frank, seventeen years old. of 16 Falrvlew avenue, Frank had lost noti- trol of his wheel, which waa runnlnir away with him. Wallah waa knocked down and the bahy fell on Its head on the roadway.

The child was rendered unconaclou* and was taken to the utflee of Dr. J. Minor Maghee, who said he did not think It waa serloiiply hurt. Prank was arrested by Policeman Lien, and thla morning was fined IlD. Wallah took the child to hi* home In th is city, saying he would have It attended to by his family physician.

—Speaking of floor coverings, there’s a lot of rugs in large sizes at snap figures! ________ _

Not© 73" Before Kuterlng Wtore,

Imos H. Yaii lorn, Itil.7 3

III.ARKIST ST„>s©mr Flats© liitreatg Nanrark, N* il,

Frve lleliverleH Any>vb©rv In (if© gtat©. IdTfNtruteit CatiiluHiJoFree. Both *l*ho*iPN 5MO,

, lA tiJO l NT.Sj

EVENTS IN THE ORANGES.How Good Food may

Turn to Poison.

HUSICALE BY JUNIOR PUPILS

WANT NO HORE SALOONS.

THE CENTENNUL LUNCHEON.It w i l l Be flerx-ed F r id a y a t fh e

F aarx C 'oonty C ooB try CInl. to n U fIn g a iH h e il Men.

Ira A. Kip Jr., the chairman, and Ed-

HOW ORANGE GOT ITS NAME

0R A N G E b r a n c h o f f i c e , ^ n f ip a rk CvtHing new s,

O RANO & N A T IO N A L B A N K BU ILO IN Q Ta lo^ontt 47t and 7i3, Ortago*

ArfyartlMment© f«c©lv©d until 11:t& At M, for inHFilan ari the u n i t day,

O K U V E f lY ROOM. 10 CONE «T,

OftAMOK. VALLKT-yT i , I

AdvortUementi ©Iw t‘©c©lv«d in the Oranges te th« fnllowtng ©geaia: i^ST ORANGB-''M a rtin Broa„ B3 ’Washlngtgn plofte (Brick

Church). OTwnW. 1£. PluidKy. *A4 Main alreet. Tel. 3123. H. M. Wlldman, )0C Main «treei.U I . Teagaf.- « « Main Ntwt (Br,ck

Ohwrch).A W. RlcbardE, Ftnirib avenue and s»jx-

t*tath otraet. Tel. 3C06.Bpallaian. -Hlghlend Avenue BUlion,

yitfotroee Pharmacy. J, M. Keeler, SG7 Scut- Itnd ©treel. Orange. Tel. 1032,

BOOTH OBaNGBJ-R^AcrtLcstle.RoulhOrange avenue. Tet 21J.

A

F rabakly lii ilotioi* o f w n ilu iu , I'rliie© « f O rangr, n©r1ar©a

Pavl<t L* P trraO Q ,I low Ordiig© got its nam e formed n

part of (h© addrt'BM made by David ),. iueraon. presldenl of ih© ConUmnlal Am- BUfiatlon, In the P ark Avenue Methnrllxi Church, E ast Orange, last night. Mr. IMerBon, who was introduced by Rev. Dr. W arren L- HoagUind. the pastor, spoke un "YTie Message of the D ispatch Rider," ami told how In the war the young men who rarried inessagea to the generals piiBHed it^nnigh the Urunges, and of their hernle work, which, until the creuUoa of the etutue of the D lspalch Rider by Frjuuk Edwin Elwell, had never been eomniemoruted.

Jn speukiug of the origin of the name Orange. Mr. Pierson sold th a t It was probably given 10 th« com niunliy by Rev, Cwteh Smilh, second president of Prince­ton College and pastor of the old First rresbyteiTan Ohurch. Mr. Smith went to Orange from* Elizabethtown. He was a strong friend of William, Krlncs of Or­ange, and Mr. Plei'son expressed tlie be lief th a t Mr. Smith, who was one of tho foronioat men of the community, had given the name Orange In honor of thi prince. It wa» during Mr. Sm ith 's presl dencjv that Nassau HuU was named, nnd llrfa fact, Mr. Pierson declarhd, gave ad- dUlonal ground for the belief that lha elergymsn .had first proposed the oamv of Orange.

Prior to the Revolution, and even after ward, the nelghboriiood had been known aa the Mountain Society. The referencea to the name Orange are found I'n Adver Ueements and in the N ew ark town records. A t first Orange Dale wos usedt but the suffix was dropped In a compara* lively short time.

wurd ilHle Graves, setTCtary iif the hui'- Rommlttpe on entertainm ent of d is­tinguished guesta nt the Orange centeit' nial. have ahmit completed the n.rrangv- mehla for the luncheon to the notabU-s who wil! take port In the celebrailon and whlph la to be given a t the Ifiracx County Country Cluii *'ii Friday. The luncheon will Ue fiervcil at ll:SG o'clock BO fle to en­able the gue txS to arrive e t the stand In lime to w itiuas the unveiling of the Htatne to the Dliipatch Rider a t 1 o'clock.

Individual lableF will bo set accommo­dating six to eight persona each and a member of Ihe club wilt preside o t each lable with the idea of making the meal im ftovlabh* and iiUaresilng uw po.'iKlbl”. Miialc will be dJscmirsed by Von B aor'a bond and on Ihe conoUislon of the repust aulomobllos will convey t h e ^ t r t y to the statue.

Fealdea Governor Stokos and hla staff, other well-known men who are expected ID be ul the luiivhvou are United States^ aeiiftlor John Kean, former acnator ^ames Smith Jr„ former AUorney-Qeneral Philander C. Knox, of Pennsylvania, aad farmer President Grover Cleveland. Gov­ernor Stokes, the Old Guard nnd the dis- llnguiahed guests will be entertained a t i o'clock In the aflernoon by the botiflc coinmiuee of the club.

K alley (leNldents P rep arin g to F ight Any liicrenae In Town*N

D rin k in g Flare©.A formal proteat agaliiRt on increase in

the number of Nutley sahjuns will hi- made lU tho mocllhg of th a t body, Juno 2U, when the application.’ for licensee for drinking places will be acted upon. There arc now fourteen SEtloons in ibe town, and If all the applications In the hands of the town clerk aro granted this number wiil be Ini’reaswl by three. The council will bf asked to decrease the prc-sent number In­stead of Increasing If.

Itel'i-rcuve to the num ber nf nppllcadniiH for drinking places wns niiulr fmm several piilpUa hi Ihe town yesteiduy. mid t'i*i uiPii folks were asked to appear before liio

cmni'H imd protest against gjam lng nt least same of them. PetltSniis to the town offldals jin* circulated omong cltiaens. hi which objection la made to an (ncieiis*e u£ the drinking places. The Nutley Civic So­ciety will probably have a committee at tiic meeting of tho council M which the lioeti.’ es will come up, also to proleat. LlcenHP night Ims been A lively one f->r the Nutley Town Council ever since Ih.? mvHflt’ipalUy was changed from township to a town. The ludlcationa are that It will be un Quieter ihip year.

C o m p o sitio n of Old ond New MUNtera F la y e d by C h ild ren In V>>lnn

H all, O rnnge.The pupils uf MIsb Laura D. Relfany-

*ler. of Eaet Orange, assisted by Mies Agnes Rolfans'der, contralto, of New Yoj’k, gave a concert In Union Hull, Or­ange, S.'^turday afternoon, before an au­dience of 200 parenfB and friends.

Miss Reifanycler, who Is conttalto ao- lolst of the MudlBon Avenue Baptist Church. New York, and a pupil of Hen- chel, gavig several solo numbers, Including "FtTi* Across the Desert Sands'’ and “Allah Be with Us,” Finden, and Need­ham 's arrangement of "L ittle Orphant Annie." As an encore she eang Becker's ■‘xSprlngtlde.’’

The pupils who look part Wtre Marjorie Kinsey, Helen H. Burr, H arriet B. Shaw- gcr, Rosamond Wfikina, Dorothy Arml- tuge, David Kirkpatrick, Irm a Marie Hlciiardson, Frederick MacTmonh, Helen Hare, LietUla Burke, Lillian Mae Oliver, liulh Bleeckor* Helen C. Shawgcr, El­eanor Kirkpatrick, Bancroft Relfanyder, Helen Erdsall and Edwin Wilkins^

DECAPITATED BY TRAIN.T hnn.ii* P ow er* ’* Body PooDd.

iVot

Hcliool llonrd Orgatilxfn.Tlie V’erona Township Board nf Educa-

(loi) orgnnlxed Saturday night at the Cedar Grove Bchoulhoux^. Ehfer 0. WeU- ytn was elected president; George H. Ja- cobuR, "Vice-president, and rrcderlck N. Brtrown, clerk. Floyd G. Stebblns wajs miiiied to succeed Mr. Brown, July i. when the new law leg lslalit^ al] clerks of acliool districts out of office becomes operative. The o ther members of the hoard are Edward Scheiber, Alonro H. Jacobus, WUllam Bowden and Mr. Steb- binx, Matters of improvement were din- cufised, but', no action will be taken until Ihe next meeting.

Ill© Brotberi Wbi» Did R e co g aU e D im .

Thomas Powers, nineteen years old, of 57 Scotland street. Orange, was run over and Instantly killed by the Orange drill No. 63 on ths Lackawanna R:inroad be­tween Cone and Centre atreeis, Oningc. early yesterday inoming. The severed head of the man was found lying beiihie ttiH ,truck about 1:46 e'clock, by Jidward Powers, a brother of the dead, man, who, liowever, failed to recognize his kin. The identification was not made until y o'clock yesterday morning, when the father of Powers called a t Kunz's morgue and rcoognisbd hla son, Powers's body was badly mutilated.

According to the Ipft^mation secured by the police, Powers probably lay down late a t night to a le ^ too near the truck. The engineer of the freight train did not see him. The funeral will be held to-nforrow morning In St. John's Church, Orange.

NEW CHURCH FOR HONTaAIRW isrk W in Be Started TIsf* W eek

O B E difice tor Italinn* o l Town.

Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Calvin Seibert, of Main street, Orange, have gone on an au­tomobile tour to the South, Including a visit to the Jamcalown Exposition.

John J. Ready an(J iamily, ot New Haven, Conn,, are spending the week at their old home In Orange,

Mrs. Charles T. Walkley. of prospect plreet. East Orange, will sail for Europe on Saturday. Later In the season she will be Joined there by her husband, the rector of Grace Church. Orange.

T he congregation of the North Orange Baptist Church was asked yeaterday to make up a collection of I5W for the ex­penses of the Italian mission a t the Cone Street Chapel. Rev. Dr. William M l.nWr^nce, the pastor, stated th a t there was a balance of 1245 In the treasury and th a t a t least ISOO more was needed to carry on the work until January J.

The Ladles' Auxiliary of the Orange St. Patrick 's Alliance will serve a centen­nial tea a t Elks' Mall to-night, following their business meeting.

Several boya were caught Saturday night by Charles F. Krceh, of IfKl Centre street. Orange, stripping the centennial decorations from his Itniiae. Kraeh got iwo of the boys, but let them go. Po­liceman Giordano, who came in response to a telephone message, got the nnrnes of several others who are suspected of com­m uting the ac t ot vandallam,

The m arriage of Miss K nlbm i Rogers, daughter of Mr, and Mra. tVlltlHin J. Rogers, of at Reynolds terrace, Orange, to Allen Cleveland Bragsw, of New YorK, will take place a t the restdene* of the bride's parents, on June 15.

Mrs. William H. Wiley, ofl 73 Hnlsted street, E ast Orange, ptve an afternoon tea Friday In honor of her two nieces. Miss Anna Frances Ford and Miss I.u- ercllu Ford, who have recently retarned from Dresden, Germany, ’

A full board meeting of the woman's hoard of m anagers of the Homeopathic Hospital of Esse* County, and the last session o t the aeaeon, will be held thla afternoon In Grace church parish-house. Orange, Reports will be read and a r ­rangements made for coming event*.

At the Children's Day exerclBCS In the Orange Valley Congregational Church yes­terday morning a choral se rv le t entitled "Patrio tic Pllgrlm a," wa* given by the iJttte onw. A patriotic address for chil­dren was made by the pastor, Rev. George P. Eastm an, and a t the cooelualon of the exercises Bible* were presented for reg­ular church-attendance and for, learning memory vtjriMh) ffoto Scripture.

Poiicetnan Busold, of Weat Orange, In* icrruptetl a fight between Jam ee MIeie Rnfi H erm an Jacobson, of 'West Orange, in Ashland avenue, th a t town, Ia$t night, and haled both men to the police elation. This mornlTig Recorder Condlt fined them 112 on a charge of breach of the peace.

ECAYIanol digestion, you know, even when it takes place in tha stomach.

Food decayed in the body afler being eaten is afi dangerous to health as food decayed before being eaten.

Food nourishes or polsona. Just accord­ing to how long it remains in the Bowels undigested.

P n ltre a t T a rg e t P rm etU e.Desk .Sergo.'int ThomnB Sherry. Rounds

man Th&udorr Stlevc, Acting Roundamai* Frank Km ny and l*oltccmen Kdwai'I Tracy. Patrick Maguire, Lawrence Cor­coran and John Manioii had i |u l r revolver target pructiM on tlie m ountaui Saturday, and beat the record made by the graup which had a teat under tho di­rection of Howard Perrlne. chuirmati of the Police Committee, by nineteen point.'. Mr. Perrlijv's detail cunHigted of eight men iuni the gruup Bulurday of only aewn. gvrgcant Sherry led In (he ftret roimd, mi l but for tiiSHPlng hU ninth «hot wouSd Imvu mode a new record fur the departmc.U, The score* Saturday were aa follow,*': Rileve 33 out of a ponalblo uO; Kenny. Sherry, 31: Mwnton. 30; Tracy. 26; Cot* ooran, 16, and >!agiih e. U.

F a re w e ll S e rv ice a t Old liO catlon.Tjeave-itaklng jwrvtres were held in th*

Washington Street Baptist Church, Or­ange, yeeterdny. ub the edlftcfc will now be removed to a location half a block away. Th® pastor, Rev. Howard IL Brown, annolm(^ed th a t jliere woubl be nt> regular nerviceft next Sunday. The building has already been lifted from the loundmlons and during the weok will be removed iii the new Hite wlilcii has t>een purchased a t Cleveland and Washinglun streets.

MSHtr Uekels va *11 llQn*. ■ocommod*- «■ good sj ia New York oBlcef; opa»— V O. TSdCUi!;, n Nortb c«atr« a t

' AcboitiS wlfldow* f43r eestenmat

In Addre** B. U. L*. Box

F lreiaap H eld fo r Aamaalt,Thomas Dowling, of 34 William street,

Orange, was arraigned l>eforo Police Jus* lire bray In the Orange Police Court Sat­urday. cnarg^d by George A. Eager, of if Canfield idrcet, with com m itting an a*- eault on hlin. E ager »ay« th a t at the fire In Hickory stree t l&ft Tuesday morn­ing. Dowling punched him in the ear. Both men are connected w ith fire head*'

r* Ondige; 410 par wtaAow* i quarters. Dowling fuimlahed 3200 bail toawBlt the ActkHi o f the g m id iury,

A fter V'nifceiiaed Peddler*.The^ South Or&nse Village police have

(heir net* extended for peddler* doing b\i*lnesa In the place without licensee. They arrested two men Saturday LU)d one Uii* morning. Habib Futfy. of 3 ^ W ash­ington etreet. New York, and Edward Muivaney. of 33 McChesney etrcel. Or- ungs, were token In by Roundsman Btieve and Policeman Tra«r, respwiilvely. Satur­day, and Hyman Collnaky, of IW Court sU-eet. thla city, wa* caught peddling clolhrspln* without ft llccuge tMs-morning by- policeman Palrldk Skffflnaton. Police Justice J. Martin Roil fined Rutfy $6 and p<.*tpOHed the hearing of Miilvaney iintU next Wednesday. The CoUiiaky case will bo dlippfod of

H art by F a ll f ro m T ro lle y Car.John Cognn. tw enty-three years old, of

Fourth and William street*, Harrisons while returning from Newark on n K ear­ny trolley oar on Saturday night, fell from the rear platform and cut him head and fuce. He waa. carried to Aller's drug store where hlS Injuries were temporarliy drcjssed and he wu* later removed to St, MIchaet'a Hospital-_____________________

T H E LAXATIVE C H E W IN G G U M

Th# »*ry f*ct th»t purptiv** ciunp »nd grip* shows thxt they U t forcing nMufe.

Gum-X(»* g*n*ly nxtuK with belter rwults. I t 's t chew­ing gom IS good IS the confec­tion kinds.

I f , • t i l yanrfltnmtlsfs wiifl i* ceat* for ttinpte pack.xe la

.H u w » e d h W. J . .

Ground wt* laid out this momlnR on Pina street, Montclair, (iir an Itnllan C&thollc church, to be known n* Our Lady of Mt. Cnnnel| I t will he a frame striic- ttire. seventy feet deep and thirty feet wide. Rev. Paul Lisa, the Itnllan arslnt- a n t priest to the Church of the Immacu- tate Conception, Hontctalr, Is cnmpleiiug the p len s .an d epcelflcatlons, which will be presented to the town bnlldlni; Inspec­to r to-day Or. to-morrow for approval, W ork on the building wtil be started this week, and pushed, so as to have the building roofed by July US, when the Italian* will hold n reltgioue celebrnllon.

The church w ill'be placed on piers, A cellar will he dug and foundations laid during the fall. A colteclion was taken (imnng the Italians of Montclair yester­day and 1160 wa* subscribed townrij the new church. The building committee oon- alsts of Raffnie Andollno, Antonio Todes- co, Nicholas Tenaso and Frank Denarino.

CHARGE AGAINST CONSTABLEFrsiderlcH Otlman, of fiellevtlle, who ia

f , constable attached to the oflice of Sher­iff tom m er, has been charged with a t- sau lt and battel^ by Michael Quton, of th e townehlp. who alleges th a t the officer e truot him without provocation Saturday night. Oilman was arresting J o in Quinn, a brother of Michael, who, tt Is allagsd, ^ s implicated In the assault o t a negro girt in Belleville about a yenr ago. Michael appronched the officer and lnqulre(tw hat the niTCBt wa* being made for, whereupon Gilman struck hint to thb face with a biBy, The constable says that (ha complatoani tn e ^ to pull ^he: brother aw ay from him,

S O U T H O R A .N U E .Chief H arry J . Becker, of the Are de­

partm ent, held an Inspection o t the paid firemen In their new uniforms on Bntur- day afternoon and afterw ard inspected npparatu*. The chief expressed his salls- faetton w ith the apnearance of the men and the condition of apparatoa.

Hose Company No. 2 will bold a meet­ing a t headquarters tcnmlght.

Robert Treat, - “of Prospect street, is (innichome from the Rensselaer Polyteo

Institu te a t Troy,Mrs. F rederick Qrelle, of Ridgewood

road, win leave next week for Portland,*^CyrijB H a iry *Lout?el and Wilfred Mur- cheo will graduate th is month from the Sheffield Sclentiflc School ot Yale Unlvei- slty, and E. Morgan Barradale from the ncademlc department.

Most of Ihe Digestion occurs In Iho thirty feet of tiilesllnes.

T hey are lined with a set of Ulllo’ mouths, that squeeze Digestive Juices into the Food eaten.

The Instestlnes are also lined with milllorn of Utile suoUon pumps, that draw the. NiRth meni from Food, as it passes them to going Ihrough.

But. when the Bov/el-Muselea are weak, the Feed moves too slow^ to sUmulalo tho little Caslric Moulhs and there is ^ flow or too little flo’W of Digestive Juho. to change the food inlo nourishment.

Then, the food decays to the Bow-Js, and the little suction pumps dravr Poh™

'^^li^cayed 'Food, into the blood. In­stead of the Nutrition ttiey s.hould ha-jo drawn.

KDLTlI.m

E(lwaid a. SandforiL of ’fluw hootgraduate from the New York next Thursday-. . .

l,ouls "W. ColfinlH, cf Ridgewood road, won one of the events a t the Montclair Gun Club shoot Bntordaj'. _ ■ _ „ .

Mrs. Andrew, 8. March Jr. of 3» Scot­land road, will hold a 'recep tion a t 'h e r reSldencB lo-morrow afternoon. .

B E L t B V t |> L E .John Slowey, sixteen years old, waa

found to a lot on Wtlllam attest, Satur­day, stupidly drunk. He was carried to the police atatidn; When arraigned betore •Justice Connell, yesterd^r m orning, he sta led th a t two young man. whose namea he aav*. had put him In the condition to which he w as f o u ^ by ijtVliMf .him te s t. I t to likely th a t ithe boy’s mother,. Mrs, Mary Blower, of W illiam stree t

■ ‘ Jusfl(»ed sigalnst them. The tice ftoedfljow ey'la and nut him on probatton.

~ ■ bjKetlY,. the new assletancJlev. Joaepastor or »t. Peter’s Church, oelsbtated his flrit high ma»s at. that place yeeter-da

“V&(Alter W. ■Wtoton.I'vlifi^

YV. >-ff nikuiu Oj BohO. teft^sfs* - , (Dornliia' on (A tbtw niotTth*' tnP to fitltf'

Qviim w«i Ukfi^ to tbo odiflo o t j u i A b t THB -v^«d»UTM t

thI*

■fef’. -jtMtv

f .

Noiv. Cadbsrels contain tho on^ com­bination of drugs that Stimulates toess Muaelas of the Bowels and Intestines just as a Cold Bath, or open-air Exercise, stim­ulates a Lazy Man.

Caacareta therefore act like Exercise.They produce the same sort of Natural

result that a Six Mile walk in the country would produce without any In)urlous Chem­ical effect,

The Vest Pocket Caacarel Box is sold by all Druggists at Ten Cents,

Be sure you get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and never sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped•■ccc."

t h e r e C.aJI BE NO DOTBT AttfllllT TH E R E kl'L Tfl IK KBW ARK,

Hesutia tell the tale. ■All (Inubt l3 removed. , . .The leatlmony of a N rw ark oltixen Can Iw eaally InvcBtlgtvted.Whiit be tter proof ciin be had?Mrs H enry Crum, of (B Howard street,

Newark, N, J „ eaye: "My husband had bean bothered w ith backaches and kidney trouble for nine years. He had to lay off from work a t tim es and woe unable to do nnythiug Which caused the luast strain on his back. Kvetylhlng he tried to get relief was nnauccessful, and wheq advised to try Doan s Kidney Pills ha bod ilttlo faith to them. However, he tried them arid found they were helping hill) ao he got ano ther Ixix a t Monk's pharmacy. A fter using this ha waa fur­ther relieved, and by the, time he had taken four o r flva boxes he had no more nato to hie bock. T he kidneys and the action of the Rldneya beoame regular and perfect. All the distressing aymptoras diaappoired and since then he has worked steadily. The cure wo* to evory way a nemtanerit.one, and th a t I* why we r « - onunOnd Doan's Kidney Pills so stretigly to others suffering to a atmltar way."

For sale by all dealers. Frlee .BO cents. Fostsr-MUbnm Co.. Bltttalo. New York, sole agents for th e ITnIted S ta tes.,

Remember the name—D oan 's-and take no other.

Of gkla. Scalp, Hslr, and Haadsf to thouiaads upon IbauiaodS of asKs, is foiiiid to Ihc cxcInsRdI' «H of Cvyietnu.8oaraad Cirrx .Cuka .QlxIiasyTtthe'pnnwt aMfi iw astottil-iiinW iiH i,

NEWARK EVENING NEWS, MONDAY, JUNE 10, lOOt.

1 WORK DONE BY THE INVENTORS.FOR SPRING ELECTIONS i _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __---------------- ]•oath Orange viii.«r I. Th»« »i aiid Novd Dcviccs Upon Which Patents Have Been

Cnmpiilicn on Qurallon* Wlslcli * # i nRecently Granted-Holder for Pen and Penal.IVtII De D ecided To-morrovr,

South Ornnffe Vlllnge H having an •um m ar polttlcal campaign. The only iMue ta the question of whethaj of not the municipal election will be held April

'9S. 190B, instead of next fall, and it will he decided a t a apeclal election In the vil­lage to-morrow.

There ti no urganlae*! oppoiltlon to the change of date, but H was found that sev­eral cltixens repre^^cnling factions were opposed to the sprlni; etectlon, and Imme- dtutely tliQ Bupportern of the change got busy and orpantacd a i-ampRlgn. On Sat­urday the following committee was ap­pointed to look out for the Interests of •prlng electloni William P, Allen, Pree- holder John B arrett, W. H. Clarke. Bd-- ward D. Duffletd, Solomon H. Howe, Al- lerton D. Hitch, former Village President Ira A. Kip Jr,, John P. Keman, Arthur B. Leach, Frederick J, Lovatt, John J. Magovern and W aller I. McCoy.

To-day the committee sent out battots *'Por" the holding of the village election

.next April and a letter cnnlstiilng the 'sta tem ent that until 1905 village rlecttons were hold In the spring; that the change to the fall was a mielaKe; that the main argum ent In favor of holding separate municipal elections Is that It affotila the voter a fair chance to give ''expression to h is opinions upon Ipcal affalra with a clearness th a t Is not possible when local, S tate and national Issues are voted upon a t tho same tim e.''

The argum ents of unnecessary expense made by those who oppose the holding of a aepam te election are replied to by the committee as follows:

"The additional expense made neces­sa ry by two elections la Inslgnlflcant in

'itself, and especially so when the object sought to be accont^lshed Is considered."

The com m ittee dedarca that the total cost to the taxpayers of an election Is approxim ately 1200, which they say *'means to each taxpayer the addition of only tho fraction of a cent on each $100 of assessed valuation."

Becauae tho question cannot under the law be subm itted again to the voters w ithin five yeara, the campaign committee urges all to arrange their engagements to> moirow so th a t they can vote.

Another combination d»vlce~thls time, a pen and pencil hoUlcd—has bten patented by an Arkansas man. who has hit upon a stmplc and useful method of combining these two desk implements so th a t either or lioih will be ready for immedintc serv­ice. By using this bolder the habit of sticking the pencU over one's ear while using the pen, is done away with. The pencil and the penholder lit Into small

Into the meat, thus giving a firm and re­liable coEinectloa between the fork and the food. In this way the m eat may l>e easily removed from the pan or cooking pot. To remove the fork U is simply necessary to release the screw by turn­ing the handle In the reverse direction.

Mew W h eelb arrow ,An improved wheelbarrow la the recent

invention of a Nebraska man. The body Of the barrow la placed on a decided In-

m V lX O T O N AND H ILTO N .A liorse attached to a runabout In which

were Michael Plnkelsleln, of 175 W arren Street, Newark, and a companion, became unmanageable on the Essex County Hpeedwoy yesterday, and ran into an-

.o ther rig, driven by John Reinhardt, who w as accompanied by a Miss Schultz, botli nf Newark. The occupants of both rlgw ' were throw n out, out. with the exception

I of Finkelsteln. neltljjer waa hurt. The I la tte r sustained contusions about the body. A fter the crash Finkclsteln'e hnrwe

I run away, but It wue caught by Pollcc- ' man Parkhouse, The rig wju wrecked 'an d R einhardt's wagon also was damaKed.

The Sunday-school board of the Irving­ton Mothodiat Church will meet to-night.

William F ritts . of Sprltigheid and Elm­wood avenues, irv ln^on , telephoned to uulico hftadquartera early yesterday morn-

,ing requesting th a t an officer look aftor a man who was acting In a strange man-

.n e r in front of hts place. Sergeant Klrk- brlde found a wen-uresBed stranger lean­ing against a tree. Upon SnvesUgnUun K irkbride found th a t the man, who re­fused to give hla name, had a cut on the loft sida of hl6 face. Ha was unable to tell how ha sustained the hurt, and ns the alraitgor w as under the InAuence of liquor, the police believe that he met with u full. The stranger Informed Klrkbride that he lived. In N ew ark and asked to be put

'aboard a trolley car bound for that city.' H Ib request was gninted.

A "birth month^’ festival will be held In the lecture-room of the First Christian

' Church, Irvington, next Thtl^rf'^dy night.A rehearsal of the musical sketch "The

' School a t Blueberry Corners," which Is to I bq given In the Hilton Methodist Church, jth e la tte r p a rt of the month under the ' ausplcea of the Epwortb Luogue, will be held to-nigbt.

The Annex H all Athletic Club of HlLtoti w as organlfsca Saturday night with the following offtcera: President, Charles a.Carpenter; secretary, Robert Maas: treiis- urer. C arl Becker. A committee on mem­bership, oonslstlng of Frederick Stem­ming, J . Alvah Baker and hfr. Haas, wa.H also najned. A social session followed, a f te r which adjournment was taken to next Sunday n ig h t

The Sunday-school board of the Hilton I Christian Church met yeaterdny and fixed I on Saturday, August 17, as the date for I the annual picnic, which will be hekl In ; Zelsmcp's woods, on the Baker road. Field day games will be held In conjunction with the plcnic-

Mlss Alicia Mordaunt, of Clinton ave­nue, Irvington,. Is apendlng a week with relatives In Toms River.

Swinge on u pivot.clamps attached to a ring ,the latter being slipped over the finger. These clamps are pivoted a t one point to the ring. If (he user is w illing with the pencil and desires to use the pen he merely swings the la tte r around In a half circle on the pivot. The device is equally useful where two pens are needed, each for a different colored Ink. It obviates the necesalty of laying one down to use the other.

F o r Tee in T^anndrlen,A recent Invention for the laundry busi­

ness has been patented by a resident of S(. 1a)uIs. It la a device for Ironing clothes by means of electricity. The Iron la bu»- I>cnded on a pivoted arm, which projects over an adjustable lronlng*board. Con­nected to the projecting arm are strong

Contents easily dumped.dine, the forward ends of the sides de­scending to an open front. On account of the Inollned body It Is Impossible for the contents to fall out while the wheel­barrow Is in motion. Oenerally it Is necessary to dump the contents a t an ex­act point and this can be very readily done with this wheelbarrow. The work­man Is not required to entirely overturn the wheeibartvw, as is now tho case. The contents of tlie Improved carrier are dumped without any special effort.

To Provent .Aecfdenis.W ith the Idea of making the use of elec­

tricity safer in the operation of different tools a frtassachuaetts man has devised a simple method which enables the operator to tell a t a glance whether the current Is

H A R R S O N B O Y K I L L E D B Y C A R W H I L E P L A Y 1H 6

F a ,ir H B « n U r r o -» li> 'i.tcrtral W k -u Hq m m o O'Awrt-. K lvr Y eara

Old. la Blruok.nomaiiD D'Auria, nv« yeara flld. aon ot

Mr, and Mrs. Koioaini D 'A uria. iif *U North Third alreet. Harrlaon. arna hlllad Inta Saturday attcriiw n by tro lley c a r 7J5 of the Kearny lino bound to r tbl* city. The acoideijt .(ccurred oppoaita Chrlat Eplarupal Church a t ClevelastJ ave­nue and Kourth alrect, H arrlaon, Th* body waa draegrd by tho car n early #Hy feet alone Fourth alroet before the ve­hicle came- to a stop. The boy 's head waa badly cruahed. Womeii p iw acnp'ra on the car became hyalerlcal and wore hurried away from the acene. M olurm en Jam es Brown, of Chester nvenue, and Conductor WllUiim Rllay, of lA Miller Btreol, both of this city, were arreeteiS by Policeman Francis Campion and taken before Justice Branegaii, who released them under 12,OOP bonds each to appear this afternoon hefore Prosecutor Speer in Jersey City. Charles Lott, a ropreaentatlve of the Public Service Corporation, a r ­ranged for the ball ot both men.

According to Ihe story told by Sle- mund Deiitsch, of 112 Avenue f , New York, who waa a witness to the accident. D'Aurin and tour other children were playing In the street. The c a r w as ap­proaching rapidly, there being a down grade on Fourth street ending about where the boy was hit. Deutach said that the motorman sounded hts gong, bu t Che children apparently did not aecm to hear It until the car was almost on top ot them. D 'Aurla'i companions m anaged to get out of the way, but he w as n o t quick enough and was struck by tlte fonder, rolled under It and hla h^ad waa crushed by a wheel. The m nrtnrman put on the broke so quickly that he threw the p as­sengers in the cur In a heap, but none was hurl. Word of the accident waa carried to the mother of the boy and she arrived while the body lay In the s ireet, covered by a blanket. Falling on her kneea by thO side of the body eho removed th a cover. Her screams could be beard a block away. Mre. D'Aprta hud to be dragged tro a i the body by her trlonde. She wao asalsted to her home. Brown said he did a ll In hie power to avert the accident.

I H A R R IS O N -E A S t N EW A R KTh* H arrison firemen were called out

sliortly ttfler 9 o'clock Saturdaji^ night by !a false alarm sent In from box 36. a t ! Fourth and Middlesex streets. The box jifl one o f those recently added to the sys- !tem.

Miss I/ulu M. Hugglna, of John street, H arrison, left to-day for Newport, where she will spend several weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. Cbarlos Sedden, who were m an led W ednesday afternoon a t C hnsl Episcopal Churoh, Harrison, by Rev. William J. Tilley, left for Pittsburg yes­terday, where they will make their home. Thuy were accompanied by Miss Martha

iClark, a sis ter of the bride, of 48 Searing ■ avenue. E ast Newark, who will be their •guest for several weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. Holloway Allen, of H an i- I ton, have returned from their wedding 'to u r and taken up their residence on South Third street.

The annual meeting of the Harrison land K earny Building and Ijoan Assocla- [tion of H arrison will be held to-morrow n ig h t

Charles Bogan, of New Brunswick, who ^for sevorat years was the bass soloist $n tho Church of the Holy Cross,^ H arri­son, spent yesterday In th a t town.

, Henry Dftjen, of 310 Hunison avenue, Harrlaon, a driver for the Otto Coke Com- rany, was Kicked In the face yesterddy by one of the horses owned by the com-

'pany. D ltjen 's teeth were knocked out

tnd his face was badly lacerated. Ho as attended by Dr. Henry Allere. Assemblyman Joseph JiS Hiordan, of

H arrison, who was confined to his home f for more th a n ft week by Illness, Is able

, to b« about again.[ At a meeting of the Board of Free Pub- I lie L ibrary trustees Of East Newark, held ' Saturday night, Coundlmnn Thomas J.

Carey was appointed librarian to fill thevacancy cat.__ Jjy the-'deuth of WilliamHealey. The library, which has been closed Blficft the death of Mr, Healey, waa ordered opened to-night.

The members of the Stiff Pleasure Club of H arrison were entertained last night

. a t the homo of George Ahsley, on South ■} F ourth street. An enjoyable time was

spent to r aoveral hours. Vocal selections ' were rendered by Edward Sullivan, John i Brogan* Michael McNamara and Edward

and B ^ a m ln Few. . 'I The F ^ t lm e Juniors baseball team of j Harrleoti defeated the Crescents sf th a t {toyna yeetorday by a score of 8 to 4.I The baseball team of Kearny Council, I Knights of Columbus, of West Hudson,

defeated a team from the Newark Coun­cil of the order on the Parkway Ova/

! yesterday by a ecore of 14 to s.

Electrlctly for Ironing.spring}!, which force the Iron with great pressure against the garm ent on the board. A foot treadle is provided, by which the iron If raised. One Iron Is used conllnuouFly, electricity providing the heat. 'The current Is furnished by means of a wire connected to any source of supply.

To W jish P ork em .An apparatus for washing pigs before

they are slaughtered has be»'n Invented by a Mlsflotirl stockman. The constme- llon and operation of the dipping tank, as It la cnlled, ere shown in the accompany­ing Illustration. Resting on the ground is the water tank, which is connected to

Lamp In implement.on or off. In some pari of the tool he places a danger signal In the form of a small Incandescent lamp, which can be readily seen ot a glance. When the cur- rent la on the light shown In the lamp.

Taken th e P lace o f Solnnorn.A recently patented device Is the thread

cutter shown in the accompanying Illus­tration. This contrivance waa designed especially to do away with sclesora for cutting the thread. It comprlseK a pair of pivoted blades, the handles of »»»-*"’• are set at an angle. At (he end of one handle Is a slot and In the other a lug, ui limit the movement of the bladcH. In use

Pigs quickly cleaned.an Inclined inlet and outlet, On the In­cline of the outlet are liny sta irs to assist the pig in ascending- In preparation for hlfl bath the pig is forced down the incline Into th e water, and if hie common sense does not direct him on to the Incline ha Is prodded from behind w ith a bar. Tha Interior of the tan k la so arranged that wheh the pig cllmba the sta irs he la thor­oughly washed.

Im proved K itc h e n F ork .One of the new Inventions Is a fork de­

signed for turning and lifting Urge pieces of m eat during the process of cooking. The fork ' conalelB of the usual handle, with a tube, or sleeve, fitted therein.

IN T H E C L IN T O N D I S T R I C TChildren's Duy excn lsea were held by

Ihu iiJIUubelh Avenue Hresbylvrian Sun- day-Bohuol last night. The prugrum con­sisted of songs by the school, Scrip ture reading by tne superlnicndeiit. W ullam H. Oordamllh, and school; pi-ayer by the pastor, flev. Samuel T. G ruhain; urecltu- llons, Charlotte Hutchinson, JcHBle Cor- mach, Elsie Sliatmoti. H arry Liuell. Gertrude Fierce and Lllhan Spaiijei; aons by six luimary boys; rtuwer exercino by four amall gln»: song by seven primary girls; solo, Mrs- Irving Albey. und an ad­dress to the children by Ivan I*. Flood, secretary of the boys' depai’im eut of the Young Men's Christian Assoelatb'T).

The Prospect A. C. defeated the WuytT- ly A. C. Saturday aflenioon on the rp fs- pects’ grounds by the Fcore of 16 to H.

Mr jiiid Mrs. Tbomua Elmer Miiriln, of Chicago, who have been ependlng tlio pa.it three weeks with Mrs. M artin .s pa­rents. Mr. and Mrs. J r^ n H. L>oremuH, on Hillside iiveiiue, Lyons Fnima, left to-dav for home. The.v W'nre uccompanh'd by Miss Hadle Iku'emns. Mrs MarUn's slater, who will spend the sum m er wiili ihem.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Van Ilouten, nf OU-h Kldge, and Miss Marjorie Tompkins, of lleuchljursl. Lung Islutul, a re vlFltln^? Miss Tompkins's uuni, Mis. JanuH Wtil- lamson, on Maple avenue, Lyons Fiirrnt’.

Mr.s. William H. Qoldsnilih and chlldreti. Ruth, Waliaoe and Kobon. have reuirned to their homo on Lyons uvenue. after spending the past six munili.s In ilielr win­ter home In nouthern Plnea, N. C.

The i’ounp Ladles' Mlpslun Hand nf the Elizabeth Avenue Prt-tihyterlan Church will meet to-night at the Inuiie of Mrs. Mary IL Ward, 113 I'rosnei't hv»Tiut‘. The country to be studied 1h Iinlia and the watchword \9 “ W atch." This wHl be the closing meeting of the year.

The Children's Day exerplscs In I'ark View 1‘rnsbyterlan Chupe! ycPterday uf- lernoun were largely aUend-d. , 'riio pro­gram consisted of recitations by Emily Adler and Charlotte 1-laUiwallc; song by nine girls; rediuilun by five small girls; recitiiilon by eight young womi-n of tho Bible class; Scripture verses by The classes; song by four girls of tho Inter- medtiite deportm rnl; recitallonB by Ed­ward Bevan. Ruth Adler, R uth Harris, Wllllum Hathw'allo. Grace W ragg, W alter Blfttherwlck and Irene Arldlemnn, and song hv membora of the prim ary class. Rev. Charles E. Granger, pasto r of the Central Frr:*by1erltth Church, and Georgp Llngorman. sunorJntendeni of the Sun­day-school, epoKe.

Mias iJessle Knox Winner, of Rhlgewnod avenue, rcturneii Saturday fnim P rince­ton. where she had liecn spending the post week with Miss Katherine McCoy.

The Lvona Farms baaeb.iU team were defe.ated by the Velox A. C. of Irvington on the formers' grounds S aturday a f te r­noon, by the score of 17 to 0.

Cuts th-6 thread.the thread cutter is placed in the palm of tho bfthd. and Is held In posStlon by n loop which slips over the little finger. Ii is claimed th a t U can be kept In the palm of the hand without Interfering wUJi sew­ing, there being perfect freedom of the flngqya a t all times. A slight Iwtut of the

. ^ g e r s 1» ftll th a t Is required to operatt •fW e cutter.

To H old l^n ib re lla" .An umbrella-holder for the use of ran-

vaasera and others who are obliged to he out In «n kinds of weather and work with their hands, is the invention of a

51^

B L O O M F IE L D .Ur. And U rs. lu d o r B. DeMoyn*, oC

; ChlOAKO, «r« vlgltlnv Mr. and Mrs, Frank I DtM oyae In Morton itreet.

. ’Tho Jkma raeetiM of tha Woman's For- «lfn H tH tonory Boclatf of the Weat- I n ln c te r Ih'WbvterlaTi Chtirch vll) be held I tO-inonDW Afternoon.] ']%• Bloomfield Chrietlan Bndeavor< tMtipj* will meat In (he Flret Baptist ' Church to-morrow nlfht.I Chrietlan Endeavor Society of the

jn ra t B ap tis t Church will hold a sociable K>hdAy, June n .

■ ,t* * -Town Council will hoid an adjourn- I . h ^ . t h c e t l n s and the Board of Biduoatlon I- ' h rieBUlar meeting to-night. l EmcA Hook-and-ladder Company will

7 "hoM lU annual meating and banquet to- I ' Morrow n tg lit

Mrs. B. Jobnaon and daughter, of Crys­ta l Run, N. 'Y., are the guesta of Thotnaa Loesch, o t U S «^nd atraet; for two •W*SKS>

Dr. Jacob 8. Wolfe, o t Walaesslng a*o-' nne, U on a n automobile trip through SuBSex County.

In the Church of the Sacred H eart last yum t a aolemn vesper service was held w ith Bev. John J, Freelnn as oelebrant; Rev. (jiovatmn Cenitl, deacon, and Rev; S w h er Joseph, of Orange, sub-deacon. The sermon was preached by Rev, J. j . J^ y la n , of Bt. Lucy's Church, Jersey City.

Mrst Sophia AcKerman, of Beat p a i- aalo avenue, who will he 101 years old in OoWMr, and who has been III soveral

/

Asya, I t now Improving.The tw enty-first commencement of U lsi

T aylor's school will be held F ri­day night a t her home In Franklin street. Diplomas will be awarded to Hiss U lllan B, Atkin, o t Ytarona: Raymond Brower, of H o n to l^ .’ the M !*w Matnda and H ag d ^ se 'K o U , of Bloomfield, and T h o n -a t F f y B M ^ of eilvar tak * .

........ ............Canaban.

' F w aaS eC r t ■ Jbn* a. ; .M D irrC LA IB .

\

KEAIINY AND A IIL IN G T O NChildren's Day exercises were held In

most of Ihe Prolerinnt clnirches In K ear­ny and Arlington yesterday, Prograinfl of songs. recUoMnna and Uietrumental sdlsc- llons were given. Next Sunday C hildren's Day will be nhaerved a l Grace M ethodist Church, Kcorny.

Pollcenmn Barrett, of K earny, found Anthony Sllvesta, eight years old. of M W arren street. Newark, w andering ahonl Ksarny avenue late last night and took him to the police station. Before the tir- rh'ol of the ottleer with the boy Desk dergeant Zltiow' had been InforniiHl oy the Newark police ot hts dlaappearance, The boy's father called for him la te r and took him home. . .

John Manning, sixty years old, of Mid­land avenue. Arlington, fell upon the sidewalk In Elm street S aturday nlsht, atrlhing a sh a r^ atone. He received a

Dr................ A.M utter dressed hie Injuries, a f te r which he waa taken to St. Mlehael'B HoapUal.

St, Cecilia's Dramatic L;:j-eijm Socinty

A.

D ouble S ta m p s w ith E v e ry

P u rch a se T u e sd a y . Bargain c in t r e

Double Stamps with Every

Purchase Tuesday.

Sale of Notions.lOc. Coat liu ttons, dog...................Ic25c. Boys’ Knee Caps, lea ther... 19c3 papers ot Hair P in s ......................IclOc, tin Never Dull Shoe D ress­

ing .................................................... 6cLarge Roll W hite Cotton Tape...6cIlk . Collar Foundations...................SclOc. Machine S tra p s ...................... 7cSc. and 7c. card Pearl B uttons...2cSpool Linen T hread .......................... IcSpool Basting C o tto n ..................... Icho.se Supporters, wom en’s ..........KcEnameled Stockinfc D arners...... 2cCard Hooks and E y es ...................... IcDoy.en Safety P in s.......................... 2cPaper Adamantine P ins...................IcYard Frilled d a r te r ElaaCic..........ScPair Good Corset S teels ..................ScPiece Fine Fea therstitch Braid....IcScissors, all sizes.............................. DcBunch Tspo, 6 pieces......................3cDress Shields, p a ir .......................... 3c

Extra Special.I5c. Skeio Fleischer’s Oer-

mantawo Wool for i . . • L

Silks and Dress Goods

W hite Pearl B uttons, all sizes,lOc. doz., to r .............. ................... 2c

‘tc. paper M achine Needles, allk in d s ..............................................2c

Boys' P an ts Bands, all sizes, ea. 3cI'om ato Pin Cushions, regu lar

8c., fo r ..........................................3cVery fine W hite Pearl B uttons,

d o z ................................................. 5cIMashwite, lOc. b o ttle ..................Sc.Ic. paper Gold E ye Sewing

Needles......................................... 2cSt. paper M ending T issue..........3cZ.Sc. Silk Tie Laces, w hite , tnn

and b lack , p a ir ...........................17c1,200 yard spool of Mansfield

Thread.........................................7.Sc

Embroidery Sale.Over 15,000 vMTds of line Cambric

iinJ Swiss ] jTilToidery. The surplus stork of 0 prmninent Importer. These ma^^nilicent fiiihrolderles ate In full pii ces nnJ anv lengths can be cut to

i iicconimoGl.ite jur customers. Hand- I some opeiiHiirk and Hind effects; j wiJLlis up I'l I'Einches, and are worth ) up to :i yard. Special ^ f k j tables, m.nn flour, right ai.sle; 1 1 1 ^ ? fllS'j window dispLiy .-......... * V V '

We quote five special.s out of more tlian fifty. Those who under­stand value.s wilt buy freely at this sale. Don't miss the opportunity.

Satin Foulard* in tb« n«w lajhion- ahle dots, coin spots and fancy figured designs, on nsvy, brown, royal and green grounds, superior quality, . m 24 inches wide, worth regular 4 1 ^ ^

Black Panama Cloth—Full 5(>-ln. wide, all pure wool, good )et black, medium weight. Black Panama Is the most popular fabric for summer wear; sheds the dust, will not wrinkle, reg. flAlOerado (note the width, Q y QSo inches). Reduced spocial.

Loulalne and Taffata Silk In thenewest gray check's and plaids, some with hamionUIng colors of red, blue, green and brown, 10 Inches wide, ex- certionally fine quality, large variety of patterns to select from, pos- p j a Itively worth 89c. yard, to-uior- row, yard..................................

60c. Reduced special, yard..Black Taffeta Silk—t yard wide.

This grade is positively the best fl.2S grade In Newark to-day, fi mediuD weight, bright Jet black, perfect weave and beautiful rich luster, guarantied to give satisfactory wear; only 500 yards In this tot of regular fl.25 Silk. Reduced special^ 89c

Mohair BrilUantliie—+0 Inches wide, extra good quality, made Irom fineat Angor.x yarns and finished with an unusual high silk luster; a desirable sumnier fabricfor skirts, dreases and bathing suit*, shown In shades ot light and medium ,>«/v

^ positive 50C.brown, royal and navy blue, garnet and black, grade. Special lor to-raorrow only, yard.........

This Is

Wash Goods ReducedEvery yard of Wash Goods marked down to a price which must

sell them. We’re tired of waiting for the hot spell promised, and have decided upon the following reductions- Twelve big tables full —Main Floor, rear.

Printed Organdies -- Large variety of this season's newest floral designs, tine sluw qoallty, make handsome sumnivi dresses. We soU this | q grade all se.uon for 30c. a y.irJ. I Reduced special, yard.............. .

l.inenett Suiting—.is inches wide, t.in and white grounds with red, bhick iind blue Coin spots, very lashionable for seashore or mountain we.ir, sold j F everywhere lor 2Sc. yard. Our 1 ^ ^ special price Ur-raorrow, yard .... ^

V h ite l.8w n-a,000 yards of regu­lar l!c, quality White Lawn, full forty Inches wide, exUa good quality. We secured this lot from an overstocked ran II ufadorer at a price conce.sslon uhich en.ihies us lu sell them Q \ / for Ihe ridiculously low price ol. yar.l.............. .....................

Wash Goods R em nants -Accumu- l,ilinii Irom our stock, consisting of l .in.y IX'UeJ Voiles. Checked Mercer- [/isl Pongee, Rlain an. Fancy silk Mulls anj ph'iiiy td oU'er desirable weaves. In leiiRltis Irom 2 to 1.5 yards; are posl- tivelv uorlh Irom 25c. to .lOc. | ' ^ 1 / _ vnrJ. Reduced special, lo rl / A I quick selling tivmorrow, yard

P rin ted B atistes in an endless se­lection of the popular llorsl designs, also dots and coin spots qp light grounds, good clean goods, will wash splendidly, 2,500 yards In this lot—worth P 3 / regular 10c, For this sale, special, yard............................. ^

P rin ted Lawn In neat floral, dotted and fancy figured designs, nice sheer quality for kimonas and dresses, Q \ / worth regular lZ)4c. yard, spe- X A f * cial.............................................

Shirting M adras—One yard wide, In neat stripes and checks, extra good quality, sold regular lor ISc. yd., |In lengths from 2 to 10 yards, 1 1 1 ^ while lot lasts to-morrow, yard.. *

W hite Persian Lawn greatly re­duced. As we are overstocked, hence the radical reductions.

40-Inch, regular 40c ........ 39e40-incli, regular 45c.a...... 35c40-Inch, regular .10c.......... 2Sc■lO-tndi, regular 20c.......... 19c.iMncIi, regular 40c.......... 39cJ 2-Inch, regular ,10c.......... 29c,1 2 -lnch, reguLsr 20c.......... I9c,I2-Inc!i, regular lOc. ...... 12Kc

H eqt cannot slip.The tinea a re mounted on the outer .end i • t the tube, and a rod paaaee through the ' tube and handle. A t one end I t a spiral ■ acrew, and a t tho o ther end Is a nut 10 cause the screw to revolve with the hand la

In operation the tines are driven Into the meat. The handle Is then turned to cauae the spiral screw to engage hr tw t i t :

Handi free for work.South Carolina man, who recommerds thv special outfit of body harneas, shown In the illpitraticn, which he designed for hie own use and hai had patented. The open umbrella It held over the head end shoulden by numerous straps and braces. Rigged up In this faafalon tho canvaaesr or other worker has the free use of hl» handa

will give n liinclibnx social iind dance In Ihe schopl hall Tliureday nlBlit. '

Mr. nnd Zlre. Harold W liiitle. ot Uel- grove drive. Kearny, left Sntiirdny after- noon for Los Angeles, Cnl.. where they will resirte-

The funeral of Agnes Alikin, six years old, daughter of Mr. miii Mrs. Daniel Ah- kln of 1B2 Pomerov nvenue, K earny, who- tiled Friday In Cornwall, N. V.. of pnc-ii- monla, was held to-day from tlie li6ine or her parents.

UNION T O W N S H IP .Cortiundt Cllandler, who liar been enii-

flned to Ids home wltJi ilie grly , is con- valeatienlZ

Mias Etiaabfith Lum, who has been leatihlng a t Peoksklll, N. Y.. liaB ro lu rn td home for Ihe summer vaenilon

Mrs. lilseklel B. Woodruff, of Mniris- town. Is visiting a t the home oT .Mrs, James L. Headley.

A meeting ot the paKiors' Aid Soebny will bo held a t the parsonage on Wednef- day afternoon. . , ,

The monthly meeting ot the Ladles Mlsalntmry Society, which wna lu be hein on Friday, has been postponed Indeflnlieli ■

Dr. end Mrs, J. H. Qlhby, of Fli ladel- pnla, spent Sunday with I-eroy A, Giuui. ot Union. „ ,

Edward Gibb and family, ot Beniards- vlUe, spent Sunday with Mr. ami Mis. John tjeonnrd, of Union.

Owing to some dlaagreoment betwi-en the members of the D ram atic CUili. their proposed entertainment has boni given up.

The commencement of the Coiinccllcnil Farm s High School will be held a t lljw church Thursday evening, The gniduai- Ing class will give a reception a t the home ot Miss Leana Crane on Monday nlKhi. June IT.

SPBCIAL CA8TORIA WOTICE.

C i f l ^ O R I ATor ’In& nti »nd Children.

The Kfaui You H an Always iioughtB ear* tli’i

B lEnatur* o f i

A STUNNING

CUT GLASS PITCHER

FOR $3.50

NOT CUT FOR A SPFXIAL SALE HUT A REGULAR STOCK PITCHER

OFFItRl'I) AT A SPECIAL PRICE

FOR THIS WEEK ONLY.

A MOST UNTSl'AL ( IPI'ORTUNITY

EVEN IN THI.S STOCK OF

a t t r a c t iv e h a k g a in s .

IF YOU WANT TO PURCHASE A

WFODING PRKSLNT, JUST COMK

DOWN AND LOOK AT OUR AS-SORT-

MF;NT o f BliAUTIFUL AND

a p p r o f r ia t k .s t h r u n g .s il v e r

AND CUT GT.AS.S. YOU WILL

FINF: SOMETHING SATISFYING

W Hl'THUR YOU DESIRE A SOc

a r t ic l f : o r a fsoo g i f t .

f

c u t GL.tSS PITCHER—3 PINTS, 9 IN, HIGH, $3.50

RETATT;

DEPART ME N T -

412-418 IL\].SEY ST,,

NEWARK, N. J,

ONE BLOCK FROM

CLINTON AYE.

Unger Bros.M A.NUFACTURING JEWELERS,

.SILVERSMITHS AND G1..A.SS CUTTERS.

V ital V im

K i n Helen B. Saftord, o t !4 Elm street, baa to n s to Northampton, ,M*aa,, tor a two weekaVitny, , „ ."" 'i'l.,

H e rm n W. Harrlaon, o t Passaic, tell hXTO a bicycle' on Bellevue avenue, year tenday, and sprained hts righ t' w rist Ue- atdea reoelvin* several brulsee. Hla wheel waa hroken. zte waa taken to hla home

'**llIra*cS,flea T, Churchill, *f Elm street. I* vliltlng friendt in Morristown.

John H. .C o ^ t, of Grove etreet, la

farm ha owni near Blspaarck. H . D. b£r, jCondlt say* tha w heat crop in th a t (hate wtU Tie a nerm al o iu ttu a year nnleaa there are early froata in A o tu s t

efit of thC'Nutley Improvement Boclety neat Friday-night

A sacred cantata waa given a t St. Paut'a Church yesterday moming by the Sunday-school In observance of children s Day.

Miaa Daisy -Fields,' of 'Yreoland avenue, has returned from a vliit to relatives In Aberdeen, Scotland.

O L B N B ID O E .V ol i r a U. R.' Msiyttn, of Ridgewood ave­

nue, reported to the police yeaterdey that her heohoUie had bMn roMed of three

tbene and fifteen ehickaThe Borough Council wiu meet to-nWd-“ • ' s' So -

IBw. HMmlng Tanbe, of tf Highland lA left thla atondDmfw Farmlng- C o i^ . -where the -WUl spend thegeenui

ton,

M i

J. HUtfortL ot the Cteeeegt, I tte neat few weeka a t Ssin-

I Ckimeh of the I MOfPPWtCS I t

■ he m h r desH to ohow

.N U T L E V - ;T h e annual meeting of the NntleY

britnch of the New Jeraey Children's Home Soolety wlH be held in the lecture-

MBU Ut« g»n*iMM,i *ton, Thnreday, June 1A

A talk about Luther

.Sf.-'f-Af

vm Bitthaak, tha hor-wlll ba given by tYUllem J.

(h e sttb U eJ th ew fw tho hso.

The Ladies' and Forrlgn MU-pionary societies MU meet fit the parlors of the Congregational church - to-morrow afternoon. ,©-- Miss Marlon Sehelfler la home from Rye fleminary.

Joseph Bohans, ot New York, and Bd- yrard N. GTeenfield, - - - ■■f Cedarbnrst, Dong _ . . ^ each by RecorderBmlth, y e s t ^ a f afiefhdon, for vIolsUn* the aiitomohUfr'Iaw tajoof dlaplavlng their llcebse numbere. The"Ss)ss were paid.

The Sunday afternoon service lu the Congregational _chufeh haa keen dlsooh- ttaiLed until M .

fined:

SlIBROflATB'B NOTIGElfi.B8TATK o r MAKY^HAMlW, -Pursvset to the ortsr ot OMrsr B. Buewil. surmssls of >ht ooumy of K«»e*, this rwy made, on ms sppllcstteo of Iho unOerelsu^l. eieoulrig of ssfif -dscsoaed, aotice la hereby slvcn Id the cr^llor* ol sold defeased to ex­hibit to the subscriber under onlh or efnnne- ihro their elaims and iiemiinds " js sn 't J " eatate of Bald flaceaaed. wUhln nine montiw from this-dale, or rhey will be forever bon ri from Pfoaseutuis or recoverlDBihe same asalnst

April 10s AMSTslA SMITH.Altman 4k AUBoatt, Proctot*. , ^ ,600 Br<Mid itm l. Ne^*ark. Ke J>.

K8TAT¥” or^HlGHABir’"wTTW DC CKAflBD-PQiwmt . P

E. BUiMlli ■umM thif dMt lUMai w ilit 'a p p l— -- lUtnid. adrawiaiwws* oC-iaW deH-eased. notloe Is hereby slvsn ta tho oesatiors of » H de­ceased-to eahlblt to the aiibacriher. aader o«th « affiraiatlon. their elstme and ^demonto Bsaintt lhe -e«at* of eatd deceased, wlthto nine mBithe from Ihle date, or ihey win be toiwvet haired from proeecunna or recover­ing Uw aame ngntunt (he nbsoriber.

IpriT!#. hoffm am n .Johnopfl Boateir. iToctpra. _____

voUCa OF ■KTTLKMBNT-NotUJ* I*«lY*n ihit tnt netounu ot tw *no»mwre

tT^tptt' vuiM* U«t will und cntAn»«nt w

hv til?

D o y o u lo v e lic iiltli iiiiil H tre n g th a n d vitalit.Y It's vusy to attain. A dear head, sii'aJv nnves, blood tinfilinji in your veins, nu'd appetite and digestion —and tliere you are. T i io re ’s A ll of

Thin ill a Bottle of VITAL VIM.V ita l V im is a nood name for a Tunie, It like a Tonic. And \ H a l

V h n is a Tonic of .a superior sort. It is neu' and has none of the prestige of old and tried remedie.5; but the mtrit is there and its reputation will grow with each bottle used. Try it yoiir.self: Buy a bottle from your Druggist. We are spend­ing considerable money to get your trade—to induce you to buy the first bottle. Our whole endeavor is centred on seijing the /m,5t bottle. Your luture patron­age will come unsolicited, Vit-iil A im makes friends easily, ’ y in i is

not a remedy for the desperately i l l . nor for incurable diseases. It is a tonic only but it is the t>est tonic. p L sa n tto fh e taste; immediate in its effect. Invigorahng and exhiUnating f your sydtem is run down or your nerves are unsteady; if your brain tires easily; if ynur blood is sluggish; if your appetite is poor, your digestion impaired or your vitality not up to the standard, V I ti i l V illi is for vou. Its reconstructive powers nre immense nnd its use a blessing. V i ta l V im is a vegetable preparation, designed to assist nature in keeping the system up to a healthy cofidition. it is'not a physic ora cure-all; just atonic and a w fc r tonic than you ever used. Brace up your system before it needs anything more serious than atonic. Take \ itiit V im now.You won’t need a doctor later. The price is Fifty cents. -----

. r .. . -.r.,, r. .. 0 . R. BRUOIER, druggist, Hamburg PI. and LafayettePETTY’S PHARMACY, Prudential BUUdlng. " fit., Newark.FEIND & MAINE, druggists, Newark. CHAS.’e . WILLIAMS, druggist, Main St., Orange.E. BEITMAN, druggist, Newark. GEO. 1. SCHREIBER, druggist, Newark,M. T. SCHGTZMAN, druggist, 198 Spruce St., Newark F W. SPECKMAN. druggist, Newark,

Jr

t tfl tha. order ot (tiojraa * bt Ih* county of Baas*. .raeDlivallon of (ho unmr-

St;BHO«ATB‘» SO T lfB S.BSt I tB of OElltfilA C. StOOBK. DE- [

(TEASED — Pursuant to tho ordor of . 0«jte« S. flBMol'. surrogaio of iho coun­ty of Es«*. >Ws lis)' msite. on iho aBOltcailon of (hr unafrtlgnfiO, ndminl^ iMlor of jSId notice is Iwrebysiren 1 o the eteilHon of ealO deow ^ lo *x- SlHt to the aubocrlber. unrtrr ,u«th or af- flrmetlon. their etalma ana demanrte eialnet ih* estate of ealJ dectaMO. within nine mctnibe . Irom (hie date, or they will be forever tarred | from prtiseeniln* or recoverln* the same-' •gabut the eubecrlber.

A ^ l IT, U»I, viCTOn J. MOORB- ICharlee H. .)laUMony, tToetor

SlRnOOATE'S BOTICUS.Of JOHN A. KUNTf^FT, DEJ-

Pursuiint W the order «f Ueorjfi! R. Hiw’ll. surroffWCP ut the cGumy of Em+ex. UiIn fiay on the at<i>ite*tlon th< uiuidrrFlancil. of uld d«i‘<'at«fUe owlvti if

w th« rrwUlorK of AkW rtWuXBPrt w ariDiQji und*t oatli i>rnffirmatlun. their flUlms andtlie SBtite fd n»:4fYum IhiB <inle. or itiey will h« forrfm fron* iiruiMK'uUng' or recovering ihe eaine i ceinxt lUe tuhecrlber.

May. St. 1»7; ^ prrNET.^TATE OF CATilABINE A SMITH, Dg- CEAfiED-Puiaunni to tht- orde^f (l«or*a H.

-- - ______ . . ,__________________ _ Ruraeil. lafrbaate of the ,i-ounl¥ of OtisWfvrirE ffv SBTTLElllENT—Nottce Is hereby ' day niade, tm the appllentlon of the undereianM, * * 2 1 1 1 1 that l^ 'lcw S ite ol the subsertbera ; c-xtcutrii of Hibi deooonit. nntloe le hereby

» thiVonih*BF't)sitft,Mjii» c i ^ y on Hsumlsyf. the tweaiyfiScobd day of June" n iu a . May t*.

jiu as BwdWMkti lYimwi.KBHRY n i e

eaeeutora of the Iasi will jWlan Shrlmotoo,- deceaacd. will be audited anil . •taied by she surrwjafo and reporttil for aotlle- Btenr t* tht OrohatW Court of theanxiify of Esses. ®B Balonlay, :J2». flfioontb day of Jono

- - - ■ hhueh nonwEU., „ , fevEWKi: E. fbbncm,

Howe 6,D»rl»t>5*‘®rs- wSatad MsiT a tan. .■to-

'lliyiCUtHL ---- -------,.,»n to th* creditors of »ald deoea«d to ea- hiblt in tha suiieorlher under oath or atfinna- tlon lhalt elalnw and demand* miaiBat tte fetate dt-aaiti ddceaevrl. within nine moath* from twa-date. of they will b* forv'-ar barred from imwsetitUr* or reeovefina the lame aaalnat th* tub*orlber. !W ed^SsU SIl.gkarlai H. BaUpinm. FrqotoS. . ,

twit-

s i ’Riioa.STE’s FtoTioES, ;g'fTOTATE''oF''nACUEL'ir~D ’ .

CBAS!EJ.I“■'I* reuan to th« order of acoTge Ht; o® liUMcn, surrogulp of the i-nufity of Eiwax,IMS ddy Riaiic. on lli> of th* uiylrr-'

**xc* utnra of Mid tlcceflMd. rwtlce h*r«by Klv«rt lo lh*» creditor* of a«*MM \IQ exhibit 1 0 iho ?uhrefiber*, under oeth flif ,*■ ■’ their clxlmx a&d dem»ndj* agiiiMt

W rtlfl deci'Riwdw wuhln moftuu.m m IW*' S tI: % th e y ^ l fee Mrtfvbr from projiecutlrig or m*overlnf the laino ftt*fnu the ettUHCTlhcTB.

May a .ROT., t l-AMBEHTEUPHALBT PKCAMP,

Adrlan^B^ef d: Pearw. Frojitera. - 'iwTlCE o r KLTTLEKBbf'f--Ntd10* ia hereby ■ aUon irbai the acooume of. (be. aubaorttwifi, admlnlalWuiis of . trenry TTetnmelBiar. (ft- Oiaaed. WDI be wtuUteil and stated bz tJF Mir- . resale end reported for seUlamjmt to ms ft- > phane' l.tmtl Of -the coitoly of BSsaS. *» ■»»- ,,,, uldny, the tnwuty-eecond d*>' of Ja“a ■ ,3

Oaied Mny. HB(rKMBIMIMi4^3?,--U

Oeorio 11. Iltus. Pnxqoi'., ^ ' - ^ ' f

NEWARKIEVKNING NEWS. M Ol^At, 10, 1907. ■ fi •'

S T O a S W E A K ;

M A R K E T D U L L

Small Advances a t Opening Wiped Out Under Pressure

of Selling Orders.

THE a O S E SHOWED SOME EASE

NEW YORK, June lO.-The openlnr buelnew In the itoclc market to-<)ar wni acanly. Small advancea were the rule, but there waa a aprlnkllng ot tosaea, in- eluding aome among the prominent atooka. O rw t Northern preferred advanced IVl and then reacted a point. Union Pacing roaa li.

Buying ordera were dlatrlbuted freely and piicea roaa aharply, with the general railroad Hat In better Inquiry and rela­tively itronger than the Induatrlale. After the atandard railroad atooka had an aver- aga riae of a point, heavy eelllng of Union Faciftc broke It a fracllon below Satur- day’a cloaing and alerted reotlelng In other atooka, which wiped out a good pert of the advance.

Noon—The earlier galna were changed, t i a rule, into amall loiaea In the courte of fllllag ordera to aell. Activity aub- alded greatly a t the raceaatona. Thera were no Important ralliea.' Bonda were ftrin.

1 P. M.—The aelTIng waa not contlnuM bedrond midday, and the market becai.ie ateadler, bu t atmoat atagnant. American C ar aagged a point,

1 Fi M.—Signa o t improvement developed towaurd the ctoae of the hour and of the period for the appearance of the govern­m ent crop rep o rt Tenneaaee Coal moved up a point, while United Statee Pipe de­clined aa much.

The m arket cloied eaay with many ■tocke a t the loweat. Pricea jumEKd to the top level of the day after the appeal- anoe of U it government crop report, but the rally did not hold. Pennaylvanla waa forcer 1% and Union Pacino and Smelting 1 under Saturdey’a do ting on the reaction, Amerloan MaJtlng aold a t a decline ot f|>.

M0INEY-INVE8TMENT8-BU8INE88HEAVY DEMAND FOR IRON.

NEW YORE S T O a MARKET.

r

The range of to day'a prfaea for the more active ttocka and bonda ot the New York marketa, aa furnlahed for the NEWS by Poet f t FUgg, la given below:

Open-Hlgh-Low-Cloa- ■ng. eel. eat. Ing.

Am. Cotton Oil Co.. Siji Slti 3114 IHViAm. Llnaeed O fl...... Id .........................Am. Smelting.......... ltd Udl4 U3% IlDHAm, Smelting, p r... lid ............................Am. S ugar................UH4 12l1t i m UUt4Am. C. ft F. Co....... 12 13% lu i 41',4Am. C. ft F. Co„ pr. »IVi .........................

Ik ^Atch., Top. ft S. F. Sdl4 W% m S9Baltimore St Ohio... ^ dd di>Mi tdlaBrook. Kap. T ran ... 5.11* d<t4 U% Canadian Paclflc.... 16 KM IdS 16S Clieaapeake ft Ohio. 31)% 3d>,i 35% 3d^ Ic a g o ft A lton ..., IS .........................Chi., Sill, ft St. P .. . 12SU ia% 12*14 12*14C , C , C. ft St. L,..,, dd% ............. ....Col. Fuel ft Iron Co. 30% 32 3014 3dliCol. Southern......... 2314 23% 23ll 23%Conaolldated G aa.... 113 .........................Delaware ft Hudaon 163 138% 16314 138%Den. ft Rio U......... 23 2M 20 20Side ......................... 23 23% 23 23Erie, let p r ,............ ST 6714 66% 67Erie. 2d p r............... 30 3M » »%General Electric Co. 112 112% 1« 112Int. Paper Co......... 11% 12% 1314 13%Iowa Central, p r .... 41% .........................

Mlaaourl Paelflc...... 7K'I 76 71% 76Me*. Central R. R., 20% .........................N ational Lead Co.., 62% 62% 62 62N. Y. A ir B rahe......101% 166 Ml% 166N. Y. C e n tra l,..,,... 112% m % u»ff -112% Norfolk ft W e rt.,... 74% 74% 7i% .74%N orth American Co. 68 ........................N orthern Pacllle... 126% 127% 126% 125Northweat ............... 116 116 113% 111%Ontario ft W eatern. 36% 37 36% 3MPennaylvanla ...........121% 121% 120% i mPreiaed S. C. Co.... 36 36% 34% 24%Heading .................... 166% 107% 106% 106%Roek laland............ 21% 31% 21% 21%Bock leland, p r ....... 46 .........................Rep. L ft S. Co.. 86 16% 26 26%B t Louta S .» W .... 20% 2M 30% 20%S. Pacifi.c.............. 73 76% 7T%Southern R y .... . . . 19% 18% 13% 13%

Southern Ry., p r.. 6t 61 60% 60%L. ft S. F. 3d p r 81% 34 33% M

Tenn Coal ft Iren 139% 140 13!i% 146Tax. ft Paelde.... 2 2M 27'Z 27%T. , Bt. L ft W .... 27% 27% 27% 27%f , , St. L. ft W., p r 60 6M » »%Union Paclflo R. R. 137% 183 136% 130U. S. Steel ............. 34% 36 14% 34%H' S Pf........ 8S%U. B. Rubber ....... 37 37* 37 37Wabaali ........ 13 13% |3 13%Webaah, p r................ 21 ............................W eatern Union Tel. 8(1% 31 30% 81W h. A !>. B .............. ^ 11 11% 11 11%

HEW YORK BOND MARKET.

Im p o ria o f th e R e w M m terlal B reak A ll P rev lew a R e co rd a In

th e T ra d e .NEW YORK. June 10.—While the ea-

pbtte of flnlahed Iron and ateel laat month were the tmalleat for any one month m the Uat decade, the Importa of raw ma­terial were the largeal In any thirty daya in the hlatory of the trade. The May ar- rlvala a t New York, Philadelphia and Bal. timore reacbed a to tal o t nearly 260,oog tona. Compared with the prevloua month, the heavleat Increaaea were made In plg Iron. which showed a gain of nearly eighty per cent.

The Iron or* Importa by themaelvea alao reaohed record-breaking Itgura*. In ad­dition to the uaual Cuban ehipmenta, heavy eargoea arrived from Buaata. North Africa, Spain, Oreeo* and -Sweden. The American demand for pig Iron la ao un- precented that the atucka of the material lying In Brltlah warebouaea are emallor than they have ever been before,

NEW YORK OUTSIDE SECURITIESThe following quotatlona are furnlahed

by Van Schalck ft Co.:INDUSTRIALS.

Cloatng Ctoaa Saturday. to-day, Bld..kaked. Uld.Aike<t.

Amarlcan C hicle..,. 178 186 176 200Am»r. Chicle, p r ... 38 I04 93 104Amerloan N ickel.... % 1% % 1%American Tobacco., m 340 320 MeAmer. Writ. Paper. 1% 3 1% 2%Amerloan W. P„ p r 13 21 19 21Bay Stale Gaa......... l % % % %Central Fliundrv,..: <1% 8 1% ^Cen. Foundry, 'vr .. 13 15 12% 16Havana Tobacco.... 10 14 10 12Havana Tobacco, p r 16 20 16 20Jlouaton OH.............. 7% 3 7% 3%Houaton Oil. p r ........ 36 60 36 60International B alt... 10 17 U ITManhattan T ranalt. M 3% 6% 0%o u t Elevator...... . 36 66 16 46Otia Elevator, p r . . . . 36 K 36 36Standard OH............. 615 622 613 624

RAILROADS.-Am. L. ft T .............. 107 112 101 112Am. L. ft T„ p r ...... 36 35% 36 86%Chicago Subw ay.... 30 20% 13% 20%Seaboard Co............ 16 90 16 plSeaboard, lot p r ... . 60 70 60 76Seaboard, Sd p r....... 30 40 30 to

lilN IN G .Argentite Cobalt.... % 1 % 1Bingham C entral__ 1% 2% tl4 2%Bonanaa Creek........ 10% 11% 10% 11%Boston Copper......... 26 26 26 26Brltlah Col. Copper. 8 3% 7% 8%Butte Coalition....... 28% 26 23 34%Butte ft London..... 1% 2% 1% 2%Butte ft New York.. 4 6 4<4 6Butte Cop. ft Zino.. 3 4% 3 4%Cumb.-Ely Mining.. S *% 7% 8%Davit-Daly Eat....... 12% 12% 13'% 13Dominion Cop., new 6% 6% 6% 6%El Raya Mining...... 6 6 6 6Ely-Nevada ........... 1% 2% 1% 2%Foater Cobalt ........ % % % %Furnace Creek Cop. % % % %Greene Con. Copper 20 23 20 26Greene Gold ........... 1% 1% 1*% 1%Greene Geld-Sllver. 1% 1% 1% 1%Green, ft D. V........ 60 60 76 86Oug.ExpIorntlon Co 230 240 220 240McKinley Dnrrngh % 1% 1% 1%Mlcmae Gold Min.. 3% 4 3% 3%Mlnea Co. of Am.. 1% 1% 1% 1%Hltchell Mining . . 3 6% 3 2%Vevada Con. Cop. 13 IS'% IS 13% Nevada Smelting.. 2% 3 2% 2Nip. Hlnea Co.... 12% 12% 12 12%Old Hundred Min.. 2% 3 2% 3%Silver Queen......... 1 1% 1 ivjTohopnh Belmont.. 4% 6 4% 6%Tonopah Eiteneion 2% 3 3% 3%Tonopah M. of Nev. 12 16 12% IBUnion Copper Co,... % % % %United copper........ 67% OS 66% C7White Knob............ ” % % % %White K. Cup., pr , 2 2% 3 2%

BONDS.Am. Steel Found. 6a 04 35 34 96Am. W rit. Paper 6e 81 34 81 84Cent. Found. 6b dot 63 72 88 73Con. Rub, T, deb 4» 34 37 34 39

FH lU D ELPH U STOCK MARKET

W H E A T R E P O R T

S H O W S L O S S E S

Both Winter and Spring Varie ties Below Condition An­

nounced One Year Ago.

INCREASED ACREAGE OF OATS

WASHINOTONe June lO.-AfHcultUra: D epartm ent's crop report, Iseusd to-daiy, shows spHng wheat condition on Juno ). I90T, S8.1. compared with S3.4 a t the corre- apondlnf date lust year.

Acreage sown In United Statee, 1W7; Spring wheat, 1€,4M,Q00, decrease of 1.342.' 000, o r seven per cent, as compared wUh last year.

W inter wheat, 77.4, oompared with 82.7 on June 1, 1906, and with 82.9 on May 1 la«t.

Total acreage of oats, 91,491,000 acree, an tnereaee of 5S2.WO acres, b» compared with the areas sown last year; condition of ouU on June 1 whs 91.4, against 85.9 last year; acre4'ige of barley Is less than th a t of las t year by about 171,000, o r 2.7 per cent.; condition of barley, 84.9, against 93.6 this time last year; i^ndltlon of rye Is 9.91« against 89.9 this time last year.

The following table shows for the five principal spring wheat Slates the acreagSg compttrod with lust ymr, on a perceniage basis, -and the cfmdition on June 19U7* and 1906, with a ten-year average:

W-YearStates. Acreage. 1907. 1906. Average

Minnesota .. 90 86 91 63N. D akota... 92 99 9G 64S. D ak o U .... 93 90 95 94Io w a ............. 97 87 F6 04Unit'd S tates 92.9 S8.7 53.4 93,3Washington.. 103 96 92 bs

The following table ehown for each of the principal winter wheat Btates the con* ditlon on June 1 In each of the last two years and with the ten>year June averages:

Junol, June 1 ,19-yr,State. 1907. lEHHi, av'ge.

K ansas .............. . 6) 74 61Indiana ....................... 78 SO 72Missouri ..................... 84 78 79Ohio ............................ 80 89 77Nebraska .....................89 86 87Illinois ........................ 89 71Pennsylvania ..........92 91 87California ....................75 85 77Oklnhoma ...................60 90 89T cias .......................... 44 87 81Mlchlgiin .................... 75 75 7JUnited Btatoa ......... 77.4 R2.7 81.1

t h e D e w a r k

E v t t t i n f i D t w tn il )m lowd 0* Ml, ft 4 ,

igtloWMi a n ti Mratk M

ATLANTIC CITYHgddon Hftll,Lg Bcllt Inn,

Tbt New PHiUMg,Gtldii Ball,

Tile WllUhtn BothvcU BIlUird P*ilor% The AlbertMw N«ire C«,,

Union Newe Co., Ctntrml

! B I G C O N T R A C T

F O R S T E E L C O .

Orders Placed for 6,000 Cars that Wifl Aggregate $6,-

500,000 in Cost.

TO USE 90,000 TONS OF STEa

CHICAGO WHEAT MARKET.

The followlnjg quo ta tion , were furnlehed by Elrele ft King:

lerlcnn Rsllway Co-Bld.Aiked.

Open-Hlgh-Low-Clo»- . „ ^ log. ert. «»t. Ing.

Am. Tobacco 6*........M6% ...........................A tch .,^ T .jt S, F. 4» 3 ^ 98% 93% H«%ciiee. ft Ohio 1 ^ lOiHi ioo% ]a6% Uhl. ft Alton SfVtv.-., mc ., B, I. ft P, oW 4a 1(»% .........................f - h '. n . I, ft Pae. 6b OTisJ ' 67% 67% 07%Im perial Jap. 1« Oe 33% .........................Imp. Ja. Sd 8e......... 93% .........................Imp. Jap. 4%«...... »2‘i *2% 33% 92%Imp. ^ p . ctf. 4%a-. 01% .........................Inter-Borough 4%a.. 75 .........................St. L. ft I, SI. G. 4* 110% .........................

tfnloti Pan. let 4b.. IWS .........................r. a. Steel B.F, .6b.. 9S% 96% 96% Ba%

NEW YORK MONEY MARKET.NB7W YORK. June 10.—(Cloae.)—Prime

m ercantile 6®J% per cent. Sterling ex- nhange firm, with nclual huslncss In kankcro' btlla a l *4,se.95®487 for demand and a t 34S3.60®483.6r. for « days. poBted rate*, 34434% and 34SS. Conmrclal tatllB

■34*3.%. Bar sliver, 60%. Mexlran dollnra, ,11%, Government bonda, Bteady. Rail­road bonds, firm.

AmiCambria ironCambria S teel.............................. 33%Storage ................................. 43Storage, p r..................................... 9%EUc. Co. of Am erica................ 92%T. ft P, 4 ,..................................... 83%Lehigh Navigation........................ icLehigh Valley....................... . 61% C3(Luke Superior C orporation-..., j 3<Maraden ...................................... . 1 l<N. J. Con. T ra c t.................................... 72'N. J. Con. Tract. 6a....................... 163Philadelphia Com........................... 39% 46Philadelphia, p r ..................................... 44Philadelphia Elec...... ................. 8 8'Philadelphia Elec, 4a.............................^ ;iPhiladelphia Elec. 6a.................... 99% 100Philadelphia T ra c t......................... 91% ■Rending 4a......................... ............

U. G. I .................................. !......... 92Unliin Hallway 4s...................... 83^Uiiilon T raction............................ 68Warwick ..................................... 8%Tonapoh ............. ............................. ijUB elm ont.............. ............................. 3 5

[9 4

63% (

CHICAGO, June 10.—The whe!il murkoi to-day opened active and firm, alihough the general run of pricea wuu soniewhut unsettled. I t was genemtly believed, how ­ever. that the government crop repon, which was expected this ftftefmwvn. would be of a bullish charat.tor. and the bulk of traders guided themselves uccordingiy. September sold a t

The corn m arket wae Ann,Bteady ruhlea and continued cold weulher in the com belt.64 4,

Trading In oats was fairly active and prices wore Arm. W eather In the West wafl considert'd too cold for the crop, 6vp- lember. 38^.

The provisions m arket was quiet and prices were easy. September pork, 18.45: lard, 9-17V» and ribs, 8.9244.

The following quotations were furnish­ed hy W. V. Smith A Co.:

At the Chicago Bojird of Trade:

ber.niSft of reportH of September

F R A N C E F A Q N G

A H O M E C R I S I S

500,000 Wine Growers, in Pas­sive Rebellion, Swear to Not

Fay Government Taxes.

FEAR NEW REIGN OF ANARCHY

Open., 97%

99%® 99% 101%l5l06iJ64'4(m 54%64%® H%

. 52

. 46%®4*%

. 39

. 37%

9,66 . 6.IT

97

LONDON STOCK MARKET.LONDON, Jun^' JO.—American securltica

.Opened Irrenular to-day. Trading was {quiet and price chikuget* ranged from %, below to \ above Saturday’s New York closing.

l>urmg the forenoon Uiore W'as Improve- tnent, led l:iy L'nk^n Paciftc, and further advances fothiwed receipt of New York

.opening priceN, Realizing caused a re­action, and at itie close prices were a IruetJon bclnw the best of the day.

I ^

BOSTON STOCK MARKET.Th* following quototlons were furnished

by W. B. Smith ft Co,:Closa

Cloae Satur- to-day. day,

Adventure ...... .............................. ;■% 2%Amiilgwratea ................................ 86% St,%Areadlun ....................................... [% 9Bulakhiln ....................................... 8 8Bingham ......................................... 17% nHutto Coal...................................... 24% 24%Calumet ft llecla............................ ,99 790CnJumet ft A rizona.................... 157 166Centennial ..................................... 26% 2 ^Copper Range................................ 79t 78%Daly W eat..................................... 16% 16%Franklin ........................................ 13% 14Grerno ........................................... 16 16%lel> Hnyale...................................... 16 16%Michigan ....................................... 1314 13 ■Mohawk ...... ............. ................... if!% soNnrlh Hutte.................................... 81% S6%Old Dominion .............................. 47 4';%Oareola ............................................ I27 1|B

Shunnon ......................................... 18 78Tnmaro.'k ...................................... 107Trlnlly ............................................ 20U. S, flmeltlng, p r ........................ 43%Utah Conaolldated ...................... 69Wolverine ...................................... i.6jMaBBarhuaetls Elec...................... 17%MafBiichuaettH Elec., p r ............. 69Maeanchum-Us Gaa .................... 61 .I'oiled Fruit ............... .........................United Hho.' Machine__ _ 63United Shoe Machine, p r ........... 27%

IW

107%69>,i31%

Now Unveil Over C e n tra l L ine,Fpecla) jo HVUMMI Vflt'S.

NEW yORK, June 10.—Important traok- *go rights over the Bofiton and Albany Railroad lines have been eeenred by the Now York, New Haven and Hartford, according to a statement made public hero to-day. These rights give the New York, New Haven and llartford new routes from New England points to New York eta tc and the West. “

— -- -------- a ------------ —M ore 'opoonaK e” In d le tine iits .

CHARLESTON, W. Va,. June 16.—The Federal Grand Jury to-day brought in

.m ore indictments against the Ritter Lum­ber Company of Wyoming County, Maben and oiflclals, on a charge of holding la- borera in peonage. One of the Indletments Contains twenty-two counts. The same company and- Us offleera and guards are ftlao.reindicted jointly and severally.

— ------------a ------------ --M cIdllnK cr E n ti t le d to Seat,

ftpsrtal DlBjMiir* to the £VJ!,V/.ve Win'S.TRENTON. Juim 10.—In the Supreme

Court to-day the Ease* Circuit Court was miatalned In dlamlsBlng the poll lion ot JM nlol. C-. Hutcheon, who eqatfisteq th#* election of William H. Neidllnger as a member of the Board of Education ot Or-

Ja Nfldllngcr badnot lived in the city the required number of years to entitle him to a Beat In the School Board.

— --------------- --------------- a ----------------------------C itagel to e R aokw ooda F re n cb e r.

■ TEENTON, June !0,—Rev. James Harl*. known ae th e "backwoods preacher"

baving resigned from a charge a t Buck- Inghatn. Pa., lo c a r Baptists are contem­plating the erection of a chapel for hla oae la the suburbs. Mr. Harle is sixty- nine years old, but he works every week­day a t bis trade of carpenter and de­votes every Sunday to religious effort

s. H e never takes a cent of pay for preach. W aJiwayg ratiirulng all of the money raised for Mm to the church. He 1ms

. hefn preaching In thia way for nearly . fa riy years.

D iv a rc e fo r S o r l ln g to a WoiAan,- TRENTON, June H .-M rs. Lain Balltii-

gar, of Medford, Burlington County, bus : been granted a divorce by the Court of : C hanctry because her husband struck her

a f ta r she bad locked up U i clothes, ec-

NEWARK SECURITIES MARKETThe following quuiationa are furnished

by J. a. HIppuTrBid.Aaked.

Celluloid .............. ............. 1;^ mConsolidated Traction Co.»........ 72 U*ConaoJidated Traction Co. Bs... 103 *£eBex County P a rk 4b due 1938Baaex & Hudson G ai Co,.*........liD lAGns A Electric Bergen Co......... b& 5G*HudBon County Gae due 1D49 103 104Hudson County Gaa k tock........ 108 llCi*J. C.. Hoboken & Paterson 4a.. 69 70Newark ConaoUdated Gaa..,**. 89^ 81•Newark 4b due 3^22.................. 102 303•Newark Con. O at Co. H a........ 10SV4 106•Newark PagBenger R ailw ay 8b 108 UO•Newark Gbb Co. Bb................. 139 m*N. Jersey Street Hallway 4e.. 6 ^ 7[M •Pats & Paa. Gaa A Elec. Co. Bb 100 102Pat. & Paaaalc Gaa A Elec. Co. 65 70Public Servloe Corporation c tfi. 64'Public Service Corporation...... 8S 92•Pub. Service Corp. 6 r 0, notea 93^ 94U S, Jer, G a^ Elec, A Trac. atk. 114 116•S. Jeraey-Qbb. Elec. A Troc. &B 97 97U•United E lectric Co. 4s.............. 68 681X

•And Interest.

W heat- July .Sept. .Dec. .

Corn—July .Sept. ,Dec. ,

Oats—July ,Sept.Dec.

P o rk ^July ...Bept. ss.

L ard—July Sept.At the New York Produce Exchange:

W heat— open. Close.July .............................. ............ PKH Wl»4Sept..................................{........... 106^ 104^Dec................................. .............. 105

Corn—July .....................................................Sept. ........... .............. .........................

Illgtl. liow. Close.67%6J%

9697%

96%®95%9^4@«8%

1(11% 99 m64% 63% 63%Bl% 63% 63%!Sfi3%62% 52 62%m «% 44%a 37%33% 38% 38%

16,35 16.29 16.2216.46 16.35 16.379,60 S.S7 8.90178.929.17 9,06 9.07IS8.10

PARIS, June 10.—The revolt of the wtne-growlng population In the south of France, which goes Into effect tg-day, ia cauaiiig conaiderable apprehension in gov- emmem drejes, By the terms of the reaoJuttnns which half a mllilon people a t Montj>cl]ler yesterday pwore with uplifted hands to execute, the deiiurtinental, city, town and communal must resignto-day, and the InhnhltnntB refuse to pay taxes until Parliament affords roller. Hev- eral Mayors, headed by M. Fiirnml, Mayor of Narborjne, resigned la.st night, nnd If thtn example Is foaowe;l n tM.nimion bor­dering on anarchy will n-KiLli and the civil government will ceiisc i" n-iyn from the BpaniHli frontier tu the Ithono. C4>m- prlelng the departments nf Merraiill, Aude. Hauie-Oargnne ^ !lll Pyreneea- OricntoIcB. The sltuallon is all the more gro\’e because It conatltuifH u iiniinimous protestation of tlie pnpulahun. and. being unaccompanied by diaordir. furnishes liit government with no preiexi to resort to force,

Marcelln Albert, the leader of the move­ment, WHS, until a couple of months ago. un obBCUre wine grower i>f Argellefa. Now he is aeclalmed as a "redeemer” und

to hold the south of France in the hollow of hla hand. Ills orders are im- [ilk'ltly obeyed, and hy the powers of or­ganization with which he is endowed, he has proved hlmirelf to be a born leader of men. U fa realized ritnnng the hot-bloodHl people of the Bouth that ?uch a man might fire a formidable revolution.

The government's hill providing for the puppresslori of the immufneturp of fraud­ulent wine comes up in the Chamber of Deputien this ofternoon, but beyond pasa- ]]ig tills bill the government can do little, all the experts who have invoKtJgated the ermrlltlgns having found that tho real depression was by overprodtm-tltin, which even the rigorous suppres­sion of fraud win not remedy. The only Rolutlnn (hey report Is the abandonment of much of the wine acreage In favor of regular farm crops and truck gardening.

AUTO COLLIDES WITH THEE,

PITTBBURO, June 10.—C ontracts for the conitructlon of 6.000 steel cars aggregating in cost 16,600,000 liavc been placod In the ^ B t forty-eight hour* by the United fltatea B t« l Corporation. This 1b one of tho largoBt orders for eteel products and the largest for steel cars that has been placed Blnco steel cur construetion hue been an industry of the PUtaburg district. To nil the orders about 90,000 tons of uttsol plates will be required. Nearly one-half of the contracts have been placed with Pittsburg builders.

The Union Railroad of the Carnegie ateel Compunyi a eubsidlary of the utecl cortKiruitun, awarded the contract for 1,54)0 steel hopper curs to the Proawjd Bled Car Company of P ittsburg und 800 steel hopper cai'B and 600 patent ttucL dump cars to the Standard Steel Car Company, also of this city. These cars will be used on the Union Kullrond In the dletributton of cold slag about the many terminals of the BesBemer and Lake Erie Railroad.

Coulraet for 3,000 Cars.The Chicago, Lake Shore and Eastern

Railroad, another subsidiary of the United S tates Steel Corporatlun. awarded the contract to the American Car and Foun­dry Company for over 3,000 steel cars for US© on that syatem. The bulk of tho steel for these cars will come from Pitts­burg mllki, although the cars will be built a t the Plante of the American Car and Foundry Company, outside of PlitBtiurg.

This 1b the first large order that has boon placed with the steel car builders for some time. It is regarded as a forerunner

•of large contracts which must be placed hy the principal railroad systems to en­able them to handle their enormously In­creased traflic and to m aintain tlu*lr eiiulp* meat. It Is expected eveiHunlly tu result In H "rush." It Is orgued that tlie only danger^ of the preaent outlook Is dial the mills will become so crow’ded with nidcrs that it may become rtlftlctiU to place iJiem.

PLANS FOR IMPROVEMENT,A reh lteets Have F in ish ed Prepara-

tltiiiM fur the nenutlfy luK of A tlantic City.

ATT..ANTIC CITY. June lO.^Comprcbpn- fitve pliuiB for the devolopment of A tlan­tic (Mty along artis tic lines have been tircpared by Carrerc & llaslIngB, archi­tects. of New York City, ami work on these plnnif has been Kuthorlzed by the r i ty ’s odiclats. No estimate o f the coat lia» been miub*. but it wUi be nillllon.s of dollars, and the expenditure w lli extend over a long term of years.

T htrt' arc four dlvlwtnns of the pinna as prepared. Tho lirsi af thcae Ih the ilevel- opmenl of a clvle centre. It is prnpostd to establish n large square, bounded by Alliibtlc and Arctic, TeimeBsee ami North Carolina avenueg, the new stuthm of tl>© PGtmsylvnnla Railroad to be on one side, a new city hall on the other, and smaller municipal buildings around these.

Next in Importance la the draJnjtge canal, which has In'en authorized by the City Council. In the development of th© boardwalk It is propoaed to follow the present lines, but to carry the ocean side m arches of concrete, to Introduce pioper ekclric lighting and to construct for tho convenience of visitors p ^ ilio n a and Bhel- ters.

WILSON TRUSTED HOLMES.flvcrclHrjT H <T«r Bmyecfc^d Btatts-

l l e U a Utttll lh « P re sen t •^Cutton L e a k ’ Case Came

WASHINGTON, June 10.*-WIHlam A. Cochran, m anager of the Planters’ Hotel, Bt. toulB, waa the first witness lo-day ia the trial of EJdwIn 9, Holmes Jr . In the "cotton leak” case. He produced the register of the hotel for November, l»4, showing th a t gn the fourth of th a t month Holmes and his son, Mr. and Mrs. Fred­erick Peckhom and Moses Haas, of New York, and a Mrs. Tompkins, of Chicago, had been guests of the hotel, and that their names had til been registered by KoImeB, Tha object of thia testimony was to show the relations of the parties.

Bartholomew' C. White, special cotton crop agent for the Department of Agri­culture, Identified a number of rei>orts made by him In IMS. IDi and 1905. In some of these, be said, chi-nges had been made In hiB flgurea. without his knuwledge.

Before Mr. W hite concluded his testi­mony aocretary Wilson made his appear­ance In tha courtroom and White was ex- cused, in order to permit the Secretary to testify. After drawing out from Mr. Wilson the fact tha t he had been at th© head of the department siiu:e 1S97, Mr. Beach questioned him concerning the preparation of the report. The wltneaa Baid th a t as a rule his servlcea In th a t (jonneetlon conaleted in signing the re­port. Generally he was not present while the report was In process of preparation.

He said th a t Holmes had been desig­nated as asBOclaie statistician on the recommendation of Mr. Hyde, and tha t while the office is not apeclflcally author­ised by Congress, he considered that he had full Authority tp mAke the appoint­ment Of the 8.000 employes of tho de­partment, he said fully three-quarters are paid from a lump sum, as was Mr. Holmes. He said also that Holmes had charge of ihe crop reportn and that tt was understood that they were to be treated as strictly confidential. Speaking of hts estim ate of Mr. Holmes, he said:

"1 never had the least Buspiclon con­cerning him until this case came up,”

Recces was then taken.

W H E A T E X P O R T

G R O W S L A R G E R

Shipment of Hour Also Shows an Increase, but in Less

Marked Degree,

AVERAGE HOME CONSUMPTION'

TEAMSTERS HAY STRIKE.tu

NEW YORK PRODUCE MARKETNEW YORK. Juno 16.—Flour—Receipts,

18,690; salefl. 2,200: steady, but quiet.W heat—'Reculpts, 96,700 hu.; sates, 1,-

600,000 b u .; there was rnore or less cov­ering by wheat shorts all the morning In anticipation of a bulllah government re ­port, prices advancing about %c. In con­sequence; July, 10413'16i^l06H i Septem ­ber. 105H6)10641; December, I06?;(g)l(}7^.

Ryo—Dull; N6. 2 Western, nominal.Com—Receipts, 92,4SO bu,; nominal.Beef—Steady,pork—Steady.Lard—Steady; Western prime, 9.05®

9.16.Sugar—Raw. quiet: fair refining, 9.36;

centrifugal 96 tost, 3.86; mDlasaes- sugar, S .ll; refined, steady; crushed, 6.70; pow­dered. 5.10; granulated, 6.00.

B utter—Easy; recelpta, 6,425 packngeB. Street price, extra creamery, 23V»ib'' 4. Official prices: Creamery, common to ex­tra, IbSjP'iJ; Slate dairy, common to fancy, IS4f33; renovated, common to extra, 16^ 3Di«j: W ceteni foctory, common to first, 17tf«-20, W estern imitation creamery, firsts, 31,

Cheese—W eak; receipta, Ctil. New 9tntc, full cream, colored and while, small, best, U4i; do> large, 12; do. large and small, fair to good, 1 0 ^ 1 1 ^ ; do. in ­feriors, 7 1 4 4 ^ : Ekims, l(P.

Eggs—U n se ttled ; receipts, 18.203 ease#. Btatti, ppim.sylvania nnd nearby, fancy, Belected w hite, 19; choice, 17^18: brown and m ixed, extrap. 17V41818: first to ex tra firsts, lfity47; Western, firsis, J514h@1®1 clat price, first, 15); second, 14ViS15; K en­tucky and Tennessee. 14^6.

Poultry—Dressed, firm: W estern broil- era, 25^4): turkeys, 10@U| fowls, 12^15^

Petroleum—Firm ; refined, all ports, 8.404fR.46.

Coffeo-Steady; No. 7 Rio, 6%; No. 4 Santns, 7fl .

Molasses—Steady; New Orleans, 37^48,

M ach ine gk ida a t P n tcraon and th e O w ner Could hot C o n tro l I t .

PATERSON, June iq.-Unablo to con­tro l a big new touring car he hsd re­cently purchased. Benjamin Weinberg, a ta liu r of 194 Market street, ran th© ma­chine Into a tree a t East Eighteenth and Van Houten streets yesterday morning. Tn the vehicle besides the owner were Mrs. L. Diamond and Miss Rita Diamond and a friend.

In turning a comer the machine skidded. The wheels on on© side of the auto were lorn off and other parts of the car were bent and twisted. None of tho occupants of the car was hurt, and they returned to their home In a trolley car.

th lc n g o raeklng-hoQ H e R rlveri Quit W ork Vnlean W nges

A re IlnlHC'd.CHICAGO. June 10.—A repetlllon of t l i j

packing-house ieam.^ters' Ktrike of flvo years iigo, whloh wus uiiohdcrl w jih ituu'y violence than any labor trouble of similar duration in Chicago, bernme u fjosslblhly yesterday. The Ptockyiit*! drlversv voicd AlinoHi unanimously to go out n-xf Sat­urday, unless Uieir denjanda aie gi^v'iiul by the (airkf-ts. The action foilov^al n_- pnrlB that requosis for an Incruase Jii wages of four ceuia an hour had been u -

by a ll large packing-houses.To-day uu ultiinauim will be serv.'d on

Ihe paekors hy the iinton. Th.- h1UimiI..ui nlen wtll be considered to-uiglit hy team sters’ Joint council. Tlie coum'il wilt bp asked to guarantee Ub Buppori. Xego- ttatloriB hvlweea thb teflmHters und tin. packiiig-houseH have been In piogj-i'S.s fur tiiree weeks. It is said Mu* packi is of­fered to renew the old contract, wiih the same scale of wages, and that the union leluflid.

STEAMSHIP ARRIVALS.

THROUGHOUT THE NATION.

TELEGRAPHERg AWAIT DECISfON.R neptlo ti o t A S trik e A gn ltia l W e s t­

e rn i 'a lo n S till P e n d in g .NEW YORK. June 10.—W hether nr not

there will be a stiike of tiie teiegraphers agulnat the Western Union Telegraph Company will be known posIMvcly un Friday. The officers of Ih© union will watt until Wednesday evening or Thura- day morning for a reply from the board of directors of the company, which moela un Wednesday.

NEW YORK COnON MARKET

C oal Traot*' J<r«x4rfipeHal tAa SVESHiO NHWS,

WASHINGTON, June 10.-Tho Invegli- gallon of the bitum inous coal carrying railroads which the Departm ent of Ju s­tice has been conducting for some montlis has been concluded. Tbe papers, Includ­ing the rocommendattou of special coun* scl, are being prepared for submUslon to the attorney-general, I t ts understood that evidence of a conspiracy in restraint of trade Is deemed aufllclehtly cdtivlncing upon which to base legal action.

W here CokJ i t o r e g la Taxahte.iSpcHof Dinpoteh to tU B Y SyiSQ NEWS.

TRENTON, June 10.—Justice Fort filed Ail opinion In the Bupreme Couft to-day

. _ LTompanyplace. The syllabus

from the State ofnnd Btorod a t th a tholds:' "Coal shtopa . _______ __-Pennsylvania imo stored In this State to await orders fo r ‘sale, and then to be

to customers purchasing after such storage. Is not in interstate commerce and la taxable a t the place of storage here.'*

t r a n s s h ip ^ r such t

NEW YORK, June ID.—The cotton m ar­ket opened barely Bteudy to-day a t un­changed prices to an advance of 2 points on the old crop, but 413.TI points lower on the new crop rfiontha. These were In­fluenced by disappointing cabies, fairly good weather in the South and realising, while July was sustained by continued ap­prehensions of a corner, althougb a pri­vate cable was received from an English firm whose name had been mentioned in connection with the supposed deal denying absolutely any connection wHh the m a t­ter, i

Trade w as fairly active during the early session, coming largely through wire and conimlBslon houses. There was some buy­ing ou a bullish crop report from New Or­leans. Prices were irregular, however, and during the middle of the morning were about 8 to 16 points net lower on the new crop, with July holding 3 or 4 points net higher.

While Ju ly continued relatively steady, holding a shade over the closing te u re s qf last week, og support from leading bulls and covering, the new crop was easy dur­ing the middle of the morning, and a t one time showed a net loss of points.L ater prices rallied a point o r two and Just before midday July waa points net higher, with the active new crop months, still showing a net loss of 16^16 points.' Spot, steady; middling upland, 18,%; middling gulf, 13.S0.

Mayor Loses V aluab les In gcreet.F IjA IN FIE LD , June 10.—Cash to Ih©

amount of 1206. a check fo r |U 5 and vouchers, orders and records o f ticket ■salea of the horse »Uov that closed 8ui- unluy at the Plaiiiheltl Riding and D riv ­ing Club were lowt yesterday afternoon. Although the natno nf E. S. Hooley, treas­urer of the club, WHS on a number of iho papers imd the contents o f the paekago would give the finder u n :i.dy due us to whom it belonged, nothing hud been lirard of the lost Ihlnga up to noun to-day. Mayor Cherlea J, FlHk. who was taking the vouchers, cash and rhcekF to Nfr. Hooley's house, dropped thorn from hla carriage. The jDOlko were notified. I t Is understood that the Ioub w ill be made good to the club If the finder does not return the lout articles.

WEST DERRY. N. H .-M ore than otie- nuarter of the students and some ef the inemberB of the faculty of Pinkerton Academy are confined to their rooins here as Che result of an epidemic of mumps.

SHERIDAN, Wyo.—While pursuing two Montana horse thieves yesterday. Sheriff G uy ' and a pass© from Johnson County shot and killed one of the robbers that held up a Northern Pacific passenger train a t "WHch's Spur recently.

NEW YORK-Caught in W ashington street early to-day, after he had Attempt­ed to a ttack ', a twelve-year-old Syrian girl, H arry Rettlg, twenty-six years old, committed suicide tn the Church Street Police Station by hanging bimeelf to a steam pipe. The Improvised noose was made of two handkerchiefs, a cravat and pieces of his shirt,

GUTHRIE, O klft.-In the Democratlo primaries, C. N. Haskell, of Muskogee, I. T., for Governor, has received a plu­rality of 14,000 over Lee Cruce, of Ard­more, and R. L. Owen, of Musko­gee. and Roy V. Hoffmann, of Chandler, have been nominated for United Biates Benatora by pluralities ranging from 6,000 to 8,000.

PHILADEIj PHI A, June 10.—Arrived, Btcnmer W estcrland (IBr.) from Liverpiiol via Queenstown.

PTa SCONBET, Mass.. June 10.—The Blcamer Minnehaha, from London for New York, waa In cammunlcation by wireless telegraph with liie station here,

j when 270 miles e.iat of Sandy Hook, a t 6 A. M- Will probably dock about 7:30 A M. Tuesday.

SABLE ISLAND. N, B.. June 10,-T h e steam er Kronprlns Wilhelm, frnm Bre­men for New York, was In communication by wireless telegraph with the Marconi station here when 210 miles southeast of this point a t 6:46 A. M. Will probably dock about 7 P. M. Tuesday.

BROW HEAD, June lO.-The steamer Kalacr Wilhelm der Orosse, from Now York for 'Bremen, was reported by wire­less telegraph when 120 miles southwest a t 2 A. M. to-day. Will probably reach Plymouth about 3 P. M.

B7A8CONSET, Mass., June lO.-The steam er Ryndam, (roiti RoCterdHin for New York, was in communication by wireless telegraph with the station here when 270 miles east of Bandy Hook a t noon. Will probably dock a t 9 A. M. Tuesday.

WASKTNOTOxN. June JO.-Wheat ex­ports In the ten months ending with April aggregated about 66.000,000 bushels, against *2,000.000 m the same months of the fiscal j year 1906, and 4,000.000 In the same months of 1905, while flour exports also show an j Increase, though not so strongly marked.

For the full fiscal year, which ends with June, the exports of wheat, Including flour, In terms of wheat, will probably Aggregate about 140,000,000 bu&iiels, against j94.000. 000 In the fiscal year 1906 and 44.- 000,000 In 10OG. These figures, taken from ! the export returns of Ihe bureau of sta* tlsUcs of tho Daparim ent of Commerce and Lahur, suggest that the ability of the United States to contribute to the bread­stuff supply of the other parts of the world Is still considerable In years of nor­mal crops, notwithstanding the growtli of the consuming population and the drift of population from the agricultural area to the m anufacturing centres.

This recent Increase In exports of wheat Is Ihe natural sequence of the large crop of IWti, which waa the second largeat ever produced In the United States. A com­parison of the export figures with those 1 of productloa for a term of years shows ] that increase o r diminution of exports followa closely the production Of the year ' immediately preceding. After the very i high crop of IDOl, amounting to over 748.- OOO.OOo bushels, the crop of the United ' StHtcB fell steadily -to 670.000.000 bushels j in 1902, 638.000.000 bushels in 1903 amf 552.- 000,000 bushels In 1904. Correspondingly, ' the exports of wheat, having reached their high water m ark of almost 155,000.-000 bushels In the fiscal year 1902, fell to IH.OOn.noo bushels In 1903. 44,000,OOn bushels in 1904 and 4,000,000 bushels Jn 1905. The exports of wheat flour have suffered less, but were also m aterially reduced from 30.- ft'W.OW barrels In the fiscal year 1903 Id n.orn.OOO bnrrels In 1904 and less than9.000. 000 barrels In 1903.

The w'hettt exporting power of the Ignited States waa then thought by many tn be prnctlcully a t nn end. hut the high crop of 1905 l(l93.oO(i,i>00 buahelB) was Immediately roflerled In the exports. Tn the fl»rul year 1900 thn exports of wheat r(jflo to 35,000.000 bvishels nnd the exports of flour to 14.000,001) barrels, the totnl In terms nf wheat being 96.000.000 huohHa, aa iitPilnat 44,000.i}(jO tiuphelB jn 1905. The allH hlglier crop of 1906 (735.ono,ooo bushel?) fu r­ther Increased the exportB, pr is Khown t»y iho flgurCM for the ten months ending April, 1907, quoted above, and the total shIpmentB of wheal during the entire fis­cal year may bn eaiimated at about 7>.000,iHiO hushelfl. and of wheat and flour cnnihlned nl about 140,000,000 bushels.

Nevnrlhelesa, the wheat surplus of the United Bf.'itcft Is not so large ns It was Bume ycurn ago.

The average home conaurnptton during the throe- yeiirB ending June 30. 1904, was

I 4ft9/HX>.riOO huk^helB. and during the last ] throe years &Ui,O0O,0o0 hnahelM, nr tl2.000,00h j budticlB more. This la explained partly ! by the tnereasR In pfipuUttion, ttu l also by 1 un IneriMfiod per capita eonsutnption. By av3‘rngtug the per capita conmimptlun by triennial porbulH tlie follow ing comparlBqn Is obtained. For the throe years eqdlng Juno 30, 1901, 4.9'J huKhelK; for the tnrf'e

[ yonra ending June 30, 1904. 0,21 husheld,1 and for the layt three years, 6.R buehclj.

This Increase look place In the face of an Increase In price, the average annual price of winter wheat in New' York for IMl- I9(jg having been elghty-lhree cents and for 1904-1906. Jl.

C. C. I. Commencement .Snndny,HAOKBTTaTOWN, June in .^ t was

commencement Sunday yeatRrciuy in con­nection with this year's closing exercises of Centenary Collegiate InsUtuie. morning pervlce was a union meellng In the Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church. The bac^alAureale, or commenctMnenr ser­mon. was delivered by the Rev. Dr. Gard­ner Eldrldge. of Brooklyn. In the evening the union eervice Was In the Ftrat FToBby- terlan Church, when the annual com­mencement sermon was preached by Rev. Dr, William Ingraham Haven, corres­ponding secretary of the American Bible Society. The musical program waa ren­dered by the TnstUute choruA. Tht* next event on the week's program \» tho annuul contest In oratory and elocution In tha school chapel to-night.

B oxerU m In h 'o rtlie rti C hinn .VICTORIA, B. C., June 10.—Tho steumcr

Bellerophon yeflterday brought news of a revival of Boxerlsm In North China. Yuen 8hlh KoI'b officials have arrested numerouB Chinese recently for preaching and praetlslng Boxerlsm and Inducln* natives to smear their door posta with blood on the assumption that tnla renders the occupants Invulnorabla when fighting. Heavy loss of life Ib reported from Keil- win, Kwangsl, South Ohma, as a result of tho audden aubsidence of part of the large walled city. A large area of shops and dwellings collapsed and burled tho places to the second story.

FROM OTHER COUNTRIES.ST. PETERSBURG—A Terrortot named

Chernsu, alleged to be Implicated tn the recent plot against the life of Emperor Nicholas, shot himself twice In an at- tempt to commit suicide to-day, In a nearby suburb,

TEHERAN, Persia—!! is reported that Hlsaam Mulk, the rebellious prince, a t­tacked Baler El*Dowloh, Governor of Lurlstan provlfice, near HJhavend, West­ern Persia, Saturday, but was compelled to retrea t with heavy losees.

TOUFICOINO, Franco—The first or- gnnlaed attem pt of the clergy to hold a street procession since they . were de­barred, from so doing by the church und State separation law took place here yes­terday and was promptly suppressed by tho police.

SANTIAGO, Chllft-The Britl.sh royal mail steam er Ortega, from Liverpool May 9, via Rio Janeiro May 23, for Valparaiso, Is ashore In the Straits of Magellan.

PAHT8—The Franpo-Japajftse agreement was signed to-day by Foreign Minister Plchon in behalf o t France and Minister Kurlno for Japan.

OTTAWA, Ont.—Details of a dis.istrous fire In the W alters Mlnea at Btrathcona, Alberts, In which six men lost their lives reoched here to-day. An explosion In the centre ot the mine caused the conflagra­tion.

T o C ane 01 $10,000 Roles.WASHINGTON, June Ml-Tbe present

luue of 310,000 notes will be called Jn and canceled. This Is because fourteen such bills were among the 3173.000 which vanished la s t w inter from the Chicago Buh-Treasu*!',

T w o A rre s te d . One B ic a p e s .JERSEY CITY. June 10, “-DetecUvs-Ser-

geant Jam es Rooney, ot this city, yester- day held up tn Third avenue two men who were carrying a grip. In which, he says, he found forty-five brass valves th a t had been taken from, sir brakes on ratlroad cars. Ho arrested both men, b u t one dashed away and escaped. The oOser m an registered a s Aaron, Blauvelt. th irty years old. of 321 East Thirty-second street. New York, and said he was a braksm anon the Long Island

found____ Railroad. He said

th a t he found the valves on the H acken­sack meadows.

Mrs. H end erso n ’s B ody Honte,CAMDEN, June lO.-A victim of a col­

lision between a locomoUve and an auto- mobile at Westfield avenue crossing F rl- day. the body of Mrs, Elisabeth ..ender- eon was taken to her home, 3101 Sedgeley avenue, Philadelphia, yesteiday. Her hus­band was able to leave the hospital with hlr heed bound with handagea Two others of the occupants of the auto who were Injured are still In Cooper H os­pital.

> " I. . Ig t ll l "■ hoo ting Vp" B ro w n sv ille .WASHINGTON, June 10.—The Senate

Committee on Military Affairs to-day heard the testimony of Alex f , Levle, who was first sergeant of Company L, Twenty, sixth Infantry, a t the time It was ordered from Brownsville, Tex. on tha arrival of the negro troops. Levle tesiifled th a t h e heard cpnveraatlonB on the streeta In Mrovrnsvllle showing that a strong feeling existed among clUisns against the nogio soldiers being ordered there.

" — - • --------------- -E ie re ls s s a t B e lv ld e re .

BBLVIDBRE, June l0.-d2hlldren's Day wns obrerved by the churches and Sab­bath sohoolB b)(e yesterday. The exsr- c ls « were of nn Interesting character.JSS in whiteand carried flO'wero. The uroirrani ren* dered a t the Methodist o h u r e h i ^’■Jl **l*‘" ^ " J? ® B«,!vldero o r e h S t r a ^ the ohureh c ^ r aaslated In the emcroleea. An elTerlhg was taken to be devoted to ChTtoUim edueatioh. oovoiso ra

P ed id ler May B e F a ta l ly A asan lted .JERSEY CITY, June 10.—Jam es Dalton,

th irty y e a n old, a peddler, of 3,406 Boule­vard, this city, waa assaulted by two men In Bowers street Saturday afternoon, one of bis aasnllanta using the butt end of a driving whip, and yesterday when Dal­ton 's condition .became such th a t It was found neceasary to call In a physician, it was lound tha t he waa suffering from concussion of the brain. The police a r­rested WBliam Smith, twemy-aeven years old, of 68 Reservoir avenue.s ---------------

MaadsatlUi to Compel Track Repairs.BAYONNE, June 10.—At the next meet­

ing of the City Council a committee front the Board of Trade will deipand th a t colihetl begin mandamue proceedings to com palithe trolley company to repair its trsoks wlimf Avenue Q, This action wae taken a t the suggestion of Mayor Pierre Oarven, who declares he haa asked the

irpottkitloD for relief Yvltliout avalU

Mi»tt to D texolve Powit^r Tm»1.Rperiai DUpc/cA to the BVEyiKG BEW8.

WASHINGTON. June lO.-Thn suit In equity to disaolve the Powder Trust will be filed a t Cincinnati in a few daya. P m - ther delay hae been made unnecessary by the Circuit Court a t 8t. Paul deciding In the Standard Oil suit that the frovernnncni need not confine Ha case to nperatlona of the tru st since Ita organization aa a hold­ing company. The hill aa prepared by District Attorney MePherimn Ima been ap­proved.

Bnnk Ifotes for R edem ption.WASHINGTON, June lO.-Natiunal

bank notes received to-day for redemp­tion. tt.U72.796; governmont receipts from internal revenuCr ll»565,4U; customs, 4797,- 991; TniscelloJieouB, 1615,916; expenditures, 31.4SO.000.

T ttl'S T CO-HFANlEa TO UOMBIffEsH e rd e r o f M e rra n ti le a n d E iia lljsb le

C o n cern s A g ain T n lk e d Of.NEW YORK, June 10.-Tht>uj?h official

confirmation Is stlU lacking, It 1b believed generally in Wall street th a t tho much- reported and long'Peiidlng merger of tha Mercantile Trust Company and Equitable Trust Company virtually has been a r ­ranged, and th a t actual consolidation will occur thia week. The merger will be effected, U is understood, by the acquiat- lion of the Equllablo by the Mercantile Trust Company.

The Thomas F. Ryan Intcreets are said to be closely affUlated with both com­panies, and It generally Is expected that Alvin W. Krcch, now president of the Equitable Trust Company, will be chosen president of the coiisohduted company.

LONGSHOREMEN CONPtDBIfTaP resid en t of Union T h inks Hot

W eath er W ill H elp Str ikers.NEW YORK, June ID.—Reprepentatlvfcx

of eieamehip companies admitted yester­day that the non-union men who have taken the places of the ^d iking longshore­men have not been doing their work satia- facturlly. Some of the places where the strikebreakers are being lodged are in bad condition and tho Hoard of Health has been notified.

"Give us three or four days of scorch- ing hot weather and the eteamsblp com­panies will soon beg us to go back to work,'" said Patrick Connors, president of the I.rf>ng8horemen'8 tTnlon, a t a meet­ing of the ddegates yesterday afternoon.

IBCURITlKSa IRVESTMCNTB. ETC. SECURITIES, INVESTMENTS^ ETC*

M o r r i s t o w n T r u s t C o m p a n yM O R R IS T O W N , N . J .

Capital $600,000; Surplus ahd Profits $1,500,000

Pays 3% InterestO n A c e o u n t f t o f S 1 0 0 o r O v e r , S n b j o o t t o C h e o k

S A n n JE L FSEBBKAK, P M ttd e n t.J A M E S A. W EB B , Vlee-Pres, IfiGLLARO W. C U T LSR , V IcS 'Pra i.

JNO. H. B, OORIELt., Sac. rfARR If A. V A N O ILO ER , Treat. R A L P H S. B T B EE T T . A ss t 8ao. and Treat.

Tel.»7<0

T d .1740.

ARE YOU OOINO TO EUROPE, FLORIDA OR BERMUDA?

ft gen a ier AU 3 l«m sb l» LintsOENBRAL INSURANCE.

irtra, LlablUtr, Steain, Boiler, Faratmnl Acoldant, Burglaxy and Plate Glass Inaur- anofl. JTdalltjr, Contract and Court Bonds.

m . I . B Y R N E G O . ,800 Brogd S3.. Newgilc, N. J.

a tn U llR O AND LOAM.

Aatadnaw ion l B T sa ta— T a -a ig h t a a d To-nsorrow- M oralag,

gun seta. 7:33; rises. 3;M, Moon rises, 4:68 A. M, Moon's age. »% days. 6;tl P. M„ new mooa Bun ■ decQnatloa, 23 ds- g n e a north of eeteatial equator.

Maoa T eB agieratare, S2 D e g n e a .Tha temnarauire a t 3 o'clock this m om -'

Ing was ?0 degrees, a t 7 o'clock 68 and a t noon 32 degrees. The humidity a t T o'clock wna eighty-five per cant, and At lioon waa ninety-two per cen t, when the wind, which was from the northweat, Slew a t ^ live hilles an hour. Yeatar- day the highest tenlM ratqre was f t de­grees, the lowest 61 Ttogreas and the av­erage 33 degrees. The average humidity waa elghty-one per cent. The wind was from the northwest and blew a t a max­im urn velocity of fifteen miles an hotm. One y*ar ago to-day the highest tem ­perature Wes 8» degrees the lowest « degreea and the average 71 degrees. The day wsa cloudy.

l U n i S O I A l l K E A IIY

B i i l d i i f & l u i i s s o c ' n

The twenty-second annual meeting of the aasoclatlon Will tw held a t 316 HstTlsciii avenue (Riordan building), Harrison, N, J ., on

T i a 3 l i ) r , J m e 1 1 , 1 9 0 7 ,a t T;<6 F. I f,, for the aleotlon of officers, four directors and dne auditor: to voU upon an am endm ent to the constitution authorising the board of directm'B to bor­row money when deemed advlssbie, and for such other bushiesa. ns m ay be p'rop- ertly b ro u j^ t before the stockholdera

“iite polls will he open a t.» o’cloek and close tn oils hour.. Subscriptions wilt be reoeived for a new seftes of stock tihe 2ftb), which will be commenced t h a t ^ e n l n ^

Post & Flagg,^38 Wan S tm t , Npw York,

Brtncb Otflee: 774 In i4 SLr w v w w w w s iw ' Y*"*miW ABX, M. J.

AUIEB um m, ImIM Ptnurn iL B n M lS B t o t t .

Local lavostmcit Securltlit.

ANTHONl

Dated R g# « , m

O’MALLBY,Seorttary.

SstfthUaMcg i s s r .

V A I SCNAICK & GO.,T W aU Otowst, Mew Y ork .

s s r r 7 I S M s iT M t,W U U u t r . Msith, H gr. T ele . MOO.

TT. B, gHITB W. H. OgBOBIGiBstabUahed ISTP,

W. B. SM ITH A, CO.----BTOCE BROKSM ----

H.MgkMM J T* Com . ifooh ■xobiRVCOm ^ m w n Boikt4olTi«<l«Ko. 71 BBOADWAYg NEW YOSK.

NATIONAL STATE BANK BUILDINO,■os Bread gt,, «ot. He«lianleiMsWark,N.A.

A. PLUIfB GUVOBD, Maiiafer.

Boiis fir InnsWHowam K. Stoitea.

II PINE f T r a o r , n e w ' YORK

\ :

s

® , J I"X E 10^ i ^ .

y

The Settlement offamestolnn1 OLD COLONIAL MANaON AND PLANTER’S .BOAT

n \A L niAl'TICH.

Colonel William 'Bvrd't Public SerUices. His 'ManuseripU and His Place in the Histcrv of Vsrgtnia.

BY FRAAK <i. (ilLMAA.

ih an addreM the New EmfUtmlSdiqlely of New York In Dpeemher of last year, D r Alderman, the president of the Unlveralty of Virginia, dlseunsed the wii- trlbutlone which the Hurltun and the Cavalier had made to out con’mon conn, try. After he had paid hhi tribute lo tho Northern colonist he i^ald of the South­erner:

“ I can understand the enlhuslacTn of a Virginian for there large-Rtatured tnen of their tidew ater lunda: oul of whnm came our Biinrenie mitlcnal hero, riiHl o lloTnerln group of reHourcoful men. without whoso Influe'noe It would hr rtltt1r'.;lt to «ee how Ihla republic could Imvp lieeti txirn. Il la endloBBly pleosorit to fi Southerner to hark hack to their ninnlv BlmpllcHy. their- activity, their dlaintcrcjieU publlr aplrit. their continental gni<*p ftml Uiclr whole- Kome. catholic lovnbleneBS."

Colonel W imam Byrd, of Weslover, be­longs to an earlier period tlmu did thiw Homeric group. HSb period, too. was one o f peace and harmony between the people and the sovernment. Spotswood and Odoeh, who were the royal Oovernors of Virginia during Byrd’a later residence In the colony, were the heat of thoae ap ­pointed bv the King. They were able, publlo-splrlted. consclentlnua workers for the best interests of colunlste and Ihelr sovereign, snd their adnilnlstrnltons were limes of pence and hannony. If Byrd, during this period. d'i<!S not rise to the s ta tu re of thoso who cante later, he doe.i show the same disinterested public spirit, the same netivllv. the rontlnenlalgrasp of public qupstlunp. If H had beep his fortune to h:vie been born u gencia- tlon Inter, he would have been f<n»nd n worthy cumpnnlon of Ia' p. Mndlson. Je f­ferson and W ashington. f'Jf whom he. In n nteaavirc. nrennired the way.

On the tomb of Colonel nyrd, at West* over, to which 1 narte reference In a Inr- tner arUcIc. It Is reporurt that 'T Huh eminently flllert far the nerviee and nrna- nient of hla eeutitry, he wiir mailc re- eelver-genernl ef hla iiii'.JiBly’s reveruioe here, was thrice nppnlnleil puhlle aBent to the court and mliilatry nf Kripliiad, and helng thlrly-seven >Tiira a invmlier at laat Irecamc prealdenl nf the cimnrll of thiB colony. To all Ih^a w.th added a great elegancy "f taste and life, the well- hrcd gentleman ami polll/^ eompatdfui. the- splendid eennnmiFt fuul ]irndeni father ' f a family, wMlh^the oonatiini enemy nf nil exorbitant power and li-'oity friend to tho libertlpF nf his roimtrv-"

A. ro tisp le-fillons Otllclnl.Colonel Byrd wn.s ulwiivF keenly nlH's

all those forcea th a t nmfh? lor the prog­ress of the colniiy. He waa noi ivne of those men of weJtUli muJ I'uHun who gtv ' nothing of their time nnd efTnrt to tho public service. Ami wh'm he tt>ok an olflee to w'hlch he had bei-m elected or np- pointed ho gave tn the tiansarllon of lua duties hlfl host powers for the hIghesJ good of the people. 'I'he hnm>r of Borvltn: his fellows was the hlglioj^l cioinpciiaatlon. He was like so many af the eminent Vu- glnlans who loted Iheir uwti estates, ihelr own family life. Uielr Mwn libraries fttul (heir own clrrle of frioml.s—he enjoyed all of these dplighis. hut lie looked upon the public business as u work in ‘which iie should engage as a respL-itshflllly jual as neccMAry to he m'-l as the most personal <»bllgttUon. And the one who wrote h's epitaph made empluitio lids Important fact that while he wa.s giving so much t f his time and cnegy to Ihc performance of public duties he w'aa alw'uya "the well- bred gontlemun ami polite companion.''

In a letter wliii-h Ire wrote to Fetpr Beckford, who had hern a friend of his in London, but who Irud later settled Itj Jam aica, he givi-s u picture of life In Virginia in hl& ilay and makes clear i.ts notions of puli1lc-s.piiii«'d rltixonship.

"W q live here In henllli, in plenty, In Innocence and Focurliy." he declmcs, ■‘fearing no enemy from abroad, or rob- bera a t home. Our governhient, loo, is an happily consilluied' th a t ft Oovernt-r must first outwit ua before he can op- preijs u». And If ever he squeeze money out of ua he m ust first lake care to de­serve It. Our negroes are not so num'^r- oua or so ciiterpvlzlng ns to give ua apy apprehohpKm or uneasiness, nor Indeed Is their labour any o ther than gardoning, ttmJ lesB bi' far than what the poor people of other nounirys undergo. Nor are any crueltys exercised upon them, unlea.s by great acclderit tiiey happen to fall Into the hands of a brute who always paast-s here for a nionater. We all lye seeurL'iy with our doors unbarred, and can travel th e whole country over without arme or guard. And all Ihia not fur want yf money or rogues, but becaueo we have ro g rea t city to shelter the thief, or pawn- brokcfi to receive w hat he aieals/'

Stllh In tho preface to hla "fBstory of Virginia" gives testimony of the interest which Byrd had In public aPfalra. Ife iaya he was indebted to Colonel Byrd for **a very full and fa ir manuscript of the

London Company’s Records" In his Invos- tlgullons of malerlttls for his book. He HIH- Iks of the ’'Humanity nnd Polttencss" of ihe weH'hretl gciiUcman and scholar in mnlilng avullahle the manuscripts to iilm, and tella how Byrd threw open his whnle lihrnfy and "was himself over stu­dious nnd sollcltouR to search out and give" him whatever might be useful In his undertaking. Thwe were the rec­ords formerly owned by the Earl of Southampton and sold by his executors to Colonel B yrd's father. 8tHh ebarne- terlsoB them aa ” a very curious and valu- alijr- Piece of the AntlquLkB of our Coun­try."

Hyrtl devnlFd lilmsrlf to the a rts Of r< ;u''^as falihfully an he would have done to iho a rt of war if hla fortune had been catiJ In an age of revolution. Governor apf’lewood did much for the dex'clopmctil or the cul.my on its material side. Byrd 'V3K an much interepted In everything Uiai concerned airriciiUure as were Jef- forsun mid Washington a t a later time. !n iLiii crirrcsilumli.'nOB with hi* Engllah fri.>iuls there ore to bn found, mingled with hla brilliant comment on English soolety and pnllttcs, many refereneea to sehemea which he w a, furthering for the rtevoloi>ment of tho colony. For Initance. ’ In u le tter to Colonel Martin ftladen he advociites Ihe building of a canal be­tween the BlBter colonies of Virginia and N orth.Carolina. From I.orU Islay he rc- Cf'lved grafts of vlnee and fruit trees with rvhich he nxp.’rlmented on the sunny :'hires of Wesiover. In 1733 he mapped out two towns on hie eetatrs farther up the Ji4mos, "one at achoccoes. to he called Richmond; tho other at the point of the ApiKjmntlnx, to Ih) called Petersburg, lo- '■‘'■(Itimi nalum lly Intended for marts."

"Thus," he comments on hla project, "wc build not ciatlea, but dties, In the ulr.”

I t w a s n o t l o n g a f t e r C a r o l i n a w a s y r i i n t o d I n 1063 h y C h a r l e s I I . , o e i g h t o f I l l s t a r - o r l t o a a s l o r d s p r o p r i e t o r s , b e ­f o r e d h s p u t c a a r o . s e b e t w e e n V i r g i n i a a n d t h e n e w c o l o n y I n r o E a r d t o a c o m ­m o n b o u n d a r y . T h e p l a n t e r s o f t h e o l d e r c o l d l y c l a i n i e d t h a t i h . ' n e w p a t e n t c u t I n t o t h e l e r r l t n r y g r a n t e d t o t h o r n l o n g b e f o r e . . . \ , s i h e p o p u l a t i o n l a c r e a e s d t h e d t s p u i e n h r - r n m e m a r e s e r i o u s a n d t h r e a t e n i n g . F r o m t i m e t o t i m e a t t e m p t s w e r e m a d e t o e s t o l . l l s h a b o u n d a r y t h a j w o u l d h e f i c e e p t a t i l e i n b o t h p e o p l e s , o u t f a i l u r e h o d r e s i i M e r t o n t h e . s e o c c . a -

S h n i s , A t I a s i . I t , 17? ; . d u r i n g t h e a d m l n - i H l r a t l o n o f C o v e r n o r O . m e h . o f V i r g i n i a . I h e I v l n g w : i H p r e v a i l e d u p o n t o a p p o i n t

a c o m r n l . s s l o n f n t m t h e t w o c o l o n i e s t o I I * i i i e d i v i d i n g l i n e f r o m t h e c o a s t t o I h e m o u j i t H l n s , I t w a s t o b e g i n s o m e ­w h e r e t u n r t h e D l s m r f j S w a m p n n d e n d I n I h c A p p a h i c h h i n M o u n t a i n s . T h e r e w e r e t h r e e r e p r e s e n t n t l v c s f r o m e a c h e n l o n y w h o w e r e i i s s l s t r d h y s u r v e y o r s a n d n c - c o m p i i n i i ' d h y g u K l e . s . I n d i a n s a n d n e g r o e s t o r l e t i r t h e w a y a n d t o r e d u e e t h e i r d l s - c i i m f i i r t . B e a l d e s t h e s e h e l p e r s , C o l o n e l

l l y n l . w l i o w a s a t ( h e h e a t l o f t h e V l r - g l n l n ( ■ ■ n i i n i l e a h i i t . t t i o h w i t h h i m h i s p a s t o r , M r . l ' ' i t r i t n l n o , r n a t t e n d t h o i n e n i b e r B o f [ h e f p i i r t t e s . a n d " U i e r a t h e r b e c a u s e t h e p e o p l e o n t h e f r o n t i e r o f N o r t h C a r o l i n a , w h o h a \ ' e n o m l n l s i e r n e a r t h e m , m i g h t l i . a v e o n c i p p o m i n l t y t o g e t t h e m s e l v e s a m i t h e i r c h j l i l r e n L i s p l l z e r t . "

Ilir .lo ry o f llie M speilltlon .O f t h i s e x p e d i t i o n C o l o n e l B y r d w r o t e

, a m u r e I n t i T c . s t l n g c h r o n i c l e . T h i s h i s ­t o r y . w i t h s e v e r a l o t t i r r w r i t i n g s n f h i s , ji.t.s b e e n p r e s e r v e d I n m a n u s c r i p t b y h t s l i c s c e n d a n t a . I n I W t h e y c a m e I n t o t h e p u s S c H s l o n o f M r s . E v e l y n T a y l o r H n r r l - . s o n . a t I j o w e r B r a n d o n , w h e r e , b e s i d e s t h e e e m a n u s c r i p t s , a r e m a n y o f C o l o n e l B y r d ' s c o l l e c t l n n o f p o r t r a i t s o f h i s I l l u s ­t r i o u s f r i e n d s . T h e c o v e r o f t h i s b o o h o f i h j c i i r a e n t s i s a d o r n e d w i t h t h e h o o k m a r k o f t h e c o l n n e l , w h i c h c o m s i s i s o f h i s c o a t -

j o f - o r m n w i t h e l u b o r o t e s c r o l l w o r k . A c t o r s t h e t o p o f t h e f i r s t b l a n k p a g e h s written:

T o M r s . E v e l y n T e y l o r H a r r i s o n , P r o m h e r o f f e c U o o a t c

Mother Maty Byrd.A n t ] b e l o w i s t h i s :

For Httsler Ucorge Evelyn Harrison,O f H r a n d t i n .

W e s t u v e r , M a y 12, 1W 9.So from W rstover, the mansion tha t

Colonel Hyrd built, they were transferred to Brandon nnd fell Into the posseaBlnn of the greal-grnmlaon of the author. These writings of Colonel Byrd's are most val­uable for the light they throw upon the life of that period and moat charming for their "anlmoHon of style," They have a freshnciB tiC spirit, a quaintness of ex­pression, a keenness of observation, a subtlety- of humor that are unsur­passed In tho Wrliltigs of the period. lt__was easy for him to derive pleas­ure from a toilsome journey on horseback over 300 miles of swamp through primeval forest, and swollen etreabis. Just as It waa easy for Shakes­peare's Jacques to "suck melancholy out of a song." They mtiy have been de­layed hy underbrush almost Impenetrable hy precipices almost unsurmountable; they may have been ohilgeil to sleep upon onzy anil and he lulled to rest by the howling wolves, they may have been In constant tea r of attacks from hostile In-

H89 Short Jumper Kimono. B4BATISTE W itH EMBROIDEAV.

D esipt by May Hanton.26 Five-gored PetticoAt

\

Negligee* are eiwontlal to summer comfort, and dainty one* contribute so largely tapplnest and content that they may safely be Included la the list of iH^rnls. « I* one that is simplicity Itself and. that Is wtira over sit eicepttonsliy sAtlg- o rr petticoat, tn this Instanoe both are fnado of .batiste with embnldery, but ry material of the sort la appropriate Dotted Bwlaa muslin Is being nibcb used

both for the kimonos snd for potUcoats, and la very charming with trimming of lace— -------- ---- ------- ------------barred dimity, ■while for the little Jumper

e are a ^ ira b le . Dreidea dimity, too, Is itnlng cl German Valenciennes lace. Bilk ishoble raalertala, but those ‘ ‘

___ . _ ...................... .............. say* lovelyJor summer wear __ „kimono iS 'fuat what Its name Implies, nnd Is made m one -piece and slipped -Ml over ■ ■ ■ ■ ......................... .. . . ' f a flve-i

and there is also a fancy for uring cross-ifi............... . ‘ ‘ ■ ■inan be used for the netl

sort are a bit more fashionable and are always lovelvJi • ■ ■ ----------- ----------------- aade iC

tho pretty lawns, batistes and the like are a ^ ira b le ., and is essantially dainty with Irimmlng cl German . . ............______ ___

ittlcoat, so well a* washable raalertal*. but those of the tlngerlepretty, and fs essentlall; can be used for the

the head; itraps holding the sleeve poritons in place. The petticoat Is finished with a narrow frill a t the lower edge, and with the flouncee that ate

■'> » - '

L o w e r v b p a i a d o a .

W illia L tT f^ T > d ’a vBook- H i t f k And Co^1- o[- AriTL6,

' -r '

"4%.;

'or suipmer wesr. The jumper

-gored.Joined. to th#~other and a rran g e civer the tower portion. For t |^ mMIum al*e the

kimono vriU require 2% yards of m ateriu 2T. lU yards 36 ur lU yards 44 Inchea, wide the.pettleoat 6 yard* SMI Inohee wide, srith jfaris of embroidery 10 Inche* wide.

HAT HANTON PATTERNB—The Mky Hanton pattern mustratsd on this page own be bad te til slice for tOc, each. Mall orders promptly flUsd. HAY HANTON PATTBBN CO. (N. N.), 112-142 IFest.. Twenty-sevenUi Btreet. New York. A oom- plels line of HAy Hanton palteni* Ipmarrled by THK OOERIffi 0 0 - BrMd and . Market Btnwta.

C !2...

dians, and yc*t lh<? serenity of Colonel B.vrd nex'rr w-pmx to have hern dlstiirl)<?tl.

la all of their fallureA and acoUliMUa and alarms, Byrd was ahle to i]|<^covcr ftome lumti.)!' with whioh to nininlnate liU narrative. He “travels five mlion on Sun­day and pays for violating the Sab­bath by loglnp a pair of gold bnttona," And botfldf's th is loss, they were not the gtilncrs of any distance hy their Sunday's Journey, because a ewollcn, river mad© them pa>- tw o days for .violating one. Then he foils into a delightful comment upon the observance of the Ssibbalh. Al­though he would not Approve of making of it a day of work or of sport, he says he would not “care, like a New England miigiatrntc. to order a man to the whip­ping poat for daring to rid© for a midwife on Sunday.”

He was much amused by “a small major who has a small fevor and bears It—like a child.” On another oceasion, when there Is a supposed alarm from hoaMle Indians, "the small major, whose tongue had never lain atliU was taken speechless for sixteen hours*'*

A Fills© A larm ."After w© put ourselves In haul©., a r ­

ray," he adds, *‘we discovered that the alarm w as but the nocturnal note of a little hurmlese bird. Some of the com­pany dreamed of nothing but BC4Tilplng all the rest of the night.” One day they were "enterLnjued" a t the cabin of one of tlie frontiersmen In th© mountains. Their "landlady” aimised him very much. He Hays of her, “she, In the days of her youth, it aeema, had been a laundrons in the temple, and talked over her adven­tures In that station with as much pleas­ure as an old soldier over hla battles and his distemper. And I believe ,with as mnny additions to the tru th ."

Herein ftr© to bo found, too, Interesting descriptions of the places through which they worked their way and of the natives and frontiersmen th a t they were to a t­tem pt 10 convert to the Christian faith. There were over a hundred baptisms "by gurgling wtiyside hrooka, in tents, and tn cabins, wherever the family of jv pioneer had pierced the fringe of the wilderness to live.” They hud thrilling exparlancea w ith wild anim als; they picked dv 's tnu ts from trees which the men were "too lazy to climb or cut down;" they discovered ginseng by lla purple flower, which Byrd calls “the plant of life.” Throughout the account of the peiiloua journey of three hundred miles and return, there 1» not one dull page. On every one wlH b© found pleasing humor and Interesting ob­servation upon unfamUlar things and people.

At gpofstrood’s f'flutl©.In th is volume of manuscripts, bound

In vellum, is an jnterc^wtlng account of u journey from Westover to Governor Spolswoori's enchanted casilc on the Rapl- dan. Byrd was recelvcti In u gracious m anner by I#ady SpotHWoml "In a. saloon elegantly set* off with pier glasses.'* H® and the Governor talked of the Iron works th a t were being built nearby. Spntswood complained of miemanagement by one Graeme, "n,mnthemfiticlan, whoa© ihoughls a re am ong the slarp." Then the Governor read Byrd a lecture on tar. affirming that It can be made in the warm cUittatOj and afterw ard discussed projects for the de­velopment of hemp hr the colony. At last, says Byid. they changed- the sc«ne to poSI- tics. How th© Ministry had receded from ilB demand to raise a standing salary for all succeeding Governors of Virginia, for ^ear “some curious members of the House of Commons should Inquire how themonpy was disposed of th a t had been raised In the o ther American colonies for the sup­port o f tlielr Governors." After they had drunk prosperity to all of th© Oovemor'i projects In a bowl of rpunch they retired to th e ir devotions.

ThU manuscript of Byrd’s Is the only Important picture w© ha ve of the later home life of Governor Spotswood, the Knight of the Golden Horseshoe. He tells us of th© conversation he had with the women, which. *'llk© wblpt syllabub* Wiis very pretty, but had nothing In i t" They walked him about *'among ail their little animals* with which they amuse them­selves and furnish the table* The worst of it U, they are, so tender hearted they shed a silent tear every time any of them are klBed." One day. while he was conversing with Lady Spotswood IB the saloon, a t&in© deer strayed fliio the room, saw his reflection tn one of the elegant pier glasses, made quickly for his tmeglnary rival, crashed Into the gloss and ovetlumod *** table laden with the china nothings dear to-a woman's heait, blit Lady Spotswood met this trial with moderation and good humor.”

*'To go. to Virginia with an open mind this •oramer,’' says the Spectator In The Outlook, "Is to take a course in colonial history wlMch will never bo fOTgotten, thou|ri> the eleven volumes of Bancroft fade from the mind and the .dates of all the FrepMents depart and leave not a wrack behind/'

ThU ia frus. Beautiful Brandon, on the Jamos^ with its fvled walls, will teach one Interesting, chapter of this history. Here theie **Westovcr manuscripts” are carefully guarded as a most precious heir­loom of the 'pas^ under the supervislun of the amlHng author In his frame, sur* rounded by so tnony of his noble friends Theae ^11 furnish a m<mt valuable and necessary ODmeotlng Unk between C a^ lain John Iknitb and his life at Jan > ^ town settlement and Washlngtoa and Lea, whoi *%eosnktlons ofterwartL flowered out of the soiM bod« vegry Uke tbaakl stock*

A V i_ ^ iv t4 T v P l& n h e t* i a f t i5 O w n B o a h o n . r k e ^ m e J P iv e jo , w i1 - K H i j A M - e n d a n h s .

'AUisJoiyo/fheArr^ct-,.cs.r,

unly gentler and more nhle. through virtue find Buffering, lu evoke the love of niil- Jlons."

itine pnrkw.ay, ouxi^ to Ollag© bfeymnn,

St cor Ians Emma ' ft B fr Co tin at* 2fix

RfiAL KST.^TEC TRAKIIFERS.

. The following deedfl wore recorded the county reglsLer n office Balurdtiy:

NEWARK,George F. Sohacf<*r et ux to Alfred

Trumans el ux. a b South Orange av 52 ft 0 fr rriul's av, oOxIlS...

Charles Lewis et ux lu Louis L thner rt al. cor Arliitglon and AugUBtuste, 19x64 .............................................

tvoiijB^Zapclkov et a) to Glovaiml D1 Gugljftiino, w H Bergen si lUO f t sfr VVaverly uv, 14x93..........................

August Wlldermann et ux to Gae­tano Foriunato, n b Oliver at !25 f tw fr Adams et. 2>x9fi....................... Z

Louis Brelning Jr, cl ux to Charles Spenglor* cur a r WnlHon av and es HlUsItle av, 25x100............................

Stephen O. Ivtjckw'ood ©t at (exra, etc), to F lunk Morcilo el ux, n s Nichols St 161 ft w fr Adams al,75x89 ...................................................... ;!

Ernest Fischer et ux to Rudolph Bauman et ux, cor a s B, Orangeftv and c s Salem st, 25x113.............

Esther G. Beiby to UlysBCB B. Brew^- s te r et ux, w a Mt. rn jsp ec t av IW f t n fr Ballantine pnrkway, 60x130

Louis Zapelkov to Ollag© " e a Bergen St Buchanan, 300m ................

MerchHivtB l.,and and Impravoment Co. to Edward S. Ely ©t ux, Noa. 683* 585. 689, 597 and m Clinton avand 89 and 90 Baldwin nv ................

Edward 6. Ely ct ux to Frederick WIphke, cor n s Clinton av and e s Baldwin av, 111x153, and secondtract ...................................................

Edward H, W right et uls (truatees, etc.) to Young Men's F ather Mathew Total Anstinence Donevo- lem Society of Newark, n w corHudson ana Condit sta 88x110........

John 8. Glbaon et ux to Domenlc A. Valentino, s a Kearny at 2JJ7 ft w frSummer av, 37x44...............................

J. Frnnklln F o r | et al (exrs., etc.) to Francesco Bucclno, e g Clifton avcor B a land of Doremus. 15x83........

Carlene K. Brown to Ft iiiiceflco B u o cino, cor n s Sixth nv ur»d e a Clif­ton av, 50x56.........................................

George Btlckel et ux to Reuben B. Edwards, w $ Columbia s t 103 fts fr MamlUon si, 25x93...... : ...........

Reuben B. Edwards to John B. Oel- kem, w ft Columbia si Ififl f t s fr cor Ham ilton at* £7x133, and secondtra c t ........... ............................. ...........

Alwildft Wood to Reuben B. E d­wards, w s Columbia st 156 ft s frHam ilton st. 27x182.............................

Weequahio P ark L«iiid and Improve­m ent Company to George E. H in­ton, s e Mapea av 354 ft w fr E liz­abeth av, 40x100....................................

OtiTSIDE OF NEWARK. H enry No)te et ux to Theresa Eager

Orance, n , Elin st s w our laiiu Theodore Cundit 124 ft e fr Park st,27x83 .......................................................

Alice W. Hayes to Cornelius O 'Leary. Oranffc, s s l>odd at 163 ft « frWashlnffton st. 69x184.......................

3ara Bain and husband to Arthur W olfarlh, East Orange, e a Ster­ling s t 1S7 ft n fr 9th av, 29x8«........

George F. Simpson Jr. to Allison P. Clark Jr, et al, Verona, s a Hill­side av 420 ft w fr Lakeside av, 60i148 ..........................................................

Jacob Rudensey et ux to David Loeser, Montclair, cor * s Chestnutet and w a Midland av, 10*x2l4........

David L o c e r et ux to Jacob Ruden- aey, Montclair, n e e Lincoln st 230ft fr w B G rant st, 26x78....................

CharJotta W tkstrom and husband to David Loeser, Montclair, s s Chest­n u t s t 22S f t e fr Valley rd. 00x144.

David Loeser e t ux to Willie Wlk- stroni, Montclair, cor a a Chestnut

. a t and w e Midland av, 103x214.-.. Catharine C. Balter and husband to

Mary J . Rogers, Nutley, n s Mel­rose s t 128 ft w ir Jersey st, 29x135.

Joseph Davis e t ux to George C. Bartow, E ast Orange, n s Buroh- ard av 13T ft e fr North P ark at,iioxss: .............................. ....................

Joseph Davla et ux to George C, Bartow, E ast Orange, w s Amherstst S79 f t s fr Central av, 30x100........

Susan Randan and husband to P eter Farrell. Orange, a s Joyce at n w cor land WUtlam H. Glbblna, 28x127

Columbia Building and tamn to Emily A. W agner, E ast Orange, n w s Bedford s t 2E0 ft a w fr- Mapleav, HxlOO .............................................

John H. Clawson e t ux to Ralph Haaon North, CaJdwell, w • Elm ­wood rd 315 f t e w fr Claremont av,21x28 ...............................................

M artha W . ^Horgan et ala to FVwl- eriefc Keyler, B ast Orange, ■ a Ranebaw av 13C f t s s fr Prospeotat, 4 « x W .............. .................... . . I . . . ,

Herm an O. Hornfeok to Wtlllam Heed, VeronA centre line Grove a v jo r a tJ tK I t n fr Bloomfleld av,

John w rigan’d ' e t " t i l ’ ’ to ' 'E v ii Behauder, Irvington, cor ne a H al- Bted aV and n w a Btuyvesant av,.(8x115 ........... ..................................

Jane g. B tker e t alls to Charie* liomiD, Irvington,, s w cor Btuy- vesant av and Laurel av, 60x112.,

Clarenee D- Sheldon et ux to Bara E. Robinson Montclair, centre of Llewenyii rd s e cor land party second jfrATt ...................... .................

m

.OUb

TOO

S50

L.. cor ATlinxlt>n niui August® nt8, 15,000.Edwrii'd Zuiia et ux to I'lHz-Ti®' H. nnd

!>., €' s OliiirtwJck uv 2l2i ft H fr Avon av, iT,hftO.

Giu-tann Forlunnto et ux in . August WIitlermuiin. n a uHvef ui 135 ft w fr AthuiiH al,

William Selenfrelnd ct ux tn Rlriiurd Reiiiluger, c s Jfickstjn at ft a fr I'lovcr st.

Wllluini Svleufrelnd et ux lo Ernest T<. Keis)-, i‘ s Jaeksnn pi 184 ft s fr Clo\ er hi,sm .

Proffresfllve I’npfr Dux r« . to Gcurpn ei'uiffcl, w a LlvlngBtnn pl cor iTih av.

FrugresHlve Paper Hox Co. to (ycorge KUhgel, w jt* Llvlngaton st cor ITih av,

f 13.600.! Rnsurhi Mange et ux to RnfTaule IM ; Sicfat\u cl ux, fl n South Orangu iivu \}'l II

© fr Hjiyest et,Qilhurl Chiirdjivoyne ct ux to Harold

w . Hcftdluy, w H Houth iGili m \~h ft fr B B South tiranKe av. R,wn. .....................

Frank S* Gordon ei ux m Eighth Ward B «ncl Ij-> © Clifton uv 446 ft b frThird av, »4.f>W.

Margaret C!onk!ln to ProiealiiTit Foater Home Suvieiy, e n North Tlilirt «t 176 ft u fr SBVi'nth iiv. £500.

George F SchaolTor et iix U* (‘hrlsUnn. WurHlor. e h HoinlmrR pl IS ft s fr Darcy Bl. 52.700.

Young Father M.ilhew Tol.al Ab-•Ttliii'oce Rcneviilent ftocii'tv of Newark to Howard Savings liiBtltmhm, cornpr w Hudson, Bt and n.B H artford pt. S]O,»iO0.

Citstndlo HeJfuimo et iix (o Harold W. Headley, s « South Orange uv l.Vi ft w fr SrttHh Tenth bI, tlUJO.

Henrj’ C. fiiirhnuiler pt ux to GiistJivuft A. RiclmrdB. n b F erry st 124 ft « fr Schatk Pl,

* Dometile A. Valentino to PlilHp J. Fan- nnn, b b Kearny pt 237 ft w fr Summer av, $7(Mi.

Frnncesrn Huednn to Eveline 0. Mor­ris, cor n P Sixth nv and e b Clifton ftv* nnd peennil Inict. J.6,r>00.

Francepeo Huceinn to Cnrlene K. Brown, cor n B Sixth iiv and e b Oil ft on av, and Bceond tract.

John R, Ckdkers et trt io Fidelity Trust Co., w B Columbia st 156 ft fr HainlUnn at, and seeond Irnet, $6,000. \

OUTSIDE OF NEWARK.Barbara Gnolnerand husband to Adnlph

Hoffinann, Orange and West l)rfthgr, w a Liberty st cor land Catharine MeDon- ough. and eecond Im rt, $1,000.

Allison R Clark Jr. et nl to freorge F. SlmpFon Jr., Verona, s 8 llIllBide av 420 ft w fr Lnkeslde av,

Modern Rulldlng Company to EsBex Tlile Guaranty and Trust COTnpany. Montclair, e a North Muunlalrv av 275 ft n fr Van Vleek st, I7.BOO.

Guatrif EnarBun et ux tn Eaaex Title Guaranty and Trust Company. Montclair, cor w B Valley road and n s land Mary Ellen Doyle. $4.F4M).

GuaUif Knarson et u* to Essex Title Guaranty and TtuhI Company, Moniclutr, w B Valley road 7 fl n fr land Mary Ellen fk^yle, $4.raw.

Francis E. Kiiuwles ct ux to Moses Cohen, South Orni^Kv. u o m Prospect pf 20n fl n w fr ITospt vt st, $J I.

Nleholas Rmwer lo Emma E. Gould. Verona, e « (irovo av 250 ft s fr a proposed road. $],SiXi.

Emily A. Wagner and hURbnnd to Co­lumbia Building ujul l->rjan, East Orange, n w B Bedford st £50 ft a w fr Maple av, $1,600,

Robert J. fltlllwell to John G. Ball, Irv-n, B

M)

1.300

^ MORTGAGES.^ThtH

county, _ _ , were recortod in th* iRter^ office Baturdey:

NEWARK. J , S a l v a t ^ Ceriu et ux to- H erinaa. C.

BchnelJer, w ■ I r o t h Wth »t 310 f t * fr Uth av. ffiOt,'-

Loub LMmer «t to- Gottfried Krue­ger et «t. ieor ArUngton and A ugueta c ti, ii.«o,

liQul* lA haw et alfi. to M utw l B. end

Ibgton, h e Clinton nv w 60 f t fr o s Cum- minga et, uml second tract. 12.600.

Annie Hammer and huehnnd to Ellxa B, Bt'pvei, Irvfngtiiij, w s Orange av a e cor land Jamea N. Day, (l.tiOO,

Wllllain Reed to Herman H. Hornfeok. ■Verona.'‘middle nf Grove av nr Gould lane 358 ft n fr BlOOtnltnld av, 34.000.

Sara E. Hnbthson and husband to Fidel­ity Trust liomMiiy, Montclair, cor w e land Clnrence D. Sheldon nnd centre line Llewellyn road, formerly P ark av, 38,000.

CONTRACTS.The following enntracts h&ve been re ­

corded at the courthouse;R. J. Stillwell, owner, 19th av, Irving­

ton. with the E. Boeger Plumbing Com­pany, for plumbing work, $200; Joseph B. Allen, architect.

Franceaoo Branahlno, owner, 67 Delaney «t, with NIela Nelleno, for all work, 1650.

Antonio Cerrato. owner, 161 Newton it,- with Edwin Hoftman, for plumbing work, 31.600; with John J. C ra"' .se, for roofing work 3136; F. Averkamp, arcnlteet,

Victor E. Qlrtenner owner, 468 Spring- field av with John Beyinx, for pointing work, 3130; Francis Averkamp, architsct,

W EST HVDSOk REAL ESTATE.

SpfrioJ DitpatrA to rte E V glflX a SEWS.JERSEY CITY, June lO.-The following

deeds and mortgages affecting property In W est Hudson were recorded Saturday:

KEARNY CONVEYANCES.Alfred C. Htley ct ux to T. George Stiles,

e B of Chestnut et 69 f t n f r Railroad av, 44,l«xl00t 31.

Erick G. Erickson et ux to August P. SchehJnder et ux. e s of Davis av f t s fr Midland av, SxSfi 3L

Alexander Cowle et ux to Edwin Rigby, w s of Kearny av 800 ft n fr Halgted st, 30x100. 31.

Edwin Rigby et ux to Alexunifer. Cowls e t ux. w s of Kearny av iOO ft n fr H al- stsd st, 60xWO, II.

T. Herbert Dear et ux to Associated In ­vestors of Newark,te a,of Elm s t 100 f t s fr Isiurel av, 100x90; e s of Forrest 'st 148 f t D ,fr Laurel av. 48x100, and w a of Davis nv no f t n fr Laurel av, ttXixtO, $1,000.

Kate A. and William H, Jones to Oroebe A McGovern, a corjmnillon of Newark, s a of Oakwood av 30 f t w fr Highland av, 36x90. n.

KEARNY MORTOAOBS.

31,339.Alexander Cowle et ux to Richard and

rAnn F. HU1. w s of Kearny gv 300 f t n f r H a b te d St, t e x m 3k«*. ’

NEW YORK CITY.Stk g tn s t C an fr#as Ckristophar I tra s t Ferry Fass Oar Stews,

High Lustre Taffeta Ribbon,in white, hlack in d colors.

y inch. 4 inch. 5 inch,lO c y d . I S c y d . 1 9 c y d .

Leather Goods.Spdcial pricM on TR A V E L L IN G BAGS, SU IT

LASICS and other tourist requisites.LEATHER COVERED FLA SK S......... SO c t o 3 .4 5CLOTHES H A N G E R S in cases.............. 9 5 c t o 4 .3 5COLLAR B A G S ........................................... 5 0 c t o 4 .6 3FITTED D R ESSIN G C ASES................ 8 5 c t o 1 1 .5 0M EDICINE C.ASF:S.................................... 5 5 c t o 6 .0 0SHAW L ST R A P S........................................ 2 5 c t o 1 .0 0T r u n k s t r a p s ........................................ 6 0 c t o 7 5 cTR A V ELLIN G BAGS, sole leather,IS in .. 5 . 7 5 , 16 in ., 6 . 0 0 ,1 7 in .. 6 . 5 0 , 18 in., 6 . 7 5b e l t s of leather, silk, steel studdedand linen ............................... ........... .................5 0 c t o 6 .0 0CIRCULAR B EL T S of black leather, stitched;special 22 to 36 inch; value 75c., for........... ........... 5 0 cBELTS, embroidered d u a lc , with g ilt buckles;special a t .................. ............. .......................................... . I 5 cWith pearl buckles; specwl at................................T. 2 S c

Dress Goods Department.Light weight Spring Dress Fabrics Greatly Under*

priced.NOVELTY M O H AIR, exceptionally bright, lus­trous quality, invisible stripes and checks, shades of navy marine, black and cream; |1 .5 S quality, for 1 .1 5PANAM .\ SU IT IN G , 54 inches w ide, all the de-

sirable colors, also black, spring w eight, superiorquality; regular price f l , .35, for.................................. I.OOCREAM SERGE, 46 inches w ide, all wool, strong and serviceable, for outing suits; value$1.10, for.............................................................................. 8 9 c

MOHAIR SIC IL IA N , 52 inches "wfde, good quality, shades of brown and green-only; 75c, quality; price to close this lo t.............. ........................ 3 9 c

MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED.

Broadway, 8th and 9th Sts., N. Y.

Wedding Gifts Graduation Gifts

A ppropriate Beautiful Ufieful

Ol^R assemblage of beatitiful articles suit­able for Wedding and Graduation Gifts has been gathered with greater thought

and care than ever before. The display shows all the very latest designs and novelties in

JEWELRY WATCHES DIAMONDS STERLING SILVER PLATED WARE

CUT GLASS FINE CUTLERY CHAFING DISHES COFFEE MACHINES

CLOCKS AND CLOCK SETSEverything has been selected not only for its beauty in appearance, but also for its more substantial quali­ties for wear and service. And the prices are entic­ing enough to make your gift-choosing a pleasure.

We alwMys carry a large line of WEDDI\0 RINOS la H k„ 18k. and 22k, In tail sixet and welghti.

O ur Optical Service is an expert service. All exam inations are m ade by conscien­tious experts by th e most approved m ethods. T hat is w hy we guarantee th e perfect com fort and case of every pair of glo-saes we At.

J . W I 5 5 & S O N S6 8 S B R O A D S T R E E T .

g ^Fhone ^*3160" Conafrntlnf All Btorei. Mail ©n*! '['hone Orderft j

puREFaao DEPART­MENT

COR. BRO A D ST. AND PA RK PLACE, NEW ARK.Orders e t 0B.OO Shipped Free to Aay Part of Now Jonejp

----- ^ , ..w.... a. aptwxa ' I

SGHEUER’S IT MARKETTo Get You Hero M O R N I N G S

8 and 12 !lWe’re Offering These You Buy Between

From 8 to 12 Tuesday MorningFrOTh Sldfshwi I E pSpring Onions, J | | U

SOFT-SHELL CRABS. Q

National D itcuit Co. In er ^ Seal Chdcolnte W a fe rs—F ig f p ■Newtons, b o x ............................. | U

ROB ROY TOMATOES, i | i | ^

SHREDDED WHEAT,ORAPE NUTS, box........... l U C

ALL-MY BMGMNS.New Onions, q u a rt......... ......... 1 ooGreen Peas, q u art................. . ( |o aIrfttuoe, head...............................f z l l :Cucumbers, each .,...........................V VGreen Beans, q u art................. 'I 4Wax Beans, q u a rt. ..................... f | | | CNew fhiinneh, Vi peck............... I • •Fancy Crcpm eir B utter, lb ........... ..IT oPouna Cake, lb................................. ..lO oWlq^enmayer's or Felgenspan's B u r ,

1.00Case a t 2 dosen.

Scheusr's Golden Santos Coflee, tb,l(ie 6 Ibi. to r W e.

■cheuer*s Teas, l b . . . , ................ ,.....B S e

From8tol2TuesdayMoniB|jFreshly Baked Drop Cakes.

Crullers, Jelly Diamonds, dozen...................................

Quart Bottle Cellfomla Port, Sherry, Angeline,Catawba...... ..............

Dutch Cleanser, Tryphosa, Jello, box ||G

Heinz Cfttsup, b ottle ..................... 9cALL-DAT BARfiAIK.

Messina Unions, dozHi............1Fresh Tomatoes, qaait.,....„ .... i ^ |Oranges, dozen..,,,................... | I JFancy PtnehppleA * lor..... .....JHartley’s or Robinson’s Maraalade...lSc^Stuffed Olives, bottle....... .......v \ f IKmlBottle Sweet or Sour Ptddes..,.., / ISummer Bi&igna, tb.......„..... t |100 Stomps with Scboierls Teas, lb..,l too Stamps with t lb. an Premhim

Baking Fovder..... ..20 Stamps 'wItliPtM. JaraC(Aae,lb.]

Pres DaUvarlM McamilDf and Afteneen at WembMo, BesevUlaaod Best <

n '

7 N E W A B K f s i s n E S ^ . I o t o t a t : n o .M A R R I A G E S .

t e i M T h i ^ o t I l s n n r M i i J s r K tu p ty . t o J i i i W U m B r s m h i J h

D A T - K I S A H B J J Y - O n t a t u r d A y , J u n » ^ f i , A t B f - l m w o o d , O r a n s s , , N . J . , b r t h < * R » v . f i l s n l t y V h l t B , M o l a l u l b y t h e R < * v . W i l l i a m F O r c # Y W i a k e r D . i > . , D o r u l h y M i l l e r , d a u a h t e r o f f i a n r y l l l U e r K e u b e v . l o f l t r p K e n l > « t A v a n

C B H B T B R I R l t .(orgMfaidrmrk toil

H E C t . F W A R T B U - I I B B .

[ * n i r y i | l U « r K e u b e f . h i r .

D E A T H S .B A n T M ^ T T - D o p a r t e d t h i s I l f * a t b e r n 1 *

‘imw'c, l U H H a m l l l o u i i n v s t , E a s t O r a i i f f . S u n * 4 a y , J u a « U . 1M 7 . M n . 8 y U i a t t a r M « t t . ! • « - l o y ^ i i i o l h a r o f U r * . N a n n i e W a s h i n f i o n ' F * ' * - t a r . I n h e r 7« l h y e a r . B a l a l l v a * a n d f r l e n d i a r e h l n d t f I n r l i e d t o a ( i * n d f u n e r a l a e r v l e e t t n C a l v a r y D a p U K C h u r o b . M n p i e a v e n u e , J g s s t O m n a e , o n W e d n e e d a y , J u n e T 2. a t t o ’ c l o c k . I n t e m n a n i I n H o s e d i a a O f m e t e r y -

B R I T T O N - A t C a l d w e l l . N . J - , J u n e 9 , _ I W T . A d a V . . b e l o v e d d a u v h t e r o f r t a b r j e l c . a n d A a n o a U . B r l t i o n * n e e d l b y t a r * a n i o n t h e 2* d a y * . F u n e r a l r s r v l c e a w i l l b e h e l d a t t h t > l r

n s t d e n c a W e d n w a l R y a f l w n o o n . J u n * 19 . a t 2 J b o * e l o e | i . R e l a i t v e a a n d f r t e n d i a r e r e - f i t f u l l y I n v i t e d . J t i t e n n e n t I n C a l d w e l l a^etery.

B I I O W N o S u d d e n l y . J u n e 7 , 1007. a t O r a n f t , X . J . , D a n l a l W . H r o w n , f o r m e r l y o f W o o d - b r l d f s , N . J . H e l a t l v e * a n d f r l e n d i a r e l n > v i t a d t o a t t e n d t h a f u n e r a l a e r v l o e * a t h l a l a i * M a t d e a c e . N o . 28 W e b s t e r n l a o i r O r a o | e , o n T u a a d a y . J u n e 11. a t 11 A . U . I n i e r m w l a t A ^ t i a O B m a i s r y .

, C A L l . A H A ) f r * A t C r a n a e . N . J . . J u n e 0 . 1007.[ - ^ f b o t n a s < * a ^ h a n . R e l a t i v e * a n d f r l s h d i a r e

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d a y , a t f l A . M - , t t a s n o n t o H t . J o h n ' s C h u i r h .I v S m a H l f f h H a a s o f K e q u l e m w i l l b e o f - I ( 0 ^ f o r t h e r e p o e o o f h i s s o u l . I n t e r m u n t ' j U m . J o h n ' s C e m a t e r y ,

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y e a r s , i n s h o e b u i l o e s a ; o n e s p e a k u n n g u a g a p r e f e r r e d . R . S O U M l

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j u i r e d . A d d r a a W a t c h m a n , B o x 89, N s w i d c o .

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i n g ; a t j i t a e x i w i i e n o e a n d s a l a r y d e s i r e d . A d * d r e s s M a n u f a c t u r e r , B o x 90 , N e w s c f T l o a ,

p a c k e r s - L . B A M B E R G E R A C D .R f S O U l R E P A C K E K d A N D f l l T E B T

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f H « i * h o r e < A | > p l y uo E v a r g T H n p t . . H a s t O r ­a n g eC O O K w a n t e d ; m a s t b « w i l l i n g a n d o b l i g i n g .

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o f c a o b d a y ; o n a l i v i n g i n O i ^ n g a o r E s i t O r a a g * p r e f e r r e d 620 P a r t t a * # . , B a a t O r a n g e .

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a b i l i t y , w o u l d I l k a t o w o r k o n m o b i l * . A d d m a A u t o . B o o t S I , N e w s

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n a w s p a u m ; a i p e r t a w c a u n n s o a s a a r y : a s i K l t o r p a r t t c t t l a n i P r ^ B y n d t o a t a , L o o k p o r t , W . T .

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n g I n a c l e a n , c o o l f a c t o r y T W e w a n t o p e r a - t o r i o n n l g h t a h i r t n , l u i M n t a a a n d w o m a n ’ s n l g h t g o w o i j h o u r s f : f l o t o 9 : 30 ; h a l f h o U d a y o n

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c h a r g e o f k i t c h e n ; 6 r s t - e l a a a b a k e r ; r e t e r s a o e s . A d d r e s s A . K . B . . S l O B r o a d s L , c i t y .

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d r e s s C o o k . B o x » . N e w s o i T i o e . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _C O O K w i s h e s p o s l i l o n . 240 H p r I h g V e i d a v a .

llsabeth, N. j.

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gold jewelry; ataady work. BCHAPPEU 76 Hayes st. NBACHBR ft BRQD, 90 Baecber st.

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work by day or week; can do any kind of work and 1i good cook; reference fumlahed. 46 Centre et,

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t w e e n 10 a n d I h y e a r * o fi . f 6 p e r w e e k , w i t h o p i _ _ _ _ _ _ .I . A p p l y F e d e r a l W i t s C l o t h C b . I, N . J .

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t r a d e .r i s e n ,HOT—Wanled, bright ofnoa boy;

tunliy for advancement. WILLIAMS CO., Brown city.

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l e a b o y ; g o o d o p p o r - . A p p l y B H B R W I N -

s L a o d L l M a r a v a . ,

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S o u t h U t h e t .P L U M B E d R — F l r t t - o l a s a p l u m b e r ; n o n e o t h e r

j i a e d a t ^ l y . 46 P a o i l l o a t .I T O R T E R f o r f u r n i t u r e a t o r e ; p o r l e r s tnt d r y

D I B H W A B H E R - W a n t e d . c o t o r a d g i r l , w i l l i n g t o w o r k , c U a h w a a h I n g . H o t e l ^ n a l n g t o n ,

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chargers wanted; steady work, at highest prices. ALBERT ABRECHT, 8S Cmwford at.

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or write two days, IT West Kinney pi.

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FARRBLl^On June A at Hawthorne, N. T,. [ CMra, wife of John Farrell. Relailvos and

frlendj are kindly Invited to attend the fu- 'fteral on Wednesday, June 13. from the offloe •f T . J. CkTIan. t n Central avenue, a t 1:80 lA. M., to the Cathedral, where a Mom of Ite-

will be offered for the repoee of her igOttL iBtanneikt in the C7emeiak*y of the Holy

F E L T H R — O n i o n d a y , J u n e f i , 1907, E m m a . f M s e t d a u g b t a r o f E d w a r d r . a n d t h e l a i * l i u m t X F e l t e r . F u n e r a l a e n k e e w i l l b e i M d a t h e r l a t a h p m e . N o . 196 L a f a y e t t e f t r a a t . o a T t m r t i y a v s n l n i . J u n e i t , a t 9 P . 8 t R a l a G v e a a n d f r i e n d s a r e I n v i t e d t o a t * h e a d . I n t a r r o a n t a t N e w b u r g , N . T . N t w b u r g M a n p l a a a a c o p y .

U>1CETEH—.Suddenly, on Sunday, June 9. WIlUajn, balDvstl nueband of Amelia rsr (oae, Doerr). aged 4ft years. Flela-

.Jkd friends are kindly invited to attonul ftmsral on Wednesday, June 12, at 2 I', from his late residence, M2 Hawthorn*)

avenue, oomer Fabyan place, to Woodland CWDeb - - ■ 'i t e i Y t o r I n t e r m e n t .^ n W A T R I < ^ K - 0 « J u n e 1907, W l l l l m n

b e d o v e f t a o n o f t h e l a t e T h n m a i i s n r l A n n ' F l i x p a f r i o k . R e l a t i v e s a n d f r i e n d s a r e k i n d l y

l a r u e d t o a t t e n d t h e f u n e r a l f r o m h i s l a t e g c M d e a c a . 66 G o l d e n a i r e e t , o n W e d n e s d a y J u n e 18, a t 8:36 A . M . , t o 8 t . P a t r f o k ' s C a t h f ^ - d i a l . w h e r e a H i g h U s a s o f R e q u i e m w i l l b er i r e d f o r t h e r e p o s e u f h i s s o u l , i n t e r m e i i t

I h * O e r e t t a r y o f t h e H o l y B e p u l c h r e . F R E E M A N — O n J u n e 9 , U M f T . M e l l e a F r r « ^ *

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r h i n g . J u n e 12, a t 9 A . M . K i n d l y o m i t i w e r s -G R A Y B f r - O n B u n d a y , J u n e 9. R M 7 , E d e f s U

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a r a t t r a a t m e n t - c a l l a t p A K R R ' B . 27 P o u i h O n u n g o a v e . ( f a u l o r y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e ! : t n . m l ] p l a n o a f o r s m a l l r o o m s .^ R G A I N B I n P e a s * p i a n o s . I n o u r w a r e -

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p r i o e a ; w o r k g u a t a n t e e i l ; e s t l m a t e a f r e e . . L L O W E N 8 T E I N . 423 R r t w d s t . ; l e l . 228L . H . B .I T A K E c o n t r a c t s f o r a l l t i n n i n g , r p o O n g ,

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p l a a t r r i n g . a l i e r a t l o & i t a n d l o b b i n g a i p a u i a t - t y . T . H . D E R M O D Y , I f l S H a l s e y s t . T c l . 6091L

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n e a t l y d o n a ; s c r e e n d o o r s a n d w i n d o w s m a t ^ A d d r e s s C a r p e n t e r , D o x 89, N e w s o l f i c r ,W D d o p o l i s h i n g a n d ' a t a m p l n g lot m a n u f a ^ _ t u r e r s . H . M , T E N N f t C O . , 3M M u l b e r r y * t .

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n o n t b a n d a p . 190-291 M a r k e t a t .

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t i o n ; h a a d y a r o u n d b a r ; c a l l e t o n c e . M a n ­s i o n i t o u w : , B r o a d a t . , B l n o m f t e l d , N . J .M a C H I N T R T S w a n t e d t o o p e r a t e p l a i t e r a , m i l l -

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a n d 86 ; c i U x e n i U n i t e d S t a t e s , o f g o o d c h o r a o t e r a n d t e m p e r a t e h a b i t s , w h o c a n ■ p e a k , r e a d a n d w r i t e E i ^ I i s h . F o r I n f o r m a t i o n a p p l y t o r e o r u l t l d g o m c e r , 276 M a r k e t i t . , N e w a r k * o r 47 M o n t g o m e r y a t . * J e r s e y C i t y , N . J .

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v a o a l n g ; g o o d p a g . B u n A d v e r t i s i n g B u r t a u , C h i c a g o .

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d r e s s M . . B o x B , K e w a O l f i o a .W A T C H M A N ; g o o d , s t e a d y m a n : r e f e r e n c p s ;

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m o u n t e d l a t h e . ‘ H E D G E S f t B R O , 12 l U i l - r o a d p i .T O U N O M A N w ’ o n t e d t o w o r k a r o u n d h o w l i n g

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a e n a l d e ; W a g e s ; f o m i l y o f f i v e E ‘ t v F - M R C H I l p . 112 W o r t h a t , , f l e w Y r ^ r k ; ' p h ^ 6035. W o r t h .C O O K — G o o c S c o o k t o d o a l l b n t l a n n d n * w a l k

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a n g e a n i l B l o o m f i e l d e r o e a t o w n t r o l l e y l i n e .G I R L S — W i u i t e d . t w o g l r l a f o r l i g h t o f f i c e w o r k

f u r o n e n r t w o w e e k r f ; n e e d n o t h a v e h a d e x p e r i e n c e . A p p l y T u e a . l a y m o r n i n g a t N e w J e r s e y T o b a c c o C c i . , 9-16 A r i l n g l o n a t .G I R L W a r n e d , g i r l o v e r I f l y e n r a o f a g e . t o

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i i n w i t h t w o c h i l d r e n : P r o t m t a n t T u - e f e r r e d . A t M r e n a O o i i d H u m e , H o x 77. N e w a o f f i c e .

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s a l a r y . W . J A N S E N , ^ r t n g f l e l d a v e . , n e a r B o y d e n a v e . , H i l t o n , N . J .8 A L E S W D H E N w a n t e d f o r a o d a f o u n t a i n ; n o

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t i c a l u h o u s e k e e p e r I n a s m a l l f a m i l y ; n o o b - J e c t l o n a t o c h i l d r e n . 68 S t o n e a t .H O U S E W O R K — S e t t l e d c o l o r e d w o m a n w U r h e *

p c a i t l o n I n a m a l l f a m i l y , o r p l a i n c o o k i n g g e a a h o r e . j J I B e a c h * t . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _H O U S E W O R K — Y o u n g g i r l w a n t * g e n e r a l

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c e n t r a l a n d W a t s o n a v e e . . E a n t O r a n g e .U P S T A I R S G I R L I N F A M I L Y O F T W ' O

A U V L T S : N O C H I L D R E N : R E F E R E N C E R E g r i R K D . 620 C U N T O N A V B .

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w a l l i n g , p u l d w h i l e l e a r n i n g . T h e L e n o x , 25 C e n t r a l a v e .

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a t . , c i t y . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _H O U B E W O R K - O e r m o n g t r l w a n t s p l a c e a t

g e n e r a l h o u e e w o r k ] n s m a l l f a t a l l y . 64 I k t r - c l a y a t .H O U S E K E E p E H — W o m a n w o u l d l i k e p o s i t i o n 1

a i h o u e e k e e p o r . I n q u i r e 100 B l o o m O e l d a v e .H E L P — D o n ' t b e w i t h o u t ; c o o k s , w a l t r e a a e s ,

n u r s e s , h o u a e w o r k e r a ; a l l n a t i o n a l I t I p h . H o m e E m | i . A g ' y , 78 C e n t r e a t . . O r a n g e . T e l . 282 ; h o u r s , D - 5.L A U N D R E S S — Q o o d l a u n d r p a e w o u l d t a k e a

f e w s m a l l w a s h i n g s h o m e ; n o I r o n i n g ; v i c i n i t y P a c i f i c a t . A d d r e a s D . , B o x f t f l . N a w * o f f i c e .L A U N D R E S S — W < » m o n d e a l r * w o r k a a l a u n ­

d r e s s b y w e e k o r d a y . C a l l 110 E a s t K i n n e y B t , t o p f l o o rN U R S E — R e r t n o d m i r a e l o o k i n g f o r a B l l u a t l o n

t u a s a l A t a I c K p e r a u n o r i n v a l i d t o t r a v e l ; t e l . 3A 05W . E m p l o y m e n t o f f i c e , 42 J p n e a i t . _ _ _ _ _ _S T E N O G R A P H E R a n d t y p e w r i t e r , n e a t , a c -

c u r a l e , w a n t s p o e l i l o n ; m o d e r a t e s a l r y . A d - d r e s s A m b i t l o u a , B o x 74 , N e w s o f f l r e .

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$ f l . A d d r o a a B o x 82 , N e w s o f f i c e .

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b e d o n e a t h o m e ; a p p l y b y l e t t e r o n l y . R o o m f ^ 2 , 41 W e s t e t . , M a n h a t t a n .

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r t r e a * : o n J y t w o i n f u t n l f y ; r e f e r e t i e e a . C a l l e v e n i n x a . t H R o e o v l l l g f t v e . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

h o u s e u ' o r k — c o m p e t e n t w h i t e m a i d F O R G E N E R A L H O U 8 H W O B K ; 126 P E R

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w o r k ; m u s t b e g o o d c o n k a n d l a u n d r e a s ; w a g e s $ 22. M B S , F R A Z E E , 7 M i d l a n d a v e . , A r l i n g t o n , N . J .H O U S E W O R K — W a n t e d , a g i r l f o r g e n e r a l

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s m a l l f a m i l y ; g o n d w a g e s . M R S . J A S . H . C . R I C H M O N D . 94 P l e a s a n t p i . . A r l i n g t o n ,N J . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _l i o u . ^ E V ^ ’ D H K — A g i r l f o r g e n e r a l h o u s e w o r k ;

w h o u n d e r s l a n d A c o o k i n g . C a l l m o r n i n g s a t M H H . H . 8 E L . 103 W h l t f o r d f t v e . , N u t l s y , N . J .H O i r . ‘ ^ E W O K K ' - ^ i r l t o a a s l E i t w i t h h o u e e w o r k ;

n o w a s h i n g o r I r o n i n g . C 3 H i l l s i d e p i . , b e ­t w e e n R o s e a n d A v o n a v e . ; c a l l ^ t w o d a ^ . _ _

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h o u s e w o r k I n a p f t i t r a e n i ; t w o I n f a m i l y ; s l e e p h o m o . J . K A Y , 97 Q u I t m a n a t _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _H O U S E i W O l l K — W a n t e d , f t g i r l t o d o g e n e r n l

h t i j i K o w o r k I n f a m i l y o f t h r e e . A p p l y a t B 20 P a r k a v e . . I M e t O r a n g e , N . J .H u i ; 9 K W ' O R K - 4: J o m p e l e n t g i r l f o r g e n e r n l

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h o u a e w o r k : f l a t : a m a l l f a m i l y . A p p l y a o c o n d f l o u r , 2U 2 N o r t h F i f t h s t .

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h o u s e w o r k ; S c a n d i n a v i a n p r e f e r r e d . E . J E N - B W N . 128 I t e r g e n a t . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

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w o r k i n s m a l l f a m i l y o f a d u i t a .T ' n r k a v e . , O r a n g e .H O T J B E W O R K — W a n t P d , h o l f ^ g r o w n g i r l t o a s ­

s i s t w i t h h o u e e w o r k ; r e f e r e n c e . I H i S C e n t r a l a v e . , E k w t O r a n g e . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _i m U s E W O R K — C o l o r e d g f r l g e n e r a l h o u s e ­

w o r k ; o s i U i w U h c o o k i n g ; n o l a u n d r y w o r k . 226 R o s e v i l l e a v e . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _h o u s e w o r k — W a n t e d , g i r l f o r g e n e r a l

i e m a i l f a m U y . 33 B u r n e t t s t , ,h o u s e w o r k I n E a s t O r a n g e .H O U S E W O R K — A G e r m a n g i r l f o r g e n e r a l

h o u s e w o r k ; e m a i l f a m i l y ; g o o d w a g e s . 142 M o n m o u t h a t . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _H O U A E W O R K — W h i t e g i r l f o r g e n e r a l h o u j i e -

w o r k ; f a m i l y o f t h r a * ; I f o o d w a g o e . A p p l y 35 A v o n a v e . _ _ _ _ _ _ .H O U S E W O R K — W ' a n t a d , g i r l f o r g e n e r a l h o u s e ­

w o r k ; r e f 6i T ' ® n * 56* r e q u i r e d . 04 A s h l a n d a v e . , E a s t O r a n g e . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ '

H O I T B B W O R K — Q f r l g e h e r a l h o u a e w o r t c ;m u a t h a v e g c p o d r e f e r e t i o e B . 401 rdt. P r o a -

p e c t , a v e . ^H O U B H I W O R K — W a n t e d , a g i r l t n d o g e n e r a l

h n u a e w o r k . A p p l y 76 W i l l i a m s t . , B a * t O t -g n g e . _ _ _ _H O U & K W O B X — W a n t e d , a g i r l f o r g e n e r a l

h o u e o w o r k ; a t r o p a t h o m e . 600 W o s h i n g L o n s t . ^H O U A B i W O R B ^ - O I r t f f t f g e n e r a l h ^ e e w o r i c ;

s m a l l f g a i l l y : r ^ r a n c e . C a l l a t 3f l d a r k a t .H O U S S J W O R K — w o m a n w a n t e i l t o o e s l e t I n

l i g h t h o u a e w o t k , W 1 W a s h i n g t o n s t .^ U e E I W O R K — T c A m g g i r l t o o a s i i t w i t h

h o u s e w o r k . 166 F a i r m o u n t a v e , _ _ _ _ _H O U S E T W O R K — W a n t e d , w o m a n f o r g e n e r a l

h o u s e w o r k - I n g u l f * 498 B r o a d s t ,K O U 9 E W O B K r ~ ^ ^ ’ l h o u e e w o r k o r ^

s t n l r a g t r i * 169 B e r g e n a t .

H E L E ^ W a n t e d . a l l k i n d * o f e x p e r i e n c e d f l u t l n g - r o o t p h e l p : v a m p e r a , b o r l w r - t r l m m e r s ,

B t l t c n a r * , a t e . ; g o o d w a g e * a n d p e r m a n e m p o - i l t i c m a F X f O B B H i a M A C O „ A d a m s a n d C l i n - t o n a t e . . C h i c a g o , H I .H A T J

a n g e9 X b l o c l ^ . « f i e r l e n c « j . w a n t e d . O r -

M i t c h e l l e t , O r a n g e , N . J .a t B o x C o , .m o N B R — O o o d I r o n e r w o i t t M t h r e e d a y * a

w e e k ; s t e a d y w o r k ; W h i l e . H I O G l N S . W r i g h t a t -K l T d i t e M A I D w u u d a t f o r

W t a c b C h l M T c n ; e n t r a n c e o n l ( n ha n d C e n t r a l i I t « . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _K I T C B S N O I B I . . ^ ' W B n t c 4 , a k i t c h e n g t r l . l ( n

C o u r t a r t .L A i 54 D R Y - a i r l _ t o d o m a r k i n g e n d a ^ o r t t h g ;

e x p e r i e n c e d p e g f a r ^ . A p p l y g n o w L a u n d r y , H e d e n b a r g W o r k s , P l a n a a i t d M a c k e U , e l * .L A U K D E Y - S M r t I r o o i r s w a n t e d , w o r t o ; c o e

w h p c a n i r o n a h l r t w a i e t s — - x » —L a u i i 4 i y > 407 N o r t h F o u r t h a tL A U H B f l T - P l e o e I r o n e r a w a n t e d ; e r p m U i

s t e a d y w o r k a l l y e a r a r o u n d . 863 'a v f t

R o a e ^ i t eW ' A S H T N O — W a n t e d , a w o m a n b y t h e d a y f o r

w a s h i n g a n d i r o n i n g ; a l s o t o m a k e h m e l f g e n e r a l l y u s e f u l . 296 B r o a d a t . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

T O f f T N O G I R U ,

T H E D A V I D B T R A U 8 C O M P A N Y R B - Q T I i n a T H E 6 B R V I C K S O P N E A T T O T I N G O l R T i B F O B b a r g a i n T A B L E S ; E X P E R I ­E N C E U N N E C B B S A B T ,

T O U N O W O M A N t o a c t a s a t c r o ' s l e d g e r c l e r k , m a n u f a c t u r i n g c o m p a n y ; i n u e t b e n e a t , q u i c k

a n d a c c u r a t e a t f i g u r e * . A d d r e s s L e d g e r , B o x £ H , N e w s o f f i c e .

H E L P W A N T C O — M E I V A H D W O t f E H .

C O O K B . c h a m b e r m a i d s , w a l t r e e a e * , h h w e - w o r k e r s ; a l s o t h r e e w h i t e y o u n g m e n f o r

h o t e l ; g o o d w a g e a . M R 3 . B i W * n > N » 168 H i g h at.S T E N O G R A P H B R B a n d l y j t e w r i t a r a w a n t e d ,

w h o h a v e h a d e x p e r l e n o e ; n o n e b u t e x p e ­r i e n c e d n e e d a p p l y , A d d r e a s W . « B o x 89, N e w *o f f i c e .

E M P L O Y M E N T W A N T E D - M B N .

A C C O U N T A N T t e x p e r t ) o p e n # , c l o s e s , d U ^ t a n g l e s b o o k s ; m o n t h T y t r i a l l ^ l a n c e a ; a u d i t a ;

I n v e s t l g a t l o r L s : a c c o u n t i n g a n d c o a t s y a t e m s . Q u a l l f l e d A u d i t o r , P o a t o f f l e s B o x 486,a c c o u n t i n g — P r a o t l i i n g p u b l i c a c c o u n t a n t ,

m a n y y e a r s ' e x p e r i e n c e , s o l l o l t e a d d i t i o n a l e n g a g e m e n t s ; U m e t t e r m * t o a u l t . A d d r a e a E x p ^ B o x 14, N e w * o f f i c e .A C C O U N T S a n d l t e d , m a t h o d a d e v l a e d , o j o a t

■ y a u m a I n t r o d u c e d ; r a t e * r e a a o n a b l a . A d ­d r e s s I h i b l l c A c c o u n t a n t , B o x 77, N a w a c E c e .L00K-KljTE2’ER (oMiatanO; young men,

e m p l o y e d , w o u l d l i k e t o m a k e c h a n g e , d r e s s R c l i a h l e , B o x 9 , N e w * o f f i c e .

n o wA d -

B U T C H E B ; d i s e n g a g e d ; c i t y o r c o a s t ; w a i t o n t r a d e , t e n d r o u t e , o r b o t h . A p p l y 81 S u m m e r

a t . . O r a n g e , N . j . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _B U T C H E R — A r a d s i n g l e y o u n g

l i k e p o a l t l o n b u t c h e r s t o r aave.

B O Y ( c o l o r e d ) , d r i v e c a r r i a g e f o r d o c t o r o r b e l l ­b o y . A d d r e a s W U t l n g . B o x 15. N e w s o f f i c e .

B A K E R w a n t a p o s i t i o n , o n b r e a d , c a k e , p l e a 2 f i 6% B l o o m f i e l d a v e . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

C O A C H M A N ; Single, w h i t e , t h o r o u g h l y u n d e r ­s t a n d i n g M l d u t i e s ; p o l i t e ; c a p a b l e ; r e f e r -

e n r . e s . A d d r e a s C o a c h m u b c a r e M r . P r s b a t , 198 B l o o m f i e l d a v e n M o B t a U l r B a k e i y , N . J .

c h a u f f e u r — M e c h a n l o w i s h ® * p o e l t l o n a a c h a u f f e u r , o r I n g a r a g e . A L F R E I D R O B B . 69

S o u t h 6 t h a t , H a r r i s o n .C H A U F F E U R w l a h e e p o s i t i o n ; m a k e o w n r a ^

p a i r s : g o o d r e f e r e n c e . A d d r e s s C . W I L I A S . 5 M a i d e n l a n e .C H E F w o n t s s i t u a t i o n t n o e a a h o r a h o t e l , c l u b

o r c a f e : b e a t r e f e r a n c a . A d d r e s s J , A « , B u x I , N e w s o f f i c e , 4 ,_ _ _ _ _ _

c h e f , f i r a t - o l a o a , w i s h e s p o a l t l o n ; « J . M . , 72 J o n e s a t . _ _ _ _

C A R P E K T E R r ^ E k p e r i e n e e d o o r p e t i l e r a n d c a r - p e n t e r ' B h e l p e r o r a l o c d i L a g f o r s t e a d y p o r ­

t i o n s o n b u t l d t n g a o r s h o p w o r k . B D W A R D T , 141 K e a r n y a v e . , K e a r n y . N . J . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _c a r p e n t e r , f l r a t - o l o a a , w a n t s w o r k ; d a y ' s

w o r k o r c o n t r a c t . A d d r e a s 247 G r o v e s t , I r v i n g t o n , N . ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^ _ _ _ _ _C A R P E i N T E r R w a a t s w o r k ,

t e r . B o x 29 , N e w s o f l l o e .A d d r e s s O o r p e n -

8T S u s s e x a y e . ,D d p a l m

, c i t y .D R I V B R r - T o u f l g m a n w a n t s p o s i t i o n l o _ d r i v e

s i n g l e b o r s s o r t a b o r t n g w o r k . 234 J e O e r a o n

D R I V E R - T o u n g m a n H t d r i v i n g . A f l B r e a s X 28. , 51 B o u t h 7t h s t .

M A N - H o n d y m a n w o n t s w o r k a r o u n d g a r d e n o r o s c o A M m a a . 114 W i l d w o o d o v e . . U p p e r

M o n t c l a i r . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _M A N — S t e a d y , e x p e r i e n c e d m a n a s p a c k e r 0

c o l k c l c r . A d d r e s s F t e o d y , B o x 79 , N e w s o f ­f i c e .M A N . l u s t c o m a o v e r , g e t w o r k ;

s p a i e k s S l a v i c , J O H N . I f f t W t U l g m s t .PATTERN MAKBS-Boy PoalUoi to

I r a r a p a t t e r n m a k i n g t r a d e . A d d r e s s J . 0 „ 41 mirviaw BV*.s X i^ l lA N ^ n expcrleneed Jawslry salesman

wishes tn represent responalpje Jewelry manu- faoturer fn Chioago and the west on 00m- missicn; very beat refrtwwn furnlihad. A d ­d r e a s E i r a E N S T B J W E ^ 6917 Michigan ave., Chicago. ______ . . .H A L E f l H A N — Y o u n g j n o n , a c q u a i n t e d w i t h

N e w J e r s e y , N e w - Y o r k a n d P e n n s y i v a n t i i f d e ­s i r e s » c h a n g e o f l i n e ] s M o c o n a t t e n d t o ' b o o k -

k « e p t n g a n d c o r r e a p o t t d l n f f . A d d r e a s M , O . , S o x I d , N e w s o f f i c e .

S T A B L E M A N — H a l t , m o Z T l e d , O a r m o p . w a n t a w o r k o i a t o b k u a o J i i n n d e n r t a n d * - g o r d e a

w o r k ; r e f s r e n o a a , ^ j ^ A d d m a O a r d p e n , B o x 7 , N e w s o f f i c e .B R l P P l N O C L E R K r ^ B i p e r i s n c e d y o n i i f f m a n

w i s h d e p o a l u m ; b a s t o f r e t e r M c e . M I C H A B L 3 A N N , S I S L a f a y a t t t s t . ^ _ _ _STKNOORAFH&R expert t y p ^ desirai

pesltlon portly cl^iw l. Box 9fl<A T, M. C. A,young h a m (Oenawn>> lately loated, wlAss

position In office-aa book-keeper, Utne olerk, shipping or stock eHrk. where boneaty and obHlty will be appraetatad; wage* no object; eon furnish best rdletenee. Addreas H, BRAUN, IZB Vlrgtttla avd-. Jatoff q ty , N. J,YOPKQ m an—AbhW and IntoUliHtui. y n S

ro*p. not afraid to srork, daMmn any pesltioo ng tlO; beat rafliMacea. AAftTMi BftPB-

Box J9, Hawn cAos.

WASHING—Besides doing away with wash day In hot weather, you will find that it Is

much raaler to keep servant* If you have all tlie washing done out of the hoitae. We coll for your work, wash It, Iron all the bod and table linen, starch the pieces that need aUrch- Ing and return them with the flannel* rough dried ready for you to dampen and Iron, iTIce. 0 cents per pound. Rough Dry Laumlry Co., 413 Market at. 'Phone 6263.WAf5HING; rough dry; 89c. per do*en piece*:

this Includes the Ironing of bed and table linen and starching of starch piece*. HDWEI^L'S Laundry, 88 Marshall at.WAflHINO—Plain washing done at home; bed

spreada and blonkeia extra. Send postal or call. MRg. J. MILLER, 89 Uncoln *t.WASHING—Wanted, washing to take home;

good laundress. MRS. K. HOLLAND, GoSouth 14th it., city,___________WASHING—Rough dry wash taken home; top

floor. HUNTER. 63 Crane st.WASHING—Famlir woahiug done right. Elite

Hand Laundry, 4 Second ava.____________WABHING—German w<nnan wishes washing;

home or out. SO Cotden st,WASHING—Woman wants woohlng to do. 79

Crane et,_____________WOMAN—A young Gerroon wishes a position;

with ona child; wilting'to help with sewingand light iMUSswork; good references. Call76 Bouth 8th st.. second floor.WOMAN—Mlddle-ogad woman wanta to care

for Invalid or work in a small private family.149 Norfolk sL; no cords. ____________WOMAN to go out washing. Ironing and

clsaalng; first-olou work done. Inquire topfloor left, 627 Bergen at.______W O M A N — Y o u J a g w o m a n w o n t s G o o U n g o r

h o u s e w o r k . A d d r e s s C . , B o x 11, N e w e o f f i c e .WOMAN would like general housework; good

reference. 97 Burnet at-, rear.___________^ ' D U A N w o n t s w o r k o f a n y k i n d . 189 J e f f e r ­

s o n s t . , I n b a s e m e n t .WOMAN wants washing;

SbermoBhome or out.

WASHERWOMAN—Woman to take home washing and Ironing; bring reference. ITa

Bank st.________________WASHERWOMAN—Hungarian woman wanta

(o taka washing boms. 48 Rankin i t , firstfloca*. _________________________WASHERWOMAN—Woman wants washing

and Ironing; neat home. 92 Academy it.WASlOfiRwOMAN—Woman wants washing to

do a t home. 299 Bpriogfisld ave.WABHERWOMAN-Woshlug out first ot the

week. 284 Jefferson sL

WANTED.

OBNT8' CAST-OFF CLOTHING.I pay highest cosh price* for gent*' coat-oS

clotmng and ahoes; *paoial prices paid for la­dles' dresBeBi send postal and I«will coll; business strictly confidanUal. CHJCS. GAHN, 885 LUtiaton ave.

O O L D , S I L V E R , b r o k e n J e w e l r y , p r e o k R U * s t o n e s , d e f a c e d U , 6 . c o i n s , a t o m f i a , c o l a o o d

c u r i o c o l l e c t i o n ; a n t t o o e * ot a l l k l o d a : f u l l v a l u e i r i v e n t V E R R l j W O r a n g e a n d 11t h s t

TRADING WAMPB, all kinds, bought for highest caoE prices, loose or bortc; milk

labels, soap wrapper* and ail kind* of tag*, coupons, eio., axchanga for etamM. N . J. Coupon Oo., 82* RUma s t . near Market i t . ___^

CAST-OFF CLDTHINO.We pay highest prices lor lodlen', gents*

coat-off clothing. Bend postal I will oall. BER8QN BROS., W CANAL BT.

FULL VALUE PAID FOR LADlEff' AND SuBhPfl^OT-OFF CLOTHINO ANDFURfi;

inUCTLT CONBIDENTIAL lUWD FOftTAJa ADELAR. 18 HAMBUTO P L . __________

QBNT0' CAST-OFF CLOTHtNO. Having big demand for same. 1 pay hlgheit

prices, 'fiend poatol and 1 wUI call at once. CHIREL5TEIN, 99 Mulberry st.__________WANTED—500 watches to repair: ooma. write

cr 'phono. BCRBLLSR, watchmaker, 286 Uorkat at., 2 btooks below Broad at.IflOaj,____________________________OLD GOLD, Oliver and ecrapi <ff jewelrirt dlo- _iD£Adg and platinum - * * - -t f o r c o s h .

a OONZALiZ.

Sr, £90•hma*

B r o a d s t . e v a r p l a n e s t e r a .t«ADIBS8' and gents' coat-off olothlng; olsb

laajbar b*da; hyrteit prtoeineld: send poaitX o a r TwIU calf. M. FEINBgRG. 89 Mercer st.CABH paid for old gold,

SILVER AND DIAUONDB.T. J. BRADLEY, 872 BROAD BT.

W B b u y l o d f a s ' a n d g e n t s ' c o s t - o C t c l o t h i n g ; g i v e m e a ( r i a l , b e c a u s e I a m a t a i l o r , a .

LAZARUS, W BeUflvtlla a v a ; -*end postal,R T O H B B T n r l o e s p a i d f o r i o f f i e t ' a n d g e n u r

O A O t - o f f C l o t h i n g , s h o e s a n d f s m t h e r a B e n ip e s t o l to J . B E C K E R . i O J o Q a s . g tT R A D m o 8T A U F B b o u g h t f o r h i g h e s t q « * h

p r i c e s , l o o s e o r I n b o o k s . I n q u l r a t o o i g a ?a t o r e , 916 C o u r t s t . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _T T P B W f i t T B R ; * e c o n d - h a n f f ; v i r i b l e p r e ­

f e r r e d ; s t a t e p r i c e . A d d r e a a L . , B o t 31,N e w s o f f i c e .GOLD AND EtILVER, platinum, diamonds and

pawn tloketa bought N. BLUWB. 887 Broad.W A N T E D , a i m o d s e c o n d - h a n d K o .4 D e n t m o r *

t y p e w r i t e r . A d d r e s s T . . B o x 5 , N e w * o f f i c e .f t N T T H l K t

ROeiK. 6you Imva to tell, send for G. Acadejpy st. 'Fbooa 8TS5J.

w a n t e d t o b u y . a N a t i o n a l c o t f i r o g l s t e r . S 61 M u l b e r r y s t , c i t y .

Uowae1ial4 Qciofta W ainted.a l l k i n d s o f h o u s e h o l d g o o d * a n d m a r a h o a d l a a .

a n t l r e c o s t o n t a o f a t o r a i L h o u a « a n d f l a t s a n y t h i n g y o u b a V e t o a a l l , b o u g h t r o t o u b ( e o n e t i l t o s b e f o r e s a l l l i i g ; e e U z n a t a * c h e e r f u l J r g i v e n ; s e n d p o a t o l o r ' ^ n e S 7B 6J .

R E I D , A u c t i o n R o o m s , 8 8 A c a d e m y e l

A F T B n T O D H A V B T R I E D O T H B R B , V a N P O O T A g B U t * A I J . K I K D S . O I ' W X ) D a i

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “ ' I T I A I . t lS W L

A X T U n d a t h o t i M h o M n x K l . tram b a U H M * n d l U U i . u d u i t t g i m . < t £ . tot c u b b .

V. S I M O N , 11 A a d c m n H b d p e m i o r W I L T * i . m tu _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _B B S T p r t « * t a r t a o u M h n l d c o a d a i ^ w o l i i p r k t *

for t e l l u r b a J t r i i M U w i a i u f f i i r B l t n r ^ u u ^ l U t i . c l a t h l i n t - B B B Q 8 8 , 1 1 P a c l f t c t bH i o H K B T P R I C B B p i M f o r n e o a d - l u k i i d t i g

n l t o r * I D A n r p a U M H B d m U I . w « w U J o a l l A . B A S O W I T C H * C O „ , t i t « B e l t a r i n . » » * ■U r a U B S T c » f e b r j e u p . M t o r i l l H n d .

foraHur*, u d fraUi«iai undnd. d

PHABBIOtOflY. K N O W U t T M l t . a d o t b e r . t v i H i i d l B C I

for m o r . PRrtcHAito's r

EVtoLNO m MO]

ra m io N A L .FAUI' OOBISWKIN, haker by traiie, Mild

t d d m lo UftH. WKHER. 1436 Nurtb' ^ very iU'k.‘WaHTBD, a (rood borne for two he*Uhy

bibtM fl woeka otd (twUw>; lU to term*. Ad* |4 rea> 8Uta. Boa 18. New» ofn*"t.________IcHlLDKBN waDlcil to bokril 2& J«r »t, top

dour.

Bttalm rsa P « ro o n « l.PERCKUL'd.

I&v'erythlai for Beauty,LARQE8T ERTAflUSilMlONT IN NTWAR1C

Imported rii.mjan Rair Oooda. PERcKLL'b, « n BROAD BT„

COR. iVttST PARK.Lataal and moat approvoct aummer atytoo.

tn^KRTBODYa PAVORtTK.,THK TURBAN PUFP,

For mountain or Muhore. n e v e r out o f (’URb ON AC?COTJNT OP

^ a hk or dam p WKATHEH.FuMeat aaBortment of

. FINEST QUAUTY. n a t u r a l WAVT HAIR.RAra ahadea, illvir while, aprinkled fray,

« perfectly malched.Ordflra for Pufla, awltohaa, Fompadoura,

Wavni, etc., fllled without daUy-OHlUmKN’S HAIRCUTTINQ.

yROUPTHERVICn SKILI^KriAirENDANTS. maRc e l w a v in g

andARlrBTIC llAinDRESSXKa

Manlcurlnff. Slncaiut.Shampooinp. Hair <'olortn(»

Facial and Scalp vibraaaate, ipeclal raiea for counw of treatmenta.Make appclmmenu by ’phnne-No. 263AJ,

PERCKLL'a. PLKCELL'S,Vn Broad at.

rO R f4 L « .TENTS, boat cu iSlona. eauvaa. atichora. ropi»

ate, W'ALSH'S SONS A CO.. 2dO Wajhlnir> Ion at.. !P5 Pataak at.t'MBREbLAfl^^mca. aalecrDotn and repair da*

tartment removed to Ida HABcy at., near ' door: allk co^ tta, tl- A. W.

WOLF^N factan. Halaey and Market ata.VAN KEURE^M a'^OM;

CO,-^:ucTORa.DEALERS IN NK\^ AMu UECOND-UAND

b u ild in g MATEHIAU PASSAIC AVE..south o f clay ST. BRinoiL

BAST NEWARK. N. J. lo ca l ‘PHONE H HARRISON.

LONJ DISTANCE THONK U.'atRtSON.

MORTOAOIB LOANS—R B 4L BSTATH.luuu.tNM LOAN

UN BOND and MURTGAOBAT 8 PER CENT.. IN SUMS AND FOR PBRIODS TOSUIT THE HOKHOWtR. COMMlfiSlON F,^ACTH^D. ALL NEC!

NO BONUS OR A crm t. ALL NECEUART

rAPKIlS i ARKFX'LLV PREPARKI^.aiAHLUS A. KKICK.

COUN SKUJn-AT-LA W.T68 BROAD ST,

VIO'JN; Strad mMel: food. munilMon*: my ~ save 1112; wUI wll tor pi\ Addreaa

liQX b, Newt oflti'T.huatA^d

L. C. L,WASHINCI MAOHlNll>-E:iay runnUip. quick

worklnc, alrunceai made: lateat patenl; trial flven; cf^utar. ilRAlNARD, South (.rvanpe.

ZIMMERMANN’B* aell more

HUMAN HAIR GOODS than any New York atore.

041 Broad at., 3 doon from New at. WIGS for atreei wear for ladlea and g-fiulemen,

perfect fltUnf, as natural hb your o.vn hair; . workmariahlp the beat: prices the laweal. fWlTClilBS, Btralght, wavy, In uil the rare

ahadea, at extrcDiplf low prices. POMPATXJtTRa. WAVES. PUTF8.

sh am pooinq , m a r c e l w a v in g .ZIMMERMANN'S.W1 BROAD ST.,

_ Three doori from New at.

WE CAN SAVE YOU MONET, ^Rallont no^ tle r made at w y price; enamole. ije., too..

15®’* ♦2.80; atalna, Acme, iBc., 80o.,60c.. |i . I1.7B for noora or fumltuie; tor (uir vaTblan and paint removar, cluana ofl ready for a*w coat ^ r

H oaaehoM tiooUa a n d K u ru lta re^Al^TERATlON BALE at U.\X KLUS9KR S,

185 Sprlnffield ave,; 4W fU’Carta, (1.4U up; •lldlny couch. |S.4i>: Iron heil. fl-TU: matUnf, I0(i. yard; draaaora, lilJM; ollolcih, uk. yard, Axmmater rue*. 9xl3> Iceboxw. |8.tK^BEAUTirUL bevel flat* foldln* bed, bent

wood chatra. boa couch, atwliif machinea, aa food aa new; aaerlfice. TO Haiecy at.b e a u t if u l foldlnt bed for aale; large bm.--

eled mirror 1ncnaa> with "-flghu; cheu4>. Addreaa Cheap, Bok 39, Newa offle*. ^CARPET your floor for tU.&iJ. rcveraiWe rufs:

haiidaome dealgna, oolor*. cholceat all-wool and Burmcie ruga; come or write. iCen^Ington Ruga, IRtt Irv in g ^ nvc., S.Milh Oninae.FOR 6ALE>-iA kUchen stove. No. 8, very

cheait. In excellent comllllon. Apply 53 South JefTeragn *l-i Oranie.QHBAT OFFERINaa ID aecupd-hand fumi*

tute; couchra. T6c.; beda, fl; aprlnEB, 7bo.; chain. S&c.; pillowy and all otner aco*ond hand fumiiura fold at a aacrlflca at the largest second*hand furniture houao In the

* I*’- ^4 Wawhl ngtnn at. _________Call 42 HlllBlde

LOANS negotiated on real ealatr, notea, bonda.buildiiut W ti aioeb and all kliida of penonal

prupvrty, ahurt tluia luaoa on aacond murtgaca, C. i. BROWN. Cumnilaxloner of Deeda Notary ihiLtU. room 10. lill Market ft.

MONEY TO LOAN ON MORTOAGE; BY AN ESTATE, a d d r e ss , WITH PARTICU­

LARS, A, Box 9U. NEWS OFFICE.

tatti.OOO TO LOAN on bond and rnfirigage. la auma to suit, at 6 per cent, without bonua.

EDWARD 8. BLACK, vounselor. SU Prudential.MONET to loan on InmmvM real eatata. no

commluion charged. WH. A. LEE. 23 Mar- •hfUJ jL

MoitrUAGiaSi l o a n ^ p e r s o n a l .Ilt»lluto

tlOOTHEHB'B A REASON

fur~our beinx known aa the Inneat, moat wo*oomiiK>dBllr)g pud liberal cuncern loantng

Call after 6 o'clock, HO Main a(..

GOOD oak crib with tick; |3, pi., nral floor.

OAK W’Ani)ll(>BE, bookcase, mtiRlo stand,' oak; comhlimUon desk and bookcase, wajiiut;

bM'ka.OraTUre.OAK HUPTFIT. chiffonier, single metal bed­

stead, mntLivPB and npriiig, carved mahogany card table, ottomans, etc. 42 Orleana at., lat floor, right.SEWING MACHll^F^Tcr Wll^ Whoeler &

Wlleon. BliigcT, Doinoailc, New Homo. While; hargahia; up. J34 Bank St.

oomiiKMailng Piid liberal cuacern ioaniag iTiouay on PuruUure. Plana, lloree, Wagen, etc.. In the city; lu fact, thure are eeveral reaaona, but one In particular la that

WE DO Afl W B SAT.ThoUfiands of satlaAed customers could taatlfy

to (hat foot. We want your eonfldenca and know the only way to obtain aama is by .wtuare deallug. cutirteoua treatment and oonalderatldli

I at all tlnii-e.I THAT IS OUR rOLlCT.i and biB beefl for ih* paat alatcen years. Those I methodn have enabled us to defy all corapetl- I tion and have been the cauxo or a continual • Increase In our hualncaa. But we eillt want to grow, Htiii with that Idea In mlnA we are Conih^ually adding Cealurra to our ayatem, vrfalch ue know will be appreclatM.

SMALL OR LAUQB IXIANS.It Tnakoa no dlffcriiju'e, ui*y all receiee the

lame careful attention. Absolute privacy, prompt metboda, no humiliation of '^reg tape^' arc faa lures.

Write, 'iihobe or call and you will ba aur» prised how quickly and easily you can obtain

" lefilvely no advance cnargea---------- ---------- f f .

H O M ES. *TO. _ABSOLUTS iALE.

AT AUfRtlN! AT AlWTONl J09KTH MARKS,

AUCTIWSI®. win eapoee w » |e at

PUBLIC VENDUE all right, title and Intvraet in the following de- •oflbed property by ^ —W. H BURJNEt . a tto rn ey AT LAW;

6 leama bay honw*. weighing L W w h . m (same brown horeea. weighing LflOO each. t teams black horses, weighing l.MO eaoh- 4 eoLleetor*’ horaea,8 chunky buitncw* bnreea.I very faji irnttlng horse, llutiaaome Bhetlend pony, govenm eart and

harncae,B> ECU of double hamesa. . ^10 seta of Rlngle himeas. rubber tired njn-

alK.utg, titicki, wagtma. coilectore’ bugi|^A aafcB, desks, tiflice flxtures, hay. oats, fwd and all siahte utensils.TO BE BOLD ON PRElfiaES.

Brewery stable*. W-W North rlra i et., oof. Berry at.. Brooklyn, one block from Grand al. Bale poll live, rain or shine, Tunaday. June li« 190T. at 11 A. M.

Terms of sale. cMh ty sale.

W. H. BURNET, altoniey.New York, rqome flffl-Wa.

BANET BROE.BAUn AMD EXCRANO* BTADUM.

87-43 BRIDOE VT,,MEWAHK. N.

tOO-HORSBS AND MULEE-JHeonaranUy or band to Miect Ddki. .Qb» carload*, horaai and mulea, euHab e fmr all pufpoeea acclimated and ready for Imroedlau city uie. received weekly, Ratletactlon guaraci- lead and prlcw to auli all buyero.

Tfi-HOR8EB FORaulUbke for all klada of work.

Both 'phones, 424 Newark.

InepectloQ Invited prior IIKI Naeeau au.

3.8IW upera weekly; have US price 7275; blggetl iMirgaln ever

loan, ros]o th er LOANS PAID OFl

PEOPIJ7’R 1.0AN AND HROKERAQE C a , Bi>onrlB 40L 402. 403 A d 404

Niagara building, )Rfl Market at'Phe-........ — - - —

STOVES and ranges cheap. _

field ave. Tel. 2292L•tova ropairi; 5 aec^jad-band

M._BIDDELMAN, 241 Bprlug-

A. C. OBTCH1U0 * 00.. 183 MARKET 8T.

DR. MANDEVILLB,Spoclallat. 67S Broad at., over Cbllda’i i 3I> yeira experience a» a specialist on all chronic dlaeaoea of men And women, catarrh, nervous diseases, dlaesHsa of hi*art, kidneys, alnmaoh, ■ver or bladder, rbeumatlam, urinary and all lltTg dlaMRea; hour*, 2 to 4 P. M., fl to 8 P. M-; advice free. Notice—Offlioe closed Friday, Heiurday and Sunday. Do not forget numa. ptaca and number.

CHIROPODIST. .H. E. 81LSBT. 20 CEDAR ST.

MARCEL w a v in g .Manicuring, fa<-« and scalp maaaage, sham-

po<ilng and halrdreaaingi wttb a full line of hair goods.

FIRST QUALFg u a ra n teed

'T AND PERFECT MATCH•PHONE 3«fl3J.

WHY pay more when you can buy your furni­ture, carpels, bedding, etc., at U, Kantor'a

ehcaiwr end better than In aay other store. B. KAN'rOK, tkS Market; one aiare; open evemngs.

Safes.BAFEB, aalea, safe*; large, medium and senaU:

some are brand-new, but all at eecond-bond prieva; large variety to eelect from; old safes bought for caah. Newark Beoonil-handi chinery Co., Ilfl C’healnut at_____________ALTERATION SALK-NEW AND HprOND-

HAND SAFES BOLD CHEAP, PAY.MJLB tl WEEKLY. D. REINHORN, Bl SPRING- FIELD AVB.aAFBB-^FFICB AND HOUSE, bKST

MAKE; NEW AND SECtvND-HAND. MACKNBT A DOBBMUS CO-. TPd BROAD 3T.SAFES, all titee. fur hou*« or office; gu<iran-

teed areproof; lowest price*; very beat made. IL R. BRANT, Market and Mulberry ata.

P O. Box 244.

W TRTTfftyour Judgment, ana know you will agrre with our numerous patron# that OUR WAT of glvltig your troubled tnlnd rest la better than any doctor's preKriptlon.

BORROWED MONET for a ehert time enable* you to be comfortable as well a* IndejwDdsBt. gtvaa you presUg'\ tom A LOAN

ON FURNITURBalso give* you both use of MONET and BErTTRiTT at preclaely theaame tiTh*. We accept EAST PAYMENT^, either weekly or monthly, and illov you a

MOST LIBT^RAL DTRCOUNT.We regard and m ein nil business In the atrti'tcst cnnfldenoe. We aasure you there 1# NO PimLICTTY. We»U be gind to explain further at our offcPB or your hnmp. 'Phone or poital brings nijr reprnrentatlvH.

. NDW JERSEY LOAN CO.,L. D. ■FHONF/47Bfl. 142 MARKET BT.

CENTURY BX4:>a., ROOMS 8b8-fl08.

DEEDS, bonds, mortgegea carefully drawn and executed; acftrche* made and titles to real

ealaie perfected; co-pa]'tnor*hlp patters drawn; chattel murtgmgee forocloaoU; |M;na1on \ nuuhers and legal papers uC all kinds executed; ac- knnwirdf menta and Rffidavlt* taken: or«u evenings for marriage*. ‘PlionH RICH­ARD F. ilOFGOOD, Juatka of the peace, flfl Clinton at.

00 CL ZUCKNICK. 19 CKDAR, NEXT 70 BNYDER'S.

Human hair goods made tn order. All the latest atyt«A in curl#, puffs, pompadour* and gwltchea. W'e handle only the li«ai hair lo the market and guarantee perfect aatlefoction tn color and wear. Our work doea n<A turn red or fftda. T ^i^es and wigs our specialty.HUPEBFLUOUB hair, w'arts and molea perma­

nently destroyed without Injury to the skin; arms beafutlfied; eyebrowa perfected: elecirlulty treatment, II; vlbraasage for prevention and removal of wrinkle*, T5c. HARRIET ELLIB, formerly with Helen Brigga, of New York. Ladle*. 02 Park pi., next to Proctor’a.COfiOROVB’S DETECTIVE Ac/e NCT-a aer-

vica for banker*, lawyera, corporation! and individuals, inveatigatei all matters affecting banking, legal, commercial and personal InUr- eiu of either a civil or criminal i-haroeter: tel­ephone 41VI7 Newark; night telephon* tWt* Branch Brook. T5i-7fl0 Broad ft., cor. Bank *1.

W a tc h e s a n d J e w e lry .DIAMONDB, wBtehte ami Jewelry.

CASH OR CKEDIT.T. J. BRADLEY. 372 BROAD 8T.

PIMPLEH GONE.BDPERTLUOUS HAIR REMOVED.

WARTB, MOLES,Without fcarej 50 cent* a treatment

DR. STTCfKl^.Moved to 27 Academy at.lUPERFLUOUB HAUL

Warta. Moles and nirthnuirkB removad fom « by •lactrlelty; 2i year#’ egparlfQoA

MME. w eb tk b \ ’t :l t bommee. W ash ing^ f t

RENTI3TRY at ono-half the regutar price;fllllnga, plates, crown and bridge work all at

the reduced price and dorte at your conven­ience. day or evening. Addreaa Registered Dentlat, &X 86, New-e offlee._______________PURR—M. J. CARROLL, practical furrier, has

’ removed to 1ST Washington at.: furs taken on storage, repairing; remcNilellng done at sum­mer prices; formerly with W. H. A R. Bumett.BALE OF tr im m e d HATS AT HALF

rRICB. MIRIAM M08E8. 270 BOUTH OR­ANGE AVB. DON’T FAIL TO SEE MY SPECIAL SAILORS.MIDWIFE—Private nuraing; oonflnementa;

[ adoption, mother’s cere. LUDWIG, iflth ave,, corner aoth ft.; take Springfleid or Plank toed oar to Mtb at.

, CARPENTER Jobbing all kinds; noreen# made ' and repaired; all orders promptly attended to. ' PONKERBLOAT & WILLIAMS. B03 Bank at.

PBNSIONfl, CALL OR WRITE John Francle Cahill. 900 Broad at

ALL WARS; ALL ENTITLED.STORE TOUR FURNITURE

at ROBINSON'S; rooms looked and ventilated; llper month and up. 190-201 Market at.

' STRAW BATS prti i aprhig ibapea. J. II fcgtoo at. __

___ over In _m. HENBaAM, 1'12-to-data

in Weak*

FOH BALB.dU» KINDS of eiNioiiil-b&iid bttlldlag matartat

foe aalai doora. hamloek and ntueI boudsj 0O& greenboua# aagb: baBdlon bought

and ramovtd. A, ROWS, 110 Main a t, aoroat Hollywood ava. East Otaa««. H, IH —

ALTERATION SALB- lOO OBAFHOPHONlBa AND 5,000 RECORDS AT LESS THAN

HALF PHIC*5 o '— ------_ JWN AND - _•1 SPBINOFIELDUBLD A V a

i ABLE launches, partial paymenia, enjoy yoUf vacation-and holidays boating: 16 to 20 f t

choice of engines, 1160 to i860. Addreaa Agent > Box 21, New* omce.

DILUARD AND POOL TABLSi •Old. raatsd, repaUed, raoovi■viu, rawwo, EViHuiw, nwvavw,

I LUDLOW, maaufaotinw, 191 M* ! Soon from Broad. L D. *ptiuc»a

LBLSa BOUGHT,

I BUTCHER’S FIXTURES and tool# for easy pcs^enu; Icebo:uHf ir^j itirin r, loeboxe* mad* to order. Vl.

MELKICK. 88 I^rtnca at.. Newark; tel. 26A.RAE coata, veat* and aproni Of all alaea; - ■ - oyatar aprooa,

(black) for waltareibutoher govna and aprona, oyatar

" “ ■............M and a a a t* ..............I full dreaa veata . .glovat. h a rry W. BMITH, 214 Mirkat et.

' BARGAmS-Old lumbar for aalA ' MBLTZ&R, 65 UIH« *t., city.

Apply i.

I CAMJSlus-^Biitman Browniea, ll.Wj new , Boater Brown, beau alL 11.60; nlm*. 4 for 76o. i Photo Supply, 101 Waahtngton a t

.mthAOE p l a n t s , early Jersey Wakefleld: all Read early; Danlah ballhead, |1 1,000; U ,00(|. F.'W. R Q C H E y ^ Iff , Cheater, K. ^

I CAMERA—For aate, 8 ^ 4 ^ plate camera, two [ plate holden, tripod land complete outfit, ' aheap. 528 Broad a ti CASH REGISTER (National)j ^ a r ^ " - I sell for m ; almost new. K HARMON, f Washington a t

will278

4‘ COFFEE MILL—'La^ga. : obeap. FLEDEL 4 ^

coffee mill for saH 15tb ave.

1 TK)N'T fo r g e t t h e OI4D B8T. STORE : FIXTURE PLACE; ALL KINDS OF STOREI FlXTURtOI. NEW AND SECOND-HAND,

BOUGHT, MLD ANI> HADE TO ORDER.I ROSENBAUM. SO FERRY BT.; TBL. S488W,

Edison phemograph, -with one dtuen reourd*.< 115. 76c. per week; also apecial tale on, flower horn#. 50 below regular prloe; aleo reo- ofda will bu sold at coat price;'don’t mla# this ; apportuuUy. E. FALKENMEIM, 8 Ferry a t, I Just below Peuntylvanla Railroad Station,j E dison home phonograph: repeater; 60 I

record*; bom, stand and recorder; 1 1 8 I5th ave.1 riSHINO TACKLID-Tij* kind Uiat wUl brta*

Kturiu; MiBPIO* auUItt from t i «|i> BUOS 1 BB(Wi£br*I, fl«-2»8 a irto ftfld w t , oop^w

11 Balmont: boUt ’vIion*v VutalMt Built UduU ' Bhd halt; tide table# nwa.I F or baud—Pnnter'g atona with table, good 1 as new: bargain ^ Quick buyer. The 06- ■ gQRNE CO., 7M Hummer ave. ;

SAL^eeveral case# of h lg b -g r^ « -"i &ncu at factorY prices. JT. K. DAViB,; MlUhum. •

fEFX iiljM ><H 3art for 15; eo«t MS. Second floor, 8SB Parker, at.

ChlckeTia.CincKENS-.lO0 White Leghorn yearling hen*;

Blanchard A Wyckoff airain; ft.^O each. A. D. STOUT. Box 2fll, Plainfield. N. J.CHICKENS—Sixteen chickens

large coop; gcicd coudlltnu. ave., Vali*tiurg. near OroT c at

for sale; also IG Thirteenth

c h ic k s for sale; 12o. each. PlFTtHB <\ RPiOAn. UW Cllnloa ave., weat, cor. fiTnllh

at., Irvington.

BOGSL-Freah gooHP egga (or sale. Island ave., Bant Orange. N. J.

THE Giant Flytn-^uth Rork. barred; none larger or bpller breed, all -alntiT lav 'n'i

eggs now 76 CHltS fur Ifl; 1,1 nor IU(>. 7N (Vii- tra a t. Orange.; tel. 2.12.

TyiM’w rIte ra a n d S ap p lie a .TYPEWKtTBR EXCHANGE “uL^EST IN

NEWARK;” MOST HELIABLK; ALL MAKES REPAIRED. SOLD. RENTED. WORK GUARANTEED. 16A BEAVER BT. TEL. 4430.TYPEWRITERS bought, a »ld, rented, repaired.

exchanged; aupplle* (or all machines. O. M. JUDD, agent, Denamora, 704 Broad. Tel. 2742J.

ilg iig .CHAS. B. MAIER, INC..

BIGNB AND SHOW CARDS,98 MARKET ST..

'PHONE 1874 NEWARK. N.ARTlSTlt’ H10N8. SHOW CARDS. LETTKR-

INO. BEN-A‘TAR, TSfl Broad at , nnr. Ma.*- k*t, Ail trolley* paaa the door. 'Phone 60011.

Doga.cock er spaniel pup for salo; flrftt-olasi* slock;

reaenhable. 54 BrunBrunewli'k st.DOG—Lo»t black and while male fox terrier;

right hind foot cut; reward uffered, OS (.’am- dyi at._______________________________ _FOB SALE, a thoroughbred greyhound, 15

month# old. MRS. SCHMERREil, .flA Cogrt et.. city.WELL BRED Sable and white collie;

months old: male. 826 Halsey at.. Court at.

thrivenc-ar

Cow#.COW—Preah Jfraey cow, with calf; good fam­

ily cow; also a fine black TKiny, with drap. EUGENE SHlREk Hrowertown road, Little Falla, PasBAln County, N. J.COW'—Freih Joraey cow with calf; good (amlly

cow; alao a fine black pony with trap. Ei;* GENE SlilRE, Browertown rd., Little Falls, Passaic Cl)., N. J.

W ALLFAPEH AND PAFBHHANGllVU

MERMAN A CO., NEWARK’S LEAD­ING DECORATORS, 21B WASHING­

TON 8T.. CORNER BANK. IN THE 8UOPPINQ DISTRICT: TO SAVEMONEY ON TOUR PAINTING, PA- PER-HANOING and DECORATING, CALL AND LOOK OVER OUR IPOT WALLPAPER SAMPLES. CONSISTING OF THE LATEST DESIGNS IN ALL COLORINGS-. OUR WORKMANSHIP IS GUARANTEED AND RECOM­MENDED; ESTIMATES CHEER­FULLY FURNISHED; TELEPHONE AND WE WILL CALL. L. D. TEL. 4208J:

LOANS ON FTTRNT*nmE Without Removal,

QUICKLYi A 7D PRIVATELY.If you burrow |10 yo'i pi'y back itbc. weekly If you borrow |15 you pay back 7fie. weeklyH you borrow ll-O you pay back U5c. sreeklyIf you borrow ynu ;«y back 4106 wsektyIf you borrow IflO you pay back jj 25 weeklyIt you borrow 4^ you pay bock II.Bfl weeklyIf you borrow J40 you pay back <1.65 weeklyIf you borrow tW you pay back tt.flS weekly

Payments can be made momhW t; desired. Do not lose y<)Ur peraonal Lniienendence by

ashing a Friend (or a temporary loan whsu you are in need—but come to ue for your w v i t^ we make It a plain business propoaltlon—you

Siay for what you get snd do not have to ask avora

MUTUAL LOAN CO.,84-26 Wood building,118-120 MARKET BT.

at auction .L^rgeat Commission Stables In New Jersey.

MO-HEAD OF HOHSEB-3W BULL’S HEAD COMMtHrtlON STABLES,

405-4ST BROAD BT.. NWVARK. N. J-, TUESDAY. JUNK li. IIWT.

commencing at 10 A. M.. wUh horaM, wagons and harness. Any genUeman who Is in need of a horae should not full lo be on hand Tues­day Regular auction aalns every Tueaday and Frlrtar. eomm-nol.,, . . ^J. F. 6EBRINO. Salesman.

J. B. MOREllDUtt, 8ale*man.J. 8. WILLIAMS, Auctioneer. Doth 'phone*. ___________ ______

THE SAM TEAGUE WAGON WCHIKa,T AND fl WEBSTER ST,

Carpenter, plumber, painter, maaoti wagoigi, gToc«r. bulcher and milk wagohs, express and general delivery wagons, open and top buggies, runabouts and surreys, at low prlcea and easyterm*. __OUR WEEKLY SPECIALS ARE:

One mbher tired depot wagon, good as new. |l4d: two rubber tired tmi liugglei, at <50 and $66; ntie rubber tired runaiMHit, fit ¥00; elo- gMiit cflnopy lop rubber llretl park surrey, ooat WIKI, Just Uhe a new one, cannot detect It from new, $176; one slateen-paB*)*nfer stage, prime cundtllon: low-down milk wagon, $86; one heavy team bottle beer wagon, four plumber wagons.

8AM BERRY,28 BRIDOR S*T.

HnrseJ of every desorlpilon for sale or ex­change; 2d head ot mule*, suitable for all pUr- poxes, Including two pair of small delivery Wiigon mules, One tbree-«eai top wagon, suit- able for country or seashore, cheap; work and bualnes* horses to hire. Tol. flU2tlll, Newark,

ph in k a s JDNES a CO.OUR WEEKLY BARGAIN OFFERING!

No, 415, one Conmrd Buggy, worth 1125; will sell for tlM>.

At 805 Mnrkel *1 . new store. PHINEAB JONES ft 00.

f if t e e n good work emd business horne*. from 126 upward; also one [meddler's outfit, hunr,

top n^dler’s wagon, etc., harncue. priro S.5.5 the loll also 11-foot wagon, $45;two rubber-ilred runalxiUL*. prices 820 and $25 each. Inquire rear of hotel, comer Mill er.d Quarry sts., Belleville.FINE vehicles at greatly rcducetl prlcea; one

fine doctor’s Stanhope at $20n, one $aou. EiUJTey ul 1250, others from $10U to $200, coe $225 Indies' phaeton at 1186, runabout*, top cjr- rlttKes ABil Concordn; every vehicle gtiaranieej; can't Iw beat for style and price. J. LUDWIG, INC,, 2n-22 I'amflalrt at,

loans to k v eryuodt ON

FX’IINITUKK. PIANOH, HORSES. WAGONS, ETC-, irrc.

Wc make it as easy aa poeslbla for honest penpio to do bualnt'fiij with us. We appreciate lh4- fart IhBl every person of prldo dcstroe to keep their pcr*i.riiai affairs private, and we can jirnmlee and gufiriintee to such abeoluto confl- dence In nil trunj^actlons cooducled with Uh.

OUR COiNFlUKN'iTAL CREDIT HYaXEM Is astonlshlnaly liberal, simple, safe and pri­vate. \Se take all rlek. We create no pub­licity. We make no charge for application.

WE TRUST you.We will open a ci-nfid* iitlal crctllt account with you. If you arc In nt-cil of money call at our nlTlre. Your account will be wclcoropfl, and once opened ran always be uscil. You have use of both niituey and good*. Money In few Jictii-B ttflcr applying. Do nof fail to call and get our terma before doing hueineas elsewhere,

I^ECrHITY IkDAN COMPANY,UH MARKET ST. TEL 24U9L .

SALARY LOANS ON PLAIN NOTES.

110. m , $30. $40. $60. 160. $70, llOdk CheapCBC and beat place lo

BORROW MONEY. •'ABSOLUTELY NO SECURITY.’*

LOWSar RATES. ftASIBST BATMENT& REMEMBER,

IF YOU WORK WE W'ILL LOAN YOU MONET

CONFIDENTIALLY,Open from 8 A. M. to 0 P. IL

Wed- and Bat- eves, to $>CALL. TELEPHONE OR W R im

NEW JERSEY FINANCE CO..Suite 312-14 St huLier tiUllalog.

BROAD AND COMMERCE s m Oppoelte postoflloet T«J, 868.

MONEY I MONEYI MQNBYI _ Eatabiiahed 1882.TWO CENTS ON THE DOLLAR

LOANS ON Hou seh o ld f u r n it WlTHOU-r rem o va l , t h e CHEAPE3T I THK CITY. CONFIDENTIAL AND RELIA­BLE, AT SHORT NOTICE. BVERT DOLLAR PAID REDUCES THE LOAN- NO CONNDC- TION WITH ANY OTHER LOAN COMPANY. LOANS ON DIAMONDS. WATCHES. JEW­ELRY AND p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y . O, BTERMAN. Iff CEDAR ST.. NEAR BROAD ST.. ADJOINING BEE HIVE.

OPEN EVENINGS.MONET to loan on boiisehold goods and par-

Botial property, without removal; our rate# are the low«t in the city; uulck. eonfldenltal iDd reliable. Come and get our terms and b* convinced.MITCHELL’ 103 MARKET BT,

ver Grand Union Tea atora.Room 22. ove

PAPBHHANGrNG—Rpfnre giving out your pa.perluuigtng, drop me a poatgl card for ea(l< 1

mate; we do good work at ven'' low coat; IV ' will pay you lo sea ua flm: big etock to ohooH from; we do Interior painting and kalac}- mlnlng. JOSEPH COHEN, manager. 294 South OrSAgfl ave.

MONEY LOANED SALARIED PEOPU5 and othen wllhout aecurlty; easy paymenu: offices In flS principal clHee; aave youreeit

‘ " rav termr ftrot. D. H.2B8 Waahlpgtoit »L

THE BROOKLYN WALLPAPER CO, have opened a flrst-olaaa decorating eetabllah ment at 277 Bank at.; rooms i».per4^ from 12.50 up: wallpaper sold gt per roll; paint. Ink done at vefy reasunanle price*; aeni] ^wtal. The Bro^lyn Walipuper Co„ 2IT

cioiNO to have your bouse decorated? Get my M tti^te; largest and moat complete aateo-tlou of waltpaiier In Newark

to be Al ^ wallpapeiSouth Orange ave.i utab. 1892'

. -- - wark- work guaranteed. price* are 20 wrt , .- -Fber>w other*; -per from 2c. to fl.flff. ROTHOUSa. 9

CHRISTIAN, TEL. 204J. Eatlmtte* fuml*hed for ail kinds of

FAINTING' AND PAPER-HANtHNO. STRICTLY riHHT-CLASa WORK, UBINO r est m a t er ia l s ONLY. 100 Wfiahlngton at,, near Warren.

ATTENTION—Room* pfttV'rpd from $3.50 up; •peolalty tu painting, Inalde and outside; moat

reaaonable prices; work guaranteed; we sell paper a t factory prloea. The Manhattan Deco­rating Co., B. WAX, prop., 77 South Orange ave,

e m p ir ^ wT^l l p a p e r co m pa n t^ ^HAS REMOVED TO 224 W’ASHINQTON ST,

‘Wo arft now ready to *how you a flpe aelec- tlon of wallpaper* of the best gradeo »t roa- aonable price*, Boome papers, up.

* BilLRBAK. n rKBRT BT.l 'PHOIM K lSf,OO-CAKT; Uk* new: nibbw tlru ; p*rMol uid

covMi pric« le. aa Irvlm it., a n t flwr,BBAA Vtotor uA BMUm raoDrO*

At OOLOtTB. 1* W**t Pirk.J laU K ? noOFB-T«lH Ih* D.. L. uid' tF. tor

•nm jkt. W* kart Juet c o n n s about n,000 I lokan («tl of thelrtln iM (i with our "CoDtuiT I Cnr.peo)UI." H.« boot ntaterla] on the mtnket ' tor all 100H1.B and uraterpnwBnf. Alao an ax*

OalUnt waterprooBn* for oollam. G0ABAN- : TKE13 for 10 yearn CENTtmT ROOFIKOI J^ S . ** *^**^'***^

liUNnEto-FMt, bnrdwooOa n a n . Wtilta Wooilatooit

City, or 'nhoDa H40 Bar«*n-wbltnrooA oy,

Wtilta Wooilftoofc CDmfnay, letter

STOTjrH. ^ riSSgSfe.Jf■- a t _

FOOL and bnitard tatihia. twuglit and ram ^; lana vMck of anr gnd iaoiMd-4iand: rentlrfbft CAWFIFLD, iPflMarktfM. Te(.26MiU

\ ■ r TieiNttNQ FIUES8, 7xU. band taver,\ ■ . irtya and typo;, u s ^ ottly two tn\ I I oiiaap. c i\i awdungg. n s M K tts 1T4 bw

I EBGOMW-

. witit Tnontlta: BMOd fit

BDA-BdlaoH gold mold; $40, chup.------------- w - - - “ “ANMNG. BSoontfletd gyaei ftfont-

‘m S li

IT: tX ,i

xikl A ISSiL alto -Horwuxuli. mim»

L. KATZ. 09 SPRINGFIELD AVE.. la wt4I khowti for doing the beat and cbeapMf woiic In the city; *ella paper at coat price: deo- orating and paper-hanging; open until 7. p. M,ROOMS papered, tS.60 up, Ipcloding paper and

tabor; kalaominlng, $1.50; painting, I2.Q0; out and inside work; call or write; work guaran­teed, RABINOWIt Z. 40 Afitor at. L. D.teT.12B4R.

WILL paper a room, celling and side walla; nice i>ap*r; wo alao do painting and kalao-

iplnlng at the ioweat prices. - F. ROGOW. 120 Belmont ave.. near I7ta ave .; ‘phone 2ffi)3WfrROOMS papered. $fl up, Indudlng paper and

labor; kalaomlning, It; palming. $2; miuide. toalde work; guaranteed- Call or write, HUR- WITZ ft BBRGER, 235 at,; postal,. __RAlNTlNO.‘''Taper-hangli)g and decorating done

at loweat prfcee; workmanahtp guaranteed. Oftlt or-write. EDELSON ft ZIED. 129 Bltn at.FAINTING, papering and decorating done at

lowest prtcoa; workmanahlp gwiirantetd. BCHABF^I , * WEISS. 4*0 Central ave.

HORSES, CAHUIAOI'^S, ETC.RURUEU'tlre Canopy-lop surrey...........$160 00

Hubb*r-tlre Canopy-top Surrey........... 193 90Rubbor-tlra low wheel Kunabuut............ flO ffORubber-lire Runabout, with top............. 06 00Steel-tire Bualnesn Concord.................... flO 00NelurBl wood high wheel Runabout,

leather cushion and book. ............... 115 00Bubixrr-tire Phaeton, leather top......... 105 00Rubber-tlr* Runabout, slick Beat, yel­

low gear, Pluck body......................... HO 00Very fine Runnbaui, high wheel, a very

popular aeller.................. ...................- It.Cul-undfr Bunahout, rubber tire........... 140 00

150 styles ilunies* tu aulect frum- Old harness taken in exchange- Two eeuond-h&nd 8utTe5’». rubber Urea- One iecond-hatid, Runabout, rubber Urea.One aecund-hand extra heavy Concord- One aecona-httfid Blcei-tire Concord, medium. Cme aeeapd-httnd *leel-tlr*- PhftOtfUi.25 seta second-hand light Harnco*.10 flats tecfmd-hand team Harnea*. Beconrt hailH heavy"Iffenr.t f oUars-Meond-ljflhd heavy nUigle lUrnta*- Secend-hand Faria alway* on hand, SMond-hand CoUar*-

LOOK FOR THE RED KC1R8H, ASCHENUACH'S.

70 MARKET ST-, 'phona 4364.______ _Aff AUCTION.

*75— HEAD OF HORSES— r275 ALFONZO FOX, PROPRIETOR OF THE

g r ea t e a s t e r n h o rse BAZ.VR,620 BROAD BT. AND lfl-21 ATLANTIC 8T„

NEWARK. N. J.,^THURSDAY, JUNE 13, AT 10 A. M.

Wa wUl mil u auction on Thursday. June 13. 1907, 275 head of all the dlfTerani type* of horaefl (hut are In the moat denwnd at thk* time of the year.

Among the above w*tll be somo extra good big draft hofflea, weight from 1.50l> to 1.7W; Jersey chaaka. bu*lnete horaea aiul some excellent ex- preaa chunks, and weveral very fast trotters and itBcerf-R c^lar aucOon aalea evei-y Monday and Thuraday. commencing at 10 A. M.

ALFONSO FOX. Propriotor.FRED a SCHREVE, Auctlonear. TEU 1620.

WATSON DUAIPING WAGONS.First In field, last In repflir Hhnp: all fllset

conatantly un liand; all wagon* guaranteed for one year. Newark Band Co., foot of Centre st.O.NE driving mare, can road 15 mile* an hour;

guaranteed kind In all hainoafl; price |flO can hn avirn any time. 75 Orange stFOR SALE, two-ieat depot rarrlage. phnolon

also hnrncM closet Can be seen at 226 North Grove at., East Orangn.FOR SALE, second-hand, two-yd., Wetann

dump wagons, cheap; In good Condition. New­ark Paving Co.. 133 First *t,FOR RAI.B—Pony and govornea* cart: also

donkey. Apply corner Freeman *t and Val­ley rd., West Grange,

■ P M ilB M OPHOUTUHITIM.A1.WAT* SKB mack riRBT .

tor Baick » d MttaUetnnr h im : honMl l.v.1-MJi wpiKylflpM IwndM old!; N fw «fk'uf™ ITiB; 1, I>. '^jkune BOTTW- llACK. l « M»r- ket *L

, I CAN SELL YOUR BUfllNEWI with a y ayalsm when other* fail: attilng cent- jtnee*: aave time and monay by* calling hire fl™j‘ “ ACK. 142 Market at., Newark. 9* Bata building. Philadelphia.

SALOONS, HGTBiX ROADHOUSES,In and oreund Newark and PhUadalphla; heal list ef good, live, subaiantlal bualneae place# aver offered. HACK. H2 Mai*»t.p a p e r route

cuatomenroffered iu thi* ]in«; luive other butineaa. MACK, 142 Market.TWELVE-ROOM bcardlug-houae; near poaf-

Office; pr|{>« |5ou; nicety fumlahrtl; reht $50; tKmendoua ucrlAca; call oulck- HACK, 142 Market.FURNISHED-ROOM house; nine rMCni and

bath; vlclmiy Hroad *1, and Lackawann* depot; rent $32; newly furnished; new leMO; IJP date- (teairubla location; price $700. HACK, 142 Market.FURNlSHEEbROO&l houfie; vicinity High It.!

eleven rooms; all improvements; for $0fli>: rent $40; beautifully furnished and carpeted through­out. MAnt, U2 Markst.RESTAURANT; near LAfaystU fit- i rent ISh

moothly; raevipta $to dally: av«rylmng com­plete. old astabllahed, pro*paroUa bualnaM; price IdfiU; eauae alokneaa. HACK. 142 Market.rURNlRHED-RClOK HOTT8B, vicinity Green

•t.i tS50; 12 rooma; nil Improvements: rent •35; a genuine bargain; InvesilgiMs. MACK, 142 Market.BUTCHER BUSINESS: actually the best atore

In Newark, for th« money; price $525-. rent $80; recetptj average tkiO weekly; a real good bualneaa plara; svlandld looatlon. MACK. 142 Market.VF-TO-DATB dfilicatesaen buslneta; oeniraii

clearing $i00 weekly; everything flrat-claas lund beautifully mted: dealrable location; in­vestigate. MACK, 142 Market.FIRST and aecond cktaa confectlotiery, ata-

tlonary. cigars, notions, small groceries and paper route; lOO pUcea for aale. with living rooms; all locailona and price*. MACK. 142 Market. •NEATLY furnished eight-room hou*e. com­

plete; rent only $27; desirable central loca­tion, 1200; beat bargain In Newark. MACK. 142 Market.CORNER confectionery, cigar*; flna neighbor­

hood; stock and fixture* worth $200: reoeiptg $lff dally; price $250; rent $13. MACK. 142 Market.NICELY furnlabed UVroom houa*. HaJaey ft-;

rent |4<»; price $B60 cash; three floor* and basement, complnte. MACK, 142 Market.CONFECTIONERY, candy, enkefl, clgart; een-

IfAl. rent $14; receipt* $H dally; atock $200; aplendid luc-allon; prio* t2iX); bargain. 61ACK. 142 Market. vrUCTOGRAPH BUSINESS: Market st.; cen­

tral. fern $26, Including flvn living rooms; hancLnme reoelpts; stock $600; price $600; leaving city. MACK. 143 Market.ItlGU-ClASB .BAKRKIKB; the beat in Ruther-

(or>1, 12.2011, and the best In Elisabeth (or Sl.fltK); also several other smaller one* that are ganutiie mopey-makoro. In and around Newark. MACK. 143 M*rk4tCOAT and apron supply business; fine horse

and wagon; |l,60ff stock; gunrontee clears $45 weeklv. rent $25. Inclu^ng nice living rooms; price $2,500; retiring. MACK, 142 Morkei, *.KHOR STrtRK; South Orange ave.; rent only

$lk, iriducllng four iiica living rooms; $1,500 stock: reri.'||ini averagu ? tlffO Iveekly; price il,5W. MACK, 142 Market.

In

•VUKIBfB OPrORTUlflTlBt*AI PR1CB8 Cor

cf flat*, dry ttsrvbfltkdis*

furnliura, earpais. oonteata grooerlea, shot atoraa and

~'ptlDna; tnachinery and • oon- V f,

Cor old furnl y Jtwida, groi of adl ftsBorlL

snttrs plant* bought Cue eaah; quick and MMtlal. VAN B ^ A g L 4» tki. Ortags TIMna 2071 N aw a£^ poaULRAhItKR PIltiF fnr sale oheau tn a quick

buyer; sold on aocount of alckneas. rlilL SNYDER, M Court at,___ ,OONFECTIONEUY STORK- Wanted to buy, a

ccmtoutloncry aiorc. M_Oirawford *1.FOH SALi‘1-$I&<lf*) will buy an intareat In a oontQtcrriol bualhesa In the dty of Newark that pays a salary of $6,060 per yea* a* treas­urer of the company ; we did a buxines* ot over

last year; our sales for 1h« month of May amnunied to over $64.1)00. Addreea Oppbr- tunlty, But 42, News office.FOR SALE. lUie paying salnon, In good locat-

liy. SS»r further particulars ajjdrasa AL- BfWT HUGilEB, attorney-at-law, 144 East Staid *L. Trenton, N. JFIVH-CENT THEATHEH pay enormoufly; in-

v w $10 to il.oik) with us: make »>n i>er cent, before January- Addres* HaMoiuil Amusement Bynrtlcate. Grind Haplds, Mlrh.I MADE $60,000 In five year* In, the mall order

business; began with $6 ; any me can do the work h<»mr In simre lime; s«nd for free booh- Ifltj tells how to get started. Manager, liox 9311. Lochport, N. Y.ICB BVrtlNEPS—For aal*. flrst-olaas retail Iro

buflim aa: ochhI summer and winter trade: oomidele outnta: will deal with nrlnvUials only. Address X ^ T .^ .. ^ x 45. News __ _MANUrACTUniNQ” nrTn. 4t^ye*rs doing buM-

nes*. Incorporaird June 3. and requires $6.00U only (wilt not taka more) tn further tholr plans; have been making 30 per cent, profit durlnr the iwet llva years, and will guarantee at least 7 per conL Addreaa U., Uox 4<>, News Dince. __________MlLiTTWUTR-ild aiiiftbltahwl milk routs for

sale; weakly profit $44; roaaon for selling, other busineaa; good umwirtunUy. Addinaa Reasonable. Hox 2. Newa uffice. ____m ilk r o u t e for aula, on aroount of alcknoas.

Adtirea* t^heap, Ilox 44, News olflce.

^iVTOMOBIUBII AH0 lIOTOECYOiJHbTHE MOTuR ca r CO. OF NBW JKRFCT,

t»l HALSEY STuHAS THE FOLLOWING ^R O A lN t

IN HDGONI>-KAND CARS: rSERLKBS, 24-lL F., side entraooe UmMa«.

original cost I5.U00. Waa flpaolally built to toQir tJurope in threo yoor* ago. Thl* car hot boen thoroughly ovarnaulad and Is In drat* claoa condition. Will be painted any color to suit purrhaaer. Price $1,000.

CADILLAC, Model H. flrst-cloaa oondUloOi loat y W e Victoria body, for $700.

CADILLAC. Model F, first-olmaa condIthNk HOO. Thl* la a bargain.

w e alao hava Autocar Runaboula fron* |UQ and upward.We have the largeat Una of autoinoMl* aup*

plifi In the State. Qur prlotjl or* tha lowsat ronalderlng quality of goods. If you wUl ^v* I to figure on your tire equTpmeatus a rhanca to figure <

we aasure you w* wl*' >rir** are an object

your tire equipmeat tve aasure you we will get the or4^ ft low

MOTOR CYCLE BARGAINS.Indian (IfipBj Model............................... m $0M«rkto iUm) Mfjiiel.............................. (»Thnr finOfl) Modfll....... m MIndian (IPOT) Model .................. 55

Immediate detlvNisa on the nimou* Read* inm. the best in the world; coeh or easy pay- menu; open eveninoa. WURTH. M William at.

STORAGE warehouse and tnnvlng husinraa, In­cluding van*, horsr's. etc., slan three adjoin-

^ng lolA In flna business lorsltnn. will be sold at bargain, as present owner desire* to retire; term* to suit puri'hasvr. Addrowi Storage, Lux 65, News nffirs.

MOVING WAGON for sale; price $46: single wagon, good for peddler, $15. Corner Jeffer­

son and Chestnut at*.HARK1?SS—One set of team hnrnRSR and six

bets of single hnrnnaa. IRfl Rhcrde Island ave.. East Orange, N. J.FOR HALE, two covered carrlog-^s; ahi'glo or

two seats; $(H) and fflO. NATHAN RUHBELL. Bli5om(leld, N. J.HORSE for sale; suitable for any huslnes*.

Apply JOSEPH M. BYRNE, 27 Washington st.. West Orange.HandboMK bay horse: guarantefNl kind and

gentle In ail harness; trial allowed, $85- 24S Orimge st.ONE good butlneas horse; extra drive; will

suit grocer or baker; ow*ner will soil cheap. Call U Essex Bl.HORSE, more; fl years old; good worker; bound. Call IM Belleville ave.. between 5:3()

and ft P. M._______ ______HANDSOME carriage, Rockaway type. In prime

order; low price. Address Hurried, Box 40, News office.TRUCK—Thtee-horw truck for sale. $100. In­

quire MRS. FRANCIS JACOBS, Montclair Heights._________________ ______________TRUCK HORHE for sale. Can be Men at 6

o’clock. A. RUMMEU Wheeler Point mad.$876 WILL buy heavy team of work horse*;

worth $600. Candy fAclory, ]fl6 Monrc>e at.FOR SALK—A good horse, hnmeaa and wagon,

at 56 Berkshire pJ-. Jrvlugtoif; N. J.team of horse* and Tmy dump wagon for

sale. 361 South Ninth a tMILES W. BANET ft BRQ.. tT Bridge at.;

work boms to hire.75

HORSE and wagon for sale. FalrmouDl ave,

ALTMAN, SAg

HORSE for sole. 1 Dodd s t , Orange, N. J.

F o r Snfw o r B a d ia n g e .HAVE on hand 20 head horses, workers,

drlvera and boslnes* horaes; also rig for sole, top buggy; horses fnr aS-le and exchange. City Line. tM Springfield at'*., cor. 2ist at. ‘Phone il5T,RUNABOUT, fagst make, fine condition, cost

IS50: win sell cheap or trade for business agon. ■ ‘ ~ ‘wau

office,Address Runabout, Box ■ 11, News

ttorawa, O arrlaigeat B3tp*« W iuifed,CROW’N Point Btook Farm, Troy Hill*. N- J .;

hurscfl boarded; pasture; box sialle; tMiddocks; tfclgphone 75F1-4. JUDD CONTHT. Proprietor.BEST of pasture for a limited number of

horaefl. H. F. BACKUS, Caldwell, N. J,. of Ridge at,, Newark, N. J.

WILL exchangs lots In Aldcne nr Pasaalo. N.J., for cows, horaea, wagons or automobile*.

C. EUGBTER, PsMalc.___________________WANTED, a good lop platform wog'in; must

be cheap. Address Caah, Bc>x I, News office, Orange.

T

BRACTDLET—LdPIt, Sunday afternoon tn Hill­side Park, between 4 and 8 P. M . gold brace­

let, Ml with six bltiQstonps; reword. 61 Elliot st.UR063—Lost. Saturday, coral bead proas, gold

bead In centre; going from 2A7 William *t,. Blast Orange, to cor. Central ave. and Warren st. Reward 11 Mlurned to flfl? Wllll&m st., East Orange.DOG—Lost female fox terrier; name on collar ^^ulnnle; black ej'e. Bl Elm MISS RElL'

reward.FOR—I.ost, Sunday, June 0, about S:45 P. M ,

between iFIcst pretbyterlan Church and poat- offlee. a T. H. C- -A. eterllnc silver medal o( a watch fob. Finder will plooae return to G. BOWERS, lul Eighth ave.. city; reward.GIRDLE—Lo«t. between Elixabelh and Jelllfl

aves., ribbon girdle, with fancy buckle.'Re­ward If returned to 441 Jelllff ave.IDLER—Lost, one motor cycle Idler, at Pino

Brook bridge. Finder will kindly return to G. E. POST, 2ST Mulberry at., Newark, N, J, reward.

ness repository, II, 1: Bn»d. Newark. N. J.

AUCTION 5ALB8.BANKRUPT SALE OF aHOCEHIES AND

FIXTURES.W. W. REID, AUenoKEER.

WILL SELL r .WEDNESDAY. JUNE lA

COUbllNCINQ AT in :» A. M.. "ON THIS PHEM18E1B, IIB HHOHTH AVn„

BT ORDBB OF A. W, HABIUa, RECJBVfR, LAROB VHOI.B8AI.B. STOCK OS'

QHOCEBIE8,soniliUiw ot OM004 and BoOXd Ooodi ot ■rwl w lo ty , Flow, 8u,»r. CWtM, To*. (tuU, Boon., Blafch, 0 |lm Otlo, Tniported Sardlim,

■ ■■ a . *(c.

*. ’BOOIINWSISGB, horM, Camsm and har-................, Id Lombardy «t.. nojr

......................... 'Phone m SO to;!?Halstead st.. Arlingtofi, N. J. 'Phone 2UHW, fnll line ot horioe and ponies o( vera hast

type,. ■ Anion* them are throe large com tor family dltvln*. one very fast trotier end one very fast paoof'; Mveral *eneral punwee horeei. twenty beantltoj ponies of every else, all broken for cblldrog tu rldo and drive. Cav rtagos of every style, by H. A. Moyer and Watertown Carriage Oumpany; matisr ather flrst-closfl roaaufaaturerik Pony vehicle* O' every style of very beat makers; busing* wagon* for alt purpovea. dump wagnna aod enri*. Harnsaa of every concetvabte «lae and weight f(H' truck, rood or fausiiiesa pUrpoaea; in fact everything for ftable or road u**. ,,“ BODRNWEISER'8 veterinary denliat, fl. U,

1X)CKBT—Lotrt. 00 Oranga cor. Sunday, n td locket with ebaint inottomrti “B- V. D."

Howard If reiuraed. B. PULASKI. iDfi Hairl- son ave., Hoirkon.LOCKET—Lost, gold locket and chain, going

from Parkhuint it- to Washington, aliher on car or street. Reward If returtied to 61 Porit- hurst st.

Ela Lombardy lit., niwr Newark, N.

GROCERY bameia.A..p...^Bugfy baiueM.v............Eipree* haraew....... ...d.-LBurrey harneaa.......... ..Donhte

Vinegar, Holoasee. Csmls. Sojip. « a ,.AtJSO FIXTUilES.

inclifdtng pJatforin uUt Counter Bcaloa, Coffee Milh Bftje, Counters, Bine, etc., e tc .. -SANltRUFrCY auctioTi sale; U. 8. Auctloneep

Chatia* Shoigrood ood Su Van PoanoU vriO wll At pablie auction, the sutlfe pleat ol the Ekc4lsh>r Hat SutmnU sl.iNewark, N. J., W a^rjc^r, June 12. a t A. ii.j plant oonaiata of an entire up*toH)ata plaiu and equlptuenl -for the manu^setura of and ladies' f«H and baaver hate; stock t.-Dh- slat* of eoQ doaut finished laaiev hxM, Lix)g dc*eh una&iBhed ha*s, 5,0tX) |>outt4s trlole ring,-----— — ‘ '— -Jaing and

. ___blooiunra, _

pre***A heater*, copper BscivriiN.atiR«sliig tna- nktQW, brtuUng mno)dn$ga «Uk binding, tiet bandsr office furmture^ eto.: «oeda to b«i luid in sspsimW lota fog cash: to be nnoved at otue: oatAbiguag cob he M m gal*;, and

A. KTMrKMIltT* «a4-'

1

.$» to 119 to iw 3 to 1^

Je truc^ hahieiBe......i..*»i....... ..$40 to 156Very flna.Ufi* ot Lep 'RobA Stable SIim a

Fly Nets. Cooler*, oto.Everythlni for your bon*.

G in. ROUDAUPp 902 Mackot et.

RUBBKR’"TlRE8r"^We put .on a&d repair solid and cushion

vehicle tlrce; ws uee Hartffjrd riibher only; they afe the b«*t; prices low; work done while you wilt. .

JO H ]^ . MERKEL CO.. Prtnoe *t.HOMESl, HOR8ES'f--^4^ M ' hand.

eotra gdod big draft twnuM, t in e a s chunk* and some gi>Dd driving and saddle horaea at the 1ov«*t market prlcta. Rear 20-22 Bridge *t. ALBX. BCHMAlJtACH. prtprWor. ‘Phone apfliWf ________ __________ _GOOD pnaiure for |d^ i n Brintb, a t tb*

old Blackfaum farm, which oozitalna 80 acre*

PURSE—In or around Centre Market, Saturday Hvenlag, Jqne 0, purse loat. containing IS, one

$6 bill, one $1 bill and change. Please return 14 North Third et., first floor, or KOLLUaR, RAUCH CO„ 30C Market st., aa it belongi to poor woman; reward.PURfiEJ-Lsft, by wotiing girl, purae cootain.-

Ing $5.90. Finder may keep the chafigf If bills are re tamed to SSI Warrim st.^ _ ____ _RAIN COAT—'1-0*1. <m ipiitiglleid^ avs, be­

tween Itith tL and Glymplo Perk, a n ln coaL light brqwA, Return to m dlnloa ave.; re- ward, _____ _WATCH—Lost, lady's gold watch with hiAlr-

wreath pin, from Walnut and l.ang at. to........ .................... ........... PHir “ ’Hamburg* p|.l tlbeimi reward. MRS.

AH i«an|«t: ilPFBR,

ro im D .

_ rurmiug stwings aaU plsaWshade: horses called Rir and deuyersd free

'>lsture Hmcl. shads: horses chatpa, BTacIchiMti'a k W«*t Otangev

10-

f in e BUdWESW WA«0AI o f a l l KINDS,and the beat nihbar tlvM aaniages modei *$

(hs lowest iirieM and « u tia t Urm*.. THE CENTRAL WAOON WORKB,

■GsAtnU ava.. Third gflt'TMrtR ata,h . .

GLASSES—Pound, on Cliatni ave., near Oa- borne terrace, a pair of foTd- f1m< *y*glaifted.

Owner can hav* same by calling a t 42 HUltng- ton gve. and paying coat of •dvertlsement

McDOWELL BlESTSng—Ragy to leant; rapid a t (Sr Louis, »9M, over

inatructiCT:'allpattern* ai lings to mwaure: cJsspecial, terms June; faahksiabla dnftwnnking

BenOor ctfcular. call, ROSE C. LY N ^. S35 Brogd.

ING, XJU>IER’ TA_ UNESY TAUGHT; TION: CLASSES !^kf ST9 BRUB 0T.»

MO iiffiuN E H ^ RW L DREIBSMAK-y o r ............. ...........

PHAKMArY—An uMrdlnary ootxwtunity: nuln thoroUjfhfar'' In very heart of Newark!

has $;t.i!f»ii stock ins) fixtures; b«?aurifully fKiPfl placi:: rr-nl Ififi; lonx kaae; price KI.OW cash;will make terms. Utivlng clly.Market.GENT» ' FURNISHING™hats. elc.; the only

one In town wllh iituMUaiton 3O.OO0; adlitln- mg, Newark; Kah II,TIN) stock: flUA flxtur'*i: rpm |['ir>. with four llvio* nx>ms and hath in rear: sublet for $11: Jon* lease; hafldBonio rt'Ct'lnls and tmnrovlns all the time; price W.HfNl. MACK. H2 Marki-t.

ALWAYH RELIABLW BUHINKStl imOKKRS,

WI-l.Ny.EL ft ('O. lIKt MARKET. ROOMS 41-42.

BUTf'HER nrsiNKflH on Main it.; fibat-riaM bualne.«fi; will w-ii ftir UiMi if sold «iiikk.

WENZEL ft CM., li>i) Matket, rooms 41-42.BOARDlNO-HOrSE, wllh furnished roorra;

always filled; fpiii $(W); busln>!ss $250 w '-kly; price S700. W'H.NZEL ft CO-. IflU Market, room* 41-42.BEER PIPE cleaning hualn HS, with two

horses, wagon and all niachlnery comidyte; price $lHXi W^ENZEL ft CU.. lOQ Market, rooms 41-42.CONFECTIONERY store, wllh 5 roomi, rent

120. giMKl Iwatlon; price WENZEL ft CO., lim Market, rtx.iniB 41-42.CONFECTIONERY, ctgnr and notion s(or*;

bu^Jnens $S6 wei-kly; rom $16; price $4'i0. WENZEL A CO.. IIW Market, rooms 4J-I3.CIGAR and cigar manufacturing bualn^ss:

prtisent owner there for ihlrly yrara, paying huslm‘ss; price IftTH). 'A'ENZEL ft CO., 106 Market, rooms 4t-4‘J.FURNISHED-ROOM HOUflE. on Walnut.

Qpftr Broad; fine location; always fined; price $4»>. W'ENZEL ft CO., Iflfl Market, rooms 41-42.GROCERY BUSINESS: In fine location; rent

$fll); pries $T5fl, including hor^o and wagon, Partlculftra «t WENZEL ft CO.’S. Iflfl Mar­ket, rooms 41-42.GROCICRY BUSINESS; we have a good se­

lection of good j>ayln _see WENZEL'ft CO ’ ' ”OYSTER and chop house, with four room*;

rent Ilfl; clegring $26 weekly; jjrioe $21W; sickness cause of selling. WENZEL ft LO., lltO Market, rooms 41-12.LEATHER STRAP HlJSINKBS; good payittg

buHlnet*. will aell for $1.01)0; complete ma­chinery for all: worth $2,(Kkii bIcKmcss caiwe cf aelilng. Partlciilftra at WENZEL 4 CO., IW Market, rooma 41-42.SALOON—Good paying saloon, wllh six rooms:

rrnt $35; price WENZEL ft K.O., l!«JMarket, rooma 41-42.SALOON—Corner saloon; PcIUng SO halves beer

weekly: two barrels whisky monthly; ront $40. with bine rocma: priest fli.iXW; hai» $1.(rtO worth of stcK’k. WENZEL & CO., IVti Mar­ket, rooms 4L42.SALOON—Old Mtehll^hed hueln*’**; 14 room*

and etableii: rent $45; elghi-yoar leaw: plica $,yw; W'lll take ll.Wff. InoTudlng nil (urnllura. 'WENZEL * CO., lUfl Market, rooms 41-42.TRUCKING BtlSINEBB-Ons Of the heat ray­

ing trucking hualneaBPB In Newark; fine horaea and WBROtis; win wll complete fftr I’JOCIO. WENZEL ft CO.. IM Market, rooms 41-42. __________

prices from |(l5o‘ tb fl.tiOO. For parlloulari Market, room* 41-42.

ARMOUR'S EXCHANGE.ALL LiNEa OF BUSINESS BOLD.

NOTHING TO pay UNTIL BALE 13 COMPLETED,

Ruyarsl Investigate my'PHONE 35S2J. IWl MARKET ST,

ClGARfi. sliitlofiery, confocllonery. snortingexcellenttfob’its- BDlendlrt comer; five room*,

trade; 'exLpptlohally clean nstyrooly 1 ^ - AKMCiVn, l«» MarUPi.PARTIAI-L.7 furnlBhPd sp.TnlPrn-tmml Jouw;noto; Ije.l b»r«aln In Ni'worll; Win. ARMOl.K,1*8 Marki't. ____P08TAU?. ci»nr», confwllonery; vslat.ll^.'l

mrntr; wSili I've r«mss;Jlfyke* and a!w*Vl tuey: •pK'n'Ili' ehance. AKMorR. 18* Murker__rm A R PTORB. with mstiufneturln* outfit nn*

.took- Al location; rheaii rent; well worth IheTmiil orlic; ill, IS* Market.CONrEf-nONtORT. Ice oroum; five taWee;

bcaulttvil tountaln; elrlinese competa sale; money-itinken «>lll «tan* every InvMtlBatlon; bkrealii AKMOUB, jAS Market.nBnr’FfiY' aratt* enrtier: dolna over *RW

wSSly hWt-clBe* «n<l profitable: big fie- liven' r^g; trial allowefi; barKaln, ARMOUR, 188 Market. ____

good bu sin ess PI-ACBP 'W'ANTBD.No "graft" In my ayelem of ■elllng a bagl-

n m : no faking; no fnlie promHea; no money In advance. ARMOUH, 188 Market-HAIR PREPSINO PABIA)HBi thoroughly ea-

taWtahed and very profiiaile; wiulpment com. nieie and up to date; Uttle money neceaaary AliMOUR. 188 Market__CftJAR STORE: hanfiaomely afiulpped: welt

aiockefi; ateadlly Inereaalng trade; chance oannol 1» beaten at the low price. ARMOUR. 188 Marliei-

MANY BU6INBB8 OPPORTTOITIBS, which are not ailveriiaag dally. Call and aee office Ltal of dealrable buatnaaa and Inveatment Droboaltlona. I probably havo juat what you want! If not, I will got it tor you. ABMOUB, 188 M a r k e t . __________________

.TISE TOUR "WANTS" gnd your H In tha olaaalfiad colunmi of Tb*

Brel* Veltung, tha aerntan Naw*.On* laaertton................................. lo. par wortTwo or thre* daya....................... So.

r«l« Salt na )tu«rt

.Wo or tlFour or five days,. ........ .doven or eight dayipa..eb**e«»d'r>e,^. per wordBy Itk* monlt)...... .................. t.e..50p.j^ llM

k J. FRBIB ZSITUNG, 75 MARKET flT.

_ par word ic. par word

hoMMhold goods.- ......................... end boogM

for ca«h: ooaauU u* boRwa aeillnga ComuierwlALL ktivla o* nrsroliandl**.

coRtsiiU of Btorofy hod*** and fiats,T id ing ConipaaVi $5 Ae^amy a t Tel.*>T^.ANY kind of hguusahold goods from hffoara and- - -— -‘‘-■ta and — »-----»-*_________ ___ )JTS. “poitfti or call. Tol- W4I*.

flalt. atorM. a l^ B and merchondiae bought for cash at F. iMMOITR 78 Academy sL Bend

BARBER BHOP; good two-oholr shop; very «h«ap for buyer to-day; reason, owner going

Into busineas, Ifl Bowery tt.Newark. _____ •HGTEU BSloon and reataufant, wllh 18 room*:

two bath* and barber shop; rent $75 month* tvi 1aM*:,lkeniw paid unlit January n«xt; dally bar trade |dU; oatllemeat of aaiale- cauie for MtUug; sold fr«« and clear for $4,500: hrawer’a aairtataiice aiatxred If rtqttlrsd. Inquire at ADAM LJSBERT8, 800 Broad It-, Newark,Kv JaA GOOD saloon, with alx room*, near oUr

mark**. wUh good whisky trade: rent $35; six year*' lease; oteh required. ILOdO, at ADAM LEBERT'S. 800 BNaad Nawartt. ft. J. •A FINE liquor coroec, with 12 room# and two

baths, auitahls for hotel curooses; lonrlcoae; prlea | i . m at ADAM SflO SnAditw, Newark, K. J.gALGON. With four romna; In good factory

aClghib^dcil; « good busintaa; owner nioaiog ntaoe 81 7«af»: Ul health c4u*e for isemflg price SdOOa at AI^AM LMBSRt'B, 800 Brood 6t/. Newark. N. J.A CORNBH saloon in good buatii«ai ovniuet

gM amaWUhed: rttit 185; price- >350, at LEfiERrSa m Brood e t, Kewortt,

PAKTNBH wanted to Invest $1,000 In retail huslnees, with or without aervlcpi; a rare

ehanre. Addn-aa C. M-, Bo* 10. N»*w« office.

SALi>*)N, will iPll fnr l+ffff. rmrner place, with three rooma and hath; gmad stand; cheap,

gutnk. B«ix au, Newa r-fllvc.THE MUIIDU17H CreBraery To. offers a amall

•mouni; of Ua treoaury stork at i& |Htr shar*; this la a local enterprlsr-, engaged In Ihs ilia- trlhutlnn of butler and eggs; a 10 per cent, dividend has been paid «‘»rh year. For fur­ther particulars apply to E. a . WEgT. trcai'- urer, national hank reference. Murdoch Cream­ery Co., Bloomflcid,w a n t e d ROTIMAN ft •,'0 , hankers, Cam­

bridge building, ,X'id at. ami Mh ave., New York: gontleman of high rtmractel* to take imeltlon of tfuvt wllh corvmrstlon; Mlnr>‘ f.U) lo $60 per week; tnual Invest $2 000 or l-'l.tWO In ao<-urttlM (.f (he company m» Kunmnlrr nntl become manager of one branch of U19 busi­ness.

TOIJCDO.IflOfi, 4n H. P. touring car: fully ssiutppsd with lop. lamps, throe extra them, ole.; asm* h«a Juri heeq thoroughly overhauled and repalntad and In excellent onnditton; wiu *«at seven paa- •angriw; owner going abroad wlU sacrifle# to Immediaio purohoaer. MR. A. H. SEBlIby. nSO Highland ave., Newark. N. J.AiTTOMOBIUfl^TIRBa, atc-: w* poalUvalg g|&

afl makes (domeiflle and imposed) iBlo eoa«* and tubes at lower than New TotK or locoj houiwe and stand hack of the iniaraBMat get our prices on anything. ’Phone ntoT,_____ WURTH. M WILt-IAM «T.

YAt.E MOTOR CYCLIC.COMK. try It Iwfore buying your 1907 motel

cycle; can deliver at once,F C. CORNISH. 219 CUKTON AV»,

W,\NT a party in rent one lo (Art niim rt*\- chlni*s, UNI ftlrejidy out In .leraey ruy ; ri-ni

$1 B yenr, I'oniiriercliil. 545 Newark jersey City

IXPiTltl'CTlON, ficlionls.

fo r ty -f iv e YEARS OF aUCCEflHFlIL WORKright here In ihu city of Newark ilmt’a our

reoorrl and fmi reference—by It are willing (0 ba Jiidyed If you dselrs to pre|i«rs your­self Ihorouihly for buslneas life and obtnln a pnelil-iti u( the belter aurl, this Is tha school lo ultencl.

Day acliool Is la sesslnn the year roun«l. Cali or write (or full parUculara,

qoLKMAN NATIONAL BUBlNEbd COLLEGE, Academy and Halsey tU.. Newark. N. J.

J. KUGLER JR.. PrltL

DRAKE COLLEGE.NEWARK.

UndhubtMty lb*' largest and flneat Businesa 8>'hool In the auta.OVKX AU. SUMMER,

Ci^l, IntDresting, ProfitahSe.Call, wiUo nr 'phone fnr pHrlli’iiUni.

EDWAnn 0. miANliT, Princli^al.Pro«(J et.. corner Weal Park,

AUTOMOBILKS W hlrp; rsaarmaWe raiss; r*w pairing: storing; auppllea. DAHLQU18T ft

CO., ftuio garage. 21 Washington av*.. New­ark, N. J ; tsi. 965J, R. H._______________DON'T be fooled by color: for th« beat s«« tbs

kfarah Met* inomrcycle; all suppilea at Ntw York prices. 545 Broad at., Belmont Cyela Co.FtMt RALE, Knoa runahotu; top and ta m ^

flrst-olass cohditlnn; demonttraUon rivati; cheap. 5.1 Wcsiflold ave., Flixabelh, K. J.FOR HIRE, Packard and Panhtrd autotao- .

li!los, hour* day or rnunth, at the Auta Reding tv , 9 Wright it. Telephcma flOTW.U^-I'ON autontnhile truck. In good running

order; also trucki and wagone. aeoond* handed. 54 fllsrUng st,, Fast Orahge.NKW IIKff Merkel motnrcycle; guaranteed; list*

ed $175. must be si'ild at onoe for $140. East* ern Exchange. 87 Orange at.FOR SALE, Oldsmnhiie runabout; In gooa o >

der SCHELLER, 14 Acid*n>y st.

MACHINKRY rO R flALB.'‘'eECo39^^1LSCNJD'"A^^

WCXIDWORKING UACHINERTa A Urge aaaortiuHiu constantly on hsjidt

|atb*a« shapara, mlllaro. griodsn, drills *t&l jiilnters, planvtA nturilMr*. saw tables, etc.; boilers, etigliiea. motors, etc. Wa hava tboa> sands of imw and sacund-hand wood pu11eyi» Nil alxes; also IhuUMnd* of Iron pulley*, coup­lings, hangcra. shafting, stc,; new and aaewia- hand belting, any wldthi wa buy al) kinds ot machinery for cash.NUWAHK SCU<7ND-HAND MACHINERY GO.,

98 Chestnut st.; 'phono 8011.EN tH N l^ IM. 8U> 00, 40, IS, ft* 25. ML ft ^

5 hDrsf'puwer; boilers. 125, lOi), W, 40. 15. Sft 20. 15. 10. 5 beraepower: pupifw and ntatsrai 40-inrh exhaust fan; suction blower*: dsM wall pumps: wa guarantee sveryihlng wa lall, at low pruea, let u* knew your wa&la> TU08.

LuUiH HARTUNO, manufacturer of ataam tioll'‘rn, luaiof, smckealacks and bdavy ahsat

iron work a spatially; tn ller rejialrs uromplly lilteinU’it to; new vertical boilers on hand for irnniedl.itf shipment, 414 Paaanlc av*.« Eiaal Newark. L D. 'phone *120. Harrison.t2-Housr;powKit. doiibie-oyilndar tkokiMgnd

flve-liinai-powi'r Nash gas englnat. 2>'li0f*o« power. m<>tor: all guarantseu (o h* Mgood iiiiming order.

k’. T SCHMITT ft CO., 15 CLINTON 8T.GAS mid gasoline englneH, simplest and mog$

economical governed engine in tha makkatj we erci-t them at cost: flat our p rim bafniw yiiU buy, liuiidredj of thotn running In tbtl

Newark Uaa Kngln* Ctiai 975 MorUl

GET down In huslnena by enrolling at onrs Intho Newiirk HusIncHs College, Park building,

Park pL. hr-afl of Military Purk; William Wll- berforce winner, pfincipsl: luUjon rntcB with us are rp/mnnable. and. oonaliieritig the train­ing we givf. are leas than at most sch iols; It Is nnt HO much what you pnv as what "''oti get for your money, that uoumi: InvcsUgatH lliln school umj you will be plcai ed wllh ih« pros- ptots liere; parents and young people ars In­vited to call any day rind learn rf our work-

nk^ ab”k' ^ cat>kmy.Founded I7fl3v

S. A. KAniiAND.WIlaSON FAURAND, Hond Maxters.

HKOPRNS UNPT. Hi, 1UU7-Thorough prepat aiioii for any col lego or

acleniifio school or (or lMi«.lness life. Catulogue OD appUcatlun

The hnad tugatera will make appointments 10 see applioaniji for edmlssloik at the Academy between June 16 and 80. ___________

’hoU'7>KN'SPrivate Rusinoaa i^ollegi'. flk Centro at,, la iha br«t and cheapest ono In Newark, and leachoH you an)thiug you wish to learn ut your own price and In your own time.

Eltieh ftrhnlar taught aei'snuely, ihfeff being no olasBee.

pnaKions aerurtd all graduate*.'Phono 4W1U.Open all aummer. ____

THiQ ROtiEVlLLt; COMMERCIAL BCHOOL. I5T bl.. near Orange st., Newark.

L. RLAEmCH. PrlncUoil.A hJgb tradtf prlvotu school of Hmltcd mem­

bership. fur the Htudy of sienogruphy. type­writing, book-keeping. English nranches; no Mataea. Cntainguo on appllcatlnn._____ Telephnne WML. Brenrh Jirook.

MISS TOWNSEND'B BOARDING AND DAY fiC.'HOOL FOR GIRLB.

54 p a r k PU, NEWARK, N- J. Academic, intermediate and i^rimary dapart-

gienta. well equiuned gymnaefum and lanora- tory. Cerllflcate admits to leu ding colleges.BOSTON TEk.'HNlCAL JNSTITUTL. U22 Belle­

ville ftve.: elecirlcal studies, tnechanlsa).architectural drawing. moiHeniatlcs, baokwiira •tudonts, law, medical, high school course*; Qertlfli*ate admits to ouHego; tel. <I75J, B. B.NEWARK SKMiNABV. 172 rtiinton ave. Anna

F. Whitmore, prln. Roardinq and day school, all depts.. pupils enter leading cotkgoa every year on ciL; gym.. Inhoraiory. Ubrary:cai'l'g'a.

Mualc.WRIDT BCHUOL OF MUSIC,

BANJO. MANDOLIN. GUITAR. VIOLIN. Private losaona, 60c. I/isirumtmia fer sale.21)7 nigh st. (near Central ave.). L D. 'Phone,KumBNf.’H ARTlirit, voice prodiTcVlnn.

pluno and vloJln tislllnn: ii*urh«*r three years In London CorLservalory; Mmnlay. Wednendny, Friday. 144 W«ahlnKt«'iMFIB. MLNETTA^PFIU’K TIi'lfWNOR, vIoiiiT

m8ndi'>lin. banjo l>>>ij<ons. i' h . , 'Wefiiimhiu (pupllsl 4'luh meeta I'Tld. rvi'iiitigt'. 22U Walnut,HARHy FltiOHt?nt. tPiU'her luinjo, mandtilin,

violin, guitar; leison* private, Olbaon nun- dollna, guUar*: Bneon banjna. l?7 Oliver at

MISS MAE E, PKKUrXK.Violin, piano; msihml practical, thorough and

yet aimple: terms modarats, 22 Court at.WM. WALLACE CANON.

VOCAL rULTT.’RE. .V1H Uroad It. (Tel. 4SR, Branch Brouk.j 2ik) CJUtun ave.

D allH liK .THE DAVia 8rtHrt"L OF DANCING*

fl CENTRAL AVENUE. NEWARK, N. J. MRS. HELEN Da VIU, MANAGER.

niARLBH TRAVERS, INSTRUCtOR PRIVATE LESSONS (our apoclalty),

WALTZ. TWO-HTBP gu«ramaed in sis las' Sons; ADVANCED CLASS RECEPTION every TUf*. eve.. 6.60; FANCY AND STAGE DANC­ING. Write fnp circular ur apply lo MRS. HELEN DAVIS, S Central uve.; ’pbofle 2567R.H. ALLJCN OHUORNB, Instructor of danrlnw,

atudin H>11 Broad at. T have laugh! dunging In Newark tor tho past ten years and fitid ' pupils advance more rapidly by taking ]irlvut>a matructlon; waltz and two'stop taught In a few firivala lessons; inatnictlona given all sum­mer. ‘Call or write fpr an appolntnient.

e n g in e s . DOn.KMi . ^THRH, UlLiUlllff TURRETS. DRILLS. PRSSBBB AM"'

OTHER GOOD SECOND-HAND CHINERY. W. I t KINO. 25 CAM BT.

AND MA-

tA u r m i o

UNGINRS. 2ff. 2J1, 70 hi'TKOpowrr; all oompleW, anil In Al mudHIon; cheap. J. gUESSEllt-

MAN. 221* LlvIngHlon st., tdly.TWO-H‘iHHEPrtWI'JR ga« englnn; good con­

dition; for sale cheap to quick buyer. M7 Hprlnglh'ld svk ______

PATKWTN.PATENT FRAENTZEL ft RlCHAHDft

LaAW. Luag L’lsiance 'Phone BgflflJ,a i .01112 nuiLniNG,

aonjIROAj^BT., ROOMS aoi AW 602.RUBHEl.L M. |3v15TiETT, patent lawyer kad

aoilcllvr, 7HB Broad at., cor. Market; 'phoiw IfiSkR; Hnturclns’e till fl P. M.. and other •vw-' Inga by app«dnlment.

" ^ ‘drakw '* co7.Room 267.

_______ •Off Broad st. ‘Phon* 2fl48.

Tg A!H1> glinVBYORB,HARRIHON VAN DUYNE ft SON.

MTRVKYORfl.DEATwEItB LV REAL ESTATR.

Aperial attention given tu tha appralag] gr partition of real ostuU'.

flOO BROAD BT.7TinuH'rL!a’'^iCHHOR!;r,

ARCniTBOT. 81 ffisatsx AVI,'Phene ll 'M_____________ ORA NOB, w. T,

R.QAI. IC8TATB FOR aALE—OUT OF TOWW-MISCELLAABOIJi.

ni.ooMKIKI.D-Trat't ot 44 amo*.Trvlngtjin—Trftrt of 35 acres.

Fouth Ora ngp" Tract of 26 acre*, fioulh Orang<^Lota on Pouth ITospect l i Pouth OntriK^L'ds on Tlllou rd. i:aet Oj-angr WKl Park ave.: frame dwelllnf. J-JllanhAth'>i;i2 IJnl'm avn.; frame dwelling.

OLIVER W. JACKPON, 200 Market «.

FO tl SALH o n TO LK T-m i'T TOWN.

OF

THE BERLITZ SCHOOL OF LANGUAGES,s c h b i’k r u u ild in o , rrhad st .

TEACHERS BENT TO NFIGIIUORING TOWNS AND BUBUIIUS.

fiUMMRB SCHOOL AT ASIiURV N. J.Hotel Tournlnc, Fifth and Grand avea.All language* at school or reeldonco.

Acftdtemtc a n d C'ollefrlafft 8tndl«a.p r iv a t e Instruction in in« above, 21 Ml.

FleojaaDt ave., atutlent*' bams, or 75 Mitchell p].a kiwi Orange. 8. D. HILLMAN. Pb. D,

H laera llaa rn a i.READER for elderly persons. Invalids chll-

drert. M. R. 8.. Iw NcOrnngt-

North Slat East

a ic rrcL B ft.BIOYCLES—Largcet stock hi Eaatera Btatea;

more wheels than ai) the stores of Etsex Ct^nly comb^ed; every wheel guara.ntocd for lliilil: bargains In wbeela; about twenty atiop- wom Stearns, I>ays, Harvard, etc., at $15 to Ilfl.fiO; a lamp and bell free with every citaK wtaeel sale on 'prosantatlDn of this od.; Pierce, CoJumbta. Tribune. $40 to |cff. Shop­worn Tribune ami Columbia, tS5: see wheels,15 down. H week; Hartford 77 tire*, $2 U5; Tribune, $2.4fl; •undrIes railuced; tape 3c. gra-

Uc Sc.; toe clips, fle,; tires, 98c.; old wheels lb trade; c4>*n ovenings; auto tire*

^■uloaiTlalRg. HERBERT AUSTIN, fll Orangs^ k s|.. near Broad. Tel. dOSL, Rranch Brook.,TALE^^bi^clw ttlU the. leader.' LOOQ of l lm

In Newark; mak any Tata rider whol he thinJt* el this wheel; terms fl6 down end fll per week: other makes from 120 up; TOpeJr' Ing chenpesi in (be city: tires, lamps, hells and sundries a t lewegt prices; open evenings atkd flt^ a y rnornlnirft

F. C CORHIftH. 219 t^llaton ftVe.BTtLL in the bleyote bufliBsaa: bloycleg and

suadrlea at lowe« price*; wheolg with Thot hub.* aud EkYber tme-pleRe hanger/ £35;, Kart- foM tlrr*. fa.dO: 'Hartford. ‘77, n.l)U; ag^nt

bicyclo built on

all Imnrovetnents except w S u r ^ t . FRANKUlf F. ^ T O i B f^ d at* ‘

I May

Jur National earth. CHAS KREBS.

BELL^>ta^Readlw*Id wnSSfl Itt’tmde _ ^ n eve ftga

.IAb< ST.

Hpringilfcld gve.’cle and Iver

Oricea than ' and0 . « P J i a t T a d '

u il m •»*»'______ ■ to WltXlARBADIKa iTANDABT) n e tt. In finit.c1**a

odndmon. wItt. ih« tiraa: (20 It acid at own.98 C am Jf to atort-________ _______liENT'S M*»l* maatcr firaSe; ad ^

u.lticb trana: fiO. Call tc-nltdit. I9i> sooth 11th at. . ____ -gKCOKD-HASD taAy'a blcyelt; Buffito Kaiio-

attioB no«*l ol tb* Hiuiur. to WUUaa ai.

0»OBA»D BT.. 110-11 1; aw. JOHN D. TQPl’n t . . '____________

HORTH TTH BT« HL ' ro4m houe*’: bawly deeptngar

to station; <45. Apply 1»fl Horih , ,HAMBY ST., 4S—Tan-fMin brteA OwelUn* tor

hoartlna-houw ot liuilnui porocaai. CO*.]4> Market at._______ ■___________.foiTRBNT, at wyomlat an aliW-ro™ c« .

tB8c; Imprcfctncnta. ak A. tJAHOSRB.

BODSBS t o ItKIwaKASHOAM.SHITBW8BUBT BnfNB-tB tot. Bed

Bank. N. J.. (a m hotac: *11 Impircvaminai two acn* t»«utUinl)r aha^nl lawn; aaod bath. (n« and Oahlna: ataht*. hoal, telanfcooa, «to.: write for full rsuticulara befora rentl&g. Ad*

oat B. J.,HcCUieS. RW Bank, K. J.

. ' i• wi-

FO R NALG OU KXr'HANtiB—OUT OP TOWN.

IfOT’HIC <*f 14 r<vima: no Improvements; four* fifths arre land; within five mlnulca' wHlk

of West Summit StatEnn; coniUTvatIvn cash equity I'f ll.Tfffj; mfirlaagtf |2.f)f)0; to exchange, with chhIi , for umall farm or acreage between

and llft.’ klitg Ridge, JIICK.8 RROTH- KUH, Huminll.

FAH!H» FO R HAIdE—Ol'T OPfa r m of 1122 StTcs, locil-t'‘d In Masaachuiftla:

price 12,750: will Urkc mfiriKage; a grand horn© in the countr>- f''i* a iit'lc nmney. Ad­dress Farm. Rox F. Newe nfilr.f. Prangs.BMAl.«L FARM, five-room huuiie anr| outbullfi-

log for sale. Trio t'fil’M ttve,, Irvington.

P'AUHS TO 1 P T -O IT O F J T O W ^COUNTUY Mrni)i'.'u:'C iiii'l nU r' xarrlen to rent

very i'licRp III'' HiiinMici, llcrnerdavltle pprtlnn. rtflHLX. iX| Ur :ul rt . Newark.

K.U TOIIIPS t o m e t .T^llTTrvipcrty bi M Mechanic at., rearage on

freight* lnifli C. R. R-, Including modern hiitk hulltilEiK, 12,4X10 square feet floor spec*, wUh Bteani ]>Uni. ot In ijarta wllh power. In-* q.ilre CHAt*, F. KILBVRN, on the pramlaa*.

FAfTTORY space lo suit: modern equlpdientj el-wtric power and light. WM, C. C. UEXILto

RACK. 3011 .Mulberry it,

ONK FLOOR, fl.flffff square feet floor space;elevator, sicorn powur and heat: odb mmuts

(rum Lackawanna Station; also apacs for aiorag*'. TO.N'KH HR03.. 22T High it.e n t ir e throc-alory and baactnent brick fae*'

iory liailUiog at 363 lialaey *t.: 8,400 ft floor splice. Inquire room Si, JOSBPII nW'HWALlJ. 120 Market at.UMWffSgUARii; feet floor apace to ki. In wtiols

of part; with imwer, atcam heat, good llgkt. Addrf'iiB or cull C. F. CROBELMIRE, 40 Me­chanic at., or engineer.TO LET, 1,600 feat of floor apace; steam lie^l

elevator; possession July 1. Apply to HAn- A iv-NfOHT Wfg. Co.. 02 Shipman st,^^

FACTORY to let, with quite noma ma* chinery: enpocUy about 72 dojwq par day.

Address HflttcrB. Rox 7fl. Newa offica

HOUSRft TO LET.B£tOAI> ST.. 38, larff* bouse............... S

Cantral ava.. 12, ten room*........ ........... j.JCKntoP ave., 8i. ten room*..-,,,..............L£High St.a 781, 15 rooms.......... ..4. . 1,01

OLIVER W. JACKSON. 200 Market it.SEVENTEEN-ROOM HOUSE, 278 Wsahlhgtok

at., oppoBitc Blanai^’a Theali^: all ImpMvjj manta; foriiierhr Iroown B4 Crafts a Theatrlesl Hotel. Apply D. WOLFTF, SJ Market at* ^CMNt o T” HlLLr-$86; niw room*

In new n>odern corner house; **'•* ‘JLJS" strictsd nalgftlwrhootl: parquet B«Jra FINLEY, 84 Homwitead F&rk; 'phone 2$fl4L.

.AT SHORT HlLTwifl—Beautifully sltualed piaos, five minutes' walk to atallnn. new house. In­

diana limcBiono; flrat floor, four rooniH, Uvst Ty and parlor: upper floors, alt rhamhers, |wo butha. attic: mi-xlem throughout; gmunds SOO feci on mackdAmltad road: go*, water, electrtq light, telephone, atwer; prliis less than coat; terms reasonable: tielghborh'Hvl unsurpas<e:l.

ft CRAIG, 149 ttniiirtway. Manhattan.

FAt:TOlllE?< p o l l 8ALS.c'^jV i 'J^:t M hat factory (or atlo: Liberty

»>r :i7 4:i. iiiol Green al. OLIVER W<j ai 'KHj Miuk*;l at.___________

1

i

i

i

E V E N IN G NEWS. M ONEAT. TONE 10. 1907.

K>R SALB. TBl^IO.I SOtaiOO. I'm « trt« front*.

....J *t., 301-»4Si lot 60*118. •«<] *1., BTMtU; ■ w oor. *th »v».; MiloO.

1 *t„ « i* mI it., frUi Xll*l:!u: 8rlrli nulldlnt.

od 1S42; h i Stainu: two fronuim. &I1WUI* *tm,. ».37; IHxliW: U «inrM. Bollcvlll* lensltHiOtnowl *v»., 10: SlhSHi; (our-*tory build w. U»jitr»l »v«.. la: sa'jjdiu: (our-ilory bulldln*. H*lHy S«.*6; lot 1)3*11.1,Hlfh tl„ Vm W ; brlcb rriMoncu; 100*^. HIrh It., T31-TM: brlrlt r«l(l*neo; 60x300, itu U n *1., SOO; brick bulldln*: au iu ji

•«,, tlb-iKil; brick bulldln*: MiiSO, Mulbwry »t., 102 104 : 4l)*m Ml. PlMh»)ii *v»., 300*100.UpruM lb. 6B; brick rMidrncf; i3«},p ,„ Bprln* « „ 36: cnrnjr Kl»bth nv»., 115*11 W**bln*tun *1.. 2011. cor. I)»nk *1.; 38*100.

DwklllBK*.ROSBVILLIC BAROAINt.

B.TOO-Nln*-nmm .hou**; now oceuplud b» VO fvmJlieB. DB AiibliAlt bliX|l

xlUO; lot ftlobi U worts

<H4ilQftulivI r

■tuii *1., Zm, cor. «•Vlij **1 lA.t| . 1W. JAt’KBON, soil Murkrt rt.SIXTH A V n-rin* bflch. *lnro *nd n*ti. 43-

R. (rent: ownrr *o1iik a«*y: mu*t *rll; tirm* Co «m; 17.800; bar**ln. KIKH.IN, 188 Uarkkt *LUKROEK KT., near Clinton nvu.—Two-t»nillir

hooH, 14 rooma. all lmvrov»mi-ota n™i.t b**l; owner Htc* In BulValn; price t4,l<K>. KIXRAN, 38S Market it.SBLLBVILIjF: AVB.—B«r*aln: brick bulldln*.

With l*r»e «tor*, payiii* over to per cant : ■•crlflMi prlca 17,600. KIKBAN. 188 Mtrkal

tl,UR.-B*r**ln, *1*-renm *nod heuar. pcrfacl ordari Urge lot; off Ontntl nva.; n i r com-

many oLbrr barpnliui *11 KCtlonu. ' 188 Market at.

MUorr; n XtERAN.

LOri8 RCHBE8INOBR,BBAIe KBTATB

IN AU. m BRANCUXa kAIN IXOOR. UNION BUILDINa

tajNTON ST.. AT DROAC,

UTHItOP ANDBRSON,XBAL BBTATB AND INSURANCB. <14 BBOAD ST.. OPP, ORANOB ST.

TBUIPROHB 14M.FACTOBT SPECIALIST.

BSTD UM. •PHONB T4SJAMBS A. BBItnT,

RBAL ESTATB-INaBKANr*-I/)ANS. ItAJN FLOOR. BEHRT tUIlLDlNO.

40 CUNTON ST.

XM. IMS. 'Fbeair 83»n B. BOND R CO..

RBAL BSTATB AND FIRE INSITRANCB. NOW AT NEW OFPICB.

SIO BROAD ST.. t»R . MECHANIC

OBO. W. PREnNOAN,RBAL ESTATE. INSURANCE, LOANS.

SW Unka bid*., »-l* CUniou at. Ttl. 648J,

WB BUILD. BBT, SELL. RENT. SIX- CBANOE.

WB IMPROVE VACANT PBOPBRTT. MBNSTON tlUILDINO AND RBALTT CXX,

ng BROAD ST.BALL

REAL ESTATE A N lin B E INSURANTXUNTINO and c o lle c tin g RENTS A

SPECIALTY. E8T. 1806.SHEROD C. BALL. 323 MARKET ST.

■ACRIFICE: double ila-falnll)' Irani* and 3- ta i^ k earner atom and atublo; coat 116.000:

will aw for 117,000; 16.000 raah: baUnco 6- vaar iaort*ace, 6 par cant SNpVER, 3TG Mul- MRT a t "_____________SFTdo"a lenaial RBAL ESTATE BUSINESS j

» MUett your triid* «n4 GUABANTBB« • MUett your triid* «n4' MATO * OO.. 7S8 BROAD.

JAMBS J. TBBUNO {nKceaaor to ArlhtlT Da- vltMi), MU i«Ui« mAd iMUruieu brokw; oum-

tokaloMTof 4 ^ for New TotIl N. 7.. Fenn,, CcvthV N im ftiid Cal. T8T Brood, cor, Muket.

GOOD INVCSTUSKT.FIm baln«M oomefr Urse ttore and 10 tarn UMj )U TdalOOL.^ual ro&t ISjWOi priceuraai N3i roRAWi wujuri cxihl

m,600e RODEIle 761 at.CLINTON HlLIs.

SleftnUr located bulldliu lotf on &)uth Htbi " ......... . * " lOtbSouth 16lh and South lOtb ata., near Cllntun avt.1 TMtHcted. RODBH. 7S1 Broad I t

BUiSBBRa A ZiCiaLJgRr RBAL WTATB AND INBUHANCB*

lUBNT COLLKCTION8.SQO 8I10AP ST.a ROOU8 Ml-SOto

from trolley*: lot tS.SDO.|ft,800-'fw<F'f*mly houaa. on# blixk troltrye and ihrea bloclu from two railroad #ta-"tSIlfoo-Oii'-fanitlk houai on butt lot: ajl 1 ^ prnvotnentap one bloch from irolieya. three irooi**K,*SoO~Nln* room, ona-famllr ».o™; bank iiM ntort«'*e of »,000; tbU property la wall worth 11,000 iBora.To Boil wiial you want call and 'R “t eniw you the be*t pmpartla* rw the ’'?•* mooey; we mtJta It out huilnoM to *ot tha low price and then quota It to you.

TOTTHai * LURICH.4 North Ninth aL. Newark. N. J,

Oppoalta BoaavUI* Blailon.SIX-FAMILY I

82,000 caah: Riaevllla; nmtrf Thatcher ramtea: alata tuba; price 110,100. JOHNSTON BIHLDINa AND REALTr CO.,

TIP BROAD BT. _________

iUCAL BSTATB FO R SA LB -O tlT OF TOWN,

IH onniB rlll.FINE «-room houae: beautiful location; water.

«ai, «ewer and toilet; near rAllroa;l_^d iroj; ley; only 31,860; caay term*.Broad at., Newark.

ORRE.V, 764

D e lla v llls .RBA L _ EST ATE '»luWJ. CONNELL, US Waahlngton ova., vMitr £l*Ui.b1)»h«d 1606.

E a s t O ranaa*

roTrn (^ ioict? profttriteb IN

ORANCJEe N. J.AT

- p rB U C AUCTION.ON

flATTRUAY, J1.TNE a . 1007. rOMME.N'riNO AT 3 r . M. on t u b FIR*tT

l5|-»a.-RIBBD PREMISES.C. A. TISBOT. AUCfTIONEEH.

will W*n to Ih* hltheil bidder* the ffltlowln# prnprrtl«. tlie Unit tMlog the magnificent r#*l- dcnn«.

M ARLINGTON AVS. ; aecoml belnjc the Inra* tBeld ncew

2W WILLIAM ST.. directly In the r«*r of above; and lmTn«ll*t«ly efier the sale of thw» two yropertle*. the two private reildenoea.

2\ AND aa ABHIaAND a v k .All theM (iTopertle* are lieautlfully iltualed.

ami tnu*l be mttrn to be appreolatad. The rral* dence* a rt well built In every partlouUr and In perfect condition, with all ih* moat moiiern Improventmta. The Interior of each can be ««n on day of aal* only. Nut over five mlnutea' walk from the D.. L. and W, R, R. Btatlon.

SAldJS PlW inVB—RAIN OR BHINE*For further ijanicuinra catl on or addreea

the auctloheer. 57 Newark at., Hoboken, N. J.

WedBesdays=SpeCial RCfll E sta tC DayS=Sato<laysCOUNTRY RO*nO .

STOIIKS, O FFIC B8, BTC.. TO LBT.STtmEH. L08TS AND FLATS TO LET.

INqiTKE 88 CANAL ST.6TA1ILL (HKAR>—tIS ORCHARD ST. | kTIDlt

BTAUA; 130.JOHN D. TOPPTN, 48S ORANOB BT

8TAULE. fnur alalia; Elltabelh ave.. near Clln- i.m are : (uod abed nnd lofL DEAN A LIN-

NETT, kill Clinton av*.

ROOMS ABO f l a t s TO LBT.ROHEVH.I.E. Fourth at.. 142—Four rwxna:

Brat Poor; linorovemanta.nUXlElVfkJt) AVK,. M -T d lel, eleemnt Pat,

ft larfe rootsa and all ifpprov«Bicnie, 111); adult* imty.SOUTH IITH ST.p «07^81a lllfht rfome, tll«l

" ---- all Imprrivemcnta;bath, ijantry: dumbwaiter hall* rurnlihed; aecoud floor; between three cara; near Bouth Orsnse ave.; tl6>

rVi'O ajijant atore* for rent; Immediate poa- araalon; iti heart of city; rent metderatt; 52

Academy »t. For uartloulara, apply LOUIS V. ARONSON, tt*15 M 'dulberry jTlIKKB Htorea (o let. corner Sprlnalleld ave,

end 7lh it. Apply 402 Rurlnfdeld ava.WABJIINGTON BT., K»--Reconi| float, epaM

25kT8, euliable for any bualneaa; third floctr !5i&u. For partIcaUra Inquire In cafe Da Jianne, IT Cenlral avp.___________________WASHINGTON 8T.. 2trT-Larce, light More:

from Way 1; luUahla for any ouaTnea*. W.K. LBHWAN, T3S Broad at.

STORi£S, OKFfCKS» QTCat OVT O F TOWN*

DBNTIST. fine opportunity for dentlat: beau­tiful new flat, with all ImprovemeflU; m

centre of town; no opposition. Write or call, ail Valley road, Weal Orange.lRVlNOTON-Old-«atnbllahnl blarkamlth ahop.

with tool* and flxtnroa. on Hprlngfleld av*. Inqiilrt N. WBRER. 30 Siuyvewnt av*.

HOOMS AND FLATS TO LtCT.APARTMENTS-^# De 451 High at.

* ‘ thioppnsUe unurthouae; ala room* and bathroom; all modern Improveoienla; atrtm heat and hot water and Janitor aervlca furnlahrd; renta. 130 up. Apply KELLEY, 44T High at. _____AJ’ARTMENT^New houae. coroeT Ridge at.

and Second avn.; beet location In the city; ilx und a«ven rouma: all tight; |35 and I5T.50 per monih; only two left; Janitor aarvlot. DH. EDWIN BKTTR. 4«« Broad.APAllTMENT. very central, Park at., 63, be­

low Prfji'tor*#—Flvi room*; bath: modern Im­provement*; heat, hot water furnlahed; reduced rent. Inquire JACORV, third boll, or janitor.

SOUTH ARLINGTON AVK,. near Central— One-famlty hoUae; 10 room*: all modern Im­

provement!; In goud cOQdJtlun; halt in centre; muat iM anld to aettle an retata; value IT.50U; want an offer. H. C. REACH. 600 Broad it.

FOR EAST o r a n g e BARQAlHfl -A PPL T-

TOTTEN A LLTUCa4 Ho. pfh a t. Newarlu N. J,.opp, RoaavUla Bta.

I rw ln ^ f OB*

IRVINGTON TERRACE.IjOTS 25x126,

ONLY 110 DOWN AND 44 to |10 MONTHLY. NO INTKRK6T OR TAXK8 TTU-i IMS.

Btreete graded: aldewalka; ■awara; water; bait reitrlctlone: located on Stuyveaant av*„ trvlngioi), bear Bprlngfleld ave.

TALE LAND CO .8S Park How, New York. bOO Broad at.. Newark.

OITlce on the coratr of Bprlngfleld and Btuy* vtaent avee.

IRVINGTON, Waehlngton ftve.. 85-Flne prop­erty, JUBl over city line; oppoaita Speedway;

•even rooma and halh; new Improvemenle; three lota, bam and ahed*. tree* and planii; front* on two street*.HOUSE .with seven roomei bath and eteam

heat; house elx mcitns and bath; hmieo dvs ronma. three lota and atabio- N. WEBER, SU Stuyveaant ave.IRVINGTON r e a l ESTATE HEADQUAR­

TERS; HOMdM A RPF.CIALTY. STATES, m BPRINGFIELTi AVE.; 'PHONB £S2tt.

BJdtOAIN LOTS-Two, Bouth Ninth a t, finelo tio n , 11,000; throe. RoaaviUe. near Cent­

ral av*., Iteo each.: iDveatIgate quick, HORN, Union building.

VANSom m lts

b a le Aa\D RENT,FtfnmSHKD AND UNFUiElNTBIfflD.

ATTRACTIVE MOUNTAIN PKOPERTIKS.DANia.! ALT, 500 BROAD BT,. makes loana,

Mils real eatate* bualneaa and atnrea: lowest rate Inaurance; lowcat rate aearche*.

Thirty minutes frum Newark; high elevation; pure air and water; all oonveniences of a city home.

E. C, HOLMPlfl AGENCY. Summit N. J.^ J tO H W. MORBB,Il4^ Batate, luuranoe, Rentjny d^^ileott!dngg

t h ir d A v a REAL ESTA TE WANTED.

fi, W. GBERY A CO.* SOO BROAD, flaiil Eitale. Fire Inaurance and Leant.

JOHN J. OmNN. 506 PBBH1NB AVR*

Itiabrancft* Real Batata, Loana

tw o -fa m il y HOUSES*We NEED properllea on Milford. Htll*ld«i

Ridgewuod. Cnadwtuk, Seymour and Farley avaa and Daborna terrace tor actual buyeri.

DEAN A laNNBTT.515 CUNTON AVm. TBL. 2aOOW.

5Myi

RIAL m .t o io iT bu

'RED J. WORT,TATB AND INSURANCB. lUlLDINQ. TBL. 152J,

SAMUEL R CAIRN Ba 4M

BROAD ST.Real Estata, luaqranca.

Beota oolltutad.

SAUlBLB PROFBRTISS In all localltll.l Sanil ua full particular* aaP low.it price*.

Duick and eatlilectcry deal. aeDured. BINHOTT ft DBAN, PM BROAD BT,

Neat reddle Churcb.RSAL EBTATB-lNBIlRANCB-IiOAWg.

hONiCT TO LDAX tu auma to autt.nw iirotu vi-

LIBT your propertlea for sale or rent with ms. tH. C. BEACH. 600 Rrosd at.

REALEDWARD H. LUU,

61S Prudential bulldlnc.I Heat agt^e, tnanranee. loana and appralaaJa

ESTA TE W ANTED—OVT OF TOWN*

a pa r tm en ts—h.lb Cllninn ave.; live large, Ight rooms and hath; handsomely decorated;

steam heat, hot water and Janitor service. Inquire at basetuent.a pa r tm en ts , Big and seven rooms and bath;

It improvement*. E. LBHMAN A C?0., 06 Clinton ave.RANK ST., 224; near courthousc-Pour r 'Orna

and bath- Inquire i&nltor, or L- BLlWlBB, 112 Market H-PERUEN ST . 604—Fiat in let, five rooms and

liath, all improvements.PLBKCKER ST.. 54-Slx rooms; improvementa.

Inquire Janitor or 105 Washington at.PLBHU’KEB ST, l5d-9erond floof;

rooma; gas and water; brick house.

CARLTON APARTMENT COR. lllLLHIUB I’L. AND ROBB BT.

To rent, these handarjme ela and seven roomapartniwnia; bath, eleoirlo light, atearo heat; il modern Improvemenle rent roaaonabla.

quireLOWT A BERGER

METROPOLITAN tll’lLDlNG, COR. MAR­KET AND WASHINGTON STB.

TELEFIIONB SIOO.

CENTRALLY lorated, eight light rooms, ♦2T;etcam heat, bath,, ‘Aeclrlc, Kos. hot water;

warrlrobes, china oloset. ahadei, screens; other improtemcnls; private hall like a house on one floor, for a laige family. Inquire 10 Cedar eL

CENTRALLY LOCATED. FOUR LARGR UOHT ROOMS; *1A

INQUIRE U> CEDAR BT.CAMl'EN ST.. IPl, near South Orange ave.—

Four llghl and airy rooms, all modem Ini' provenienis, from June 15; rents for |14. In quire coal otilce, 13 Hayea aL____________CAMDEN ST-. 163—Seven elegant rooms with

ail Improvements; rent 118.CLIFTON AVE.—Elegant six or spvea rooms;

all Improvembnts; slcam'hcat; open fireplace • • MYRON W,lawn. shfl4e trees, inquire

MORPK. 13B Third aveCOR. IHTH AVE. AND IBTH HT.—Elegant

new flate; all Improvements; four and flve rooms: rent J14, *10 and gl7; adults only. In­quire at 05Q 18th at. ____ __________COURT ST.. ISlV^Plve light rooma: all Itn-

proverriPtiisi Janitor service: decorated; op poslte Krueger's rusldence; Janitor on pretu- Ises. _____COURT ST.. 48. near city hall—Four nicely

papered nnd palniod rf»ms: gas nni! water; no other tenants; private house: rent reason- utile. _______________CAMP ST., 24—81x nioma and hath, steam

beat and hot water; janitor service. SAMUEL R. CAIRNS. 4&4 Broad a t _____

BOUTH BTH 0 t (beet parl>-«lxn>onii; enamel bath, open plumbing; senarst* halis and

separate etcam; |22* GlFrORD,^ 734 Pru- d<>titlaJ,Rtrt'TlI HT., t'or. OrchartW-Four rooms; third

5<>or; stationary tuba, gas, water; |10 month. Inquire on ihe premia#*- __BOITH tUTH ST.. 5«2-Thrrt mom* to Ml, $8.

Inquire L. J. PRUZINBKI. WD I2th *t.STRATFORD P L . 78—Flr*t flat, 5 llgM

mr»ra*: bath; all Iwtprovamenu. Inquire i4 Monigomery it., JOHJC FRANZ.

ipartment: first floor per month, FRANKLIN F,

BOI'THERNTfag Uroait it., Newark, N. J.

rent $45MAYO A CO.,

FCHRflSlII'n) HOOMH TO LKT.NEW BT., fn—Heauilful (‘onnectlnir fumlihed , room* for light hourtkt*rning. with at| con­venience*; single or connecting: also bailroom for gantlemen; central; rea*onahM.N0W' BT*. 42-Brtullfuny furnished room.

suitable for one or two; also hall room; all improvemenla; vary central and raaawnable.NELSON PL , 25-NlcHy furnlahed front «wm

to lel; In private house; all improvemnDta.NORFOLK BT.. 231>. near Hunk st.'-I-arg*

rooms for light houtekreping. fl.50 up: hall room*. $1 up; all Imprnvamcnta^________NORFOLK BT„ 2fl7-Fuml*hcd rnoma for light

housekeeping; single nr connecting.ORCHARD ST-, !L near IJmad at and the new

city hall—Nicely furnished single or connect­ing rooma; all Improvements; furnlahed Cum* piste for housekeeping: F2.IW up.

THE 6U69EXApartment, In Roseville; just completed; cor Dickerson and Second s(s.. two blocaiOrang" it-

___ __ . two blocks south offive rooms and bath; pantry: prl-........ ........ ............................................pn-

vaie hall; alsam heat and hot water supplied: Janitor service; eight minutes' walk to Roi ville Depot; rent *26 to 130,

‘THE PARKHrUHT." Parkhurst It.. 72-Flv* rooms and bath; ateam host, elactiic light;

one block from South fll. Station. Apply Jani­tor. _____ __TO LKT. elegant flats Iti the five new two-

family house*. 7lh to 727 20lh st., between Sprlngrtelil ave. and lOth ave.; all Improve­ments. Inquire on prsmliea.TO LET, five rooms and bath: all Improva-

menis; rent $15, $17 and )1H* B. LRHCH- ZINKR A CO., 782 Broad st.TO LET“ Beven rooms and bath, all Ira prove-

mems, at 506 Bergen bL Inquire first floor.THIRD BT., 4 8 ^ F lv a room*

ments; one block aouth of Orange _iLmlhutea* walk of Roaevlllt Depot; |1Q.

all Iniprove- elghlj ,

VAILSaUROH. South Orange ave.. MS-Cornsr flat, flvo rooma and bath; all Improvement*;

newly rtecoratsd; fine view.WEST KINNEY BT., 00 and 152-Three and

four rooms: all large, light, with Improve- menta; central location; amall families; refsr- nncee.WllXlW would like to take middle-aged ladv

to share ttart of expenses In a email, cosy ftafi Addresa Central. Boa 2H, News office.W<A>D0ll)K, five brand-new five and six room

apartments. Triton terrace, near Penbody pu, only 120 am! $2t. ORBEN. 784 Uroad.

iin Bt.^AVASHINGTON BT., 147, opposite Und'Three unfurnished room* to let: suitable for

light housekoeplng: all Irnprovements. _____WKBBTER 8T.-Flat, four ronms, with Im-

provemenla; rent $1S. <‘’*11 Ih to 12 morli-ingf. 7 to 0 evenings, 25 Webster st-WrCKLlFFE BT*. 123-BIx rooms, two •mall,

all Improverncnta excepting beat; third floor; adults only: rent $2(1,

ROOMS TO LKT—OUT OF TOWY.a pa r tm en ts of 6* 7 and 5 rooms and bath;

very latast Improvameati; select location; June 11, cernef Watson smd_ Central av**.

Oranfs, IJrds PariL Full p * f^ u l« . B. “ BRANT, W Marktt *t., Newai^ K- J.EAST ORANGE, Rhode Island ave., 83-New

2-famlly hou*e; 6 rooms, bath: all latest ini- nrovBinents: three minute* t'l Ontral ave trolley; take Central ave. car to Weet at-

GRCHAUD ST.. 42. near city hall—Two nicely furnished front rooms; on* for houerkceiilng;

two vonnectlhg rooms; running water; all im- provem l•nl■.PRIVATE family, having large furnlahed

Cnmt room In elegnnt home, with all mod­ern improvements, ceiutal location, would let •arae la young couple or two gentlemen; refer- enr#a required. Address Private. Hox 2(1, News office.PLANE HT.. 220—Furnished front'*VooTna. fof

gentlemen only; reference- ,ROHEV'ILLE. South Twelfth si.. ll^T w o

welLfumlshed rooms with hath end enn- venlencea. In private family; near trolley* and •tatlvn: third floor.HOBEVHpLE a v e ., SIH4—Two front roorns, fur-

nlshad; suitable for one nr two or light houaekeeplng; all improvement*._________ROOM—T.«dy wilt let furnished room In her

apartmeni; modem; duwntown; reasonable; reference*. Addrue* Apartnients. Ilox Tfl, News office.ROOME-Prlvate family h«fl two nicely fur­

nished rooms, complete for houerf-keeplng: all Improvemenis. Addresa ITlvale, Box 80, New* office.BPRINO BT,. 87. between Gmtit *t. and 8th

ave., hear Lackawanna Depot—Furnished room*, t l ; light housekeeping, $1.60 and |2..’>0.BOUTH ORANGE AVE.. 252, corner Camden

at.—Nice hallroom; use of halh. etc.; private family; $1.50.UNION 8T.. 144-ruralshed ronm#: front and

bi^k; houmkecplng; all itnpruvemenis; gas and bath; | 2; homo comfnrte.WASHINGTON AVE., 28H“ Large alcove front

roorm for one or two gentlemen: two blocks from Brie Depot, three from Oroenwood lAk* Depot.WASHINGTON BT.. IS3-Urge moms. euUahle

for one or two gentlemen; sloo email room; all Improvements: very central.WASHINGTON HT.. 53:i-Furnlshrd front

room, auHalile for one or two; linprovpmcnia; private family; second floor. _______WASHINGTON ST. llfl^^Niee rooms: fur­

nished for light housekeeping; modein Im­provements. ___WASHINGTON BT.. 2fi2-''The Phoenix;" sin-

gte and double rooms; all Improvomente.WASHINGTON ST., 116-Large furnished room

with private family.WALNUT ST., ftfl—Nicely Curnlehed room* for

llghl housekeeping; all Improvements; elnglo or connecting; rent cheap.WALNUT ST. 71-Nlcely furnished room for

genUemen: all lmprovem®nte; running hot and cold water; reasonable.

bathiof, plaao; good oycl# roads; r*fer*ne*

tlv«a: tenna $7. MRB. E. A. HM1TH. Keani- urg, N. J,

BOARDERS wanted: h**Hhy location; plenty fnMh vegetable*, eggs end^hlckena; good

bs'Mng; good cycle roads; refereflca given; trrmi IT. MRB. E. A. BMITK. Ketnsburg, N. J.BOARnFRB taken. White Lake farmhouse;

good boaM; flahlng and boating; pUno, boats free, F. W. VAHS, Markaboro. N. J.EUREKA COTTAGE, open Jwn* 15: good

mountain air. flahlng, boating, bowling, driv­ing and excellent board; 17 to 1$ per week. MRS. JOHN GB^KKIRY. Beech Lake, Wayns County. Pa.SEWARBN HOTEL Bewaren, N. J.-8elect

family hotel; water front; hatKIng, boating, Ashing, (rnnls, evening dancing; apeclil raiva fur Heaaon; 45 mlnutce from Newark. Central Railroad; commutation. $7.60; booklet. K. UGCK. _______ ____________

SUMMER RESORTS.ATLANTIC CITV, H. J ,

STOP AT THENEW PRINCESS HOTEL

W HEX ATATLANTIC CITV

South Caroilna avenue. 200 feat from beach.The Prlnceaa Hotel Is newly furmshed

throughout with rare taste, and posossse* all modern requisites for convenience and comfort of the guest*. Golf iirlvllsge* and privilege of ihe Allantio Yacht Club **xteM ed to tbs guests. American and European‘‘‘a 'B O O K LET w in b r irU d Ir (n r- n l ih e d u p o n a p p lica tio n *

Ratee, Running from $12.6(1 to 130.00 oer week, according to the locstltm of the rooms.

For anv further information sdflreas CROW ELL A COLLlEai,

T h e P i'la c e a a H otel, A l la n t lc C ity , N. J*

om r ADTBimiviniim.FURf^tC NOTlun ts herefby gWea t te t ^ 1

followlBB ordloano** have beta pasged Byl tha Board of Btreet and Water CoaiJioJaaloawal and approved by the Mayor of the cUy of lfew-1 ark, stMl i^rauant to Chapter ttfi of th* Stal*|

of i*» . -- ............ ........................laws i are bartwith pabllahed by tUls:An ordlnanc* to open

HlLLaiPE a v e n u e .from Watson avtoua northerly about 100 foot. ]

f a r " ------- ^or to the present tennlnua of aald avsniia.An ordlname to open

JO HN^N AVENUE, from Watson avenue northerly about 100 feat, or to* the preetnt tennlnua of said avenua

A. R. DENMAN.President of the Board of Btrest and Watar

CoihRiiaalonera.WILUAM E. GREATHSAD.

Clark of the BtMsrfl. JAOOB HAliBBUNO.

---------------------- _ _ M 3 ja . .

SUnnER RESORTSHIGHLANDS, N. J ,

OHAVELLY POINT UBACU* W ater Witch Stauon, Highland#, N. J-.

the ideal camping ground, to gpenfl your i v u a tio n , located on, tbe plctufeaqua IBhreWabury River. Fine bathing beacli. , good boating and flahlng, Excellent japring water an the groundi. Good lanU tary conditions. (Convenient Co railroad I atation nnd ateamboat Unditigt, For carrying sttea and rate#, apply to WM. BURDGE. Leonardo. N. J.. or J. MORT. JOHNSON, Highland#, N. J.

T lio i i i p s o n H o u s t} „Highlands N. J-

Ocean, river and hay ] for bathing, fishing, boating or water molorlDf. HatSi, 112 up. BoiAlet.

J N- RlKEH.CAMP 1IARHI80N,

at the Highlands, completely furnished tent* and cutUges lu lel; running water on prsmbies.

J. F. LEONARD, Highlands, N. J.

SPRING LAKE, FT. J .

Rest-a -W h ileS p rin g L uke, X* J .

An Ideal rvaurt for the summer's aojouiti. Beautiful lonallon; modem sod Improved hoL<tl; well ventilated looms; sanitary plumbing; per­sonal atlention given every guest. New man­agement. Early- reaer^-atloua advised.

GRAND ATLANTIC HOTEL Virginia ava. and the beach. Atltuttiu

N. J.; uadtir entire new maiuigement: beautifully furnished rooms, en suite with bath: hoi rad cold »ea water altschad to all baths: also public hot a«a water baths; phone* In roomsi muxlr and social diversions; termA American p’sn. $2.50 per day up, 412.60 weak- iy up; ^.C°.PSW,r?*iP*garage. CHARLES E.' COPE. prop., formafl of ih# KKtattnny. Delaware Water Qap. P«»

WALNUT ST.. TR-Nicety furnished front room with ail Improvemonts.

WILLIAM ST. 172-Nlcely furnished front room for light housekeeping; $2.

EABT ORANGE. 8o. Mapl. ftV,.-Flal; mv.B rooms and bath; convenlt-nl and fine loca­

tion; rant $28. H. C. REACH. 800 Broad st.f l a t to let In new two-family house: *1*

large rooma and bath; handanmely decorated; large lot; separM* entrance and healer; excel- Ife-ht location: near trolley. D., L and W. and fclo Haliroad. Addrens Owner, 816 ■Washing­ton at., Orange, N. J.NEW flat to let. six rooms, bath: all Improve­

ments: beautiful view of Orangt* Mountain; rnnt reasonable. 611 Valley road, M'eat Or­ange.OllANGE—$36; ten rooms ami bath; seirarate

steam heat; in new house; large lot. (17x200; separate entrance; on Ogden st., corner Central ave.; live mlnutea’ walk from P., L. and W. Railroad Depot. M, J LAWLER.ORANGE—Four-room flats; g a \ water, toilet;

110. Inquire 2 Girard ave.. East Orange,OHANOR, Park at.. HKV-Saven rooms and

bath: steam brat; rent |27._________ ______

FURNISHED ROOMS TO LBT.

CHEBTNT'T ST.. S7-8econd floor, four rooiM and bath: all Improvements but heal: |17.

GIFFORD, 734 Prudenilat.ELEGANT flat, second floor, In new a-atory

brick huuae; 7 large, light rooms, bath and pantry; newly decorated; steam heat fumlshed; eight minutes from Bosovllle Depot; adults only. 564 Central ave.

BANK ST.. 07, corner Waablngton at.—Nicely furnished single and connecting rooms: aii

Improvements; furnished complete for house­keeping; $2 up. ________unOAD BT., lia ft^ lA rg e airy room: large

rioset; bath adjoining, use of 'phono; four minutes from South St. Station of Pennsyl­vania R. R.

EIGHTH AVE., BA-'In brick house, five large bright airy rooms, all Improvements, laun­

dry. large yard, near Lackawanna Station; nice private home for adult family________

broad st., BT2—Three connecting front rooms; furnished for housekeeping; second

floor; osar Lackawanna Depot: also single r o o m . _________________ ^

FOREST HILL, NEW 10 ROOMS. ETC. CLINTON HILL, N W . lO ROOMS, ETC. Either a choice bargain: built by pro*ent

owner# for rBildences; sole on account death; price for either $D.<W. but want offera. Cnui- munleaie w-tth J. C, McCURDT. KOO Broad,

BROAD ST.. D40-Belect furnished rooms; im­provements; references, ______

BERGEN ST., 216, near South Orange ave.— I^rniahed rooma for Ittghi houiekoeiilng.

kitchen and bedroom: light rooms. ___

FOUR daalrabla buUdlM lota on west eld* of North Ath a t, near Bloomfleld ave.. cheap.

mODBR. 781 Broad aL

NEAT cottaga for two aroaU famUlea 1o aub- w f-s of >8rwi'ftrK V<‘hln (he or I'-n mlnutea vt

trolley, with good alsed lot. Addrea* X , Box 4fi. News wltlce-

FLATS—Two handsome flats; excellent condi­tion; all improvements: one with electric

light and heater; snlce neighborhood: 10 raln- utSB to centre of city. 107 Quitman st.

BELLEVILLE AVE-, 164—Large fumlahad front room, with every convenience; suitable

for two gentlemen; termi |1.60 each. ___

FLATS—Elegant five-room flats, all modem Im provements; rents cheap: fine location. In

quire on premises, corner Twelfth *t. Twelfth ava.

DLEEX7KER ST., 01—Flimlabed room* to let for light housekeeping; all Improvements;

reasonable rent. ______ _

and HT.EECKKR BT., 102—Select light housekeep­ing rooms: goa range and all ImprovemenU.

SPRINOrlELD AV«. PROPERTY.I fprinfaeld to 178 William. OLTVER W* K0ON, 900 Market at.

PlfRNISHBD HOBSBS TO I.KT-OUT OF TOWM.

'I F rw n o t to Hit your nropony kindly k»ow. M. HOnmTZ. Tsd 8prln(tl*M

let ma gee.

Madison—Nicely furnished ten-room house, conveniently and pleasantly locatfil. to rent ir the summer. Addrea# X. Y, Z.. Box 74,

FLAT. ilA rorjma, bath; all Improvements;steam heat furnished free; rent $20. In^lro

at premlaee. 261 Verona ave., near MJ- Pros­pect ave. _____ ______

BEACH fiT.. JO—Largo furnished room: ault- uble for light housekeeping; also other rooms.

DOlTDINfJT 9T., S—Two furnished room*; all improvements; for reapeotafaie colored man.

for the News office.

Dwalllnsi**liPUDNDtD INVEeTMENTV-Mt Prospect ave.j

fine thrte story flat, *lx rooms, bath each, [|< ^ Ugbt: two stores; deep lot, with shop:

■3a* looaAloDi always reated f72Q, can be ITM; be quick; ta,8S0; cash needed, |l,b00. VAN JIOIIN. Vnloa building.

FLATB to let,- 5 large light rooms and bath;steam heat and Janitor Bervlro furnlshoil;

rent reasonable.. Apply Janitor. 57 Wallace st.FUHNIBUKO HOl'SKS T4> LB T-SEA -

8HORE1.6'IAT—Ttiree-tamlly houee; n room*; be.tP|

paiitry; «team heal; 8l*M porchm. wHh all . ------------- gjj Hunterdon st.

COLUMBIA ST., 66—Furnished, 2 from con­necting rooms, $a.50: from parlor. J2.IW); nice

back room, $2: front bedroom, $1.25; Im- pr-wsmenla.

BRADLEY BEACH, facing Fletcher L a k ^ rent, five and sixnprovements. Inquire A. C. KIlsSEY, corner

modern Improvements______FLATS (slnBrel, five rooms and all Improve.

Improvements. Inquire . Beach and (JIIR ave.

man(a; rent reasonable, city.

150 Hawthorne ave..

COLUMBIA BT., 62—Two beautifully furnished connecting rooms, also bay-window rr>om for

one or two gentlemen: all Improvements; rent reasonable. ,

' HtTJtj 8B(?nON-^plnndld three^famtly, IT rooms, 8 baths; built day's work: will sacrl-

«ea: t6.?00j ront $624. VAN HORN, Union building*

fBKLLRVILLB AVE.-Rariraln*; fine three- ' atory briok, two flata. atorea, sacrifice $7,400, rent tTSO; alegont brick rrshlence, II rooms,

'bath, oil In^rovemenu, a snap, |5,5<K>; many bargmloa two u d three families. VAN HORN, Union building.

BBLMAB,THE QUEEN HUMMER P*ESORT,

Furnlahed CottHge* for season Cif lOOT. Booklet on reque.tt.

Call or write NKIL H. MILI-HR. at railroad flatlon. BELMAR. NEW JERSEY.

FIJkT to let: five room# and ,^ th ; all Im­provements; heal furnished. 200 &mth Tenth

at. _________

COURT BT.. 76, opposite Plane at.—Nicely fur­nished single and connecting rooms; all Im-

provemenU; furnished compleie for honsokeep- lug: 12 «p _____________________________

FOREST HILL, Ridge at., 789—Fine apart- ment: separate entrance and aieam h o ^ Ira-

ntedl&te ^KiHsivislon, reasonable rent. CONK­LIN. 415 Prudential. __ __________

COURT ST., Ofi—Two competing furnished ropms; light houst-kcrpJng; tine nrlghborhooii;

centrally located; bath; gas; no children.

bobbvzllb AND EAST GAINS.

OltANGB BAR-

BELUAR. N. J..Mi>dem Summer Coltsges fnr R#nL

Send for deaorlpllve Ijouklet HONCE * DUROIfl,

Opposite Railroad Station. 706 Tenth *Ta.

FOUR rooma and bath; all Improvements; and niher large nlne-nv>m houses to let, with all

Improvements. EMERY E. HARDY, 182 Mar­ket at.

COimT ST.. 24. hpftr Broad—Neatly funilshp'l pleasant room; very central; all Improve-

mt'hu; p r iv a te .________________ _______CENTRAL AVE., I ll—Light airy front rmnn.

furnished: bath: private: one or iwo gentle-

t4|60(Mrwo-fftniUy house: all lEnprnvpments; liarawDod floors: neai; strvot pavml; neurdepot an d tru ll^ a

$fl.20d‘'Thrae-lainny house; aji ImDrovomorii(except h u t; 17 rooms, bcKlilvs ;< l.4ilhn>oin»; ilot ^ 1 0 0 ; itTMt paved: puit'm sidewalk.

BRADLEY BEACH,Complotriy furnlahed coHsgea. ready for In-

srv’i-ikjn Unidley Beach, one mile south of As-........................ lel upon aptd.......................

E«i

FOUR very pleasant rooms; on third flixir;water and ga-i; adults only. 34 (Jrecn at,

near rniumbla at.

f u r n i h u b d b o o m s t oOF TOWN.

LBT—OVT

EAST ORANGE. North imh at.. Street Station—I'hjriiished c

room to let.(SO, near drove

p unfurnished

NORFOLK, A’n.. 28tb si.. 6Ut-James{own Ex- TwsUlon vliUors: nicely furnlaheri rwms; §*»-

lect neighborhood: $1 a dny. MRS. W. L nOWLETT, ____

BOfiBDlNO.BROAD BT,. 824—Elegantly furnished rooms:

single or en suite; with board; breukfasis.b ro a d BT.. 910. opposite city hall—Single

room, with board. __________BROAD

board.ST., 98&—Rooms; flrat-claaa table

BERGEN ST.. 873. near Clinton ave,—Fur­nished room, with breakfast if desired

BELLEVILLE AVE., 220—Handsom«ly nished nx>m#. wKli or wlihoul board-

BURNET ST., wanted.

3D"Two gentlemen boarders

CENTRAL AVE.. 2fv-The Lenox; rooms, sin­gle and en suite, with bath; excellent table;

elevator: electric llghtH; all modern Improve- mente; rates reastinahle.CLINTON BT.. 41-Largft front room, with or

Without board, for one or two genilenjcn; aJI Improvements; also small room.____________COURT 8T.. Itth-Pleaeant rooms; home table;

refined people: table board. ______

HOTKI- MONTlCfeLl-O.Ofuan end o( Kentucky nv*., near all tioB,: NEW THROirGHOITl ATLANTIt!ClTyS LARGEST, FINEST AND IlLST AP­POINTED HOTPIL AT MODERATE HA rSB, elegant rooma. with bath; table and pervJee of higheat standard; homelike surroundlnga; lit­eral ownership management; capacUy nbO: fipeclsl rales, $10 up weekly: |2 up daily, booklet A. CONRAD KKHOLM

HotelDennisA tlan tia CItr, N. J*

Occupies oue-hoU aquara of uoobslructectbeach front. ____ _WAUTER J. BUZBT.

S E A S ID E HOUSE,Directly on tite beach front, overluolting (hi

Steel Pier. Uneaueiled oud modern In every partkuJar, CapacUy BOO. Sea water baths, with BUlie* or public, steam heated sdQ parlors. The table and service are of tbs hlghiat stand­ard. Auto at troJaa. Booklet F. P. COOK A PON _________ .

r i o x K i - r i K O Q U O i e sOcean end Souih Caroll.m ave.; centre of at­tractions | ranking with the beat modern hauaes; capacity 4(Kl; rooma, single or en suUe, with rrlvate bath: elevator; Bieam healed; large pordie*; orchestra, elo.; special terms—$10 Up weekly; open all year; booklet. W. F. BHAW

HOTEL AND BAIVATORIIliU, ATLANTIC CITY,

One of ibe newest slone, brick and steel build­ings. with every comfort Always open. Always ready Alwaya busy _______

W ilburton-l> y-the-SeaDirectly cn Otcan: elevator; hdi and cold sea water baths; suites with bath; saason June to October. A. C. & 8- H, LttTCHWORTa

OCEAN GBOVB. If. J*

W IN D SO R HOUSE2 blocks from beach; 16 to SB, C. F. Macaenste.

M A R IN E Directly on the ocean front, opjMSlte batl>lng ground*.

M. K. WILCOX.THK r ASDOLPH. 16 Pltm*n »v*.j ilngl®

room,. IB to 112: 6oubl». |8 weekly; half Wocit tu beach. A. WARD-

HOSMAN HOUSE from beach. Open» yds. to Dee.

BRADLEY BEACH, N. J .

BEACH VIEW HOTELThe only hotel directly on th# beach; all con­

veniences; hot and cold baths; opening dst# June 28, JOSEPH W. ELLORe

DELAW ARE W A TER GAP* PA.

W A T ER GAP MOL'SE*Delaware Water Gap. Pa.

New ownership nianagemeat Opens June 15. remains open until November,

for the entertainment of a refined, select patronage. Entirely rebuilt, enlarged and modernised by expenditure of IKW.OOO. New and luxurious furnishings. Now the finest equipped and best appointed mountain hotel. Capacity. 4CH). Highest altitude. Coolest loca­tion; commanding unobstructed view# of thirty mllea. Entirely removed from noise and dust of railroads and highways, but within easy access r>f both. Hydraulic elevator*, steam heal, log fireplaces. Private tiled baths. Run­ning water In all rooms. Ligbied by electric­ity and gua. ruisine under direction of noted b’Yencli rnofa. will be of the highest standard. White service throughout. Orchestra. Variedeoctal fealureti. Rilllarda. bowling, etc. Golf, tennis, rowing, canoeing, bathing, fishing. New mirage and livery, with high-class aaddle horses and equipment. Write for illustrated booklet and torms. JOHN FURDT COPE.

MT. POCONO, PA.

h o t e l POC011A99ET; election 2,100 feet; special rates for spring and fall. Write

(or bookleL

NEW ENGLAND,

HOTEL RALEISH Moat select and atiractlv# moderate priced hotel, ceti -

trally located on the tameh; accommodations, service and cuisine excel any in town at Hlmi- lar prices; fresh and hhII waier tisths; elevator, etc.; capacity 400: rates extremely low; bo.k- lel. K. J. DTNES.

EABT PARK ST.. 22—One large front room.second floor, elegantly furnished, with board;

also few table boarders; terms reasonable.EAST PARK ST.. 2r»—Largs from or back

room, with or without board; also table board; cnnlral location.

HOTEL PONCE DE LEON, Virginia ave,., at beach. Modern In appoint­ments. Capacity 850. Firat-clafs cuSitne and ■ervlc#. Special spring Booklet^GRINDROD.

EAST PARK BT.. 85—Rooms; board; also table board.

A R L I N G T O NCapacity 300; booklet-

L. K. KUNZ.

FURNISHED room for refined lady or gentlc- maii, with or without board, In small family;

ail accommodations. Address Rooms, Box 60. Newa office.

STEAMSHIPS.

FIFTH ST.. 20—Tjargrt rooms, flrat-claas hoard, for marrleil couple or gentlemen; private fam­

ily; convenient to three trolley*.HALSEY ST.. 55—Room for one man, with

board; $5 a week; all Improvements; porce­lain bath; central.

, ___ ___ _ .. Tlnr. euliablefor two or three; exceTlent table; bath; tcniia

moderate.HOWARD ST., 76-Large from

Bile

La r g e furnished rooms In private family;oelect location, easy access to trains ana

trolley; will furnish breakfast If desired. Ad­dress Large. Box 20, News office.____

New DEPAJtTURK—rkoucrd ratrh ■■E P T U N E LINE

Stri. Connectlout ATtd Kbode lalantf.?t*fBty—CoBTeni<ocs—Comfort—ilnsift___

NEWYfiBK-52” 80$T0ll

IiAROE from room, baih and Improvemenu;breakfast if dealrcd; one or two gentlemen;

central. Address Furnlahed, Box 60, Newa of­fice.

F all JtiTcr Cl.OO I Frovldcnee ftl-tO Kewport, • I . I S Hew Bedford, BI.IO

COlfRK.3TONmNtl BKIlUCTIOB TU AJSU rKOM fHlSCIrAL NEW KNOI-AND TOWTS

l/xn N.T. Dally * Sundai, PIEK «, N. *• tt. W«t«Ui St.,6.»P . M. Td». tasniryant. TlriH I wolirotrtwai nWMtmSot. on«t I Toi.uuwditb iTel. US! 3lacl.3i.

A N C H O R LINfeSUtSHOW MH LOHOOHDEIRV

You'D find our iDustrated booklet

'New Englud Vacation Reswls”a handy thing in making plant for your summer outing.

{i telli you bow to ao. wk«r# to iisy, what to m»« and how touoh it coat.

If you've *eTer eoiored tb* plaaattfs of a Mow Eng' 1*B<| vacstioDj there'* a u w t ia atore for yoa ihia suano'.

A t iny rale, seod for the baoUet il‘i yoon for tha

Atbirssi IC M. BURT. C«B. Poll. Aite

Boaton fll Maine Raifraail BOSTON. MASS.

Boston" “Maine

MOEN PL. and Harvey Bl.^Drtlrabto rooms, nlngle ami rn suite; prlvata ^ ih a ; eggs from

hens; own vegetables.ownm a g a z in e st.. 3T—Can accommodate four

boarilen; »lio furtiUhed room, nine stcond bell. ' ____________________MT. pl e a s a n t ave.. Bl^Kome cooking nnJ

comfortBI large or .mail r o o m a .______NEW ST., ■ Ifa—Nicely furnlihofl front anfl

itnglo roomii celnct board; all Improvcmenta

SaitUns fiviB New F o rk e n r r SiiliiTila]iNEW TWIN SCBEW STEAMSHIPS

“CALBDOSIA** « u d “ COLIMUBIA" Average paaaagB VA daya.

AND FAVOfilTB KTEAmSHIPS “A o to rlft" n n d “ P n ra S l^ k ."

For Book of Tour, and Information TpidT to M. R. DENNIS ft CO„ 174 Broad al.j joa U. DTBNE CO.. 800 Broad at. Nawart

J. E. MATES. M Clinton at. Nawarlt.

MAINB

......... .....t upon annilcatlon. MACTKINAl-iJ A liiTHENB, Real Batata. MX) Mala at

Flt'E-KOOM flat* Unit floor, In threa-atory single lioaaa. 43 Blum at.: all Improvement,.

Inourr* 411 18th ave.

Dli (iRAW AVE.. 8U(>—Newly furnlahed room, for gentlemen; with bath; convenient to For­

est Hill Station; ft. ________________

bury I'nrk; hrmkii

FIBK'S REAL ttSTATK EXClLANGE, ROSEVILLE AND SEVENTH AVEfl. --------- --------- -IANCII■PHONE 100 BRANCII BROOK,

To EFFECT a quick sale the large, iwrive- hfvim, ono-famny’houae, Ne. 110 Orchard et.,

|i0n a lot yixl65, with a stable on the alley hi llh# rear, Is offered at a price which cannutI fail to ihtertfli any one desiring such a hivmo j lu that auction of, the city. For full particularsban bh JOHN D! TOPPIN, 4W Orange et.

aiTlUOE ST., NEAR LINCOLN PARK. Thrf-e-Ntcry-aiuPi'XtepBloil frame dwelUng, 13

ruoiiia, modt^ni impruvemente, sfeaaijbeat; lot SPxlOO; lu moBi desirable realdmca aeotloii: hciurcaldtut owner dlrecla prompt-«aale: full partlculara and purmUs at our office, •

g, B. DONlJ A lY)., 6Jf) BROAD AT.TWO-FAMILY house on Fourlh at,, A^aevillo.

near Urolley; all Impr^vomctua: two steam healers; rent per n^onth; price $4,700 If

Kid at once: b^usy iu goi>d order; ho agenta;l 25x100. Addrera Hiisyvllle, Box INI, New*

office..REAUTIPTL CUNTON HTLL.

Elegaul twc-faiiiUy houaca. I51h *jidCouth 16th Nia., n«;ar Clluton ave.; fourteen iwm i and baths; dnc7,initeii; Kcnarate heaters; ground H2xl(ia. RODRR. 7sl IJroad at.

DON'T MISS IT.Bplendld one-family houaej on South 14th and

flouth 16th ats., near Clinton ave,, seven rooms and bath; ateam heai; decoraied; price rea­sonable, RODER. TNt Broad ei,

ANON. N J.-Fumlahed house; alxteen twms;■ Crnnt: moilern plumbing: electric llgnts.

A-Iilrt't-; AiUS. ONKIU 371 Montrose ave..H-'uHi I >ratipe. ______

FAIRMOUNT AVB-, T&—Five rooms and bath; all Itnprovemema except heai:_aduUa only.

FIFTEENTH AVE.. 422, near Blxth at.—Five light rooms. |I2 : adults; top floor.

EMMET ST., 4»~Large. well furnlHh«‘il front room; suitable for one or twn gonilemen;

private family of adults; all Improvomflhia.ELM ST.. 11—Elegant furniBhnd rooms at

modern prices; central location; all Inijjroee- menta

IIOTIH, TO I.KTWOUT OF OWSi.TMF V[iT' R HuTEL for rent; 6U rooma; all

fiirMiPlif‘il. I'liit tit once, J. L. HCOLTHORP, IllghluntlP. N. J.

HOWARD 8T.. 173-)T5. near Oourt at.-Four coxy room#, bath and all tmprovemetita, in

the n»»w apartment houae; adults only.L. LEVIN, milliner. 190 ftpringfletd ave, Tel. 2t)6GR. __

BART KINNEY ST, 4fl- Two furnlHlitd or un- furniahed rooms to let; colored

E2AST PARK ST.. SI-HlKh-da/a furnlahed rooms; elngle or en Rulie,

fiTOlUOS, OFFI* FS. KTC,. TO LBT.

HOWARD BT., 64—Four rooma and bath A >d all modern Improvcmentei Inquire betwoen

12 HTiil 6 P. M.

FOURTH AVEv. 100—Stone house; himdwjme furnlahed rooma; all 1ini.iruvfmenta, light

housekeeping If deaired; running water; terma moderate.

NEW BT.. 44—Large, pleasant room, board, for gentleman; Teaaonable._____

ORCHARD BT.. Sl^-Rooma; aultable for one or two; with board; small family; room adjoin­

ing modern bath. ________ORCHARD ST., 180—One largo room, auitabla

fnr couple, with board: also table iK>ard. BROWNv ________________ONE or two refined ladles to board In private

family: home comforts. Address Refined, Box 86. New# o f f i c b . _______________

r “THE NEW LINE” 1C N T JR ra ite TXANtPORTATipjlM .

$2 .00 to BOSTON11.00 to Fall River.- *1.00 to Providence.

PERrKCT fB R V IM Kv*ry WKEKBAVOllCIlflSTHiS. WIHELKS3 tKI.KUHATHPier 10B. n „ Foot Wall HI., B P. M..

Foot E. 8-ltli St. ItlSO H. U.^ THK ONLY iNDBPeNDEIIT LIMS a

PLANK ST.. 161—Comfortably furnished rooms: bountiful' table; alt Improvementa; $5; also

furniahed rooms, rear, light, clean, gas, run­ning water, $1.26; lable board reasonable; gen- ilcmen. ^ ____

OLD DOMIKION LfNE.For Jametiown Expoattlon, Old Point Com­

fort, Worfoik. Portsmouth, Plnneria Point and

THE EmersonfF o rm erlj Hot*] Velvet}

Old Orchard BeachM AI a a

OPENS JUNE 29 t h

$00 Kooma Remodeled K nropesa F laa FlevNtor K lectrle Lights

SI.OO per day Up Three tnhlea of HaaelkWILBUR T* EMERSON* Mgr.

Newport News, Va,, connoting for Petersburg, Richmond, V'lrglnla Beach, Washington, NARBAOAN61&TT PIEE> R. X»

PARK P L , 65~DQuble and amgle rooms with hoard; sH Impfovernents-

ATTUAi'TlV 1 v|4*rv; n-iu |IS; William at.IncuiT’- I'lSH, 51b Waahlngtim at.. aroui3

ihe cf'in-T ______RIUOK vS'i AHLVI. four Htallf*; lante carrlaap-

houav: I'iilrr and O.U <xin\c!i! trices. Rear, ai Eaei Park mCENTRAL a v e .,

rooina: ront $26.Ih2—Btore and tw'O living

CLINTON AVK.. <’Cirner Ridge wikmI ave,--Two new. large stores: good Jucailon. Inquire 306

CTlntim ftve.iKK’itJH can aecure, fFoiu, back parlur for

offivv, u*e reception l )om If deaired; formerly ocoupl-'d by doctor. 5 North 11 Ih et.DE8KROOM or light repair rooro; in store. 14

Barga in—For a nne 3-famlly houee, all latest linprovejn«ii*H with heal, only

$1,000 cash required: in fine location; alao a Jtood S-famlly heuoc; must fk-II. Addrcto Op- gwrtuiiity, Uox 24. News ufllre.

A BARGAIN.North fitfi at,, n«ar Rlnnmflrid ave., new

l^wo-famlly house; all improvi-mcma oarepi I beat; artuual roni IV724. RODEli. 7bl Broad at.I lOLTH llTH 8T.. l®fi, near Central ave.— I Two-fajnlJy, IB roonfs; two baih*. two steflrn. .heaters; light rooms; slate roof; large lot: ^tlca right. MKNZEL, 47 Markot aLPLV^B

bouse:8T., n»ar Bloeckcr—Twelve-room

e: all tmprovenumis; bargain;«.W0 cosh required. 8INNOTT & DEAN, " '

,VB*,5^

DOWN, balance an rent; 10-room house: all lisproVemeniH; barn and vhlck^n-huUM;

nearly acre of ground; |4I.OUO. SHlPilAN, 4TI Brood st.FOREST HILL-$».000; 705 Mt. Proepect ave.$

12-rtKJin, iwo-famhS' rrMiwe; loi 3.txihu; au improvemenu. VALENTINO & CO., dOO Broad,|HM> DOWN, 125 monthly, buys now, 2-fainHy

house: separate entrance#; near two troriey Itnea JOHN H. DUKN A SONft. 757 Broad at.Ba r ga in—S-famlly; every Improvement but

heat: Ifl.flOO; cash IflOOr this is a 15 per cent lavsatmant. SNOVER, 27$ Mulberry at.GOOD flv*-Tpi»m house, goM iocatlon, vratvr,

gas, Svwer and '•oi- •*'''• -<iay tortniInquire at .one#, ORBKN» 784 Broad.Bciiwdj-J-W .OtkJ, sit-N onh Hixth st.; 6-

rtMBu; one-farally frame; alt improvements TAltgNTIWQ & CO., 500 Broad.

Academy at.ELIvftANT 2d. 3d floors; 12 New st.. 2 door#

from Brood, opp. Hahns A ( >. aide entranoe, ‘er>- pToinlitvm location; suitable for dentlat.

photngraphar or ony bualneaa requiring good dtaylay ulndows; poseesaion as soon os bU lerutlons are completed. Inquire 57 Halsey sLFOR RE*\T— Tel- <6.

Brjad st.. 576, store or entire building. Bruad st.> 542, #tor« or entire Imitdlug. Beaver et., atoroa, 11. IT and 10- BrilevlUe ave.. sloreB. 36. 72, TB.Market at., atortsa. 31T, 819 and 321.

OLIVKH W. JACKflON, 2U9 Market It.FOR RENT from Mav 1, tb# premUsa oc­

cupied by th# W. W. Hayden Co., In iba Crana factory building, McWtuuler and Oliver at*. Apply on pt-emtaea to cngtaMr or B. N.CRANE. '10 Centjml ava.FIaOOR to let. SW Market at.; rent

srkUf.lXER. WBlchmfclwr, Jeweler optician, 2WJ Market st.; open pjgbta.

t l « .and

fr o n t Matket at. cflioa, lo Splttgorii building, from May L Inqulr# JatHtor^_____________

FINE ofllca to aeoOBd floor; ovae ^ ^ oarlty fiarini# Boole, T4S Brood. Uqulr*

Security Savioi* Bank. ________ ____good tight floors, aultable for raonafaotttrlRi

of Jewelry and ttoveltle*. eUvator and Ml no^rn Improvemwitat litre minute* Poat* office and deiKitB. Wnalneer. 24 Ttoudlao* at.

LOFTS W -rm FORTSft AND STEAM HEAT. 46 r IftAWRENCQ 8T. W'ARH! NOTON WILSON.

HI’NTERDON 6T.I half block from Clinton Hv«.-Hffuit1ful all-room flat:

lmprt»v«n»« nta; steam heoii |J1- QILLlsw * ro ,, IKl Miirkcl a t . _________ _

FOURTH AVK., 149—Nicely fumlshisil riwraa (or light housekeeping or genti tiii-n

HlLliHIDI-; AVKv, 157—Five eJegant room#: hath, rajigo. tuba, pantry and all Improve-

ivii»nt(i: $15 Apply JOS. GLABSNER, 88 Avon

f if t h st .. 100—Newly fiirniwhPd rrKitua for g^nUemetr, also light housttkiHUiIna UoAe-

men! bell.

ROflEVlLLB. North Hlh at.. 6—Ne^-ly fur- nishedr light, airy rooma; all iraprovemenlB:

three mlnutos Lackawanna Station, half block trolley#: board optional-________________

C., touth ana West. Freight & passenger eteamer# sail from Pier 20, N. R., foot of Beech st. N- Y., week days at 3 F. M. Tickets A information, Newark Affiee, 182 Market at.

JNO. A. KIPP, Agent •T h e G la d s to n eVTEAMBOATSft

fr o n t BTi. 64, between Fulinn and Hector ■t#.—Furnished rooms for househeeplng. or

men.

RthtETVllXiE, Warren at-. 662—Large front al­cove room, on second floor, with board for

two; also single room; table board.________

HIGH HT 810—Three rooma. In linuae, with Improvements. _____

a private pULTON 8T., 26—Cbotce aoeond floor room; Improventonta; 'phone: rea-sonablc.

ft08BVI^_ N.>rtlL„Pj

HALSEY 8T.. 830—Nicely furnished room; water; complete for hotiaekeepibg.

JAMK9 ax.. SS FIrit and third "“ I * ant joora, and bath; alM S room*, TB Ston« ,t. McCRACKEN, SOO Broad.___________ ,

OARSIDK 8T., 157—Two furnlihnl rooma;lleht housekeeping; a^luUs; water; use of

bath and laundry-: alfto third floor bedroom-

nieosant. front rooms with board: five mu » t» to a t^tton; terma. 85 *nd S6.

Ml.

tIUPJONpiVER ^(CHTjjRVlCf

0F£F:B may 26.N drragansett Pier, R. I.

American and European plan.Information and descriptive booklet may ba

had of AndU^Radeh owner; A, L. Smith, itigr.

UTTI.WrON AVE., SIS-Fbhr-room tlo-ir ItR; ivht tW. Inquire M HYAMS.

flfih floor. Metropolitan building. Market and

g r a n t flTr, 8. corner Broad si., opposlta Lackawanna Depot — Clean, well-furnished

room for two: also single room.

B1DOOND AVK., 184-186. n ^ r Ml. Proapect ava overlooking Branch Brook Park—IdaaJ

summer Ittcatlon; apftrtmenl-hotel plan; niftsaaS' aepsrate tables: outside guest# served. Telephone ®6J Branch Brook.

PEOPLESL ll^ g N E W YORK,

Superb StsamersCft W. IIOJtSBSHARON SPRINGS, N. Yn

: Branch

fifth floor, Meiropollian WsFhlngton hIs

GREEN ST., 75—Single and connecilDg room*, complete (or light housekeeping; $2 and $8

: per week; also hall roonis.

SEKJOND BT.. 26. near Central ave.—Large room fer two gentlemen; all Improvement*;

iKArd 14,60 eseh-SIXTEENTH AVE.. itSt—One large room, sult-

LOTVTvR part of house; all Broad and Market sis. Inquire 18 Orlean# st.MT. rRORPkTCT AVE.. 7 1 3 —Five rooms; bath;

second floor; iwo-(amlly houae: rant rea«n* able. M. HYAMS. fifth floor. MetroiKflltan building. Market and Washington.

HALSBT ST., 81—Vary desirable, neatly fur­nished alcov* rexun, suitable for one or two

gentlemen; central; Improvement#; references exchanged. ______________

able for Jid wife or two genilemen;also singla room, with bath and flrst-clasa boatd.

MONMOX TH s t .. 22—T w o flats for rent; five and six large jwm# with S V i 'tubs; $18 and $20. Inquire B. EDELMAN.,,

141 caarlton at.m agnolia st .. 115—Plat to lit; four rooin;,

with Improvemenls; rent $11. Inquire ra. 8TEINBB. 113 MagiwHa et.MORTON ST., 20—Four rooms; atnall family.

Inquire 628 High st.________ . ______n o rth BIXTH BT.. 760. three block# ftwra

Dloomfleld av*., opposite Branch Park—Three rooms, 17, BEYER. J17B Brood at.WORTH THIRD BT., Jf?!;' *1!modem ImprovemenlB. Apply KLEIN, on premlsea, or at 307 Mofrla ave.n elso n PL-. 52—Top flat; alx rooms and

bath; all linprovemenia,NKIV flat*: five rooma and bath; mil Improve-

ments; 119: will deenrate to suit tenant, MRS. VAN DOREN. 126 Peshlne avt..______OXFORD ST., 30—Four nio® new rooms: water

and gaa; rent $12; will be ready by the 15th.

LOFTS—Lawrence at.,heat, vlectfla light and pow w, at p ^ u i^

prloes. Apply to JAMBS M.51 and 53 L:iwr<Tic* at.

near Market; steam " «-er, at radueod

SEYMOUR JR.,

ONE'FAMILT hotiae, 9 rooms, with heat; lot r n w in Ll 250 Market flflxtW: opposite Branch Brook Park. Coll ^ ^

TS7 North « h city. _____CLIFTON AVB:, near BJxtb ave.—Th«a-fam'

m i 15 rooms; >5,200. SINNOTT A DKaK, MS Broad at.TtfREE'FA^DLT bdttae, IB rooma; rent M2h;

otily 4500 caah needed. SAMUEL R. CATBNfl, 4M Broad at. : _■

I BJX'FAMriiT and- twv^famlly house for «1n; i >1XB»: Bouth litir ft. InqtBro V, WEISS. 4S5 tAwon ail*.iftOUSE, with amall shop ,for aaler gas, water

ME N w ; >L>W. >70 Bofilh Ifttb a t

Inquire SCHE1>>Lfigl, Jeweler, 260 MariMt W.__________ _

liOFT to let. wlth.^wec; rent reasonable. 89-■. InqufMcWhorter a t ’ Inqulrt ef engineer.ONC largs corner ■tore, corner Ferry and Voa

Lureci, *ultable for any buslHMs, wUb four rouma uod bath lu rear; alao fist In nain* building, 150 Von Buren sLBTORSlBfiaUron 'biUldlng. Junction of Spring*

field and Elghtoantb avaa.; goud, hueUIng sTM>e-for any Ifr * ■■— ^ -----—__ me; double show W'lndcwa, __and eleetrie ■ light* A ^ly on pramliMC OfJQKEPH OiCrtC Metwdutan buUdlng, lUrkKand Waahibiftoa iMl

o ran g e st ., 522—Flat, five room*: Imprvtve- mentf. • __

PARkHtIRBT BT„ 26--Beeond floor, flve rooma, ojen plumbing, two l'*ay window*, every room

light; awntug* and screens; beat turnlkbed: J26. QIFFORD. 7W rruianrial,QUITMAN ST., ISJ—Very desirable flat, fi

room* and bath; separate entrance; steam heat: *H Iraproveraenta. ______HOiEVfLU>-6cveraV flno apartments; every

modern IniprovofTiant; handuntnpiy d#<^rat^; fi to 7 rooms; |19 to |39- CHAR. ORBBN, 764 Broad.ROSEVILLE, 8ev4Mth are.-Ckimer flat, aecond

floor, aix rooms and bath, |ih)] flats, beat fur« nlahed, $15. aiOTH. IM Rc*ertll« ave.BGBBVtLLB. H«T4b Hth aL, 9S-3 ro»QW In

a ptivnte family; water and p a : no ohll- dren: second bisug# from the bridge.ltOSSiVILLB>-Foar rooms and a bath; with oHviL»i.iBr~rw **ivu mu

Imgdvemetttsi rant >14. Xogiiln n n t floor,I Aft*

HALSEY 8T., 28d-Two connecting rooms;furnlahed (or housekeeping; 42-25; also..one

room for housekeeping. $1.50.

SUBSEX AVE- 67. near Jamefl #(.-Touug lady to share room wth another; board reasonable.

TICriENOR AT.. 48. one block from South St. Station—Bright, sunny rooms, ^ylth board.

HALSEY 8T-, 56—Room fpr oflr man; $1.50 a week; all Impts ; porcelain bath; central.

HALSEY 8T, 96—Ijurge front room, sultaole for one or two; all Improvements,

■WaBKINGTON BT., 205, Commercial Hotel— FMnflahed rooms to let; with board; rate#

reasonable.'

HIGH ST., 366-Two connecting front room*, second floor, with alcove, furnished for house-

keeping; newly decorated; all Improvementa

■wABiroiaTON BT.. „ n -« i« i]r room; aecopd floor; with board.

•ALBANY. i AblROTTDACK Leave Pier £2. N. iL. ft. Canal St-, week day# and Sunday#! 6 P. |f.^ ]3>th Rt>i 6:30 F, M,r oonnectlog at Albany with trains for all points Elart, J ^ r tb ju d Weft.

Charming night trip*. Fine rcoma, with or without bath. Orcheatro*. All the com­forts of borne and club. Starlight, Moon­light, fiearthUght.Tickets reading by rail between New Tofll and Albany or Troy accepted on steamer#.C IT IZ E N S I DeSS"I I M K NEW YORK, I RicRmioeid LllwS TROT. I god OnteoTg,Leave Pier 46. N. R.. f t West 16th 8t„ weekril«ya and Sundays, 6 P. M. (5 P. M.commenflhtg June ip . ^ ___

Stateroom* at Wbarf CMUces, also City Ticket Office, 290 Broadway, and at prin?i- pftl ticket office# In Greater New York.

NEW YORK STATR.

CAMP C IT Y -U L H E il PARK}Brooklj'it. N. Y.; the delights of a lumnisr camp; boating, flahlng and bathing; Just tb* place for children; 40 minute* from BfoolUyg Bridge, 5c. fare; circular* C. M. MILLER

WABRiEN ST.. 64—Pleasant front room with beayd,_#uIt*M* twj}j also table boart^

NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.

HIGH ST., 45S“ 0>nnecilng roomu for light housekeeping; modern conveniences; centrally

located.BOARD WANTED.

b u s in e s s man wants board and room; oouthHIGH ST.. 430—Fleanom furnished rooms for

housekeeping; also room for two gentlemen.of Market and saat of Broad; private family

preferred. A ddreas Board, Box o. News office.NEW JERSEY CENTRAl

HIGH. ST., 194—One furtiished single room.^OOl£ and board desired by young lady In

' Addresa (Sbmfort, Box: 78,JAMES BT.. 57—Single room on eerond floor;'

nicely furnished; all conveniences; near lAck- awanna Station.

private family. Newa offlee.

LITTLETON AVB., 876, near Bprlngfleld ava— Neatly furnished rooms; ail Improvements;

gentlemen only. Ring second bell_;

B O A R D IlfG ^tlT OP TOWN C a r d e r s wanted: large, front room with. -Il ■ ■ Kla'>i l.«AB*lnn ■ ak IIha

lu Auect May Ut, RMT.For KaaiuD, j iviblenein, Atlentown and

Mauflb Ghunk (7:27 to Ea«b^. fcA5 A. R ; l;m i 'M to Saatoq) P, M. SoitdayA ig-afi. 4:55, 5 :^ P<For WUke*:UArro and Scrantw, B:S5 A, M-j

den; all ImprovsmeDta; high location: on line ■ irolley, inrrt minutes ----

ii2(k 4;S2 P. 'U. Su&dgye 4:56 P. M.Far Perth Amboy, 6:14 7:27, 6;85. A M ' 1:8B; 4:W, 5:aSnP. M. Sundaya,

- " • -'UJ5. P'

la r g e front room; four wtndcwF: high locAt tlon; central. Address Central, Box 79, New*

tlrma 'reaitonable. News office.

roro the station; Address Board. Box 6&i

A. U.\ 6UI5,

office.Ma r k e t BT.. n^u omy; Sieam hsat;

electric light#; shower baths; large rea41ng< room; all lepers and magaxlnea; tertna ILBO lw IB par week: evorytblirir clean. Home Hotel.

CALDWELL, N. J.—Wanted, two carpenfera or mechonlea: large front'room; board milonal;

three mlnutea to trolley. Address KIRK, CaM- weH» N- J-

For"'AtlanUo Highlands. Beabright, etc., viaS tird w , «my) P- M- a m ijw n c w A. M.BMk. I<uw Brucii, AJbary Park,Brauch onl»). *i«9. tP;Ss (ria

MERCER ST., 42. between High and Weft ft., near Springfleld ave—Large furnished

fitmt room; housekeeping or gentlemen: all Improvementa.

HABTORARGB, MfiKlnley av#., l»-Large front alcove room vrlth board for two gentlemen

or Qoupte. or commuter's single room: all lnt~ provementa; terms moderate._____ _

MABRHAtX 8T„ T. near city hal$<-Two con* nesting moms; furnished for houaekeepbwj

also aittgle room for couple; ail tmprovtmenra.

EABT ORANGE. Grave pL, 22-p-Lam on second floor: excellent hoard; fie*

utea to Grove Street Stsilon end troflay.ipoommlti' “S ’ «:«. . s a -. .f:.. » u a-iu. a u ;.A ) , *!M .M. Umiaan. »:M A.

1 P. M,. d»:

MVRRAT ST-. 4«-T«o nlcly famlihad ur unfurnished rpoms, with all Irntwovemealg; fb

a private fnmiljf; rear all car linea

e a s t ORANOE, Oiestnut at.. 10—N lo ^ fur- nlsboil roMu ond board; also UbJa board;

near «tati(»R tad trolley; term* tnodent*.Una

ly. KM • linka.Capltftla ftitd U ink ti>uaa. 10 otnTa Jji ,a rer tranalant ftda.; 4 worda tft ft In

BABT ORANOK, Gnanwogd av«., 4t-Boft)4*14ULBKPR7. tfr.i ST&^Larjfl room (or llabt

heiawtwfilin. 'MtHJMBHHT Pl», g>—Fomlthtd rooma to W.NEW ST., DA b,tw»n Halaw aiKl Wftib

tnft^ au.—R I^ A t large or amall furniiliadloom*! fttl ImtMVomantai a s y caairal.

lug a i^ table bom^; doe location; oba min* ^ 8t- station anil imUcTi

board wAKTBD-oirr o r w w ii.bo om ana board *anl«l (or tiro nmi with

BattlBbra and WaatUngtoa T:U, k :4 11™ a ^ . T j ;*0, »;W P- U. « in d a »» ?» U i» A. M.! 1 I ^ « . #:». « :» f . t L

rw rra iton^ball 'at fltroet Statfog Tel*

Not lOM than th rM Hn*» tiken* D M th NWMiOi aovsn ttn«», 60 flontsi

■ ddltlofial lift**, 70 oint* a Hn«.

private iamtly; in Ot*tm or Biurt GnuifOiAdt^fa YPanied, Bin 46, New* oObSi 0*>- R»»-

W. C. HOPB. Oan. Ptaa Agt

SHARON SPRINGS, N. Y.Tha Badeb-Bodeo of America. Beet White ftol- phur. Magneela, Cholybeaie fipripga In tha world. FIctumque and IdeiU , 11(11 for hoalUi and recreation; free from malaria and moMiul- toee. Band coneeria, delightfol drive,, summer aoclal features and outdoor eporu, Partloutara Beaorl Bureau. Pltth Avenue Hotel, and ITI and 1B.44 Broadway, New York.

ClftaaJfled advertlnmftnta muit be rft- ealvad bnlore 12:111 e'elaek tar Inaartlon In •II editlona at tha aftnift d«y. Advertl,*- mftntft raeaived batwaan that hoiir and 1 a’cleok will ftppaiif In an overflow oolumh of tha Sacond and Third Editlona.

Tranalant ad^ertlilng In tha N E W A R K E V E N IN G N E W ! muat ba prapald. No •ecount* will ba opanad tar luon.

No ftdvartlaamanta will bt rac^lvad over the telephone axoept thoie eent by lu . thorliad agente.

two waake and than dftetroyed. If any othar diapoaitlon la deelrod the office ahould be nottflad. '

Bualnate offiea o n n each week day evening until SitO o’clook.

No advartleamant raealvad for laie than 20 cente, except Employment Wanted. For thla Diaaa of advartlclng, 1 oant a word, minimum 10 canU. A g ita tyM UMd axoluflvaly on elataffiad pigaa. Nodltptay Or cuts,Tranalant, 1, oant a woi i. ma month,daily, | i.M a ilna: every other day, *0c. a ' line, minimum three llnee. The averagaU tayan abort warde to tha line.

One year dally, *16.00 a llhOi avory othat '------- ---------- *"raa line

Merrlage Notioea, 60 centa.Auetlon Sales, 1* eanta a line Pat, .Imploymant Agenolat, 10 oenit a Ilna

flat. „ ■ ■Rallglaua ^otteee. 26 cente fdr fifty

words or teaa. Additional words 1 oant «ach.

y

NEWARK EVENING NEWS. MONlE At, JUNE iU 1907. 17

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ted

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SAILORS PLAY WINNING BALL

Shot Out Broncos in Snappy Game and Tie the Buffalos

for Third Place.

HIT BALL H A R D ; HELD FAST

The nplendl<f opurt mnde by Newark ■Inc® the completion of the first IVeatern trip haa landed the Sallora up rLmong t)ie leadera In^lhe first dJvlaton, tho locals now beln^ tied with Huffnlo for third plac--, and clone upon the trail of Jersey City and Toronto. Newark played fast ball again yesterdity. and de­feated Rochester, a t Wledcnmayer'n Park, while 111 Providence the Giays Montreal down a few more P'*kh by dc* fettling the Royals, Or anti^rduy, Newark defeated Rochester In the first game f>f the scries, Buffalo checked JerB<*y Clty'rt winning streak in Jersey Cliy. Tornnin went down to defeat In BallUnor© and Providence disposed of Montreal,

fitan itta is o f (h e Tentii«.>

Jerwy C ltj..... *........ "s , 3 H i 0 5 .571Newerk........ ........... 8 1 ll 3 4 8 8 18 .ri«Buffalo........ ............. s a a .J 4 1 9 4<IA ()45Baltimore.......*........ ll 1 5 8 ... ;t 1 AIT .4KfiRnrhester...... *........ i| :t 1 8j 1 5 t 18 471Montreal .................. 0! 1 8 2 2 2 13 .406Providence..... ......... Ij 3 1 11 2 4 3 IS .$H2

iJameeluet .... ..... I'J 15 15 Ibllk 18^0 31

R c« a lte o f YeB«erclay*s Gamen.Kowark s, Roch«et(^r 0.

Providence fl, Montreal 1. H eso ltn o f K alardM i'a tia iu e i.

Newark a. Rochesier 3.Ruffsto fl. Jerery City fl.

Baltimore !l, 'IVjjotilo I.Prosidence 7, Montreal .1.

G am es To*ilay.Rochester at Newark,

Buffalo al Jersey City.Toronto at Baltltnore.

G am es T o-u iorrow .Rocheaier ai Newark.

Buffalo at Jersey City.Toronto at Haltlmore,

Montreal at Prnvidence,

PLAYS T H A T H A PPEN ED D U RIN G T H E W A SH IN G T O N -W E ST P O IN T BASEBALL GAM E

’V-v.. • . -JSScS'.f

GRAYS DEFEAT ROYALS AGAIN

Providence Bunches Hits at Right Time and Wins Out

by Score of 6 to I.

WET BALL BAFFLES NEWTON

FpeHnI JJisj/flfrA fo t fi« P } V E M \ 0 S E W S .

PROVIDENCE, June 10.-Providence de­feated Montreal ngaln yneterday afler- noon ut Rocky Point by the score of i to I. The Grays bunched their hits in the fourth and sixth Snnlngfl off Newton, who Mcis al a disadvantage owing to a wet ball. The score:

Providence. R.H.E,| MomrHa.1. R.H.E, rolam l, cf__ 0 1 0. Juyct', If........... 0 0 1IvOrd. jS, Clmdh'rne,

0 2 0 nin. 2b ....If 0 0 o| Barger, cf.

McConnThe Rsllore went to the starting line agftlnst Rochester ye.sierday .Tficnioon with a bingliiig Tevr-r, and In a gumc iri which hits CHinc thick nnd fast t!i« Now- arks shut out the Bronooa by the FCOIV of 5 to 0. Not only did tlic Jack Tars cloiu the horpehlde In a peppery way, but they also fielded In fust and brilliant fn.= iiTofi and sailed through the contest without ,i hitch, h y defcallng the Broncos agiiln Newark itocl Itself In the EaPlern I.,engi]e for third place wltli BuITiilfL The cnnlcHt wttJi full o£ life from beginning to end and ,W'ua greatly relished by the big crowd of Newton 3, epectatois, i

Bill Carrlck pitched great ball for New­ark and In the contest not w Bixuico retched third base. Two got ns for hs the setybud bag,' Hayden In Ihc foui iU inning and Bannon In the ninth. Carrlck wos accorded perfect support by his team- rnaten and the gumo was iend'T'*d es cuedingly spicy by hah--rulslng feats by

lb ... I 1 0 Morgar ell, 2b X 0 0| Mudlg;iin.cf.,2h 0 t)

Vlonovan r f.. 1 I niHerbsi. r f .. .Crawford, sa, 1 0 Brown, lb ...... 0 2 0Peterson, c ... 1 X Ui Needhuni. an 1 1Killian, p ...... 1 1 L Connor, c ......... 0 X 1

--------- 1 Npwton, p ....... ' I l lTotals ......... 6 7 1 'Hughes, p ....... 0 0 0

TotftiH ........ 1 7 4Providence ........, . 0 G fl 2 n 3 h I ■—6Montveht ..............i) 0 0 0 I o 0 0—1

First Urtse on bulls—Off Kllllun X off

NEWARKSTAKEDOUBLE-HEADER

Locals Defeat Allentown Twice at Morris Park, Hope Pitch­

ing Both Contests.

/ • » M l

J C n o Q J t f h o ' o t r r b . « » ^ 7 W V e i / a a j *

J a o o ,i>rr<^ isr»-

GREAT a T C H BY ARMSTRONG

......— V». flllU 1.1old, and by llie brilliant work uf

Engle, Zacher and Jones In the outer giir- Stiinage caught u superb gnme be­

hind the hni and oporuted his whip with terrible effect on umblllouM banc siealerm among tlie Broncos. Jimmy Bannon, tlic former Newark player, was In his element and pulled down a couple of dlfiXeiiti flies which aroused exclleiuenl In the ranks of the bleacherJtefl close to his icrritury.

Pappalau. wdio pitched for the visitors, started off w^rll, and U whs not until tho fifth Inning that tliv Bnllors Kcor»'d, 1 '\vt» errors and nno single and a double In tli‘d period netted two runs for Kewnrk: in the sixth a two-bagger and two slngl'^s resulted In another run, and la the "IglUh two more were tallied on a pair of two- baggers And A single.

Bill Carrlck drove In the firfU run for the Ballora In the fifth Inning on a two. Xittgger to left field. Jones led off wUh a blnglo to left and Journeyed aroumi the

Slrut’k Old—By Killian rf. by Hughes 1; by NVwlou 3. Siiriifiee hits— Donovan, Crawfoid, lllll, MiUKun. Stolen bHsC“ iMoi-gan. Double' plays—I>on«:»Vttli, Ik'terson and Crawfoi-d; Al>steln. Peter* fion. I/.ird iind <''rawfnrd. Ult by pitched hall—By Ncwion ball—ConnorI, Umjdre—Mr, t.’<vnway. Tlme—Ono hour and fifty hilnulcs. Atiendanco—2.WK).

Basplmll 9Ltfl«President P. T. Powers on S aturday ap­

pointed Jack McC’arlliy, a f o rm ^ arbl- trutor of playa In Tho AmcrJ<'u)t League,a member of ihX! Easlern Lewgiio staff of

ipIrcB, which Inrreakes the f»jrve to six. McCarthy wa?s a spcvliitor al tho New-

In com-Natloiial

srk-ROchcfticr gjiinc yesterday piifiy uiMi .hirk Sh^rlilan, ilio League umpire,

oFrank McManus, tne Jersey City ca tch ­

er, Is out of the pRjiip with a split finger,OTjotiis Moron, ihe former Jersey City

pitcher, ehut out St. LjOuIs Saturday,pUchlng for (he i>lulud('!^<iju Nutiona.ls.by the soon.' of 3 to P. Sfuren gave the Cardlniila one hit. O

Wally Woods, the Jersey City third has»*nirin, who was replaced Iasi season by firaiil, and tlii.s year by Sviuelle, ex-

■Urciilt on CnTlok's" rirlvo" n rh r qtun.'ii.R ■ P '''''" protBC-nV,. .O I i l i o . I for In f'nf nolo of o, calchor. Wooda

* a L T u ro d at flra t^aao mi a^rrm ndir^io '*■'’* pracdBiiig: for tho position forMoran, Mah!!n* put the bull In tlip same | at™'m place. roMhlng flrat on Moran's poor | hi"throw. In sioa lln t aecond Ilornn threw ® Sood i ate nor

Newark clinched Itshold cn feurth place In the Atlantic I.«Ague pennant race yes­terday with a double victory over Allen­town, at the sAme time moving up on the Inlter, which Is third. Heading lost some ground through a defeat a t the hands of Kllswibelh. while th« reorgantted Eustons contlriTied to win at Pottsvllle’s expense

HesaltM At Y e s te rd a y ’s G am es. Newark 6, Allentown A (ftiwt game),

Newark fi. Allpntoen 4 (aecood game).Elisabeth pi. Reading 7.

Ration lA, PotUvllle 4. gtandInK of Ih e T ra m s .

W. LlP.C.I w . l . p .c .so tt TUI Elisabeth ..11 16 .423IK 111 (m:« TiiPRler .... 9 13 .*<W

.17 11 .0071 FMitavme ..10 lA .SH6

.12 11 6221 l-ktslon ...... 6 ID .240

- . on Moran'throw. In sicailng second Dornti th’r bad to-Moran and Carrlck scored, ruck- man then ended the inning hy flying out to Hayden. ^

In tho sixth, Mullen stariod mattera by ripping off a tw o-baggrr to left, scoring on Zsoher's wallop to centre. Jones fnlritory and Zachcr was nipped »i thivd on a great throw by Bannon. With two out Stttfittge retired tho aide by going out

, on a grounder to Pappalau.Mullen duplicated his performance nf

the elxth Inritn^ Ir, the eighth by opc.nihfc up with anotlHT two-bagger to left lieR i fiil, Sharpe advanced him to third on a sacri.flee, ajtd Zacher si'ni him home on a | belt to left field. It was Jimmy Jones's turn for a whack and he welted Hie halt to left for two sacks, scoring Zacher. Jonett reached th ird base on a daring etenl but was left on the bag ss Ijtanagc and Carrlck went out m quick order, the form­er Alrtklng out. and <^arrlck retiring on a weakling to Pappalau. The score;

NEW ARK.A.B. R. H.

RvRtlIng . flronklyn Allentown Newark .,

H esn lls o f J^a ln rd ay ’s GniikeH,Allentown) 11. Nenark fl.

rottftvIMe 3, KUssKbelh 1.ReaciinK 3, Brooklj'i) 1 ftlrst gnme).

Reading 8, Urooklyn 0 (BPc'd game).Easton ti. Cheater 2.

G am e To-iiu>*Elizabeth at Newark.Newark Atlantic Irfugucrs revellefl in

basoball vlclorles yosterday afternoon, winning a douhle-headcr from Allenlown At Morria rai'U. 1i was the first lime that the locals puUwl off such a stunt, mid a big share of the honors for tho dual triumph went to Hammy Hope, the Newark twJrler. Hope pitched both games and Ircld the lieavy hitting vIbU- ora down to twelve safelU'S In tho two contest a. The Newark play era barked him up in gntirt tnyjo and hit opponune- ly heliSnd him. The games were hard fought. Newark taking the first by the score uf G to 3 and the second tiy 5 tn 4.

Tliere was nearly an hour's dolHy In siartUig the Ural gunie, owing to iJu- lar- diuess of lli6 Allentown team, The v Isitora played im exhibition game nt Elizabeth m the morning nnd It was 2:40 o'clock heforo the first gmiie here wns utartfd. althougli it had been booked to begin a t 2 o'clock.

Hambttchcr began ihc first game for Newark with a two-bagger, which shot along the third base Ime out Into left field. H WAS left there, linwex'er, and there was no scoring until Abe last of the fourth Inning, when Newark broke the Ice and got one man home. With on© down, Westlake lifted a tw isting fl.v to left Held. heHtiua the return to second by an eye­lash. Davis followed with a emash over (I'inl and IVestlake scampered home.

Mopr held Allentown to three bits throughniit the game, and the flist of Ml' eunie In the fifth Inning, which fie- \*-Ii>perl imo a run. Griffln opened Hie •session with a snnrolifng single ,lo left and udvaiH’od to second on McDonttld'a sa c ri­fice. llnTbush struck out and W fstluke had (frlflin healen In an eff'irt to steal

failed to cover the base properly and "Pop’s" well meniu throw palled out to left field, allowing Qrlffln In come home. Newark went ahead

Newark will wind itp Ra home aeries again with two runs in the fifth, largely j with the ntiffulgp. who are achoduled to 1 due to the visitors' errors. Fay got a life

Friday, Saturday on McDoimld's fumble, took second on a iv. <)n Sunday night th e Bnllora '

leave for KuffKlo, where they are sched­uled for three jjamcH, m aking seven

DATE SET FOR THE BIG MATCH

Johns and Voorhds to Roll Post­poned Championship Series

Here on Friday Night.

WINNER W ILL MEET SMITH

Umpire Fteve Cuwack, who enwr Ed Mc- Donakl, ihe new Newmk utility Snilelder, pUiy In the New Vork S tate Loague l,v«t W0 H8OU, s.nld ycHterduv at WiedeninHyer's Park, that hejia.s ffiiled to see any short

The date of the postponed aeries In the Greater New York and Intercity Individ­ual Championship Tourney between Johns, of this city, and Johnny Voorheiw. of Brooklyn, has been i d for Ftldfty night on Ihe Oxford alleyw. The m atch Ip un Important fine in th a t the winner wdll meet Jimmy Bmlth, who has completed hie echedule, In a roll-off for the rhamptem- ehlp, Johns and Voorhels are Lied, each having won twenty-five aeries and loat eight, while Smith's record reads twenty- six victories and eight defeats.

All three men, who arc In line for the title, have rolk'd great tenplris In the o 'di pclllion, The plmwlug of Johne has hc-n particularly goo<l. The local man won every series so far on the Oxford allcyp. slxieen 111 all, and if h© defeats 'V'oorh* iH he will have a clean record of home gamcH. JohUB also wi-m nine of i]|>- seventeen pprles he hns rolled on oppo- nenl'n alleys. VO''irhPls loot only ono aerlea cm h is . home drives. He whs beaten by Johns in a match in which th« local man averaged 237.

The first .average prize Is also at stiike In the Johns-Voorhels match. Both men have a mark of 2U5 and a fraction nnd only a few plna separate

EISELE RE-ELECTED a P T A IN .lY 'ell-kTiown A th le te A gain riio a e it

to l/CAil N ew ark .4ra<lemy T ra c k T eam fo r Next Y ear.

Captain Frederick H. ElKrle. nf the New­ark Afad'-my track iciim, has be n unanl- moiifily chosen to succeed hlmwelf ns leader of Ihe Arademy boyfi for another year. This Is the aeroml year In succes­sion that h© has born given ihe honor wiihout a dissenting vole.

ElBCle had <>xpei.‘tert in enter Princeton ne.xi full, blit has decided to mice an extra year's cnurHo nt the Academy. HIb pr^a- ence on the leant nem year wdll add strcngili to th€ Rggrcgfitloh, as he In one of the best athletes In ihe school: B©-filden hln ability on a truck man. Eisele in a good hflsketball player, and w'Bs caplaliv of the Academy flv© loat .eenson.

OTHER ATLANTIC GAMES,

lowed wfth a n n th w e ra rk to the ter ' I'Cague so fa r thle ' third, bm SwarneyspasuhDonald

playing a faster game th an Me- j aid last Bpason.

Engle. T. t ......... 4 0 1 2 nMaliHnjt* e. e ...., . . . 3 If *1 3 iCockman, 3b...... ... . 4 fl 1 3 6Mullen. 2b .......... 3 *> 2 1Bharpo* lb ........... 0 0 n 0lecher, c. f ........*.** 4 1 3 3 1)Jones. 1. t ......... . 4 1 8 (1ptannge* c. fl 1 0 [\Carrlck. p ........... 1 1 0 4

Totals ............. n 12 15ROCHESTER.

Bannon, c. f ........' tTayden, I. f ........

Clancy, lb .......Fliinagan, r, f . . , , IfOudenFlAger, 2b.1.4cnnox, 3b...........Moran, s. a..........Doran, c ..............,*Pappalau, p .........•Byrnes ...... .

Totals ...............

A.B. R, H. P.O. A.,* 4 0 ■* 3 1,* 3 0 1 1 0

0 0 13 02 n 1 0 U

.. 3 n 0 1

.. 3 0 0 3 33 0 0 1 "• 33 0 0 o ft5 0 0 ii 5

*. 1 0 0 0 02S 0 ' 4 '24 15

pninu in eleventh inrvl. 0 0 0 0 2 1 0. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

sluaLght with the BiPons.OTommy McCarthy le booked to niteh

tills afteruooi; agulnat Hocheater, while LaHelle will probablv offlGiate to-itiorrow. O

Charley Malay, of iiic BroncoB, tsi on the sick list with ah ulcerated sore th roat.

OAlthough the Broneofl excelled the Saiiora a t the Xuit and Ini fielding Saturday, Newark scored, a lucky win by the score of 6 to 3. O

A lter winning eighteen stra igh t gamcR In Ihf! TrJ-Slate League, H arrisbu rg 's winning streak was broken Saturday t>y Williamsport, tlie league leaders being defeated 4 to 1. O

fJharley Roy met Ills second defeat In the Tri-Stale League on Saturday, Johns­town hitting him safely thirteen tim es and defeating Wllniinglon by the score of 7 to 2.

In the event of rain preventing N ew arklay or

game wMl be played on

■ Newark ......Rocbepter ............. 0 0 0 D 0 0 0 0 D—0

Two-baae hits—Mullen 2, Carrlck, J oiipa.

and Rirtdicstfir playing either fo-da; to-morrow, a game wMl be , .Wednesday, th a t day being an open date for both teams. O

On collage diamonds. Saturday. H arvard deferttnd Columbia, 2 to 1: Brown shut out PennsylvanU', 6 to fl, and Holy Cross de-

“ feated TVesleyan, 8 to 7.E C>[ The. Pierce and Bennett public school I r.Tnep ph^yed -n record game In Boston Sat- I unlay, the contest going twenty*^lght In- filngs, the former team winning by the

score of 4 to 3. Ooodale. the Pierce team 's etoien bases^-Mahimg. Mullen, ' Jones’ r pJR’hftr fnimed iwenlv-Uvo men. and Coit- Wild pltch-Pappiiiaii. Uase on bnlin-Car- I »'>">« pitcher., atrackrlok. H it by p licher-H ay j™ , Mnhllng. I 'weniy-one p lam a .Sacrifice hits—Mullen, SinuiJe, Carrlck. I y^„\, u ■

■ struck ou t-Pappalftu 2. !.ett on basea-I Newark V, HochPgier 3, Double p lay s- a *1 Carrlck, Mahllng and Sharp?; Moran, ,

Lioudenslagcr and Clancy. Time—One hour [> ‘ ^O^ens^^^A^t'imdnn^i^ Uniplre-M r. Umpire Owens B.ays that Milwaukee hasOwens._ Attendance-J*(KX). 1 orti^irly crowds a t ilk ball gumoe

• , country.A W m T rA n iC A r iT C Cl T i r r C D t I thl« Ib most rem arkable, be-A lu I lK iL lU i L H A u U Il O L U u u n K 5 | cause beer Is sold In large qunntUtes a t

__________ _ , the gauies In that city, nnd St is very« few ..At «. I rfcldom that any disorder prevails, either T w elv e P ie t e r s A re n » f t te g 0%er | in knocking players or roasting utnplree.

ih e .»00 Mericp w ith W ellueeL e a d e r o f t h e Refxolerji.

Twelve players i,n j;he Am erican LeagueHEYNIGER IN THE LIMELIGHT

are batting over 300 per cent. Bohby Wnl- ls.ee, of St. Louie, la showing the way, :

, w ith an average of 356 per cent., while j ' Niles, uf St; Ivdbis, Is second, with 233 pi-r : cent. The averages of those h iulng ov^r

.300 follow;

Pritirrtnn Pltolicri W ho D efea ted 'Ynle for Second Time* Hne Offer

to ifotn the Yanicccs._ , „ „ . The victory of Princeton over T ale Sat-

)onovan D etroit 2 ' t'>® TIeev. aefekted the Blueipencer, 'St. B H 3 6 0 '.Xl ' <lme *hl® season, by the.e .. ' ^ score of 4 to 3, has turned a ll eyes

1 ; toward H eynlger.; the Princeton tw lrler,3 1333 I who figured so largely In the tictory .

Wallace, St. L onls... 43 Ifm 21 B7 Thlelman, Cleveland. 3 12 1 4Nllee, S t Louts..........3u IK 19 33Lajflte, Cleveland...... 43 1B9 2D B2Pickering, St. Louis. 39 146 32 4;

3 327 Meynlger'a ^ rea t work In the box this— IPS. ®t. Louis. 89 IW 47 4 .322 ! season has made him a m agnet fo r m ajor

» 1“ m .« ■5JE* league managers, nnd last S aturday hisO iifefori ’ D etrolt'' ' M LW » ■« 2 I Work was watched by g, representativec S S i ? ^ i e J ^ t ^ d ‘ ::;.34 m w I i 5 If™™ •'i®Flick, C leveland,...;, 44 tS8 25 « 8 ,30T S"'* ' '"'•'o was sent there by C lark ^ i f .

J - - ■ \ ■ T ! ntli to.se© the youilgHter work. ^Q rlffllh* la anxious to secure Heynlger to bolsterHATIONAL LEAGUE .300 HITTERS I th© pXftf r hffA in h ls'j^seR elon an allur-

---------------- : Ing offer to join the Yankees a f te r com-I mencement. Other big Jeoffue m anagerstte liife ld tf e f C1ilc«go. Leads the

Regal«.r« w ith « I*er«ent«ge e f .8B3 fep F o rty D u n es .

HSv^vi^lclnfeldt, the Chicago third

, - _____ ,eagu<[ have made propositions to the Young slab I a rtist this aeasoti, . but they w ere all I turned down. It Is generally believed

tha t he wllh 2H)t consent to en te r the [ jlSrofesalonal ranks.L To Heynlg^r's superb boxw ork the 1 Tigers owe th lr victory over T ate. He ! had ten etrlkeouts to his credit in the

baiettflci^ leads the N ational League in batting w ith 0. percenUige of .833. having- a e e f Sherw ooi Magee, .the PhUadrfnhla | o,e hits to six. in the

pmec, I fpurth Inning he performed th e unusual stunt of slrfltlng out three Tale b atters on nine pitched oalls.

M tneldsr, who Is now In seco|id place, at*’points behind Ststnfeldt. llofroan, of 4 ,n t c ^ i Is th ird with .800 per cent. With

■' of H annifan, who has play-iK . 1*k8 game waa attended by tho old-lLrae™ I entbualasm th a t always m arks the eon-

the exception of ed In only six _Giants are not represented tn the .300 division of hitters. Those batting .800 or better follow;

G. AB, B. H.SH PC.Bilchte, P h lla ......... 5 10 2 S 0 ,36;Rteinfeldl, C hicago... 40 138 14 4« 8 .883Magee, P blla........... .. 40 150 is 49 0 .3J7tSvimme, St. Louts... T 10 2 5 1 ,313Boultoe. Boston..'.’. . . . 8 13 3 4 0 .303Hannifan, New York* 6 10 2 3 0 .300Hofman. 0 » ic a g o . . .v a Up 23 42 W JDO

RATIONAL LEAG U EB a s a l t s o f T « stev d « y fs G asse l. .

Msv York I* «t. aChlcMO A PfcllfldsmhI* fi. ^

Brooklyn 3, CliulTmiitl t (i«t gsmt)., ClndtmsU iL Brooklyn 2 73d 04iM).

. ItiMiklKff Of tk e rpctiina.' " ■ w , i . p c ;

CWottlp 1;,TO8 Bp*t«i a .'M: K«w 14 .874 u A T ff? M: Phllafl^phU M 17 B r ^ y s ...,I8 » .Ml)

fcuib^ug s . i l 18 .5381 iL Loots....... 13 8 ,m

tseCs between Princeton and Tale, I t wan reunion day for Tiger gmduate«e and In honor of the occasion the gan^e was the scsn0 .af mvoh pomp ood neramony.

■«--------------— —V ic to ry fo r V a lls b a rg li S ta r s .

The Vallabyrgh BlaVtt defeated the Broad A. C. on th8 fonner^s grounds, Boylan streets V altsburf^ yesterday a f ­ternoon by the score of n tb 7. The S tars secured tnirteon h its off Haver, the Broad tw iner. Zlmtaerman and F ltspatrlch dtd some heavy hatting for the S tars, the fonner securing, four ttafetjes and tn s la tter thPM. d a u b e r , the V ailsburgh i first baseman, knocked ont ft home run with two men on. bases in the fourth In­ning- ■ ’

— T-*— ---------A^lctory: f a r M prluglicld A* r* a.

•The Springfield A, C/ rlslted BerkeleyFielr"* --------- s . - . .the

pacrlflcf, atul provMCl whni Hope's ground- t r 'tvent between Bird's leg.s. Hfjpe went down to second on the throw-In. and crossed the rubber when Sweeney cut loose a double lo right. A double by Davln and Bucceaalve elngles by Fay and Tierno gave Newark two more runi* lit the hIxLIi.

Newark's last run came In the cighih Inning and was made by Fay. ^’ho ran all the way around lo third while Kelly waa being run down at the plate, and ho scored on Tlerno's single. Allentown reg­istered & count tn the aeventh on a double and a Flilgle. and another In the eighth on a base on balls, a steal o f second and a wild throw by Tvelly. The score:

NEWARK.

H rfld ln g S en ten by B H sn b e th an d I P o ttsv llle- Lnsea to th e

E n slo n T eam .8/jrHfll 10 tkp. E V E S r \ a S E W S .

KLTZABETH, Jun#* 10.—In a lieavy- hlitiivg game Elizabeth defeated Read-

[ Ing here, yesterdny iiftei'nunn, 16 in T, All I of tlie Ellzabetli players, particularly ; Bi-human and Wagner, htl the bull hftni.' The features of the gamo were dlffloult

eatclies made Hv Urane. Hchumtin and Wagner. The st-ore:

Reading. R.TI.E.! Kllzubrth. R.H.B,Clark, AS....... 1 3 2[Bchutnuii. If.. I! 4 0Cox, lb .......... 0 0 0 W^tigner. r f .... 2 4 0

SCOTS TIE THE WEST HUDSONS

Gain Chance to Battle for Soc­cer Championship by Defeat­

ing Bums Qub Eleven,

NEWARKS DISPOSE OF CLARKS

The ScnUlsb-Amarlcans of thH city dc- fi'iiu‘41 the Burns Club eleven of New Y'urk In a ’Naflunal Association Foolball !/Prt>fiu' content nt the flurrlHOn Oval, Harrison, yeslerdny afternoon by the

of 2 to 0. By Its victory the Scots ile«l the \Vp8i Hmlaonfl for Hrat place In the Uagno standing and will now have to pldy ii werU'rt for the tllle.

Th<- Ihu'ns H ub pul up a grand exhlbi- Uuti in iiie Ursi half of Ibe conieel when irprevi-nied thi* locals from scoring. Near Uui cml of the first period Connor look the bull tho whole length of the field, but n’hen neiir the bvuis' goal he made a bud kh.'k, Ihe leathtT going aboul two feet <)\‘i r ills- bob! posi.

The Hints showed some great speed In the Hei,oTul half uml jifter ten minutes nr play Roy lallted. Shortly nfterward AIv Gen, one of the Scots' rnrwnrds, sent n but one fit the Burns Club gonl, which Fiiir'wealher wjss unable hi handle. The llne*up;

Si'olllBh-Amprli'iins, Hums Club.................. . Gtml ...........FalfweHlhrr

Rennlk............... hulliJueK .......... DewarXVlIaon...... ........ [‘■’ullbark .......... RosslilHlr.................. HalfhMCk ................... EMUHosh. ................... Hftlfbftck .............. TnyloiCrnlK.............. . . Hiilfhsck . . .A. RoberlsmiFuulds.................Right wing......................lnce

. .-Riglil wing........McDonald.Centre Torwurd.......... Connor. . . . l.eft wing......... DonaiclHOti......Left w ing... .J. Boherlflonend of firnt half—fentllsh-

Americans 0. lUinis Clitb D. Final score— ScottlPh-AnierlcnUs 2. Burn« f’tub n. Ooala FCOTcd by Roy. MeGee, Time of halves— Forty-five inlnules. Heferee-^, Bunnis- ter, of PaliTBon.

ClDfUa I.ONF to \ p w a r k F .Tho Newark V. C. secured a hard-

earned viciory over the Clark A. A learn of East Newark, in a Ni^iliuml ABsOidatloii FnnibHll Lengiio gutne on the (!latk grouridfl. Eoat Newark, yeilcrdny. th*j 8vor« being L' lo Fully 1.200 penple wit-

Henderson..Floy..............McGee.........Cnlvllle........

Score a t

EASY WIN FOR WASHINGTONS

L oals Hammer the Ball Hard and Defeat West Pointers by

Score of 17 to 3.

TRAVERS WILLTAKE ON PROS

\

State Amateur Golf Champion to Gmpete in Fhiladelpiua

National Tourney.

U. S, G. A .’S PROGRAM IS OUT

ALBRIGHT BANGS OUT HOME RUN

A.B. R. H. P.O. A. K.Hambacher, 1. f.. .. 4 0 2 1 0 uSweeneiv. 311............ 3 0 1 1 4 0Weptlakf, c ......... 4 1 1 fi 2 IDavla, c .f . . . ....... 4 i 2 1 0 f)Kelly, 2h............. ..* a 0 0 1 '* 1Lamar, r. f .......... 3 n 0 n t) 0F«y, Ih ................ ... A a 1 n 1 0Tierno. 9. s ......... .... 3 0 1 I 19. Hope, p .......... ,.. 4 1 t) 3 6 0

Totals ............. ... 32 6 9 27 IG 3ALLENTOWN

A.B. H. H. T.O. A. E.Bird, s. s ............ ... 1 1 1 0 bLandgralf, 2br... ... 4 0 n 2 ] O'Streaeer, c. f ...... ... 4 il (I 1 il 0Middleton, c. f.. ... 4 1 1 4 n 0Ijembrecii. 3b.... ... 4 IJ 0 >} 2 uOrimn, r. 1......... ... 3 1 1 1 0 0McDnnnld. lb ..,., i) 1 11 1llttrbush, c ......... ... 4 1) ft ,T 2 1Miller, p .............. ... l> u ' (1 1 0

Totals ...... . . . . 29 a 3 24 17 4Newark . 0 0 0 1 2 2 0 1 - ttAltentown ......... . 0 0 0 0 1 0 ! 1 0— If

EJarned run»—Newark 3. Two-buso hlta— Hambftpher, Westluke. Sweeney, Davia. Middleton. Stolen haseii^I.Hndgrarr 2, KbUv. Bird. Wild plii-h—Hope. R-ises on balls-Off Hope 5, off Miller 1. FirM base on errora—Newark S, Allentown 2. Sncrl- flcB hits—Sweeney. Lamar. Tierno Mc’ Donald. Struck out—By Hope S, by Miller 3. Left on baseR—-Newark 6. A l^uow n o.

Heoond O am e AIro \ewit< iV"-Tho iBcond game brought cv,lW some

spectacular worlt on both aides, VTlewark opened up savagely on Murphy, AUeri- town’B crack twlrler. Hnmbacher dupli­cated, his feat of the first game by open­ing with a two-baggor over third, and moved up on a saerTflee- He waa caught between third and home on Lam ar's tap lo Murphy« but by some clever dodging eluded a half dozen Allentown players and safely slid across the plate. Lam ar waa perched on th ird when .the aoramble was over, and tallied later on Davie's sln- gle.

Allentown scored In the third on long hits by Slreaser and Allddleton, Two hlta with a aacriflee aandwlehed fn enabled the visitore to tie the score In the sixth. Newark made a game rally In the seventh, with two out, and again forged ahead. Ttamo doubled to centre, Hope singled to right ancT Hambacher placed a Texas leaguer back of short, scoring Tierno. Middleton made a wild throw to catch Hope a t third, and Sammy came home. Two hlla* tt dead baU and two er­rors enabled Allentown to tie the score again In the eighth. Newark won the game In Its half o f the eighth on a ba e <>*}'Halls and hits by Annatrong and Fife' which netted a run, A sensational one- h a n d ^ . catch by Arm strong In the ninth masted the vlsltors*^ hopes. The score:

NEWARK.

L<»wJp, p ........ 0 0 1Shield, cf....... & 0 3Curry. 2b.......1 2 1Mci..ane. 3b, p 1 1 0Tyler, r f ........2 0 uRobbins, c __1 1 XIBritton, If, p.. 1 1 *r Beard, If. 3b.. O 1 0

MIII.T, ib,Ciaue, ef........2 1 oRbemaeker. l X 0TTaye^. lb . .........2 b 2Don'er, Jb ..... 1 u '>Rerrv, c ......... 8 1 GOhl, p ................:i 3 ‘J

Totals ......... 16 lil 6

Hambacher I

Weat1ake» o .... Davlfl, di

Fay, lb ..,; . . .

Totals 33

A.B. H. H. P.O. A... 4 1 2 2 1.. 3 0 ft 1 4.. 2 1 ft 8 1.a 2 0 ft 0 0s 4 0 3 0 0

.. 8 1 ft 2 1,* 4 0 2 % 1.. 4 4 I 10 0.. 4 1 1 s 2

1 1 0 4

1 10 27 14

Totals ....... 7 9 6Reading ...............6 0 0 0 6 0 3 4 0 — 7Elizabeth .............0 0 4 2 4 0 0 6 *—10

Earned runs—Elizabeth 7. Reading A F irst base on errors—Rea cling 4. iClIzHbeth 3. I^eft on btiaea—Elizabeth B. Reading 6. Struck out—Uy Ohl 4. by Britton 1 F irst base on balls—Off Ohl 3. off Lewis 2. Pnased ball—Berry. Two-base bltH—Schu- nian, Wagner. Sacrifice hitw—Clark. Schu- nian. Wagner 2, Miller 2. Stolen haacH— Curry. Wagner, Rhemacker, Berry, Ohl. Dnuble plays—W-agner and Miller 2; Rhemucker. unaaslsted. HU by pitcher— Hayes. Time—Two hours. Umpire—Cul- lom.

E n slo v , IS t P o tta v ll le , 4.NppWflf I h c E V B S l \ f i VEWN.

POTTSVILLE, June 10.—Terrific b«m- bardment by iSaston of Poitflville'e two best pItebeTB, Dcchert and SUlen*. In thv first four Innings a t the TumhJ,|ng Run Park yesterday afternoon gave Easton an easy victory, 16 to 4. The score:

R, H. E.Easton ............... 10 0 1 2 0 6 0 3 0-lR 10 2Pottavllle ........... 0 1 0 6 0 0 y 2 1— 4 111 1

Batteries—Woods and Sullivan; Dechert, Blllery, Meeghau and Edgar.

A U an lta L e a g u e Kotes.Xfi|M fiptelal police a t Morris Pork went

on jmlka before ihe s ta rt of the first gam s yesterday berause the managoment desired to reduce the mimbcr of men wlio are on duty there. After about fifteen mlnules of parleying the management gave In. but served notice tha t the cm would bfl enforced to-day. when Newark plays Elizabeth- The policemen usually placed outside the grounds to gather in the bolls knocked over the fence stayed Inside yesterday and during the second gome nearly a dozen balls were tost by being batted outside the enclosure.

* • •President Dobbins introduced ft new

umpire named McCormick, ■ who hails from Elizabeth, to the local fans yeater- dny, There was considerable kicking over his decisions on balls and strikes. . . .

Brooklyn anil Cheater will play a double- header a t Brooklyn on Wedneeday.

* * •hlewark tiaa il^ned Fhll Bonner, of

Philadelphia, who, will be given a trial a t second bate. Bonner played a few games with the Philadelphia Athletlce In lS«.

SATURDAY SPORTS.There wan a hot race for the t«Am

sup a t the anniversary shoot of the Mont­clair Oon Club Saturday. The home team of five men w6n the trophy with a total of ?12. The New York A. A. squad was second lYlth 2J1. South Bide Gun Club of Xhls city was third with 100, and the Rahway Quit Club came fourth; breaking

TiPjaSvd th** ennipft. Dunlop aiici rimmu- P011 tal!i!< d (lifi Newark leuin's gOiUs, while Tjrtw made the Clarks' only point.

The s<^"rlng In the first half wea even, each Ride getting one goH.1, Dunlnp dnlim' the trick for Newark shortly jifter pt.iy began, while Jvriw Bcorcd for the Clarks juBt before llnie waa culled.

Rnili elevetiH put up a stubborn fight In the anrfirid hall, and It W'lis only after tlii* hurdesL kind of playing near the end uf the contest Ihnt Thompson scored Ili6 winning goal for the Newurks, The link­up;

Newark F. C. Clark A. A.Mi-Rorer................. Oonl ..HuntC'uthlll................ Fulll»ackr............ TowmauJam es Ijeggiit.. FulUmck .................YoungM cKay.............. HnlfbHck ...........Rumrn' i]M o n ig 0 m e r y H :i I / hue k ................. 11Dunlop................ Hult'buek l^>noMcLeod............ Right wing ........C. Flsclu?;I'honipson . HJghl wing .......................TaylorFenw ick...... Cenire I'lMWai'fl ....... McNeillM clnnes...... Left wltig ....... LawJohn Leggitt.... Left wing ............... NeHnon

Score al end of first lialf—Newark 1, Clark 1. Final Rcpre—Newaik 2, CUrk X. Goals—Dunlop. Thompson, Law. Time of halves—Forly-flve mi miles. Referee—J, Talt.

Hy sending Pitcher McDonough's curves to all cornvr.i of the field, the Washlngluu A, A had little trunbli' In scoring a 17 to 3 vict'uy over the VX'ewt Point B. B. C, of Rronklyn. on ihe former's grounds, W nglii Btrcct. yesterday afternnon. The Wnahingtons made sevenlpen hits off Me- Ponounh'R offerings, including two dntihlc.*, two triples and a home run. ( ‘iu|»brook. Ihe Wushlngtonw' twlrler, held his appoiiMhlfl down tu one somi. h hit. for Hi\ iniimuR, after whJcb he im up a till and the \\\'^^ Pointers seiMired five hUs in n row. which, together u lth two er­rors. neiieiJ the visitors three rmiK. Al- brlghi f.e< ijrfcl three hits for the Wash- ingtonegniif of ine blngles Going for the clm iit.

"■'riie Wat4lilhgtons startril In their run getiniK lu the first Inning. McDonough fuimt'jl Mviklin, the first batter up, but MoniroH.H Mingled over third base and Wildernan hroughl lilin home when he m u one lo drop left field for two bases, Cau.shrrKik came in for a single, which s<‘iii W'jld' man iicrosa the rubber. Ben* wmk Mil I'.v uriB of McDonough's benders, hut Albright and Htiiitn ended ihe scasUm by seniling pop flics to the pitcher.

Afl»-r two men were out In the second liiniing the Washlrigtuns again started In in ( lotituig iti« bull. Langheld and O'NcU were easy outs. Mcrktln singled and Monlrnaa w'as given a ilfo on flrat on an error t>y Doran. XX' IIdeinon dropped one ovtr Bi-uund baae, Merkllh acoring. Cnus- hrook ^viii H slow grounder to the first baBcnmn. w)io fumbled It. ttJlowIng Ottus- Di‘03>k to reach first safflly. Hens hit lo i.>or|in. wlio let the ball get through hla legs, Hiid Montrose tAltlod. With the bascH Hill'd, Albright sent one over lliu centre tlejcl4<i‘'a head for u home run.

The W.LHhlngloos failed to scare In the tlilnl wchHion, but secured one tally In the fourth, unotliur one in fifth, and three in (he ajxili innIngH. Caimbrook lot up In tlie Kvvvhth Inning, nnd threo singles and an c rrjr netted two runs. West Point iai)l<’4| another nm In Its half of the iighih. when XVogner hit to right field for n h■1nL‘

A biiHv Oil balls, two slnglftn and a pair of triples ncltpd the Washlnglons four mure runs In the eighth. The score:

Mf'rklln, 2b... 1 ftiPwiiH*, c... .. 0 0 0Muutroee* If. 2 2 fl Thlrnt* 2b.. .. 0 2 2Wlldemun, 3b S 1 Wagner, If. .. 1 (1CniiPbrook, p 3 U KoflKler, 3b. .. 0 0 2Bsn*. r f ........2 0 Fiircht* lb .. ■3 1 0 2Albriffhl. Ih .. a » 1 Doran* aa... .. 1 0iinhm, c f ...... 2 2 0 fimilli, cf.., .. 0 2 0]4intfhel[l, C-. Z 0 McDonough, V 0 0 0O'Neil, SH...... 0 0 Wood, r f .. . .. 0 0 0

Tothls ........n 17 2 Totals ... .. 1 1 1

Cifiod F is h in g a t S en b rig h t.Codfish are sllll bemg caught off Sea-

bright. ChurleB Brundt. fishing on the Taurus, captured ono iwelve^oundcr. Ho also caught Your sea bass and three Llnck- flsh. John OX>erg got one cod, alx sen b«sa and four blackftsh. A silver eel weighing seven pounds W’as cauglil by A. Camindy. Joseph Tschlriiait landed a slx-poimd fluke and four sea bass. Mrs. II. Hmlili caught two fine porgles. Other catches were: K. Rumpf, eight sea baas and eight ling; Paul Ferry, eight sea baas and four ling; Joseph Pfelalsr, alx aea base end five ling; F. Meyer, seven sea bass and tw'o ling; O. Kcatenbaum, five sea hasB and two ling; A. Willis, six sea bass and three ling: J. M. RclUy, five seu baas and three ling; Gub Scherer, six sea bass and four Hug.

Bird. H. X ....,,,.......l^ndgTttff. 2b...**;. Blr<!B»CT. 1. f , . , , . . . ;Middleton, c. ( .......Lembreeli, lb , ........Grimn, r. f , . . . . . . . .McDonald,Kite,Murphy, p , ; ............

Totals .„ Newsik .: Allentown

ALLENTOWN.A.B. R. H, P.O. A. B.

, i 8 24

H el^le SnUinlay ntternofm amt dvfcuUdB erlu '

- to lit. The Hpiifljffleldi run* in tbs Am lotiini. .

. eley MelithtB A. C. by the score <>t T6 to .ut The HpHn^Aei,^ tallied Utlrteeo

^Earned n im -M ew ark L Allentown 2. Two-base h l t - '^ t n o . Stolen bases-F ay , I.a,^CTa«. Wild jrttchr-Morphy, Bm b on b a l ls -M Hops £ H it % pitcher—By Hope 8. Hirst base on "etTOrs—Allentown I. SacrMcs hits—Sweeney, streaser, Mc­Donald. Stm ek out—By Mope 5, by Mur­phy 8. Left on- bases—Newark 5. -Mien- town 8. Time—One hour nnd forty-bv* minutes. Umpire—McConnlck. Atteod-saoe-AUO,

Attcnd-

W tarsets. P, V. Carlouah made the best average In the flfteen-bird event, wlnnina lour out ol seven. C. W. Feieenspan. ofth e 'S ou th Bide Gun Club, wen In good form also, and made some good scores.

• • •A. S. Linrfley carried off the chief honors'

a t tho monthly shot of the Smith Oun Club. He broke fo rty -e ig h tta rg e ts h? the fltty-Wrd handicap. W. McMahon wnS seconA • ii «

Cricket players were busy a t Branch Brook, The Nesrark Club defeated the Hudson County eleven by the score of 71 to 52 In a Mew Jersey League match. Es­sex County won Us flrst game In ths league competition, downing (he St. Ron­alds of W est Orange, » fo 1(. The 0. N. T. and Elisabeth y . M. C. A. elevens were prevented from playing because they had no pertall from the P ark CTommis- sicn. F a te r^ n A. won from Bound Brook a t Paterson, IBS to 54.. . .

Chrtat ChnpBli nf. E ast Omugs won tlj* cham ^nM tlD la the tta e k mstrt of the Choir Athletlo Ustguy, held on the new Ashland Ovat, t a d r e c i te d the point cup. Grace Church of w anfee was second.

Mercershurg Aesdemy won the Ameri­can ftiterchouwtlc nteet held by the Uni­versity of Chicago a t Marshall Field.d

Qllbfrt H o m x , o f Montclair. w*i clioBon captain of w itlUm a CoUiffo track toMi tor w t Y«ora

N rv rn rk 91nrlc«men K l^ctad to OtUcc.P H lL IJP eH t'R G . Jiina 10.—The State

Sporf«mf'n'B Asauclatlon, w’hich held n three clays' fihooi hen* laat week, has elected the following offieern for the en- ftuhiig year: Prealdfiiu, I>r. C, M. Luckey, of ftainfleld; vice-president, George H. Plercev Newark: secreiarv. Charles T. Day Newark; ireusurer. lanac H. Ter­rill 'N ew ark; board of trustees, W. M. Houev. Somerville; C. T. Doy, Newark, and U. P. Voftpler, Plainfield; attorney, Francirt P. Noti Jr., Newark, legiBlativo committee, C. T. Daj^ Newark, and M. Tioopv, Somervllh*. The next annual lour- nument will be held al Jersey City.

---- --------- • --------- -----DDWXflVG TO-MGHT,

F ra ternal I^eaguo—Mnsona vs. Odd Fel­low's; ^Montgomery allej H,

Bub Tourney—West Knds vs. Puritans, Pnrltniifl s'a. ironiiiflft A. r , Ironaldea va. HnWihorne; Bub alleys.

Tuxedo Three-Man Tourney—Orange A. A . Slicker, ^ iiltu h le ; Tuxedo alleys.

South Side ThVee-M?in 'Tourney—Bay View, tirmoH, Mueller, South Side alleys.

irauuots Two^Man Tourney*—Pftxr,art and Zflzznll, Mftr*?h and Terwtlllger, Bol- it-n and Stfln; Jroauole nlleya.

Foreatere' League—Passaic A va. South End B; Central nlleys.

ROWING.M iddles Are R ovrlns Ditlly.

ANNAPOLIS, Md.p Jim# 10*—I t h a i been arranged that the members of the first and second crews of the N aval Acadeiny, with Coach Richard Olendon, and prob­ably Lieutenant Commander K. E. Invln, wUi leave Annapolis for Poughkeepsie on Friday next, and will occupy the Ever- Blades, the houseboat of Colonel Robert M. Thompson, of New York, as traintng quarters. T rainer Jack McMoster willleave next Wednesday, In order to mako pieparatlons. Since Thursday the mem* bars of the crew have hod nothing to dobut to follow Coach Glendon'# orders, aud U r. Glendon, for the first time during his four seasoni ihere, has not had the in^ Urfereuce of the rigid academy roiuine tn his practise work. The crews have been getting on the w ater morning and afternoon* and will continue to do so until they leave Annapolis.

H a rv a rd O arsm en A rriv e .GALE'S FERRY, Conn.. June 10.-The

H arvard freshmen* the first of the C an- bridge rowing contingent to reach herc^arrived late yesterday afternoon and were taken up the river from New London In tne Hai^'ard launch to Red Top, Theirshells had preceded them. The Harvard varefty crew will come to«day In charge

‘ Mans ■ • " ------ -----------------■ *,of M anager George W hltner and J ^ a t a n t U unagor "T eddy ' BooeevoU Jr. The tear Tale crew* epent their Orat Sunday In camp peacefully, attending church a t

ew London tn the morning. They werekept In their quarter# In the afternoon by heavy ehowera. Captain Ide anld that ft waa doubtful whether the (our-mlle couree would be tried to-dav aa originally plan­ned.

CoraeH Oferaaneii Greeted.POUGHKEEPSIE. June lA -W Ith the

arrival of Ihe ComdU crew# the old Inter.collegiate rowfatg courae on the Hudaon la beginning to take on a buay look.Cbmell launelt UiiVed Mat evening, and

..........................................■

The_ ___ - Jharua of wblatlcs

from all the ateam craft m the harbor."W e thought It batter to eome to the

Hudaon earlier thgn uaual.'' aald Coach Courtney, "becauae the acaaon was ao bfeckward a t Ithaca that fee , believed unore favorable conditions might be found on tim Mudauri. -AJp to ihia ttma It haa not been poaaible to round out the van ity eight ‘to any wbara near tba CorneU itgod- a r t . -

m - '

I W ashington ........2 6 0 1 1 3 0 4 •—17j WcBI PolnU......... 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 ^ 3I Earned rune—Wanhlngtona M, West i Points 2. Two-baaa Iilts-W lldeman,I Ralim. Three-bftHti hltfl—Merklln, BenZa 1 Honie runs—Albright, Wiigner, Hlolvn I baBB.-* - Albright 2, Cftusbrook, Mprklln,I Langhcld, Dor^n. Base uh bftIl»-Off

McDonuuKb 1. KirBt bafre on (urors— WaBhlnglnn 4, West Points 1. Btrnck out —By t*Hii'shruok 4, h.v Mt^Donough 2. Left on bases—Washlngtonfl 10. Weal Points 6. Time—One hour and forty minutes, Urn- pirn—Cadue. Attendance—3,000.

E u r e k a A, C.# TfewurU A. A., 7. By making a grand ninth Inning rally

the E ureka A. C, defeated the Newark A. A. by the senre of B lo 7. Tli© Newarke were Ipadlng until the eixth Inning by nix runs, but the Kurekas landed on Knoth, the Newark twlrler, In the ninth inning nnd secured seven runs, which were enough lo give then a victory by one run. The score:

R H EEureka A. C ......... 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 7-8 W’ 4Newark A. A....... «(101 13 00 0-7 10 4

B atteries—Shea ran ami E, Blckinger; KiiuiU and Cavnuaugh.

O ra n g e V alley , l.’li A tins It. B« C«, TaThe Orange V^allt y A. C. won from the

AMaa K. B. C. of Jersey City a t Orange Valley yeaterday arifnioon, the score bo- itig U lo 7. The Vull'.'ya were ombatted, thirteen h its to nine. i>iit twelve ernirs w«‘ro made by the All;m players, which helped the home nine greally In tallying. The Bcore:

R H .E .Orange X^alley....... 9X00 0 0 0 0 *—13 9 3AUaa n. B. C......... 0 IM» 0 fi 0 6 2 0 - 7 13 12

B atteries—Taggart an»l McCarthy; Zehu* bftuer, Cornwall and IlflliT.

R a tto n a l T u rn e rs . 4 1 I ru u s ld e s , a.At tho W est Bide OvrU, yesterday morn­

ing, tliB National Ttiruors defeated the Ironsides by. She sror'e of 4 to S. A crowd of fully 3,000 ppopio wltrjf'-s.ied the conte.il, which wits iTiarkf'd by fast fielding by both teams. The scor

R H ENationals ............... 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 ( L - 4 7 jIronsides ............... OOOO'OOOSO— 2 6 3

B atteries—Pehn and l^anghcld; Ulrich and Oliver.

V a ils b u rg h A. O.g 2 )W o o ils l4 e A. T., (Reeves’s pitching for the Vallgburgh A

C. was the feature of the tam e, In whlfh hla learn defeated the Woodslde A. C.. tho form er's grounds yesterday srtcr- noon, 2 to 1. Reevea let his opponchta down with three hlis, and struck out b.ri bftttcrfl. Tho score;

R H 1:Woodslde ............... 6 0 0 e i 0 6 0 # — 1 .1 iVallaburgh ............ OOOCOflOOS—2 4 2

Batterie»~W . Cocyman and Clements; Reeves and Leary.

P a r k w a y A. C., 8 , D olm a A. C., 3.Heavy hitting marked the baseball

game, In which the Parkway A. C. of K earny defeated the Dolma A. C, of this city. I to 2. a t the Parkway Oval, H arri­son, yeaterday afternoon. The score:

R, H,EParkw ay.A , C ...... 4 8 0 0 e ( ) 0 l * - . 8 l ] SDolma A, C ........... 0 2 0 00 0 * 0 0 -2 11 1

Batteries—Lloyd and Christie; Wilson and Klelnow.

i t , O e n e d le ts , 8 | E ssex B. B. C» 1.The St. Benedict B. B. C, won from the

Essex B. B. C. on the latter'e grounds, Thomas and Dawson streets, yesterday afternoon. 3 to 2. The ecore:8t. Benedict........... OOO J O l O O O - j ’ 3Essex ......................0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 -2 4 8

B atteries—Hoelxel and Felver; Felin and Reilly. ____

Orlfetaal A ll-S tars, d | H lgklaada, t .The Original All-Stars lourneyed to the

Atlantic H t^ la n d s yesterday afternoon and defeated the Highlands. 4 to 2. Ths score;

R H EA11-8tars .............. 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 * O-4' 9 iHighland ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0-3 3 2

Batteries—Mills and Speary; Noonan and TeWy.

43aH r*et F . C» T| R o se lle B, B. C.. 6.Tho C arteret F. C. won from the Ro­

selle B. B. C. a t Roosevelt yesterday afternoon, T to (. The score;

R. H. E.Carteret F . C........ 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 «-7 8 2Roselle B, B, C ..,. 1 0 0 1 * 0 0 2 2-6 . 7 2

Batteries—Andres and Freeman; Lloyd and CMWigJf.

' ‘S i lv e r L a k e , 1B| O rie n ta l A, C., B.The Bllysr Lake A. A. defeated the Ori­

ental A, C. a t Silver Lake yesterday a ris rn o e^ 1$ to 8. The enOTO;Silver l> l te . . . , . . , . , 0 2 4 0 3 2 0 lr»-;W14 2O rien tA rr................ 0 0 2 2 2 2 0 0 0- 8 T *

B atteitM -TT«yls and Boltetti TuUy andWdkdII.":,

Jercgie D. Travers, the Montclair golfer, s lio defeated Max Behr. uf Morria Coun­ty. by 7 up und 6 to play In the final fur the Slate clpimptunshlp a t Uaitueml on Hilurday, la going to Compete In the na- llunnl open a t the Phlludelphla Crinket Cluh, June 2* nml 21. Travers told a NEWS representative on Saturday that he wanted tu aee what he could do agatnil the prufesSInnais. The State champion Is also going to play. In the In­vitation tournam ent a t the Wilmington Country Club on Thursday, Friday and Saturday uf thta week.* « *

Condition! are out for (he thirteenth annual am ateur champinnablp of the United S tale! Golf AsaoclalioD, to bo held over tlie link# of the Euclid Club of Cleveland, Ju ly 9, 10, 11, 13 and 13. Thla corapetUlon le open in hII goUere belong­ing to otubtt which arc memberi of the United S ta te i Golf Araoclatton and to tliooe foreigner! vielUhg tbie country who may be Invited hy the executive commit­tee of the meeoolatlon.

The priiea will conelut o f the H ate- meyer Cup and four mcdali. The <tttp ih&ll be held for the year by the olub from which the winner ehail have enter­ed. A gold medal will go to the winner, a iiHver medal to fhe runner-up, and bronze mcdnla to the Beml-fiiiultiiB, The

filayer making the loweet score in the hlrty-slx-hotv qualifying round wilt >w- celve a epeclnl prize.According to the program, elghwei)

holes wlU T>« played on the firet day itnil ft like number un the iiecand. The tnirty- iwo player# m aking the loweat ncoree nt thirty-six holes shall then compete a t eighteen-hole m atch play until tlie final round, which ehail be a t thlriy*e1x hotel. All entries a re subject lo (he appraval of the executive commUtee and must be re­ceived by the secretary, W. TVllowcs Mor- Kun. not lAier th an 0 P. M>, Munday, July 1.

K. M. Byers, of P ittsburg, in the present chnmrioti. H e won hte title a t ICnglewood lest July, defeating Qeorge Lyon. oC‘ Toronto. Canada, In the final round* i Byers, who is now abroad, competed re- ' cently In the am ateur cUftitiplonihlp tournam ent of G reat Britain at fit, An­drews. but lost in the first round.

* * »

E, r . MllUr won the eighteen-hole medal play hundicftp a t M onlrlalr on Baturdny wtih a card of 92* ir>—77. Paul Harrlet^n had g gross ftoore of &,* * •

The ball ew eepstakes s t the Rosevilie' Gnlf Club on S aturday was won by Elmer Wood, with a ca rd of S7, Jl—70, At the i t>H«x County rpu iU ry Club E, F. Ban^ ' fiird worked his w ay to the final round In the competition for the Bailey Cup*« * •

There wore tw enty-one players oa a side in tho team matoh between North i Jeraey and Hackensack over the former's links on Saturday. North Jersej^ gion I t to 3. A return m atch will be pinyed a t Hackenaack Ihe la tte r part of July, *• « «

In the S tale Tournam ent nt Bnitusrol last week the Englewood golfers iimdo n "killing.'' They iwgan on the nmt d a y : hjr winning the team banner, and in addf- ' tion tu that the four members of the auo- eeasfiil team received medals. lOswald Klrkby also gut a medal for having to w score In the qualifying round. OrJ Batur- day Klrhbj- got a prise for tile best xross senre fn tho handicap and Jnother for winning out In tho first beaten eight. Other Englewood winners were R. D, Webb nnd Fred Bnaro.

* * •

The second mnnual championship of the Women'e Kastern G<df Aesoclatlon and trl-cIty m atches for tho Ortsenm Cup wlUj bo played this week over the links of tho Cnunliy Club of Atlantio City. T h e , championship le on for to-morrow and Wednesday, coudlUona calling for thirty* six holes of medal play.• n «

Alec Smith, the Nassau professlonaTg wXio is abroad preparing for the open title of Great B ritain, is on hli game. I t t ' a recent matoli a t Carnoustie he mode the course In 72* w ithin a stroke of the record*

SCHOOL PROTESTS POSTPOHEDAetlon A g iila st ThlrteOBtll Avew««

lo sH ttttlo n * W in n e r o f P o in t Bnw<* n e r , D o w n f o r T o -m o rro w ,

Antlon on the p ro trs ts mad« by tha Can-, trol Avonue School against awarding tba championship point banner to Thlrtaontli. Avenue School tu. ths winner of the a n - ' nual field day m eet of the Public School I Athletic Association, held a t the Orange Oval, last Thursday, was laid on the tab le , at a special m eeting of the executive com- mlltoo, held a t tha University Club, Bat- uniny night, for fu rth er consideration a t ani;ther meeting, to bo held to-morrow night. I t le claimed th a t a number of th e ' Thirteenth Avenue School pupils com­peted In two field events. In violation ot the rules, and the aotUm was drferrod be­cause Principal Cqx, of the Thirteenth Avenue School, waa unable to attend tho meeting. ,The protest against Ixjuls Kado, of tha CentruS Avenue School, who won the twelve-pound shot, on the ground that he was over eighteen years of age, Wua thrown out. os It w as proven th a t hs was not over th e age limit. Another proteet, mode by th e Sum m er Avenue Schoo., against a substitu te used by Burnet Street School In th e lOO-yord dash, went over for an Investigation.

LM’s M sl Notliliie Parlors,260 WASHINGTON ST., s t ..

Iroquois B nlld lng . Newark, N. J ,Open BveiilDBSa H. P* Cox* IHftr*

OEJT THE FACTfl ABOUT LEE'S FAMOUS MJSFITtt,

Evflir xsntiftnt ib work nr Hym*noted lailars. There la an aBE»uraTic<‘ Ihai It le batter than the vary hf^i of rrailymatle clotb- tng[. Hundreiis nf eulU* hrre wnre made to order, depoalta pftid on them and lUe sHrmentji never called for. Mnny haii' jk-i evur been tried on, yet all iIih lallom fall todiSDOse of are by a irad^ u-nti 4:alb'd tnlifttB. Rfmembtr, wbat dfm'i lit ouf- ukui will lit au- olhrr, and in th« itiu1IH(i.!f uf sfylfle and »lKPa h^re it |h eaay to lit y>'>u in Momu choice ault, made with all the r klH nn-1 ‘‘are hlgb-claf! tailors atvo to ih+'lr iiJtnii' iiifr. Thin le ib* sortof clolhlTifC wiJ oIT'T, atirl ih*' prU’4? In IcM than ready-mad^ HtorFS auk lur ih-lr warpi.

GAR.MENTS MADE FOP THK WKALTHT AT Y^U' r.AN U1’“ADILY TaY.

Very hamls'inL^ Sjk k Suii, neal quarlPf-lnch r plnlr| In twu toTH'B »f «r«y, aompihlriK lo jdeaeo

whu itbpr'K-laii* an excIiiHlvi' jiattrrn; rnadt! h> tlrtiAbi'l'-, FiTtfi . for |5(P. If it fUa you, our prii-'f' JIp*.

Iir.ubl -brFaHt*.! Hiur SsCTgp SuU. Imrvirted r]it(h, akt'lrion lln*‘ri; HontFihlTi|f niyllNh for this HPRHon t>f ih^ y‘'rir; miidr hy Troudham, of Itiondwa]-. ic bHI a.t |4t>. Our [irice If II flta you. flA.

ilU for rioKtiUi «UAtom-made Saok Rult (hat jiiFt arrived from BlpaarU of riUMhurs. orlgl- rwilly modp for |3A. A baricitln If it fits you.

t lylieh rtilver gray Crftvenette COal; wn! m&4i« to nrdn* i»y P<*yepr, of Newport News, for |4d. uur pncf If U fUe you |lfl. Ratbrr ewauger; I'uii be UBt'd either as a ralti cout or spring overuoal.

tiO for coat and trousers* inoltled sray effect, that were made to order for 185- by lAnd, ot Buffalo,

Four swell blue serge sack aults; received to­day from finodfTau, of Pittsburg; were made t4> Order for I40t your choloe If w« cap fit you, $15.

Two Sack Sulla, one tight gray with inviirtble pUtd. the other the latcHt ebade of brown; were made lo order bv Newman, of Grand Bapidii, for $5fi; your choice, providing you can bafitted* for $20,'Boubie-breaated Blue Berge Suit, very awag-

a«r, one-half •Ilk llnedt rnKdb for |4S by raaptier, of Waehlngtoa, D. Ci Our price, If It fits you, tie.oo.

Very fiwell Rack finll of Ught Tan Brown; two button long roll; made (or $45 by CTamar A Slewari. of Pittsburg; If It fita you, our price $14.

TALL a n d fiTOUT MEN.Many garments have arrived her* lately that

were made eepectally for tall and atout men and men of extra proporttona.

COLUMNS OP TYPE WOULDN'T s TELL AlX OUR OFFERS.

A Hal of all our offera would take daya to prepare and occupy colanma of type. There­fore* don't Judge ue. by tb* Wlef fiatRemember, you irtW oow find here over 1*600 of the anappleet and moot swagger garmeou wa have ever dlaplayedvLEK'fi MlfiFfT CLOTMIXG FARLOAfi,

9S0 WuhlM|:tw* 9U Near Market St.I ra q a o ie B a lld laff* Newarltg If* J .

Offcn Bw eafav** R* Coa* SIffT*

BASE BALLN E K i a i Y E r t PAM,

Mendair and Tuesdi) st 4MCNESTEIn.llESUK

i i p m K

.■‘:v.,‘iv\,i: '5.-- .f -

b n k s s d

F- i■■ 5

< ;

-fv

IUgh c t m futddhxg

And iociety 'engrrolng

execttied t i t m o d tn i i

cosf. S litio n eiy i t d h n ,

1 st floor.

Tbe Wemtber To m orrow : Probably F air

w m

^ M A R K K T .:H A L S E Y 6 BANK"*

D on't permit your

furs to remain about Me boost any longer. L et

Its store a n d Insure themf

for you .

June Sale HousefurnishingsUntil Tuesday closing time we will ofier the following special values in Summer Household Goods

aiid Kitchen Needs. This sale is an annual evenTat our store and always attracts an unusual amount of attention. The values are alsyays most remarkable and the merchandise of a nature well calcu-

• lated to appeal strongly to thinlj:ing housekeepers. Remember, until closing time Tuesday.

The Peerless ‘Iceland* Ice Cream Freezers

DcriPt Oils gre«t Mle we will offer these well known Ice cream freezers »t special prices—one of the best Ice cream freezers made anJ used by liurtdredaof families to their entire aallsfactlon —two, three and four quart sizes—no

Garden SpadesFull size kinds of refular

standard shape—well made —kinds that we sell regu­larly for 65c. each, but while they last, spe* dal at, each.......... 'I O C

Chafing Dishes

10.98 Dinner

8ets__7j98

Another lot of those celebrated

Lawn MowersOur “ Tip Top’* brand—

choice of 12, 14 or t6 In. sizes — strictly first class machines, easy running— re*, price |2 .98oa. J J Q special a t ............... m n y

J17.9B dinner sets ready to­

morrow In our crockery section

Made of good reliable tin, hickel plated—will do the work and give as good service as those costing twice as much—this H C f , sale special,........... /OC

) Is really equipped for the summerwithout one—special tor Tuesday at the fcUowIng prices;

Z quart size, regular price | Jl.BS-spedal.............. 1 . 0 7

J quart size, regular price | AQ 12,10— spedal........... I . 7 0

4 quart size, regular price ^ ^ C f 2 .6 S—special................L * L o

Food ChoppersSargent's well known

“ Gem ” food choppers— made of steel—self clean­ing, self sharpening steel cutters — family s i z e —regular 98c, kinds, 79c

—be sure and secure your

share of the treat this time—

these splendid sets consist of

one hundred pieces of good

quality American porcelain,

Including soup tureen and three

meat • dishes —'pretty, bright

pattern—all perlect and lully

equal to sets selling regularly

for (10.98—Our price Tuesday

Inverted LightsLooks as well as an elec-'

Iric globe and gives more light-throws light down­ward-complete with man­tle,burner and globe m e _ —reg, |1 ,00 , at.,., f O C

Mrs. Potts’ Irons

7.98

Three Irons, one stand and o n e handle Included inset

I —regular price 98c. per set, but lor this sa le o n l y A - special a t ..... .......... I 7 v

**White ‘Mountain

Grand” Refrigerators

Have given universal satisfaction anJ hundreds of Newarj^ housekeepers have recommended them to their friends. Thespecial feature of Jhls refrigerator Is th ltliirp srts of Intarlor are reraovabi^ aflowlng you to get at every corner easily for cleaning. Consider these l^^ rtan tpoints: Removable ice chamber, grate, waste pipe, adjustable shelves—made of hea^solid oak, highly polished, airlight, thoroughly Insulated walls—two sizes:

Size holding 75 lbs. Ice, 15.24regular |17.25, at.

ilze hrriding 100 lbs. regular (19,49, at..

Size hrriding 100 lbs. Ice, 17.49

Specia l S a le Genuine A gate Nickel Steel Enam eled Kitchen W are

3,700 pieces of strictly perfect agate steel enameled ware on sale to-morrow at the following excep- tlontlly low prices—the season’s opportunity for those whose kitchens require replejiishing.

Tea KettlesHo. S slH, regular (A t.

T7C.— apMloi 0 * ^No. t aU^ regular

«7c.-apecliU___Ho. T sli*, regular 7 0 ^

fie.—apeclal..... • O*Ho. 8 ilM, regular

(Lis-apeclal.... OOv Ho. 8 st» , regn-1 n o

lar ILSt-opae. ■•vA

Swet Fttts

e Qt.. tiae, regularf7c.—ipedal.....tH/t

10 qt. eite, regular nOr aioc.—apeelal....

toasting PansBtrletlf flrKt quRlItj

three i l m - •peclftl for thli great •al«.

46c

“ .c': 'p"a.r: ;S6c

Sance Pans3U qtw atir. reft,

•prcinl.....wVf8% qt, Blie. rPH. i j -

Mo.^i|»eolal.....Gqt. alsee regular Z7r

e^.~ppedftl.....B rite, regular

tre—apeclftl.......VVt10 qt. itlip. rts . 7Qg*

87c,-apeckl....

Milk or Rice toilersA very uuful articio

lor kltcbeu use. The tullowlng sitee apcetal;1 qt. elie, regular

7 7 c .- .p « la l .....WWk.5 qt. .lie , regular 7 7 -

Wc.—epeclal......s q t iliie. regular O?/-

gl.1 6 —apeclal...-

Ceffee or Tea Pots1 nt. e're, regular

40c.—epeeSttL...qt. ilie, reK,

M r.-ipeclal..... WW3 qt. Mse, rei^Qlnr JQ^

©C--ipeclHl.....3 qt. alie, ref ular

i^,-*peclul.....4 qt. ulie, regular Cl2/»

f4c.-*peclal.....

lippef Sauce Pansl \ i q t eite* r«f.

Jsc.-apecUl.....3qt. ilif, regular ^1^

Me.—special.....24c

3 qt. eSie, rffiilar I J lrMe.—ipeciRl......

4 qt. rIs , regular 40c.—*peclal.«...

Visit Our Popular Price Men’s and Boys* Clotlilng Store* 3d Hoot

R.J.GOERKE T J . G E K T H v.nuLa.a racAr.

flARKETii: 0RQAD5T.

800 W aists Special at 59c.That Were Posittvely Made Up to Sell at $1.00, >1.25 and $1.50.

It’s an unasSailtble fact that we* give better waist values than any other store in Newark. Oar bargains from day to day, as thousands of women will testify, prove this fact most conclasively. And to-morrow we even expect to outdo our best efforts of the past, when we shall offer 800 of the hadsomest and most stylish L,ingerie and Lawn Waists at a price never before equaled for value-giving. An eaquisite assortment, embracing every new whim of the season. Dozens and dozens of different styles, including the new Diichesa aad Marie Antoinette effects. Some trimmed with Val. inser­tions, others with allover embroidery and many with lace, the most beautiful designs that we have ever offered at this price. By all means come and see them. You’ll find $1.00,

.25 and $1.50 Waists offered a t .................................................. .............................................

Ribbons3,000 Yards of Loom Ends of

JOc., I2c, and I5c. Qualities Special Per Yard 9c,

And should thi* quantity sell out before the day is over we'll take rib-

'bons from our regular stock and re­duce them to the price quoted. The assortm ent consists of loom-ends of .satin taffe­ta, taffeta and messallne ribbons; 3 to 5 inches wide; 10c., 12c. and 15c. values, grouped together in a great sale for to­morrow, per yard............

LacesNets Thai Were Imported to Sell

at 98c. to f t . 25, Special a t 59c- a Yard.

Remember, there are only a limited number of these laces, and the value is so exceptional that we do not promise to have enough to last th e day out. Cream and while Oriental AH* over Lace, 36 inches wide, sttitahle for waists and entire costumes, 9Sc. to 11.25 values, while the lot lasts, to-morrow,yd...

W ash GoodsRousing Specials for 'Tuesday

Only, tOc. and t2%c. Values at 8c.

2.000 yds, Ptatn Col’d C ham brayi.2.000 yds. M ercerized Shepherd

Checks.2,500yda.Corded DressQlngham a. 3,501) yds. New P rin ted Organdies.4.000 yds. L ancaster and Amos*

keag Apron Gingham.To-morrow special, yard.

lOc. and UJc. va lues a t .

UmbrellasFor Tuesday’s special selling

we will offer regular |1 .50 and I3.CX) umbrellas at $1.00. Come in 28 and 26 inch sizes for men and women—fast black covers that we guarantee for two years —steel rod and frame—choice line of handles—reg­ular $1.50 and $3.00 Tuesday....................

]Wen*s Straw HatsOver one hundred dozen

men's straw hats for Tuesday only at a special price. All new and this season’s sh a p e - yacht and telescope—round and

“square crown styles—made of good quality straw—ready in our men's shoe and hat annex to-morrow a t............. .................

70 Silk Coats, 9 .75Sale Does Not Start Until 2!3Q P. M.

When we tell you that this is the most surprising value in silk coats ever offered in Newark, you may depend upon it absolutely. The purchase consists of exactly seventy garments. Thirty of them are made in a beautiful Eton style, of finest black taffeta, with checked silk lining, and handsomely trimmed; ail regular $19.75 goods. The balance (40 in number) are sample coats fashioned in Eton, hip length jacket styles and three- quarter effects; the finest coats shown this season are inciuded, and the regular prices range up to $29.50. Finest taffetas, hand- somely lined and trimmed, and a few beautiful black silk braided effects. These pretty coats will be found to be almost in-

Black Dress Goods

54-inch black all wool Panama and 58-inch black all wool serge for Tuesday only at a decided saving. Strictly all wool and woven of superior yarn—suit­able for separate skirts—sold regularly for $1,25 per yard, very special for one day a t.................. .

Women’s Vests and Pants--Big SpecialA s an extraordinary bargain, to stimulate selling to-morrow, we shall offer 72

dozen W omen’s Vests and Pants at a record-breaking price. T h ey’re “ mill seconds ” of a quality never sold for less than 25c., but the imperfections are so sligh t that they’re scarcely noticeable, and in no way impair the wear of the garmen t, T h ey’re made of finest combed yams; the vests are straight or shaped, with lace trimmed yokes and ribbon drawn; the pants are lace trimmed to match. No mail or 'phone orders filled; none sent C. O. D. “ Mill seconds” of 25c. grades, at per garment

Sale for Boys$3 Wash Suits at $1*98

100 high grade Wash Suits, in special Tuesday sale at a saving of a dollar on each one. They’re made of white and tan linen.im- ported percale, pique and crash, silk poplin and all the newest light and dark stripe and mixed effects; come in sailor, eton sailor, Russian and Peter Pan styles, handsomely trim­med and embroidered with silk; sizes to 6t boys from 2 ' to 10 years; suits that will compare with any $3 suit in town; special

Linoleum SaleGood NdiPs for Homefumishers I A New

Shipment o f 5,000 Yards o f Our Famous Genuine Cork Linoleum

Has Arrived, Enabling You to Vuy a 65c. Grade at

This is positively the best grade of Linoleum ever offered at the price. It's genuine Cork Linoleum, full 2 yards wide, shown in a great variety of handsome patterns — special per ‘ square yard

d u o w a lu a

45c"Not 'better Thtn the ‘Best Bat Better TTian the Upst."

Gingham S k ir t s YoUf Teeth!

dispensable for Summer wear—hence, if you can possibly do so, be among the fortunate seventy. Not a coat(p tlie lot worth less than $19.75, and' from that to $29.50. (No mail or ’phone orders. None sent^C, Q. D.) On sale Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 shaigj. While they last

As a special offering for one day only we will place on sale

.to-morrow a quantity of wom­en’s gingham petticoats at 39c. each. All of good quality in a variety of plaid & check effects, made with deep circular flounce with ruffle on edge—reg. 50c,, spcc’l 39c

Don’t let the ravages of decay kill them. Without good teeth your di­gestion will be Impaired—and poor digestion will shorleii your life. Good teeth will prolong it. See us about your teeth. We are experts In dentistry In all Its branches. The work we do gives permanent satis­faction, and Is done without pain. Our reasonable prices are within reach of oil,,Artifielal Tm I I i.......... »S, »e, $10Qeld Crown*.. .......................Oald P i l l i n i i ............. ........$1 up0«m*n1 or Ani>1(ani f il l ln g i... SOo■ Ih Io la traetlon........... SOe• li^ le Extiwetton, with C a *...... $1

Big Made, Laid and Lined Carpet Sale AMERICAN* _ 7 _____________________________________ !____ _________ I Dental Parlors

We begin to-day our regular June sale of high class carpets, and those who contemplate purchasing such merchandise will find it greatly to their advantaj^e to look litre before deciding. During this sale every yard of carpet sold will be sewed, laid and lined without cost.

Savonnerie C arpets—Our entire line included in this sale —finest Asminster weaving—handsome designs | and colorings—borders to match—regular f t .60 I per yard, sewed, l.iid and lined—at this salesp’l

W ilton Velvet C arpets—These handsome caipets come in a large yariety of patterns—toob), hall and stair ef­fects—tegular price fl;65 per jard—during | p A this sale, hewed, laid and lined at this special I R l l price....................... ;.............................................. * * * '^ ' '

Wool Velvet C arpets—a splendid selection of these car­pets in hall and stair effects only—sold regularly A A for (l.OS per yard—during this sale, sewed, laid U l I P and lined at the very special price, per yard........ x/Vf

T apestry Brussels Carpets—Beautiful new designs and adorings with or without borders to match—many q h hall and stair effects—regular $1.00 per yard, X R P sewed, laid and lined, special per yard................. V A l/V

All Wool Ingrain l ^ m t sin ^ ln s I

Our entire line of the very best quality wool Inlratfis Included in this sale--a m p large variety of patterns—newest effects regular / K P 90c. per yard, sewed, laid and lined, per yard.... •

A xm lnster C arpets—About twenty different designs in these beautiful carpets—rich colorings—with | or without borders—regular price $U S per yard I /II — sewed, Isid and lined, special at, yard............ a t t a v

All*Wool Velvet Carpets—Twenty-two designs in this substantlai fabric—newest patterns—suitable for rooms, halls and stairs—regular $l.2S per yard— | a a a^wed, laid and lined, spedal for this sale, per I I I I yard.......................... ............................................. l a m v

Body Brussels Carpets—A limited number of patterns In this fine carpet—mostly with borders to match— | z p rich color effects—sold r^ la r ly lor $l.(i0 per I A S yard—sewed, laid and lined, special for this sate * • xxz

•A xm lnster C arpets—Fifteen splendid patterns to choose

from—the very prettiest colorings Included—a * | ^ grade soW regularly lor $1.25 per yard—tor this 1 I I I sale only sewed, laid and lined at, yard............. l a 1 V

T apestry Brussels Carpets—Our entire line of the very finest grade of ten-wire Tapeatry Brussels Carpet | a a —room effects only—with or without borders— I I I I I r^u lar $1.15 per yard—sewed, laid and lined at * • ' / V

Great Purchase of White Bed SpreadsWe fiave again secured at a greater concession than ever before, the season’s accumtilationi and factory odd lots of one of the greatest mills in America. This splendid purchase consists of crochet, honeycomb and satin quilt? and,

• while of course they are subject to,trifling imperfections, the savings are really most important.17! Crochet Spreads tor

Zull-alse bed»t-re*. i.«) *a<d> — leclal for tine sale at

263 Crochet Spreads tor full-size beds — reg. 1.;$ each — special for this oulo St

3J Crochet Sprfrttds for ' full-size 1ml s—re*. each—apeclal fortm* sal* at

108 Crochet Spreads for (uil-elae beds-^res. l.!S each — special for this sale a t

$0 Crochet Spread*—' neattir hemmed a n d frln»«d-reg. 1.98 each - tbl* sale

22 8 n 11 n Marseille* Spresda, In pink and blue- reg. price 2.60 each —thie sate

BROAD ST.Near Bank S tra a t

OVEK BRAUaURV PIANO aTORE755

Run Down? Fagged Out?A Good tonic Will Tone You Up—Put Snap in Your Step—Blood in Your Veins!

There are lots of tonics—many poor ones, a FEW good ones. But we knowof none so good PETTY’S BEEF, WINE AND IRON. We recommend it highly as the very best, it is pleasant last* ing—very appetizing—and very invigorating.

Petty 's Beef. Wine evnd Iron.Bottle. 50c.—3 bottles, $1.35.

Petty^ P h B h r m c h c y ,

S P r u d e n t i S h l B l d g * ^

O p e n A U N i g h t . ^

Petty: He put* up preacrlptloni.

Carefuf Housewives

WHEN PUTT1N6AWAY STOVES

Atwaya giva than) a eeat of e . 6*4 to maka tkam mat proof.

It thin*. ttMlf. la anpiitd Ilk* piiBi. !* btttar jp...^«y«ii*«i«Hafil8Yta.«liiaaotwlr»zo»*ii*.

‘‘mihaeU stem leek llitm*.Fur **)* -by 'SatiUtcr A Pollnra.' Hahn« &

(3o„ W. V. Snydar A Co., Omm* A Co. and Matthla* lardlflw.

Bon , Ami

*rhe Best Scoertag Soap Ma<S§

A Scouring Soap A M etal Polish

A Glass CleaDcr

BHBlnIFF'S SALES.(ChBTiccry A-232.)

BHSRIFF'B BALI3-“ In GbAacery of NewUetween WlUlo.m.H. C. 8clv»fer. cAeo-

Utor etCL* cbmplkinunt, «nd John Croftby, do- fa., for of tnsetfBgeG pre«-

Umm* 'By virtue of the above «tat4Nl writ of Bert

raatae* to me directed. X ihan evpota for tale by puoBe vetidue, ttie cutirlhouee, tn ark. on Tuaedey. the eleventh day of JuM next* a t two- o'clock P. Bf.. all that traet of paroel of tend end preminen eltuale. lying and b^ng In city of Newark. JEnex CouaITi. Kew Jereey,

Beglcmtng In the nortberly line of Clay etireec at a point one bundrra and ten feet from the northweet oomtir of the name and Ogden etreet; thrnce running eeeterly mloog the northerly line of nay street iUfy feet; ihenoe northerly and at right angiee to Clsy etreet Olljr eeven and (irirty-.itva bundredthi feet to the eoutfaerly tine vf a atrip of f o r t y w i d e taken and epiirnprtated j»y cdty of Hfwerk fur the purpoae of bultdlnf the U!IT Brock »k‘wer; ihfiu*e weeterly Mid itne elxty-one end forty-five hundredtlii feet more or leea to lot number five on a map of property or t te N&wapk Aquedeet: Beeidi thence eouthertr et right anglcB to Cler Sti*n f4irtr-tw«-feel to the plnre uf .beinglola nurtfhert Tbrea and four In. plKamwber two on aaid map. being the Hgne premlifa conveyed by the Mayinp and CoxRmQA CSwittcH of the city of Newaj^to .inhn i>o€b}'. dK dated JL and rKordet inr t t of deeilf for rnw iy m piigtfnK Newark* N. J.. May m, igjrr.

FRANK If. BOMMSH. wT * Bheritt..N«V«gk. N. J., Uay ia.,1007. '

NAundorfl/flol'r* (tll'-fOQl. ,j,.-, =■.■

From Making to Eating

Desserts Are BestSb L»*y to Make So Good to Eai

FIUM.R

AT AU GROCERS IN THIS package

OtANDUL « eODUV CO. W n . i n Prai«j|a su MV.

OPENING SALEsons Of OCl SfEQALS m Tils WEEK. BEOINMlNfi TG-BH;

P C R E E N CLOTH , 9r**n or htiBk. par aqu ir* foot.i P O U L T A V N IT T IN Q . Z-lneh m »h, p*r aqusr* fM ■ P O U L T R Y . . - ....... ------------ ------------- ------------- - 7 8 9

...............

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 3 0.280

_ _ ' ire\4|, i~tnvu rrma*i koi vigvB'w •S T A IN E D S C B E E N OOORSU *11 o IlM , M O h......18-Ineh W IN D O W SC R E EN S . «ash....22-Inch WINDOW SCREENS, •*«h.«....

L MAIMOWITZ & SONS .U rd a r tF T o m p d r D e liee ted .